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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.
+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68385 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68385)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Civilization in the United States, by
-Various
-
-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: Civilization in the United States
- An inquiry by thirty Americans
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: Harold E. Stearns
-
-Release Date: June 23, 2022 [eBook #68385]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Emmanuel Ackerman, Charlie Howard, and the Online
- Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
- file was produced from images generously made available by
- The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CIVILIZATION IN THE UNITED
-STATES ***
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Note: Italic text is enclosed in _underscores_; boldface
-text is enclosed in =equals signs=; Small-Caps text is shown as
-ALL-CAPS. Other notes will be found following the Index.
-
-
-
-
- CIVILIZATION IN THE
- UNITED STATES
-
- _AN INQUIRY BY THIRTY AMERICANS_
-
-
- EDITED BY HAROLD E. STEARNS
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- NEW YORK
- HARCOURT, BRACE AND COMPANY
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY
- HARCOURT, BRACE AND COMPANY, INC
-
-
- PRINTED IN THE U. S. A. BY
- THE QUINN & BODEN COMPANY
- RAHWAY, N. J.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-This book has been an adventure in intellectual co-operation. If it
-were a mere collection of haphazard essays, gathered together to make
-the conventional symposium, it would have only slight significance.
-But it has been the deliberate and organized outgrowth of the common
-efforts of like-minded men and women to see the problem of modern
-American civilization as a whole, and to illuminate by careful
-criticism the special aspect of that civilization with which the
-individual is most familiar. Personal contact has served to correct
-overemphasis, and slow and careful selection of the members of a group
-which has now grown to some thirty-odd has given to this work a unity
-of approach and attack which it otherwise could not possibly have had.
-
-The nucleus of this group was brought together by common work,
-common interests, and more or less common assumptions. As long ago
-as the autumn of last year Mr. Van Wyck Brooks and I discussed the
-possibility of several of us, who were engaged in much the same kind
-of critical examination of our civilization, coming together to
-exchange ideas, to clarify our individual fields, and to discover
-wherein they coincided, overlapped, or diverged. The original desire
-was the modest one of making it possible for us to avoid working at
-cross-purposes. I suggested that we meet at my home, which a few of
-us did, and since that time until the delivery of this volume to the
-publishers we have met every fortnight. Even at our first meeting we
-discovered our points of view to have so much in common that our desire
-for informal and pleasant discussions became the more serious wish to
-contribute a definite and tangible piece of work towards the advance
-of intellectual life in America. We wished to speak the truth about
-American civilization as we saw it, in order to do our share in making
-a real civilization possible--for I think with all of us there was a
-common assumption that a field cannot be ploughed until it has first
-been cleared of rocks, and that constructive criticism can hardly exist
-until there is something on which to construct.
-
-Naturally the first problem to arise was the one of ways and means. If
-the spirit and temper of the French encyclopædists of the 18th century
-appealed strongly to us, certainly their method for the advancement of
-knowledge was inapplicable in our own century. The cultural phenomena
-we proposed to survey were too complicated and extensive; besides, we
-wished to make a definite contribution of some kind or another while,
-so to speak, there was yet time. For the cohesiveness of the group,
-the good-humoured tolerance and cheerful sacrifice of time, were to
-some extent the consequence of the intellectual collapse that came
-with the hysterical post-armistice days, when it was easier than in
-normal times to get together intelligent and civilized men and women
-in common defence against the common enemy of reaction. We wished to
-take advantage of this strategic situation for the furtherance of our
-co-operative enterprise, and decided, finally, that the simplest plan
-would be the best. Each of us was to write a single short essay on the
-special topic we knew most thoroughly; we were to continue our meetings
-in order to keep informed of the progress of our work and to see that
-there was no duplication; we were to extend the list of subjects to
-whatever legitimately bore upon our cultural life and to select the
-authors by common agreement; we were to keep in touch with each other
-so that the volume might have that inner consistency which could come
-only from direct acquaintance with what each of us was planning.
-
-There were a few other simple rules which we laid down in the
-beginning. Desirous of avoiding merely irrelevant criticism and of
-keeping attention upon our actual treatment of our subjects rather
-than upon our personalities, we provided that all contributors
-to the volume must be American citizens. For the same reason, we
-likewise provided that in the list there should be no professional
-propagandists--except as one is a propagandist for one’s own ideas--no
-martyrs, and no one who was merely disgruntled. Since our object was to
-give an uncompromising, and consequently at some points necessarily
-harsh, analysis, we desired the tone to be good-natured and the temper
-urbane. At first, these larger points of policy were decided by common
-agreement or, on occasion, by majority vote, and to the end I settled
-no important question without consultation with as many members of the
-group as I could approach within the limited time we had agreed to have
-this volume in the hands of the publisher. But with the extension of
-the scope of the book, the negotiations with the publisher, and the
-mass of complexities and details that are inevitable in so difficult an
-enterprise, the authority to decide specific questions and the usual
-editorial powers were delegated as a matter of convenience to me, aided
-by a committee of three. Hence I was in a position constantly to see
-the book as a whole, and to make suggestions for differentiation, where
-repetition appeared to impend, or for unity, where the divergence was
-sharp enough to be construed by some as contradictory. In view both of
-the fact that every contributor has full liberty of opinion and that
-the personalities and points of view finding expression in the essays
-are all highly individualistic, the underlying unity which binds the
-volume together is really surprising.
-
-It may seem strange that a volume on civilization in the United States
-does not include a specific article on religion, and the omission is
-worth a paragraph of explanation. Outside the bigger cities, certainly
-no one can understand the social structure of contemporary American
-life without careful study of the organization and power of the church.
-Speaking generally, we are a church-going people, and at least on the
-surface the multiplicity of sects and creeds, the sheer immensity of
-the physical apparatus by which the religious impulse is articulated,
-would seem to prove that our interest in and emotional craving for
-religious experience are enormous. But the omission has not been due
-to any superciliousness on our part towards the subject itself; on the
-contrary, I suppose I have put more thought and energy into this essay,
-which has not been written, than into any other problem connected with
-the book. The bald truth is, it has been next to impossible to get any
-one to write on the subject; most of the people I approached shied
-off--it was really difficult to get them to talk about it at all.
-Almost unanimously, when I did manage to procure an opinion from them,
-they said that real religious feeling in America had disappeared, that
-the church had become a purely social and political institution, that
-the country is in the grip of what Anatole France has aptly called
-Protestant clericalism, and that, finally, they weren’t interested
-in the topic. The accuracy of these observations (except the last) I
-cannot, of course, vouch for, but it is rather striking that they were
-identical. In any event, the topic as a topic has had to be omitted;
-but it is not neglected, for in several essays directly--in particular,
-“Philosophy” and “Nerves”--and in many by implication the subject is
-discussed. At one time Mr. James Harvey Robinson consented to write
-the article--and it would have been an illuminating piece of work--but
-unfortunately ill health and the pressure of official duties made the
-task impossible for him within the most generous time limit that might
-be arranged.
-
-I have spoken already of the unity which underlies the volume. When
-I remember all these essays, and try to summon together the chief
-themes that run through them, either by explicit statement or as a
-kind of underlying rhythm to all, in order to justify the strong
-impression of unity, I find three major contentions that may be said to
-be basic--contentions all the more significant inasmuch as they were
-unpremeditated and were arrived at, as it were, by accident rather than
-design. They are:
-
-First, That in almost every branch of American life there is a sharp
-dichotomy between preaching and practice; we let not our right hand
-know what our left hand doeth. Curiously enough, no one regards
-this, and in fact no one consciously feels this as hypocrisy--there
-are certain abstractions and dogmas which are sacred to us, and if
-we fall short of these external standards in our private life, that
-is no reason for submitting them to a fresh examination; rather are
-we to worship them the more vociferously to show our sense of sin.
-Regardless, then, of the theoretical excellence or stupidity of these
-standards, in actual practice the moral code resolves itself into
-the one cardinal heresy of being found out, with the chief sanction
-enforcing it, the fear of what people will say.
-
-Second, That whatever else American civilization is, it is not
-Anglo-Saxon, and that we shall never achieve any genuine nationalistic
-self-consciousness as long as we allow certain financial and social
-minorities to persuade us that we are still an English Colony. Until
-we begin seriously to appraise and warmly to cherish the heterogeneous
-elements which make up our life, and to see the common element running
-through all of them, we shall make not even a step towards true
-unity; we shall remain, in Roosevelt’s class-conscious and bitter but
-illuminating phrase, a polyglot boarding-house. It is curious how a
-book on American civilization actually leads one back to the conviction
-that we are, after all, Americans.
-
-Third, That the most moving and pathetic fact in the social life of
-America to-day is emotional and æsthetic starvation, of which the
-mania for petty regulation, the driving, regimentating, and drilling,
-the secret society and its grotesque regalia, the firm grasp on the
-unessentials of material organization of our pleasures and gaieties are
-all eloquent stigmata. We have no heritages or traditions to which to
-cling except those that have already withered in our hands and turned
-to dust. One can feel the whole industrial and economic situation
-as so maladjusted to the primary and simple needs of men and women
-that the futility of a rationalistic attack on these infantilisms of
-compensation becomes obvious. There must be an entirely new deal of
-the cards in one sense; we must change our hearts. For only so, unless
-through the humbling of calamity or scourge, can true art and true
-religion and true personality, with their native warmth and caprice and
-gaiety, grow up in America to exorcise these painted devils we have
-created to frighten us away from the acknowledgment of our spiritual
-poverty.
-
-If these main contentions seem severe or pessimistic, the answer must
-be: we do not write to please; we strive only to understand and to
-state as clearly as we can. For American civilization is still in the
-embryonic stage, with rich and with disastrous possibilities of growth.
-But the first step in growing up is self-conscious and deliberately
-critical examination of ourselves, without sentimentality and without
-fear. We cannot even devise, much less control, the principles
-which are to guide our future development until that preliminary
-understanding has come home with telling force to the consciousness
-of the ordinary man. To this self-understanding, this book is, in
-our belief, a genuine and valuable contribution. We may not always
-have been wise; we have tried always to be honest. And if our attempt
-will help to embolden others to an equally frank expression of their
-beliefs, perhaps in time wisdom will come.
-
-I am glad that, however serious, we are never solemn in these essays.
-Often, in fact, we are quite gay, and it would be a humourless person
-indeed who could not read many of them, even when the thrusts are at
-himself, with that laughter which Rabelais tells us is proper to the
-man. For whatever our defects, we Americans, we have one virtue and
-perhaps a saving virtue--we still know how to laugh at ourselves.
-
- H. E. S.
-
-New York City, July Fourth, 1921.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- PREFACE _The Editor_ iii
-
- THE CITY _Lewis Mumford_ 3
-
- POLITICS _H. L. Mencken_ 21
-
- JOURNALISM _John Macy_ 35
-
- THE LAW _Zechariah Chafee, Jr._ 53
-
- EDUCATION _Robert Morss Lovett_ 77
-
- SCHOLARSHIP AND CRITICISM _J. E. Spingarn_ 93
-
- SCHOOL AND COLLEGE LIFE _Clarence Britten_ 109
-
- THE INTELLECTUAL LIFE _Harold E. Stearns_ 135
-
- SCIENCE _Robert H. Lowie_ 151
-
- PHILOSOPHY _Harold Chapman Brown_ 163
-
- THE LITERARY LIFE _Van Wyck Brooks_ 179
-
- MUSIC _Deems Taylor_ 199
-
- POETRY _Conrad Aiken_ 215
-
- ART _Walter Pach_ 227
-
- THE THEATRE _George Jean Nathan_ 243
-
- ECONOMIC OPINION _Walter H. Hamilton_ 255
-
- RADICALISM _George Soule_ 271
-
- THE SMALL TOWN _Louis Raymond Reid_ 285
-
- HISTORY _H. W. Van Loon_ 297
-
- SEX _Elsie Clews Parsons_ 309
-
- THE FAMILY _Katharine Anthony_ 319
-
- THE ALIEN _Frederic C. Howe_ 337
-
- RACIAL MINORITIES _Geroid Tanquary Robinson_ 351
-
- ADVERTISING _J. Thorne Smith_ 381
-
- BUSINESS _Garet Garrett_ 397
-
- ENGINEERING _O. S. Beyer, Jr._ 417
-
- NERVES _Alfred B. Kuttner_ 427
-
- MEDICINE _Anonymous_ 443
-
- SPORT AND PLAY _Ring W. Lardner_ 457
-
- HUMOUR _Frank M. Colby_ 463
-
-
- AMERICAN CIVILIZATION FROM THE FOREIGN POINT OF VIEW
-
- I AS AN ENGLISHMAN SEES IT _Henry L. Stuart_ 469
-
- II AS AN IRISHMAN SEES IT _Ernest Boyd_ 489
-
- III AS AN ITALIAN SEES IT _Raffaello Piccoli_ 508
-
-
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 527
-
- WHO’S WHO OF THE CONTRIBUTORS 557
-
- INDEX 565
-
-
-
-
-CIVILIZATION IN THE UNITED STATES
-
-
-
-
-THE CITY
-
-
-Around us, in the city, each epoch in America has been concentrated
-and crystallized. In building our cities we deflowered a wilderness.
-To-day more than one-half the population of the United States lives in
-an environment which the jerry-builder, the real estate speculator, the
-paving contractor, and the industrialist have largely created. Have
-we begotten a civilization? That is a question which a survey of the
-American city will help us to answer.
-
-If American history is viewed from the standpoint of the student of
-cities, it divides itself roughly into three parts. The first was
-a provincial period, which lasted from the foundation of Manhattan
-down to the opening up of ocean commerce after the War of 1812. This
-was followed by a commercial period, which began with the cutting of
-canals and ended with the extension of the railroad system across
-the continent, and an industrial period, that gathered force on the
-Atlantic seaboard in the ’thirties and is still the dominant economic
-phase of our civilization. These periods must not be looked upon as
-strictly successive or exclusive: the names merely express in a crude
-way the main aspect of each era. It is possible to telescope the
-story of America’s colonial expansion and industrial exploitation by
-following the material growth and the cultural impoverishment of the
-American city during its transformations.
-
-The momentum of the provincial city lasted well on to the Civil War.
-The economic basis of this period was agriculture and petty trade: its
-civic expression was, typically, the small New England town, with a
-central common around which were grouped a church--appropriately called
-a meeting-house--a school, and perhaps a town hall. Its main street
-would be lined with tall suave elms and bordered by reticent white
-houses of much the same design as those that dotted the countryside. In
-the growing towns of the seaboard this culture was overthrown, before
-it had a chance to express itself adequately in either institutions
-or men, and it bloomed rather tardily, therefore, in the little towns
-of Concord and Cambridge, between 1820 and the Civil War. We know
-it to-day through a largely anonymous architecture, and through a
-literature created by the school of writers that bears the name of the
-chief city. Unfortunately for the further development of what we might
-call the Concord culture, the agricultural basis of this civilization
-shifted to the wheat-growing West; and therewith channels of trade
-were diverted from Boston to ports that tapped a richer, more imperial
-hinterland. What remained of the provincial town in New England was a
-mummy-case.
-
-The civilization of the New England town spent itself in the settlement
-of the Ohio Valley and the great tracts beyond. None of the new centres
-had, _qua_ provincial towns, any fresh contribution to make. It had
-taken the culture of New England more than three centuries before it
-had borne its Concord fruit, and the story of the Western movement
-is somehow summed up in the legend of Johnny Appleseed, who planted
-dry apple seeds, instead of slips from the living tree, and hedged
-the roads he travelled with wild apples, harsh and puny and inedible.
-Cincinnati and Pittsburgh jumped from a frustrate provincialism into
-the midst of the machine era; and so for a long time they remained
-destitute of the institutions that are necessary to carry on the
-processes of civilization.
-
-West of the Alleghanies, the common, with its church and school, was
-not destined to dominate the urban landscape: the railroad station and
-the commercial hotel had come to take their place. This was indeed the
-universal mark of the new industrialism, as obvious in 19th-century
-Oxford as in Hoboken. The pioneer American city, however, had none of
-the cultural institutions that had been accumulated in Europe during
-the great outbursts of the Middle Age and the Renaissance, and as a
-result its destitution was naked and apparent. It is true that every
-town which was developed mainly during the 19th century--Manchester as
-well as Milwaukee--suffered from the absence of civic institutes. The
-peculiarity of the New World was that the facilities for borrowing
-from the older centres were considerably more limited. London could
-export Madox Brown to Manchester to do the murals in the Town Hall: New
-York had still to create its schools of art before it had any Madox
-Browns that could be exported.
-
-With the beginning of the 19th century, market centres which had at
-first tapped only their immediate region began to reach further back
-into the hinterland, and to stretch outward, not merely for freight
-but for immigrants, across the ocean. The silly game of counting
-heads became the fashion, and in the literature of the ’thirties one
-discovers that every commercial city had its statistical lawyer who
-was bold enough to predict its leadership in “population and wealth”
-before the century was out. The chief boast of the American city was
-its prospective size.
-
-Now the New England town was a genuine community. In so far as the
-New England community had a common social and political and religious
-life, the town expressed it. The city which was representative of the
-second period, on the other hand, was in origin a trading fort, and
-the supreme occupation of its founders was with the goods life rather
-than the good life. New York, Pittsburgh, Chicago, and St. Louis have
-this common basis. They were not composed of corporate organizations
-on the march, as it were, towards a New Jerusalem: they were simply a
-rabble of individuals “on the make.” With such a tradition to give it
-momentum it is small wonder that the adventurousness of the commercial
-period was exhausted on the fortuities and temptations of trade. A
-state of intellectual anæsthesia prevailed. One has only to compare
-Cist’s _Cincinnati Miscellany_ with Emerson’s _Dial_ to see at what a
-low level the towns of the Middle West were carrying on.
-
-Since there was neither fellowship nor social stability nor security
-in the scramble of the inchoate commercial city, it remained for a
-particular institution to devote itself to the gospel of the “glad
-hand.” Thus an historian of Pittsburgh records the foundation of a
-Masonic lodge as early as 1785, shortly after the building of the
-church, and in every American city, small or big, Odd Fellows, Mystic
-Shriners, Woodmen, Elks, Knights of Columbus, and other orders without
-number in the course of time found for themselves a prominent place.
-(Their feminine counterparts were the D.A.R. and the W.C.T.U., their
-juniors, the college Greek letter fraternities.) Whereas one will
-search American cities in vain for the labour temples one discovers
-to-day in Europe from Belgium to Italy, one finds that the fraternal
-lodge generally occupies a site of dignity and importance. There
-were doubtless many excellent reasons for the strange proliferation
-of professional fraternity in the American city, but perhaps the
-strongest reason was the absence of any other kind of fraternity. The
-social centre and the community centre, which in a singularly hard and
-consciously beatific way have sought to organize fellowship and mutual
-aid on different terms, are products of the last decade.
-
-Perhaps the only other civic institution of importance that the
-commercial towns fostered was the lyceum: forerunner of the elephantine
-Chautauqua. The lyceum lecture, however, was taken as a soporific
-rather than a stimulant, and if it aroused any appetite for art,
-philosophy, or science there was nothing in the environment of the
-commercial city that could satisfy it. Just as church-going became
-a substitute for religion, so automatic lyceum attendance became a
-substitute for thought. These were the prayer wheels of a preoccupied
-commercialism.
-
-The contrast between the provincial and the commercial city in America
-was well summed up in their plans. Consider the differences between
-Cambridge and New York. Up to the beginning of the 19th century New
-York, at the tip of Manhattan Island, had the same diffident, rambling
-town plan that characterizes Cambridge. In this old type of city layout
-the streets lead nowhere, except to the buildings that give onto them:
-outside the main roads the provisions for traffic are so inadequate as
-to seem almost a provision against traffic. Quiet streets, a pleasant
-aspect, ample domestic facilities were the desiderata of the provincial
-town; traffic, realty speculation, and expansion were those of the
-newer era. This became evident as soon as the Empire City started to
-realize its “manifest destiny” by laying down, in 1808, a plan for its
-future development.
-
-New York’s city plan commissioners went about their work with a
-scarcely concealed purpose to increase traffic and raise realty values.
-The amenities of city life counted for little in their scheme of
-things: debating “whether they should confine themselves to rectilinear
-and rectangular streets, or whether they should adopt some of those
-supposed improvements, by circles, ovals, and stars,” they decided, on
-grounds of economy, against any departure from the gridiron design. It
-was under the same stimulus that these admirable philistines had the
-complacency to plan the city’s development up to 155th Street. Here we
-are concerned, however, with the results of the rectangular plan rather
-than with the motives that lay behind its adoption throughout the
-country.
-
-The principal effect of the gridiron plan is that every street becomes
-a thoroughfare, and that every thoroughfare is potentially a commercial
-street. The tendency towards movement in such a city vastly outweighs
-the tendency towards settlement. As a result of progressive shifts in
-population, due to the changes to which commercial competition subjects
-the use of land, the main institutions of the city, instead of cohering
-naturally--as the museums, galleries, theatres, clubs, and public
-offices group themselves in the heart of Westminster--are dispersed
-in every direction. Neither Columbia University, New York University,
-the Astor Library, nor the National Academy of Design--to seize but
-a few examples--is on its original site. Yet had Columbia remained
-at Fiftieth Street it might have had some effective working relation
-with the great storehouse of books that now occupies part of Bryant
-Park at Forty-second Street; or, alternatively, had the Astor Library
-remained on its old site it might have had some connection with New
-York University--had that institution not in turn moved!
-
-What was called the growth of the commercial city was really a
-manifestation of the absence of design in the gridiron plan. The
-rectangular parcelling of ground promoted speculation in land-units
-and the ready interchange of real property: it had no relation
-whatever to the essential purposes for which a city exists. It is not
-a little significant that Chicago, Cincinnati, and St. Louis, each
-of which had space set aside for public purposes in their original
-plans, had given up these civic holdings to the realty gambler before
-half of the 19th century was over. The common was not the centre of
-a well-rounded community life, as in New England, but the centre of
-land-speculation--which was at once the business, the recreation, and
-the religion of the commercial city. Under the influence of New York
-the Scadders whom Martin Chuzzlewit encountered were laying down their
-New Edens throughout the country.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was during the commercial period that the evolution of the
-Promenade, such as existed in New York at Battery Park, took place.
-The new promenade was no longer a park but a shop-lined thoroughfare,
-Broadway. Shopping became for the more domesticated half of the
-community an exciting, bewildering amusement; and out of a combination
-of Yankee “notions,” Barnum-like advertisement, and magisterial
-organization arose that _omnium gatherum_ of commerce, the department
-store. It is scarcely possible to exaggerate the part that Broadway--I
-use the term generically--has played in the American town. It is not
-merely the Agora but the Acropolis. When the factory whistle closes the
-week, and the factory hands of Camden, or Pittsburgh, or Bridgeport
-pour out of the buildings and stockades in which they spend the more
-exhausting half of their lives, it is through Broadway that the greater
-part of their repressions seek an outlet. Both the name and the
-institution extend across the continent from New York to Los Angeles.
-Up and down these second-hand Broadways, from one in the afternoon
-until past ten at night, drifts a more or less aimless mass of human
-beings, bent upon extracting such joy as is possible from the sights in
-the windows, the contacts with other human beings, the occasional or
-systematic flirtations, and the risks and adventures of purchase.
-
-In the early development of Broadway the amusements were adventitious.
-Even at present, in spite of the ubiquitous movie, the crowded street
-itself, at least in the smaller communities, is the main source of
-entertainment. Now, under normal conditions, for a great part of
-the population in a factory town one of the chief instincts to be
-repressed is that of acquisition (collection). It is not merely that
-the average factory worker cannot afford the luxuries of life: the
-worst is that he must think twice before purchasing the necessities.
-Out of this situation one of Broadway’s happiest achievements has
-arisen: the five and ten cent store. In the five and ten cent store
-it is possible for the circumscribed factory operative to obtain the
-illusion of unmoderated expenditure--and even extravagance--without
-actually inflicting any irreparable rent in his purse. Broadway is
-thus, in more than one sense, the great compensatory device of the
-American city. The dazzle of white lights, the colour of electric
-signs, the alabaster architecture of the moving-picture palaces, the
-æsthetic appeals of the shop windows--these stand for elements that are
-left out of the drab perspectives of the industrial city. People who
-do not know how to spend their time must take what satisfaction they
-can in spending their money. That is why, although the five and ten
-cent store itself is perhaps mainly an institution for the proletariat,
-the habits and dispositions it encourages are universal. The chief
-amusement of Atlantic City, that opulent hostelry-annex of New York
-and Philadelphia, lies not in the beach and the ocean but in the shops
-which line the interminable Broadway known as the Boardwalk.
-
-Broadway, in sum, is the façade of the American city: a false front.
-The highest achievements of our material civilization--and at their
-best our hotels, our department stores, and our Woolworth towers are
-achievements--count as so many symptoms of its spiritual failure. In
-order to cover up the vacancy of getting and spending in our cities,
-we have invented a thousand fresh devices for getting and spending. As
-a consequence our life is externalized. The principal institutions of
-the American city are merely distractions that take our eyes off the
-environment, instead of instruments which would help us to mould it
-creatively a little nearer to humane hopes and desires.
-
-The birth of industrialism in America is announced in the opening of
-the Crystal Palace in Bryant Park, Manhattan, in 1853. Between the
-Crystal Palace Exhibition and the Chicago World’s Fair in 1893 lies a
-period whose defects were partly accentuated by the exhaustion that
-followed the Civil War. The debasement of the American city during
-this period can be read in almost every building that was erected.
-The influence of colonial architecture had waned to extinction during
-the first half of the century. There followed a period of eclectic
-experiment, in which all sorts of Egyptian, Byzantine, Gothic, and
-Arabesque ineptitudes were committed--a period whose absurdities we
-have only in recent years begun to escape. The domestic style, as
-the century progressed, became more limited. Little touches about
-the doors, mouldings, fanlights, and balustrades disappeared, and
-finally craftsmanship went out of style altogether and a pretentious
-architectural puffery took its place. The “era of good feeling” was an
-era of bad taste.
-
-Pittsburgh, St. Louis, and Chicago give perhaps the most naked
-revelation of the industrial city’s characteristics. There were two
-institutions that set their mark upon the early part of this period.
-One of them was the Mechanics’ Hall. This was usually a building of red
-brick, structural iron, and glass, whose unique hideousness marks it as
-a typical product of the age of coal-industrialism, to be put alongside
-the “smoke-halls” of the railroad termini. The other institution was
-the German beer-garden--the one bright spot on the edge of an urban
-landscape that was steadily becoming more dingy, more dull, and more
-depressing. The cities that came to life in this period had scarcely
-any other civic apparatus to boast of. Conceive of Pittsburgh without
-Schenley Park, without the Carnegie Institute, without the Library or
-the Museum or the Concert Hall, and without the institutions that have
-grown up during the last generation around its sub-Acropolis--and one
-has a picture of Progress and Poverty that Henry George might have
-drawn on for illustration. The industrial city did not represent the
-creative values in civilization: it stood for a new form of human
-barbarism. In the coal towns of Pennsylvania, the steel towns of the
-Ohio and its tributaries, and the factory towns of Long Island Sound
-and Narragansett Bay was an environment much more harsh, antagonistic,
-and brutal than anything the pioneers had encountered. Even the fake
-exhilaration of the commercial city was lacking.
-
-The reaction against the industrial city was expressed in various ways.
-The defect of these reactions was that they were formulated in terms
-of an escape from the environment rather than in a reconstruction of
-it. Symptomatic of this escape, along one particular alley, was the
-architecture of Richardson, and of his apprentices, McKim and White.
-No one who has an eye for the fine incidence of beautiful architecture
-can avoid a shock at discovering a monumental Romanesque building at
-the foot of Pittsburgh’s dingy “Hump,” or the hardly less monstrous
-beauty of Trinity Church, Boston, as one approaches it from a waste
-of railroad yards that lie on one side of it. It was no accident, one
-is inclined to believe, that Richardson should have returned to the
-Romanesque only a little time before Henry Adams was exploring Mont St.
-Michel and Chartres. Both men were searching for a specific against
-the fever of industrialism, and architects like Richardson were taking
-to archaic beauty as a man who was vaguely ill might have recourse to
-quinine, in the hope that his disease had sufficient similarity to
-malaria to be cured by it.
-
-The truth is that the doses of exotic architecture which Richardson and
-his school sought to inject into the American city were anodynes rather
-than specifics. The Latin Renaissance models of McKim and White--the
-Boston Public Library and Madison Square Garden, for example--were
-perhaps a little better suited to the concrete demands of the new
-age; but they were still a long way from that perfect congruence
-with contemporary habits and modes of thought which was recorded in
-buildings like Independence Hall. Almost down to the last decade the
-best buildings of the industrial period have been anonymous, and
-scarcely ever recognized for their beauty. A grain elevator here, a
-warehouse there, an office building, a garage--there has been the
-promise of a stripped, athletic, classical style of architecture in
-these buildings which shall embody all that is good in the Machine
-Age: its precision, its cleanliness, its hard illuminations, its
-unflinching logic. Dickens once poked fun at the architecture of
-Coketown because its infirmary looked like its jail and its jail like
-its town hall. But the joke had a sting to it only because these
-buildings were all plaintively destitute of æsthetic inspiration.
-In a place and an age that had achieved a well-rounded and balanced
-culture, we should expect to find the same spirit expressed in the
-simplest cottage and the grandest public building. So we find it, for
-instance, in the humble market towns of the Middle Age: there is not
-one type of architecture for 15th-century Shaftesbury and another for
-London; neither is there one style for public London and quite another
-for domestic London. Our architects in America have only just begun
-to cease regarding the Gothic style as especially fit for churches
-and schools, whilst they favour the Roman mode for courts, and the
-Byzantine, perhaps, for offices. Even the unique beauty of the Bush
-Terminal Tower is compromised by an antiquely “stylized” interior.
-
-With the beginning of the second decade of this century there
-is some evidence of an attempt to make a genuine culture out of
-industrialism--instead of attempting to escape from industrialism into
-a culture which, though doubtless genuine enough, has the misfortune
-to be dead. The schoolhouses in Gary, Indiana, have some of the better
-qualities of a Gary steel plant. That symptom is all to the good. It
-points perhaps to a time when the Gary steel plant may have some of
-the educational virtues of a Gary school. One of the things that has
-made the industrial age a horror in America is the notion that there is
-something shameful in its manifestations. The idea that nobody would
-ever go near an industrial plant except under stress of starvation
-is in part responsible for the heaps of rubbish and rusty metal, for
-the general disorder and vileness, that still characterize broad
-acres of our factory districts. There is nothing short of the Alkali
-Desert that compares with the desolateness of the common American
-industrial town. These qualities are indicative of the fact that we
-have centred attention not upon the process but upon the return; not
-upon the task but the emoluments: not upon what we can get out of our
-work but upon what we can achieve when we get away from our work. Our
-industrialism has been in the grip of business, and our industrial
-cities, and their institutions, have exhibited a major preoccupation
-with business. The coercive repression of an impersonal, mechanical
-technique was compensated by the pervasive will-to-power--or at least
-will-to-comfort--of commercialism.
-
-We have shirked the problem of trying to live well in a régime that is
-devoted to the production of T-beams and toothbrushes and TNT. As a
-result, we have failed to react creatively upon the environment with
-anything like the inspiration that one might have found in a group of
-mediæval peasants building a cathedral. The urban worker escapes the
-mechanical routine of his daily job only to find an equally mechanical
-substitute for life and growth and experience in his amusements. The
-Gay White Way with its stupendous blaze of lights, and Coney Island,
-with its fear-stimulating roller coasters and chute-the-chutes, are
-characteristic by-products of an age that has renounced the task of
-actively humanizing the machine, and of creating an environment in
-which all the fruitful impulses of the community may be expressed.
-The movies, the White Ways, and the Coney Islands, which almost every
-American city boasts in some form or other, are means of giving jaded
-and throttled people the sensations of living without the direct
-experience of life--a sort of spiritual masturbation. In short, we have
-had the alternative of humanizing the industrial city or de-humanizing
-the population. So far we have de-humanized the population.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The external reactions against the industrial city came to a head in
-the World’s Fair at Chicago. In that strange and giddy mixture of
-Parnassus and Coney Island was born a new conception of the city--a
-White City, spaciously designed, lighted by electricity, replete with
-monuments, crowned with public buildings, and dignified by a radiant
-architecture. The men who planned the exposition knew something about
-the better side of the spacious perspectives that Haussmann had
-designed for Napoleon III. Without taking into account the fundamental
-conditions of industrialism, or the salient facts of economics,
-they initiated what shortly came to be known as the City Beautiful
-movement. For a couple of decades Municipal Art societies were rampant.
-Their programme had the defects of the régime it attempted to combat.
-Its capital effort was to put on a front--to embellish Main Street and
-make it a more attractive thoroughfare. Here in æsthetics, as elsewhere
-in education, persisted the brahminical view of culture: the idea that
-beauty was something that could be acquired by any one who was willing
-to put up the cash; that it did not arise naturally out of the good
-life but was something which could be plastered on impoverished life;
-in short, that it was a cosmetic.
-
-Until the Pittsburgh Survey of 1908 pricked a pin through superficial
-attempts at municipal improvement, those who sought to remake the
-American city overlooked the necessity for rectifying its economic
-basis. The meanness, the spotty development, and the congestion of the
-American city was at least in some degree an index of that deep disease
-of realty speculation which had, as already noted, caused cities like
-Chicago to forfeit land originally laid aside for public uses. Because
-facts like these were ignored for the sake of some small, immediate
-result, the developments that the early reformers were bold enough to
-outline still lie in the realms of hopeless fantasy--a fine play of the
-imagination, like Scadder’s prospectus of Eden. Here as elsewhere there
-have been numerous signs of promise during the last decade; but it is
-doubtful whether they are yet numerous enough or profound enough to
-alter the general picture.
-
-At best, the improvements that have been effected in the American city
-have not been central but subsidiary. They have been improvements, as
-Aristotle would have said, in the material bases of the good life: they
-have not been improvements in the art of living. The growth of the
-American city during the past century has meant the extension of paved
-streets and sewers and gas mains, and progressive heightening of office
-buildings and tenements. The outlay on pavements, sewers, electric
-lighting systems, and plumbing has been stupendous; but no matter what
-the Rotary Clubs and Chambers of Commerce may think of them, these
-mechanical ingenuities are not the indices of a civilization. There is
-a curious confusion in America between growth and improvement. We use
-the phrase “bigger and better” as if the conjunction were inevitable.
-As a matter of fact, there is little evidence to show that the vast
-increase of population in every urban area has been accompanied
-by anything like the necessary increase of schools, universities,
-theatres, meeting places, parks, and so forth. The fact that in
-1920 we had sixty-four cities with more than 100,000 population,
-thirty-three with more than 200,000, and twelve with more than 500,000
-does not mean that the resources of polity, culture, and art have been
-correspondingly on the increase. The growth of the American city has
-resulted less in the establishment of civilized standards of life than
-in the extension of Suburbia.
-
-“Suburbia” is used here in both the accepted and in a more literal
-sense. On one hand I refer to the fact that the growth of the
-metropolis throws vast numbers of people into distant dormitories
-where, by and large, life is carried on without the discipline of
-rural occupations and without the cultural resources that the Central
-District of the city still retains in its art exhibitions, theatres,
-concerts, and the like. But our metropolises produce Suburbia not
-merely by reason of the fact that the people who work in the offices,
-bureaus, and factories live as citizens in a distant territory, perhaps
-in another state: they likewise foster Suburbia in another sense. I
-mean that the quality of life for the great mass of people who live
-within the political boundaries of the metropolis itself is inferior to
-that which a city with an adequate equipment and a thorough realization
-of the creative needs of the community is capable of producing. In
-this sense, the “suburb” called Brookline is a genuine city; while the
-greater part of the “city of Boston” is a suburb. We have scarcely
-begun to make an adequate distribution of libraries, meeting places,
-parks, gymnasia, and similar equipment, without which life in the
-city tends to be carried on at a low level of routine--physically
-as well as mentally. (The blatantly confidential advertisements of
-constipation remedies on all the hoardings tell a significant story.)
-At any reasonable allotment of park space, the Committee on Congestion
-in New York pointed out in 1911, a greater number of acres was needed
-for parks on the lower East Side than was occupied by the entire
-population. This case is extreme but representative.
-
-It is the peculiarity of our metropolitan civilization, then, that in
-spite of vast resources drawn from the ends of the earth, it has an
-insufficient civic equipment, and what it does possess it uses only
-transiently. Those cities that have the beginnings of an adequate
-equipment, like New York--to choose no more invidious example--offer
-them chiefly to those engaged in travelling. As a traveller’s city
-New York is near perfection. An association of cigar salesmen or an
-international congress of social scientists, meeting in one of the
-auditoriums of a big hotel, dining together, mixing in the lounge, and
-finding recreation in the theatres hard by, discovers an environment
-that is ordered, within its limits, to a nicety. It is this hotel and
-theatre district that we must charitably think of when we are tempted
-to speak about the triumphs of the American city. Despite manifold
-defects that arise from want of planning, this is the real civic centre
-of America’s Metropolis. What we must overlook in this characterization
-are the long miles of slum that stretch in front and behind and
-on each side of this district--neighbourhoods where, in spite of
-the redoubtable efforts of settlement workers, block organizers,
-and neighbourhood associations, there is no permanent institution,
-other than the public school or the sectarian church, to remind the
-inhabitants that they have a common life and a common destiny.
-
-Civic life, in fine, the life of intelligent association and common
-action, a life whose faded pattern still lingers in the old New England
-town, is not something that we daily enjoy, as we work in an office or
-a factory. It is rather a temporary state that we occasionally achieve
-with a great deal of time, bother, and expense. The city is not around
-us, in our little town, suburb, or neighbourhood: it lies beyond us,
-at the end of a subway ride or a railway journey. We are citizens
-occasionally: we are suburbanites (_denizens_, _idiots_) by regular
-routine. Small wonder that bathtubs and heating systems and similar
-apparatus play such a large part in our conception of the good life.
-
-Metropolitanism in America represents, from the cultural angle,
-a reaction against the uncouth and barren countryside that was
-skinned, rather than cultivated, by the restless, individualistic,
-self-assertive American pioneer. The perpetual drag to New York, and
-the endeavour of less favourably situated cities to imitate the virtues
-and defects of New York, is explicable as nothing other than the
-desire to participate in some measure in the benefits of city life.
-Since we have failed up to the present to develop genuine regional
-cultures, those who do not wish to remain barbarians must become
-metropolitans. That means they must come to New York, or ape the ways
-that are fashionable in New York. Here opens the breach that has begun
-to widen between the metropolis and the countryside in America. The
-countryman, who cannot enjoy the advantages of the metropolis, who has
-no centre of his own to which he can point with pride, resents the
-privileges that the metropolitan enjoys. Hence the periodical crusades
-of our State Legislatures, largely packed with rural representatives,
-against the vices, corruptions, and follies which the countryman
-enviously looks upon as the peculiar property of the big city.
-Perhaps the envy and resentment of the farming population is due to a
-genuine economic grievance against the big cities--especially against
-their banks, insurance companies, and speculative middlemen. Should
-the concentration of power, glory, and privilege in the metropolis
-continue, it is possible that the city will find itself subject to an
-economic siege. If our cities cannot justify their existence by their
-creative achievements, by their demonstration of the efficacy and grace
-of corporate life, it is doubtful whether they will be able to persuade
-the country to support them, once the purely conventional arrangements
-by means of which the city browbeats the countryside are upset. This,
-however, brings us to the realm of social speculation; and he who would
-enter it must abandon everything but hope.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Metropolitanism is of two orders. At its partial best it is exhibited
-in New York, the literal mother city of America. In its worst aspect
-it shows itself in the sub-metropolises which have been spawning
-so prolifically since the ’eighties. If we are to understand the
-capacities and limitations of the other great cities in America, we
-must first weigh the significance of New York.
-
-The forces that have made New York dominant are inherent in our
-financial and industrial system; elsewhere those same forces, working
-in slightly different ways, created London, Rome, Paris, Berlin,
-Vienna, Petrograd, and Moscow. What happened in the industrial towns
-of America was that the increments derived from land, capital, and
-association went, not to the enrichment of the local community, but to
-those who had a legal title to the land and the productive machinery.
-In other words, the gains that were made in Pittsburgh, Springfield,
-Dayton, and a score of other towns that became important in the
-industrial era were realized largely in New York, whose position
-had been established, before the turn of the century, as the locus
-of trade and finance. (New York passed the 500,000 mark in the 1850
-census.) This is why, perhaps, during the ’seventies and ’eighties,
-decades of miserable depression throughout the industrial centres,
-there were signs of hope and promise in New York: the Museums of Art
-and Natural History were built: _Life_ and _Puck_ and a batch of
-newspapers were founded: the Metropolitan Opera House and Carnegie Hall
-were established: and a dozen other evidences of a vigorous civic life
-appeared. In a short time New York became the glass of fashion and
-the mould of form, and through the standardization, specialization,
-and centralization which accompany the machine process the Metropolis
-became at length the centre of advertising, the lender of farm
-mortgages, the distributor of boiler-plate news, the headquarters of
-the popular magazine, the publishing centre, and finally the chief
-disseminator of plays and motion pictures in America. The educational
-foundations which the exploiter of the Kodak has established at
-Rochester were not characteristic of the early part of the industrial
-period--otherwise New York’s eminence might have been briskly
-challenged before it had become, after its fashion, unchallengeable.
-The increment from Mr. Carnegie’s steel works built a hall of music for
-New York long before it created the Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh.
-In other words, the widespread effort of the American provincial to
-leave his industrial city for New York comes to something like an
-attempt to get back from New York what had been previously filched from
-the industrial city.
-
-The future of our cities depends upon how permanent are the forces
-which drain money, energy, and brains from the various regions in
-America into the twelve great cities that now dominate the countryside,
-and in turn drain the best that is in these sub-metropolises to New
-York. To-day our cities are at a crossing of the ways. Since the 1910
-census a new tendency has begun to manifest itself, and the cities
-that have grown the fastest are those of a population from 25,000 to
-100,000. Quantitatively, that is perhaps a good sign. It may indicate
-the drift to Suburbia is on the wane. One finds it much harder,
-however, to gauge the qualitative capacities of the new régime; much
-more difficult to estimate the likelihood of building up, within the
-next generation or two, genuine regional cultures to take the place
-of pseudo-national culture which now mechanically emanates from New
-York. So far our provincial culture has been inbred and sterile:
-our provincial cities have substituted boosting for achievement,
-fanciful speculation for intelligent planning, and a zaniacal optimism
-for constructive thought. These habits have made them an easy prey
-to the metropolis, for at its lowest ebb there has always been a
-certain amount of organized intelligence and cultivated imagination
-in New York--if only because it is the chief point of contact between
-Europe and America. Gopher Prairie has yet to take to heart the fable
-about the frog that tried to inflate himself to the size of a bull.
-When Gopher Prairie learns its lessons from Bergen and Augsburg and
-Montpellier and Grenoble, the question of “metropolitanism versus
-regionalism” may become as active in America as it is now in Europe.
-
-Those of us who are metropolitans may be tempted to think that the
-hope for civilization in America is bound up with the continuance
-of metropolitanism. That is essentially a cockney view of culture
-and society, however, and our survey of the development of the city
-in America should have done something to weaken its self-confident
-complacence. Our metropolitan civilization is not a success. It is a
-different kind of wilderness from that which we have deflowered--but
-the feral rather than the humane quality is dominant: it is still a
-wilderness. The cities of America must learn to remould our mechanical
-and financial régime, for if metropolitanism continues they are
-probably destined to fall by its weight.
-
- LEWIS MUMFORD
-
-
-
-
-POLITICS
-
- No person shall be a Representative who ... shall not, when
- elected, be an inhabitant of that State in which he shall be
- chosen.... No person shall be a Senator who ... shall not, when
- elected, be an inhabitant of that State for which he shall be
- chosen.
-
-
-Specialists in political archæology will recognize these sentences:
-they are from Article I, Sections 2 and 3, of the constitution of the
-United States. I have heard and forgotten how they got there; no doubt
-the cause lay in the fierce jealousy of the States. But whatever the
-fact, I have a notion that there are few provisions of the constitution
-that have had a more profound effect upon the character of practical
-politics in the Republic, or, indirectly, upon the general colour of
-American thinking in the political department. They have made steadily
-for parochialism in legislation, for the security and prosperity of
-petty local bosses and machines, for the multiplication of pocket and
-rotten boroughs of the worst sort, and, above all, for the progressive
-degeneration of the honesty and honour of representatives. They have
-greased the ways for the trashy and ignoble fellow who aspires to
-get into Congress, and they have blocked them for the man of sense,
-dignity, and self-respect. More, perhaps, than any other single
-influence they have been responsible for the present debauched and
-degraded condition of the two houses, and particularly of the lower
-one. Find me the worst ass in Congress, and I’ll show you a man they
-have helped to get there and to stay there. Find me the most shameless
-scoundrel, and I’ll show you another.
-
-No such centripedal mandate, as far as I have been able to discover,
-is in the fundamental law of any other country practising the
-representative system. An Englishman, if ambition heads him toward
-St. Stephen’s, may go hunting for a willing constituency wherever the
-hunting looks best, and if he fails in the Midlands he may try again
-in the South, or in the North, or in Scotland or Wales. A Frenchman of
-like dreams has the same privilege; the only condition, added after
-nineteen years of the Third Republic, is that he may not be a candidate
-in two or more _arrondissements_ at once. And so with a German, an
-Italian, or a Spaniard. But not so with an American. He must be an
-actual inhabitant of the State he aspires to represent at Washington.
-More, he must be, in all save extraordinary cases, an actual inhabitant
-of the congressional district--for here, by a characteristic American
-process, the fundamental law is sharpened by custom. True enough,
-this last requirement is not laid down by the constitution. It would
-be perfectly legal for the thirty-fifth New York district, centring
-at Syracuse, to seek its congressman in Manhattan, or even at Sing
-Sing. In various iconoclastic States, in fact, the thing has been
-occasionally done. But not often; not often enough to produce any
-appreciable effect. The typical congressman remains a purely local
-magnifico, the gaudy cock of some small and usually far from appetizing
-barnyard. His rank and dignity as a man are measured by provincial
-standards of the most puerile sort, and his capacity to discharge the
-various and onerous duties of his office is reckoned almost exclusively
-in terms of his ability to hold his grip upon the local party machine.
-
-If he has genuine ability, it is a sort of accident. If he is
-thoroughly honest, it is next door to a miracle. Of the 430-odd
-representatives who carry on so diligently and obscenely at Washington,
-making laws and determining policies for the largest free nation ever
-seen in the world, there are not two dozen whose views upon any subject
-under the sun carry any weight whatsoever outside their own bailiwicks,
-and there are not a dozen who rise to anything approaching unmistakable
-force and originality. They are, in the overwhelming main, shallow
-fellows, ignorant of the grave matters they deal with and too stupid
-to learn. If, as is often proposed, the United States should adopt
-the plan of parliamentary responsibility and the ministry should be
-recruited from the lower house, then it would be difficult, without a
-radical change in election methods, to fetch up even such pale talents
-and modest decencies as were assembled for their cabinets by Messrs.
-Wilson and Harding. The better sort of congressmen, to be sure, acquire
-after long service a good deal of technical proficiency. They know the
-traditions and precedents of the two houses; they can find their way in
-and out of every rathole in the Capitol; they may be trusted to carry
-on the legislative routine in a more or less shipshape manner. Of such
-sort are the specialists paraded in the newspapers--on the tariff, on
-military affairs, on foreign relations, and so on. They come to know,
-in time, almost as much as a Washington correspondent, or one of their
-own committee clerks. But the average congressman lifts himself to
-no such heights of sagacity. He is content to be led by the fugelmen
-and bellwethers. Examine him at leisure, and you will find that he is
-incompetent and imbecile, and not only incompetent and imbecile, but
-also incurably dishonest. The first principles of civilized law-making
-are quite beyond him; he ends, as he began, a local politician,
-interested only in jobs. His knowledge is that of a third-rate country
-lawyer--which he often is in fact. His intelligence is that of a
-country newspaper editor, or evangelical divine. His standards of
-honour are those of a country banker--which he also often is. To demand
-sense of such a man, or wide and accurate information, or a delicate
-feeling for the public and private proprieties, is to strain his parts
-beyond endurance.
-
-The constitution, of course, stops with Congress, but its influence
-is naturally powerful within the States, and one finds proofs of the
-fact on all sides. It is taking an herculean effort everywhere to break
-down even the worst effects of this influence; the prevailing tendency
-is still to discover a mysterious virtue in the office-holder who was
-born and raised in the State, or county, or city, or ward. The judge
-must come from the bar of the court he is to adorn; the mayor must be
-part and parcel of the local machine; even technical officers, such
-as engineers and health commissioners, lie under the constitutional
-blight. The thing began as a belief in local self-government, the
-oldest of all the sure cures for despotism. But it has gradually taken
-on the character of government by local politicians, which is to say,
-by persons quite unable to comprehend the most elemental problems of
-State and nation, and unfitted by nature to deal with them honestly
-and patriotically, even if they could comprehend them. Just as
-prohibition was forced upon the civilized minorities collected in the
-great cities against their most vigorous and persistent opposition,
-so the same minorities, when it comes to intra-state affairs, are
-constantly at the mercy of predatory bands of rural politicians. If
-there is any large American city whose peculiar problems are dealt
-with competently and justly by its State legislature, then I must
-confess that twenty years in journalism have left me ignorant of it. An
-unending struggle for fairer dealing goes on in every State that has
-large cities, and every concession to their welfare is won only at the
-cost of gigantic effort. The State legislature is never intelligent;
-it represents only the average mind of the county bosses, whose sole
-concern is with jobs. The machines that they represent are wholly
-political, but they have no political principles in any rational sense.
-Their one purpose and function is to maintain their adherents in the
-public offices, or to obtain for them in some other way a share of
-the State funds. They are quite willing to embrace any new doctrine,
-however fantastic, or to abandon any old one, however long supported,
-if only the business will promote their trade and so secure their power.
-
-This concentration of the ultimate governmental authority in the hands
-of small groups of narrow, ignorant, and unconscionable manipulators
-tends inevitably to degrade the actual office-holder, or, what is
-the same thing, to make office-holding prohibitive to all men not
-already degraded. It is almost impossible to imagine a man of genuine
-self-respect and dignity offering himself as a candidate for the lower
-house--or, since the direct primary and direct elections brought it
-down to the common level, for the upper house--in the average American
-constituency. His necessary dealings with the electors themselves,
-and with the idiots who try more or less honestly to lead them, would
-be revolting enough, but even worse would be his need of making terms
-with the professional politicians of his party--the bosses of the local
-machine. These bosses naturally make the most of the constitutional
-limitation; it works powerfully in their favour. A local notable, in
-open revolt against them, may occasionally beat them by appealing
-directly to the voters, but nine times out of ten, when there is any
-sign of such a catastrophe, they are prompt to perfume the ticket by
-bringing forth another local notable who is safe and sane, which is
-to say, subservient and reliable. The thing is done constantly; it
-is a matter of routine; it accounts for most of the country bankers,
-newspaper owners, railroad lawyers, proprietors of cement works, and
-other such village bigwigs in the lower house. Here everything runs
-to the advantage of the bosses. It is not often that the notable in
-rebellion is gaudy enough to blind the plain people to the high merits
-of his more docile opponent. They see him too closely and know him too
-well. He shows none of that exotic charm which accounts, on a different
-plane, for exogamy. There is no strangeness, no mysteriousness, above
-all, no novelty about him.
-
-It is my contention that this strangle-hold of the local machines
-would be vastly less firm if it could be challenged, not only by
-rebels within the constituency, but also by salient men from outside.
-The presidential campaigns, indeed, offer plenty of direct proof of
-it. In these campaigns it is a commonplace for strange doctrines and
-strange men to force themselves upon the practical politicians in
-whole sections of the country, despite their constant effort to keep
-their followers faithful to the known. All changes, of whatever sort,
-whether in leaders or in ideas, are opposed by such politicians at
-the start, but time after time they are compelled to acquiesce and to
-hurrah. Bryan, as every one knows, forced himself upon the Democratic
-party by appealing directly to the people; the politicians, in the
-main, were bitterly against him until further resistance was seen to
-be useless, and they attacked him again the moment he began to weaken,
-and finally disposed of him. So with Wilson. It would be absurd to say
-that the politicians of his party--and especially the bosses of the
-old machines in the congressional districts--were in favour of him in
-1912. They were actually against him almost unanimously. He got past
-their guard and broke down their resolution to nominate some more
-trustworthy candidate by operating directly upon the emotions of the
-voters. For some reason never sufficiently explained he became the heir
-of the spirit of rebellion raised by Bryan sixteen years before, and
-was given direct and very effective aid by Bryan himself. Roosevelt
-saddled himself upon the Republican party in exactly the same way. The
-bosses made heroic efforts to sidetrack him, to shelve him, to get rid
-of him by any means short of homicide, but his bold enterprises and
-picturesque personality enchanted the people, and if it had not been
-for the extravagant liberties that he took with his popularity in later
-years he might have retained it until his death.
-
-The same possibility of unhorsing the machine politicians, I believe,
-exists in even the smallest electoral unit. All that is needed is
-the chance to bring in the man. Podunk cannot produce him herself,
-save by a sort of miracle. If she has actually hatched him, he is far
-away by the time he has come to his full stature and glitter--in the
-nearest big city, in Chicago or New York. Podunk is proud of him, and
-many other Podunks, perhaps, are stirred by his ideas, his attitudes,
-his fine phrases--but he lives, say, in some Manhattan congressional
-district which has the Hon. Patrick Googan as its representative by
-divine right, and so there is no way to get him into the halls of
-Congress. In his place goes the Hon. John P. Balderdash, State’s
-attorney for five years, State senator for two terms, and county judge
-for a brief space--and always a snide and petty fellow, always on the
-best of terms with the local bosses, always eager for a job on any
-terms they lay down. The yokels vote for the Hon. Mr. Balderdash, not
-because they admire him, but because their only choice is between
-him and the Hon. James Bosh. If anything even remotely resembling a
-first-rate man could come into the contest, if it were lawful for them
-to rid themselves of their recurrent dilemma by soliciting the interest
-of such a man, then they would often enough rise in their might and
-compel their parish overlords, as the English put it, to adopt him.
-But the constitution protects these overlords in their business, and
-in the long run the voters resign all thought of deliverance. Thus the
-combat remains one between small men, and interest in it dies out. Most
-of the men who go to the lower house are third-raters, even in their
-own narrow bailiwicks. In my own congressional district, part of a
-large city, there has never been a candidate of any party, during the
-twenty years that I have voted, who was above the intellectual level
-of a corner grocer. No successful candidate of that district has ever
-made a speech in Congress (or out of it) worth hearing, or contributed
-a single sound idea otherwise to the solution of any public problem.
-One and all, they have confined themselves exclusively to the trade in
-jobs. One and all, they have been ciphers in the house and before the
-country.
-
-Well, perhaps I labour my point too much. It is, after all, not
-important. The main thing is the simple fact that the average
-representative from my district is typical of Congress--that, if
-anything, he is superior to the normal congressman of these, our days.
-That normal congressman, as year chases year, tends to descend to
-such depths of puerility, to such abysses of petty shysterism, that
-he becomes offensive alike to the intelligence and to the nose. His
-outlook, when it is honest, is commonly childish--and it is very seldom
-honest. The product of a political system which puts all stress upon
-the rewards of public office, he is willing to make any sacrifice, of
-dignity, of principle, of honour, to hold and have those rewards. He
-has no courage, no intellectual _amour propre_, no ardent belief in
-anything save his job, and the jobs of his friends. It was easy for
-Wilson to beat him into line on the war issue; it was easy for the
-prohibitionists to intimidate and stampede him; it is easy for any
-resolute man or group of men to do likewise. I read the _Congressional
-Record_ faithfully, and have done so for years. In the Senate debates,
-amid oceans of tosh, I occasionally encounter a flash of wit or a gleam
-of sense; direct elections have not yet done their work. But in the
-lower house there is seldom anything save a garrulous and intolerable
-imbecility. The discussion of measures of the utmost importance--bills
-upon which the security and prosperity of the whole nation depend--is
-carried on in the manner of the Chautauqua and the rural stump. Entire
-days go by without a single congressman saying anything as intelligent,
-say, as the gleams that one sometimes finds in the New York _Herald_,
-or even in the New York _Times_. The newspapers, unfortunately, give no
-adequate picture of the business. No American journal reports the daily
-debates comprehensively, as the debates in the House of Commons are
-reported by the London _Times_, _Daily Telegraph_, and _Morning Post_.
-All one hears of, as a rule, is the action taken, and only too often
-the action taken, even when it is reported fairly, is unintelligible
-without the antecedent discussion. If any one who reads this wants to
-know what such a discussion is like, then I counsel him to go to the
-nearest public library, ask for the _Record_ for 1918, and read the
-debate in the lower house on the Volstead Act. It was, I believe, an
-average debate, and on a subject of capital importance. It was, from
-first to last, almost fabulous in its evasion of the plain issue,
-its incredible timorousness and stupidity, its gross mountebankery
-and dishonesty. Not twenty men spoke in it as men of honour and
-self-respect. Not ten brought any idea into it that was not a silly
-idea and a stale one.
-
-That debate deserves a great deal more study than it will ever get
-from the historians of American politics, nearly all of whom, whether
-they lean to the right or to the left, are bedazzled by the economic
-interpretation of history, and so seek to account for all political
-phenomena in terms of crop movements, wage scales, and panics in Wall
-Street. It seems to me that that obsession blinds them to a fact of
-the first importance, to wit, the fact that political ideas, under a
-democracy as under a monarchy, originate above quite as often as they
-originate below, and that their popularity depends quite as much upon
-the special class interests of professional politicians as it depends
-upon the underlying economic interests of the actual voters. It is,
-of course, true, as I have argued, that the people can force ideas
-upon the politicians, given powerful leaders of a non-political (or,
-at all events, non-machine) sort, but it is equally true that there
-are serious impediments to the process, and that it is not successful
-very often. As a matter of everyday practice the rise and fall of
-political notions is determined by the self-interest of the practical
-politicians of the country, and though they naturally try to bring the
-business into harmony with any great popular movements that may be in
-progress spontaneously, they by no means wait and beg for mandates when
-none are vociferously forthcoming, but go ahead bravely on their own
-account, hoping to drag public opinion with them and so safeguard their
-jobs. Such is the origin of many affecting issues, later held dear by
-millions of the plain people. Such was the process whereby prohibition
-was foisted upon the nation by constitutional amendment, to the dismay
-of the solid majority opposed to it and to the surprise of the minority
-in favour of it.
-
-What lay under the sudden and melodramatic success of the
-prohibitionist agitators was simply their discovery of the incurable
-cowardice and venality of the normal American politician--their shrewd
-abandonment of logical and evidential propaganda for direct political
-action. For years their cause had languished. Now and then a State
-or part of a State went dry, but often it went wet again a few years
-later. Those were the placid days of white-ribbon rallies, of wholesale
-pledge-signings, of lectures by converted drunkards, of orgiastic
-meetings in remote Baptist and Methodist churches, of a childish
-reliance upon arguments that fetched only drunken men and their wives,
-and so grew progressively feebler as the country became more sober.
-The thing was scarcely even a nuisance; it tended steadily to descend
-to the level of a joke. The prohibitionist vote for President hung
-around a quarter of a million; it seemed impossible to pull it up to
-a formidable figure, despite the stupendous labours of thousands of
-eloquent dervishes, lay and clerical, male and female. But then, out
-of nowhere, came the Anti-Saloon League, and--sis! boom! ah! Then came
-the sudden shift of the fire from the people to the politicians--and
-at once there was rapid progress. The people could only be wooed and
-bamboozled, but the politicians could be threatened; their hold upon
-their jobs could be shaken; they could be converted at wholesale and
-by _force majeure_. The old prohibition weepers and gurglers were
-quite incapable of this enterprise, but the new janissaries of the
-Anti-Saloon League--sharp lawyers, ecclesiastics too ambitious to pound
-mere pulpits, outlaw politicians seeking a way back to the trough--were
-experts at every trick and dodge it demanded. They understood the
-soul of the American politician. To him they applied the economic
-interpretation of history, resolutely and with a great deal of genial
-humour. They knew that his whole politics, his whole philosophy, his
-whole concept of honesty and honour, was embraced in his single and
-insatiable yearning for a job, and they showed him how, by playing
-with them, he could get it and keep it, and how, by standing against
-them, he could lose it. Prohibition was rammed into the constitution by
-conquering the politicians; the people in general were amazed when the
-thing was accomplished; it may take years to reconcile them to it.
-
-It was the party system that gave the Anti-Saloon League manipulators
-their chance, and they took advantage of it with great boldness and
-cleverness. The two great parties divide the country almost equally;
-it is difficult to predict, in a given year, whether the one or
-the other musters the most votes. This division goes down into the
-lowest electoral units; even in those backward areas where one party
-has divine grace and the other is of the devil there are factional
-differences that amount to the same thing. In other words, the average
-American politician is never quite sure of his job. An election (and,
-if not an election, then a primary) always exposes him to a definite
-hazard, and he is eager to diminish it by getting help from outside
-his own following, at whatever cost to the principles he commonly
-professes. Here lies the opportunity for minorities willing to trade
-on a realistic political basis. In the old days the prohibitionists
-refused to trade, and in consequence they were disregarded, for their
-fidelity to their own grotesque candidates protected the candidates
-of both the regular parties. But with the coming of the Anti-Saloon
-League they abandoned this fidelity and began to dicker in a forthright
-and unashamed manner, quickly comprehensible to all professional
-politicians. That is, they asked for a pledge on one specific issue,
-and were willing to swallow any commitment on other issues. If
-Beelzebub, running on one ticket, agreed to support prohibition, and
-the Archangel Gabriel, running on another, found himself entertaining
-conscientious doubts, they were instantly and solidly for Beelzebub,
-and they not only gave him the votes that they directly controlled, but
-they also gave him the benefit of a campaign support that was ruthless,
-pertinacious, extraordinarily ingenious, and overwhelmingly effective.
-Beelzebub, whatever his swinishness otherwise, was bathed in holy oils;
-Gabriel’s name became a thing to scare children.
-
-Obviously, the support thus offered was particularly tempting to
-a politician who found himself facing public suspicion for his
-general political practices--in brief, to the worst type of machine
-professional. Such a politician is always acutely aware that it is
-not positive merit that commonly gets a man into public office in the
-United States, but simply disvulnerability. Even when they come to
-nominate a President, the qualities the two great parties seek are
-chiefly the negative ones; they want, not a candidate of forceful and
-immovable ideas, but one whose ideas are vague and not too tenaciously
-held, and in whose personality there is nothing to alarm or affront the
-populace. Of two candidates, that one usually wins who least arouses
-the distrusts and suspicions of the great masses of undifferentiated
-men. This advantage of the safe and sane, the colourless and
-unprovocative, the apparently stodgy and commonplace man extends to the
-most trivial contests, and politicians are keen to make use of it. Thus
-the job-seeker with an aura of past political misdemeanour about him
-was eager to get the Christian immunity bath that the prohibitionists
-offered him so generously, and in the first years of their fight they
-dealt almost exclusively with such fellows. He, on his side, promised
-simply to vote for prohibition--not even, in most cases, to pretend to
-any personal belief in it. The prohibitionists, on their side, promised
-to deliver the votes of their followers to him on election day, to cry
-him up as one saved by a shining light, and, most important of all,
-to denounce his opponent as an agent of hell. He was free, by this
-agreement, to carry on his regular political business as usual. The
-prohibitionists asked no patronage of him. They didn’t afflict him with
-projects for other reforms. All they demanded was that he cast his vote
-as agreed upon when the signal was given to him.
-
-At the start, of course, such scoundrels frequently violated their
-agreements. In the South, in particular, dry legislature after dry
-legislature sold out to the liquor lobby, which, in those days, still
-had plenty of money. An assemblyman would be elected with the aid of
-the prohibitionists, make a few maudlin speeches against the curse
-of drink, and then, at the last minute, vote wet for some thin and
-specious reason, or for no avowed reason at all. But the prohibition
-manipulators, as I have said, were excellent politicians, and so they
-knew how to put down that sort of treason. At the next election they
-transferred their favour to the opposition candidate, and inasmuch as
-he had seen the traitor elected at the last election he was commonly
-very eager to do business. The punishment for the treason was condign
-and merciless. The dry rabble-rousers, lay and clerical, trumpeted
-news of it from end to end of the constituency. What was a new and
-gratifying disvulnerability was transformed into a vulnerability of the
-worst sort; the recreant one became the county Harry Thaw, Oscar Wilde,
-Captain Boy-Ed, and Debs. A few such salutary examples, and treason
-became rare. The prohibitionists, indeed, came to prefer dealing with
-such victims of their reprisals. They could trust them perfectly,
-once the lesson had been learned; they were actually more trustworthy
-than honest believers, for the latter usually had ideas of their own
-and interfered with the official plans of campaign. Thus, in the end,
-the professional politicians of both parties came under the yoke. The
-final battle in Congress transcended all party lines; democrats and
-republicans fought alike for places on the band-wagon. The spectacle
-offered a searching and not unhumorous commentary on the party system,
-and on the honour of American politicians no less. Two-thirds, at
-least, of the votes for the amendment were cast by men who did not
-believe in it, and who cherished a hearty hope, to the last moment,
-that some act of God would bring about its defeat.
-
-Such holocausts of frankness and decency are certainly not rare in
-American politics; on the contrary, they glow with normalcy. The
-typical legislative situation among us--and the typical administrative
-situation as well--is one in which men wholly devoid of inner
-integrity, facing a minority that is resolutely determined to get
-its will, yield up their ideas, their freedom, and their honour
-in order to save their jobs. I say administrative situation as
-well; what I mean is that in these later days the pusillanimity of
-the actual law-maker is fully matched by the pusillanimity of the
-enforcing officer, whether humble assistant district attorney or
-powerful judge. The war, with its obliteration of customary pretences
-and loosening of fundamental forces, threw up the whole process
-into high relief. For nearly two long years there was a complete
-abandonment of sense and self-respect. Rowelled and intimidated by
-minorities that finally coalesced into a frantic majority, legislators
-allowed themselves to be forced into imbecility after imbecility, and
-administrative officers, including some of the highest judges in the
-land, followed them helter-skelter. In the lower house of Congress
-there was one man--already forgotten--who showed the stature of a
-man. He resigned his seat and went home to his self-respect. The rest
-had no self-respect to go home to. Eager beyond all to hold their
-places, at whatever cost to principle, and uneasily conscious of their
-vulnerability to attack, however frenzied and unjust, they surrendered
-abjectly and repeatedly--to the White House, to the newspapers, to
-any group enterprising enough to issue orders to them and resolute
-enough to flourish weapons before them. It was a spectacle full of
-indecency--there are even congressmen who blush when they think of
-it to-day--but it was nevertheless a spectacle that was typical. The
-fortunes of politics, as they now run, make it overwhelmingly probable
-that every new recruit to public office will be just such a poltroon.
-The odds are enormously in favour of him, and enormously against the
-man of honour. Such a man of honour may occasionally drift in, taken
-almost unawares by some political accident, but it is the pushing,
-bumptious, unconscionable bounder who is constantly _fighting_ to get
-in, and only too often he succeeds. The rules of the game are made to
-fit his taste and his talents. He can survive as a hog can survive in
-the swill-yard.
-
-Go to the Congressional Directory and investigate the origins and
-past performances of the present members of the lower house--our
-typical assemblage of typical politicians, the cornerstone of our
-whole representative system, the symbol of our democracy. You will
-find that well over half of them are obscure lawyers, school-teachers,
-and mortgage-sharks out of almost anonymous towns--men of common
-traditions, sordid aspirations, and no attainments at all. One and
-all, the members of this majority--and it is constant, no matter what
-party is in power--are plastered with the brass ornaments of the
-more brummagem fraternal orders. One and all, they are devoid of any
-contact with what passes for culture, even in their remote bailiwicks.
-One and all their careers are bare of civilizing influences.... Such
-is the American _Witenagemot_ in this 146th year of the Republic. Such
-are the men who make the laws that all of us must obey, and who carry
-on our dealings with the world. Go to their debates, and you will
-discover what equipment they bring to their high business. What they
-know of sound literature is what one may get out of McGuffey’s Fifth
-Reader. What they know of political science is the nonsense preached
-in the chautauquas and on the stump. What they know of history is the
-childish stuff taught in grammar-schools. What they know of the arts
-and sciences--of all the great body of knowledge that is the chief
-intellectual baggage of modern man--is absolutely nothing.
-
- H. L. MENCKEN
-
-
-
-
-JOURNALISM
-
-
-According to the _World Almanac_ for 1921 the daily circulation of
-newspapers in the big cities of the United States in 1914 (evidently
-the most recent year for which the figures have been compiled) was
-more than forty million. For the six months ending April 1, 1920,
-the average daily circulation of five morning newspapers and eleven
-evening newspapers in Greater New York City was, as shown by sworn
-statements, more than three and a third million. These statistics cover
-only daily newspapers, not weekly or monthly journals; and the figures
-for New York do not include papers in languages other than English.
-The American certainly buys newspapers. To what extent he reads them
-it is impossible to determine. But we may fairly assume that the great
-majority of literate inhabitants of the United States of all ages are
-every day subjected in some measure to the influence of the newspaper.
-No other institution approaches the newspaper in universality,
-persistence, continuity of influence. Not the public school, with all
-other schools added to it, has such power over the national mind; for
-in the lives of most people formal schooling is of relatively short
-duration, ceasing with adolescence or earlier. The church? Millions of
-people never go to church, and the day when the clergy dominated human
-thought is gone for ever. If we add to the daily press the weekly and
-monthly periodicals, with a total circulation per issue of two hundred
-million (for the year 1914), we shall not be far wrong in saying that
-the journalist, with the powers behind him, has more to do, for good
-or for evil, than the member of any other profession, in creating and
-shaping the thoughts of the multitude. Compared with him the teacher,
-the preacher, the artist, the politician, the man of science, are
-restricted, interrupted, indirect in reaching the minds of their
-fellow-men.
-
-So that in estimating the capacities and contents of the American
-mind, which we have no means of lining up in its hundred million
-individual manifestations and examining directly, an analysis of the
-American newspaper is a fair rough-and-ready method. What everybody
-reads does not tell the whole story of what everybody is, but it tells
-a good deal. Moreover, it is not necessary to analyze any one newspaper
-or to separate its clientèle from that of any other newspaper. For
-though everybody knows that the New York _Tribune_ and the New York
-_World_ have distinct qualities which differentiate them from each
-other, that some papers are better and some are worse, yet on the whole
-the American newspaper is amazingly uniform from Portland, Maine, to
-Portland, Oregon. It is, indeed, a more or less unified institution fed
-by the same news services and dominated by kindred financial interests.
-If you travel much, as actors do, without interest in local affairs,
-when you go to the hotel news-stand in the morning, you cannot tell
-from the general aspect of the newspaper you pick up what city you
-are in; and in a small city it is likely to be a metropolitan paper
-that has come a hundred miles or more during the night. Indeed, this
-is the first thing to be learned about the American from a study of
-his newspapers, that he lacks individuality, is tediously uniform, and
-cut according to one intellectual pattern. He may have his “favourite”
-newspaper, and with no sense that his confession of habitude is
-shameful he may write the editor that he has read it constantly for
-forty years. But if it goes out of existence, like his favourite brand
-of chewing-gum or cigarettes, there is no aching void which cannot be
-comfortably filled by a surviving competitor. Editors, except those in
-charge of local news, move with perfect ease from one city to another;
-it is the same old job at a different desk.
-
-The standardization of the newspaper reader and the standardization
-of the journalist are two aspects of the same thing. As a citizen, a
-workman, a human being, the journalist is simply one of us, a victim of
-the conformity which has overwhelmed the American. When we speak of the
-influence of the journalist, we are not speaking of an individual, but
-of “the powers behind him,” of which he is nothing but the wage-earning
-servant, as impotent and unimportant, considered as an individual, as
-a mill-hand. Journalism in America is no longer a profession, through
-which a man can win to a place of real dignity among his neighbours. If
-we had a Horace Greeley to-day, he would not be editor of a newspaper.
-He would not wish to be, and he would not be allowed to be. Certainly
-his vigorous integrity would not be tolerated in the modern unworthy
-successor of the newspaper which he founded. The editor of a newspaper
-is no doubt often a man of intelligence and experience and he may be
-well paid, like the manager of a department store; but he is usually
-submerged in anonymity except that from time to time the law requires
-the newspaper to publish his name. His subordinates, assistant editors,
-newswriters, reporters, and the rest, are as nameless as floor-walkers,
-shipping clerks, salesladies, and ladies engaged in more ancient forms
-of commerce.
-
-It is true that during the last generation there has been a tendency in
-the newspaper to “feature” individuals, such as cartoonists, conductors
-of columns, writers on sport, dramatic critics, and so on. But these
-men are artists, some of them very clever, who have nothing to do with
-the news but contribute to the paper its vaudeville entertainment.
-During the war there was a great increase in the amount of signed
-cable matter and correspondence. This was due to the necessity of the
-prosperous newspaper to show its enterprise and to cajole its readers
-into believing that it had men of special ability in close touch with
-diplomats and major-generals collecting and cabling at great expense
-intimate information and expert opinion. The circumstances were so
-difficult that the wisest and most honest man could not do much, except
-lose his position, and nobody will blame the correspondents. But it
-is significant that not a single American correspondent emerged from
-the conflict who is memorable, from the point of view of a more or
-less careful reader, as having been different from the rest. If from a
-miscellaneous collection of clippings we should cut off the dates, the
-alleged place of origin and the names of the correspondents, nobody
-but an editor with a long and detailed memory could tell t’other from
-which, or be sure whether the despatch was from Mr. Jones, the special
-correspondent of the _Christian Science Monitor_ (copyright by the
-Chicago _News_) or an anonymous cable from the London office of the
-Associated Press. And even the editor, who may be assumed to know the
-names of hundreds of his colleagues and competitors, would begin his
-attempt at identification by examining the style of type to see if it
-looked like a column from the _Sun_ or from the _World_. Almost all the
-war news was a hopeless confusion of impressions, of reports of what
-somebody said somebody else, “of unquestionable authority,” had heard
-from reliable sources, and of sheer mendacity adapted to the momentary
-prejudices of the individual managing editor, the American press as
-a whole, and the American people. And this is a rough recipe for all
-the news even in times of peace, for the war merely aggravated the
-prevalent diseases of the newspapers.
-
-Since the purpose of this book is to discuss peculiarly American
-characteristics, it should be said at once that the tendency of
-the newspaper to obliterate the journalist as a person immediately
-responsible to the public is not confined to America. Economic
-conditions in Europe and America are fundamentally alike, and the
-modern newspaper in every country must be a business institution,
-heavily capitalized, and conducted for profit. In England the decline
-of journalism as a profession and the rise of the “stunt” press has
-been noted and deplored by Englishmen. Years ago it meant something
-to be editor of the London _Times_, and the appointment of a new man
-to the position was an event not less important than a change in the
-cabinet. Who is editor of the _Times_ now is a matter of no consequence
-except to the man who receives the salary check. English journalism
-is in almost as bad a case as American. In England, however, there
-is at least one exception which has no counterpart in America, the
-Manchester Guardian; this admirable newspaper has the good fortune to
-be owned by people who are so rich that they are not obliged, and so
-honest that they are not willing, to sell out. It is this fact which
-has afforded Mr. Scott, the editor-in-chief for nearly half a century,
-an opportunity adequate to his courage and ability. There are few such
-opportunities in England, and none in America. Even the Springfield
-_Republican_ has largely lost its old character.
-
-As for the continental papers, one who does not read any of them
-regularly is in no position to judge. In 1900 William James, a shrewd
-observer, wrote in a letter: “The Continental papers of course are
-‘nowhere.’ As for our yellow papers--every country has its criminal
-classes, and with us and in France, they have simply got into
-journalism as part of their professional evolution, and they must be
-got out. Mr. Bosanquet somewhere says that so far from the ‘dark ages’
-being over, we are just at the beginning of a new dark-age period. He
-means that ignorance and unculture, which then were merely brutal,
-are now articulate and possessed of a literary voice, and the fight
-is transferred from fields and castles and town walls to ‘organs of
-publicity.’” This is only a passing remark in an informal letter. But
-it is a partial explanation of American yellow journalism which in
-twenty years has swamped the whole press, including papers that pretend
-to be respectable, and it suggests what the state of things was, and
-is, in France.
-
-It should be noted, however, that personal journalism has not entirely
-disappeared in France, that the editor can still be brought to account,
-sometimes at the point of a pistol, for lies and slander, and that a
-young French _littérateur_, before he has won his spurs in poetry,
-drama, or fiction, can regard journalism as an honourable occupation in
-which it is worth while to make a name.
-
-With the decadence in all countries, certainly in America, of the
-journalist as a professional man in an honourable craft, there might
-conceivably have been a gain in objectivity, in the right sort of
-impersonality. Anonymity might have ensured a dispassionate fidelity
-to facts. But there has been no such gain. Responsibility has been
-transferred from the journalist to his employers, and he is on his
-mettle to please his employers, to cultivate whatever virtues are
-possible to journalism, accuracy, clearness of expression, zeal in
-searching out and interpreting facts, only in so far forth as his
-employers demand them, only as his livelihood and chances of promotion
-depend on them. The ordinary journalist, being an ordinary human
-being, must prefer to do honest work; for there is no pleasure in
-lying, though there is a temptation to fill space with unfounded or
-unverified statements. And if his manager orders him to find a story
-where there is no story, or to find a story of a certain kind where
-the facts lead to a story of another kind, he will not come back
-empty-handed lest he go away empty-handed on pay-day. Any one who has
-worked in a newspaper office knows that the older men are likely to be
-weary and cynical and that the younger men fall into two classes, those
-who are too stupid to be discontented with any aspect of their position
-except the size of their salaries, and those who hope either to rise to
-the better paid positions, or to “graduate,” as they put it, from daily
-journalism to other kinds of literary work.
-
-The journalist, then, should be acquitted of most of the faults of
-journalism. Mr. Walter Lippmann says in his sane little book, “Liberty
-and the News”: “Resistance to the inertias of the profession, heresy
-to the institution, and willingness to be fired rather than write what
-you do not believe, these wait on nothing but personal courage.” That
-is a little like saying that the harlot can stop harlotry by refusing
-to ply her trade--which is indeed the attitude of some people in
-comfortable circumstances. I doubt if Mr. Lippmann would have written
-just as he did if he had ever had to depend for his dinner on pleasing
-a managing editor, if he had not been from very early in his brilliant
-career editor of a liberal endowed journal in which he is free to
-express his beliefs. Most newspaper men are poor and not brilliant. The
-correspondents whom Mr. Lippmann mentions as “eminences on a rather
-flat plateau” are nearly all men who have succeeded in other work
-than newspaper correspondence, and if not a newspaper in the world
-would hire them, most of them could afford to thumb their noses at the
-Ochses, Reids, and Harmsworths. Personal courage is surely a personal
-matter, and it can seldom be effective in correcting the abuses of an
-institution, especially when the institution can hire plenty of men of
-adequate if not equal ability to take the place of the man of stubborn
-integrity. I know one journalist who lost his position as managing
-editor of two wealthy newspapers, one in Boston, the other in New York,
-in the first instance because he refused to print a false and cowardly
-retraction dictated by a stockholder whom the editor-in-chief desired
-to serve, in the second instance because he refused to distort war
-news. But what good did his single-handed rebellion do, except to make
-a few friends proud of him? Did either newspaper lose even one mournful
-subscriber? Did the advertising department suffer? Far from it. Another
-man took his place, a man not necessarily less honest, but of more
-conformable temperament. The muddy waters of journalism did not show a
-ripple. Paradoxically, the journalist is the one man who can do little
-or nothing to improve journalism. Mr. Lippmann’s suggestion that our
-salvation lies “ultimately in the infusion of the news-structure by
-men with a new training and outlook,” is, as he knows, the expression
-of a vague hope, too remotely ultimate to have practical bearing on
-the actual situation. The man of training and outlook, especially
-of outlook, is the unhappiest man in the employ of a newspaper. His
-salvation, if not ours, lies in getting out of newspaper work and
-applying his ability and vision in some occupation which does not
-discourage precisely the merits which an honest institution should
-foster. This is not merely the opinion of a critical layman but
-represents accurately if not literally the advice given to me by a
-successful editor and writer of special articles. “In this game,” he
-said, “you lose your soul.”
-
-The stories of individuals who have tried to be decent in newspaper
-work and have been fired might be valuable if they were collated and
-if the better journalists would unite to lay the foundation in fact of
-more such stories. But a profession, a trade, which has so little sense
-of its own interest that it does not even make an effective union (to
-be sure, the organization of newspaper writers met with some success,
-especially in Boston, but to-day the organization has practically
-disappeared) to keep its wages up can never be expected to unite in the
-impersonal interests of truth and intellectual dignity. The individual
-who charges against an enormous unshakable institution with the weapons
-of his personal experience is too easily disposed of as a sore-head and
-is likely to be laughed at even by his fellow-journalists who know that
-in the main he is right.
-
-This has happened to Mr. Upton Sinclair. I have studied “The Brass
-Check” carefully for the selfish purpose of getting enough material
-so that the writing of this chapter should be nothing but a lazy man’s
-task of transcription, not to speak of the noble ethical purpose of
-reforming the newspaper by exposing its iniquities. I confess I am
-disappointed. “The Brass Check” is a mixture of autobiography, valuable
-in its way to those who admire Mr. Sinclair, as I do most sincerely,
-and of evidence which, though properly personal, ought to be handled
-in an objective manner. I am puzzled that a man of “training and
-outlook,” who has shown in at least one of his novels an excellent
-sense of construction, could throw together such a hodge-podge of valid
-testimony, utterly damning to his opponents, and naïve trivialities,
-assertions insecurely founded and not important if they were well
-founded. I am so sure that Mr. Sinclair is on the whole right that I am
-reluctant to criticize him adversely, to lend a shadow of encouragement
-to the real adversary, who is unscrupulous and securely entrenched.
-But as a journalist of “training and outlook” I lament that another
-journalist of vastly more ability, experience, and information should
-not have done better work in selecting and constructing his material.
-As a lawyer said to his client, “You are a saint and you are right,
-but a court-room is no place for a saint and you are a damn bad
-witness.” Mr. Sinclair’s evidence, however, is all there to be dug out
-by whoever has the will and the patience. If one-tenth of it is valid
-and nine-tenths of doubtful value, the one-tenth is sufficient to show
-the sinister forces behind the newspapers and to explain some of the
-reasons why the newspapers are untrustworthy, cowardly, and dishonest.
-
-Though Mr. Sinclair tells some damaging stories about the sins of
-anonymous reporters and of the prostitution of writers like the late
-Elbert Hubbard, who had no excuse for being anything but honest and
-independent, yet Mr. Sinclair on the whole would agree with me that the
-chief responsibility for the evils of journalism does not rest upon
-the journalist. He tries to place it squarely where it belongs on the
-owners of the press and the owners of the owners. But it is difficult
-to determine how the weight of guilt is distributed, for the press is a
-monster with more than two legs.
-
-Part of the responsibility rests upon the reader, if indeed the
-reader is to blame for being a gullible fool and for buying shoddy
-goods. Mr. Lippmann says: “There is everywhere an increasingly angry
-disillusionment about the press, a growing sense of being baffled and
-misled.” And Mr. Sinclair says: “The people want the news; the people
-clamour for the news.” Both these statements may be true. But where
-do the learned doctors find the symptoms? A few of us who have some
-special interest in the press, in publicity, in political problems,
-are disillusioned and resentful. Probably everybody has said or heard
-somebody else say: “That’s only a newspaper story,” or “You cannot
-believe everything you read.” But such mild scepticism shows no promise
-of swelling to an angry demand on the part of that vague aggregate, the
-People, for better, more honest newspapers, to such an angry demand as
-you can actually hear in any house you enter for cheaper clothes and
-lower taxes.
-
-If we make a rough calculation of the number of papers sold and of
-the number of people in the main economic classes, it is evident
-that papers of large circulation must go by the million to the
-working-people. Well, is there any sign of growing wrath in the breasts
-of the honest toilers against the newspapers, against Mr. Hearst’s
-papers, which throw them sops of hypocritical sympathy, not to speak of
-papers which are openly unfair in handling labour news? Or consider the
-more prosperous classes. In the smoking-car of any suburban train bound
-for New York some morning after eight o’clock, look at the men about
-you, business men, the kind that work, or do something, in offices.
-They are reading the _Times_ and the _Tribune_. There may be some
-growls about something in the day’s news, something that has happened
-on the stock-market, or a stupid throw to third base in yesterday’s
-game. But is there any murmur of discontent with the newspaper itself?
-I fail to find any evidence of widespread disgust with the newspaper as
-it is and a concomitant hunger for something better. The Reader, the
-Public is mute, if not inglorious, and accepts uncritically what the
-daily press provides. The reader has not much opportunity to choose
-the better from the worse. If he gives up one paper he must take
-another that is just as bad. He is between the devil and the deep sea,
-as when he casts his ballot for Democrat or Republican. And if he
-votes Socialist he gets the admirable New York _Call_, which is less
-a newspaper than a vehicle of propaganda. When one paper is slightly
-more honest and intelligent than its rivals, the difference is so
-slight that only those especially interested in the problems of the
-press are aware of it. For example, in discussing these problems with
-newspaper men, with critical readers of the press, persons for any
-reason intelligently interested in the problems, I have never found
-one who did not have a good word to say for the New York _Globe_. It
-is so appreciably more decent than the other New York papers that I
-can almost forgive it for thrusting Dr. Frank Crane under my nose
-when I am looking at the amusing pictures of Mr. Fontaine Fox--the
-newspaper vaudeville has to supply stunts for all juvenile tastes.
-Yet the _Globe_ does not find a clamorous multitude willing to reward
-it for its superiority to its neighbours, which I grant is too slight
-for duffers to discern. The American reader of newspapers, that is,
-almost everybody, is a duffer, so far as the newspaper is concerned,
-uncritical, docile, only meekly incredulous. It may be that “the
-people” get as good newspapers as they wish and deserve, just as they
-are said to get as good government as they wish and deserve. Certainly
-if the readers of newspapers seem to demand nothing better, the
-manufacturers of newspapers have no inducement to give them anything
-better. But this does not get us any nearer a solution of the problem
-or do more than indicate that some vaguely indeterminate part of the
-responsibility for the evils of the newspapers must rest on the people
-who buy them.
-
-From the buyer to the seller is the shortest step. The newspaper is
-a manufacturing concern producing goods to sell at a profit; it is
-also a department store, and it has some characteristics that suggest
-the variety show and the brothel. But the newspaper differs from all
-other commodities in that it does not live by what it receives from
-the consumer who buys it. Three cents multiplied a million times does
-not support a newspaper. The valuable part of a newspaper from the
-manufacturer’s point of view, and also to a great extent from the
-reader’s point of view, is the advertisements. The columns of “reading
-matter,” so called, are little more than bait to attract enough readers
-to make the paper worth while as a vehicle for advertisements. It is
-of no importance to the management whether a given column contain news
-from Washington or Moscow, true or false, or a scandal or a funny
-story, as long as it leads some thousands of human eyes to look at it
-and so to look at adjacent columns in which are set forth the merits of
-a safety razor or an automobile tire or a fifty-dollar suit of clothes
-at thirty-nine dollars and a half. There has to be a good variety and a
-certain balance of interest in the columns of reading matter to secure
-the attention of all kinds of people. This accounts for two things, the
-great development in the newspaper of pure, or impure, entertainment,
-of more or less clever features, at the expense of space that might be
-devoted to news, and also the tendency to accentuate narrative interest
-above all other kinds of interest. A reporter is never sent out by his
-chief to get information, but always, in the lingo of the office, to
-get a “story.” This is sound psychology. Everybody likes a story, and
-there are only a few souls in the world who yearn at breakfast for
-information. To attack the newspaper for being sensational is to forget
-that all the great stories of the world, from the amatory exploits
-of Helen of Troy and Cleopatra to the scandalous adventures of Mrs.
-Black, the banker’s wife, are sensational and should be so treated. The
-newspaper manager is indifferent to every quality in his news columns
-except their power to attract the reader and so secure circulation
-and so please the advertiser. And the advertiser has as his primary
-interest only that of bringing to the attention of a certain number of
-people the virtues of his suspenders, shoes, and soothing syrup.
-
-But the advertiser has a secondary interest. The newspaper willy-nilly
-deals with ideas, such as they are. No idea inimical to the
-advertiser’s business or in general to the business system of which
-he is a dependent part must be allowed in the paper. Therefore all
-newspapers are controlled by the advertising department, that is, the
-counting-room. They are controlled negatively and positively. We are
-discussing general characteristics and have not space for detailed
-evidence. But one or two cases will suffice.
-
-An example of the coercion of the newspaper by the advertiser was
-recently afforded by the Philadelphia press. The Gimbel Brothers,
-owners of a department store, were charged by United States Government
-officials with profiteering. The only Philadelphia paper that made
-anything of the story was the _Press_, which was owned by Mr. Wanamaker
-of the rival department store. The other papers ignored the story or
-put it in one edition and then withdrew it. If there is an elevator
-accident in a general office building, it is reported. If there is a
-similar accident in a department store, it is usually not reported.
-When the New York _Times_ (April 25, 1921) prints a short account
-of the experience of four Wellesley college students who disguised
-their intellectual superiority and got jobs in department stores, the
-head-line tells us that they “Find They Can Live on Earnings,” though
-the matter under the head-line does not bear this out. Perhaps it does
-no harm to suppress, or fail to publish, news of accidents and to make
-out a good case for the living and working conditions of shop-girls.
-These are minor matters in the news of the world and their importance
-would appear only if they were accumulated in their tediously
-voluminous mass.
-
-The positive corruption of the newspaper by the advertiser goes deeper
-and proceeds from larger economic powers than individual merchants.
-There is all over the world a terrific economic contest between
-the employing classes and the wage-earning classes. The dramatic
-manifestation of this contest is the strike. Almost invariably the
-news of a strike is, if not falsified, so shaped as to be unfavourable
-to the workers. In the New York _Nation_ of January 5, 1921, Mr.
-Charles G. Miller, formerly editor of the Cleveland _Plain Dealer_,
-exposes the lies of the Pittsburgh papers during the steel strike.
-In two weeks the Pittsburgh papers published more than thirty pages
-of paid advertisements denouncing the leadership of the strike and
-invoking “Americanism” against radicalism and syndicalism. The news
-and editorial attitude of the papers coincided with the advertisements
-and gave the impression that the strikers were disloyal, un-American,
-bolshevik. They were silent on the real questions at issue, hours, pay,
-working conditions. And not only the Pittsburgh press but the press of
-the entire country was poisoned. For the Associated Press and other
-news services are not independent organizations feeding news to their
-clients but simply interrelated newspapers swapping each other’s lies.
-The Denver newspapers control all the news that is read in Boston about
-the Colorado coal mines. The Boston newspapers control all the news
-that is read in San Francisco about the New England textile mills. The
-head of a local bureau of the Associated Press is not a reporter; he is
-merely a more or less skilful compiler and extracter who sends to the
-nation, to the whole world, matter which is furnished him by the papers
-of his district. So that he can usually hold up his hand and swear to
-the honesty of his service; he is like an express agent who ships a
-case of what he thinks is canned corn, and it is not his fault if there
-is opium concealed in the case.
-
-The power of the advertiser to make the newspaper servile and right
-in its opinions is not confined to the local department store or the
-special industry operating through a district press. Nor is it confined
-to the negative punishment of withdrawing advertising of commodities
-like hosiery, chewing gum, and banking service from papers that offend
-their masters. There is another method of exerting this power, and that
-is to buy advertising space in which to set forth ideas calculated
-to influence public opinion. Here is a full page from a New York
-paper containing a cartoon and text, the main idea of which is that
-Labour and Capital should pull together. It is signed by “‘America
-First’ Publicity Association” and is Bulletin No. 115 in a series--“be
-sure to read them all.” This full-page bulletin, of which there have
-already been more than a hundred, appeared in many newspapers--I do
-not know how many; and a full page costs a good deal of money. What
-is the object of this patriotic association? The prevailing theme of
-the bulletins which I have seen is “Labour be good! Fight Bolshevism!
-Beware the Agitator!” Who is going to be influenced by these bulletins?
-Not the workingman. He knows what he wants, and if he is the dupe of
-agitators and false theories, these sermons can never rescue him.
-Not the capitalist. He knows what he wants, and gets it. Perhaps the
-little middle-class fellow may swallow such buncombe on his daily
-journey between his office and his home in the suburbs. But he is
-already an intellectually depraved servant of the employing classes,
-and it is not worth hundreds of thousands of dollars to complete and
-confirm his corruption. The primary object of the advertisement is to
-keep the newspaper “good,” to encourage its editorial departments,
-through the advertising department, not to fall below 99 and 44/100%
-pure Americanism or admit ideas inimical to the general interests of
-chambers of commerce, manufacturers’ associations, and other custodians
-of the commonweal. I suspect that some clever advertising man has stung
-the gentlemen who supply the money for this campaign of education, but
-what is a few million to them? The man who can best afford to laugh is
-the business manager of the newspaper when he looks at the check and
-meditates on the easy money of some of his advertising clients and the
-easy credulity of some of his reading clients.
-
-It may be argued that the newspaper, which is a business, ought to
-be controlled, directly and indirectly, by business interests; and
-certainly if we allow the commercial powers to manage our food supply,
-transportation, and housing, it is a relatively minor matter if the
-same powers dominate our press. In like manner if we tolerate dishonest
-governments, we are only dealing with an epiphenomenon when we consider
-the dishonest and inefficient treatment by the press of public affairs,
-national and international. All the news of politics, diplomacy, war,
-world-trade emanates from government officials or from those who are
-interested in turning to their own advantage the actions of officials.
-Business is behind government, and government is behind business;
-which comes first is unimportant like the problem of the chicken and
-the egg. It is a partnership of swindle, and though the details of
-the relation are infinitely complicated, the relation in itself is
-easy to understand and accounts quite simply for the fact that world
-news is the most viciously polluted of all the many kinds of news.
-The efforts of a merchant to keep up the good name of his department
-store, or of a group of manufacturers to break a strike are feeble and
-even reasonable, so far as they use the newspapers, compared to the
-audacious perversion of truth by the combination of arch criminals,
-government and international business.
-
-The star example in modern times is the current newspaper history of
-Russia. The New York _Nation_ of March 6, 1920, published an article
-showing that in the columns of the New York Times Lenin had died once,
-been almost killed three times, and had fallen and fled innumerable
-times. The _New Republic_ published August 4, 1920, a supplement by
-Lippmann and Merz summarizing the news which the _Times_ printed about
-Russia during the three years preceding March 1920. The analysis shows
-an almost unbroken daily misrepresentation of the programme, purposes
-and strength of the Russian government and continuous false “optimism,”
-as the writers gently call it, about the military exploits of Russia’s
-enemies, the “white hopes,” Kolchak and Denekin. The writers expressly
-state that they did not select the _Times_ because it is worse than
-other papers but, on the contrary, because it “is one of the really
-great newspapers of the world.” “Rich” or “powerful” would have been a
-better word than “great.” The sources of error in the Times were the
-Associated Press, the special correspondents of the Times, government
-officials and political factions hostile to the present Russian
-régime. Among the offenders was the United States Government or the
-journalistic fake-factory in or adjacent to the Department of State. At
-this writing the article in the _New Republic_ has been out nearly a
-year, that in the _Nation_ more than a year. It is fair to assume that
-they have been seen by the managers of the _Times_ and other powerful
-journalists, that if there was any misstatement the weekly journals
-would have been forced to recant, which they have not done, and that if
-the Ochses of the newspaper world had any conscience they would have
-been at least more careful after such devastating exposures. But the
-game of “Lying about Lenin” goes merrily on.
-
-The American government and the American press have not been more
-mendacious in their treatment of Russia than the governments and the
-press of other nations, but they have been more persistently stupid
-and unteachable in the face of facts. The British government has been
-engaged in an agile zigzag retreat from its first position of no
-intercourse with Russia, and when the London _Labour Herald_ exposed
-the trick of Lloyd George which consisted of printing and sending out
-_from Russia_ propaganda against the Soviet government, the prince of
-political liars was obliged to stop that fraud. On the other hand one
-of the first acts of our new administration was Mr. Hughes’s idiotic
-confirmation of the attitude held by the old administration, and he
-furnished the newspapers real news, since the Secretary’s opinions,
-however stupid, are real news, to add to their previous accumulation
-of ignorance and lies, and thereby encouraged them in their evil ways.
-If a government is composed of noodles and rogues, the press which
-reports the activities of the government and the opinions of its
-officials is only secondarily responsible for deceiving the public.
-The editors might be more critical in sifting the true from the false.
-But the newspaper has no motive for trying to correct the inherent
-vices of business and government; it does not originate those vices but
-merely concurs in them and reflects them. The newspaper is primarily
-responsible only for the stupidity and mendacity of its correspondents
-and editors. It is not an independent institution with its own ethic,
-with either will or full opportunity to serve the truth, but is only
-the symptom and expression of the vast corruption that lies behind it
-and of the dense popular ignorance that stands gaping before it.
-
-The _Dunciad_ of the Press does not end in quite universal darkness.
-There is a little light over the horizon. A new organization called
-The Federated Press, which endeavours to “get the news in spite of
-the newspapers and the great news agencies,” announces that already
-two hundred editors all over the world are using its service. It is
-too soon to tell how successful this enterprise will be, but it is a
-ray of promise, because it is an association of working journalists
-and not a vague aspiration of reformers and uplifters. Until some
-such organization does become powerful and by practical labour
-make an impression on the daily paper, we shall have to depend for
-enlightenment on a few weekly and monthly periodicals of relatively
-small circulation. Most of the popular weeklies and monthlies are
-as bad in their way as the newspapers, but they aim chiefly at
-entertainment; their treatment of the news in special articles
-and editorials is a subordinate matter, and their chief sin is not
-dishonesty but banality. The periodicals which do handle the news,
-always honestly, usually with intelligence, the _Nation_, the _New
-Republic_, the _Freeman_ and one or two others, must have an influence
-greater than can be measured by their circulation; for though the
-giant press laughs at the cranky little Davids with their vicious
-radical ideas, and though it is too strong to be slain or even severely
-wounded, yet it cannot be quite insensible to the stones that fly from
-those valorous slings. It is, however, an indication of the low mental
-level of America that the combined circulation of these journals, which
-are, moreover, largely subscribed for by the same readers, is less than
-that of a newspaper in a second-rate city. Two of them are endowed
-or subsidized by liberal men of means and none of them is shiningly
-prosperous. An intelligent populace would buy them by the million. So
-we leave the responsibility where, after all, it belongs. The American
-press is an accurate gauge of the American mind.
-
- JOHN MACY
-
-
-
-
-THE LAW
-
-
-“The first thing we do, let’s kill all the lawyers.” This outcry of
-Jack Cade’s followers that the disappearance of the whole profession
-was the initial step in man’s progress toward a better world would be
-echoed in the United States by the revolutionists of to-day, and also
-by not a few solid business men who have nothing else in common with
-the mediæval agitator except perhaps the desire to see the fountains
-run wine and make it a felony to drink near-beer. Indeed almost every
-one takes his fling at the law. Doctors and ministers can be avoided if
-we dislike them, but the judge has a sure grip upon us all. He drags
-us before him against our will; no power in the land can overturn
-his decision, but defeated litigants, disappointed sociologists, and
-unsuccessful primary candidates all join in a prolonged yell, “Kill the
-umpire.”
-
-Where there is smoke, there is fire. Underneath all this agitation
-is a deep-seated suspicion and dissatisfaction aroused by the legal
-profession and the whole machinery of justice. It exists despite the
-fact observed by Bryce, that our system of written constitutions has
-created a strongly marked legal spirit in the people and accustomed
-them to look at all questions in a legal way--a characteristic
-exemplified when other peoples judged the Covenant of the League of
-Nations as an expression of broad policies and the aspirations of a
-hundred years, while we went at it word by word with a dissecting knife
-and a microscope as if it had been a millionaire’s will or an Income
-Tax Act. Moreover, although lawyers as a class are unpopular, they are
-elected to half the seats in the legislatures and in Congress. The
-profession which cannot boast a single English Prime Minister in the
-century between Perceval and Asquith, has trained every President who
-was not a general, except Harding. Perhaps this very fact that lawyers
-receive public positions out of all proportion to their numbers
-partially accounts for the prejudice felt against them by men in other
-professions and occupations.
-
-Hostility to lawyers and case-law is no new phenomenon in this country.
-Puritans and Quakers arrived with unpleasant memories of the English
-bench and bar, who had harried them out of their homes. To them, law
-meant heresy trials, and the impression that these left on the minds of
-their victims has been set down forever by Bunyan in the prosecution
-of Faithful at Vanity Fair. The Colonists were no more anxious to
-transplant some Lord Hate-good, his counsellors, and his law books to
-our shores, than Eugene V. Debs would strive to set up injunctions and
-sedition statutes if he were founding a socialistic commonwealth in
-the South Seas. The popular attitude toward lawyers was re-inforced
-by the clergy who were naturally reluctant to have their great moral
-and intellectual influence disputed by men who would hire themselves
-out to argue either side of any question. The ministers who ruled
-Massachusetts and Connecticut by the Law of Moses, wanted no rivals to
-challenge their decisions upon the authority of Bracton and Coke. And
-everywhere, except perhaps on the Southern plantations, the complicated
-structure of feudal doctrines, which constituted such a large part of
-English law well into the 18th century, was as unsuited to Colonial
-ways and needs as a Gothic cathedral in the wilderness. Life was so
-pressing, time was so short, labour so scarce, that the only law
-which could receive acceptance must be so simple that the settlers
-could apply it themselves. Although Justice Story has spread wide the
-belief that our ancestors brought the Common Law to New England on
-the _Mayflower_, the truth is that only a few fragments got across.
-These were rapidly supplemented by rules based on pioneer conditions.
-Much the same phenomenon occurred as in the California of 1849, where
-the miners ignored the water-law of the Atlantic seaboard which gave
-each person bordering on a stream some share of the water, and adopted
-instead the custom better suited to a new country of first come, first
-served. Almost the earliest task of the founders of a Colony was the
-regulation of the disputes which arise in a primitive civilization by
-a brief legislative code concerning crimes, torts, and the simplest
-contracts, in many ways like the dooms of the Anglo-Saxon kings.
-Gaps in these codes were not filled from the Common Law, as would be
-the case to-day, but by the discretion of the magistrate, or in some
-Colonies, in the early days, from the Bible. Land laws and conveyances
-were simple,--the underlying English principle of primogeniture was
-abolished outright by several Colonial charters, and disputes of title
-were lessened by the admirable system of registering deeds. Such
-law did not require lawyers, and it is not surprising that even the
-magistrates were usually laymen. The chief justice of Rhode Island as
-late as 1818 was a blacksmith. Oftentimes a controversy was taken away
-from the court by the legislature and settled by a special statute.
-Thus, instead of the English and modern American judge-made law, the
-Colonists received for the most part executive and legislative justice,
-and lived under a protoplasmic popular law, with the Common Law only
-one of its many ingredients.
-
-The training of the few Colonists who did become lawyers may be judged
-from that of an early attorney general of Rhode Island:
-
-“When he made up his mind to study law, he went into the garden
-to exercise his talents in addressing the court and jury. He then
-selected five cabbages in one row for judges, and twelve in another
-row for jurors. After trying his hand there a while, he went boldly
-into court and took upon himself the duties of an advocate, and a
-little observation and experience there convinced him that the same
-cabbages were in the court house which he thought he had left in the
-garden,--five in one row and twelve in another.”
-
-The natural alienation of such attorneys from the intricacies of
-English law was increased by occasional conflicts between that
-system and Colonial statutes or conceptions of justice. An excellent
-Connecticut act for the disposal of a decedent’s land was declared void
-by the Privy Council in London as contrary to the laws of England,
-and the attempt of the New York governor and judges to enforce the
-obnoxious English law of libel in the prosecution of Peter Zenger in
-order to throttle the criticism of public officials by the press, would
-have succeeded if the jury had not deliberately rejected the legal
-definitions given by the court.
-
-The Common Law became somewhat more popular when the principles of
-individual rights which had blocked Stuart oppression were used
-against George III. After the Revolution, however, it suffered with
-all things English. Many lawyers had been Loyalists. The commercial
-depression turned the bar into debt collectors. The great decisions of
-Lord Mansfield which laid the foundations of modern business law were
-rejected by Jefferson and many other Americans because of that judge’s
-reactionary policy towards the Colonies. Many States actually passed
-legislation forbidding the use of English cases as authorities in our
-courts. The enforcement of the Common Law of sedition and criminal
-libel by judges, many of whom had been educated in England, identified
-the Common Law with the suppression of freedom of speech. Nevertheless,
-the old simple Colonial rules were insufficient to decide the complex
-commercial questions which were constantly arising, especially in
-maritime transactions. Aid had to be obtained from some mature system
-of law.
-
-At this moment a rival to the Common Law presented itself in the
-Napoleonic code of 1804, attractive to the populace just because it
-was French, and to many of the bar because of its logical arrangement
-and because unlike English lawyers they were widely read in Roman and
-modern Continental law. For a time it was actually doubtful whether
-the legal assistance which American judges needed would be drawn
-from England or France. French writers were cited in the courts and
-Livingston drafted a code on the Napoleonic model for Louisiana. The
-English law had, however, one great advantage. It was written in our
-own language. Furthermore, a group of exceptionally able judges such
-as Joseph Story and James Kent, by their decisions and writings,
-virtually imported the great bulk of the Common Law into this country
-and reworked it to meet American conditions. Nevertheless, this law was
-something that came from outside and had not grown up altogether from
-the lives and thoughts of our own people, so that it has never meant to
-Americans what English law means to Englishmen, for whom it is as much
-a product of their own land as parliamentary government or the plays of
-Shakespeare.
-
-Another reason for American hostility to law was found at the frontier.
-The pioneer, imbued with the conviction that he was entitled to the
-land which he had cleared, ploughed and sown, often thrown by crop
-failures into debt to the tradesmen in the town, resented law as
-something which was forced upon him by people who led easy lives, who
-took his land away for some technical defect of title, foreclosed
-mortgages, compelled him to pay for goods of high prices and low
-quality, suppressed hereditary feuds, and substituted a mass of book
-learning which he was too ignorant or too busy to read, for the simple
-principles of fair play which seemed sufficient to him. Habitual
-obedience to law was a spirit which could not develop in men who were
-largely squatters, and who, from the outset of our national history,
-disregarded the Congressional statutes which required that public
-lands must be surveyed before they were settled. Sometimes, as in this
-instance, the settler’s resistance to law was successful. More often
-they were overpowered by the strength of civilization and submitted to
-the law sullen and unconvinced.
-
-The old frontier is gone, a new frontier has arisen. The meeting
-place of unfriendly races has moved Eastward from the Missouri to
-the Merrimac. The pioneers of to-day came often from autocratic
-lands where law was something imposed on them from above, and they
-were slow to regard our law as different in kind. It was not a part
-of themselves. Moreover, they did not find in America the energetic
-police organization which had compelled their obedience in Europe.
-The men who framed our system of laws were taught by Puritanism that
-duties declared by those lawfully in authority should be voluntarily
-performed. A statute once on the books got much vitality from this
-spirit and from the social pressure of the homogeneous settled
-communities, whatever the difficulties of enforcement at the frontier.
-These forces behind law became weaker when the population was split
-into numerous and diverse races by the great tide of immigration.
-Obedience to law, never automatic among us, now became liable to cease
-altogether whenever a person thought the law unreasonable or felt
-fairly certain that he would not be found out.
-
-This belief that a law ceases to have obligation when it becomes
-inexpedient to obey it, extends far beyond the recently arrived
-elements in our population. For instance, a wealthy man with several
-American generations behind him, who was serving on the jury in an
-accident case, stood up on a chair as soon as the jury got into the
-consultation-room and urged them to disregard everything which the
-judge had instructed them about the inability of the plaintiff to
-recover if he, as well as the defendant, was negligent. “This doctrine
-of contributory negligence,” said this educated juryman, “is not the
-law of France or Germany or any country on the Continent of Europe. A
-number of eminent writers agree that it is a thoroughly bad law. Let’s
-have nothing to do with it.” Needless to say, the plaintiff recovered.
-This conception of a higher law than that on the books may owe
-something to the Abolitionists’ belief that they were not bound by the
-laws protecting the inhuman institution of slavery. Many conscientious
-persons still hold that a man ought not to be punished for disobeying
-a law which he believes to be morally wrong. Fortunately, a corrective
-to this dangerous doctrine of the inner legal light is found in the
-words of a leading Abolitionist, Judge Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar, in
-charging the Grand Jury on riotous resistance to the fugitive slave
-law, although he himself regarded it as vicious legislation:
-
-“A man whose private conscience leads him to disobey a law recognized
-by the community must take the consequences of that disobedience. It
-is a matter solely between him and his Maker. He should take good care
-that he is not mistaken, that his private opinion does not result from
-passion or prejudice, but, if he believes it to be his duty to disobey,
-he must be prepared to abide by the result; and the laws as they are
-enacted and settled by the constituted authorities to be constitutional
-and valid, must be enforced, although it may be to his grievous harm.
-It will not do for the public authorities to recognize his private
-opinion as a justification of his acts.”
-
-Disrespect for law has been aggravated by the changing function of
-the lawyer since the Civil War. In the forties and fifties, he stood
-out as a leader in his community, lifted by education above the mass
-of citizens, often before the public gaze in the court-room and
-chosen because of his forensic eloquence to deliver many of those set
-orations which Americans constantly demand, brought forward by the
-litigation of those days as the avenger of crime, the defender of
-those unjustly imprisoned, the liberator of the escaping slave, or
-upholding some great public right on behalf of his city or State--the
-construction of a toll-free bridge across the Charles, the maintenance
-of the charter of Dartmouth College. After 1870, this pre-eminence was
-challenged by the new captains of industry, and their appearance was
-accompanied by an alteration in the work of many an able lawyer, which
-soon obscured him to the popular imagination. The formation of large
-businesses required more and more the skill which he possessed. Rewards
-for drafting and consultation became greater than for litigation,
-which was growing tedious and costly, so that his clients avoided it
-whenever possible. Consequently, he changed from an advocate into a
-“client care-taker,” seldom visible to the people and often associated
-in their minds with the powerful and detested corporations which he
-represented. Much of the prejudice against “corporation lawyers”
-was unjust, and the business development of to-day would have been
-impossible without the skill in organization and reorganization of
-great enterprises which they displayed during the last half century.
-However, popular opinion of a class is inevitably based, not on all
-its members, but on a conspicuous few, and the kind of legal career
-described in Winston Churchill’s “Far Country” was common enough to
-furnish data for damaging generalizations. In any case, the decline in
-the public influence of the bar was inevitable, especially as certain
-businesses retained the exclusive legal services of a staff of men, so
-that it could be said: “Lawyers used to have clients; now, clients have
-lawyers.”
-
-Of course, during this period there were many lawyers who made a
-notable success by conducting cases against corporations. These
-accident lawyers were, however, no more popular than their opponents,
-even with the workingmen whom they represented. The small means of
-their clients made any remuneration from them improbable unless damages
-were recovered. Consequently, the lawyer agreed to take nothing if
-defeated, but to even matters up insisted on a large fraction of the
-amount awarded, usually one-third or even more, if he won. Therefore,
-he fought not merely for justice and his client, but for his own fee,
-and the temptation to win by every possible means was great. Business
-men were quick to label him unscrupulous, while workingmen resented it
-when a large slice of the money which the jury gave to them as a just
-measure for suffering a lifelong disability vanished into some lawyer’s
-pockets.
-
-No satisfactory substitute for the contingent fee was suggested, but
-the prejudice created by the system and by the dislike of corporation
-lawyers was too great to be dispelled by the many members of the bar
-whose practice lay in neither of these two fields. And indeed, the
-profession as a whole cannot free itself from blame for some very
-definite evils, soon to be discussed. Unfortunately, the long-standing
-antagonism between lawyers and laymen has distracted the thoughts
-of both sides from wrongs which ought to be and can be cured, and
-turned them to never-ending disputes on problems of relatively small
-importance. For instance, almost any layman will open a discussion of
-the function of the lawyer by condemning the profession because it
-defends criminals who are known to be guilty. The solution of this
-problem is not easy, but it is not worth a hundredth of the attention
-it receives, for it hardly ever arises. The criminal law is a small
-part of the whole law, and lawyers who have spent their whole lives in
-that field have declared that they were not certain of the guilt of a
-single client. A far more important problem is whether a lawyer should
-advocate the passage of legislation which he personally considers
-vicious. Indeed, the underlying question, to which lawyers and laymen
-ought to be devoting themselves, is this. How far can the State
-ascertain the proper course of action by limiting itself to hearing
-paid representatives of the persons directly interested, financially
-or otherwise; or should the State also call in and pay trained men to
-investigate the question independently? The solution of this question
-will affect not only lawyers, but other professions as well. Medical
-experts, for instance, might cease to be hired by millionaires to prove
-them insane, or by the prosecuting attorney with the opposite purpose,
-but might be employed by the court to make an impartial inquiry into
-the mental condition of a prisoner. In short, it may be that we have
-carried the notion of litigation as a contest of wits between two
-sides so far that the interests of society have not been adequately
-safeguarded.
-
-If laymen have erred in concentrating on minor points, lawyers have
-been far too ready to deny laymen any right to discuss law at all.
-It is just as if school-teachers should maintain that parents and
-citizens in general have no concern in the problems of education. The
-time has come to close the gulf in American life between the legal
-profession and the people who are ruled by laws. Law is the surface
-of contact where the pressure of society bears upon the individual.
-Doubtless, he attributes to the law many of the features in this
-pressure to which he objects, whereas they actually result from the
-social structure itself. The man who feels wronged by a prosecution
-for bigamy, or for stealing bread when he is starving for lack of
-employment, cannot expect to change the law without also changing the
-views of the community on monogamous marriage and the organization of
-industry. These institutions of society show themselves in the law
-just as the veins in a block of marble show themselves at the surface,
-but it is as futile for him to blame the law for “capitalism,” private
-property, or our present semi-permanent marriages as to try to get
-rid of the veins by scraping the surface of the marble. On the other
-hand, there are aspects of law which do not correspond to any existing
-social requirements or demands, and the layman has good cause to offer
-his opinion. And it may be worth listening to. The onlooker often sees
-most of the game. Although the layman may lack technical knowledge,
-he can appreciate the relation of law to his own department of human
-activity--business, social service, health--in ways that are difficult
-for the lawyer who is absorbed in the pressing tasks of each day.
-Moreover, the lawyer’s habitual and necessary obligation to conform
-to existing laws naturally inclines him to overlook their defects,
-which are obvious to those who can spend in detached criticism the
-same time which he requires for practical application. Modern medicine
-was created by Pasteur, who was not a doctor; modern English law by
-Bentham, who was a lawyer to the extent of arguing one case and who was
-edited by Mill, a philosopher and economist.
-
-Knowledge is no longer a matter of water-tight compartments. “All good
-work is one,” says Wells in “Joan and Peter.” Law touches psychology
-in its treatment of the defective and insane, medicine and surgery
-in industrial accidents and disease, political science in municipal
-corporations, economics in taxation, philosophy in its selection of the
-purposes it should strive to accomplish. And this is a meagre list.
-The greatest need of American law is the establishment of means for
-intelligent mutual understanding and effective co-operation, not merely
-between lawyers and experts in such other fields as those mentioned,
-but between lawyers and the mass of our population, who fill the jails,
-pay the taxes, drink city water, get hurt in factories, buy, sell,
-invest, build homes, and leave it all to their children when they die.
-
-For these men and women have a right to complain of our law. Its evils
-are not those commonly decried, lawyers to defend the guilty, reliance
-on precedents instead of common sense, bribed judges. The real defect
-is failure to keep up to date. Many existing legal rules have the same
-fault as New York surface-cars before the subway or Hoboken Ferries
-before the tubes. They were good in their day, but it has gone by and
-they cannot handle the traffic. The system formulated by Story and
-Kent worked well for the farms, small factories, and small banks of
-their time, but the great development of national resources and crowded
-cities presented new situations unsuited to the old legal rules, and
-kept men too busy for the constructive leisure necessary for thinking
-out a new system. The law became a hand-to-mouth affair, deciding each
-isolated problem as it arose, and often deciding it wrong. Yet lawyers
-were satisfied with law, just as business men with business. Then came
-the agitation of the last fifteen years, which has at least made us
-discontented about many things. The next task is to stop calling each
-other names, sit down together, think matters through to a finish,
-and work together to complete the process which is farther along than
-we realize, of making over the common law system of an agricultural
-population a century ago to meet the needs of the city-dwelling America
-of to-day.
-
-A first step toward co-operation would be more discussion of law in
-the press. Several years ago Charles E. Hughes in a public address
-said that one reason why courts and lawyers were so unpopular in this
-country was the unfamiliarity of the people with what they were doing.
-Outside of criminal prosecutions, divorces, and large constitutional
-cases, newspapers give very little attention to legal questions, and
-even these cases are presented fragmentarily with almost no attempt
-to present their historical background and the general principles
-at issue. There is nothing to compare with the resumé of trials
-and decisions which appears from day to day in the London _Times_,
-no popular exposition of legal problems such as Woods Hutchinson
-has done for medicine or numerous writers for the achievements of
-Einstein. Surely law can be made as intelligible and interesting to
-the ordinary educated reader as relativity. It enters so intimately
-into human relationships that some knowledge of it is very important,
-not as a guide in specific transactions as to which a lawyer ought
-to be consulted, but as part of the mental stock-in-trade of the
-well-informed citizen. Wider realization of the difficulties of the
-work of judges and lawyers would bring about a friendlier and more
-helpful popular attitude.
-
-The public might understand, for example, why law does not progress
-so conspicuously and rapidly as medicine or engineering. Part of the
-blame rests, no doubt, upon lawyers, who have been less active than
-other professions in discussing and applying new ideas, but the very
-nature of the subject is an obstacle to quick change. In law, progress
-requires group action; the individual can accomplish little. The
-physician who discovers a new antitoxin, the surgeon who invents a new
-method of operating for gastric ulcer, can always, if his reputation be
-established, find some patient upon whom to test his conception. Its
-excellence or its faults can be rapidly proved to his own mind and
-that of any skilled onlooker. And new ideas, if sound, mean a larger
-practice and money in his pocket. The lawyer gets no such rewards for
-improving the law, and has no such opportunities for experiment. If
-he is convinced by observation, wide reading, and long thinking, that
-arrest for debt should be abolished, or the property of a spendthrift
-protected by law from his creditors, or trial by jury abandoned
-except in criminal trials, he cannot try out these theories upon some
-client. He must sacrifice days from his regular work to persuade a
-whole legislature to test his idea upon thousands of citizens, and if
-the idea is a bad one, the experiment will be a widespread disaster.
-Consequently law reform always faces an instinctive and discouraging
-legislative opposition. Even after every State except two had adopted
-the Uniform Negotiable Instruments Law, the Georgia legislature refused
-to do so because the Act abolished days of grace, the old custom
-allowing a debtor three days beyond the time of payment named in his
-note. They said that when a man had promised to pay a debt on May 1,
-it was un-American not to let him wait till May 4. Again, a committee
-of very able New York lawyers recently drew a short Practice Act
-setting forth the main requirements for the conduct of a law-suit, and
-leaving the details to the judges, who may be supposed to know more
-about their own work than the legislature. Similar laws have long been
-in successful operation in England, Massachusetts, and Connecticut,
-whereas the existing New York Code of Civil Procedure with its
-thousands of sections has been a vexatious source of delay and disputes
-in the press of urban litigation. The new measure was an admirable and
-thorough piece of work, endorsed by the Bar Associations of New York
-City and the State. Yet it was killed by the age-long opposition of the
-country to the town. Upstate lawyers, less harassed by the old Code
-because of uncrowded rural dockets, objected to throwing over their
-knowledge of the existing system and spending time to learn a new and
-better one. The legislature hated to give more power to the courts. As
-a result, the new bill was scrapped, and nothing has been done after
-years of agitation except to renumber the sections of the old Code with
-a few improvements.
-
-Another factor in law reform is the existence of fifty legal systems
-in one nation. Even if the law is modernized in one State, the
-objectionable old rule will remain in the other forty-seven until
-their legislatures are persuaded by the same tedious process. On the
-other hand, this diversity has its merits. Some of the progressive
-Western States serve as experiment stations for testing new legal
-and governmental schemes. Still more important, the limitations on
-legal experimentation are somewhat offset by the opportunities for
-observation of the workings of different legal rules in neighbouring
-States. The possibilities of this comparative method for judging the
-best solution of a legal problem have not yet been fully utilized. For
-example, a dispute has long raged whether it is desirable to compel a
-doctor to disclose professional secrets on the witness-stand without
-the patient’s consent. About half the States require him to keep
-silent. The reasons given are, that patients will seek medical aid
-less freely if their confidences may be disclosed; doctors would lie
-to shield their patients; some doctors are hired by employers to treat
-workmen injured in accidents and will try to get evidence on behalf of
-the employers if they are allowed to testify. So far, the discussion
-has turned on the probability or improbability that these arguments
-represent the facts, and neither side has collected the facts. The
-discussion could be brought down to earth by an investigation in New
-York which has the privilege, and Massachusetts, where secrecy is
-not maintained. Are doctors less consulted in Massachusetts, do they
-perjure themselves, do they ingratiate themselves with workmen to
-defeat subsequent accident suits? Statistics, personal interviews with
-judges and physicians, and examination of the stenographic records of
-trials ought to give valuable assistance in determining which half of
-the States has the better rule.
-
-Since law reform requires highly organized group action, some
-individual should be charged with the responsibility of organization.
-At present, it is everybody’s business. Judges are hearing cases
-all day and writing opinions at night, and they have no legislative
-position as in England, where they can draft bills and present them in
-the House of Lords. Individual lawyers carry little weight. The Bar
-Associations have accomplished much, but the work of their members
-is done without pay in the intervals of practice, and they have no
-official standing. The Attorney General is necessarily a partisan,
-representing the State’s side in litigation, with neither the time
-nor the duty to improve the law in general. The United States and
-the larger States badly need a Minister of Justice. All complaints
-of legal inefficiency would come to him, and he would be constantly
-collecting statistics of the cases in the courts and their social
-consequences, observing procedure personally, or through a corps of
-expert assistants, conferring with the judges and the Bar Associations,
-drafting or examining measures affecting the administration of justice
-and giving his opinion about them to the legislature, and charged
-with the general duty of ascertaining whether every person can find
-a certain remedy from the laws for all injuries or wrongs, obtaining
-right and justice freely and without purchase, completely and without
-denial, promptly and without delay.
-
-Until we establish such an official, we can rely on three instruments
-of legal advance, each of which may be a point of co-operation between
-lawyers and laymen. Of the first, the Bar Associations, something has
-already been said. The second is the judiciary. Unfortunately, the
-tendency of the American antagonism to law to concentrate on personal
-topics has warped the prolonged discussion of this branch of our
-government during the last ten years, and, indeed, since 1789. Charges
-of corruption and incompetency against individual judges, and methods
-of getting a bad judge off the bench, have entirely obscured the
-problem of getting good judges on the bench. The power of judges to
-declare statutes unconstitutional and void makes them the controlling
-factor in our government, yet there is no country where less attention
-is paid to their selection and training. It is of no use to recall
-a poor judge by popular vote if the people are eager to put one of
-the same type in his place. Nothing need be added to the estimate in
-Bryce’s “Modern Democracies” of the unevenness of judicial personnel.
-The most obvious need, if the inferior judges are to be brought up to
-the level of the best men, is for higher salaries. But that alone is
-not enough to induce leaders of the bar to become judges. No salary
-could be so high as the income of successful metropolitan lawyers.
-The time has come for greater willingness on their part to retire from
-a large practice in middle life and devote their talents to judicial
-work. And even this will be useless, unless selection is based on
-merit. Our system of an elective judiciary is probably too deeply
-rooted to be entirely abandoned, though it is clear that legal talent
-is not a quality, like executive ability, readily capable of being
-appraised by the electorate. On the other hand, it is not altogether
-certain that State governors would appoint judges without regard to
-partisan considerations. An interesting compromise plan has been
-suggested, that there should be a Chief Justice, elected by the people,
-who should be in effect the Minister of Justice already described.
-All the other judges would be appointed by him, for life or for long
-terms, while his responsibility for wise selections would be secured
-by a short term or even by the recall. A governor does so many tasks
-that his judicial appointments do not play a large part in the popular
-judgment of his record, but the Chief Justice would stand or fall on
-the merits of the administration of law under his management.
-
-Moreover, we do not deal fairly by the judges chosen under existing
-systems. After they have been selected, they should have more
-opportunity to study the special duties of their position before
-beginning work, and more leisure amid trials and opinions for general
-legal reading and for observation of the complexities of modern
-life which are inevitably involved in their decisions, especially
-on constitutional questions. Most litigation grows out of urban and
-industrial conditions, with which State supreme court judges may easily
-get out of touch, if they remain continuously in the State House in a
-small upstate city like Springfield, Albany, or Sacramento, with little
-opportunity to visit the factories and tenements of Chicago, New York,
-and San Francisco. It may also be doubted whether our usual system
-which restricts some judges to trials and others to appellate work is
-wise; an occasional change from one to the other is both refreshing
-and instructive. Judges frequently complain of the monotony of their
-work, cooped up with a few associates of similar mental interests, so
-that the atmosphere may acquire the irritability of a boarding-house.
-It is not generally understood how much judges are cut off from other
-men. Close intimacy with their former friends at the bar or with
-wealthy business men who may have cases before them, is sure to cause
-talk. Graham Wallas’s suggestion of an occasional transfer to active
-work of a semi-judicial character, like Judge Sankey’s chairmanship of
-the English Coal Commission, seems valuable. Our Interstate Commerce
-Commission would provide such an opportunity. Finally, the existing
-gulf between courts and law schools might be narrowed by summer
-conferences on growing-points in the law, where each side could give
-much out of its experience to the other.
-
-The remaining instrument of progress is the law schools. “Legal
-education,” says Bryce, “is probably nowhere so thorough as in the
-United States.” The chief reasons for this success are two, the
-professional law teacher, who has replaced the retired judge and the
-practising lawyer who lectured in his spare hours; and the case-system
-of instruction. This method is not, as is popularly believed, the
-memorization by the students of the facts of innumerable cases.
-It imparts legal principles, not on the say-so of a text-book or
-a professor, but by study and discussion of the actual sources of
-those principles, the decisions of the courts. The same method in the
-Continental Law would result in a class-room discussion of codes and
-commentators, which are there the sources. One of the most interesting
-signs of its success is its spread from law into other sciences such as
-medicine. Books based on the study of concrete situations are used in
-public schools for the study of geography and hygiene, and charitable
-societies work out the general needs of the community from the problems
-of individual families. This system has superseded in all the leading
-law schools the old methods of lecturing and reading treatises. Its
-most conspicuous service is, of course, vocational, the training of
-men whose advice a client can safely accept. Already some States
-have required a law-school degree as a condition of admission to the
-bar, and the old haphazard law-office apprenticeship will eventually
-disappear, although the question of how far a man who is earning his
-living should be allowed to study law in his spare hours at a night law
-school whose standards must usually be lower than a full-time school
-remains as a difficult problem in a democratic country. Efficiency
-of training conflicts with equality of opportunity. A second service
-of the leading law schools is the modernization of the law through
-the production of books. A great example of this is the “Treatise on
-Evidence,” by John H. Wigmore, dean of Northwestern Law School, which
-is every day influencing courts and renovating the most antiquated
-portion of the common law.
-
-Of late years, the need for fresh changes in method has become plain.
-Christopher Columbus Langdell, the inventor of the case-system, laid
-down two fundamental propositions: “First, that law is a science;
-second, that all the available materials of that science are contained
-in printed books.” Experience has proved that he was right in believing
-that attendance in a lawyer’s office or at the proceedings of courts
-was not essential to a legal education. But the scope of legal study
-must now extend beyond printed books, certainly beyond law books.
-Since law is not an isolated department of knowledge, but a system
-of rules for the regulation of human life, the truth of those rules
-must be tested by many facts outside the past proceedings of courts
-and legislatures. Not only law in books but law in action has to be
-considered, and after learning the principles evolved by a process of
-inclusion and exclusion in the decisions or by intermittent legislative
-action, the scholar must find how those principles actually work in
-the bank, the factory, the street, and the jail. The problem is still
-debated, whether this can better be done in the pre-legal college
-course or by the use of non-legal experts in the law schools, or
-whether the necessary material should be assimilated and presented by
-the law teachers themselves. Yet this widening of the content of legal
-study does not in the least impair the validity of Langdell’s method,
-the systematic investigation of the sources of law at first hand,
-whether those sources be found in the reports and statutes which he had
-in mind, or in the economic, social, and psychological facts which have
-demanded attention in recent years.
-
-Something must be said in closing of those portions of the law where
-change has been most necessary. Of these our criminal law is easily
-the most disgraceful. Its complete inability to perform its task has
-been exhaustively demonstrated by the opening chapter of Raymond
-Fosdick’s “American Police Systems.” The lawyers and judges are
-only partly to blame, for their work forms only the middle of three
-stages in the suppression of crime. The initial stage of arrest and
-the final stage of punishment are in the hands of administrative
-officials, beyond the control of the bench and bar. Many criminals
-are never caught, and the loss of public confidence in the justice or
-effectiveness of prisons makes juries reluctant to convict. Yet the
-legal profession is sorely at fault for what takes place while the
-prisoner is in the dock. The whole problem calls for that co-operation
-between lawyers, other experts, and laymen, of which I have already
-spoken. Unless something is soon done, we may find crime ceasing to be
-a legal matter at all. Even now, many large department stores have so
-little belief in the criminal courts and prisons that they are trying
-embezzlers and shoplifters in tribunals of their own, and administering
-a private system of probation and restitution. The initial step is a
-reformulation of the purpose of punishment. Twenty-five years ago,
-Justice Holmes asked, “What have we better than a blind guess to show
-that the criminal law in its present form does more good than harm?”
-
-One serious reason for its breakdown has been the creation of
-innumerable minor offences, which are repeatedly committed and almost
-impossible to suppress. The police are diverted from murders and
-burglaries to gambling and sexual delinquencies, while the frequent
-winking at such breaches of law destroys the essential popular
-conviction that a law ought to be obeyed just because it is law. The
-Chief of Police of New Orleans told Raymond Fosdick, “If I should
-enforce the law against selling tobacco on Sunday, I would be run out
-of office in twenty-four hours. But I am in constant danger of being
-run out of office because I don’t enforce it.” So they were hanging
-green curtains, which served the double purpose of advertising the
-location of the stands and of protecting the virtue of the citizens
-from visions of evil.
-
-At the present time we have thrown a new strain on the criminal law by
-the enactment of nation-wide prohibition. The future will show whether
-the main effect of this measure will be an increase in disrespect and
-antagonism for law, or the ultimate removal of one of the chief causes
-of lawlessness and waste. Unfortunately, the perpetual discussion
-of home-brew receipts and hidden sources of supply has prevented a
-general realization that we are witnessing one of the most far-reaching
-legislative experiments of all time. What we ought to be talking
-about is the consequences of prohibition to health, poverty, crime,
-earning-power, and general happiness. It is possible, for instance,
-that total abstinence for the working classes coupled with apparently
-unlimited supplies of liquor for their employers may have the double
-consequence of increasing the resentful desire of the former to wrest
-the control of wealth from those who are monopolizing a time-honoured
-source of pleasure, and of weakening the ability of the heavy-drinking
-sons of our captains of industry to stand up in the struggle against
-the sober brains of the labour leaders of the future. Prohibition may
-thus bring about a striking shift of economic power.
-
-The delays, expense, and intricacies of legal procedure demand reform.
-The possession of a legal right is worthless to a poor man if he cannot
-afford to enforce it through the courts. The means of removing such
-obstacles have been set forth by Reginald H. Smith in “Justice and
-the Poor.” For instance, much has already been accomplished by Small
-Claims Courts, where relief is given without lawyers in a very simple
-manner. When a Cleveland landlady was sued by a boarder because she
-had detained his trunk, she told the judge that he had set fire to
-his mattress while smoking in bed and refused to pay her twenty-five
-dollars for the damage. The judge, instead of calling expert witnesses
-to prove the value of the mattress, telephoned the nearest department
-store, found he could buy another for eight dollars, and the parties
-agreed to settle on that basis. Again, family troubles are now
-scattered through numerous courts. A father deserts, and the mother
-goes to work. The neglected children get into the Juvenile Court.
-She asks for a separation in the Probate Court. A grocer sues her
-husband for food she has bought, before a jury. She prosecutes him
-before a criminal court for non-support, and finally secures a divorce
-in equity. One Court of Domestic Relations should handle all the
-difficulties of the family, which ought to be considered together. Much
-of the injustice to the poor has been lessened by legal aid societies,
-which have not only conducted litigation for individuals but have also
-fought test-cases up to the highest courts, and drafted statutes in
-order to protect large groups of victims of injustice. The injury done
-to the poor by antiquated legal machinery is receiving wide attention,
-but it is also a tax on large business transactions which is ultimately
-paid by the consumer. Reform is needed to secure justice to the rich.
-
-The substantive law which determines the scope of rights and duties has
-been more completely overhauled, and many great improvements have been
-accomplished. Relations between the public and the great corporations
-which furnish transportation and other essential services are no longer
-left to the arbitrary decisions of corporate officers or the slow
-process of isolated litigation. Public service commissions do not yet
-operate perfectly, but any one who doubts their desirability should
-read a contemporary Commission Report and then turn to the history of
-the Erie Railroad under Jim Fiske and Jay Gould as related in “The Book
-of Daniel Drew.” The old fellow-servant rule which threw the burden of
-an industrial accident upon the victim has been changed by workmen’s
-compensation acts which place the risk upon the employer. He pays for
-the injured workman as for a broken machine and shifts the expense
-to his customers as part of the costs of the business. The burden is
-distributed through society and litigation is rapid and inexpensive.
-Unfortunately, no such satisfactory solution has been reached in the
-law of labour organizations, but its chaotic condition only corresponds
-to the general American uncertainty on the proper treatment of such
-organizations. It is possible that just as the King, in the Middle
-Ages, insisted on dragging the Barons into his courts to fight out
-their boundary disputes there, instead of with swords and battleaxes
-on the highway, so society which is the victim of every great
-industrial dispute will force employers and workmen alike to settle
-their differences before a tribunal while production goes on. The
-Australian Courts of Conciliation have lately been imitated in Kansas,
-an experiment which will be watched with close interest.
-
-Less importance must be attached, however, to the development of
-particular branches of the law than to the change in legal attitude.
-The difference between the old and the new is exemplified by two
-extracts from judicial decisions which were almost contemporaneous.
-Judge Werner, in holding the first New York Workmen’s Compensation Act
-unconstitutional, limited the scope of law as follows:
-
-“This quoted summary of the report of the commission to the
-legislature, which clearly and fairly epitomizes what is more fully set
-forth in the body of the report, is based upon a most voluminous array
-of statistical tables, extracts from the works of philosophical writers
-and the industrial laws of many countries, all of which are designed
-to show that our own system of dealing with industrial accidents
-is economically, morally, and legally unsound. Under our form of
-government, however, courts must regard all economical, philosophical
-and moral theories, attractive and desirable though they may be, as
-subordinate to the primary question whether they can be moulded into
-statutes without infringing upon the letter or spirit of our written
-constitutions.... With these considerations in mind we turn to the
-purely legal phases of the controversy.” (Ives _v._ South Buffalo Ry.
-Co., 201 N. Y. 271, 287, 1911.)
-
-A different attitude was shown by the Supreme Court of the United
-States in its reception of the brief filed by Mr. Louis D. Brandeis
-on behalf of the constitutionality of an Oregon statute limiting
-woman’s work to ten hours a day. Besides decisions, he included the
-legislation of many States and of European countries. Then follow
-extracts from over ninety reports of committees, bureaus of statistics,
-commissioners of hygiene, inspectors of factories, both in this country
-and in Europe, to the effect that long hours of labour are dangerous
-for women, primarily because of their special physical organization.
-Following them are extracts from similar reports discussing the general
-benefits of shorter hours from the economic aspect of the question.
-Justice Brewer said:
-
-“The legislation and opinions referred to in the margin may not
-be, technically speaking, authorities, and in them is little or
-no discussion of the constitutional question presented to us for
-determination, yet they are significant of a widespread belief
-that woman’s physical structure, and the functions she performs in
-consequence thereof, justify special legislation restricting or
-qualifying the conditions under which she should be permitted to
-toil. Constitutional questions, it is true, are not settled by even
-a consensus of present public opinion, for it is a peculiar value of
-a written constitution that it places in unchanging form limitations
-upon legislative action, and thus gives a permanence and stability
-to popular government which otherwise would be lacking. At the same
-time, when a question of fact is debated and debatable, and the extent
-to which a special constitutional limitation goes is affected by the
-truth in respect to that fact, a widespread and long continued belief
-concerning it is worthy of consideration. We take judicial cognizance
-of all matters of general knowledge.” (Muller _v._ Oregon, 208 U. S.
-412, 420, 1907.)
-
-The decision displays two qualities which are characteristic of the
-winning counsel since his elevation to the bench; it keeps its eye
-on the object instead of devoting itself to abstract conceptions,
-and it emphasizes the interest of society in new forms of protection
-against poverty, disease, and other evils. To these social interests,
-the property of the individual must often be partly sacrificed and in
-recent years we have seen the courts upholding the guarantee of bank
-deposits, State regulation of insurance rates, and suspension of the
-right of landlords to recover unreasonable rents or dispossess their
-tenants. All this would have been regarded as impossible fifty years
-ago.
-
-These extensions of governmental power over property have been
-accompanied by legislation severely restricting freedom of discussion
-of still more radical types of State control. It is argued that the
-right of free speech must face limitation like the right of the
-landlord. The true policy is exactly the opposite. Not only is it
-unjust for the State to carry out one form of confiscation while
-severely punishing the discussion of another form, but in an age of
-new social devices the widest liberty for the expression of opinion
-is essential, so that the merits and demerits of any proposed plan may
-be thoroughly known and comparisons made between it and alternative
-schemes, no matter how radical these alternatives may be. A body of law
-that was determined to stand still might discourage thought with no
-serious damage; but law which is determined to move needs the utmost
-possible light so that it may be sure of moving forward.
-
-No one has expressed so well the new importance of social interests,
-and the value of freedom of speech; no one, indeed, has expressed so
-nobly the task and hopes of American Law, as the man of whom it is said
-that among the long list of American judges, he seems “the only one
-who has framed for himself a system of legal ideas and general truths
-of life, and composed his opinions in harmony with the system already
-framed.” (John H. Wigmore, “Justice Holmes and the Law of Torts,” 29
-Harv. L. Rev. 601.) Yet no one has been more cautious than Justice
-Holmes in warning us not to expect too much from law.
-
-“The law, so far as it depends on learning, is indeed, as it has
-been called, the government of the living by the dead. It cannot be
-helped, it is as it should be, that the law is behind the times. As law
-embodies beliefs that have triumphed in the battle of ideas and then
-have translated themselves into action, while there is still doubt,
-while opposite convictions still keep a battle front against each
-other, the time for law has not come; the notion destined to prevail is
-not yet entitled to the field.” (“Collected Legal Papers,” 138, 294.)
-
-It is the work of the present generation of American lawyers to be sure
-that the right side wins in the many conflicts now waging. We cannot
-be certain that the law will make itself rational, while we remain as
-inactive as in the past, absorbed in our own routine, and occasionally
-pausing to say, “All’s right with the world”; for, to quote Holmes
-once more, “The mode in which the inevitable comes to pass is through
-effort.”
-
- ZECHARIAH CHAFEE, JR.
-
-
-
-
-EDUCATION
-
-
-If Henry Adams had lived in the 13th century he would have found
-the centre of a world of unity in the most powerful doctrine of the
-church, the cult of the Virgin Mary. Living in the 19th century he
-sums up his experience in a world of multiplicity as the attempt to
-realize for himself the saving faith of that world in what is called
-education. Adams was not the first to be struck with the similarity of
-the faiths of the mediæval and the modern world. This comparison is
-the subject of an article by Professor Barrett Wendell published in
-the _North American Review_ for 1904 and entitled “The Great American
-Superstition”:
-
- “Undefined and indefinite as it is, the word education is
- just now a magic one; from the Atlantic to the Pacific, it
- is the most potent with which you can conjure money out of
- public chests or private pockets. Let social troubles declare
- themselves anywhere, lynchings, strikes, trusts, immigration,
- racial controversies, whatever you chance to hold most
- threatening, and we are gravely assured on every side that
- education is the only thing which can preserve our coming
- generations from destruction. What is more, as a people we
- listen credulously to these assurances. We are told, and we
- believe and evince magnificent faith in our belief, that our
- national salvation must depend on education.”
-
-Professor Wendell goes on trenchantly to compare this reigning modern
-faith with that in the mediæval church. He calls attention to the
-fact that whereas the dominant architectural monuments of the Old
-World are great cathedrals and religious houses, implying the faith
-that salvation could be assured by unstinted gifts to the church,
-in our modern times the most stately and impressive structures are
-our schools, colleges, and public libraries, many of them, like the
-cathedrals, erected by sinners of wealth in the pursuit of individual
-atonement and social salvation. “Ask any American what we shall do to
-be saved, and if he speak his mind he will probably bid us educate our
-fellow-men.” He might have extended his comparison to the personal
-hierarchy of the two institutions, for at the time of his article
-the President of Harvard spoke to the people of the United States
-with the voice of Innocent III, surrounded by his advisers among
-university presidents and superintendents gathered like Cardinal
-Archbishops, in the conclave of the National Education Association,
-of which the Committee of Ten was a sort of papal curia. Although
-the educational papacy has fallen into schism, the cities are still
-ruled by superintendents like bishops, the colleges by president and
-deans, like abbots and priors, and the whole structure rests on a vast
-population of teachers holding their precarious livings like the parish
-priests at the will of their superiors, tempered by public opinion.
-Indeed, Professor Wendell is struck by the probability that as European
-society was encumbered by the itinerant friars, so America will have
-“its mendicant orders of scholars--the male and female doctors of
-philosophy.” But it is his main theme which concerns us here, that “the
-present mood of our country concerning education is neither more nor
-less than a mood of blind, mediæval superstition.”
-
-The difference between faith as religion and as superstition may be
-hard to define, the terms having become somewhat interchangeable
-through controversy, but in general we should doubtless use the
-pragmatic test. A vital and saving faith which actually justifies
-itself by results is religion; a faith which is without constructive
-effect on character and society, and is merely fanciful, fantastic,
-or degrading we call superstition. The old education which America
-brought from England and inherited from the Renaissance was a
-reasonable faith. It consisted of mathematics, classics, and theology,
-and while it produced, except in rare instances, no mathematicians,
-classical scholars, or theologians, it trained minds for the learned
-professions of those days and it gave the possessors of it intellectual
-distinction, and admitted them to the society of cultivated men
-everywhere. Its authority was largely traditional, but it worked in
-the world of that day much as the thirty-three Masonic degrees do in
-the world of Masonry. It may properly be called a religion, and in its
-rigid, prescribed, dogmatic creed it may be compared to the mediæval
-theology. At any rate, it suffered the same fate and from the same
-cause. Its system was too narrow for the expanding knowledge and the
-multiplying phenomena of the advancing hour. It failed to take account
-of too many things. The authority of tradition, by which it maintained
-its position, was challenged and overthrown, and private judgment was
-set in its place.
-
-Private judgment in education is represented by the elective system;
-President Eliot was the Luther of this movement and Harvard College his
-Wittenberg. Exactly as after the Reformation, however, the attitudes of
-assertion and subservience in spiritual matters continued to manifest
-themselves where the pope had been deposed, in Geneva and Dort and
-Westminster, so in spite of the anarchy of the elective system the
-educational function continues to impose itself in its traditional
-robes of authority, and to be received with the reverence due to long
-custom. And in this way education in America from being a saving faith
-has become an illusion. The old education, its authority challenged,
-its sway limited, and nobody caring whether its followers can quote
-Latin or not, is in the position of the Church of Rome; the so-called
-new education, uncertain in regard to material and method, direction
-and destination, is like the anarchic Protestant sects. Neither
-possesses authority; the old system has lost it, and the new ones have
-never had it. They are alike in depending upon the blindness of the
-masses which is superstition.
-
-Although the generalization remains true that the mood of America
-toward education is a mood of superstition, there are certain forms
-of education operative in America to-day which approve themselves by
-performance and justify the reasonable faith in which they are held.
-The argument in favour of the elective system, by force of which it
-displaced the prescribed classical course, was that it was necessary to
-give opportunity for specialization. This opportunity it has given, and
-in certain directions the results produced by American institutions
-are of high value. Our scientific education is the most advanced, and
-in the professions which depend upon it, engineering and medicine, our
-product doubtless “compares favourably” with that of Europe. These
-facts cannot be cited, however, as a valid reason for the American
-faith in education as a whole. It is recognized to-day that progress
-in natural science has far outrun that in politics, social life,
-culture--therein lies the tragedy of the world. A few men of science
-have a knowledge of the means by which the human race can be destroyed
-in a brief space--and no statesmen, philosophers, or apostles of
-culture have the power to persuade the human race not to permit it to
-be done.
-
-In another direction a great increase of specialization has taken
-place--in the preparation for business. Our colleges of business
-administration rival our scientific schools in the exactness of their
-aim, and the precision of their effort. Here again, however, it may
-be questioned whether their success is one to justify belief in the
-educational process as a whole. The result of such specialization
-upon the business organization of society can hardly be to arouse a
-critical, and hence truly constructive, attitude in regard to the
-whole economic problem; it is nearly certain to promote a disposition
-to take advantage of the manifest shortcomings of that organization
-for individual successful achievement. Whether society as a whole will
-profit by the efforts of such experts as our business colleges are
-turning out remains to be seen. Whether we are wise in strengthening
-the predatory elements which put a strain on the social organization,
-at a time when the whole structure is trembling, is open to question.
-Here again the faith of America in education as social salvation is not
-justified by individual results, however brilliant and fortunate.
-
-The value of the specialist to society is unquestionable, but he
-alone will not save it. Such salvation must come from the diffusion
-and validity of the educational process as a whole, from the men and
-women of active intelligence, broad view, wide sympathy, and resolute
-character who are fitted as a result of it to see life steadily and
-see it whole, reason soundly to firm conclusions in regard to it, and
-hold those decisions in the face of death. The specialist indeed may
-be considered a necessary subtraction from the general social army, a
-person set apart for special duty, whose energies are concentrated and
-loyalties narrowed. We expect him to die, if need be, in maintaining
-that the world moves, but not for freedom of thought in the abstract.
-It is by the generally trained, all-round product of our education that
-the system must be judged. And what do we find?
-
-The general student, it appears, tends to be the product of as narrow
-a process as the specialist, but not as deep. As the demands of
-specialization become more exacting, its requirements reach farther and
-farther back into the field of general education, and more and more of
-the area is restricted to its uses. The general student in consequence
-becomes a specialist in what is left over. Moreover, he exercises his
-right of private judgment and free election along the path of least
-resistance. Laboratory science he abhors as belonging to a course of
-specialization which he has renounced. The classics and mathematics, to
-which a good share of our educational machinery is still by hereditary
-right devoted, he scorns as having no _raison d’être_ except an outworn
-tradition. With the decline of the classics has gone the preliminary
-training for modern languages, which the general student usually
-finds too exacting and burdensome, and from the obligation of which
-colleges and secondary institutions also are now rapidly relieving
-him. We boasted in the late war that we had no quarrel with the German
-language, and yet by our behaviour we recognized that one of the fruits
-of victory was the annihilation of at least one foreign speech within
-our borders. The general student is thus confined, by right of private
-judgment of course, to his own language and literature, and such
-superficial studies in history and social science as he can accomplish
-with that instrument alone. His view is therefore narrow and insular.
-His penetration is slight. He is, in short, a specialist in the obvious.
-
-Not only does the general student tend to be as restricted in
-subject-matter as the specialist, but he lacks the training in
-investigation, reasoning, and concentration which the latter’s
-responsibility for independent research imposes. The definition of
-the aim of general education on which Professor Wendell rested his
-case for the old curriculum in the article quoted above, is “such
-training as shall enable a man to devote his faculties intently to
-matters which of themselves do not interest him.” Now clearly if the
-student persistently chooses only the subjects which interest him,
-and follows them only as far as his interest extends, he escapes all
-training in voluntary attention and concentration. In his natural
-disposition to avoid mental work he finds ready accomplices in his
-instructors and text-book writers. They realize that they are on trial,
-and that interest alone is the basis of the verdict. Accordingly they
-cheerfully assume the burden of preliminary digestion of material,
-leaving to the student the assimilation of so much as his queasy
-stomach can bear. One way in which the study of English literature or
-history can be made a matter of training in criticism and reasoning
-is to send the student to the sources, the original material, and
-hold him responsible for his conclusions. He may gain a wrong or
-inadequate view, but at any rate it is his own, and it affords him a
-solid basis for enlargement or correction. Instead of this the student
-is invited to a set of criticisms and summaries already made, and is
-usually discouraged if by chance he attempts a verification on his own
-account. The actual reading of Shakespeare, Bacon, Milton, Swift, Burke
-will give the student at least a certain training in concentration;
-but this is hard, slow, and dry work. It is much easier and more
-comprehensive, instead of reading one play of Shakespeare, to read
-_about_ all the plays, including the life of the author, his dramatic
-art, and some speculations in regard to the Elizabethan stage. It
-was William James who pointed out the difference between _knowledge
-about_ and _acquaintance with_ an author. The extent to which we have
-substituted for the direct vision, with its stimulating appeal to
-individual reaction, the conventional summary and accepted criticism,
-the official formula and the stereotyped view, is the chief reason for
-the ready-made uniformity of our educated product.
-
-The pioneer democracy of America itself is responsible for a method of
-instruction typically American. The superstitious faith in education
-was the basis of a system whereby many busy, middle-aged persons whose
-early advantages had been limited, by means of attractive summaries,
-outlines, and handbooks, could acquaint themselves with the names of
-men, books, and events which form the Binet-Simon test of culture,
-and enable the initiate to hold up his head in circles where the best
-that has been thought or said in the world is habitually referred to.
-This method is carried out in hundreds of cultural camp-meetings every
-summer, by thousands of popular lectures, in countless programmes of
-study for women’s clubs. Unfortunately it is coming to be not only the
-typical but the only method of general education in America. Chautauqua
-has penetrated the college and the university. Better that our fathers
-had died, their intellectual thirst unsatisfied, than that they had
-left this legacy of mental soft drinks for their children.
-
-Thus far I have had the college chiefly in mind, but the same
-observations apply equally to the secondary school. The elective system
-has made its way thither, and indeed one of the chief difficulties of
-organizing a college curriculum for the general student which shall
-represent something in the way of finding things out, of reasoning from
-facts to conclusions, and of training in voluntary attention, is that
-of determining any common ground on the basis of previous attainment.
-Not only the elective system but the Chautauqua method has largely
-permeated our high schools. The teachers, often on annual appointment,
-more than the college instructors, with comparative security of tenure,
-are dependent on the favour of pupils, a favour to be maintained in
-competition with dances, movies, and _The Saturday Evening Post_, by
-interesting them. It is therefore a common thing for teachers to repeat
-in diluted form the courses which they took in college--and which in
-the original were at best no saturate solutions of the subject. The
-other day, on visiting a class in Shakespeare at a Y.M.C.A. school,
-I ventured to suggest to the teacher that the method used was rather
-advanced. “Ah, but my daughter at high school,” he said, “is having
-Professor Blank’s course in the mediæval drama.” Now such a course
-intended for graduate students investigating sources, influences,
-and variations among saints’ plays and mystery plays, could have no
-educational value in material or method for a high-school pupil, but
-it was, no doubt, as interesting as a Persian tale.
-
-Inasmuch as the colleges and the secondary schools are both uncertain
-as regards the meaning and aim of general education, it is not
-surprising to find the grade schools also at sea, their pupils the
-victims both of meaningless tradition and reckless experiment. The
-tradition of our grade schools, educational experts tell us, was
-brought by Horace Mann from Prussia. There the _Volkschule_ was
-designed for the children of the people, who should be trained with a
-view to remaining in the station in which they had been born. At least,
-it may be conceded, the German designers of the system had a purpose
-in mind, and knew the means to attain it; but both purpose and means
-are strangely at variance with American conditions and ideals. Other
-experts have pointed out the extraordinary retarding of the educational
-process after the first years, when the child learns by a natural
-objective method some of the most difficult processes of physical
-life, accomplishing extraordinary feats of understanding and control;
-and some of the most hopeful experiments in primary education look
-toward continuing this natural method for a longer time. At present the
-principle of regimentation seems to be the most important one in the
-grade school, and as the pace is necessarily that of the slowest, the
-pupils in general have a large amount of slack rope which it is the
-problem of principals and teachers to draw in and coil up. Altogether
-the grade school represents a degree of waste and misdirection which
-would in itself account for the tendencies toward mental caprice or
-stagnation which are evident in the pupils who proceed from it.
-
-Thus the parallel which Professor Wendell established between our
-educational system and the mediæval church would seem to have a certain
-foundation. In the colleges, as in the monasteries, we have a group
-of ascetic specialists, sustained in their labours by an apocalyptic
-vision of a world which they can set on fire, and in which no flesh can
-live; and a mass of idle, pleasure-loving youth of both sexes, except
-where some Abbot Samson arises, with strong-arm methods momentarily
-to reduce them to order and industry. In the high schools, as in the
-cathedrals, we have great congregations inspired by the music, the
-lights, the incense, assisting at a ceremony of which the meaning is
-as little understood as the miracle of the mass. In the grade schools,
-as in the parish churches, we have the humble workers, like Chaucer’s
-poor parson of the town, trying with pathetic endeavour to meet the
-needs and satisfy the desires of their flocks, under conditions of
-an educational and political tyranny no less galling than was the
-ecclesiastical.
-
-But, we may well enquire, whence does this system draw its power to
-impose itself upon the masses?--for even superstition must have a sign
-which the blind can read, and a source of appeal to human nature.
-The answer bears out still further Professor Wendell’s parallel.
-The mediæval church drew its authority from God, and to impose that
-authority upon the masses it invented the method of propaganda. It
-claimed to be able to release men from the burden which oppressed them
-most heavily, their sins, and in conjunction with the secular power
-it enforced its claims against all gainsayers, treating the obstinate
-among them with a series of penalties, penance, excommunication, the
-stake. Education finds its authority in the human reason, and likewise
-imposes that authority by propaganda. It too claims the power of
-salvation from the evils which oppress men most sorely to-day--the
-social maladjustments, “lynchings, strikes, trusts, immigration,
-racial controversies”--and it is in alliance with the secular power
-to preserve its monopoly of social remedies from the competition of
-anything like direct action. Now it is clear that in the religion
-of Christ in its pure form the church had a basis for its claims to
-possess a power against sin, and a means of salvation. Similarly
-it may be maintained that human reason, allowed to act freely and
-disinterestedly, would be sufficient to cope with the evils of our
-time and bring about a social salvation. Indeed, it is curious to
-remark how nearly the intellectual conclusions of reason have come to
-coincide with the intuitive wisdom of Jesus. The church was faithless
-to its mission by alliance with temporal power, by substituting its
-own advancement for the will of God, by becoming an end in itself.
-Education likewise is by way of being faithless to itself, by alliance
-with secular power, political and financial, by the substitution of its
-own institutional advancement for disinterested service of truth, by
-becoming likewise an end in itself.
-
-In one of the most remarkable pronouncements of the present
-commencement season, President Hopkins of Dartmouth College summarized
-the influences which make against what he calls Verihood. They are
-first, Insufficiency of mentality, or over-professionalization of
-point of view; second, Inertia of mentality or closed mindedness; and
-third, False emphasis of mentality or propaganda. The late war and
-its evil aftermath have put in high relief the extent of this third
-influence. President Hopkins speaks as one of the Cardinal Archbishops
-of Education, and I quote his words with the authority which his
-personality and position give them:
-
- “Now that the war is passed, the spirit of propaganda still
- remains in the reluctance with which is returned to an
- impatient people the ancient right of access to knowledge
- of the truth, the right of free assembly, and the right of
- freedom of speech. Meanwhile the hesitancy with which these
- are returned breeds in large groups vague suspicion and
- acrimonious distrust of that which is published as truth, and
- which actually is true, so that on all sides we hear the query
- whether we are being indulged with what is considered good for
- us, or with that which constitutes the facts. Thus we impair
- the validity of truth and open the door and give opportunity
- for authority which is not justly theirs to be ascribed to
- falsehood and deceit.”
-
-The war was a test which showed how feeble was the hold of American
-education upon the principle which alone can give it validity. Nowhere
-was the suppression of freedom of mind, of truth, so energetic, so
-vindictive as in the schools. Instances crowd upon the mind. I remember
-attending the trial of a teacher before a committee of the New York
-School Board, the point being whether his reasons for not entering
-with his class upon a discussion of the Soviet government concealed
-a latent sympathy with that form of social organization. The pupils
-were ranged in two groups, Jews and Gentiles, and were summoned in
-turn to give their testimony--they had previously been educated in
-the important functions of modern American society, espionage, and
-mass action. Another occasion is commemorated by the New York _Evening
-Post_, the teacher being on trial for disloyalty and the chief count in
-his indictment that he desired an early peace; and his accuser, one Dr.
-John Tildsley, an Archdeacon or superintendent of the diocese of New
-York under Bishop Ettinger:
-
- “Are you interested in having this man discharged?”
-
- “I am,” said Dr. Tildsley.
-
- “Do you know of any act that would condemn him as a teacher?”
-
- “Yes,” said Dr. Tildsley, “he favoured an early peace.”
-
- “Don’t you want an early, victorious peace?”
-
- “Why ask me a question like that?”
-
- “Because I want to show you how unfair you have been to this
- teacher.”
-
- “But Mr. Mufson wanted an early peace without victory,” said
- Dr. Tildsley.
-
- “He didn’t say that, did he? He did not say an early peace
- without victory?”
-
- “No.”
-
- “Then you don’t want an early peace, do you?”
-
- “No.”
-
- “You want a prolongation of all this world misery?”
-
- “To a certain extent, yes,” said Dr. Tildsley.
-
-Nor did the sabotage of truth stop with school boards and
-superintendents. A colleague of mine writing a chapter of a text-book
-in modern history made the statement that the British government
-entered the war because of an understanding with France, the invasion
-of Belgium being the pretext which appealed to popular enthusiasm--to
-which a great publishing house responded that this statement would
-arouse much indignation among the American people, and must therefore
-be suppressed.
-
-We need not be surprised that since the war education has not shown
-a disinterested and impartial attitude toward the phenomena of human
-affairs, a reliance on the method of trial and error, of experiment
-and testimony, which it has evolved. Teachers who are openly, or even
-latently, in sympathy with a form of social organization other than
-the régime of private control of capital are banned from schools and
-colleges with candle, with book, and with bell. Text-books which do not
-agree with the convenient view of international relations are barred.
-Superintendents like Ettinger and Tildsley in New York are the devoted
-apologists for the system to which they owe their greatness. To its
-position among the vested interests of the world, to the prosperity of
-its higher clergy, education has sacrificed its loyalty to that which
-alone can give it authority.
-
-The prevention of freedom of thought and enquiry is of course necessary
-so long as the purpose of education is to produce belief rather than
-to stimulate thought. The belief which it is the function of education
-to propagate is that in the existing order. Hence we find the vast
-effort known as “Americanization,” which is for the most part a
-perfect example of American education at the present day. The spirit
-of “Americanization” is to consider the individual not with reference
-to his inward growth of mind and spirit, but solely with a view to his
-worldly success, and his relation to the existing order of society,
-to which it is considered that the individual will find his highest
-happiness and usefulness in contributing. This programme naturally
-enough finds a sponsor in the American Legion, but it is truly
-disconcerting to find the National Education Association entering into
-alliance with this super-legal body, appointing a standing committee
-to act in co-operation with the Legion throughout the year, accepting
-the offer of the Legion to give lectures in the schools, and endorsing
-the principle of the Lusk Law in New York, which imposes the test of an
-oath of allegiance to the Government as a requirement for a teacher’s
-certificate.
-
-We have now the chief reason why education remains the dominant
-superstition of our time; but one may still wonder how an institution
-which is apparently so uncertain of its purpose and methods can
-continue to exercise such influence on the minds and hearts of men.
-The answer is, of course, that education is not in the least doubtful
-of its purpose and methods. Though the humble and obscure teacher,
-like the Lollard parson, may puzzle his brains about the why and how
-and purpose of his being here, his superiors, the bishops, the papal
-curia, know the reason. Education is the propaganda department of the
-State, and the existing social system. Its resolute insistence upon
-the essential rightness of things as they are, coupled with its modest
-promise to reform them if necessary, is the basis of the touching
-confidence with which it is received. It further imposes itself upon
-the credulity of the people by the magnificence of its establishment.
-The academic splendour of the commencement season when the hierarchs
-bestow their favours, and honour each other and their patrons by higher
-degrees, is of enormous value in impressing the public. Especially
-to the uneducated does this majesty appeal. That an institution
-which holds so fair an outlook on society, which is on such easy and
-sympathetic terms with all that is important in the nation, which
-commands the avenues by which men go forward in the world, should be
-able to guarantee success in life to its worshippers is nothing at
-which to be surprised. Hence we find the poor of different grades
-making every sacrifice to send sons and daughters through high school,
-through college, in the same pathetic faith with which they once burned
-candles to win respite for the souls of their dead.
-
-There are reasons, however, for thinking that the superstition is
-passing. In the first place, nowhere do we find more scepticism in
-regard to the pretensions of education than among those who have been
-educated, and this number is rapidly increasing. In the second place,
-the alliance between education and a social system depending on private
-capital is too obvious, and the abrogation of the true functions of the
-former is too complete. The so-called Americanization campaign is so
-crude an attempt to put something over that even the unsophisticated
-foreigner whom it is intended to impress watches the pictures or reads
-the pamphlets which set forth the happy estate of the American workman,
-with his tongue in his cheek. The social groups which feel aggrieved
-under the present order are marking their defection by seceding from
-the educational system and setting up labour universities of their own.
-So serious is this secession that New York has passed the Lusk Law,
-designed to bring the independent movement under State control. In the
-third place, the claim of education to be an open sesame to success in
-life is contradicted by the position of its most constant votaries, the
-teachers. The prestige which used to attach to the priests of learning
-and which placed them above the lure of riches has vanished; their
-economic station has declined until even college professors have fallen
-into the servantless class, which means the proletariat. Truly for such
-as they to declare that education means success in life is a dismal
-paradox.
-
-Another sign of approaching reformation in the educational system is
-to be found in the frankly corrupt practices which infest it. Here the
-parallel to the mediæval church is not exact, for in the latter it was
-the monasteries and religious houses that were the chief sources of
-offence, while the colleges and private institutions of higher learning
-which correspond to them are singularly free from anything worse
-than wasteful internal politics. It is the public educational system
-which by reason of its contact with political government partakes
-most palpably of the corruption that attends the democratic State.
-It is unnecessary to mention the forms which this corruption takes
-where a school board of trustees by political appointment is given
-the exploitation of the schools--the favouritism in appointments and
-promotions, the graft in text-books and equipment, the speculation in
-real estate and building contracts, the alienation of school property.
-There is scarcely a large city in the country in which pupils and
-teachers alike are not shamefully and scandalously defrauded by action
-of school trustees which can be characterized in the mildest terms as
-wilful mismanagement conducing to private profit.
-
-There are two things necessary to the reform of education. One is
-democratic control, that is, management of institutions of teaching by
-the teachers. It is to be noted that this is the demand everywhere of
-labour which respects itself--control of the means of production and
-responsibility for the result. Surely the teachers should be one of the
-first groups of toilers to be so trusted. Under democratic control the
-spoliation of the schools by politicians, the sacrifice of education
-to propaganda, the tyranny of the hierarchy can be successfully
-resisted. Once the teachers are released from servile bondage to the
-public through the political masters who control appointments and
-promotions, they will deal with their problems with more authority,
-and be independent of the suffrage of the pupils. Through joint
-responsibility of the workers for the product they will arrive at that
-_esprit de corps_ which consists in thinking in terms of the enterprise
-rather than of the job, and from which we may expect a true method of
-education. Already the movement toward democratic control of teaching
-is taking form in school systems and colleges. There are a hundred and
-fifty unions of teachers affiliated with the American Federation of
-Labour. But the true analogy is not between teachers and labour, but
-between education and other professions. To quote Dr. H. M. Kallen:
-
- “To the discoverers and creators of Knowledge, and to its
- transmitters and distributors, to these and to no one else
- beside belongs the control of education. It is as absurd
- that any but teachers and investigators should govern the
- art of education as that any but medical practitioners and
- investigators should govern the art of medicine.”
-
-The other thing needful to restore education to health and usefulness
-is that it should surrender its hold upon the superstitious adoration
-of the public, by giving up its pretensions to individual or social
-salvation, by ceasing its flattery of nationalistic and capitalistic
-ambitions, and by laying aside its pomps and ceremonies which conduce
-mainly to sycophancy and cant. Education has shown in special lines
-that it can be thoroughly scientific, disinterested, devoted. It is
-its task to translate these virtues of the specialist into the general
-field. It is not the business of education to humbug the people in
-the interest of what any person may think to be for their or for his
-advantage. It is its business to deal frankly and honestly with them,
-accepting in the most literal sense the responsibility and the promise
-contained in the text: “Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall
-make you free.”
-
- ROBERT MORSS LOVETT
-
-
-
-
-SCHOLARSHIP AND CRITICISM
-
-
-It is natural for the musician to think any land barbarous if it
-has produced no great composers, the painter if it has produced no
-great painters, the critic or the scholar if it has produced no great
-scholars and critics, and so on for all the other arts and sciences.
-But it is idle to insist that every race should express itself in the
-same way, or to assume that the genius of a nation can be tested by
-its deficiencies in any single field of the higher life. Great critics
-are rare in every age and country; and even if they were not, what
-consolation is there for the clash and diversity of races and nations
-except the special and diverse gifts which each may furnish to the
-spiritual whole? England has achieved greatness without great music,
-Germany without great sculpture, ancient Rome without great science or
-philosophy, Judæa with little but poetry and religion; and it is not
-necessary to lay too much stress on our own lack of great scholars and
-great critics--yes, even on our lack of great poets and great painters.
-They may come to-day or to-morrow, or we may be destined never to have
-them. The idea that great national energy must inevitably flower in a
-great literature, and that our wide-flung power must certainly find
-expression in an immortal poem or in the “great American novel,” is
-merely another example of our mechanical optimism. The vision of great
-empires that have been both strong and silent, Assyria, Babylonia,
-Egypt, haunts all history; Virgil or Camoens only fitfully expresses
-the power that is summed up in Cæsar or Magellan.
-
-But without insisting on impossible aims or illusory standards of
-greatness, it is fair to ask some flow of spiritual activity, some
-general spirit of diffused culture,--in a word, the presence of a soul.
-For though we must eat (and common sense will cook better dinners than
-philosophy), though we must work (and the captain of industry can
-organize trade better than the poet), though we must play (and the
-athlete can win more games than the scholar), the civilization that
-has no higher outlets for its intellect and imagination will show at
-least some marks of spiritual starvation. You may see the signs of its
-restless gnawing on the face of almost any American woman beyond the
-first flush of youth; you may see some shadow of its hopeless craving
-on the face of almost any mature American man.
-
-The same signs are to be seen in American scholarship and American
-criticism. If scholarship were what most people think it, the dull
-learning of pedants, and criticism merely the carping and bickering
-of fault-finders, the fact would hardly be worth recording. But since
-they are instruments which the mind of man uses for some of its keenest
-questionings, their absence or their weakness must indicate something
-at least in the national life and character which it is not unimportant
-to understand.
-
-
-I
-
-The tradition of scholarship, like so many other things, comes to us
-from what used to be called the Renaissance, the period (it may not
-be ironical to be reminded) in which the Americas were discovered
-and explored; and whatever savour of distinction inheres in the idea
-of “the gentleman and the scholar” was created then. Scholarship at
-first meant merely a knowledge of the classics, and though it has
-since widened its scope, even then the diversity of its problems was
-apparent, for the classical writers had tilled many fields of human
-knowledge, and the student of Homer and Virgil was really faced with a
-different problem from the student of Plato or Thucydides. Scholarship
-has never been a reality, a field that could be bounded and defined
-in the sense in which poetry, philosophy, and history can be. It is
-a point of view, an attitude, a method of approach, and, so far as
-its meaning and purpose can be captured, it may be said to be the
-discipline and illumination that come from the intellectual mastery of
-a definite problem involved in the growth of the human spirit.
-
-Scholarship, conceived in this sense, has no history (though dull and
-learned hodge-podges have served as such), for it is a spirit diffused
-over various fields of study; and in America this spirit has scarcely
-even come into existence. American Universities seem to have been
-created for the special purpose of ignoring or destroying it. The
-chief monuments of American scholarship have seldom if ever come from
-men who have been willing to live their whole lives in an academic
-atmosphere. The men whom we think of as our foremost literary scholars,
-Gildersleeve, Norton, and the rest, acquired their fame rather through
-their personalities than their scholarly achievements. The historians,
-Motley, Prescott, Bancroft, Parkman, Rhodes, Lea, Fiske, Mahan, were
-not professors; books like Taylor’s “Mediæval Mind,” Henry Adams’s
-“Mont Saint Michel and Chartres,” Thayer’s “Cavour,” Villard’s “John
-Brown,” and Beveridge’s “John Marshall,” even Ticknor’s “History of
-Spanish Literature,” were not written within University walls, though
-Ticknor’s sixteen years of teaching tamed the work of a brilliant
-man of the world until there is little left save the characteristic
-juiceless virtue of an intelligent ordering of laborious research. It
-would seem as if in the atmosphere of our Universities personality
-could not find fruitage in scholarly achievement worthy of it, and
-learning can only thrive when it gives no hostages to the enemy,
-personality.
-
-Of the typical products of this academic system, the lowest is
-perhaps the literary dissertation and the highest the historical
-manual or text-book. It may be because history is not my own special
-field of study that I seem to find its practitioners more vigorous
-intellectually than the literary scholars. Certainly our historians
-seem to have a special aptitude for compiling careful summaries of
-historical periods, and some of these have an ordered reasonableness
-and impersonal efficiency not unlike that of the financial accounting
-system of our large trusts or the budgets of our large universities.
-To me most of them seem feats of historical engineering rather than of
-historical scholarship; and if they represent a scholarly “advance” on
-older and less accurate work, written before Clio became a peon of the
-professors, it can only be said that history has not yet recovered from
-the advance. Nor am I as much impressed as the historians themselves
-by the more recent clash between the “old” school and the “new,” for
-both seem to me equally lacking in a truly philosophic conception
-of the meaning of history. Yet there is among the younger breed a
-certain freshness of mind and an openness to new ideas, though less to
-the problems of human personality or to the emotional and spiritual
-values of man’s life. This deficiency is especially irritating in the
-field of biography. Not even an American opera (_corruptio optimi_)
-is as wooden as the biographies of our statesmen and national heroes;
-and if American lives written by Englishmen have been received with
-enthusiasm, it was less because of any inherent excellence than because
-they at least conceived of Hamilton or Lincoln as a man and not as an
-historical document or a political platitude.
-
-But literary scholarship is in far worse plight in our Universities.
-No great work of classical learning has ever been achieved by an
-American scholar. It may be unfair to suggest comparison with men like
-Gilbert Murray, Croiset, or Wilamowitz; but how can we be persuaded
-by the professors or even by a dean that all culture will die if we
-forget Greek and Latin, until they satisfy us by their own work that
-they themselves are alive? Asia beckons to us with the hand of Fate,
-but Oriental scholarship is a desert through which a few nomadic
-professors wander aimlessly. As to the literatures in the modern
-European tongues, Dante scholarship has perhaps the oldest and most
-respectable tradition, but on examination dwindles into its proper
-proportions: an essay by Lowell and translations by Longfellow and
-Norton pointed the way; a Dante Society has nursed it; and its modern
-fruits, with one or two honourable exceptions, are a few unilluminating
-articles and text-books. Ticknor’s pioneer work in the Spanish field
-has had no successors, though Spanish America is at our doors; the
-generous subsidies of rich men have resulted as usual in buildings
-but not in scholarship. Of the general level of our French and German
-studies I prefer to say nothing; and silence is also wisest in the
-case of English. This field fairly teems with professors; Harvard has
-twice as many as Oxford and Cambridge combined, and the University of
-Chicago almost as many as the whole of England. Whether this plethora
-of professors has justified itself, either by distinguished works of
-scholarship or by helping young America to love literature and to write
-good English, I shall not decide, but leave entirely to their own
-conscience. This at least may be said, that the mole is not allowed
-to burrow in his hole without disturbance; for in this atmosphere, as
-a protest and counterfoil, or as a token of submission to the idols
-of the market-place, there has arisen a very characteristic academic
-product,--the professor who writes popular articles, sometimes clever,
-sometimes precious, sometimes genteel and refined, sometimes merely
-commonplace, but almost always devoid of real knowledge or stimulating
-thought. Even the sober pedant is a more humane creature than the
-professorial smart-Aleck.
-
-Whence arises this inhibition of mediocrity, this fear of personality
-and intellect, this deep antinomy of pedant and dilettante? The
-“fear-of-giving-themselves-away disease” which affected the professors
-of the Colleges of Unreason in “Erewhon” is mildly endemic in every
-University in the world, and to a certain degree in every profession;
-but nowhere else does it give the tone to the intellectual life of
-a whole people. If I were a sociologist, confident that the proper
-search would unearth an external cause for every spiritual defect, I
-might point to any one of a dozen or more damning facts as the origin
-and source of all our trouble,--to the materialism of a national
-life directed solely toward practical ends, to the levelling and
-standardizing influences of democracy, to Anglo-Saxon “Colonialism,”
-to the influence of German erudition, or to the inadequate economic
-rewards of the academic life. I should probably make much of that
-favourite theme of critical fantasy, the habits derived from the “age
-of the pioneers,” a period in which life, with its mere physical
-discomforts and its mere demands on physical energy and endurance, was
-really so easy and simple that Americans attempt to reproduce it on all
-their holidays.
-
-But in so far as they have any reality, all these are merely symptoms
-of the same disease of the soul. The modern sanatorium may be likened
-to the mediæval monastery without its spiritual faith; the American
-University to a University without its inner illumination. It is an
-intellectual refuge without the integration of a central soul,--crassly
-material because it has no inner standards to redeem it from the idols
-of the market-place, or timid and anæmic because it lacks that quixotic
-fire which inheres in every act of faith. It is at one and the same
-time our greatest practical achievement and our greatest spiritual
-failure. To call it a compound of sanatorium and machine-shop may seem
-grossly unfair to an institution which has more than its share of
-earnest and high-minded men; but though the phrase may not describe the
-reality, it does indicate the danger. When we find that in such a place
-education does not educate, we cry for help to the only gods we know,
-the restless gods of Administration and Organization; but scholarship
-cannot be organized or administered into existence, even by Americans.
-
-What can we say (though it seem to evade the question) save that
-America has no scholarship because as yet it has a body but no soul?
-The scholar goes through all the proper motions,--collects facts,
-organizes research, delivers lectures, writes articles and sometimes
-books,--but under this outer seeming there is no inner reality. Under
-all the great works of culture there broods the quivering soul of
-tradition, a burden sometimes disturbing and heavy to bear, but more
-often helping the soul to soar on wings not of its own making. We think
-hungrily that the freshness of outlook of a young people should be more
-than compensation; but the freshness is not there. Bad habits long
-persisted in, or new vices painfully acquired, may pass for traditions
-among some spokesmen of “Americanism,” but will not breathe the breath
-of life into a national culture. All is shell, mask, and a deep inner
-emptiness. We have scholars without scholarship, as there are churches
-without religion.
-
-Until there comes a change of heart or a new faith or a deep inner
-searching, scholarship must continue to live this thwarted and
-frustrated life. Only a profound realization of its high purpose and
-special function, and the pride that comes from this realization,
-can give the scholar his true place in an American world. For this
-special function is none other than to act as the devoted servant
-of thought and imagination and to champion their claims as the twin
-pillars that support all the spiritual activities of human life,--art,
-philosophy, religion, science; and these it must champion against all
-the materialists under whatever name they disguise their purpose.
-What matter whether they be scientists who decry “dialectics,” or
-sociologists who sneer at “mere belles-lettres,” or practical men who
-have no use for the “higher life”? Whether they be called bourgeois
-or radical, conservative or intellectual,--all who would reduce life
-to a problem of practical activity and physical satisfaction, all who
-would reduce intellect and imagination to mere instruments of practical
-usefulness, all who worship dead idols instead of living gods, all who
-grasp at every flitting will-o’-the-wisp of theory or sensation,--all
-these alike scholarship must forever recognize as its enemies, and its
-chief tempters.
-
-
-II
-
-Scholarship, so conceived, is the basis of criticism. When a few years
-ago I published a volume which bore the subtitle of “Essays on the
-Unity of Genius and Taste,” the pedants and the professors were in the
-ascendant, and it seemed necessary to emphasize the side of criticism
-which was then in danger, the side that is closest to the art of
-the creator. But the professors have been temporarily routed by the
-dilettanti, the amateurs, and the journalists, who treat a work of the
-imagination as if they were describing fireworks or a bull-fight (to
-use a phrase of Zola’s about Gautier); and so it is necessary now to
-insist on the discipline and illumination of scholarship,--in other
-Words, to write an “Essay on the Divergence of Criticism and Creation.”
-
-American criticism, like that of England, but to an even greater
-extent, suffers from a want of philosophic insight and precision. It
-has neither inherited nor created a tradition of æsthetic thought.
-For it every critical problem is a separate problem, a problem in
-a philosophic vacuum, and so open for discussion to any astute
-mind with a taste for letters. Realism, classicism, romanticism,
-imagism, impressionism, expressionism, and other terms or movements
-as they spring up, seem ultimate realities instead of matters of
-very subordinate concern to any philosophy of art,--mere practical
-programmes which bear somewhat the same relation to æsthetic truth that
-the platform of the Republican Party bears to Aristotle’s “Politics”
-or Marx’s “Capital.” As a result, critics are constantly carrying
-on a guerilla warfare of their own in favour of some vague literary
-shibboleth or sociological abstraction, and discovering anew the
-virtues or vices of individuality, modernity, Puritanism, the romantic
-spirit or the spirit of the Middle West, the traditions of the pioneer,
-and so on ad infinitum. This holds true of every school of American
-criticism, “conservative” or “radical”; for all of them a disconnected
-body of literary theories takes the place of a real philosophy of art.
-“Find an idea and then write about it” sums up the American conception
-of criticism. Now, while the critic must approach a work of literature
-without preconceived notion of what that individual work should
-attempt, he cannot criticize it without some understanding of what
-all literature attempts. The critic without an æsthetic is a mariner
-without chart, compass, or knowledge of navigation; for the question is
-not where the ship should go or what cargo it should carry, but whether
-it is going to arrive at any port at all without sinking.
-
-Criticism is essentially an expression of taste, or that faculty of
-imaginative sympathy by which the reader or spectator is able to
-re-live the vision created by the artist. This is the soil without
-which it cannot flourish; but it attains its end and becomes criticism
-in the highest sense only when taste is guided by knowledge and
-thought. Of these three elements, implicit in all real criticism, the
-professors have made light of taste, and have made thought itself
-subservient to knowledge, while the dilettanti have considered it
-possible to dispense with both knowledge and thought. But even
-dilettante criticism is preferable to the dogmatic and intellectualist
-criticism of the professors, on the same grounds that Sainte-Beuve
-is superior to Brunetière, or Hazlitt to Francis Jeffrey; for the
-dilettante at least meets the mind of the artist on the plane of
-imagination and taste, while the intellectualist or moralist is
-precluded by his temperament and his theories from ever understanding
-the primal thrill and purpose of the creative act.
-
-Back of any philosophy of art there must be a philosophy of life, and
-all æsthetic formulæ seem empty unless there is richness of content
-behind them. The critic, like the poet or the philosopher, has the
-whole world to range in, and the farther he ranges in it, the better
-his work will be. Yet this does not mean that criticism should focus
-its attention on morals, history, life, instead of on the forms into
-which the artist transforms them. Art has something else to give us;
-and to seek morals, or economic theories, or the national spirit in
-it is to seek morals, economic theories, the national spirit, but not
-art. Indeed, the United States is the only civilized country where
-morals are still in controversy so far as creative literature is
-concerned; France, Germany, and Italy liberated themselves from this
-faded obsession long ago; even in England critics of authority hesitate
-to judge a work of art by moral standards. Yet this is precisely what
-divides the two chief schools of American criticism, the moralists and
-the anti-moralists, though even among the latter masquerade some whose
-only quarrel with the moralists is the nature of the moral standards
-employed.
-
-Disregarding the Coleridgean tradition, which seems to have come to
-an end with Mr. Woodberry, and the influence of the “new psychology,”
-which has not yet taken a definite form, the main forces that have
-influenced the present clashes in the American attitude toward
-literature seem to be three. There is first of all the conception of
-literature as a moral influence, a conception which goes back to the
-Græco-Roman rhetoricians and moralists, and after pervading English
-thought from Sidney to Matthew Arnold, finds its last stronghold to-day
-among the American descendants of the Puritans. There is, secondly,
-the Shavian conception of literature as the most effective vehicle for
-a new _Weltanschauung_, to be judged by the novelty and freshness of
-its ideas, a conception particularly attractive to the school of young
-reformers, radicals, and intellectuals whose interest in the creative
-imagination is secondary, and whose training in æsthetic thought has
-been negligible; this is merely an obverse of the Puritan moralism, and
-is tainted by the same fundamental misconception of the meaning of the
-creative imagination. And there is finally the conception of literature
-as an external thing, a complex of rhythms, charm, beauty without
-inner content, or mere theatrical effectiveness, which goes back
-through the English ’nineties to the French ’seventies, when the idea
-of the independence of art from moral and intellectual standards was
-distorted into the merely mechanical theory of “art for art’s sake”;
-the French have a special talent for narrowing æsthetic truths into
-hard-and-fast formulæ, devoid of their original nucleus of philosophic
-reality, but all the more effective on this account for universal
-conquest as practical programmes.
-
-The apparent paradox which none of these critics face is that the
-_Weltanschauung_ of the creative artist, his moral convictions, his
-views on intellectual, economic, and other subjects, furnish the
-content of his work and are at the same time the chief obstacles to his
-artistic achievement. Out of morals or philosophy he has to make, not
-morals or philosophy, but poetry; for morals and philosophy are only
-a part, and a small part, of the whole reality which his imagination
-has to encompass. The man who is overwhelmed with moral theories and
-convictions would naturally find it easiest to become a moralist,
-and moralists are prosaic, not poetic. A man who has strong economic
-convictions would find it easiest to become an economist or economic
-reformer, and economics too is the prose of life, not the poetry. A
-man with a strong philosophic bias would find it easiest to become a
-pure thinker, and the poet’s visionary world topples when laid open
-to the cold scrutiny of logic. A poet is a human being, and therefore
-likely to have convictions, prejudices, preconceptions, like other men;
-but the deeper his interest in them is, the easier it is for him to
-become a moralist, economist, philosopher, or what not, and the harder
-for him to transcend them and to become a poet. But if the genius of
-the poet (and by poet I mean any writer of imaginative literature) is
-strong enough, it will transcend them, pass over them by the power of
-the imagination, which leaves them behind without knowing it. It has
-been well said that morals are one reality, a poem is another reality,
-and the illusion consists in thinking them one and the same. The poet’s
-conscience as a man may be satisfied by the illusion, but woe to him
-if it is not an illusion, for that is what we tell him when we say,
-“He is a moralist, not a poet.” Such a man has really expressed his
-moral convictions, instead of leaping over and beyond them into that
-world of the imagination where moral ideas must be interpreted from
-the standpoint of poetry, or the artistic needs of the characters
-portrayed, and not by the logical or reality value of morals.
-
-This “leaping over” is the test of all art; it is inherent in the very
-nature of the creative imagination. It explains, for example, how
-Milton the moralist started out to make Satan a demon and how Milton
-the poet ended by making him a hero. It explains the blindness of the
-American critic who recently objected to the “loose thinking” of a
-poem of Carl Sandburg in which steel is conceived of as made of smoke
-and blood, and who propounded this question to the Walrus and the
-Carpenter: “How can smoke, the lighter refuse of steel, be one of its
-constituents, and how can the smoke which drifts away from the chimney
-and the blood which flows in the steelmaker’s veins be correlates in
-their relation to steel?” Where shall we match this precious gem? Over
-two centuries ago, Othello’s cry after the death of Desdemona,
-
- “O heavy hour,
- Methinks it should now be a huge eclipse
- Of sun and moon!”
-
-provoked another intellectualist critic to enquire whether “the sun
-and moon can both together be so hugely eclipsed in any one heavy hour
-whatsoever;” but Rymer has been called “the worst critic that ever
-lived” for applying tests like these to the poetry of Shakespeare.
-Over a century ago a certain Abbé Morellet, unmoved by the music of
-Chateaubriand’s description of the moon,--
-
- “She pours forth in the woods this great secret of melancholy
- which she loves to recount to the old oaks and the ancient
- shores of the sea,”--
-
-asked his readers: “How can the melancholy of night be called a secret;
-and if the moon recounts it, how is it still a secret; and how does she
-manage to recount it to the old oaks and the ancient shores of the sea
-rather than to the deep valleys, the mountains, and the rivers?”
-
-These are simply exaggerations of the inevitable consequence of
-carrying over the mood of actual life into the world of the
-imagination. “Sense, sense, nothing but sense!” cried a great Austrian
-poet, “as if poetry in contrast with prose were not always a kind of
-divine nonsense. Every poetic image bears within itself its own certain
-demonstration that logic is not the arbitress of art.” And Alfieri
-spoke for every poet in the world when he said of himself, “Reasoning
-and judging are for me only pure and generous forms of feeling.” The
-trained economist, philosopher, or moralist, examining the ideas of a
-poet, is always likely to say: “These are not clearly thought out or
-logical ideas; they are just a poet’s fancy or inspiration;” and that
-is the final praise of the poet. If the expert finds a closely reasoned
-treatise we may be sure that we shall find no poetry. It is a vision of
-reality, and not reality, imagination and not thought or morals, that
-the artist gives us; and his spiritual world, with all that it means
-for the soaring life of man, fades and disappears when we bring to it
-no other test than the test of reality.
-
-These are some of the elementary reasons why those who demand of the
-poet a definite code of morals or manners--“American ideals,” or
-“Puritanism,” or on the other side, “radical ideas”--seem to me to
-show their incompetence as critics. How can we expect illumination
-from those who share the “typical American business man’s” inherent
-inability to live in the world of fantasy which the poets have created,
-without the business man’s ability to face the external facts of life
-and mould them to his will? These men are schoolmasters, pedants,
-moralists, policemen, but neither critics nor true lovers of the
-spiritual food that art provides. To the creative writers of America
-I should give a wholly different message from theirs. I should say to
-them: “Express what is in you, all that serene or turbulent vision of
-multitudinous life which is yours by right of imagination, trusting
-in your own power to achieve discipline and mastery, and leave
-the discussion of ‘American ideals’ to statesmen, historians, and
-philosophers, with the certainty that if you truly express the vision
-that is in you, the statesmen, historians, and philosophers of the
-future will point to your work as a fine expression of the ‘American
-ideals’ you have helped to create.”
-
-But it is no part of the critic’s duty to lay down laws for the
-guidance of the creator, though he may have insight enough to foresee
-some of the directions which literature is likely to take. He may even
-point out new material for the imagination of poets to feed on,--the
-beautiful folklore of our native Indians, the unplumbed depths of the
-Negro’s soul, the poetry and wisdom of Asia (which it may be our chief
-destiny to interpret for the nations of Europe), the myth and story
-of the hundred races that are to make up the new America, and all the
-undiscovered coigns and crannies of our national life. I shall not say
-that these services are extraneous and unimportant, like furnishing
-the fountain-pen with which a great poem is written; but incursions
-into the geography of the imagination are incidental to the critic’s
-main duty of interpreting literature and making its meaning and purpose
-clear to all who wish to love and understand it.
-
-The first need of American criticism to-day is education in æsthetic
-thinking. It needs above all the cleansing and stimulating power of
-an intellectual bath. Only the drenching discipline that comes from
-intellectual mastery of the problems of æsthetic thought can train us
-for the duty of interpreting the American literature of the future. The
-anarchy of impressionism is a natural reaction against the mechanical
-theories and jejune text-books of the professors, but it is a temporary
-haven and not a home. The haphazard empiricism of English criticism and
-the faded moralism of our own will serve us no more. We must desert
-these muddy waters, and seek purer and deeper streams. In a country
-where philosophers urge men to cease thinking, it may be the task of
-the critic to revivify and reorganize thought. Only in this way can we
-gain what America lacks, the brain-illumined soul.
-
-The second need of American criticism can be summed up in the word
-scholarship--that discipline of knowledge which will give us at one
-and the same time a wider international outlook and a deeper national
-insight. One will spring from the other, for the timid Colonial
-spirit finds no place in the heart of the citizen of the world; and
-respect for native talent, born of a surer knowledge, will prevent
-us alike from overrating its merits and from holding it too cheap.
-Half-knowledge is either too timid or too cocksure; and only out of
-this spiritual discipline can come a true independence of judgment and
-taste.
-
-For taste is after all both the point of departure and the goal;
-and the third and greatest need of American criticism is a deeper
-sensibility, a more complete submission to the imaginative will of the
-artist, before attempting to rise above it into the realm of judgment.
-If there is anything that American life can be said to give least of
-all, it is training in taste. There is a deadness of artistic feeling,
-which is sometimes replaced or disguised by a fervour of sociological
-obsession, but this is no substitute for the faculty of imaginative
-sympathy which is at the heart of all criticism. When the social
-historian is born, the critic dies; for taste, or æsthetic enjoyment,
-is the only gateway to the critic’s judgment, and over it is a flaming
-signpost, “Critic, abandon all hope when this gate is shut.”
-
- “To ravish Beauty with dividing powers
- Is to let exquisite essences escape.”
-
-Only out of the fusion of these three elements of taste, intellect, and
-knowledge can American criticism gain what in one of its manifestations
-is called “personality” and in another “style.” Only in this way can
-it win in the battle against the benumbing chaos and the benumbing
-monotony of American art and life.
-
-We are all cocksure but bewildered children in a world we cannot
-understand. We are all parvenus--parvenus on a new continent, on the
-fringes of which some have lived a little longer than others, but the
-whole of which has been encompassed by none of us for more than two or
-three generations; parvenus in a new world of steam and electricity,
-wireless and aeroplane, machinery and industry, which none of us has
-yet been able to subdue to a mould that satisfies our deepest cravings;
-parvenus in our culture, which still seems like a borrowed garment
-instead of flesh of our flesh and bone of our bone. What is the good of
-all the instruments that our hands have moulded if we have neither the
-will nor the imagination to wield them for the uses of the soul? Not
-in this fashion shall we justify our old dream of an America that is
-the hope of the world. Here are hundreds of colleges and universities;
-why not fill these empty barracks with scholars and thinkers? Here are
-a hundred races; why not say to them: “America can give you generous
-opportunity and the most superb instruments that the undisciplined
-energy of practical life has ever created, but in the spiritual fields
-of art, poetry, religion, culture, it has little or nothing to give
-you; let us all work together, learning and creating these high things
-side by side”? Here are more hearts empty and unfulfilled and more
-restless minds than the world has ever before gathered together; why
-not lead them out of their corrals, and find a fitting pasture for
-their brains and souls?
-
- J. E. SPINGARN
-
-
-_GLOSSARY_
-
-The English language, extraordinarily rich and expressive in everything
-that concerns the practical or the imaginative life, suffers from the
-poverty and lack of precision of English æsthetic thought. It may
-therefore be useful to indicate briefly the special sense in which
-certain terms are used in this essay.
-
- “_Spectator_: I should say that you have advanced a subtlety
- that is little more than a play on words.
-
- “_Friend_: And I maintain that when we are speaking of the
- operations of the soul, no words can be delicate and subtle
- enough.”--GOETHE.
-
-
- _Art_--Any creation of the imagination, whether in the form of
- imaginative literature or of painting, sculpture, music,
- etc.
-
- _Artist_--The creator of a work of art in any of its forms;
- not used in this essay in the narrower sense of painter or
- sculptor.
-
- _Taste_--The faculty of imaginative sympathy by which the
- reader or spectator is able to re-live the vision of the
- artist, and therefore the essential pre-requisite to all
- criticism.
-
- _Criticism_--Any expression of taste guided by knowledge
- and thought. (The critic’s training in knowledge is
- scholarship, and his special field of thought æsthetics.)
-
- _Æsthetics_--An ordered and reasoned conception of the meaning
- and purpose of art, intended for the guidance of the critic
- and not of the artist.
-
- _A Literary Theory_--An isolated “idea” or theory in regard to
- imaginative literature, without reference to any ordered
- and reasoned conception of its meaning and purpose.
-
- _Impressionist Criticism_--Any expression of taste without
- adequate guidance of knowledge or thought.
-
- _Intellectualist (or dogmatic) criticism_--Criticism based on
- the conception that art is a product of thought rather than
- of imagination, and that the creative fantasy of the artist
- can be limited and judged by the critic’s pre-conceived
- theories; or in the more ornate words of Francis Thompson,
- criticism that is “for ever shearing the wild tresses of
- poetry between rusty rules.”
-
- _The Intellectuals_--All who lay undue stress on the place of
- intellect in life, and assume that the turbulent flux of
- reality can be tied up in neat parcels of intellectual
- formulæ.
-
- _Poetry_--All literature in which reality has been transfigured
- by the imagination, including poetry in its narrower sense,
- the novel, the drama, etc.; used instead of “imaginative
- literature,” not merely for the sake of brevity, but as
- implying a special emphasis on creative power.
-
- _Poet_--A writer of imaginative literature in any of its forms;
- not used in this essay in the narrower sense of a writer of
- verse.
-
- _Learning_--The accumulation of certain forms of knowledge
- as a basis for scholarship, but no more the main purpose
- of scholarship than his preparatory training is the sole
- object of the athlete or soldier.
-
- _Scholarship_--The discipline and illumination that come from
- the intellectual mastery of a definite problem in the
- spiritual (as opposed to the practical) life of man.
-
- _Pedant_--Any one who thinks that learning is the whole of
- scholarship.
-
- J. E. S.
-
-
-
-
-SCHOOL AND COLLEGE LIFE
-
-
-Should we ever entertain an intelligent explorer from Mars, we should
-of course importune him, in season and out, for his impressions of
-America. And if he were candid as well as intelligent, he might
-ultimately be interviewed somewhat as follows:
-
-“At first I thought the most striking fact about you was your
-passion for education. While I have been enjoying your so thorough
-hospitality I have met a minority of Americans who express themselves
-less complacently than the rest about your material blessings; I have
-talked with a few dissidents from your political theory; and I have
-even heard complaints that it is possible to carry moral enthusiasm
-too far. But I have yet to meet that American who is sceptical about
-education as such, though on the other hand I have found few of
-your citizens quite content with the working of every part of your
-educational establishment. And this very discontent was what clinched
-my first impression that schooling is the most vital of your passionate
-interests.
-
-“Yet as I have travelled from one to another of your cities, a second
-fact about you has struck me so forcibly as to contest the supremacy
-of the first. You Americans more and more seem to me to be essentially
-alike. Your cities are only less identical than the trains that ply
-between them. Nearly any congregation could worship just as comfortably
-in nearly any other church. The casts of almost any two plays, the
-staffs of almost any two newspapers, even the faculties of almost any
-two colleges could exchange ‘vehicles’ with about the same results that
-would attend their exchanging clothes.
-
-“And in nothing are you so alike as in your universal desire to be
-alike--to be inconspicuous, to put on straw hats on the same day,
-to change your clothes in Texas in accordance with the seasons in
-New York, to read the books everybody else is reading, to adopt the
-opinions a weekly digests for you from the almost uniform opinions of
-the whole of the daily press, in war and peace to be incontestably and
-entirely American.
-
-“Now, I should scarcely make bold to be so frank about these
-observations if some of my new friends had not reassured me with the
-information that they are not novel, that a distinguished Englishman
-has put them into what you have considered the most representative and
-have made the most popular book about your commonwealth, that in fact
-you rather enjoy having outsiders recognize the success of your efforts
-in uniformity. There is, of course, no reason why you should not be
-as similar to each other as you choose, and you must not interpret my
-surprise to mean that I am shocked by anything except the contradiction
-I find between this essential similarity and what I have called your
-passion for education.
-
-“On Mars it has for a long time been our idea that the function of the
-school is to put our youth in touch with what all sorts of Martians
-have thought and are thinking, have felt and are feeling. I say ‘put
-in touch’ rather than ‘teach,’ because it is not so much our notion
-to pack their minds and hearts as to proffer samples of our various
-cultures and supply keys to the storehouses--not unlike your libraries,
-museums, and laboratories--that contain our records. We prefer to
-think of schooling as a kind of thoroughfare between our past and our
-present, an avenue to the recovery and appreciation of as many as
-possible of those innumerable differences between Martian and Martian,
-those conflicting speculations and cogitations, myths and hypotheses
-regarding our planet and ourselves that have gone into the warp and
-woof of our mental history. Thus we have hoped not only to preserve
-and add to the body of Martian knowledge, but also to understand
-better and utilize more variously our present minds. So it seems to us
-perfectly natural, and has rather pleased than distressed us, that our
-students should emerge from their studies with a multitude of differing
-sympathies, beliefs, tastes, and ambitions. We have thought that such
-an education enriched the lives of all of us, lives that ignorance
-could not fail to constrict and subject to hum-drum monotony.
-
-“So when I return to Mars and report that I found Earth’s most
-favourable continent inhabited by its most literate great people,
-a people that has carried the use of print and other means of
-communication to a point we Martians have never dared dream about;
-that this people has at once the most widely diffused enthusiasm for
-education and the most comprehensive school equipment on Earth; and
-finally that this people is at the same time the most uniform in its
-life--well, I fear I shall not be believed.”
-
-On subsequent visits the Martian might, as a wise man does who is
-confronted by a logical impasse, re-examine the terms of his paradox.
-
-As regards our uniformity, fresh evidence could only endorse his first
-impressions. The vestigial remnants of what regional cultures we have
-had are rapidly being effaced by our unthinking standardization in
-every department of life. The railroad, the telephone and telegraph,
-the newspaper, the Ford, the movies, advertising--all have scarcely
-standardized themselves before they have set about standardizing
-everything within their reach. Not even our provinces of the
-picturesque are immune, the places and things we like to think of as
-“different” (word that betrays our standard sameness!) and glamorous
-of our romantic golden age. In the Old South, Birmingham loves to
-call herself the Pittsburgh of the South; our railroads have all but
-hounded the packets from the Mississippi; it is notorious that our
-apostles to the Indians, whether political, religious, or pedagogic,
-wage relentless war on the very customs and traditions we cherish in
-legend; the beautiful Missions that a kindlier evangelism bequeathed
-to them are repeated and cheapened in every suburb and village of the
-land, under every harsher sky; those once spontaneous fêtes of the
-plains, the “Stampede” and the “Round-Up,” have been made so spurious
-that the natives abandon them for a moth-eaten Wild West Show made in
-the East; and in only a year or two even New Orleans’ Mardi Gras will
-be indistinguishable from its counterfeits in St. Louis and elsewhere.
-
-As with these adventitious and perhaps not very important regional
-differentiations, so with the one fundamental demarcation our people
-have all along recognized as conditioning the give-and-take of American
-life. The line between the East and the West, advancing from the
-Alleghanies to the Rockies and then part of the way back, has never
-stayed long enough in one zone to be precisely drawn, but it has
-always been sharply felt. Since Colonial times the East has meant many
-things--wealth, stability, contacts with Europe, refinement, industry,
-centralized finance--and the West has meant many things--hardship
-and adventure, El Dorado, outlawry, self-reliance, agriculture, vast
-enterprise; but they have never been so close to meaning the same
-things as to-day. To-morrow they will merge. Even now the geographical
-line between them may be drawn anywhere in a belt two thousand miles
-wide, in which it will be fixed according to the nativity of the critic
-rather than by any pronounced social stigmata. East or West, there is
-a greater gulf between the intelligent and the unintelligent of the
-same parish than divides the intelligent of different parishes. East
-or West, Americans think pretty much the same thoughts, feel about the
-same emotions, and express themselves in the American tongue--that
-is, in slang. If the slang, the accent, the manner differ noticeably,
-as they still do, there are not wanting signs that another generation
-will obliterate these differences too. Publishing, to be sure, tends
-to concentrate in the East, though without impoverishing the West,
-since all notable circulations have to be national to survive. The
-very fact that the country’s publishing can be done from New York,
-Philadelphia, and Boston demonstrates our national unanimity of opinion
-and expression.
-
-Before it overleapt the geographical walls, this national unanimity
-had wiped out every class distinction but one, which it has steadily
-tended to entrench--the money line. Families may continue to hold their
-place only on the condition that they keep their money or get more; and
-a moderate fortune, no matter how quickly come by, has only to make a
-few correct strokes, avoid a few obvious bunkers, and it will found a
-family by inadvertence. The process is so simple that clerks practise
-it during their vacations at the shore.
-
-Besides money, there is one other qualification--personal charm. Its
-chief function, perhaps, is to disguise the essentially monetary
-character of American social life. At any rate, Americans are almost as
-uniformly charming as they are uniformly acquisitive. For the most part
-it is a negative charm, a careful skirting of certain national taboos:
-it eschews frank egoism, unfavourable criticism, intellectual subtlety,
-unique expressions of temperament, humour that is no respecter of
-persons, anything that might disturb the _status quo_ of reciprocal
-kindliness and complacent optimism. The unpopular American is unpopular
-not because he is a duffer or a bore, but because he is “conceited,”
-a “knocker,” a “highbrow,” a “nut,” a “grouch,” or something of that
-ilk. We do not choose, as the Martian suggested, to be as similar as
-possible; we choose _not_ to be dissimilar. If our convictions about
-America and what is American sprang from real knowledge of ourselves
-and of our capacities, we should relish egoists, disinterested
-critics, intellectuals, artists, and irreverent humourists, instead of
-suppressing them when we cannot mould them. That we do not relish them,
-that we protect ourselves from them, is evidence that we fear them.
-What reason should we have to fear them save a secret distrust of our
-asseverated convictions? Our unanimity, then, would seem to the Martian
-to be an artificial substitute for some natural background we lack but
-should like to have; and a most dangerous wish-fulfilment it is, for it
-masks our ignorance of what we are and what we may reasonably become.
-Far from being self-knowledge, Americanism would seem to him to be a
-hallucination, an article of faith supported only by our determination
-to believe it, and to coerce others into believing it. The secret of
-our uniformity would be a stubborn ignorance.
-
-At which point our critic would have to re-examine his earlier
-impressions about our “passion for education,” and strive to understand
-the uses to which we actually put our educational establishment, to
-appraise its function in our life.
-
-Beginning with the kindergarten, it provides us a few hours’ relief
-from our responsibility toward our youngsters. Curiously, the Americans
-most given to this evasion are the Americans most inveterately
-sentimental about the “kiddies” and most loath to employ the nursery
-system, holding it somehow an undemocratic invasion of the child’s
-rights. Then somewhere in the primary grades we begin to feel that
-we are purchasing relief from the burden of fundamental instruction.
-Ourselves mentally lazy, abstracted, and genuinely bewildered by the
-flow of questions from only one mouth, we blithely refer that awakening
-curiosity to a harassed young woman, probably less well informed than
-we are, who has to answer, or silence, the questions of from a score to
-three score mouths. So begins that long throttling of curiosity which
-later on will baffle the college instructor, who will sometimes write a
-clever magazine essay about the complacent ignorance of his pupils.
-
-A few years, and our expectation has shifted to the main chance. We
-begin worrying over grade reports and knotting our brows over problems
-in arithmetic by way of assisting our offspring to the practical
-advantages of education. For the child, we now demand of his teachers
-solid and lasting preparation in the things whose monetary value
-our office or domestic payroll keeps sharply before us--figures,
-penmanship, spelling, home economics. For us, the vicarious glory of
-his “brightness.” But we want this brightness to count, to be in the
-direct avenue to his career; so we reinforce the environment that
-gently discourages him from the primrose paths of knowledge. Nothing
-“practical” is too good for the boy at this moment--tool chests,
-bicycles, wireless, what not. Thank God, we can give him a better start
-than we had. As for arts and letters, well, we guess what was good
-enough for his dad is good enough for him. Meanwhile we are rather
-pleased than not at the athletics and the other activities in which the
-grammar school apes the high school that apes the college.
-
-The long spiral of repetitive schooling in study and sport has now
-commenced its climb: year by year reviews and adds its fresh increment
-to last year’s subject-matter in the classroom and on the field.
-Is it so strange that when the boy meets his college professors he
-is cock-sure of knowing to a hair the limits of what is normal and
-important in life, beyond which lie the abnormal interests of the
-grinds? That mediocre _C_ is a gentleman’s mark? Not his to question
-the system that, in season and out, has borne down on passing instead
-of on training, and that ends somewhere, soon or late, with a diploma
-and, amid family plaudits, graduation from family control.
-
-The high schools are expected to fit ninety-five per cent. of their
-charges for life and five per cent. for college. If our boy and girl
-are of the ninety and five, we demand very early specialization toward
-their precious careers, wax enthusiastic over the school’s model
-mercantile and banking establishment, expand to know our children are
-being dosed with a course in “Civics,” generously admire the history
-note-books in which they have spread much tinted ink over a little
-stereotyped information, and in what we fool ourselves into believing
-are the margins to all these matters proudly watch them capture a class
-numeral or a school letter, grumblingly pay for real estate signs that
-have gone up in flame to celebrate some epochal victory, and bear with
-their antics during hazings and initiations. It’s a democratic country,
-and if the poor man’s son cannot go to college, why the college must
-come to him. Nor are we without a certain undemocratic satisfaction in
-the thought that he has stolen a four years’ march into business over
-the rich man’s son, who spends his college hours, we assure ourselves,
-acquiring habits that will leave him weak in the hour of competition.
-
-Meanwhile the straddling masters are cramming the other five with all
-the dates and rules and verbs and prose passages which long and bitter
-experience has demonstrated to be likeliest on entrance examinations.
-From the classrooms, as term follows term with its endless iteration
-of short advances and long reviews, there rises the bruit of rivalry:
-masters decorously put forward the claims of their own colleges; pupils
-rejoice when their future alma mater notches another athletic victory
-to the well-remembered tally; the weak of heart are urging upon their
-bewildered parents the superior merits of the “back-door” route to some
-exacting university--by certificate to a small college and transfer at
-the end of the first year.
-
-There are high schools in whose cases all this is understatement;
-and of course there are innumerable others, especially in these days
-when the most rigorous colleges have lost a little of their faith in
-entrance examinations, where it is absurd overstatement. Nevertheless
-your son, if he goes to a representative Eastern college from a
-representative high school, goes as a man steals second in the seventh.
-And his subsequent instructors marvel at the airy nonchalance with
-which he ignores “the finer things of life”!
-
-The private secondary schools, save those that are frankly designed to
-relieve parents of recalcitrant boys when the public schools will have
-no more of them, are pretty much without the ninety-five per cent. of
-non-college men. Frequently they have their charges for longer periods.
-So they are free to specialize in cramming with more singleness of
-mind and at the same time to soften the process as their endowments
-and atmospheres permit. But at bottom the demand you make of the “prep
-school” is the same demand your bookkeeper puts on his son’s high
-school: you want your boy launched into college with the minimum of
-trouble for yourself and the maximum of practical advantage for him;
-your bookkeeper wants his boy launched into business with a minimum of
-frippery and a maximum of marketable skill. One boy is experted into
-college, the other is experted into business. You are both among those
-passionate believers in education who impressed the Martian on his
-first visit.
-
-Some educator has announced that the college course should not only
-provide preparation for life but should itself be a satisfactory
-portion of life. What college student so dull as not to know
-that? For the most part, he trusts the faculty to provide the
-preparation--sometimes it would seem that he dares it to--but he
-takes jolly good care that the four years shall give him life more
-abundantly. He has looked forward to them with an impatience not even
-the indignity of entrance examinations could balk; he will live them
-to the top of his bent; and he will look back on them tenderly, even
-sentimentally, as the purplest patch of his days. So the American
-undergraduate is representative of the American temper at its best. He
-is the flower of our youth at its moment of perfect bloom, its ideals
-not yet corrupted, its aspirations unwithered. As he thinks and feels,
-all America would think and feel if it dared and could.
-
-At this point, therefore, the Martian’s inquiry into what we expect
-from our educational establishment would have to shift its point of
-view from the older to the younger generation. The Martian would be
-much in demand at our colleges, both as a sure-fire lecturer and as
-a shining target for degrees certain to attract wide publicity to
-the donors. Let us imagine him setting aside a page in his notebook
-for a scheme of undergraduate emphases, grouped and amended as his
-triumphant progress permitted him to check up on his observations.
-
-Athletics would of course head the list. Regarded as play--that is, as
-they affect the spectator--college sports proffer a series of thrilling
-Roman holidays extending from the first week or so of term-time to
-the final base-ball game and crew race of Commencement week the next
-June, and for some colleges there may be transatlantic sequels in
-midsummer or later. It is by no means all play for the spectator,
-whose loyalty to his institution makes it his duty to watch the teams
-practise, follow the histories of the gladiators who are at once his
-representatives and his entertainers, and drill himself in songs and
-yells at noisy mass meetings; to bet on his college according to his
-purse and without any niggardly regard for his sober judgment as to
-the event; then to deck himself in the colours, march to the field,
-and watch the fray from the cheering section, where his attention will
-be perpetually interrupted by the orders and the abuse of a file of
-insatiable marionettes who are there to dictate when he may and when
-he may not give throat to his enthusiasm; and finally, if Providence
-please, to be one of the snake-dancing celebrants of victory. If he
-have the right physique or talent for one of the sports, he will
-find himself conscripted by public opinion to enter upon the long
-and arduous regimen that turns out the annual handful of athletic
-heroes--to slave on freshman squads, class teams, scrub and third and
-second teams, and finally perhaps, if he has been faithful, to play
-a dull minute or two of a big game that is already decided and so
-receive his coveted letter and side-line privilege as a charity. Or at
-the dizziest pinnacle of success, a “star,” to endure the unremitting
-discipline of summer practice, incessant training, eating with his
-fellow-stars at the training table, in season and out to be the butt of
-instruction and exhortation from all the experts of the entourage. As
-they affect the participant, then, college sports are to be regarded as
-work that differs from the work of professional sportsmen chiefly by
-being unremunerated.
-
-The student’s next most vivid concern is the organization of the social
-life in the academic commonwealth of which he is a citizen. Every
-American college has, or fancies it has, its own tone, its ideal
-type of man; and good citizenship prescribes conformity to the spirit
-of the place and observance of the letter of its unwritten code. For
-the type is defined by a body of obligations and taboos transmitted
-from generation to generation, sometimes through the mouthpiece of
-the faculty, sometimes by way of the college “Bible” (to use the
-slang name for those handy manuals of what to do and what to avoid
-which the college Y.M.C.A. issues for the guidance of newcomers), but
-most often by a rough process of trial and error which very speedily
-convinces the freshman that the Fence is for seniors only, or that
-it is impracticable to smoke his pipe in the Yard, or that it is
-much healthier to take the air in a class cap than bareheaded. The
-cherished “traditions” of a college are for the most part a composite
-of just such privileges and prohibitions as these, clustering round the
-notion of the type and symbolizing it; and, curiously, the younger the
-institution, the more insistent it is likely to be about the sanctity
-of its traditions--a college feels the need of a type in much the same
-degree that a factory needs a trademark.
-
-Conformity thus becomes an article in loyalty. Sometimes the mere
-conformity is the desiderate virtue, as used (at least) to be the
-case in Yale. Sometimes the type will go in for individualism, as at
-Harvard a decade ago, where the thing to conform to was non-conformity.
-One tradition is probably universal: is there anywhere in America a
-college which does not boast that it is more “democratic” than others?
-Democracy undergoes some engaging redefinition in support of these
-conflicting claims, but at bottom it refers to an absence of snobs,
-arrogant critics, incomprehensible intellectuals, bouncing wits,
-uncomfortable pessimists--in short, the discouragement of just such
-individual tastes and energies as the Martian found discouraged in our
-social life at large. The money line remains. Theoretically, the poor
-may compete in athletics and in other student enterprises and reap the
-same social rewards as the rich: practically, they may compete and go
-socially unrewarded, precisely as in the outside world. It is natural
-and seemly that this should be the case, for the poor cannot afford
-the avenues of association which are the breath of society to the
-rich. There have been football heroes whom the well-to-do have put
-in the way of acquiring wealth after they left college, but this is
-patronage, not democracy. There are also colleges proud to be known as
-poor men’s colleges, and for that very reason devoid of the democracy
-they boast. Not long ago the president of Valparaiso had to resign, and
-it developed that among the counts against him were the deadly facts
-that he had attended the annual alumni dinner in dress clothes and
-had countenanced “dances, athletics, fraternities, and such.” No, all
-that we really mean by democracy in college is the equal opportunity
-to invest one’s inoffensive charm and perfectly good money in a
-transient society, to be neighbourly across geographical and family
-lines, to cultivate the local twist of the universal ideal--to be a
-“regular fellow.” Which is very much what we mean by democracy outside.
-Whatever the precise type of man a college exalts, its characteristic
-virtues are those that reflect a uniform people--hearty acceptance
-of unexamined ideals, loyal conformity to traditional standards and
-taboos, unassuming modesty in “playing the game,” and a wholesome
-optimism withal.
-
-But as for genuine democracy, the unrestricted interplay of free
-spirits against a common background, what college can boast that its
-social organization approaches even the measure of equality enjoyed
-by its disinterested scholars? There was a modicum of it in the
-free elective system that obtained in Dr. Eliot’s Harvard. There
-was an indifference to seniority that sorely puzzled the graduates
-of other colleges. Alas, freshman dormitories descended upon it,
-treacherously carrying the banners of “democracy”; and a “group system”
-of courses began to externalize intellectual interests to which the
-elective system, abused as it was, had offered every opportunity
-for spontaneity. It may be that the Amherst of Dr. Meiklejohn’s
-experiments, or the Smith that President Neilson envisages, will
-recapture opportunities now fled from Cambridge. These cases, after
-all, are exceptional. For the typical American college, private or
-public, marshals its students in two caste systems so universal and
-so familiar that it never occurs to us to scrutinize the one and we
-are liable to criticize the other only when its excesses betray its
-decadence.
-
-The former, the divisioning and tagging of every recruit with the
-year of his graduation, looks to be an innocent convenience until
-you have surveyed its regimental effect. Freshmen are green; so we
-clap ridiculous caps on them, dub them “Frosh” or “Fish,” haze them,
-confine them to a York Street of their kind or impound them in freshman
-dormitories, where we bid them save themselves, the which they do in
-their sophomore year at the expense of the next crop of recruits. It
-is not so much the occasional brutality of hazing parties and “rushes”
-that should arrest us here, nor yet such infrequent accidents as the
-probably insane despair of that Harvard freshman whose phobia for
-eggs drove him to suicide to escape the inflexible diet of his class
-commons, as it is the remorseless mob invasion of personality and
-privacy which either leaves the impressionable boy a victim of his
-ingrowing sensibility or else converts him into a martinet who in his
-turn will cripple others. In the case of the Cornell freshman who was
-ducked for stubbornly refusing to wear the class cap and was saved
-from more duckings by an acting president who advised him--“in all
-friendliness,” said the newspapers!--to submit or to withdraw from
-college for a year, it is not necessary to applaud what may have been
-pig-headedness in the victim, or to flay what may have been wisdom in
-the executive, in order to admire the single professor who stood ready
-to resign in order to rebuke his college for her bigotry. What was
-really significant here, however, and what is everywhere characteristic
-of this sort of benevolent assimilation, was the tone of the university
-daily’s editorial apologia:
-
- “Complete liberty of action has never been recognized by any
- but avowed anarchists; granted the validity of the law, there
- can be no charge of intolerance in the enforcement of it.”
-
-The legal “validity” of an arbitrary tradition! No “intolerance” in its
-enforcement by Judge Lynch! The editor of the _Cornell Sun_ went on
-to say that the existence of the “law” in question is “no secret from
-the prospective Cornellian,” implying, no doubt, that to offer oneself
-for matriculation at Cornell is _ipso facto_ to accept the whole body
-of Ithacan tradition and taboos, along with their interpretation and
-enforcement according to the momentary caprice of the majority, as
-a _contrat social_. Small wonder he called the refractory freshman
-a “red.” The young editor’s reasoning should recommend his early
-appointment to a place in the greater _Sun_.
-
-The caste system of academic seniority, like all caste systems, is
-worst at its base. Such customs as the sequestering of the upper
-classes in their private quads or ovals, the jealous protection of
-senior privileges, and the calendrical elaboration of the alumni
-programme serve to import a picturesque if rather forced variety into
-our drab monotony. That men should choose to organize themselves to
-protect some more or less irrelevant distinction is of no special
-importance to outsiders so long as they do not use their organization
-to dragoon minorities or to bully individuals. Yet, speak out against
-the exploitation, and you will be accused of attacking the fellowship.
-Criticize the shackling of freshmen, and there will not be wanting
-college editors to call you a fanatic who cannot bear the jolly sight
-of cap and gown.
-
-The other system of caste, to which we give sharp attention when it
-goes badly wrong, is of course the club hierarchy. Wherever there are
-clubs their social capital will necessarily fluctuate with the quality
-of the members they take in. The reformers who deplore the institution
-of “rushing” have of course exaggerated its evils, but the evils
-are there. In young colleges, and wherever clubs are insecure, the
-candidates are liable to be spoiled for any club purposes before their
-destination is settled; wherever the candidates must do the courting,
-either brazenly or subtly, they tend to debauch the club. The dilemma
-holds, in one form or another, all the way from the opposed “literary”
-societies of the back-woods college to the most powerful chapters of
-the national fraternities; and it is particularly acute where the
-clubhouse is also the student’s residence. Any remedy thus far advanced
-by the reformers is worse than the disease.
-
-In many of the older colleges the equilibrium has been stabilized by a
-device similar to the gentlemen’s agreement in industry. The important
-clubs have gradually adjusted themselves into a series through
-which the clubman passes, or into which he penetrates as far as his
-personality and money will carry him. So the initial competition for
-untried material is done away with or greatly simplified; one or two
-large freshman or sophomore clubs take in all the likely candidates;
-the junior clubs do most of their choosing from among this number;
-and the senior clubs in turn draw on the junior. Meanwhile the member
-turnover is perhaps trebled, and initiations and other gay functions
-multiply.
-
-It is to be remembered, however, that not all the brethren shift onward
-and upward year by year. Many have to content themselves with clubs
-already won, and those who pass on are a narrowing band, whose depleted
-ranks are by no means restored in the eleventh hour recruiting of
-“elections at large,” deathbed gestures of democracy after a career
-of ballotting to exclude candidates who had not taken all the earlier
-degrees. Thus increasing distinction is purchased through the tried and
-true method of decreasing numbers. To be sure, the same end could be
-served if all would remain in one club and periodically drop groups of
-the least likely members. Initiations might be reversed, and punches
-be given to celebrate the lightening of the ship: it would be no more
-fantastic than a good part of the existing ceremonial. But--it would be
-undemocratic! And, too, the celebrations might be fatally hilarious.
-The present pre-initiation discipline is one that tests for regularity
-and bestows the accolade on the inconspicuous, so that the initiates
-turn out pretty much of a piece and the entertainment they provide is
-safely conventional. But reverse the process, assemble in one squad all
-the hands suspected of being exceptional--all the queer fish and odd
-sticks--and there’s no predicting what capers they might cut as they
-walked the plank.
-
-The real evil of the club caste is its taste for predictability,
-its standardization of contacts, its faintly cynical sophistication
-where life might be a riot of adventures and experiments and
-self-discoveries--in one word, its respectability. Not that it does not
-provide much good fellowship and a great deal of fun (including the
-varieties that have distressed its moral critics). But that everything
-it provides is so definitely provided _for_, so institutionalized, and
-so protected from the enrichment different types and conditions of men
-could bring to it that it is exclusive in a more sinister sense than
-the one intended by the critics of its alleged snobbery.
-
-Normally the club system is by no means so snobbish as it is thought
-to be; it dislikes, and is apt to punish with the black ball, the
-currying of social favour and the parade of special privilege. For
-youth is youth, and in the last analysis the enemy of caste. It is
-the glory of college life that the most unexpected friendships will
-overleap the fences run by class and club regimentation. It is its
-pity that the fences, which yield so easily to irregular friendships
-once they have discovered themselves, should nevertheless be stout
-enough to herd their victims past so many unrecognized opportunities
-for spontaneous association. The graduate who looks back fondly on his
-halcyon days is very likely passing over the Senior Picnic and his row
-of shingles to recall haze-hung October afternoons of tobacco and lazy
-reminiscence on the window-seat of somebody who got nowhere in class
-or club, or is wistful for the midnight arguments he had with that
-grind who lived in his entry freshman year--nights alive with darting
-speculation and warm with generous combat. Of these clandestine sweets
-he will say nothing; he is a regular fellow; but he affords one of the
-proofs that the well-worn social channels are not deep enough to carry
-off all the wine of free fellowship. And that even the moderate caste
-of college, securely established as it seems, must defend itself from
-youth (even from its own youth!) is demonstrated by two phenomena not
-to be explained satisfactorily on any other hypothesis. What is all the
-solemn mummery, the preposterous ritual, the pompous processions to and
-from temples of nightmare architecture, the whole sacrosanct edifice
-of the secret fraternities, if it be not an embroidery wherewith to
-disguise from present and future devotees the naked matter-of-factness
-of the cult? And, on the other hand, what are the too early maturity,
-the atmosphere of politely blasé languor, the ubiquitous paraphernalia
-for comfort and casual hospitality that characterize the non-secret
-and citified clubs of the “indifferent” college but so many disarming
-confessions of the predictability of everything--the predictability,
-and the necessity for quiet acceptance? Under all the encouraging
-variations and exceptions runs the regimental command of our
-unanimity: if you are to belong, you must conform; you must accept the
-limits of the conventional world for the bounds of your reality; and
-then, according to the caprice of your _genius loci_, you will play
-the game as if everything, even the minutiæ of the ritual your club
-has inherited from freer spirits, were of tremendous moment, or you
-will play it no less thoroughly but with the air of one who knows that
-nothing is of any moment at all. The clubs, that have so often been
-criticized for their un-American treason to democracy, are only too
-loyally American.
-
-The third emphasis would be corollary to these two--the political
-management of athletic and class and club affairs. The politics are
-those of personal popularity, the management is that of administration
-rather than legislation, the spirit is the American flair for petty
-regulation. Where issues are in question the tone is almost certain to
-be propagandist, conservatives and radicals dividing a field littered
-with hard names. College life has accumulated an abundance of machinery
-for the expression of the managing instinct, and most of it works.
-Nowadays the lines of representation finally knot in a Student Council,
-which is at once the Cabinet, the Senate, and the Supreme Court of
-the undergraduate commonwealth. The routine of its work is heavily
-sumptuary, and such matters as the sizes and colours and seasons for
-hatband insignia, the length of time students may take off to attend
-a distant game, the marshalling of parades, are decided with taste
-and tact. Then, abruptly, it is a tribunal for major cases, just if
-severe: a class at Yale fails to observe the honour rule, and upon the
-Council’s recommendation twenty-one students are expelled or suspended;
-it was the Student Council at Valparaiso that secured the president’s
-withdrawal; and at Cornell it was the Student Council that came to
-the rescue of tradition when a freshman refused to wear the freshman
-cap. Invariably, one concludes, its edicts and verdicts will support
-righteousness, as its constituents understand righteousness.
-
-The constituents themselves are ordinarily on the side of light, as
-they see the light. Not so long ago the faculty of a small New England
-college decided to dispense with compulsory chapel: the students voted
-it back. Moral crusades spring up like mushrooms and command the
-allegiance of all but the recalcitrant “rough-necks,” whom student
-opinion is sometimes tempted to feel are beating their way through an
-education for which they make no equivalent return in public spirit. A
-typical campaign of the sort was recently put in motion by the student
-daily at Brown: the editors discovered that “the modern age of girls
-and young men is intensely immoral”; they penned sensational editorials
-that evoked column-long echoes in the metropolitan press; they raised
-a crusade against such abominations as petting parties, the toddle
-(“Rome,” they wrote, “toddled before it fell”), and “parties continued
-until after breakfast time”; almost immediately they won a victory--the
-Mothers’ Club of Providence resolved that dances for children must end
-by eleven o’clock....
-
-And now the undergraduate will emphasize study. But a sharp line must
-be drawn between study that looks forward merely to the A.B. degree as
-the end of schooling and the beginning of business, and study that is a
-part of professional training, that looks forward to some professional
-degree at Commencement or to matriculation in a graduate school. Both
-come under the head of preparation for life; but in the former case
-the degree itself is the preparation, whereas in the latter case it is
-recognized that one must master and retain at least a working modicum
-of the subject-matter of the professional courses and of the liberal
-courses preliminary to them.
-
-The arts man, then, recognizes only the same necessity he has faced
-all the way up the school ladder--to pass. If he have entrance
-conditions, they are mortgages that must be paid off, perhaps in the
-Summer School; he must keep off probation to protect his athletic or
-political or other activity status; beyond this, he must garner enough
-courses and half-courses, semester hours or points, to purchase the
-indispensable sheepskin. Further effort is supererogatory so far as
-concerns study _per se_: prizes and distinctions fall in the category
-of “student activities,” hobbies, and belong of right to the “sharks”;
-scholarships, which in America are for the poor only, have to do
-with still another matter--earning one’s way through--and are mostly
-reserved for the “paid marks men,” professional studiers, grinds.
-
-Upon his programme of courses the student will often expend as much
-mental energy as would carry him through an ordinary examination: he
-will pore over the catalogue, be zealous to avoid nine o’clocks and
-afternoon hours liable to conflict with games, make an elaborate survey
-of the comparative competence of instructors, both as graders and as
-entertainers and even (quaintly enough) as experts in their fields,
-and enquire diligently after snap courses. Enrolled in a course, he
-will speedily estimate the minimum effort that will produce a safe
-pass, unless the subject happens to be one that commends itself to
-his interest independently of academic necessity. In that case he
-will exceed not only the moderate stint calculated to earn a _C_, but
-sometimes even the instructor’s extravagant requirements. There is, in
-fact, scarcely a student but has at least one pet course in which he
-will “eat up” all the required reading and more, take gratuitous notes,
-ask endless questions, and perhaps make private sallies into research.
-The fact that he holds most of this labour to be self-indulgence will
-not temper his indignation if he fails to “pull” an _A_ or _B_, though
-it is a question whether, when the grade has sealed the course, he will
-be much the wiser for it than for the others.
-
-On the evils of the course system there is probably no new thing to
-be said. Such devices as the “group system” at Harvard interfere with
-liberty of election without appreciably correcting the graduate’s
-ignorance of the courses he has passed and cashed in for his degree.
-Recognizing this fact, certain faculties have latterly inaugurated
-general examinations in the whole subject-matter studied under one
-department, as notably in History, Government, and Economics; but
-thus far the general examination affects professional preparation, as
-notably for the Law School, much more than it affects the straight arts
-career, where it provides just one more obstacle to “pass.”
-
-This business of passing is a seasonal nuisance. The early weeks of
-term-time are an Arcady of fetching lectures, more or less interesting
-assigned reading, and abundant “cuts.” Across the smiling sky float
-minatory wisps of cloud--exercises, quizzes, tests. Then up from the
-horizon blow the “hour exams,” first breath of the academic weather
-that later on will rock the earth with “mid-years” and “finals.” But
-to be forewarned is, for the prudent student, to get armed, and
-Heaven knows he is amply warned by instructor, registrar, and dean.
-So he hies himself to the armourer, the tutor, one of the brotherhood
-of experts who saw him through the entrance examinations; he provides
-himself with bought or leased notebooks and summaries; he crams through
-a few febrile nights of cloistral deprivations and flagellations; and
-the sun shines again on his harvest of gentlemen’s _C_’s, the proud
-though superfluous _A_ or _B_, and maybe a _D_ that bespeaks better
-armour against the next onset. Or, of course, he may have slipped
-into “probation,” limbo that outrageously handicaps his athletic
-or political ambitions. Only if he have been a hapless probationer
-before the examinations is there any real risk of his having to join
-the exceedingly small company of living sacrifices whom a suddenly
-austere college now “rusticates.” (For in America suspensions and
-expulsions are the penalties rather of irregular conduct than of mental
-incompetence or sloth.) In four years, after he has weathered a score
-of these storms and concocted a few theses, the president hands him a
-diploma to frame, he sells his other furniture, puts mothballs in his
-cap and gown, and plunges into business to overtake his non-college
-competitors.
-
-Student opinion recognizes that the man enrolled in professional
-courses or headed for a graduate school faces more stringent
-necessities. He may devote himself to his more specific training
-without the imputation of being a “grind,” and if he pursues honours
-it will be in the line of business rather than of indoor sport. He
-will be charier of cuts, more painstaking as regards his notes and
-reading, and the professional manner will settle on him early. In
-every college commons you can find a table where the talk is largely
-shop--hypothetical cases, laboratory experiments, new inventions,
-devices for circumventing the income tax. All this, however, is
-really a quantitative difference, not a qualitative. Of disinterested
-intellectual activity he is if anything more innocent than his fellow
-in the arts school.
-
-So much for the four great necessities of average student life--in
-order of acknowledged importance: athletics, social life, politics,
-study. Deans and other official but theoretical folk will tell
-our Martian that the business of college is study and that all the
-undergraduate’s other functions are marginal matters; but their own
-conduct will already have betrayed them to him, for he will not have
-missed the fact that most of their labour is devoted to making study
-as dignified and popular as the students have made sports and clubs
-and elections. These four majors hold their places at the head of the
-list of student emphases because no representative undergraduate quite
-escapes any of them; the next ones may be stressed more variously,
-according rather to the student’s capricious private inclinations than
-to his simpler group reactions.
-
-Now, for instance, he is free to “go in for” some of the innumerable
-“student activities,” avocations as opposed to the preceding vocations.
-There are the minor sports which are not so established in popularity
-that they may conscript players--lacrosse, association football, trap
-shooting, swimming, and so on. There are the other intercollegiate
-competitions--chess and debating and what not. The musical clubs,
-the dramatic clubs, the magazines, and many semi-professional
-and semi-social organizations offer in their degree more or less
-opportunity to visit rival institutions. Then, too, there is in the
-larger colleges a club for almost every religious cult, from Catholic
-to Theosophist, whose devotees may crave a closer warmth of communion
-than they realize in the chapel, which is ordinarily non-sectarian;
-a club apiece for some of the great fraternal orders; a similar club
-for each of the political parties, to say nothing of a branch of the
-Intercollegiate Socialist Society, with another organization forming
-to supply the colleges with associated Liberal Clubs. Moreover, all
-the important preparatory schools, private and public, are certain
-to be represented by clubs of their alumni, some of which maintain
-scholarships but all of which do yeoman service scouting for athletes.
-Frequently there is a Cosmopolitan Club for foreign students and
-travelled Americans. And, finally, there are clubs to represent the
-various provinces of knowledge--the classics, philosophy, mathematics,
-the various sciences, and so on indefinitely. Then, in colleges in
-or near cities, there are well-organized opportunities for students
-who care to make a hobby of the Uplift and go in for social service.
-While, for amateur and professional sharks and grinds, there is the
-honour roll of prizes, scholarships, fellowships, distinctions, and
-other academic honours. Verily a paradise for the joiner. Day by day,
-the calendar of meetings and events printed in the university paper
-resembles nothing so much as the bulletin board of a metropolitan hotel
-which caters to conventions.
-
-If at first glance all this welter of endeavour looks to be anything
-but evidence of uniformity, at second will appear its significant
-principle. Every part of it is cemented together by a universal
-institutionalizing of impulses and values. There is scarcely a college
-activity which can serve for a hobby but has its shingle and ribbon and
-certificated niche in the undergraduate régime.
-
-Even the undergraduate’s extra-collegiate social life, which would
-probably stand next on the Martian’s list, is thoroughly regimented.
-Speaking broadly, it is incorrect to call on girls at the nearest
-girls’ college; and, speaking still more broadly, there is usually
-one correct college whereat it is socially incumbent to pay devoirs.
-In coeducational institutions the sex line is an exacting but
-astonishingly innocent consumer of time and energy, of which the
-greater part is invested in the sheer maintenance of convention. Along
-both these social avenues the student practises a mimicry of what seems
-to him to be the forms regnant in secular society and, intent on the
-forms, tends to miss by a little what neighbourly ease really exists
-there, so that he out-conventionalizes the conventional world. The
-non-college American youth, of both sexes, would scarcely tolerate the
-amount of formalism, chaperonage, and constraint that our college youth
-voluntarily assumes.
-
-The word “fussing” is the perfect tag for the visiting, the taking to
-games and dances, the cherishing at house-parties, and the incessant
-letter-writing that are the approved communications across the sex
-line. You make a fuss over a girl, and there it ends; or you make a
-fuss over a girl and get engaged, and there it ends; or--and this is
-frequent only in the large Western universities where well-nigh all the
-personable youths of the State’s society are in college together--you
-make a fuss over a girl, you get engaged, and in due time you get
-married. So far as fussing is concerned, sex is far more decorous
-among collegians than among their non-collegiate fellows of the same
-ages and social levels. There is a place, of course, where it is
-indecorous enough; but that place is next on the Martian’s list.
-
-Which now shifts its weakening emphasis to recreation. You will have
-thought that most of the foregoing attached to recreation and that all
-play and no work is the undergraduate rule. You will have erred. Above
-this point almost everything on the list is recognized by the student
-to be in some sort an obligation, a serious concern, a plough on which
-he finds his hand gently laid by custom but which he cannot decently
-relinquish till he has gained the end of the furrow.
-
- “Nobody could be busier than the normal undergraduate. His
- team, his paper, his club, show, or other activity, sometimes
- several at once, occupy every spare moment which he can
- persuade the office to let him take from the more formal part
- of college instruction.”
-
-The quotation is not from a baccalaureate sermon: it is from the
-Harvard class oration of 1921.
-
-The prime relaxation is talk, infinite talk--within its local range,
-full of tang, flicking with deft satire the rumps of pompous asses,
-burlesquing the comic (that is, the abnormal) in campus situations,
-making of gossip a staccato criticism--and beyond that range, a rather
-desultory patter about professional sport, shows, shallow books, the
-froth of fashion, all treated lightly but taken with what a gravity!
-For the other relaxations there are, according to taste, the theatre of
-girls and music, the novel, bath-robed sessions at poker and bridge,
-late afternoon tennis or golf or handball (very nearly the only sports
-left to play for their own sake), and the bouts with Bacchus and Venus
-which, though they attract fewer college men than non-college men, are
-everywhere the moral holidays that insure our over-driven Puritanism
-against collapse.
-
-A favourite subject for college debates and Freshman themes argues
-the case for and against going to college. You could listen to scores
-of such debates, read thousands of such themes, without once meeting
-a clear brief for education as a satisfaction of human curiosity.
-Everywhere below the level of disinterested scholarship, education is
-regarded as access to that body of common and practical information
-without which one’s hands and tongue will be tied in the company of
-one’s natural peers. “Institutions of learning,” as the National
-Security League lately advised the Vice-President of the United States,
-“are established primarily for the dissemination of knowledge, which is
-acquaintance with fact and not with theory.” Consequently the universal
-expectation of the educational establishment has little to do with any
-wakening of appropriate if differing personalities, and has everything
-to do with a standard patina, varying only in its lustre, its brighter
-or duller reflection of the established scene.
-
-Nevertheless, the essential Adam does break through and quiz the
-scene. Though it come lowest in his scale of emphasis, the typical
-underclassman knows the qualms and hungers of curiosity, experiments
-a little with forbidden fruit, at some time fraternizes with a man
-of richer if disreputable experience, perhaps strikes up a wistful
-friendship with a sympathetic instructor. Then the world of normal
-duties and rewards and certainties closes round him, and security in
-it becomes his first concern. Sometime he intends really to read, to
-think long thoughts again, to go to the bottom of things. Meanwhile
-he falls into the easy habit of applying such words as “radical” or
-“highbrow” to those infrequent hardier spirits who continue restless
-and unappeased. Later in life you will catch him explaining that
-radicalism is a perfectly natural manifestation of adolescence and the
-soundest foundation for mature conservatism. Wise churchmen still talk
-that way about religious doubt, and bide their time, and later refer to
-the “death of doubt”--which has really been buried alive. The Martian
-would conclude that the function of terrestrial education is to bury
-curiosity alive.
-
-But could he now feel that this educational establishment, this going
-machine of assimilation, is responsible for our uniformity? Will not
-American school and college life now seem too perfect a reflection
-of American adult life to be its parent? Everything in that scale of
-college values, from the vicarious excitements of football to what
-Santayana has called the “deprivations of disbelief” has its exact
-analogue in our life at large; and neither any college tradition nor
-yet the “genteel tradition” is of so much significance as the will to
-tradition that both reveal. The Martian will long since have suspected
-himself guilty of a very human error, that of getting the cart before
-the horse.
-
-For we have made our schools in our own image. They are not our
-prisons, but our homes. Every now and again we discipline a rash
-instructor who carries too far his private taste for developing
-originality; we pass acts that require teachers to sink their own
-differences in our unanimity; and our fatuous faith in the public
-school system as the “cradle of liberty” rests on the political
-control we exercise over it. Far from being the dupes of education, we
-ourselves dupe the educated; and that college men do not rebel is due
-to the fact that inside a world our uniformity dominates as easily as
-it dominates the school, the regimen works, college men really do get
-ahead, and the “queer” really are frustrate.
-
-Then, what is the origin of our “desperate need to agree”? There is a
-possible answer in our history, if only we can be persuaded to give
-our history a little attention. When we became a nation we were not a
-folk. We were, in fact, so far from being alike that there were only
-our common grievances and a few propositions on which we could be got
-together at all, and the propositions were more like stubborn articles
-of faith than like tested observations: “We hold these truths to be
-self-evident, that all men are created equal ... certain inalienable
-Rights ... Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness ... the consent
-of the governed ... are, and of Right ought to be, Free and Independent
-States.” That is not the tone of men who are partakers in a common
-tradition and who share reasonable and familiar convictions. Thus under
-the spur of our first national necessity we gave the first evidence of
-our capacity to substitute an arbitrary and not too exacting lowest
-common denominator to which men can subscribe, for the natural and
-rigorous highest common multiple that expresses their genuine community
-of interest. The device succeeded because we succeeded, but it was the
-propositions that got the credit. The device has continued to succeed
-ever since for the same reason that tradition succeeds in the modern
-college--nobody who has had any reason to challenge the propositions
-has been able to get at us.
-
-Our proper job was to create a people, to get acquainted with each
-other and develop a common background. But the almost miraculous
-success of our lowest common denominator stood in the way of our
-working out any highest common multiple. Instead of developing a common
-background, we went on assimilating subscribers to the Declaration, our
-arbitrary tradition, “Americanism.” We have been so increasingly beset
-by aliens who had to be assimilated that their Americanization has
-prevented our own.
-
-We now believe our national job was the Conquest of the West, as if
-scattering people over a continent were any substitute for creating a
-People. But we have never been seriously challenged. If our good luck
-should hold, the second or third generation after us will believe our
-job was the subjugation of a hemisphere, including the assimilation of
-genuine peoples who have done us less harm even than the Indians did.
-But, whatever our practice, we shall never admit that our theory has
-altered. Still lacking any common background, we shall still enclose
-ourselves against the void in the painted scene of our tradition.
-
-But our luck may not hold. We may be challenged yet.
-
- CLARENCE BRITTEN
-
-
-
-
-THE INTELLECTUAL LIFE
-
-
-When Professor Einstein roused the ire of the women’s clubs by stating
-that “women dominate the entire life of America,” and that “there are
-cities with a million population, but cities suffering from terrible
-poverty--the poverty of intellectual things,” he was but repeating a
-criticism of our life now old enough to be almost a _cliché_. Hardly
-any intelligent foreigner has failed to observe and comment upon the
-extraordinary feminization of American social life, and oftenest he
-has coupled this observation with a few biting remarks concerning the
-intellectual anæmia or torpor that seems to accompany it. Naturally
-this attitude is resented, and the indiscreet visitor is told that he
-has been rendered astigmatic by too limited observation. He is further
-informed that he should travel in our country more extensively, see
-more people, and live among us longer. The inference is that this
-chastening process will in due time acquaint him with a beauty and
-a thrilling intellectual vitality coyly hidden from the superficial
-impressionist.
-
-Now the thesis of this paper is that the spontaneous judgment of the
-perceptive foreigner is to a remarkable degree correct. But it is a
-judgment which has to be modified in certain respects rather sharply.
-Moreover, even long residence in the United States is not likely to
-give a visitor as vivid a sense of the historical background that
-has so largely contributed to the present situation as is aroused
-in the native American, who in his own family hears the folklore of
-the two generations preceding him and to whom the pioneer tradition
-is a reality more imaginatively plausible than, say, the emanations
-of glory from English fields or the aura of ancient pomp enwrapping
-an Italian castle. The foreigner is too likely to forget that in a
-young country, precisely because it is young, traditions have a social
-sanction unknown in an older country where memory of the past goes so
-far back as to become shadowy and unreal. It is a paradox of history
-that from ancient cultures usually come those who “were born too soon,”
-whereas from young and groping civilizations spring the panoplied
-defenders of conventions. It is usually when a tradition is fresh that
-it is respected most; it is only when it has been followed for years
-sufficient to make it meaningless that it can create its repudiators.
-America is a very young country--and in no respect younger than that of
-all Western nations it has the oldest form of established government;
-our naïve respect for the fathers is surest proof that we are still in
-the cultural awkward age. We have not sufficiently grown up but that we
-must still cling to our father and mother. In a word, we still _think_
-in pioneer terms, whatever the material and economic facts of a day
-that has already outgrown their applicability.
-
-And it is the pioneer point of view, once thoroughly understood,
-which will most satisfactorily explain the peculiar development of
-the intellectual life in the United States. For the life of the mind
-is no fine flower of impoverishment, and if the beginnings of human
-reflection were the wayward reveries of seamen in the long watches
-of the night or of a shepherd lying on his back idly watching the
-summer clouds float past, as surely have the considered intellectual
-achievements of modern men been due to the commercial and industrial
-organization which, whether or not conducive to the general happiness,
-has at least made leisure possible for the few. But in the pioneer
-community leisure cannot exist, even for the few; the struggle is too
-merciless, the stake--life itself, possibly--too high. The pioneer must
-almost of necessity hate the thinker, even when he does not despise
-thought in itself, because the thinker is a liability to a community
-that can afford only assets; he is non-productive in himself and a
-dangerously subversive example to others. Of course, the pioneer will
-tolerate the minister, exactly as primitive tribes tolerated medicine
-men--and largely for the same reasons. The minister, if he cannot bring
-rain or ward off pestilence as the medicine man at least pretended
-he could, can soften the hardness of the human lot and can show the
-road to a future kingdom that will amply compensate for the drudgery
-of the present world. He has, in brief, considerable utilitarian
-value. The thinker _per se_, however, has none; not only that, he is
-a reproach and a challenge to the man who must labour by the sweat of
-his brow--it is as if he said, “For what end, all this turmoil and
-effort, merely to live? But do you know if life is worth while on such
-terms?” Questions like these the pioneer must cast far from him, and
-for the very good reason that if they were tolerated, new communities
-might never become settled. Scepticism is an expensive luxury possible
-only to men in cities living off the fruit of others’ toil. Certainly
-America, up to the end of the reconstruction period following the
-Civil War, had little practical opportunity and less native impulse
-for the cultivation of this tolerant attitude towards ultimate values,
-an atmosphere which is a talisman that a true intellectual life is
-flourishing.
-
-Consider the terrible hardness of the pioneer’s physical life. I can
-think of no better description of it than in one of Sherwood Anderson’s
-stories, “Godliness,” in his book, “Winesburg, Ohio.” He is writing
-of the Bentley brothers just before the Civil War: “They clung to old
-traditions and worked like driven animals. They lived as practically
-all of the farming people of the time lived. In the spring and through
-most of the winter the highways leading into the town of Winesburg were
-a sea of mud. The four young men of the family worked hard all day in
-the fields, they ate heavily of coarse, greasy food, and at night slept
-like tired beasts on beds of straw. Into their lives came little that
-was not coarse and brutal, and outwardly they were themselves coarse
-and brutal.” Naturally, this intense concentration upon work is not
-the whole of the picture; there was gaiety and often there was romance
-in the early days of pioneering, it ran like a coloured thread through
-all the story of our _Drang nach Westen_. But on the whole the period
-from our confederation into a Union until the expanding industrial era
-following the Civil War--roughly the century from 1783 to 1883--was
-a period in which the cardinal command was, “Be active, be bold, and
-above all, work.” In that century we subdued and populated a continent.
-There was no time for the distractions of art or the amenities of
-literature.
-
-To be sure, a short-range perspective seems to belie this last
-generalization. The colonial times and the first part of the 19th
-century witnessed a valid and momentous literary and intellectual
-efflorescence, and it was then we contributed many names to the
-biography of greatness. Yet it was a culture centred almost wholly in
-New England and wholly East of the Alleghanies; it had its vitality
-because it was not self-conscious, it was frankly derivative from
-England and Europe, it made no pretensions to being intrinsically
-American. The great current of our national life went irresistibly
-along, ploughing, and tilling, and cutting down the trees and brush,
-making roads and bridges as it filled the valleys and the plains.
-That was the real America, a mighty river of life, compared with
-which, for instance, Emerson and the Transcendentalists seemed a mere
-backwater--not a stagnant or brackish one to be sure, often a pool
-of quietude in which the stars, like Emerson’s sentences, might be
-reflected. But the real America was still in the heart of the pioneer.
-And in one sense, it still is to-day.
-
-The “real America,” I say, because I mean the America of mind and
-attitude, the inner truth, not the outer actuality. That outer
-actuality has made the fact of the pioneer almost grotesque. The
-frontier is closed; the nation is the most prosperous among the
-harassed ones of the earth; there is no need for the old perpetual
-preoccupation with material existence. In spite of trade depressions
-and wars and their aftermaths, we have conquered that problem. But we
-have not conquered ourselves. We must still go on in the old terms,
-as if the purpose of making money in order to make more money were as
-important as the purpose of raising bread in order to support life.
-The facts have changed, but we have not changed, only deflected our
-interests. Where the pioneer cleared a wilderness, the modern financier
-subdues a forest of competitors. He puts the same amount of energy and
-essentially the same quality of thought into his task to-day, although
-the practical consequences can hardly be described as identical.
-
-And what have been those practical consequences? As the industrial
-revolution expanded, coincidently with the filling up of the country,
-the surplus began to grow. That surplus was expended not towards
-the enrichment of our life--if one omit the perfunctory bequests for
-education--but towards the most obvious of unnecessary luxuries,
-the grandiose maintenance of our women. The daughters of pioneer
-mothers found themselves without a real job, often, indeed, the
-chief instrument for advertising their husbands’ incomes. For years
-the Victorian conception of women as ornaments dominated what we
-were pleased to call our “better elements”--those years, to put it
-brutally, which coincided with that early prosperity that made the
-conception possible. If the leisure of the landed gentry class of
-colonial times had been other than a direct importation, if there
-had ever been a genuine _salon_ in our cultural history, or if our
-early moneyed aristocracy had ever felt itself really secure from the
-constant challenge of immigrant newcomers, this surplus might have
-gone towards the deepening and widening of what we could have felt to
-be an indigenous tradition. Or if, indeed, the Cavalier traditions of
-the South (the only offshoot of the Renaissance in America) had not
-been drained of all vitality by the Civil War and its economic and
-intellectual consequences, this surplus might have enhanced the more
-gracious aspects of those traditions. None of these possibilities
-existed; and when prosperity smiled on us we were embarrassed. We were
-parvenus--even to this day the comic series, “Bringing Up Father,” has
-a native tang. We know exactly how Mr. Jiggs feels when Mrs. Jiggs
-drags him away to a concert and makes him dress for a stiff, formal
-dinner, when all his heart desires is to smoke his pipe and play poker
-with Dinty and the boys. Indeed, this series, which appears regularly
-in all the newspapers controlled by Mr. Hearst, will repay the social
-historian all the attention he gives it. It symbolises better than most
-of us appreciate the normal relationship of American men and women to
-cultural and intellectual values. Its very grotesqueness and vulgarity
-are revealing.
-
-In no country as in the United States have the tragic consequences of
-the lack of any common concept of the good life been so strikingly
-exemplified, and in no country has the break with those common concepts
-been so sharp. After all, when other colonies have been founded, when
-other peoples have roved from the homeland and settled in distant
-parts, they have carried with them more than mere scraps of tradition.
-Oftenest they have carried the most precious human asset of all,
-a heritage of common feeling, which enabled them to cling to the
-substance of the old forms even while they adapted them to the new
-conditions of life. But with us the repudiation of the old heritages
-was complete; we deliberately sought a new way of life, for in the
-circumstances under which we came into national being, breaking with
-the past was synonymous with casting off oppression. The hopefulness,
-the eagerness, the enthusiasm of that conscious attempt to adjudge all
-things afresh found its classic expression in the eloquent if vague.
-Declaration of Independence, not even the abstract phraseology of which
-could hide the revolutionary fervour beneath. Yet a few short years
-and that early high mood of adventure had almost evaporated, and men
-were distracted from the former vision by the prospect of limitless
-economic expansion, both for the individual and the nation as a whole.
-The Declaration symbolized only a short interlude in the pioneer
-spirit which brought us here and then led us forth to conquer the
-riches nature, with her fine contempt of human values, so generously
-spread before us. The end of the revolutionary mood came as soon as
-the signing of the Constitution by the States, that admirable working
-compromise in government which made no attempt to underscore democracy,
-as we understand it to-day, but rather to hold it in proper check and
-balance. Free, then, of any common heritage or tradition which might
-question his values, free, also, of the troublesome idealism of the
-older revolutionary mood, the ordinary man could go forth into the
-wilderness with singleness of purpose. He could be, as he still is
-to-day, the pioneer _toujours_.
-
-Now when his success in his half-chosen rôle made it unnecessary for
-him to play it, it was precisely the lack of a common concept of the
-good life which made it impossible for him to be anything else. It is
-not that Americans make money because they love to do so, but because
-there is nothing else to do; oddly enough, it is not even that the
-possessive instincts are especially strong with us (I think the French,
-for instance, are naturally more avaricious than we), but that we
-have no notion of a definite type of life for which a small income
-is enough, and no notion of any type of life from which work has been
-consciously eliminated. Never in any national sense having had leisure,
-as individuals we do not know what to do with it when good fortune
-gives it to us. Unlike a real game, we must go on playing _our_ game
-even after we have won.
-
-But if the successful pioneer did not know what to do with his own
-leisure, he had naïve faith in the capacity of his women to know
-what to do with theirs. With the chivalric sentimentality that often
-accompanies the prosperity of the primitive, the pioneer determined
-that his good luck should bestow upon his wife and sisters and mother
-and aunts a gift, the possession of which slightly embarrassed himself.
-He gave them leisure exactly as the typical business man of to-day
-gives them a blank check signed with his name. It disposed of them,
-kept them out of his world, and salved his conscience--like a check to
-charity. Unluckily for him, his mother, his wife, his sisters, and his
-aunts were of his own blood and breeding; they were the daughters of
-pioneers like himself, and the daughters of mothers who had contributed
-share and share alike to those foundations which had made his success
-possible. Although a few developed latent qualities of parasitism,
-the majority were strangely discontented (strangely, that is, from
-his point of view) with the job of mere Victorian ornament. What more
-natural under the circumstances than that the unimportant things of
-life--art, music, religion, literature, the intellectual life--should
-be handed over to them to keep them busy and contented, while he
-confined himself to the real man’s job of making money and getting on
-in the world? Was it not a happy and sensible adaptation of function?
-
-Happy or not, it was exactly what took place. To an extent almost
-incomprehensible to the peoples of older cultures, the things of the
-mind and the spirit have been given over, in America, into the almost
-exclusive custody of women. This has been true certainly of art,
-certainly of music, certainly of education. The spinster school-marm
-has settled in the impressionable, adolescent minds of boys the
-conviction that the cultural interests are largely an affair of the
-other sex; the intellectual life can have no connection with native
-gaiety, with sexual curiosity, with play, with creative dreaming, or
-with adventure. These more genuine impulses, he is made to feel, are
-not merely distinguishable from the intellectual life, but actually at
-war with it. In my own day at Harvard the Westerners in my class looked
-with considerable suspicion upon those who specialized in literature,
-the classics, or philosophy--a man’s education should be science,
-economics, engineering. Only “sissies,” I was informed, took courses
-in poetry out in that virile West. And to this day for a boy to be
-taught to play the piano, for example, is regarded as “queer,” whereas
-for a girl to be so taught is entirely in the nature of things. That
-is, natural aptitude has nothing to do with it; some interests are
-proper for women, others for men. Of course there are exceptions enough
-to make even the boldest hesitate at generalizations, yet assuredly
-the contempt, as measured in the only terms we thoroughly understand,
-money, with which male teachers, male professors (secretly), male
-ministers, and male artists are universally held should convince the
-most prejudiced that, speaking broadly, this generalization is in
-substance correct.
-
-In fact, when we try to survey the currents of our entire national
-life, to assess these vagrant winds of doctrine free from the
-ingenuousness that our own academic experience or training may give
-us, the more shall we perceive that the dichotomy between the cultural
-and intellectual life of men and women in this country has been
-carried farther than anywhere else in the world. We need only recall
-the older women’s clubs of the comic papers--in truth, the actual
-women’s clubs of to-day as revealed by small-town newspaper reports of
-their meetings--the now deliquescent Browning Clubs, the Chautauquas,
-the church festivals, the rural normal schools for teachers, the
-women’s magazines, the countless national organizations for improving,
-elevating, uplifting this, that, or the other. One shudders slightly
-and turns to the impeccable style, the slightly tired and sensuous
-irony of Anatole France (not yet censored, if we read him in French)
-for relief. Or if we are so fortunate as to be “regular” Americans
-instead of unhappy intellectuals educated beyond our environment,
-we go gratefully back to our work at the office. Beside the stilted
-artificiality of this world of higher ethical values the business
-world, where men haggle, cheat, and steal with whole-hearted devotion
-is at least real. And it is this world, the world of making money,
-in which alone the American man can feel thoroughly at home. If the
-French romanticists of the 18th century invented the phrase _la femme
-mécomprise_, a modern Gallic visitor would be tempted to observe
-that in this 20th century the United States was the land of _l’homme
-mécompris_.
-
-These, then, are the cruder historical forces that have led directly
-to the present remarkable situation, a situation, of course, which I
-attempt to depict only in its larger outlines. For the surface of the
-contemporary social structure shows us suffrage, the new insights into
-the world of industry which the war gave so many women for the first
-time, the widening of professional opportunity, co-education, and, in
-the life which perhaps those of us who have contributed to this volume
-know best, a genuine intellectual camaraderie. Nevertheless, I believe
-the underlying thesis cannot be successfully challenged. Where men
-and women in America to-day share their intellectual life on terms of
-equality and perfect understanding, closer examination reveals that
-the phenomenon is not a sharing but a capitulation. The men have been
-feminized.
-
-Thus far through this essay I have by implication rather than direct
-statement contrasted genuine interest in intellectual things with
-the kind of intellectual life led by women. Let me say now that no
-intention is less mine than to contribute to the old controversy
-concerning the respective intellectual capacities of the two sexes.
-If I use the adjective “masculine” to denote a more valid type of
-intellectual impulse than is expressed by the adjective “feminine,” it
-is not to belittle the quality of the second impulse; it is a matter of
-definition. Further, the relative degree of “masculine” and “feminine”
-traits possessed by an individual are almost as much the result of
-acquired training as of native inheritance. The young, independent
-college girl of to-day is in fact more likely to possess “masculine”
-intellectual habits than is the average Y.M.C.A. director. I use
-the adjectives to express broad, general characteristics as they are
-commonly understood.
-
-For a direct examination of the intellectual life of women--which,
-I repeat, is practically the intellectual life of the nation--in
-the United States shows the necessity of terms being defined more
-sharply. Interest in intellectual things is first, last, and all the
-time _disinterested_; it is the love of truth, if not exclusively
-for its own sake, at least without fear of consequences, in fact
-with precious little thought about consequences. This does not mean
-that such exercise of the native disposition to think, such slaking
-of the natural metaphysical curiosity in all of us, is not a process
-enwrapped--as truly as the disposition to make love or to get
-angry--with an emotional aura of its own, a passion as distinctive as
-any other. It merely means that the occasions which stimulate this
-innate intellectual disposition are of a different sort than those
-which stimulate our other dispositions. An imaginative picture of
-one’s enlarged social self will arouse our instincts of ambition or a
-desire to found a family, whereas curiosity or wonder about the mystery
-of life, the meaning of death, the ultimate nature of God (objects
-of desire as truly as other objects) will arouse our intellectual
-disposition. These occasions, objects, hypotheses are of necessity
-without moral significance. The values inherent in them are the
-values of satisfied contemplation and not of practical result. Their
-immediate utility--although their ultimate, by the paradox that is
-constantly making mere common sense inadequate, may be very great--is
-only subjective. In this sense, they seem wayward and masculine; and,
-cardinal sin of all, useless.
-
-Perhaps the meaning of the “feminine” approach to the intellectual life
-may be made somewhat clearer by this preliminary definition. The basic
-assumption of such an approach is that ideas are measured for their
-value by terms outside the ideas themselves, or, as Mrs. Mary Austin
-recently said in a magazine article, by “her [woman’s] deep sense of
-social applicability as the test of value.” Fundamentally, in a word,
-the intellectual life is an instrument of moral reform; the real
-test of ideas lies in their utilitarian success. Hence it is hardly
-surprising that the intellectual life, as I have defined it, of women
-in America turns out on examination not to be an intellectual life at
-all, but sociological activity. The best of modern women thinkers in
-the United States--and there are many--are oftenest technical experts,
-keen to apply knowledge and skill to the formulation of a technique
-for the better solution of problems _the answers to which are already
-assumed_. The question of fundamental ends is seldom if ever raised:
-for example, the desirability of the modern family, the desirability
-of children glowing with health, the desirability of monogamy are not
-challenged. They are assumed as ends desirable in themselves, and what
-women usually understand by the intellectual life is the application of
-modern scientific methods to a sort of enlarged and subtler course in
-domestic science.
-
-This attitude of contempt for mere intellectual values has of course
-been strengthened by the native pioneer suspicion of all thought that
-does not issue immediately in successful action. The remarkable growth
-of pragmatism, and its sturdy offspring instrumentalism, where ideas
-become but the lowly handmaidens of “getting on,” has been possible to
-the extent to which we see it to-day precisely because the intellectual
-atmosphere has been surcharged with this feminized utilitarianism.
-We are deeply uncomfortable before introspection, contemplation, or
-scrupulous adherence to logical sequence. Women do not hesitate to
-call these activities cold, impersonal, indirect--I believe they have
-a phrase for them, “the poobah tradition of learning.” With us the
-concept of the intellect as a soulless machine operating in a rather
-clammy void has acquired the force of folklore because we have so much
-wished to strip it of warmth and colour. We have wanted to discredit
-it in itself; we have respected it only for what it could do. If
-its operations lead to better sanitation, better milk for babies,
-and larger bridges over which, in Matthew Arnold’s phrase, we might
-cross more rapidly from one dismal, illiberal city to another dismal,
-illiberal city, then those operations have been justified. That the
-life of the mind might have an emotional drive, a sting or vibrancy of
-its own, constituting as valuable a contribution to human happiness as,
-say, the satisfied marital felicity of the bacteria-less suburbanite
-in his concrete villa has been incomprehensible. Every science must be
-an _applied_ science, the intellect must be _applied_ intellect before
-we thoroughly understand it. We have created an environment in which
-the intellectual impulses must become fundamentally social in quality
-and mood, whereas the truth of the matter is that these impulses, like
-the religious impulse, in their pristine spontaneity are basically
-individualistic and capricious rather than disciplined.
-
-But such individualism in thought, unless mellowed by contact with
-institutions that assume and cherish it and thus can, without
-patronizing, correct its wildnesses, inevitably turns into
-eccentricity. And such, unfortunately, has too often been the history
-of American intellectuals. The institutional structure that might
-sustain them and keep them on the main track of the humanistic
-tradition has been too fragile and too slight. The university and
-college life, the educational institutions, even the discipline of
-scholarship, as other essays in this volume show us, have been of
-very little assistance. Even the church has provoked recalcitrance
-rather than any real reorientation of religious viewpoint, and our
-atheists--recall Ingersoll--have ordinarily been quite conventional
-in their intellectual outlook. With educated Englishmen, for example,
-whatever their religious, economic, or political views, there has been
-a certain common tradition or point of departure and understanding,
-i.e., the classics. Mr. Balfour can speak the same language as Mr.
-Bertrand Russell, even when he is a member of a government that puts
-Mr. Russell in gaol for his political opposition to the late war. But
-it really is a strain on the imagination to picture Mr. Denby quoting
-Hume to refute Mr. Weeks, or Vice-President Coolidge engaging in an
-epistemological controversy with Postmaster-General Hays. There is no
-intellectual background common to President Harding and Convict Debs or
-to any one person and possibly as many as a hundred others--there are
-only common social or geographical backgrounds, in which the absence of
-a real community of interests is pathetically emphasized by grotesque
-emphasis upon fraternal solidarity, as when Mr. Harding discovered that
-he and his chauffeur belonged to the same lodge, regarding this purely
-fortuitous fact as a symbol of the healing power of the Fathers and of
-American Democracy!
-
-In such an atmosphere of shadowy spiritual relationships, where the
-thinness of contact of mind with mind is childishly disguised under the
-banner of good fellowship, it might be expected that the intellectual
-life must be led not only with that degree of individualistic isolation
-which is naturally necessary for its existence, but likewise in a
-hostile and unintelligent environment of almost enforced “difference”
-from the general social type. Such an atmosphere will become as
-infested with cranks, fanatics, mushroom religious enthusiasts, moral
-prigs with new schemes of perfectability, inventors of perpetual
-motion, illiterate novelists, and oratorical cretins, as a swamp with
-mosquitoes. They seem to breed almost overnight; we have no standard
-to which the wise and the foolish may equally repair, no criterion
-by which spontaneously to appraise them and thus, by robbing them of
-the breath of their life, recognition, reduce their numbers. On the
-contrary, we welcome them all with a kind of Jamesian gusto, as if
-every fool, like every citizen, must have his right to vote. It is
-a kind of intellectual enfranchisement that produces the same sort
-of leadership which, in the political field of complete suffrage,
-we suffer under from Washington and our various State capitals. Our
-intellectual life, when we judge it objectively on the side of vigour
-and diversity, too often seems like a democracy of mountebanks.
-
-Yet when we turn from the more naïve and popular experiments for
-finding expression for the baulked disposition to think, the more
-sophisticated _jeunesse dorée_ of our cultural life are equally
-crippled and sterile. They suffer not so much from being thought and
-being “queer”--in fact, inwardly deeply uncomfortable at not being
-successful business men, they are scrupulously conventional in manner
-and appearance--but from what Professor Santayana has called, with his
-usual felicity, “the genteel tradition.” It is a blight that falls on
-the just and the unjust; like George Bernard Shaw, they are tolerant
-before the caprices of the mind, and intolerant before the caprices of
-the body. They acquire their disability from the essentially American
-(and essentially feminine) timorousness before life itself; they seem
-to want to confine, as do all good husbands and providers, adventure
-to mental adventure and tragedy to an error in ratiocination. They
-will discant generously about liberty of opinion--although, strictly
-speaking, _opinion_ is always free; all that is restricted is the right
-to put it into words--yet seem singularly silent concerning liberty of
-action. If this were a mere temperamental defect, it would of course
-have no importance. But it cuts much deeper. Thought, like mist, arises
-from the earth, and to it must eventually return, if it is not to be
-dissipated into the ether. The genteel tradition, which has stolen from
-the intellectual life its own proper possessions, gaiety and laughter,
-has left it sour and _déraciné_. It has lost its earthy roots, its
-sensuous fulness, its bodily _mise-en-scène_. One has the feeling, when
-one talks to our correct intellectuals, that they are somehow brittle
-and might be cracked with a pun, a low story, or an animal grotesquerie
-as an eggshell might be cracked. Yet whatever else thought may be in
-itself, surely we know that it has a biological history and an animal
-setting; it can reach its own proper dignity and effectiveness only
-when it functions in some kind of rational relationship with the more
-clamorous instincts of the body. The adjustment must be one of harmony
-and welcome; real thinkers do not make this ascetic divorce between
-the passions and the intellect, the emotions and the reason, which
-is the central characteristic of the genteel tradition. Thought is
-nourished by the soil it feeds on, and in America to-day that soil is
-choked with the feckless weeds of correctness. Our sanitary perfection,
-our material organization of goods, our muffling of emotion, our
-deprecation of curiosity, our fear of idle adventure, our horror of
-disease and death, our denial of suffering--what kind of soil of life
-is that?
-
-Surely not an over-gracious or thrilling one; small wonder that our
-intellectual plants wither in this carefully aseptic sunlight.
-
-Nevertheless, though I was tempted to give the sub-title “A Study in
-Sterility” to this essay, I do not believe that our soil is wholly
-sterile. Beneath the surface barrenness stirs a germinal energy that
-may yet push its way through the weeds and the tin-cans of those
-who are afraid of life. If the genteel tradition did not succumb to
-the broad challenge of Whitman, his invitations have not been wholly
-rejected by the second generation following him. The most hopeful
-thing of intellectual promise in America to-day is the contempt of
-the younger people for their elders; they are restless, uneasy,
-disaffected. It is not a disciplined contempt; it is not yet kindled
-by any real love of intellectual values--how could it be? Yet it is
-a genuine and moving attempt to create a way of life free from the
-bondage of an authority that has lost all meaning, even to those
-who wield it. Some it drives in futile and pathetic expatriotism
-from the country; others it makes headstrong and reckless; many it
-forces underground, where, much as in Russia before the revolution
-of 1905, the _intelligentsia_ meet their own kind and share the
-difficulties of their common struggle against an environment that is
-out to destroy them. But whatever its crudeness and headiness, it is
-a yeast composed always of those who _will not_ conform. The more
-the pressure of standardization is applied to them the sharper and
-keener--if often the wilder--becomes their rebellion against it. Just
-now these non-conformists constitute a spiritual fellowship which is
-disorganized and with few points of contact. It may be ground out of
-existence, for history is merciless and every humanistic interlude
-resembles a perilous equipoise of barbaric forces. Only arrogance and
-self-complacency give warrant for assuming that we may not be facing
-a new kind of dark age. On the other hand, if the more amiable and
-civilized of the generation now growing up can somehow consolidate
-their scattered powers, what may they not accomplish? For we have a
-vitality and nervous alertness which, properly channelled and directed,
-might cut through the rocks of stupidity with the precision and
-spaciousness with which our mechanical inventions have seized on our
-natural resources and turned them into material goods. Our cup of life
-is full to the brim.
-
-I like to think that this cup will not all be poured upon the sandy
-deltas of industrialism ... we have so much to spare! Climb to the top
-of the Palisades and watch the great city in the deepening dusk as
-light after light, and rows of lights after rows, topped by towers of
-radiance at the end of the island, shine through the shadows across the
-river. Think, then, of the miles of rolling plains, fertile and dotted
-with cities, stretching behind one to that other ocean which washes a
-civilization that was old before we were born and yet to-day gratefully
-accepts our pitiful doles to keep it from starvation, of the millions
-of human aspirations and hopes and youthful eagernesses contained
-in the great sprawling, uneasy entity we call our country--must all
-the hidden beauty and magic and laughter we know is ours be quenched
-because we lack the courage to make it proud and defiant? Or walk down
-the Avenue some late October morning when the sun sparkles in a clear
-and electric air such as can be found nowhere else in the world. The
-flashing beauty of form, the rising step of confident animalism, the
-quick smile of fertile minds--must all these things, too, be reduced to
-a drab uniformity because we lack the courage to proclaim their sheer
-physical loveliness? Has not the magic of America been hidden under a
-fog of ugliness by those who never really loved it, who never knew our
-natural gaiety and high spirits and eagerness for knowledge? They have
-the upper hand now--but who would dare to prophesy that they can keep
-it?
-
-Perhaps this is only a day-dream, but surely one can hope that the
-America of our natural affections rather than the present one of
-enforced dull standardization may some day snap the shackles of those
-who to-day keep it a spiritual prison. And as surely will it be the
-rebellious and disaffected who accomplish the miracle, if it is ever
-accomplished. Because at bottom their revolt, unlike the aggressions
-of the standardizers, is founded not on hate of what they cannot
-understand, but on love of what they wish all to share.
-
- HAROLD E. STEARNS
-
-
-
-
-SCIENCE
-
-
-The scientific work of our countrymen has probably evoked less
-scepticism on the part of foreign judges than their achievements in
-other departments of cultural activity. There is one obvious reason for
-this difference. When our letters, our art, our music are criticized
-with disdainfully faint commendation, it is because they have failed to
-attain the higher reaches of creative effort. Supreme accomplishment in
-art certainly presupposes a graduated series of lesser strivings, yet
-from what might be called the consumer’s angle, mediocrity is worthless
-and incapable of giving inspiration to genius. But in science it is
-otherwise. Here every bit of sound work--however commonplace--counts as
-a contribution to the stock of knowledge; and, what is more, on labours
-of this lesser order the superior mind is frequently dependent for its
-own syntheses. A combination of intelligence, technical efficiency,
-and application may not by itself suffice to read the riddles of
-the universe; but, to change the metaphor, it may well provide the
-foundation for the epoch-makers’ structure. So while it is derogatory
-to American literature to be considered a mere reflection of English
-letters, it is no reflection on American scientists that they have
-gone to Europe to acquire that craftsmanship which is an indispensable
-prerequisite to fruitful research. And when we find Alexander von
-Humboldt praising in conversation with Silliman the geographical
-results of Maury and Frémont, there is no reason to suspect him of
-perfunctory politeness to a transatlantic visitor; the veteran scholar
-might well rejoice in the ever widening application of methods he had
-himself aided in perfecting.
-
-Thus even seventy years ago and more the United States had by honest,
-painstaking labour made worthwhile additions to human knowledge and
-these contributions have naturally multiplied a hundredfold with the
-lapse of years. Yet it would be quite misleading to make it appear
-as if the total represented merely a vast accumulation of uninspired
-routine jobs. Some years ago, to be sure, an American writer rather
-sensationally voiced his discontent with the paucity of celebrated
-_savants_ among our countrymen. But he forgot that in science fame
-is a very inadequate index of merit. The precise contribution made
-by one man’s individual ability is one of the most tantalizingly
-difficult things to determine--so much so that scholars are still
-debating in what measure Galileo’s predecessors paved the way for
-his discoveries in dynamics. For a layman, then, to appraise the
-relative significance of this or that intellectual worthy on the basis
-of current gossip is rather absurd. Certainly the lack of a popular
-reputation is a poor reason for denying greatness to a contemporary or
-even near-contemporary scientific thinker. Two remarkable instances at
-once come to mind of Americans who have won the highest distinction
-abroad yet remain unknown by name to many of their most cultivated
-compatriots. Who has ever heard of Willard Gibbs? Yet he was the
-recipient of the Copley medal, British learning’s highest honour, and
-his phase rule is said to mark an epoch in the progress of physical
-chemistry. Again, prior to the Nobel prize award, who outside academic
-bowers had ever heard of the crucial experiment by which a Chicago
-physicist showed, to quote Poincaré, “that the physical procedures are
-powerless to put in evidence absolute motion”? Michelson’s name is
-linked with all the recent speculations on relativity, and he shares
-with Einstein the fate of finding himself famous one fine morning
-through the force of purely external circumstances.
-
-In even the briefest and most random enumeration of towering native
-sons it is impossible to ignore the name of William James. Here for
-once the suffrage of town and gown, of domestic and alien judges,
-is unanimous. Naturally James can never mean quite the same to the
-European world that he means to us, because in the United States he
-is far more than a great psychologist, philosopher, or literary man.
-Owing to our peculiar spiritual history, he occupies in our milieu an
-altogether unique position. His is the solitary example of an American
-pre-eminent in a branch of science who at the same time succeeded in
-deeply affecting the cultural life of a whole generation. Further, he
-is probably the only one of our genuinely original men to be thoroughly
-saturated with the essense of old world civilization. On the other
-side of the Atlantic, of course, neither of these characteristics
-would confer a patent of distinction. Foreign judgment of James’s
-psychological achievement was consequently not coloured by external
-considerations, and it is all the more remarkable that the “Principles
-of Psychology” was so widely and by such competent critics acclaimed as
-a synthesis of the first order.
-
-Without attempting to exhaust the roster of great names, I must
-mention Simon Newcomb and his fellow-astronomer, George W. Hill, both
-Copley medallists. Newcomb, in particular, stood out as the foremost
-representative of his science in this country, honoured here and abroad
-alike for his abstruse original researches into the motion of the
-moon and the planetary system and for his effective popularization.
-Henry Augustus Rowland, the physicist, was another of our outstanding
-men--one, incidentally, whose measure was taken in Europe long before
-his greatness dawned upon his colleagues at home. He is celebrated,
-among other things, for perfecting an instrument of precision and for
-a new and more accurate determination of the mechanical equivalent of
-heat. Among geologists Grove Karl Gilbert, famous for his exploration
-of Lake Bonneville--the major forerunner of Great Salt Lake--and his
-investigations of mountain structure, stands forth as one of our
-pre-eminent savants. Even those who, like the present writer, enjoyed
-merely casual contact with that grand old man could not fail to gain
-the impression that now they knew what a great scientist looked like
-in the flesh and to feel that such a one would be a fit member of any
-intellectual galaxy anywhere.
-
-If from single individuals we turn to consider currents of scientific
-thought, the United States again stands the trial with flying colours.
-It can hardly be denied that in a number of branches our countrymen
-are marching in the vanguard. “Experimental biology,” said a German
-zoologist some time before the War, “is pre-eminently an American
-science.” Certainly one need merely glance at German or British
-manuals to learn how deeply interpretations of basic evolutionary
-phenomena have been affected by the work of Professor T. H. Morgan
-and his followers. In psychology it is true that no one wears the
-mantle of William James, but there is effective advancement along
-a number of distinct lines. Thorndike’s tests marked an era in the
-annals of animal psychology, supplanting with a saner technique the
-slovenly work of earlier investigators. Experimental investigation of
-mental phenomena generally, of individual variability and behaviour in
-particular, flourishes in a number of academic centres. In anthropology
-the writings of Lewis H. Morgan have proved a tremendous stimulus to
-sociological speculation the world over and still retain their hold
-on many European thinkers. They were not, in my opinion, the product
-of a great intellect and the scheme of evolution traced by Morgan is
-doomed to abandonment. Yet his theories have suggested a vast amount
-of thought and to his lasting credit it must be said that he opened
-up an entirely new and fruitful field of recondite research through
-his painstaking accumulation and discussion of primitive kinship
-terminologies.
-
-More recently the anthropological school headed by Professor Boas has
-led to a transvaluation of theoretical values in the study of cultural
-development, supplanting with a sounder historical insight the cruder
-evolutionary speculation of the past. Above all, its founder has
-succeeded in perfecting the methodology of every division of the vast
-subject, and remains probably the only anthropologist in the world who
-has both directly and indirectly furthered ethnological, linguistic,
-somatological and archæological investigation. Finally, the active part
-played by pathologists like Dr. Simon Flexner in the experimental study
-of disease is too well known to require more than brief mention.
-
-Either in its individual or collective results, American research is
-thus very far from being a negligible factor in the scientific life of
-the world. Nevertheless, the medal has a reverse side, and he would be
-a bold optimist who should sincerely voice complete contentment either
-with the status of science in the cultural polity of the nation or with
-the work achieved by the average American investigator. Let us, then,
-try to face the less flattering facts in the case.
-
-The fundamental difficulty can be briefly summarized by applying
-the sociologist’s concept of maladjustment. American science,
-notwithstanding its notable achievements, is not an organic product of
-our soil; it is an epiphenomenon, a hothouse growth. It is still the
-prerogative of a caste, not a treasure in which the nation glories.
-We have at best only a nascent class of cultivated laymen who relish
-scientific books requiring concentrated thought or supplying large
-bodies of fact. This is shown most clearly by the rarity of articles
-of this type even in our serious magazines. Our physicians, lawyers,
-clergymen and journalists--in short, our educated classes--do not
-encourage the publication of reading-matter which is issued in Europe
-as a profitable business venture. It is hard to conceive of a book
-like Mach’s “Analyse der Empfindungen” running through eight editions
-in the United States. Conversely, it is not strange that hardly any of
-our first-rate men find it an alluring task to seek an understanding
-with a larger audience. Newcomb and James are of course remarkable
-exceptions, but they _are_ exceptions. Here again the contrast
-with European conditions is glaring. Not to mention the classic
-popularizers of the past, England, e.g., can boast even to-day of such
-men as Pearson, Soddy, Joly, Hinks--all of them competent or even
-distinguished in their professional work yet at the same time skilful
-interpreters of their field to a wider public. But for a healthy
-cultural life a rapport of this sort between creator and appreciator is
-an indispensable prerequisite, and it is not a whit less important in
-science than in music or poetry.
-
-The estrangement of science from its social environment has produced
-anomalies almost inconceivable in the riper civilizations of the Old
-World. Either the scientist loses contact with his surroundings or
-in the struggle for survival he adapts himself by a surrender of his
-individuality, that is, by more or less disingenuously parading as
-a lowbrow and representing himself as a dispenser of worldly goods.
-It is quite true that, historically, empirical knowledge linked with
-practical needs is earlier than rational science; it is also true that
-applied and pure science can be and have been mutual benefactors.
-This lesson is an important one and in a country with a scholastic
-tradition like Germany it was one that men like Mach and Ostwald did
-well to emphasize. But in an age and country where philosophers pique
-themselves on ignoring philosophical problems and psychologists have
-become experts in advertising technique, the emphasis ought surely to
-be in quite the opposite direction, and that, even if one inclines in
-general to a utilitarian point of view. For nothing is more certain
-than that a penny-wise Gradgrind policy is a pound-foolish one. A
-friend teaching in one of our engineering colleges tells me that owing
-to the “practical” training received there the graduates are indeed
-able to apply formulæ by rote but flounder helplessly when confronted
-by a new situation, which drives them to seek counsel with the despised
-and underpaid “theoretical” professor. The plea for pure science
-offered by Rowland in 1883 is not yet altogether antiquated in 1921:
-“To have the applications of a science, the science itself must exist
-... we have taken the science of the Old World, and applied it to all
-our uses, accepting it like the rain of heaven, without asking whence
-it came, or even acknowledging the debt of gratitude we owe to the
-great and unselfish workers who have given it to us.... To a civilized
-nation of the present day, the applications of science are a necessity,
-and our country has hitherto succeeded in this line, only for the
-reason that there are certain countries in the world where pure science
-has been and is cultivated, and where the study of nature is considered
-a noble pursuit.”
-
-The Bœotian disdain for research as a desirable pursuit is naturally
-reflected in the mediocre encouragement doled out to investigators, who
-are obliged to do their work by hook or by crook and to raise funds
-by the undignified cajolery of wealthy patrons and a disingenuous
-_argumentum ad hominem_. Heaven forbid that money be appropriated to
-attack a problem which, in the opinion of the best experts, calls
-for solution; effort must rather be diverted to please an ignorant
-benefactor bent on establishing a pet theory or fired with the zeal to
-astound the world by a sensational discovery.
-
-Another aspect of scientific life in the United States that reflects
-the general cultural conditions is the stress placed on organization
-and administration as opposed to individual effort. It is quite true
-that for the prosecution of elaborate investigations careful allotment
-of individual tasks contributory to the general end is important and
-sometimes even indispensable. But some of the greatest work in the
-history of science has been achieved without regard for the principles
-of business efficiency; and whatever advantage may accrue in the future
-from administrative devices is negligible in comparison with the
-creative thought of scientific men. These, and only these, can lend
-value to the machinery of organization, which independently of them
-must remain a soulless instrument. The overweighting of efficiency
-schemes as compared to creative personalities is only a symptom of a
-general maladjustment. Intimately related with this feature is that
-cynical flouting of intellectual values that appears in the customary
-attitude of trustees and university presidents towards those who
-shed lustre on our academic life. The professional pre-eminence of a
-scientist may be admitted by the administrative officials but it is
-regarded as irrelevant since the standard of values accepted by them is
-only remotely, if at all, connected with originality or learning.
-
-There are, of course, scientists to whom deference is paid even by
-trustees, nay, by the wives of trustees; but it will be usually found
-that they are men of independent means or social prestige. It is, in
-other words, their wealth and position, not their creative work, that
-raises them above their fellows. One of the most lamentable results
-of this contempt for higher values is the failure to provide for
-ample leisure that might be devoted to research. The majority of our
-scientists, like those abroad, gain a livelihood by teaching, but few
-foreign observers fail to be shocked by the way the energies of their
-American colleagues are frittered away on administrative routine and
-elementary instruction till neither time nor strength remains for
-the advancement of knowledge. But even this does not tell the whole
-story, for we must remember that the younger scientists are as a rule
-miserably underpaid and are obliged to eke out a living by popular
-writing or lecturing, so that research becomes a sheer impossibility.
-If Ostwald and Cattell are right in associating the highest
-productivity with the earlier years of maturity, the tragic effects of
-such conditions as I have just described are manifest.
-
-In justice, however, mention must be made of a number of institutions
-permitting scientific work without imposing any obligation to teach
-or onerous administrative duties. The U. S. Geological Survey, the
-Carnegie Institution, the Rockefeller Institute may serve as examples.
-We must likewise remember that different individuals react quite
-differently to the necessity for teaching. Some of the most noted
-investigators--Rowland, for instance--find a moderate amount of
-lecturing positively stimulating. In a utopian republic of learning
-such individual variations would be carefully considered in the
-allotment of tasks. The association of the Lick Observatory with the
-University of California seems to approximate to ideal conditions,
-inasmuch as its highly trained astronomers are relieved of all academic
-duties but enjoy the privilege of lecturing to the students when the
-spirit moves them.
-
-To return to the main question, the maladjustment between the specific
-scientific phase of our civilization and the general cultural life
-produces certain effects even more serious than those due to penury,
-administrative tyranny, and popular indifference, for they are
-less potent and do not so readily evoke defence-mechanisms on the
-victims’ part. There is, first of all, a curtailment of potential
-scientific achievement through the general deficiencies of the cultural
-environment.
-
-Much has been said by both propagandists and detractors of German
-scholarship about the effects of intensive specialization. But an
-important feature commonly ignored in this connection is that in the
-country of its origin specialization is a concomitant and successor
-of a liberal education. Whatever strictures may be levelled at the
-traditional form of this preparatory training--and I have seen it
-criticized as severely by German writers as by any--the fact remains
-that the German university student has a broad cultural background such
-as his American counterpart too frequently lacks; and what is true of
-Germany holds with minor qualifications for other European countries.
-
-A trivial example will serve to illustrate the possible advantages
-of a cultural foundation for very specialized research. Music is
-notoriously one of the salient features of German culture, not merely
-because Germany has produced great composers but because of the wide
-appreciation and quite general study of music. Artistically the
-knowledge of the piano or violin acquired by the average child in
-the typical German home may count for naught, yet in at least two
-branches of inquiry it may assume importance. The psychological aspect
-of acoustics is likely to attract and to be fruitfully cultivated by
-those conversant with musical technique, and they alone will be capable
-of grappling with the comparative problems presented by the study
-of primitive music--problems that would never occur to the average
-Anglo-Saxon field ethnologist, yet to which the German would apply his
-knowledge as spontaneously as he applies the multiplication table to a
-practical matter of everyday purchase.
-
-As a matter of fact, all the phenomena of the universe are interrelated
-and, accordingly, the most important advances may be expected from a
-revelation of the less patent connections. For this purpose a diversity
-of interests with corresponding variety of information may be not only
-a favourable condition but a prerequisite. Helmholtz may have made an
-indifferent physician; but because he combined a medical practitioner’s
-knowledge with that of a physicist he was enabled to devise the
-ophthalmoscope. So it may be that not one out of ten thousand men
-who might apply themselves to higher mathematics would ever be able
-to advance mathematical theory, but it is certainly true that the
-manipulatory skill acquired would stand them in good stead not only in
-the exact sciences but in biology, psychology, and anthropometry, in
-all of which the theory of probability can be effectively applied to
-the phenomenon of variability.
-
-I do not mean to assert that the average European student is an
-Admirable Crichton utilizing with multidexterity the most diverse
-methods of research and groups of fact. But I am convinced that
-many European workers produce more valuable work than equally able
-Americans for the sole reason that the European’s social heritage
-provides him with agencies ready-made for detecting correlations that
-must inevitably elude a vision narrower because deprived of the same
-artificial aid. The remedy lies in enriching the cultural atmosphere
-and in insisting on a broad educational training over and above that
-devoted to the specialist’s craftsmanship.
-
-Important, however, as variety of information and interests doubtless
-are, one factor must take precedence in the scientist’s equipment--the
-spirit in which he approaches his scientific work as a whole. In
-this respect the point that would probably strike most European or,
-at all events, Continental scientists is the rarity in America of
-philosophical inquiries into the foundations of one’s scientific
-position. The contrast with German culture is of course sharp, and in
-many Teutonic works the national bent for epistemological discussion is
-undoubtedly carried to a point where it ceases to be palatable to those
-not to the manner born. Yet this tendency has a salutary effect in
-stimulating that contempt for mere authority which is indispensable for
-scientific progress. What our average American student should acquire
-above all is a stout faith in the virtues of _reasoned nonconformism_,
-and in this phrase adjective and noun are equally significant. On
-one hand, we must condemn the blind deference with which too many of
-our investigators accept the judgments of acknowledged greatness.
-What can be more ridiculous, e.g., than to make dogmas of the _obiter
-dicta_ of a man like William James, the chief lesson of whose life is
-a resentment of academic traditionalism? Or, what shall we think of
-a celebrated biologist who decides the problem of Lamarckianism by
-a careful weighing not of arguments but of authorities? No one can
-approve of the grim ferocity, reminiscent of the literary feuds of
-Alexander Pope, with which German savants sometimes debate problems of
-theoretic interest. Yet even such billingsgate as Dührring levelled at
-Helmholtz is preferable to obsequious discipleship. It testifies, at
-all events, to the glorious belief that in the republic of learning
-fame and position count for naught, that the most illustrious scientist
-shall not be free from the criticism of the meanest _Privatdozent_,
-But the nonconformism should be rational. It is infantile to cling to
-leading-strings but it is no less childish to thrust out one’s tongue
-at doctrines that happen to disagree with those of one’s own clique.
-Indeed, frequently both forms of puerility are combined: it is easy to
-sneer with James at Wundt or to assault the selectionists under cover
-of De Vries’s mutationism. A mature thinker will forego the short and
-easy but misleading road. Following Fechner, he will be cautious in his
-belief but equally cautious in his disbelief.
-
-It is only such spiritual freedom that makes the insistence on academic
-freedom a matter worth fighting for. After all, what is the use of
-a man’s teaching what he pleases, if he quite sincerely retails
-the current folk-lore? In one of the most remarkable chapters of
-the “Mechanik” Ernst Mach points out that the detriment to natural
-philosophy due to the political power of the Church is easily
-exaggerated. Science was retarded primarily not because scientists were
-driven by outward compulsion to spread such and such views but because
-they uncritically swallowed the cud of folk-belief. _Voilà l’ennemi!_
-In the insidious influence of group opinions, whether countenanced by
-Church, State or a scientific hierarchy, lies the basic peril. The
-philosophic habit of unremitting criticism of one’s basic assumptions
-is naturally repugnant to a young and naïve culture, and it cannot be
-expected to spring up spontaneously and flower luxuriantly in science
-while other departments of life fail to yield it nurture. Every phase
-of our civilization must be saturated with that spirit of positive
-scepticism which Goethe and Huxley taught before science can reap a
-full harvest in her own field. But her votaries, looking back upon
-the history of science, may well be emboldened to lead in the battle,
-and if the pioneers in the movement should fail they may well console
-themselves with Milton’s hero: “... and that strife was not inglorious,
-though the event was dire!”
-
- ROBERT H. LOWIE
-
-
-
-
-PHILOSOPHY
-
-
-Philosophy is at once a product of civilization and a stimulus to
-its development. It is the solvent in which the inarticulate and
-conflicting aspirations of a people become clarified and from which
-they derive directing force. Since, however, philosophers are likely
-to clothe their thoughts in highly technical language, there is
-need of a class of middle-men-interpreters through whom philosophy
-penetrates the masses. By American tradition, the philosophers have
-been professors; the interpreters, clergymen. Professors are likely to
-be deflected by the ideas embodied in the institutions with which they
-associate themselves. The American college, in its foundations, was
-designated a protector of orthodoxy and still echoes what Santayana
-has so aptly called the “genteel tradition,” the tradition that the
-teacher must defend the faith. Some of the most liberal New England
-colleges even now demand attendance at daily chapel and Sunday church.
-Less than a quarter of a century ago, one could still find, among major
-non-sectarian institutions, the clergyman-president, himself a teacher,
-crowning the curriculum with a senior requirement, Christian Evidences,
-in support of the Faith.
-
-The nineteenth century organized a vigorous war against this genteel
-tradition. Not only were the attacks of rationalism on dogma
-reinforced by the ever-mounting tide of scientific discovery within
-our institutions of learning, but also the news of these scientific
-discoveries began to stir the imagination of the public, and to
-carry the conflict of science and theology beyond the control of the
-church-college. The greatest leaven was Darwin’s “Origin of Species,”
-of which two American editions were announced as early as 1860, one
-year after its publication in England. The dogma of science came
-publicly to confront the dogma of theology. Howsoever conservative
-the college, it had to yield to the new intellectual temper and the
-capitulation was facilitated by the army of young professors whom
-cheapened transportation and the rumour of great achievements led to
-the universities of Germany.
-
-From the point of view of popular interest, the immediate effects of
-these pilgrimages were not wholly advantageous to philosophy. In losing
-something of their American provincialism, these pilgrims also lost
-their hold on American interests. The problems that they brought back
-were rooted in a foreign soil and tradition. To students they appeared
-artificial and barren displays of technical skill. Thus an academic
-philosophy of professordom arose, the more lonely through the loss
-of the ecclesiastical mediators of the earlier tradition. But here
-and there American vitality showed through its foreign clothes and
-gradually an assimilation took place, the more easily, perhaps, since
-German idealism naturally sustains the genteel tradition and thrives
-amid the modes of thought that Emerson had developed independently and
-for which his literary gifts had obtained a following.
-
-Wherever New England has constituted the skeletal muscles of
-philosophic culture, its temper has remained unchanged. Calvinism was
-brought to America because it suited this temper, and the history of
-idealism in America is the history of its preservation by adaptation to
-a changing environment of ideas. Its marks are a sense of the presence
-of the Divine in experience and a no less strong sense of inevitable
-evil. Jonathan Edwards writes, “When we behold the light and brightness
-of the sun, the golden edges of an evening cloud, or the beauteous
-bow, we behold the adumbrations of His glory and goodness; and in the
-blue sky, of his mildness and gentleness. There are also many things
-wherein we may behold His awful majesty: in the sun in his strength, in
-comets, in thunder, with the lowering thunder-clouds, in ragged rocks
-and the brows of mountains.” Emerson’s version is: “Nature is always
-consistent, though she feigns to contravene her own laws.... She arms
-and equips an animal to find it place and living in the earth, and at
-the same time she arms and equips another animal to destroy it. Space
-exists to divide creatures; but by clothing the sides of a bird with
-a few feathers she gives him a petty omnipresence.... Nature is the
-incarnation of a thought, and turns to a thought again, as ice becomes
-water and gas. Every moment instructs and every object; for wisdom is
-infused into every form.” And Royce’s: “When they told us in childhood
-that we could not see God just _because_ he was everywhere, just
-because his omnipresence gave us no chance to discern him and to fix
-our eyes upon him, they told us a deep truth in allegorical fashion....
-The Self is so little a thing merely guessed at as the unknown source
-of experience, that already, in the very least of daily experiences,
-you unconsciously know him as something present.”
-
-In its darker aspect this temper gives us Edwards’s “Sinners in the
-Hands of an Angry God,” whose choices we may not fathom. But Emerson
-is not far behind: “Great men, great nations, have not been boasters
-and buffoons, but perceivers of the terror of life, and have manned
-themselves to face it.... At Lisbon, an earthquake killed men like
-flies. At Naples, three years ago, ten thousand persons were crushed in
-a few minutes. Etc.... Providence has a wild, rough, incalculable road
-to its end, and it is of no use to try to whitewash its huge, mixed
-instrumentalities, or to dress up that terrific benefactor in the clean
-shirt and white neckcloth of a student of divinity.” For Royce, “the
-worst tragedy of the world is the tragedy of the brute chance to which
-everything spiritual seems to be subject amongst us--the tragedy of
-the diabolical irrationality of so many among the foes of whatever is
-significant.”
-
-Emersonian philosophy fails in two respects to satisfy the demands of
-the puritanical temperament upon contemporary thought. In building
-altars to the “Beautiful Necessity,” it neglects to assimilate the
-discoveries of science, and it detaches itself from the Christian
-tradition within which alone this spirit feels at home. Both of these
-defects are met by the greatest of American idealists, Professor Royce.
-
-In character and thought Royce is the great reconciler of
-contradictions. Irrational in his affections, and at his best in
-the society of children, he stands for the absolute authority of
-reason; filled with indignation at wrong and injustice, he explains
-the presence of evil as an essential condition for the good; keenly
-critical and not optimistic as to the concrete characters of men, he
-presents man as the image of God, a part of the self-representative
-system through which the Divine nature unfolds itself. Never was there
-a better illustration of Pascal’s dictum that we use our reasons to
-support what we already believe, not to attain conclusions. And never
-was there greater self-deception as to the presence of this process.
-
-What man not already convinced of an Absolute could find in error the
-proof of a deeper self that knows in unity all truth? Who else could
-accept the dilemma “_either_ ... your real world yonder is through
-and through a world of ideas, an outer mind that you are more or less
-comprehending through your experience, _or else_, in so far as it
-is real and outer, it is unknowable, an inscrutable X, an absolute
-mystery”? Without the congeniality of belief, where is the thrill in
-assimilating self-consciousness as infinite to a greater Infinite, as
-the infinite systems of even numbers, or of odd numbers, or an infinity
-of other infinite series can be assimilated to the greater infinity
-of the whole number series as proper parts? Yet Royce has been able
-to clothe these doctrines with vast erudition and flashes of quaint
-humour, helped out by a prolix and somewhat desultory memory, and give
-them life.
-
-By virtue of the obscurantist logic inherent in this as in other
-transcendental idealisms, there is a genuine attachment to a certain
-aspect of Christianity. The identification of the Absolute with the
-Logos of John in his “Spirit of Modern Philosophy” and the frequent
-lapses into Scriptural language are not mere tricks to inspire
-abstractions with the breath of life. By such logic “selves” are never
-wholly distinct. If we make classifications, they are all _secundum
-quid_. Absolute ontological sundering is as mythical as the Snark.
-The individual is essentially a member of a community of selves that
-establishes duties for him under the demands of Loyalty. This is the
-basis of Royce’s ethics. But the fellowship in this community is also a
-participation in the “beloved community” within which sin, atonement,
-and the dogma of Pauline Christianity unfold themselves naturally in
-the guise of social psychology. In such treatment of the “Problem of
-Christianity” there is at most only a slight shifting of emphasis
-from the somewhat too self-conscious individualism of his earliest
-philosophy.
-
-Royce used to tell a story on himself that illustrates a reaction of a
-part of the public to idealistic philosophy. At the close of a lecture
-before a certain woman’s organization, one of his auditors approached
-him with the words: “Oh, my dear Professor Royce, I _did_ enjoy your
-lectures _so_ much! Of course, I didn’t understand one word of it,
-but it was so evident _you_ understood it all, that it made it _very_
-enjoyable!” The lady, though more frank in her confession, was probably
-not intellectually inferior to a considerable portion of the idealist’s
-public. James notes the fascination of hearing high things talked
-about, even if one cannot understand. But time is, alas, productive of
-comparative understanding, and it may be with Royce, as with Emerson
-before him, that growth of understanding contributes to narrowing the
-circle of his readers. The imported mysteries of Eucken and Bergson
-offer newer thrills, and a fuller sense of keeping up to date.
-
-If Royce’s philosophy of religion has not the success that might have
-been anticipated among those seeking a freer religion, it is probably,
-as Professor Hocking suggests, because “idealism does not do the work
-of religious truth.” Royce has no interest in churches or sects. Christ
-is for him little more than a shadow. Prayer and worship find no place
-in his discussion. The mantle of the genteel tradition must then fall
-on other shoulders, probably those of Hocking himself. His “Meaning of
-God in Human Experience” is an effort to unite realism, mysticism, and
-idealism to establish Christianity as “organically rooted in passion,
-fact, and institutional life.” Where idealism has destroyed the fear of
-Hell, this new interpretation “restores the sense of infinite hazard, a
-wrath to come, a heavenly city to be gained or lost in the process of
-time and by the use of our freedom”!
-
-In this philosophy, we ask, what has religion done for humanity and how
-has it operated? Its effects appear in “the basis of such certainties
-as we have, our self-respect, our belief in human worth, our faith in
-the soul’s stability through all catastrophes of physical nature, and
-in the integrity of history.” But if we accept this “mass of actual
-deed, once and for all accomplished under the assurance of historic
-religion” and through the medium of religious dogma and practice,
-does this guarantee the future importance of religion? Much has been
-accomplished under the conception that the earth was flat, but the
-conception is nevertheless not valid.
-
-It is too soon to estimate the depth of impression that this philosophy
-will make on American culture. Professor Hocking warns us against
-hastening to judge that the world is becoming irreligious. He believes
-that the current distaste for the language of orthodoxy may spring
-from the opposite reason, that man is becoming potentially more
-religious. If so, this fact may conspire with the American tradition
-of the church-college to verify Professor Cohen’s assertion that
-“the idealistic tradition still is and perhaps will long continue to
-be the prevailing basis of philosophic instruction in America.” But
-there are signs that point to an opposite conclusion and the means of
-emancipation are at hand both in a change of popular spirit and within
-philosophy itself.
-
-The economic and social conditions that scattered the more adventurous
-of the New Englanders through the developing West, and the tides
-of immigration of the 19th century, have weakened the hold of the
-Calvinistic spirit. These events, and scientific education, are
-producing a generation that can look upon the beauties of nature, be
-moved to enjoyment, admiration, and wonder by them without, on that
-account, feeling themselves in the presence of a supernatural Divine
-principle. Success in mastering nature has overcome the feeling of
-helplessness in the presence of misfortune. It breeds optimists of
-intelligence. To a cataclysm such as the San Francisco earthquake,
-it replies with organized relief and reconstruction in reinforced
-concrete. If pestilence appears, it seeks the germ, an antitoxin, and
-sanitary measures. There are no longer altars built to the Beautiful
-Necessity.
-
-Within philosophy, the most radical expression of this attitude appears
-in the New Realism, and in the instrumentalism of Dewey. In 1910,
-six of the younger American philosophers issued in the _Journal of
-Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Method_ “The Programme and First
-Platform of Six Realists,” followed shortly by a co-operative volume
-of studies to elaborate the doctrine. Their deepest bond of union is
-a distaste for the romantic spirit and obscurantist logic of Absolute
-Idealism. Hence their dominant idea is to cut at the very foundations
-of this system, the theory of relations in general, and the relation
-of idea and object in particular. Young America is not fond of the
-subtleties of history, hence these realists take their stand upon the
-“unimpeachable truth of the accredited results of science” at a time
-when, by the irony of history, science herself has begun to doubt.
-
-To thwart idealism, psychology must be rewritten. While consciousness
-exists there is always the chance that our world of facts may fade into
-subjective presentations. Seizing a fruitful suggestion of James’, they
-introduce us to a world of objects that exists quite independently
-of being known. The relations of these objects are external to them
-and independent of their character. Sometimes, however, there arise
-relations between our organisms and other objects that can best be
-described by asserting that these objects have entered into our
-consciousness. How then can we fall into error? Only as nature makes
-mistakes, by reacting in a way that brings conflict with unnoted
-conditions. Perhaps the greatest contribution of Realism as yet to
-American thought is the contribution of some of its apostles to its
-implicit psychology, already independently established as behaviourism,
-the most vital movement in contemporary psychology.
-
-The highly technical form of the Six Realists’ co-operative volume has
-kept their doctrine from any great reading public. But in its critical
-echoes, the busy American finds a sympathetic note in the assertion
-of the independent reality of the objects with which he works and the
-world in which he has to make his way. His also is practical faith
-in science, and he is glad to escape an inevitable type of religion
-and moral theory to be swallowed along with philosophy. Until the New
-Realists, however, develop further implications of their theory, or
-at least present congenial religious, moral, and social attitudes,
-their philosophy has only the negative significance of release. If it
-is going to take a deep hold on life, it must also be creative, not
-replacing dogma by dogma, but elaborating some new world vision. As yet
-it has told us little more than that truth, goodness, and beauty are
-independent realities, eternal subsistencies that await our discovery.
-
-Professor Perry has outlined a realistic morality. For him a right
-action is any that conduces to goodness and whatever fulfils an
-interest is good. But a good action is not necessarily moral. Morality
-requires the fulfilment of the greatest possible number of interests,
-under the given circumstances; the highest good, if attainable,
-would be an action fulfilling all possible interests. This doctrine,
-though intelligible, is hard to apply in specific instances. In it
-realism dissolves into pragmatism, and its significance can best be
-seen in connection with that philosophy, where it has received fuller
-development and concrete applications.
-
-Pragmatism obtained its initial impulse through a mind in temper
-between the sturdy common sense of the New Realists and the
-emotionalistic romanticism of the Idealists, or rather comprehending
-both within itself. This mind is that of William James, the last heir
-of the line of pure New England culture, made cosmopolitan by travel
-and intellectual contacts. Of Swedenborgian family, skilled alike in
-science and art, James lived the mystical thrills of the unknown but
-could handle them with the shrewdness of a Yankee trader. With young
-America, his gaze is directed toward the future, and with it, he is
-impatient of dogma and restraint. He is free from conventions of
-thought and action with the freedom of those who have lived them all
-in their ancestry and dare to face realities without fear of social
-or intellectual _faux pas_. With such new-found freedom goes a vast
-craving for experience. For him, the deepest realities are the personal
-experiences of individual men.
-
-James’ greatest contribution is his “Psychology.” In it he places
-himself in the stream of human experience, ruthlessly cutting the
-gordian knots of psychological dogma and conventions. The mind that he
-reports is the mind each of us sees in himself. It is not so much a
-science of psychology as the materials for such a science, a science
-in its descriptive stage, constantly interrupted by shrewd homilies
-wherein habit appears as the fly-wheel of society, or our many selves
-enlarge the scope of sympathetic living. Nor is it congenial to this
-adventurer in experience that his explorations should constrain
-human nature within a scientist’s map. Not only must the stream of
-consciousness flow between the boundaries of our concepts, but also in
-the human will there is a point, be it ever so small, where a “we,” too
-real ever to be comprehended by science or philosophy, can dip down
-into the stream of consciousness and delay some fleeting idea, be it
-only for the twinkling of an eye, and thereby change the whole course
-and significance of our overt action. Freedom must not unequivocally
-surrender to scientific determinism, or chance to necessity.
-
-James is a Parsifal to whom the Grail is never quite revealed. His
-pragmatism and radical empiricism are but methods of exploration and
-no adventure is too puny or mean for the quest. We must make our ideas
-clear and test them by the revelation they produce. Thoughts that make
-no difference to us in living are not real thoughts, but imaginings.
-The way is always open and perhaps there is a guiding truth, a
-working value, in the operations of even the deranged mind. We must
-entertain the ecstatic visions of saints, the alleged communications of
-spiritualists, mystical contacts with sources of some higher power, and
-even the thought-systems of cranks, that nothing be lost or untried.
-Not that we need share such beliefs, but they are genuine experiences
-and who can foretell where in experiences some fruitful vision may
-arise!
-
-As a psychologist, James knew that the significance of a belief lies
-not so much in its content as in its power to direct the energies it
-releases. His catholic interests are not equivalent to uncritical
-credulity. Santayana, the wisest of his critics, is right in his
-assertion that James never lost his agnosticism: “He did not really
-believe; he merely believed in the right of believing that you might be
-right if you believed.” As for Pascal, the wager on immortality might
-be worth the making for if one won there was the blessedness of Heaven,
-and if one lost--at least there should have been a sustaining optimism
-through the trials of this life. Communion with the infinite might open
-new sources of power. If so, the power was there. If not, no harm had
-been done by the trial. Yet there is no evidence in James’ philosophy
-that he himself drew inspiration from any of such sources.
-
-If James has drawn to himself the greatest reading public of all
-American philosophers, it is because in him each man can find the
-sanction for himself. Without dogmatism or pedantry, James is the
-voice of all individual human experiences. In him, each man can find a
-sympathetic auditor, and words vivid with the language of the street,
-encouraging his endeavours or at least pointing out the significance
-of his experiences for the great business of living. Sometimes James
-listens to human confessions with a suppressed cry of pain and recalls
-wistfully “A Certain Blindness in Human Beings,” or asks “Is Life Worth
-Living?” Once with indignation at “the delicate intellectualities
-and subtleties and scrupulosities” of philosophy he confronts “the
-host of guileless thoroughfed thinkers” with the radical realities of
-Morrison I. Swift, only to partially retract a few pages later with
-the admission, for him grudgingly given, that the Absolute may afford
-its believers a certain comfort and is “in so far forth” true. We live
-after all in an open universe, the lid is off and time relentlessly
-operates for the production of novelties. No empiricist can give a
-decision until the evidence is all in, and in the nature of the case
-this can never happen.
-
-Such openness of interest forefends the possibility of James’ founding
-a school of philosophy. It also renders all his younger contemporaries
-in some measure his disciples. Popularly he is the refuge of the
-mystics and heterodox, the spiritualists and the cranks who seek the
-sanction of academic scholarship and certified dignity. There are
-more things in the philosophies of these who call him master than are
-dreamed of in his philosophy. In academic philosophy there is a dual
-descent of the James tradition. As a principle of negative criticism,
-it may be turned into its opposite, as with Hocking, who enunciates
-the extreme form of the pragmatic principle, If a theory is not
-interesting, it is false--and utilizes it for his realistic, mystic,
-idealistic absolutism. The philosophy of Henri Bergson, that has been
-widely read in this country, reinforces this mystical spiritual side,
-but American mysticism has popularly tended to degenerate into the
-occultisms of second-rate credulous minds.
-
-On the other hand, for those in whom the conflict of science and
-religion is settling itself on the side of science, the principle of
-pragmatism lends itself to the interpretation originally intended by
-Charles Peirce, the author of the term, as an experimentalism, a search
-for verifiable hypotheses after the manner of the sciences. But this
-side of the doctrine is the one that has been developed by John Dewey.
-
-Professor Dewey is without question the leading American philosopher,
-both from the thoroughness of his analyses and the vigour of his appeal
-to the American public. In discarding the Hegelian Idealism in which
-he was trained, he is thoroughly aligned with the New America. In him
-science has wholly won, and although of New England, Vermont, ancestry,
-there remains not a trace of the New Englander’s romantic spiritual
-longings for contact with a vast unknown. His dogmatic faiths, and no
-man is without such faiths, relate to evolution, democracy, and the
-all-decisive authority of experience.
-
-For Dewey, as for the Realists, psychology is the study of human
-behaviour. For him mind is the instrument by which we overcome
-obstacles and thinking takes place only when action is checked. Hence
-in the conventional sense there are no abstractions. Our concepts are
-instruments by which we take hold of reality. If we need instruments to
-manufacture instruments, or to facilitate their use, these instruments
-are also concepts. We may call them abstract, but they are not thereby
-removed from the realm of experienced fact. Since, therefore, our real
-interest is not in things as they are in themselves, but in what we
-can do with them, our judgments are judgments of value, and value is
-determined by practice. Such judgments imply an incomplete physical
-situation and look toward its completion. But the will to believe
-is gone. There is no shadow of James’ faith in the practicality of
-emotional satisfactions, or in his voluntaristic psychology. Our
-“sensations are not the elements out of which perceptions are composed,
-constituted, or constructed; they are the finest, most carefully
-discriminated objects of perception.” Early critics, particularly
-among the realists, have accused Dewey of subjectivism, but except in
-the sense that an individual must be recognized as one term in the
-reaction to a situation, and the realists themselves do this, there is
-no ground for the charge.
-
-Such a philosophy as Dewey’s is nothing if it is not put to work. And
-here is his greatest hold on American life. Like most Americans, he has
-no sympathy for the lazy, and even the over-reflective may suffer from
-the contamination of sloth; the true American wants to see results, and
-here is a philosophy in which results are the supreme end. Reform is,
-for America, a sort of sport and this philosophy involves nothing but
-reform. Metaphysical subtleties and visions leave the busy man cold;
-here they are taboo.
-
-Professor Dewey puts his philosophy to work in the fields of ethics
-and education. Perhaps his ethics is the least satisfactory, howsoever
-promising its beginnings. Moral codes become the expression of
-group-approval. But they easily pass into tradition, get out of touch
-with fact, are superannuated. The highest virtue is intelligence and
-with intelligence one can recognize the uniqueness of every moral
-situation and develop from it its own criteria of judgment. Progress
-in morals consists in raising the general level of intelligence and
-extending the group whose approvals are significant from a social
-class to the nation, a notion of highest appeal to Democracy, with
-its faith in the individual man. But with Dewey the limit of group
-expansion is humanity, and this may verge on dangerous (unfortunately)
-radicalism. Dewey’s weapon against conventional ethics is two-edged.
-For the intelligent man perhaps there is no better actual moral
-standard than that springing from intelligent specific judgments, but
-for the uneducated, it is only too easy to identify intelligence with
-sentimental opinion and to let practice degenerate into legislative
-repression.
-
-After all, judgments of practice do face incomplete situations and the
-problem is not only to complete but also to determine the manner in
-which the completion shall be brought about. What men transform is not
-merely the world, but themselves, and the ethics is incomplete without
-some further consideration of such questions as what are human natures,
-and what do we want them to become. But perhaps such questions are
-too dangerously near metaphysics to have appealed to Dewey’s powers
-of analysis. At any rate, the general effectiveness of his ethics is
-weakened by his neglect of attention to principles in some sense at
-least ultimate.
-
-In education Dewey’s philosophy has its most complete vitality, for
-here he is dealing with concrete needs and the means of satisfying
-them. The problem of education is to integrate knowledge and life.
-He finds no joy in information for information’s sake. Curiosity
-may be the gift of the child, but it must be utilized to equip the
-man to hold his own in a world of industrialism and democracy. Yet
-Dewey’s sympathies are with spontaneity. He is a Rousseau with a new
-methodology. Connected with the Laboratory School at Chicago from 1896
-to 1903, he has since followed with sympathetic interest all radical
-experimentation from the methods of Madame Montessori to those of the
-Gary Schools. The vast erudition amassed in this field, and his careful
-and unprejudiced study of children, has made him competent above all
-men to speak critically of methods and results.
-
-In regard to education, he has given a fuller consideration of the ends
-to be attained than in the case of ethics. The end is seen as continued
-growth, springing from the existing conditions, freeing activity, and
-flexible in its adaptation to circumstances. The educational result
-is social efficiency and culture. This efficiency does not, however,
-imply accepting existing economic conditions as final, and its cultural
-aspect, good citizenship, includes with the more specific positive
-virtues, those characteristics that make a man a good companion.
-Culture is a complete ripening of the personality. “What is termed
-spiritual culture has usually been futile, with something rotten about
-it, just because it has been conceived as a thing which a man might
-have internally--and therefore exclusively.” The antithesis between
-sacrificing oneself for others, or others for oneself, is an unreal
-figment of the imagination, a tragic product of certain spiritual and
-religious thinking.
-
-Professor Dewey well understands the dangers that lurk behind such
-terms as _social efficiency_ and _good citizenship_. To him sympathy
-is much more than a mere feeling: it is, as he says it should be, “a
-cultivated imagination for what men have in common and a rebellion
-at whatever unnecessarily divides them.” But his very gift of clear
-vision, his penetration of the shams of dogma, economic and social,
-leads him to treat these things with scant respect. In consequence his
-fellow-philosophers, the educators over whom his influence is profound,
-and the public suspect him of radicalism. Only too often, to avoid
-suspicion of themselves, they turn his doctrine to the very uses that
-he condemns: industrial efficiency for them becomes identical with
-business expedience; the school, a trade school; culture, a detached
-æstheticism to be condemned; and democracy, the privilege of thinking
-and acting like everybody else.
-
-The greatest weakness of Dewey’s philosophy, and it is serious, for
-Dewey as no other American philosopher grasps principles through
-which American civilization might be transformed for the better--lies
-in its lack of a metaphysics. Not, of course, a transcendentalism
-or a religious mysticism, but above all an interpretation of human
-nature. Emotionality represents a phase of the behaviour process
-too real to deny, yet it has no place in Dewey’s philosophy of man.
-Human longings and aspirations are facts as real as the materials
-of industry. Most men remain religious. Must they rest with quack
-mystics or unintelligent dogmatists? What is religion giving them that
-they crave? Is it a form of art, an attitude toward the ideal, or
-some interpretation of the forces of nature that they seek to grasp?
-Professor Dewey is himself a lover of art, but what place has art in
-his philosophy? If it is an instrument of education, what end does it
-serve, and how is it to be utilized? The pragmatic ethics gives no
-guarantee that the moral criteria developed by specific situations will
-always be the same even for two men equally intelligent. Perhaps, in
-spite of the paradox, there may be several best solutions. If so, this
-fact has some significance rooted in man’s nature and his relations to
-the world that philosophy should disclose. Such supplementation need
-not change the character of the results, but it might forefend them
-from misinterpretation and abuse.
-
-With all its incompleteness, Dewey’s philosophy is undeniably
-that of the America of to-day. What shall we say of the future? No
-nation in the world has more abused its philosophies than ours. The
-inspirational elements of our idealisms have become the panderings of
-sentimentalists. The vitalizing forces of our pragmatisms threaten to
-congeal into the dogmata of cash-success. The war has intensified our
-national self-satisfaction. We tend to condemn all vision as radical,
-hence unsound, hence evil, hence to be put down. Philosophy thrives in
-the atmosphere of the Bacchæ:
-
- “What else is Wisdom? What of man’s endeavour
- Or God’s high grace, so lovely and so great?
- To stand from fear set free, to breathe and wait;
- To hold a hand uplifted over Hate;
- And shall not loveliness be loved for ever?”
-
-But what have we now of this atmosphere?
-
-At Christmas-time, the American Philosophical Association devoted three
-sessions to the discussion of the Rôle of the Philosopher in Modern
-Life. From report, opinion was divided between those who would have
-him a social reformer, to the exclusion of contemplative background,
-and those with a greater sense of playing safe, who would have him
-turn to history, of any sort, or contemplation quite detached from
-social consequences. Let us hope these opinions are not to be taken
-seriously. Our social reformers are not all like Dewey, whose neglect
-of basic reflection is probably not as great as the omission of
-such reflections from his published works would indicate. Nor is an
-academic chair generally suited to the specific contacts with life from
-which successful reforms must be shaped. On the other hand, abstract
-contemplation with the pedagogic reinforcements advocated, will confirm
-the popular American sentiment against reflection, if it is true,
-as Dewey asserts, that education must be an outgrowth of existing
-conditions. Fortunately genius, if such there be amongst us, will not
-submit to the opinions of the American Philosophic Association. If
-philosophy can find freedom, perhaps America can yet find philosophy.
-
- HAROLD CHAPMAN BROWN
-
-
-
-
-THE LITERARY LIFE
-
-
-Among all the figures which, in Mrs. Wharton’s “The Age of Innocence,”
-make up the pallid little social foreground, the still more pallid
-middle distance, of the New York of forty years ago, there is none
-more pallid than the figure of Ned Winsett, the “man of letters
-untimely born in a world that had no need of letters.” Winsett, we
-are told, “had published one volume of brief and exquisite literary
-appreciations,” of which one hundred and twenty copies had been sold,
-and had then abandoned his calling and taken an obscure post on a
-women’s weekly. “On the subject of _Hearth-fires_ (as the paper was
-called) he was inexhaustibly entertaining,” says Mrs. Wharton; “but
-beneath his fun lurked the sterile bitterness of the still young man
-who has tried and given up.” Sterile bitterness, a bright futility, a
-beginning without a future: that is the story of Ned Winsett.
-
-One feels, as one turns Mrs. Wharton’s pages, how symbolic this is
-of the literary life in America. I shall say nothing of the other
-arts, though the vital conditions of all the arts have surely much in
-common; I shall say nothing of America before the Civil War, for the
-America that New England dominated was a different nation from ours.
-But what immediately strikes one, as one surveys the history of our
-literature during the last half century, is the singular impotence of
-its creative spirit. That we have and have always had an abundance of
-talent is, I think, no less evident: what I mean is that so little
-of this talent succeeds in effectuating itself. Of how many of our
-modern writers can it be said that their work reveals a continuous
-growth, or indeed any growth, that they hold their ground tenaciously
-and preserve their sap from one decade to another? Where, to speak
-relatively, the characteristic evolution of the European writer is one
-of an ever-increasing differentiation, a progress toward the creation,
-the possession of a world absolutely his own (the world of Shaw, the
-world of Hardy, the world of Hamsun, of Gorky, of Anatole France),
-the American writer, having struck out with his new note, becomes--how
-often!--progressively less and less himself. The blighted career,
-the arrested career, the diverted career are, with us, the rule. The
-chronic state of our literature is that of a youthful promise which is
-never redeemed.
-
-The great writer, the _grand écrivain_, has at the best of times
-appeared but once or twice in America: that is another matter. I am
-speaking, as I say, of the last half century, and I am speaking of the
-rank and file. There are those who will deny this characterization of
-our literature, pointing to what they consider the robust and wholesome
-corpus of our “normal” fiction. But this fiction, in its way, precisely
-corroborates my point. What is the quality of the spirit behind it? How
-much does it contain of that creative element the character of which
-consists in dominating life instead of being dominated by it? Have
-these novelists of ours any world of their own as distinguished from
-the world they observe and reflect, the world they share with their
-neighbours? Is it a personal vision that informs them, or a mob-vision?
-The Danish writer, Johannes V. Jensen, has described their work as
-“journalism under exceptionally fortunate conditions.” Journalism, on
-the whole, it assuredly is, and the chief of these fortunate conditions
-(fortunate for journalism!) has been the general failure of the writers
-in question to establish and develop themselves as individuals; as
-they have rendered unto Cæsar what was intended for God, is it any
-wonder that Cæsar has waxed so fat? “The unfortunate thing,” writes Mr.
-Montrose J. Moses, “is that the American drama”--but the observation is
-equally true of this fiction of ours--“has had many brilliant promises
-which have finally thinned out and never materialized.” And again:
-“The American dramatist has always taken his logic second-hand; he
-has always allowed his theatrical sense to be a slave to managerial
-circumstance.” The two statements are complementary, and they apply,
-as I say, to the whole of this “normal” literature of ours. Managerial
-circumstance? Let us call it local patriotism, the spirit of the times,
-the hunger of the public for this, that, or the other: to some one of
-these demands, these promptings from without, the “normal” American
-writer always allows himself to become a slave. It is the fact, indeed,
-of his being a slave to some demand from without that makes him
-“normal”--and something else than an artist.
-
-The flourishing exterior of the main body of our contemporary
-literature, in short, represents anything but the integrity of an
-inner well-being. But even aside from this, one can count on one’s two
-hands the American writers who are able to carry on the development
-and unfolding of their individualities, year in, year out, as every
-competent man of affairs carries on his business. What fate overtakes
-the rest? Shall I begin to run over some of those names, familiar to
-us all, names that have signified so much promise and are lost in
-what Gautier calls “the limbo where moan (in the company of babes)
-still-born vocations, abortive attempts, larvæ of ideas that have won
-neither wings nor shapes”? Shall I mention the writers--but they are
-countless!--who have lapsed into silence, or have involved themselves
-in barren eccentricities, or have been turned into machines? The poets
-who, at the very outset of their careers, find themselves extinguished
-like so many candles? The novelists who have been unable to grow up,
-and remain withered boys of seventeen? The critics who find themselves
-overtaken in mid-career by a hardening of the spiritual arteries? Our
-writers all but universally lack the power of growth, the endurance
-that enables one to continue to produce personal work after the
-freshness of youth has gone. Weeds and wild flowers! Weeds without
-beauty or fragrance, and wild flowers that cannot survive the heat of
-the day.
-
-Such is the aspect of our contemporary literature; beside that of
-almost any European country, it is indeed one long list of spiritual
-casualties. For it is not that the talent is wanting, but that somehow
-this talent fails to fulfil itself.
-
-This being so, how much one would like to assume, with certain of our
-critics, that the American writer is a sort of Samson bound with the
-brass fetters of the Philistines and requiring only to have those
-fetters cast off in order to be able to conquer the world! That, as I
-understand it, is the position of Mr. Dreiser, who recently remarked
-of certain of our novelists: “They succeeded in writing but one
-book before the iron hand of convention took hold of them.” There
-is this to be said for the argument, that if the American writer as
-a type shows less resistance than the European writer it is plainly
-because he has been insufficiently equipped, stimulated, nourished by
-the society into which he has been born. In this sense the American
-environment is answerable for the literature it has produced. But what
-is significant is that the American writer _does_ show less resistance;
-as literature is nothing but the expression of power, of the creative
-will, of “free will,” in short, is it not more accurate to say, not
-that the “iron hand of convention” takes hold of our writers, but
-that our writers yield to the “iron hand of convention”? Samson had
-lost his virility before the Philistines bound him; it was because he
-had lost his virility that the Philistines were able to bind him. The
-American writer who “goes wrong” is in a similar case. “I have read,”
-says Mr. Dreiser, of Jack London, “several short stories which proved
-what he could do. But he did not feel that he cared for want and public
-indifference. Hence his many excellent romances.” _He did not feel
-that he cared for want and public indifference._ Even Mr. Dreiser, as
-we observe, determinist that he is, admits a margin of free will, for
-he represents Jack London as having made a choice. What concerns us
-now, however, is not a theoretical but a practical question, the fact,
-namely, that the American writer as a rule is actuated not by faith
-but by fear, that he cannot meet the obstacles of “want and public
-indifference” as the European writer meets them, that he is, indeed,
-and as if by nature, a journeyman and a hireling.
-
-As we see, then, the creative will in this country is a very weak and
-sickly plant. Of the innumerable talents that are always emerging about
-us there are few that come to any sort of fruition: the rest wither
-early; they are transformed into those neuroses that flourish on our
-soil as orchids flourish in the green jungle. The sense of this failure
-is written all over our literature. Do we not know what depths of
-disappointment underlay the cynicism of Mark Twain and Henry Adams and
-Ambrose Bierce? Have we failed to recognize, in the surly contempt with
-which the author of “The Story of a Country Town” habitually speaks of
-writers and writing, the unconscious cry of sour grapes of a man whose
-creative life was arrested in youth? Are we unaware of the bitterness
-with which, in certain letters of his later years, Jack London
-regretted the miscarriage of his gift? There is no denying that for
-half a century the American writer as a type has gone down in defeat.
-
-Now why is this so? Why does the American writer, relatively speaking,
-show less resistance than the European writer? Plainly, as I have
-just said, because he has been insufficiently equipped, stimulated,
-nourished by the society into which he has been born. If our creative
-spirits are unable to grow and mature, it is a sign that there is
-something wanting in the soil from which they spring and in the
-conditions that surround them. Is it not, for that matter, a sign of
-some more general failure in our life?
-
-“At the present moment,” wrote Mr. Chesterton in one of his early
-essays (“The Fallacy of the Young Nation”), struck by the curious
-anæmia of those few artists of ours who have succeeded in developing
-themselves, usually by escaping from the American environment; “at
-the present moment the matter which America has very seriously to
-consider is not how near it is to its birth and beginning, but how near
-it may be to its end.... The English colonies have produced no great
-artists, and that fact may prove that they are still full of silent
-possibilities and reserve force. But America has produced great artists
-and that fact most certainly means that she is full of a fine futility
-and the end of all things. Whatever the American men of genius are,
-they are not young gods making a young world. Is the art of Whistler a
-brave, barbaric art, happy and headlong? Does Mr. Henry James infect
-us with the spirit of a school-boy? No, the colonies have not spoken,
-and they are safe. Their silence may be the silence of the unborn. But
-out of America has come a sweet and startling cry, as unmistakable as
-the cry of a dying man.” That there is truth behind this, that the
-soil of our society is at least arid and impoverished, is indicated
-by the testimony of our own poets; one has only to consider what
-George Cabot Lodge wrote in 1904, in one of his letters: “We are a
-dying race, as every race must be of which the men are, as men and
-not accumulators, third-rate”; one has only to consider the writings
-of Messrs. Frost, Robinson, and Masters, in whose presentation of our
-life, in the West as well as in the East, the individual as a spiritual
-unit invariably suffers defeat. Fifty years ago J. A. Froude, on a
-visit to this country, wrote to one of his friends: “From what I see of
-the Eastern states I do not anticipate any very great things as likely
-to come out of the Americans.... They are generous with their money,
-have much tenderness and quiet good humour; but the Anglo-Saxon power
-is running to seed and I don’t think will revive.” When we consider
-the general colourlessness and insipidity of our latter-day life
-(faithfully reflected in the novels of Howells and his successors),
-the absence from it of profound passions and intense convictions,
-of any representative individuals who can be compared in spiritual
-force with Emerson, Thoreau, and so many of their contemporaries, its
-uniformity and its uniform tepidity, then the familiar saying, “Our
-age has been an age of management, not of ideas or of men,” assumes
-indeed a very sinister import. I go back to the poet Lodge’s letters.
-“Was there ever,” he writes, “such an anomaly as the American man?
-In practical affairs his cynicism, energy, and capacity are simply
-stupefying, and in every other respect he is a sentimental idiot
-possessing neither the interest, the capacity, nor the desire for even
-the most elementary processes of independent thought.... His wife
-finds him so sexually inapt that she refuses to bear him children and
-so drivelling in every way except as a money-getter that she compels
-him to expend his energies solely in that direction while she leads a
-discontented, sterile, stunted life....” Is this to be denied? And does
-it not in part explain that extraordinary lovelessness of the American
-scene which has bred the note of a universal resentment in so much of
-our contemporary fiction? As well expect figs from thistles as any
-considerable number of men from such a soil who are robust enough to
-prefer spiritual to material victories and who are capable of achieving
-them.
-
-It is unnecessary to go back to Taine in order to realize that here we
-have a matrix as unpropitious as possible for literature and art. If
-our writers wither early, if they are too generally pliant, passive,
-acquiescent, anæmic, how much is this not due to the heritage of
-pioneering, with its burden of isolation, nervous strain, excessive
-work and all the racial habits that these have engendered?
-
-Certainly, for example, if there is anything that counts in the
-formation of the creative spirit it is that long infancy to which John
-Fiske, rightly or wrongly, attributed the emergence of man from the
-lower species. In the childhood of almost every great writer one finds
-this protracted incubation, this slow stretch of years in which the
-unresisting organism opens itself to the influences of life. It was so
-with Hawthorne, it was so with Whitman in the pastoral America of a
-century ago: they were able to mature, these brooding spirits, because
-they had given themselves for so long to life before they began to
-react upon it. That is the old-world childhood still, in a measure;
-how different it is from the modern American childhood may be seen if
-one compares, for example, the first book (“Boyhood”) of “Pelle the
-Conqueror” with any of those innumerable tales in which our novelists
-show us that in order to succeed in life one cannot be up and doing too
-soon. The whole temper of our society, if one is to judge from these
-documents, is to hustle the American out of his childhood, teaching him
-at no age at all how to repel life and get the best of it and build up
-the defences behind which he is going to fight for his place in the
-sun. Who can deny that this racial habit succeeds in its unconscious
-aim, which is to produce sharp-witted men of business? But could
-anything be deadlier to the poet, the artist, the writer?
-
-Everything in such an environment, it goes without saying, tends to
-repress the creative and to stimulate the competitive impulses. A
-certain Irish poet has observed that all he ever learned of poetry he
-got from talking with peasants along the road. Whitman might have said
-almost as much, even of New York, the New York of seventy years ago.
-But what nourishment do they offer the receptive spirit to-day, the
-harassed, inhibited mob of our fellow-countrymen, eaten up with the
-“itch of ill-advised activity,” what encouragement to become anything
-but an automaton like themselves? And what direction, in such a
-society, does the instinct of emulation receive, that powerful instinct
-of adolescence? A certain visitor of Whitman’s has described him as
-living in a house “as cheerless as an ash-barrel,” a house indeed “like
-that in which a very destitute mechanic” might have lived. Is it not
-symbolic, that picture, of the esteem in which our democracy holds the
-poet? If to-day the man of many dollars is no longer the hero of the
-editorial page and the baccalaureate address, still, or rather more
-than ever, it is the “aggressive” type that overshadows every corner
-of our civilization; the intellectual man who has gone his own way
-and refused to flatter the majority was never less the hero or even
-the subject of intelligent interest; at best ignored, at worst (and
-usually) pointed out as a crank, he is only a “warning” to youth,
-which is exceedingly susceptible in these matters. But how can one
-begin to enumerate the elements in our society that contribute to form
-a selection constantly working against the survival of the creative
-type? By cutting off the sources that nourish it, by lending prestige
-to the acquisitive and destroying the glamour of the creative career,
-everything in America conspires to divert the spirit from its natural
-course, seizing upon the instincts of youth and turning them into a
-single narrow channel.
-
-Here, of course, I touch upon the main fact of American history.
-That traditional drag, if one may so express it, in the direction
-of the practical, which has been the law of our civilization, would
-alone explain why our literature and art have never been more than
-half-hearted. To abandon the unpopular and unremunerative career of
-painting for the useful and lucrative career of invention must have
-seemed natural and inevitable to Robert Fulton and Samuel Morse.
-So strong is this racial compulsion, so feeble is the hold which
-Americans have upon ultimate values, that one can scarcely find to-day
-a scientist or a scholar who, for the sake of science or scholarship,
-will refuse an opportunity to become the money-gathering president
-of some insignificant university. Thus our intellectual life has
-always been ancillary to the life of business and organization: have
-we forgotten that the good Washington Irving himself, the father of
-American letters, thought it by no means beneath his dignity to serve
-as a sort of glorified press-agent for John Jacob Astor?
-
-It is certainly true that none of these unfavourable factors of
-American life could have had such a baleful effect upon our literature
-if there had been others to counteract them. An aristocratic tradition,
-if we had ever had it, would have kept open among us the right of
-way of the free individual, would have preserved the claims of mere
-living. “It is curious to observe,” writes Nietzsche in one of his
-letters, “how any one who soon leaves the traditional highway in order
-to travel on his own proper path always has more or less the sense of
-being an exile, a condemned criminal, a fugitive from mankind.” If that
-is true in the old world, where society is so much more complex and
-offers the individual so much more latitude, how few could ever have
-had the strength in a society like ours, which has always placed such
-an enormous premium on conformity, to become and to remain themselves?
-Is it fanciful indeed to see in the famous “remorse” of Poe the traces
-left by this dereliction of the tribal law upon the unconscious mind
-of an artist of unique force and courage? Similarly, a tradition of
-voluntary poverty would have provided us with an escape from the
-importunities of bourgeois custom. But aside from the fact that even so
-simple a principle as this depends largely for its life on precedent
-(Whitman and the painter Ryder are almost alone among latter-day
-Americans in having discovered it for themselves), aside from the fact
-that to secede from the bourgeois system is, in America, to subject
-oneself to peculiar penalties (did it ever occur to Mark Twain that he
-_could_ be honourably poor?)--aside from all this, poverty in the new
-world is by no means the same thing as poverty in the old: one has only
-to think of Charles Lamb and all the riches that London freely gave
-him, all the public resources he had at his disposal, to appreciate
-the difference. With us poverty means in the end an almost inevitable
-intellectual starvation. Consider such a plaint as Sidney Lanier’s:
-“I could never describe to you” (he writes to Bayard Taylor) “what a
-mere drought and famine my life has been, as regards that multitude of
-matters which I fancy one absorbs when one is in an atmosphere of art,
-or when one is in conversational relationship with men of letters,
-with travellers, with persons who have either seen, or written, or done
-large things. Perhaps you know that, with us of the younger generation
-in the South since the war, pretty much the whole of life has been
-merely not dying.” That is what poverty means in America, poverty
-and isolation, for Lanier, whose talent, as we can see to-day, was
-hopelessly crippled by it, was mistaken if he supposed that there was
-anything peculiar to the South in that plight of his: it has been the
-plight of the sensitive man everywhere in America and at all times. Add
-to poverty the want of a society devoted to intellectual things and we
-have such a fate as Herman Melville’s in New York. “What he lacked,”
-wrote Mr. Frank Jewett Mather the other day, explaining the singular
-evaporation of Melville’s talent, “was possibly only health and
-nerve, but perhaps even more, companionship of a friendly, critical,
-understanding sort. In London, where he must have been hounded out of
-his corner, I can imagine Melville carrying the reflective vein to
-literary completion.” Truly Samuel Butler was right when he jotted down
-the following observation in his note-book: “America will have her
-geniuses, as every other country has, in fact she has already had one
-in Walt Whitman, but I do not think America is a good place in which to
-be a genius. A genius can never expect to have a good time anywhere, if
-he is a genuine article, but America is about the last place in which
-life will be endurable at all for an inspired writer of any kind.”
-
-To such circumstances as these, I say, the weakness of our literary
-life is due. If we had lacked nothing else indeed, the lack of great
-leaders, of a strong and self-respecting literary guild, even of an
-enlightened publishing system would have sufficed to account for
-much of it. To consider the last point first: in the philosophy of
-American publishing, popularity has been regarded not only as a
-practical advantage but as a virtue as well. Thanks to the peculiar
-character of our democracy, our publishers have been able to persuade
-themselves that a book which fails to appeal to the ordinary citizen
-cannot be good on other grounds. Thus, if we had had to depend on the
-established system, the present revival in our letters, tentative as
-it is, would have been still more sadly handicapped. The history of
-Mr. Dreiser’s “Sister Carrie” is enough to suggest what may well have
-been the fate of many an incipient author less persistent than he. It
-is certain, in any case, that many another, at a critical moment, has
-drifted away from literature because of the lack in our publishing
-world of those opportunities for a semi-creative hack-work which
-have provided countless European writers with a foothold and even a
-guideway. The Grub Street of London and Paris is a purgatory, but as
-long as it exists, with its humble instrumentalities, translating,
-editing, reviewing, one can at least survive until one has either
-lost or found oneself: it scarcely needs to be pointed out that the
-American magazine, with its mechanical exactions, which levy such a
-terrible toll upon one’s individuality, is anything but an advantageous
-substitute. Till one has found oneself, the less one is subjected to
-such powerful, such essentially depolarizing influences, the better;
-the most mediocre institutions, if they enable one at the same time
-to maintain one’s contact with literature and to keep body and soul
-together, are as life is to death beside them. How many English
-writers owe their ultimate salvation to such trivial agencies as
-_T. P.’s Weekly_? In America, where nothing of the kind has existed
-until lately, or nothing adequate to the number of those who might
-have benefitted by it, the literary aspirant is lost unless his powers
-mature at once.
-
-But the lack of great leaders, of a strong and self-respecting
-literary guild (the one results from the other)--is not this our chief
-misfortune? In the best of circumstances, and considering all the
-devils that beset the creative spirit, a strong impulse is scarcely
-enough to carry one through: one must feel not only that one is doing
-what one wishes to do but that what one is doing _matters_. If dozens
-of American writers have fallen by the wayside because they have met
-with insuperable obstacles, dozens of others have fallen, with all
-their gifts, because they have lost interest in their work, because
-they have ceased to “see the necessity” of it. This is just the point
-where the presence of a leader, of a local tradition, a school, a
-guild makes all the difference. “With the masters I converse,” writes
-Gauguin in his journal. “Their example fortifies me. When I am tempted
-to falter I blush before them.” If that could have been true of
-Gauguin, the “Wolf,” who walked by himself as few have walked, what
-shall we say of other men whose artistic integrity, whose faith in
-themselves, is exposed every day to the corroding influences of a
-third-rate civilization? It would be all very well if literature were
-merely a mode of “having a good time;” I am speaking of those, the real
-artists, who, with Nietzsche, make a distinction (illusory perhaps)
-between “happiness” and “work,” and I say that these men have always
-fed on the thought of greatness and on the propinquity of greatness. It
-was not for nothing that Turgeniev bore in his memory, as a talisman,
-the image of Pushkin; that Gorky, having seen Tolstoy once, sitting
-among the boulders on the seashore, felt everything in him blending
-in one happy thought, “I am not an orphan on the earth, so long as
-this man lives on it.” The presence of such men immeasurably raises
-the morale of the literary life: that is what Chekhov meant when he
-said, “I am afraid of Tolstoy’s death,” and is it not true that the
-whole contemporary literature of England has drawn virtue from Thomas
-Hardy? The sense that one is _working in a great line_: this, more than
-anything else perhaps, renews one’s confidence in the “quaint mania
-of passing one’s life wearing oneself out over words,” as Flaubert
-called it, in the still greater folly of pursuing one’s ego when
-everything in life combines to punish one for doing so. The successful
-pursuit of the ego is what makes literature; this requires not only
-a certain inner intensity but a certain courage, and it is doubtful
-whether, in any nation, any considerable number of men can summon up
-that courage and maintain it unless they have _seen the thing done_.
-The very notion that such a life is either possible or desirable, the
-notion that such a life exists even, can hardly occur to the rank and
-file: some individual has to start the ball rolling, some individual
-of extraordinary force and audacity, and where is that individual to
-be found in our modern American literature? Whitman is the unique
-instance, for Henry James, with all his admirable conscience, was at
-once an exile and a man of singularly low vitality; and Whitman was not
-only essentially of an earlier generation, he was an invalid who folded
-his hands in mid-career.
-
-Of those others what can we say, those others whose gifts have fitted
-them to be our leaders? Mr. Howells once observed of the American drama
-of the last few decades that “mainly it has been gay as our prevalent
-mood is, mainly it has been honest, as our habit is, in cases where
-we believe we can afford it.” In this gently ironical pleasantry one
-seems to discern the true spirit of modern American letters. But it was
-Howells himself who, in order to arrive at the doctrine that “the more
-smiling aspects of life are the more American,” deliberately, as he has
-told us, and professed realist that he was, averted his eyes from the
-darker side of life. And Mark Twain suppressed his real beliefs about
-man and the universe. And Henry Adams refused to sponsor in public the
-novels that revealed what he considered to be the truth about American
-society. Thus spake Zarathustra: “There is no harsher misfortune in
-all the fate of man than when the mighty ones of earth are not also
-the most excellent.” At its very headwaters, as we see, this modern
-literature of ours has failed to flow clear: the creative impulse in
-these men, richly endowed as they were, was checked and compromised
-by too many other impulses, social and commercial. If one is to blame
-anything for this it is the immense insecurity of our life, which is
-due to its chaotic nature; for one is not entitled to expect greatness
-even of those who have the greatest gifts, and of these men Henry Adams
-was alone secure; of Howells and Mark Twain, Westerners as they were,
-it may be said that they were obliged to compromise, consciously or
-unconsciously, in order to gain a foothold in the only corner of the
-country where men could exist as writers at all. But if these men were
-unable to establish their independence (one has only to recall the
-notorious Gorky dinner in order to perceive the full ignominy of their
-position), what must one expect to find in the rank and file? Great men
-form a sort of wind shield behind which the rest of their profession
-are able to build up their own defences; they establish a right of
-way for the others; they command a respect for their profession, they
-arouse in the public a concern for it, an interest in it, from which
-the others benefit. As things are, the literary guild in America is
-not respected, nor does it respect itself. In “My Literary Passions”
-Howells, after saying that his early reading gave him no standing
-among other boys, observes: “I have since found that literature gives
-one no more certain station in the world of men’s activities, either
-idle or useful. We literary folk try to believe that it does, but
-that is all nonsense. At every period of life among boys or men we
-are accepted when they are at leisure and want to be amused, and at
-best we are tolerated rather than accepted.” Pathetic? Pusillanimous?
-Abject? Pathetic, I suppose. Imagine Maxim Gorky or Knut Hamsun or
-Bernard Shaw “trying to believe” that literature gives him a certain
-station in the world of men’s activities, conceiving for a moment
-that any activity could exceed his in dignity! Howells, we observe,
-conscientious craftsman as he was, instinctively shared, in regard
-to the significance of his vocation, the feeling of our pragmatic
-philosophers, who have been obliged to justify the intellectual life by
-showing how useful it is--not to mention Mr. R. W. Chambers, who has
-remarked that writers “are not held in excessive esteem by really busy
-people, the general idea being--which is usually true--that literature
-is a godsend to those unfitted for real work.” After this one can
-easily understand why our novelists take such pains to be mistaken for
-business men and succeed so admirably in their effort. One can easily
-understand why Jack London preferred the glory of his model ranch and
-his hygienic pigsties to the approval of his artistic conscience.
-
-So much for the conditions, or at least a few of them, that have
-prevented our literature from getting its head above water. If
-America is littered with extinct talents, the halt, the maimed and
-the blind, it is for reasons with which we are all too familiar; and
-we to whom the creative life is nothing less than the principle of
-human movement, and its welfare the true sign of human health, look
-upon this wreckage of everything that is most precious to society and
-ask ourselves what our fathers meant when they extolled the progress
-of our civilization. But let us look facts in the face. Mr. Sinclair
-Lewis asserts that we are in the midst of a revival and that we are
-too humble in supposing that our contemporary literature is inferior
-to that of England. That we are in the midst of a revival I have no
-doubt, but it is the sustained career that makes a literature; without
-the evidence of this we can hope much but we can affirm nothing. What
-we can see is that, with all its hope, the morale of the literary
-profession in this country is just what its antecedents have made
-it. I am reminded of the observation of a friend who has reason to
-know, that the Catholic Church in America, great as it is in numbers
-and organization, still depends on the old world for its models, its
-task-masters and its inspiration; for the American priest, as a rule,
-does not feel the vocation as the European feels it. I am reminded of
-the American labour movement which, prosperous as it is in comparison
-with the labour movements of Europe, is unparalleled for the feebleness
-of its representatives. I am reminded of certain brief experiences in
-the American university world which have led me to believe that the
-professors who radiate a genuine light and warmth are far more likely
-to be Russians, Germans, Englishmen, Irishmen, Dutchmen, Swedes and
-Finns than the children of ’76. That old hostility of the pioneers to
-the special career still operates to prevent in the American mind the
-powerful, concentrated pursuit of any non-utilitarian way of life:
-meanwhile everything else in our society tends to check the growth of
-the spirit and to shatter the confidence of the individual in himself.
-Considered with reference to its higher manifestations, life itself has
-been thus far, in modern America, a failure. Of this the failure of our
-literature is merely emblematic.
-
-Mr. Mencken, who shares this belief, urges that the only hope of a
-change for the better lies in the development of a native aristocracy
-that will stand between the writer and the public, supporting him,
-appreciating him, forming as it were a _cordon sanitaire_ between the
-individual and the mob. That no change can come without the development
-of an aristocracy of some sort, some nucleus of the more gifted,
-energetic and determined, one can hardly doubt. But how can one expect
-the emergence of an aristocracy outside of the creative class, and
-devoted to its welfare, unless and until the creative class itself
-reveals the sort of pride that can alone attract its ministrations?
-“The notion that a people can run itself and its affairs anonymously
-is now well known to be the silliest of absurdities.” Thus William
-James, in defence of the aristocratic principle; and what he says is
-as applicable to literature as to every other department of social
-life. But he continues: “Mankind does nothing save through initiatives
-on the part of inventors, great and small, and imitation by the rest
-of us--these are the sole factors alive in human progress. Individuals
-of genius show the way, and set the patterns, which common people then
-adopt and follow.” In other words, as I understand it, and so far
-as literature is concerned, the burden of proof lies on the writer
-himself--which brings one back to a truism: it is not for the public or
-any aristocratic minority within the public to understand the writer,
-it is for the writer to create the taste by which he is understood. Is
-it not by this indeed (in a measure, at least) that we recognize the
-creator?
-
-Certainly if our contemporary literature is not respected, if it
-has not been able to rally to its support the sensitive public that
-already exists in this country, it is partly because this literature
-has not respected itself. That there has been every reason for it
-makes no difference; that it has begun to respect itself again makes
-no difference either, for when a people has lost confidence in its
-literature, and has had grounds for losing confidence in it, one cannot
-be surprised if it insists a little cynically upon being “shown.”
-The public supported Mark Twain and Howells and the men of their
-generation, it admired them for what was admirable in them, but it
-was aware, if only unconsciously, that there was a difference between
-them and the men of the generation before them; and in consequence of
-this the whole stock of American literature fell. But those who insist
-in our day that America prefers European writers to its own, because
-America is still a colony of Europe, cannot ignore the significant fact
-that at a time when America was still more truly colonial than it is
-now American writers had all the prestige in this country that European
-writers have at present; and it is not entirely because at that time
-the country was more homogeneous. Poe and Thoreau found little support
-in the generation of which I speak, as Whitman found little support
-in the generation that followed it. On the other hand, there were no
-European writers (and it was an age of great writers in Europe) who
-were held in higher esteem in this country than Hawthorne, Emerson,
-Motley, and one or two others almost equally distinguished, as well
-from a European as from an American point of view; there were few,
-if any, European writers, in fact, who were esteemed in this country
-as highly as they. How can one explain it? How can one explain why,
-at a time when America, in every other department of life, was more
-distinctly colonial than it is now, American literature commanded the
-full respect of Americans, while to-day, when the colonial tradition is
-vanishing all about us, it so little commands their respect that they
-go after any strange god from England? The problem is not a simple one,
-but among the many explanations of it one can hardly deny that there
-were in that period a number of writers of unusual power, who made the
-most (who were able to make the most) of their power, who followed
-their artistic conscience (who were able to follow it) and who by this
-fact built up a public confidence in themselves and in the literature
-they represented. Does it matter at all whether to-day we enjoy these
-writers or not? They were men of spiritual force, three or four of
-them: that is the important point. If the emerging writers of our epoch
-find themselves handicapped by the scepticism of the public, which has
-ceased to believe that any good thing can come out of Nazareth, let
-them remember not only that they are themselves for the most part in
-the formative stage, but that they have to live down the recent past of
-their profession.
-
-Meanwhile, what constitutes a literature is the spiritual force of
-the individuals who compose it. If our literature is ever to be
-regenerated, therefore, it can only be through the development of a
-sense of “free will” (and of the responsibility that this entails) on
-the part of our writers themselves. To be, to feel oneself, a “victim”
-is in itself not to be an artist, for it is the nature of the artist to
-live, not in the world of which he is an effect, but in the world of
-which he is the cause, the world of his own creation. For this reason,
-the pessimistic determinism of the present age is, from the point of
-view of literature, of a piece with the optimistic determinism of
-the age that is passing. What this pessimistic determinism reveals,
-however, is a _consciousness of the situation_: to that extent it
-represents a gain, and one may even say that to be conscious of
-the situation is half the battle. If we owed nothing else to Mr.
-Dreiser, for instance, we should owe him enough for the tragic sense
-of the waste and futility of American life, as we know it, which his
-books communicate. It remains true that in so far as we resent this
-life it is a sign of our own weakness, of the harm not only that our
-civilization has done us but that we have permitted it to do us, of
-our own imperfectly realized freedom; for to the creative spirit in
-its free state the external world is merely an impersonal point of
-departure. Thus it is certain that as long as the American writer
-shares what James Bryce calls the “mass fatalism” of the American
-people, our literature will remain the sterile, supine, and inferior
-phenomenon which, on the whole, it is.
-
-“What we want,” wrote Henry Adams in 1862 to his brother Charles, “is a
-_school_. We want a national set of young men like ourselves or better,
-to start new influences not only in politics, but in literature, in
-law, in society, and throughout the whole social organism of the
-country--a national school of our own generation. And that is what
-America has no power to create.... It’s all random, insulated work,
-for special and temporary and personal purposes. And we have no means,
-power or hope of combined action for any unselfish end.” _That is what
-America has no power to create._ But can it be said that any nation
-has ever created a school? Here we have the perfect illustration of
-that mass fatalism of which I have spoken, and Henry Adams himself, in
-his passivity, is the type of it. Secure as he was, uniquely secure,
-why did he refuse to accept the responsibility of those novels in
-which he expressed the contempt of a powerful and cultivated mind
-for the meanness, the baseness, the vulgarity of the guiding element
-in American society? In the darkest and most chaotic hours of our
-spiritual history the individual has possessed a measure of free
-will only to renounce it: if Henry Adams had merely signed his work
-and accepted the consequences of it, he might by that very fact have
-become the founder, the centre, of the school that he desired. But it
-is true that in that generation the impulses of youth were, with an
-extraordinary unanimity, focused upon a single end, the exploitation of
-the continent; the material opportunities that American life offered
-were too great and too all-engrossing, and it is unlikely that any
-considerable minority could have been rallied for any non-utilitarian
-cause. Sixty years later this school remains, and quite particularly
-as regards our literature, the one thing necessary; the reforestation
-of our spiritual territory depends on it. And in more than one sense
-the times are favourable. The closing of the frontier seems to promise
-for this country an intenser life than it has known before; a large
-element of the younger generation, estranged from the present order,
-exists in a state of ferment that renders it highly susceptible to new
-ideas; the country literally swarms with half-artists, as one may call
-them, men and women, that is to say, who have ceased to conform to the
-law of the tribe but who have not accepted the discipline of their
-own individual spirits. “What I chiefly desire for you,” wrote Ibsen
-to Brandes at the outset of his career, “is a genuine, full-blooded
-egoism, which shall force you for a time to regard what concerns you
-yourself as the only thing of any consequence, and everything else as
-non-existent.... There is no way in which you can benefit society more
-than by coining the metal you have in yourself.” The second half of
-this rather blunt counsel of perfection is implied in the first, and it
-connotes a world of things merely to name which would be to throw into
-relief the essential infantility of the American writer as we know the
-type. By what prodigies of alert self-adaptation, of discriminating
-self-scrutiny, of conscious effort does the creative will come into its
-own! As for us, weak as too many of us are, ignorant, isolated, all too
-easily satisfied, and scarcely as yet immune from the solicitations of
-the mob, we still have this advantage, that an age of reaction is an
-age that stirs the few into a consciousness of themselves.
-
- VAN WYCK BROOKS
-
-
-
-
-MUSIC
-
-
-We spend more money upon music than does any other nation on earth;
-some of our orchestras, notably those of Boston, Chicago, and
-Philadelphia, are worthy to rank among the world’s best; in the
-Metropolitan Opera House we give performances of grand opera that for
-consistent excellence of playing, singing, and _mise-en-scène_ are
-surpassed probably nowhere. Yet there has never been a successful opera
-by an American offered at that opera house, and the number of viable
-American orchestral works is small enough to be counted almost upon
-one’s fingers. We squander millions every year upon an art that we
-cannot produce.
-
-There are apologists for the American composer who will say that we
-do produce it, but that it is strangled at birth. According to their
-stock argument, there are numberless greatly gifted native composers
-whose works never get a hearing, (a) because Americans are prejudiced
-against American music and in favour of foreign music, and (b) because
-the foreigners who largely control the musical situation in this
-country jealously refuse to allow American works to be performed.
-This would be impressive if it were consistent or true. As far as
-concerns the Jealous Foreigner myth--he does not dominate the musical
-situation--I have never noticed that the average European in this
-country is deficient either in self-interest or tact. He is generally
-anxious, if only for diplomatic reasons, to find American music that
-is worth singing or playing. Even when he fails to find any that is
-worth performing, he often performs some that isn’t, in order to
-satisfy local pride. Moreover, Americans are no more prejudiced against
-American musicians than they are against other kinds. As a matter of
-fact, if intensive boosting campaigns produced creative artists, the
-American composer during the past decade should have expanded like
-a hot-house strawberry. We have had prize contests of all kinds,
-offering substantial sums for everything from grand operas to string
-quartettes, we have had societies formed to publish his chamber-music
-scores; publishers have rushed to print his smaller works; we have had
-concerts of American compositions; we have had all-American festivals.
-Meanwhile the American composer has, with a few lonely exceptions,
-obstinately refused to produce anything above the level of what it
-would be flattering to call mediocrity.
-
-No. If he is not heard oftener in concert halls and upon recital
-platforms, it is because he is not good enough. There is, in the
-music of even the second-rate Continental composers, a surety of
-touch, a quality of evident confidence in their material and ease in
-its handling that is rarely present in the work of Americans. Most
-American symphonic and chamber music lacks structure and clarity. The
-workmanship is faulty, the utterance stammers and halts. Listening to
-an average American symphonic poem, you get the impression that the
-composer was so amazed and delighted at being able to write a symphonic
-poem at all that the fact that it might be a dull one seemed of minor
-importance to him. When he isn’t being almost entirely formless he is
-generally safely conventional, preferring to stick to what a statesman
-would call the Ways of the Fathers rather than risk some structural
-innovation what might or might not be effective. Tschaikovsky’s
-variation of the traditional sequence of movements in the _Pathétique_
-symphony, for example--ending with the slow movement instead of the
-march--would scandalize and terrify the average American.
-
-This feebleness and uncertainty in the handling of material makes
-American music sound more sterile and commonplace than it really is.
-The American composer never seems certain just what, if anything, he
-wants to say. His themes, his fundamental ideas, are often of real
-significance, but he has no control over that very essence of the
-language of music, mood. He lacks taste. The fact that an American
-composition may begin in a genuinely impressive mood is no guarantee
-at all that inside of twenty-four bars it may not fall into the
-most appalling banalities. We start with lyric beauty and finish in
-stickiness. The curse of bathos is upon us. We lack staying power. Just
-as so many American dramatists can write two good acts of a three-act
-play, so many American novelists can write superb opening chapters, so
-do American composers devise eloquent opening themes. But we all fail
-when it comes to development. The train is laid, the match is applied,
-and the spectators crowd back in delighted terror amid tremendous
-hissings and sputterings. But when the awaited detonation comes, it is
-too often only a pop.
-
-Such failure to make adequate use of his ideas is partially
-attributable to the American musician’s pathetically inadequate
-technical equipment. Generally speaking, he doesn’t know his business.
-He has been unable, or hasn’t bothered, to learn his trade. Imagine if
-you can a successful dramatist who can neither read nor write, but has
-to dictate his plays, or a painter who can only draw the outlines of
-his pictures, hiring some one else to lay in the colours, and you have
-something analogous to many an American “composer” whose music is taken
-seriously by Americans, and who cannot write out a playable piano part,
-arrange a song for choral performance, or transcribe a hymn tune for
-a string quartette. Such elementary work he has to have done for him,
-whenever it is necessary, by some hack. This, to say nothing of the
-more advanced branches of musical science, like counterpoint, fugue,
-orchestration. Though it is risky to generalize, it is probably safe
-to say that among Americans who write music, the man who can construct
-a respectable fugue or canon or score a piece for full orchestra is
-decidedly the exception. In Europe, of course, any man who did not
-have these technical resources at his fingertips would have to be a
-Moussorgsky to be taken seriously as a composer at all.
-
-It is not entirely the American’s fault that he is so ill-equipped.
-Much of his comparative musical illiteracy, true, is the result of
-his own laziness and his traditional American contempt for theory and
-passion for results. On the other hand, the young American who honestly
-desires a good theoretical training in music must either undertake
-the expensive adventure of journeying to one of the few cities that
-contain a first-class conservatory, or the equally expensive one of
-going to Europe. If he can do neither, he must to a great extent
-educate himself. Some kinds of training it is nearly impossible for
-him to obtain here at any price. Orchestration, for instance, a
-tremendously complex and difficult science, can be mastered only by
-the time-honoured trial and error method, i.e., by writing out scores
-and hearing them played. How is our young American to manage this?
-Granted that there is a symphony orchestra near him, how can he get
-his scores played? The conductor cannot be blamed for refusing. He
-is hired to play the works of masters, not to try out the apprentice
-efforts of unskilled aspirants. What we need so badly here are not
-more first-class orchestras, but more second-rate ones, small-town
-orchestras that could afford to give the tyro a chance.
-
-Because of their lack of technical skill many composers in this country
-never venture into the broader fields of composition at all. As a
-class, we write short piano and violin pieces, or songs. We write them
-because we do earnestly desire to write something and because they do
-not demand the technical resourcefulness and sustained inspiration
-that we lack. Parenthetically, I don’t for a moment mean to imply that
-clumsy workmanship and sterility are unknown in Europe, that we are all
-mediocrities and they are all _Uebermenschen_. As a matter of fact,
-we have to-day probably much more creative musical talent, if less
-brains, than Europe; but, talent for talent, the European is infinitely
-better trained. This, at least in part, because he respects theory
-and has a desire for technical proficiency that we almost totally
-lack. Then too, the European has some cultural background. There is a
-curious lack of inter-communication among the arts in this country.
-The painter seems to feel that literature has nothing direct to give
-him, the writer, that music and painting are not in his line, and the
-musician--decidedly the worst of the three in this respect--that his
-own art has no connection with anything.
-
-The American composer’s most complete failure is intellectual. The
-fact that he writes music seldom warrants the assumption that he has
-the artist’s point of view at all. He is likely to be a much less
-interesting person than one’s iceman. Ten to one, he never visits a
-picture gallery or a sculpture exhibition, his taste in the theatre
-is probably that of the tired business man, and what little reading
-he does is likely to be confined to trade papers, _Snappy Stories_,
-and best-sellers. He takes no interest in politics, economics, or
-sociology, either national or international (how could they possibly
-concern him?), and probably cannot discuss even music with pleasure or
-profit to anybody.
-
-The natural inference that might be drawn from this diatribe--that
-the composing of music in this country is confined exclusively to the
-idiot classes--is not strictly true. Plenty of American musicians are
-intelligent and cultured men as well; but that is not America’s fault.
-She is just as cordial to the stupid ones. And the widespread impotence
-and technical sloppiness of American music is the inevitable result of
-the American attitude toward music and to the anomalous position the
-art occupies in this country.
-
-Let me be platitudinous in the interest of clarity and point out what
-we so often forget: that our nation, unlike most of the others, is not
-a race as well. We have common wellsprings of thought, but--and this
-is significant and ominous--none of feeling. Sheer environment may
-teach people to think alike within a generation; but it takes centuries
-of common emotional experiences to make them feel alike. Any average
-American, even of the National-Security-League-one-hundred-per-centum
-variety, may have in his veins the blood of English, French, Italian,
-and Russian ancestors, and there is no saying that his emotional
-nature is going to find many heart-beats in common with some equally
-average neighbour, whose ancestry may be, say, Irish, Danish, and
-Hungarian. What national spirit we have has been determined, first,
-by the fact that the ancestors of every one of us, whether they came
-here twenty years ago or two hundred, were pioneers. Every one of them
-left a civilization whose cultural background had been established for
-centuries, to come to a land where the problem of mere existence was
-of prime importance. Again, many of them were religious fanatics. In
-the life of the pioneer there was little room for art of any sort, and
-least for music. What he demanded of music, when he had time to spare
-for it, was that above all things it distract him from the fatigue
-and worry of everyday life, either by amusing him or by furnishing a
-sentimental reminder of old ways. To the Puritan, music, both for its
-own sake and as entertainment, was anathema. As sensuous beauty it was
-popish, and as entertainment it was worldly pleasure, and therefore
-wicked. To be tolerated at all, it must be practical, i.e., perform
-some moral service by being a hymn tune. And what the American pioneer
-and the American Puritan asked a few generations back, the average
-American asks to-day whenever he is confronted with any work of art:
-Does it point a moral? If not, will it help me to kill time without
-boring me?
-
-Instruction, release, or amusement: that, in general, is all we want
-of art. The American’s favourite picture is one that tells a story, or
-shows the features of some famous person, or the topography of some
-historic spot. Fantastic pictures he likes, because they show him
-people and places far removed from his own rather tedious environment,
-but they must be a gaudy, literal, solid sort of fantasy--Maxfield
-Parrish rather than Aubrey Beardsley. If he can’t have these, he wants
-pretty girls or comics. Purely decorative or frankly meaningless
-pictures--Hokusai and Whistler (except, of course, the portraits of
-Carlyle and his mother)--do not exist for him. Sculpture--which he
-does not understand--is probably his favourite art-form, for it is
-tangible, three-dimensionable, stable. He doesn’t mind poetry, for it,
-too, gives him release. He likes novels, especially “glad” ones or
-mystery stories. He even tolerates realism if, as in “Main Street,” it
-gives him release by showing him a set of consistently contemptible
-and uncultured characters to whom even he must feel superior. His
-architecture he likes either ornate to imbecility or utilitarian to
-hideousness.
-
-In other words, the typical American goes to an art-work either frankly
-to have his senses tickled or for the sake of a definite thing that it
-says or a series of extraneous images or thoughts that it evokes--never
-for the _Ding an sich_. Of pure æsthetic emotion he exhibits very
-little. To him, beauty is emphatically not its own excuse for being.
-He does not want it for its own sake, and distrusts and fears it when
-it appears before him unclothed in moral lessons or associated ideas.
-In such a civilization music can occupy but a very unimportant place.
-For music is, morally or intellectually, the most meaningless of arts:
-it teaches no lesson, it offers no definite escape from life to the
-literal-minded, and aside from the primitive and obvious associations
-of patriotic airs and “mother” songs, it evokes no associated images or
-ideas. To love music you must be willing to enjoy beauty pretty largely
-for its own sake, without asking it to mean anything definite in words
-or pictures. This the American hates to do. Since he cannot be edified,
-he refuses to be stirred. There is nothing left for him, therefore, in
-music, except such enjoyment as he can get out of a pretty tune or an
-infectious rhythm.
-
-And that, despite our admirable symphony orchestras and our two superb
-permanent opera companies (all run at a loss, by the way), is about all
-that music means to the average American--amusement. He simply does not
-see how an art that doesn’t teach him anything, that is a shameless
-assault upon his emotions (he makes no distinction between emotions
-and senses), can possibly play any significant part in his life. So,
-as a nation, he does what he generally does in other matters of art,
-delegates its serious cultivation to women.
-
-Women constitute ninety per cent. of those who support music in this
-country. It is women who attend song and instrumental recitals; it
-is women who force reluctant husbands and fathers to subscribe for
-opera seats and symphony concerts; the National Federation of Musical
-Clubs, which works throughout the country to foster the appreciation
-of music, is composed entirely of women; at least two-thirds of the
-choral organizations in the United States contain women’s voices only.
-It is no disparagement of their activities to say that such a state
-of affairs is unhealthy. This well-nigh complete feminization of
-music is bad for it. After all, art, to be alive, must like any other
-living thing be the result of collaboration. Women have undertaken
-to be the moral guardians of the race, and no one can deny that they
-guard, upon the whole, as well as men could; but their guardianship
-is a bit too zealous at times, and their predominance in our musical
-life aggravates our already exaggerated tendency to demand that art be
-edifying. One of the conditions of the opera contest conducted by the
-National Federation in 1914 was that the libretto must contain nothing
-immoral or suggestive (I paraphrase). Now music is, after all, an adult
-occupation, and it might be assumed that a composer competent to write
-an opera score might have taste and intelligence enough not to be
-vulgar--for, surely, vulgarity was all they wanted to guard against.
-If the clause were to be interpreted literally, it would bar the
-librettos of _Tristan_, _Walküre_, _Carmen_, _Pelléas et Mélisande_,
-and _L’Amore dei Tre Re_--a supposition quite too unthinkable. The
-feminine influence helps to increase the insularity of our musicians.
-Women are more chauvinistic in art matters--if possible--than men,
-and among the women’s clubs that are trying to encourage the American
-composer there is a tendency to insist rather that he be American than
-that he be a composer. Since it is women who support our recitals and
-concerts it is they who must assume responsibility for our excessive
-cult of the performer. This land is certainly the happy hunting-ground
-of the virtuoso, be he singer, player, or conductor. What he chooses
-to sing, play, or conduct is comparatively unimportant to us. Our
-audiences seem to gather not so much to listen as to look; or if
-they do listen, it is to the voice or the instrument rather than
-to the music. The announcement, “Farrar in _Carmen_” will pack the
-Metropolitan to the doors; but if the bill be changed, and _Zaza_ be
-substituted at the last moment, who cares? Indeed the ticket agencies,
-knowing what people really attend opera for, frankly advertise “tickets
-for Farrar to-night.” Rachmaninoff is a great pianist, and Rachmaninoff
-playing an all-Chopin programme could fill Carnegie Hall at any
-time. But Rachmaninoff playing a programme of Czerny’s “Exercises
-for the Beginner” could fill it just as well. Announce an all-Chopin
-programme without naming the pianist, and see how much of an audience
-you draw. The people who go to hear Galli-Curci sing the shadow-song
-from _Dinora_ do not go to hear music at all. They go as they would go
-to see Bird Millman walk a slack wire; they go to hear a woman prove
-that, given a phenomenal development of the vocal cords, she can, after
-years of practice, perform scales and trills _in altissimo_ very nearly
-as well as the union flute-player who furnishes her obligato. All
-this is to a certain extent true elsewhere, of course. It is natural
-that if one person can sing or play better than another, audiences
-should prefer to hear him rather than another. But this worship of the
-performance rather than the thing performed, this blind adoration of
-skill for its own sake, is cultivated in America to a degree that is
-quite unparalleled.
-
-Many American cities and large towns hold annual musical festivals,
-lasting from two days to a week or more, and these are often mentioned
-as evidence of the existence of a genuine musical culture among us. Are
-they? What happens at them? For one thing, the local choral society
-performs a cantata or oratorio. This is more than likely to be either
-_The Messiah_ or _Elijah_, works which through long association have
-taken on less the character of musical compositions than of devotional
-exercises. Edification again. Soloists are engaged, as expensive and
-famous as the local budget allows, and these give recitals during the
-remaining sessions of the festival. The audiences come largely to see
-these marvels rather than to hear music, for after the annual spree of
-culture is over they return home contentedly enough to another year
-void of any music whatever. Hearing a little music is better than
-hearing none, but the test of genuine culture is whether or not it
-is an integral part of life rather than a vacation from it. By this
-test the annual festival would seem to exert about as much permanent
-cultural influence as a clambake.
-
-The total unconsciousness on the part of his fellow-countrymen that art
-is related to life, a sense of futility and unreality, is what makes
-the lot of the musician in America a hard one, and is responsible for
-his failure as an artist. If people get the kind of government they
-deserve, they most certainly get the kind of art they demand; and if,
-comparatively speaking, there is no American composer, it is because
-America doesn’t want him, doesn’t see where he fits in.
-
-Suppose most American music is trivial and superficial? How many
-Americans would know the difference if it were profound? The composer
-here lives in an atmosphere that is, at the worst, good-natured
-contempt. Contempt, mind you, not for himself--that wouldn’t
-matter--but for his very art. In the minds of many of his compatriots
-it ranks only as an entertainment and a diversion, slightly above
-embroidery and unthinkably below baseball. At best, what he gets is
-unintelligent admiration, not as an artist, but as a freak. Blind
-Tom, the negro pianist, is still a remembered and admired figure in
-American musical history; and Blind Tom was an idiot. To an American,
-the process of musical composition is a mysterious and incomprehensible
-trick--like sword-swallowing or levitation--and as such he admires it;
-but he does not respect it. He cannot understand how any normal he-man
-can spend his life thinking up tunes and putting them down on paper.
-Tunes are pleasant things, of course, especially when they make your
-feet go or take you back to the days when you went straw-riding; but as
-for taking them seriously, and calling it work--man’s work--to think
-them up ... any one who thinks that can be dismissed as a crank.
-
-If the crank could make money, it might be different. The respect
-accorded to artists in our country is pretty sharply graded in
-accordance with their earning power. Novelists and playwrights come
-first, since literature and the stage are known to furnish a “good
-living.” Sculptors have a certain standing, on account of the rumoured
-prices paid for statues and public memorials, though scenario writers
-are beginning to rank higher. Painters are eyed with a certain
-suspicion, though there is always the comfortable belief that the
-painter probably pursues a prosperous career of advertising art on
-the side. But poets and composers are decidedly men not to be taken
-seriously. This system of evaluation is not quite as crass as it
-sounds. America has so long been the land of opportunity, we have so
-long gloried in her supremacy as the place to make a living, that
-we have an instinctive conviction that if a man is really doing a
-good job he must inevitably make money at it. Only, poetry and music
-have the bad luck to be arts wherein a man may be both great and
-successful and still be unable to look the landlord in the eye. Since
-such trades are so unprofitable, we argue, those who pursue them are
-presumably incompetent. The one class of composer whom the American
-does take seriously is the writer of musical comedy and popular songs,
-not only because he can make money, but because he provides honest,
-understandable entertainment for man and beast. That, perhaps, is why
-our light music is the best of its kind in the world.
-
-The self-styled music-lover in this country too often brings little
-more genuine comprehension to music. He is likely to be a highbrow
-(defined as a person educated beyond his intelligence), with all the
-mental obtuseness and snobbishness of his class. He divides music into
-“popular”--meaning light--and “classical”--meaning pretentious. Now
-there is good music and bad, and the composer’s pretensions have little
-to do with the case. Compare, for example, the first-act finale of
-Victor Herbert’s _Mlle. Modiste_ with such vulgar rubbish as _Donna è
-mobile_. Yet because the latter is sung by tenors, at the Metropolitan,
-the highbrow solemnly catalogues it as “classical,” abolishing the
-work of Herbert, Berlin, and Kern, three greatly gifted men, with the
-adjective “popular.” In general, he is the faithful guardian of the
-Puritan tradition, always sniffing the air for a definite “message” or
-moral, seeking sermons in tones, books in running arpeggios. It never
-occurs to him that just as words are the language of intellect, so is
-music the language of emotion, that its whole excuse for existence is
-its perfection in saying what lies just beyond and above words, and
-that if you can reduce a composer’s message to words, you automatically
-render it meaningless.
-
-Music criticism in America is amazingly good in the cities. The system
-under which the critics must work, however, whereby they are supposed
-to “cover” everything (in New York this theoretically entails making
-some sort of critical comment upon every one of three or four hundred
-events in a single season) is so impossible that much of their work is
-inevitably scamped and perfunctory. Elsewhere throughout the country
-criticism is handed over to reporters, who generally avoid trouble
-by approving of everything. There is a tendency toward the double
-standard--holding the stranger strictly to account, especially the
-foreigner, and being “nice” to the native--that produces demoralizing
-results.
-
-Of real musical journalism we have none. There is _The Musical
-Quarterly_, good of its kind, but rather ponderous and making no
-pretence to timeliness. The monthlies are chiefly for the teacher.
-The weeklies are in general frankly “shop” organs, devoted to the
-activities of the performer and filled with his advertisements,
-portraits, and press notices. There is no medium for the exchange
-of contemporary thought, for the discussion of topics having a
-non-professional cultural interest. Music publishing here is an
-industry, conducted like any other industry. The Continental type of
-publisher, who is a scholar and a musician, and a gentleman who is
-conscious of a duty to music as well as to the stockholders, is almost
-unknown here. To our publishers music is a commodity, to be bought
-cheap and sold dear, and most of them will publish anything that looks
-profitable, regardless of its quality. Their typographical standards
-are higher than those anywhere in the world, except Germany.
-
-So the American composer in America works more or less in a vacuum. He
-is out of things, and he knows it. If he attempts to say something,
-through his art, that will be intelligible to his countrymen, he is
-baffled by the realization that his countrymen don’t understand his
-language. This particular difficulty, this sense of inarticulateness,
-probably weighed less heavily upon the last two generations of American
-composers; for they were, most of them, virtually German composers.
-In their time a thorough technical education in music was so nearly
-unobtainable here that it was simpler to go abroad for it. So, from
-Paine to MacDowell, they went to Germany. There they learned their
-trade, and at least learned it thoroughly; but they learned to write,
-not only music, but German music. To them, German music was music.
-Their songs were _Lieder_; their symphonies and overtures were little
-sinister sons of Beethoven, Raff, and Brahms. So completely Teutonized
-did our musical speech become that we still find it hard to believe
-that French music, Spanish music, Russian music is anything but an
-imperfect translation from the German. A few went to Paris and learned
-to write with a French accent. MacDowell was, and remains, our best:
-a first-rank composer, who died before his work was done. His earlier
-music was all written, performed, and published in Germany, and it is
-as _echt Deutsch_ as that of Raff, his master. Not until he approached
-middle life did he evolve a musical idiom that was wholly of MacDowell,
-the American. Most of the rest came back to spend their days fashioning
-good, honest, square-toed _Kapellmeistermusik_ that had about as much
-genuine relation to their America as the Declaration of Independence
-has to ours. They might feel this lack of contact, but at least they
-had the consolation of knowing that there were people in the world to
-whom what they said was at least intelligible.
-
-The American of the present generation has no such consolation. He has
-probably not been trained abroad. He wants to write music, and being
-human, he wants it understood. But the minute he tries to express
-himself he betrays the fact that he does not know what he wants to
-express. Any significant work of art is inevitably based on the
-artist’s relation and reaction to life. But the American composer’s
-relation to the common life is unreal. His activities strike his
-fellows as unimportant and slightly irrational. He can’t lay his
-finger upon the great, throbbing, common pulse of America because for
-him there is none. So he tries this, that, and the other, hoping by
-luck to stumble upon the thing he wants to say. He tries desperately
-to be American. Knowing that the great national schools of music in
-other countries are based upon folksong, he tries to find the American
-folksong, so as to base his music upon that. He utilizes Negro tunes,
-and when they fail to strike the common chord he devises themes based
-upon Indian melodies. What he fails to see is that the folksongs of
-Europe express the common _racial_ emotions of a nation, not its
-geographical accidents. When a Frenchman hears _Malbrouck_ he is moved
-by what moved generations of long-dead Frenchmen; when a Russian hears
-_Dubinushka_ he is stirred by what has stirred Russians for centuries.
-But even if some melody did stir the pulse of Geronimo, the mere fact
-that he was a former resident of my country is no proof that it is
-going to stir mine. If you insist that Negro music is the proper basis
-for an American school of composition, try telling a Southerner that
-when he hears _Swing Low, Sweet Chariot_, he is hearkening to the
-voices of his ancestors!
-
-A curious symptom of this feeling of disinheritance is the tendency of
-so many Americans to write what might be called the music of escape,
-music that far from attempting to affirm the composer’s relation to
-his day and age is a deliberate attempt to liberate himself by evoking
-alien and exotic moods and atmosphere. The publishers’ catalogues
-are full of Arab meditations, Persian dances, Hindu serenades, and
-countless similar attempts to get “anywhere out of the world.” The
-best work of Charles Griffes, whose untimely death last year robbed
-us of a true creative talent, was his symphonic poem, “The Pleasure
-Dome of Kubla Khan,” and his settings of Chinese and Japanese lyrics
-in Oriental rhythms and timbres. Not that the mere choice of subject
-is important; it is the actual mood and idiom of so much of this music
-that is significant evidence of the impulse to give up and forget
-America, to create a dream-world wherein one can find refuge from the
-land of chewing gum and victrolas.
-
-These same victrolas, by the way, with their cousin, the player-piano,
-which so outrage the sensibilities of many a musician of the elder day,
-are a very real force in helping to civilize this country musically.
-The American is by no means as unmusical as he thinks he is. His
-indifference to art is only the result of his purely industrial
-civilization, and his tendency to mix morals with æsthetics is a
-habit of thought engendered by his ancestry. The Puritan tradition
-makes him fearful and suspicious of any sort of sensuous or emotional
-response, but it has not rendered him incapable of it. Catch him off
-his guard, get him away from the fear of being bored, and he is far
-from insensitive to music. He buys victrola records because he is a
-hero-worshipper, because he wants to hear the expensive Caruso and
-Kreisler and McCormack; but inevitably he is bound to take some notice
-of what they play and sing, and to recognize it when he hears it again.
-In spite of himself he begins to acquire a rudimentary sort of musical
-background. He begins by buying jazz rolls for his player-piano, and
-is likely in the long run, if only out of curiosity, to progress from
-“blues” to Chopin, via Moszkovski and Grainger.
-
-But the greatest present-day force for good, musically, in this
-country, is the large motion-picture house. Music has always been a
-necessary accompaniment to motion pictures, in order to compensate for
-the uncanny silence in which these photographic wraiths unfold their
-dramas. Starting with a modest ensemble of piano and glass crash, the
-motion-picture orchestra has gradually increased in size and quality,
-the pipe organ has been introduced to augment and alternate it, so
-that the larger houses to-day can boast a musical equipment that is
-amazingly good. A few years ago S. L. Rothafel devised a glorified
-type of entertainment that was a sort of combination picture-show and
-“pop” concert. He built a theatre, the Rialto, especially to house it,
-containing a stage that was little more than a picture frame, a large
-pipe organ, and an orchestra platform large enough to hold seventy or
-eighty players. He recruited a permanent orchestra large enough to play
-symphonic works, and put Hugo Riesenfeld, an excellent violinist and
-conductor, who had been trained under Arthur Nikisch, in charge of the
-performances. These, besides the usual film presentations, comprised
-vocal and instrumental solos and detached numbers by the orchestra. All
-the music played at these entertainments was good--in what is known in
-this country as “classical.” Riesenfeld devised a running accompaniment
-to the films, assembled from the best orchestral music obtainable--a
-sort of synthetic symphonic poem that fitted the mood and action of the
-film presented, and was, of course, much too good for it.
-
-This new entertainment form was instantly successful, and is rapidly
-becoming the standard offering at all the larger picture houses. It is
-a significant step in our musical life, for it is the first entirely
-successful attempt in this country to adapt art to popular wants. At
-last the average man is going of his own accord into a public hall
-and hearing music--real music--and discovering that he likes it. The
-picture house allows him to pretend that he is going solely to see the
-films, and needn’t listen unless he wants to. He finds that “classical”
-music is not nearly so boresome as many of its admirers. Freed from
-the highbrow’s condescension, unconscious of uplift, he listens and
-responds to music like the prelude to _Tristan_, the _Walkürenritt_,
-the _New World_ symphony, Tschaikovsky’s _Fourth_, and the _Eroica_.
-Theodore Thomas rendered no more valuable service to music in America
-than have Samuel Rothafel and Hugo Riesenfeld.
-
-We are still far from utopia, however. In one of his essays upon
-communal art Henry Caro-Delvaille speaks of “the true Mediterranean
-_esprit_, the viable art philosophy of the French race, which is
-essentially plastic, accepting and delineating life, free alike from
-dogmatism and mysticism.” Try to frame a sentence like that about
-America. Try to make any generalization about the American spirit
-without using “liberty,” “free institutions,” “resourcefulness,”
-“opportunity,” or other politico-economic terms, if you would know what
-confronts the American artist, above all the American musician, when
-he attempts to become articulate to his countrymen. We simply have no
-common æsthetic emotions. No wonder our music flounders and stammers,
-and trails off into incoherence!
-
-Wagner wrote _Die Meistersinger_ in a deliberate effort to express the
-German artistic creed; Verdi wrote consciously as an Italian; Glinka
-founded an entire school of composers whose sole aim was to express
-Russia. Such a task is beyond the American. The others were spokesmen
-for a race: he has no race to speak for, and the moment he pretends
-that he has, and tries to speak for it, he becomes conscious and
-futile. To speak of American music, in any ethnic sense, is naïve; you
-might as well speak of Baptist music. No. The American must accept his
-lot. There is but one audience he can write for, and that is himself.
-John Smith, American composer, dare not say: “I write to express
-America.” He can only say: “I write to express John Smith. I accept my
-life because, after all, it is mine, and I interpret my life because it
-is the only life I know.” And because John Smith is an American, and
-because somewhere, remote and inarticulate, there must be an American
-soul, then perhaps, if he does honest work and is true to himself, he
-may succeed in saying something that is of America, and of nowhere
-else, and that other Americans will hear and understand.
-
- DEEMS TAYLOR
-
-
-
-
-POETRY
-
-
-There are many fashions, among contemporary critics, of regarding
-American poetry, each of them perhaps of equal helpfulness, since
-each is one facet of an imaginable whole. There is the view of Mr.
-John Middleton Murry, an English critic, that it depends perhaps a
-shade too much on narrative or dramatic interest, on bizarrerie (if
-I may very freely elaborate his notion) or, in general, on a kind of
-sensationalism, a use of superficially intriguing elements which are
-not specifically the right--or at all events the best--elements of
-poetry. There is the view of Mr. Louis Untermeyer, one of the ablest
-of our own critics and also one of the most versatile of our parodists
-and poets, that our contemporary poetry is good in measure as it
-comes in the direct line from Whitman: good, that is to say, when it
-is the voice of the poet who accepts, accepts joyously and largely,
-even loosely, this new world environment, these new customs, social
-and industrial, above all, it may be, the new sense of freedom which
-he might, if pressed, trace back to Karl Marx on one hand and Sigmund
-Freud on the other. There is again the view of Miss Amy Lowell that
-our poetry is good, or tends to be, precisely in proportion as it
-represents an outgrowing, by the poet, of his acute awareness of a
-social or ethical “here and now,” and the attainment of a relatively
-pure pre-occupation with beauty--the sense of freedom here exercising
-itself principally, if not altogether, with regard to literary
-tradition, especially the English: once more, I dilate the view to make
-it the more broadly representative. And there is, finally, the view of
-the conservative, by no means silent even in this era, that what is
-good in contemporary American poetry is what is for the moment least
-conspicuous--the traditional, seen as it appears inevitably in America
-to be seen, as something graceful, sentimental, rightly ethical, gently
-idealistic.
-
-What will be fairly obvious is that if we follow a little way any
-particular one of these critics, we shall find him attempting to urge
-our poetry in a particular direction, a direction which he prefers
-to any other direction, and analysing its origins in such a way, if
-he analyses at all, as to make plausible its (postulated) growth in
-that direction. This is the natural, even perhaps the best thing, for
-a participant critic to do--it contributes, certainly, an interest
-and an energy. But if in some freak of disinterestedness, we wish if
-for only a moment to see American poetry with no concern save that
-of inordinate and intelligent curiosity, then it is to all of these
-views that we must turn, rather than to any one, and to the obverse of
-each, as well as to the face. For if one thing is apparent to-day in
-a study of American letters, it is that we must heroically resist any
-temptation to simplify, to look in only one direction for origins or
-in only one direction for growth. Despite our national motto, American
-civilization is not so much one in many as many in one. We have not, as
-England has and as France has, a single literary heart; our literary
-capitals and countries are many, each with its own vigorous people,
-its own self-interest, its own virtues and provincialisms. We may
-attribute this to the mere matter of our size, and the consequent
-geographical sequestration of this or that group--that is no doubt a
-factor, but of equal importance is the fact that in a new country, of
-rapid and chaotic material growth, we must inevitably have, according
-to the locality, marked variations in the rapidity of growth of the
-vague thing we call civilization. Chicago is younger than Boston, older
-than San Francisco. And what applies to the large unit applies also
-to the small--if the country in general has not yet reached anything
-remotely like a cultural homogeneity (as far, that is, as we ever in
-viewing a great nation expect such a thing) neither has any section of
-it, nor any city of it. It is no longer possible, if indeed it ever
-was, to regard a section like New England, for example, as a definite
-environmental factor, say “y,” and to conclude, as some critics are
-so fond of doing, that any poet who matures there will inevitably be
-representable as “yp.” This is among the commonest and falsest of
-false simplifications. Our critics, frantically determined to find
-an American poetry that is autochthonous, will see rocky pastures,
-mountains and birches in the poetry of a New Englander, or skyscrapers
-in the poetry of a New Yorker, or stockyards in the poetry of a
-Chicagoan, as easily as a conjurer takes a rabbit from a hat.
-
-What refuge we have from a critical basis so naïve is in assuming
-from the outset, toward contemporary American poetry, an attitude
-guardedly pluralistic--we begin by observing merely that American
-poetry is certainly, at the moment, if quantitative production and
-public interest are any measure, extraordinarily healthy and vigorous.
-We are accustomed to hearing it called a renaissance. The term is
-admissible if we carefully exclude, in using it, any implication of a
-revival of classicism. What we mean by it is simply that the moment
-is one of quite remarkable energy, productiveness, range, colour, and
-anarchy. What we do not mean by it is that we can trace with accuracy
-where this outburst comes from. The origins of the thing are obscure.
-It was audible in 1914--Mr. Edwin Arlington Robinson and Mr. Ezra Pound
-were audible before that; it burst into full chorus in 1915; and ever
-since there has been, with an occasional dying fall, a lusty corybantic
-cacophony. Just where this amazing procession started nobody clearly
-knows. Mr. Untermeyer would have us believe that Walt Whitman was, as
-it were, the organizer of it, Miss Monroe tries to persuade us that
-it was _Poetry: a Magazine of Verse_, But the facts, I think, wave
-aside either postulate. If one thing is remarkable it is that in this
-spate of poetry the influence of Walt Whitman--an influence, one would
-suppose, as toxic for the young as Swinburne--is so inconsiderable:
-if another is even more remarkable, it is that in all this chorus one
-so seldom hears a voice of which any previous American voice was the
-clear prototype. We have had, of course, our voices--of the sort, I
-mean, rich enough in character to make imitation an easy and tempting
-thing. Longfellow, Lowell, Bryant, Sill, Lanier are not in this regard
-considerable,--but what of Poe, whose influence we have seen in French
-poetry on Baudelaire, and in contemporary English poetry on Mr. Walter
-de la Mare? No trace of him is discoverable, unless perhaps we find
-the ghostliest of his shadows now and then across the work of Mr.
-John Gould Fletcher, or Mr. Maxwell Bodenheim, or Mr. Wallace Stevens,
-a shadow cast, in all these cases, amid much else, from a technical
-and colouristic standpoint, which would have filled Poe with alarm.
-And there is another American poet, perhaps as great as Poe, perhaps
-greater (as he in turn is perhaps greater than Whitman--as poet, though
-not as personality)--Emily Dickinson. Of that quietist and mystic, who
-walked with tranquillity midway between Blake and Emerson, making of
-her wilful imperfections a kind of perfectionism, why do we hear so
-little? Do we catch now and again the fleetingest glimpse of her in the
-early work of Mr. Robert Frost? If so, it is certainly nowhere else.
-Yet it would be hard to prove that she has no right to a place with Poe
-and Whitman, or indeed among the best poets in the language.
-
-But nowhere in America can we find, for contemporary poetry, any
-clear precursive signal. Little as it may comfort our fuglemen of the
-autochthonous, we must, I think, look to Europe for its origins. This
-is not, as some imagine, a disgrace--it would be a melancholy thing,
-of course, if we merely imitated the European, without alteration. But
-Browning would hardly recognize himself, even if he cared to, in the
-“Domesday Book” of Mr. Edgar Lee Masters, Mallarmé and Rimbaud would
-find Mr. Fletcher a mirror with an odd trick of distortion, Laforgue
-would have to look twice at Mr. T. S. Eliot’s “Prufrock” (for all
-its Hamletism), M. Paul Fort would scarcely feel at home in Miss Amy
-Lowell’s “Can Grande’s Castle,” Mr. Thomas Hardy and the ghost of
-Tennyson would not quarrel much for the possession of Mr. Robinson’s
-work, nor Mr. Chesterton and the author of “The Ingoldsby Legends”
-for the lively sonorities of Mr. Vachel Lindsay. In such cases we
-have not so much “influence” as fertilization. It is something of Mr.
-Masters that “The Ring and the Book” reveals to Mr. Masters: something
-of Miss Lowell to which M. Paul Fort offers her the key. Was it a
-calamity for Baudelaire that he lived only by a transfusion of blood
-from an American? Is Becquer the less Becquer or Spanish for having
-fed upon the “Buch der Lieder”?... Culture is bartered, nowadays, at
-open frontiers, and if to-day a new theme, chord, or colour-scheme is
-French, German, or American, to-morrow it is international.
-
-If we differ in this respect from any other country it is only that we
-are freer to exploit, really exhaust, the new, because we hold, less
-than any other, to any classical traditions: for traditions our poets
-seldom look back further than the 19th century. We have the courage,
-often indistinguishable from folly, of our lack of convictions. Thus it
-comes about that as America is the melting-pot for races, so she is in
-a fair way to become a melting-pot for cultures: we have the energy,
-the curiosity, the intelligence, above all the lack of affiliations
-with the past, which admirably adapt us to a task--so precisely
-demanding complete self-surrender--of æsthetic experiment. Ignorance
-has some compensations--I mean, of course, a partial ignorance. If Mr.
-Lindsay had been brought up exclusively on Aristotle, Plato, Æschylus,
-and Euripides, and had been taken out of the shadow of the church
-by Voltaire and Darwin, perhaps he would not have been so “free” to
-experiment with the “higher vaudeville.” It will be observed that this
-is an odd kind of “freedom,” for it amounts in some ways to little
-more than the “freedom” of the prison. For if too severe a training
-in the classics unfits one somewhat for bold experiment, too little
-of it is as likely, on the other hand, to leave one with an æsthetic
-perceptiveness, a sensibility, in short, relatively rudimentary.
-
-This, then, is something of the cultural _mise en scène_ for our
-contemporary poetry. We have repeated waves of European suggestion
-breaking Westward over our continent, foaming rather more in Chicago
-than in New York; and we have our lusty young company of swimmers,
-confident that they are strong enough to ride these waves farther than
-any one in Europe rode them and with a more native grace. What is most
-conspicuously American in most of these swimmers is the fact that
-they rely not so much on skill and long training as on sheer energy,
-vitality, and confidence. They rely, indeed, in most cases, on a kind
-of exuberance or superabundance. Do we not feel this in the work of
-Mr. Edgar Lee Masters--does he not try, in these many full books of
-his, where the good is so inextricably enmeshed with the bad, simply
-to beat us down as under a cataract? “Domesday Book” is, rather, an
-avalanche. He never knows what to exclude, where to stop. Miss Lowell,
-Mr. Fletcher, Mr. Carl Sandburg, and Mr. Lindsay are not far behind
-him, either--they are all copious. I do not mean to imply that this
-is a bad thing, at the moment--at the moment I am not sure that this
-sheer exuberance is not, for us, the very _best_ thing. Energy is the
-first requisite of a “renaissance,” and supplies its material, or,
-in another light, its richness of colour. Not the beginning, but the
-end, of a renaissance is in refinement; and I think we are certainly
-within bounds in postulating that the last five years have given us
-at the least a superb beginning, and enough more than that, perhaps,
-to make one wonder whether we have not already cast Poe and Whitman,
-Sidney Lanier, and Emily Dickinson, our strange little quartette, into
-a shadow.
-
-All that our wonder can hope for is at best a very speculative answer.
-If parallels were not so dangerous, we might look with encouragement at
-that spangled rhetorical torrent which we call Elizabethan literature.
-Ben Jonson did not consider Shakespeare much of an artist, nor did
-Milton, and classicists ever since have followed them in that opinion.
-If one can be the greatest of poets and yet not much of an artist, we
-may here keep clear of the quarrel: what we get at is the fact that
-Shakespeare and the other Elizabethans participated in a literary
-movement which, like ours, began in energy, violence, and extravagance,
-was at its best excessively rhetorical and given to unpruned
-copiousness, and perished as it refined. Will a future generation see
-us in a somewhat similar light--will it like us for our vitality, for
-the reckless adventurousness of our literature, our extravagances, and
-forgive us, if it does not precisely enjoy as something with a foreign
-flavour, our artistic innocence? That is conceivable, certainly. Yet
-the view _is_ speculative and we dare not take it too seriously. For if
-we have kept hopefully and intelligently abreast of the contemporary we
-have kept, none the less, our own very sufficient aloofness, our own
-tactilism and awareness, in the light of which we are bound to have our
-own scepticisms and self-distrust. I do not mean that we would perhaps
-prefer something more classical or severe than “Spoon River Anthology”
-or “The Congo” or the colour symphonies of Mr. Fletcher, merely on
-the ground that it is the intrinsically classical and severe which we
-most desire. What we seem to see in contemporary American poetry is a
-transition from the more to the less exuberant, from the less to the
-more severe; and what we most _desire_ to see is the attainment of
-_that point_, in this transition, which will give us our parallel to
-the Shakespearean, if we may hope for anything even approximately so
-high; a point of equipoise.
-
-This hope gives us a convenient vantage from which to survey the
-situation, if we also keep in mind our perception of American cultural
-heterogeneity and the rashness of any attempt to generalize about
-it. The most exact but least diverting method would be the merely
-enumerative, the mere roll-call which would put before us Mr. Edwin
-Arlington Robinson and Mr. Ezra Pound as the two of our poets whose
-public literary activities extend farthest back, and after them the
-group who made themselves known in the interval between 1914 and 1920:
-Mr. Robert Frost, Mr. Fletcher, Mr. Masters, Mr. Sandburg, Miss Lowell,
-Mr. Lindsay, Mr. Alfred Kreymborg, Mr. Maxwell Bodenheim, Mr. Wallace
-Stevens, “H. D.,” Mr. T. S. Eliot, and Miss Sara Teasdale. These poets,
-with few exceptions, have little enough in common--nothing, perhaps,
-save the fact that they were all a good deal actuated at the outset
-by a disgust with the dead level of sentimentality and prettiness and
-moralism to which American poetry had fallen between 1890 and 1910.
-From that point they diverge like so many radii. One cannot say, as
-Miss Lowell has tried to persuade us, that they have all followed one
-radius, and that the differences between them are occasioned by the
-fact that some have gone farther than others. We may, for convenience,
-classify them, if we do not attach too much importance to the bounds
-of our classes. We may say that Mr. Robinson, Mr. Frost, and Mr.
-Masters bring back to our poetry a strong sense of reality; that Mr.
-Fletcher, Mr. Pound, Miss Lowell, “H. D.,” and Mr. Bodenheim bring to
-it a sharpened consciousness of colour; that Mr. Eliot, Mr. Kreymborg,
-and Mr. Stevens bring to it a refinement of psychological subtlety;
-Mr. Sandburg, a grim sense of social responsibility; Mr. Lindsay, a
-rhythmic abandon mixed with evangelism; Miss Teasdale, a grace. The
-range here indicated is extraordinary. The existence side by side in
-one generation and in one country of such poets as Mr. Masters and
-Mr. Fletcher, or Mr. Eliot and Miss Lowell, is anomalous. Clearly we
-are past that time when a nation will have at a given moment a single
-direct literary current. There is as yet no sign that to any one of
-these groups will fall anything like undivided sway. Mr. Frost’s
-“North of Boston” and Mr. Fletcher’s “Irradiations” came out in the
-same year; “Spoon River Anthology” and the first “Imagist Anthology”;
-Mr. Robinson’s “Lancelot” and Mr. Bodenheim’s “Advice.” And what
-gulfs even between members of any one of our arbitrary “classes”!
-Mr. Frost’s actualism is seldom far from the dramatic or lyric, that
-of Mr. Masters seldom far from the physiological. Mr. Masters is
-bitter-minded, tediously explanatory, and his passionate enquiries fall
-upon life like so many heavy blows; his delvings appear morbid as well
-as searching. Mr. Frost is gentle, whether in irony, humour, or sense
-of pain: if it is the pathos of decay which most moves him, he sees it,
-none the less, at dewfall and moonrise, in a dark tree, a birdsong.
-The inflections of the human voice, as he hears them, are as tender as
-in the hearing of Mr. Masters they are harsh. And can Mr. Robinson be
-thought a commensal of either? His again is a prolonged enquiry into
-the why of human behaviour, but how bared of colour, how muffled with
-reserves and dimmed with reticence! Here, indeed, is a step toward
-romanticism. For Mr. Robinson, though a realist in the sense that his
-preoccupation is with motive, turns down the light in the presence of
-his protagonist that in the gloom he may take on the air of something
-larger and more mysterious than the garishly actual. Gleams convey the
-dimensions--hints suggest a depth. We are not always too precisely
-aware of what is going on in this twilight of uncertainties, but Mr.
-Robinson seems to whisper that the implications are tremendous. Not
-least, moreover, of these implications are the moral--the mirror that
-Mr. Robinson holds up to nature gives us back the true, no doubt,
-but increasingly in his later work (as in “Merlin” and “Lancelot,”
-particularly the latter) with a slight trick of refraction that makes
-of the true the exemplary.
-
-We cross a chasm, from these sombre psycho-realists, to the colourists.
-To these, one finds, what is human in behaviour or motive is of
-importance only in so far as it affords colour or offers possibilities
-of pattern. Mr. Fletcher is the most brilliant of this group, and
-the most “uncontrolled”: his colourism, at its best, is a pure, an
-astonishingly absolute thing. The “human” element he wisely leaves
-alone--it baffles and escapes him. One is aware that this kaleidoscopic
-whirl of colour is “wrung out” of Mr. Fletcher, that it conveys what
-is for him an intense personal drama, but this does not make his work
-“human.” The note of “personal drama” is more complete in the poetry
-of “H. D.,” but this too is, in the last analysis, a nearly pure
-colourism, as static and fragmentary, however, as Mr. Fletcher’s is
-dynamic. Mr. Bodenheim is more detached, cooler, has a more conscious
-eye for correspondences between colour and mood: perhaps we should
-call him a symbolist. Even here, however, the “human,” the whim of
-tenderness, the psychological gleam, are swerved so that they may
-fall into a fantastic design. Miss Lowell, finally, more conscious,
-deliberate and energetic than any of these, brilliantly versatile,
-utterly detached, while she “sees” more of the objective world (and has
-farther-ranging interests), sees it more completely than any of them
-simply as raw colour or incipient pattern. If the literary pulse is
-here often feverishly high, the empathic and sympathetic temperature is
-as often absolute zero.
-
-Mr. Pound shares with Miss Lowell this immersion in the “literary”--he
-is intensely aware of the literary past, rifles it for odds and ends
-of colour, atmosphere, and attitude, is perpetually adding bright new
-bits, from such sources, to his Joseph’s coat: but if a traditionalist
-in this, a curio-hunter, he is an experimentalist in prosody; he has
-come far from the sentimental literary affectedness of his early work
-and at his best has written lyrics of a singular beauty and transparent
-clarity. The psychological factor has from time to time intrigued him,
-moreover, and we see him as a kind of link between the colourists and
-such poets as Mr. T. S. Eliot, Mr. Alfred Kreymborg, and Mr. Wallace
-Stevens. These poets are alike in achieving, by a kind of alchemy, the
-lyric in terms of the analytic: introspection is made to shine, to the
-subtly seen is given a delicate air of false simplicity. Mr. Stevens is
-closest to the colourists. His drift has been away from the analytic
-and towards the mere capture of a “tone.” Mr. Kreymborg is a melodist
-and a mathematician. He takes a pleasure in making of his poems and
-plays charming diagrams of the emotions. Mr. Eliot has more of an
-eye for the sharp dramatic gesture, more of an ear for the trenchant
-dramatic phrase--he looks now at Laforgue, now at John Webster. His
-technical skill is remarkable, his perception of effect is precise, his
-range narrow, perhaps increasingly narrow.
-
-Even so rapid and superficial a survey cannot but impress us with the
-essential anarchy of this poetic community. Lawlessness has seemed
-at times to be the prevailing note; no poetic principle has remained
-unchallenged, and we have only to look in the less prosperous suburbs
-and corners of this city to see to what lengths the bolder rebels,
-whether of the “Others” group or elsewhere, have gone. Ugliness and
-shapelessness have had their adherents among those whom æsthetic
-fatigue had rendered momentarily insensitive to the well-shaped;
-the fragmentary has had its adherents among those whom cynicism had
-rendered incapable of any service, too prolonged, to one idea. But
-the fetichists of the ugly and the fragmentary have exerted, none the
-less, a wholesome and fructifying influence. Whatever we feel about
-the ephemerality of the specifically ugly or fragmentary, we cannot
-escape a feeling that these, almost as importantly as the new realism
-or the new colourism, have enlarged what we might term the general
-“poetic consciousness” of the time. If there was a moment when the
-vogue of the disordered seemed to threaten, or predict, a widespread
-and rapid poetic decadence, that moment is safely past. The tendency
-is now in the other direction, and not the least interesting sign is
-the fact that many of the former apostles of the disordered are to-day
-experimenting with the things they yesterday despised--rhyme, metre,
-and the architecture of theme.
-
-We have our affections, in all this, for the fragmentary and ugly
-as for the abrupt small hideousness--oddly akin to virility--of
-gargoyles. We have our affections, too, for the rawest of our very raw
-realisms--for the maddest of our colourisms, the most idiosyncratic
-subtleties of our first introspectionists. Do we hesitate a little to
-ask something more of any of the poets whom we thus designate? What
-we fear is that in attempting to give us our something more, they
-will give us something less. What we want more of, what we see our
-contemporary poets as for the most part sadly deficient in, is “art.”
-What we are afraid they will lose, if we urge them in this direction,
-is their young sharp brilliance. Urge them, however, we must. What
-our poets need most to learn is that poetry is not merely a matter of
-outpouring, of confession. It must be serious: it must be, if simple in
-appearance, none the less highly wrought: it must be packed. It must
-be beautifully elaborate rather than elaborately beautiful. It must be
-detached from dogma--we must keep it away from the all too prevalent
-lecture platform.
-
-What we should like to see, in short, is a fusion, of the extraordinary
-range of poetic virtues with which our contemporary poets confront
-us, into one poetic consciousness. Do we cavil too much in assuming
-that no one of our poets offers us quite enough? Should we rather take
-comfort in the hope that many of their individual “personalities” are
-vivid enough to offset their onesidedness, and in that way to have a
-considerable guarantee of survival? We have mentioned that possibility
-before, and certainly it cannot be flatly dismissed. But I think it
-cannot be contested that many of these poets already feel, themselves,
-a sharper responsibility, a need for a greater comprehensiveness, for
-a finer and richer tactile equipment, a steadier view of what it is
-that constitutes beauty of form. They are immeasurably distant from
-any dry, cold perfectionism, however; and if we cheer them in taking
-the path that leads thither, it is in the hope of seeing them reach
-the halfway house rather than the summit. For to go all the way is to
-arrive exhausted; to go half way is to arrive with vigour.... That,
-however, is to interpose our own view and to lose our detachment. We
-return to a reiteration of our conclusion that American poetry is at
-the moment extraordinarily healthy. Its virtues are the virtues of all
-good poetry, and they are sufficient to persuade us that the future
-of English poetry lies as much in America as in England. Its faults
-are the faults of a culture that is immature. But again, we reiterate
-that we have here many cultures, and if some are immature, some are
-not. Let those who are too prone to diagnose us culturally from “Spoon
-River Anthology” or “Smoke and Steel” keep in mind also Mr. Robinson’s
-“Merlin” and Mr. Frost’s “North of Boston”; Mr. Fletcher’s “Goblins and
-Pagodas” and Miss Lowell’s “Can Grande’s Castle.”
-
- CONRAD AIKEN
-
-
-
-
-ART
-
-
-The problem of American Art is unlike that of any other country of
-the present or the past. We have not here the racial and historical
-foundation on which, until now, every art has been built and so our
-striving (it is far too soon to speak of success or failure) must be
-judged from another standpoint than the one to be taken in viewing an
-art that originates with its people or is directly transmitted from
-an older race. Egypt and ancient Mexico furnish examples of the first
-case, Italy and France of the second. When the latter countries were
-colonized by the Greeks, Phœnicians and others, they received a culture
-which could take on fresh vigour when grasped by a new race.
-
-We did not start as a new race, but as Europeans possessing the same
-intellectual heritage as the men who stayed in the parent countries.
-Our problem was not one of receiving the ancient tradition from an
-invading or colonizing people who brought with them an art already
-formed. Ourselves the invaders and colonizers, our problem was to keep
-alive the ideas that we had had in Europe, or to take over those of our
-new home, or to evolve an art of our own.
-
-To begin with the second possibility, the question of our relation to
-the ideas of the Indians may obviously be disposed of very briefly.
-The tribes encountered by the early settlers were in a state of
-savagery, and this fact, together with the constant warfare between
-the two races, is a sufficient explanation why we find no influence
-from the red men. Even where the Europeans encountered culture of a
-very high order, as in Mexico and Peru, the remoteness of the native
-ideas from those of the invading race prevented for centuries a just
-appreciation of the earliest and unquestionably the greatest art
-produced in the Western Hemisphere. It is only in quite recent years
-that we have realized its merit, and it is unlikely that even our
-present-day interest in the exotic arts will bring about any important
-influence from the Indians, although in regions such as our Southwest
-and the parts of Mexico where “Americanizing” has not yet killed their
-art-instinct, they are still producing beautiful work.
-
-We have, of course, retained European ideals, but they have been
-conditioned by circumstances and we have not kept pace with Europe or
-even followed the course of the great art-movements until they were
-almost or quite superseded abroad. Our distance from the centres of
-ancient and modern culture on one hand, and the needs of building
-up the new continent on the other, combined to make our people lose
-interest in art, which, indeed, had never found a propitious soil among
-our British forebears. The case of literature is different. The love
-of it is an abiding one with the Anglo-Saxon race, and as Shakespeare
-and the Bible could be read in the frontier cabin almost as well as in
-London or Dublin, there was not the loss of knowledge of literature,
-the break in the production of it that we find in the case of the
-plastic arts.
-
-It is easy to exaggerate on this score, however, forgetting that the
-art-instinct accumulated in a race for centuries is not to be lost by a
-period of neglect. When he goes to the museum, the American recognizes
-the same masters as does the European, but the smaller opportunity here
-to know the classic past has the double effect of keeping art-lovers
-in America in a far more reduced minority and at the same time of
-weakening the authority of tradition.
-
-Not to speak of 17th or 18th century conditions, nor even of those
-of the 19th century, one need only consider the America of to-day to
-realize how little opportunity our people has to know art. In all but
-a few cities, Americans can learn only from reproductions and books,
-though even these are an immeasurably safer guide than the bad original
-works which are usually the first to arrive. When one thinks of the
-European countryside and the numberless small towns of all the old
-countries where there is no museum, one may be tempted to ask whether
-art conditions are so very different there. But they are different.
-There will be an old church, or some houses of a good period, or some
-objects in the houses, or--on the walls of the inn--some old prints
-handing on the tradition of the great religious pictures (such things
-were made quite commonly until recent times and have not entirely
-ceased to be produced); a tradition of construction and of colour makes
-the modern houses fit in quite acceptably with those of the past. The
-centuries have built up a sense of fitness and beauty in the making and
-wearing of costume; there will be some form of folk-singing or other
-collective action of an artistic character, and thus the exceptional
-individual, born with a strong instinct toward art, has surroundings
-and a foundation that are lacking here. A striking proof of the
-difference between the two continents is the effect of the war on
-art-interest: whereas in America public attention has been turned away
-from art to a most marked degree, Europe is producing and buying art
-with a fervour that can only be explained by the desire to get back to
-essentials after the years in which people were deprived of them.
-
-Another phenomenon to be noted at this point is the dominance of women
-in American art-matters. It is unknown in any other country. The vast
-majority of American men are engrossed in the drive of work, their
-leisure goes to sport and to the forms of entertainment that call for
-the smallest amount of mental effort. The women, with their quicker
-sensibility and their recognition of art as one of the things that
-mark the higher orders of life, take over the furnishing of the home
-and through this and the study that their greater leisure permits
-them, exert a strong influence on the purchase of art-works for
-private collections and even museums. The production of the American
-painter and sculptor is also much affected as a consequence, and in
-the direction of conventionality. I do not claim that the level of art
-in America would be greatly improved at present if it were the men
-instead of the women who took the lead; perhaps, in view of the state
-of appreciation in our people, it would be lowered; but I maintain that
-the fact that art is so much in the hands of women and the suspicion
-among men that it carries with it some implication of effeminacy are
-among the indications of American immaturity in art-appreciation. We
-cannot expect an art really representative of America until there is a
-foundation of regard for his work that the artist can build on. In the
-old civilizations the artist was meeting an active demand on the part
-of his people; in America, he has to seek desperately for a living.
-Albrecht Dürer summed up the difference between the two states of
-civilization when he wrote from Venice to a friend in the young Germany
-of his day: “Oh, how I shall freeze for this sun when I get home; here
-I am a gentleman, at home a parasite.”
-
-It will seem to many that even such famous words should not be repeated
-in a country where art is so often mentioned in the papers, where
-museums are springing up in large numbers, where unheard-of prices
-are paid for the work of famous men, and where even those who take
-no interest in art will accord it a sort of halo. But the very fact
-that it is relegated to the class of Sunday things instead of entering
-into everyday life shows that our colonial period--in the cultural
-sense of the word--is not yet passed. This should not be looked on as
-discouraging; it is natural that the formation of character and ideas
-should require time and I shall endeavour to show that the development
-is really a rapid and healthy one. The mistake Americans are most prone
-to, that of imagining the country to have reached a mature character
-and a valid expression, shows their eagerness to advance, and explains
-their readiness to tear down or to build up.
-
-In the presence of such a spirit, one must see the mistakes of
-conservatism or of ignorance in due perspective. However trying to
-those who suffer from them at the time, they cannot fatally warp the
-growth that is going on. For years we retained a tariff that obstructed
-the coming into the country of works of art. That is a thing of the
-past, and as one of the reasons used to defend it was that it protected
-American artists against the foreigner, so, with the abolition of the
-tariff, there has been more of a tendency to judge works of art for
-their own qualities, without question of their nationality and without
-the puerile idea of nurturing the American product by keeping out work
-from abroad. How far this mistake had gone may be judged from the
-fact that in a certain city of our Far West a group of painters made
-a protest against the attention given by a newspaper to an exhibition
-sent out from New York, raising no question of the quality of the
-work, but merely demanding that local men be spoken of when art was
-discussed in the paper--which promptly acquiesced, and removed the
-critic from his position. The case may seem an extreme one, yet it
-illustrates the attitude of many of our collectors and even our museum
-authorities who, in the name of Americanism, are “helping to fame many,
-the sight of whose painting is a miseducation,” to use a phrase that
-Mr. Berenson has applied to another matter.
-
-There is no question to-day but that America must evolve along
-the lines of contemporary thought throughout the civilized world.
-There will be a local tang to our art. Certain enthusiasms and
-characteristics, as we develop them, may give emphasis to special
-phases of our production, but there is no longer the possibility of
-an isolated, autochthonic growth, such as seemed to be forecast up to
-about the time of the Revolution. The 18th century in America with its
-beautiful architecture, its fine craftsmen, and its painting, is only
-less far from the America of to-day than is the art of the Indians.
-We still put up buildings and make furniture in what is called the
-Colonial style, but so do we follow the even more remote Mission style
-of architecture in our Western States, and attempt to use Indian
-designs in decoration. The usual fate of attempted continuings of a
-bygone style overtakes all these efforts. Our materials are different,
-our needs are different, our time is different. A glance at two houses,
-as one speeds by in an automobile, tells us which is the real Colonial
-architecture, which the imitation. At the Jumel Mansion in New York
-it is easy to see which are the old parts, which the restorations,
-although enough time has passed since the latter were made to weather
-them to the tone of the original places.
-
-In painting, the change that occurred after we became a republic is
-even more unmistakable. The English School underwent considerable
-modification when its representatives here began to work for
-themselves. Where Reynolds, Gainsborough, and Lawrence were consulting
-the old masters with such studious solicitude, Sir Joshua especially
-pursuing his enquiry into the processes of Titian, men like Copley
-and Blackburn were thrown back on such technical resources as they
-could find here and had to depend for progress on tightening their
-hold on character. Copley has the true note of the primitive in the
-intensity with which he studies his people, and must be reckoned with
-portraitists of almost the highest order.
-
-What a change in the next generation! The more independent we are
-politically the more we come out of the isolation that gave us quiet
-and freedom to build up the admirable style of pre-Revolutionary days.
-And then there was so much to be done in getting our new institutions
-to work and our new land under cultivation, there was so much money
-to be made and so much to import from Europe. It is significant that
-the best painter of the period is John Vanderlyn, who had been sent
-to Paris to study under Ingres. Fine artist that Vanderlyn was, and
-informed by a greater tradition than Copley knew, he never reached the
-impressiveness of the latter.
-
-I shall not attempt to describe at any length the various steps
-by which we rose from the artistic poverty which was ours in the
-earlier decades of the 19th century. My purpose is not to write even
-a short history of American art, but to enquire into its character
-and accomplishment. The test of these is evidently not what each
-period or school meant to the American artists before or after it,
-but how it compares with the rest of the world’s art at its time. The
-thought occurs to one forcibly on hearing of the wildly exaggerated
-esteem--whether measured by words or by money--in which the more
-celebrated of American artists are held; one asks oneself how the given
-work would be considered in Europe by competent men. Few indeed are
-the reputations that will stand the test; and we do not need to go
-abroad to apply it, for the galleries of our large cities supply ample
-opportunity for the comparison.
-
-Beginning with the landscape artists who are the earliest of the modern
-Americans to be looked on as our possible contribution to art, one’s
-most impersonal observation is that in point of time, they, like their
-successors in this country, follow the Europeans of the school to which
-they belong by something like a generation. Now, art-ideas moved very
-rapidly in the 19th century, and--however mechanical an indication
-it may appear at first sight--it is almost a sure condemnation of
-a European painter to find him in one period trying to work with
-the formula of the generation before him. In America this test does
-not apply so well, for we must allow for the effect of distance and
-compare the American with his immediate contemporaries abroad only
-in proportion to the advance of time--which is to say in proportion
-to the convenience of travel to Europe and the possibility of seeing
-contemporary work here.
-
-Thus when we consider that Inness, Wyant, and Martin were born about
-a generation after the Barbizon men and very nearly at the time of
-the French Impressionists, we shall not say that it was to the latter
-school that the Americans should have belonged. Whereas the European
-followers of Corot and Rousseau were merely _retardataires_ who had
-not the intellectual power to seize on the ideas of their own day,
-the Americans could feel a little of the joy of discoverers through
-having themselves worked out some of the ideas of naturalism in their
-evolution from the earlier landscape painting in this country. And
-so if they add nothing to what the Frenchmen had done already--with
-an incomparably greater tradition to uphold them--our trio of
-nature-lovers expressed genuine sentiment, and Homer Martin pushed on
-to a quality of painting that often places him within hailing distance
-of the classic line which, in France, kept out of the swamps of
-sentimentality that engulfed the followers of Wyant and Inness here.
-
-The cases of Winslow Homer and Albert P. Ryder have an interest aside
-from the actual works of the two painters. They are doubtless the
-strongest Americans of their time--and the ones who owe the least to
-Europe. It must be men of such a breed who will make real American art
-when we are ready to produce it. In any case their work must rank among
-our permanently valuable achievements: Homer’s for the renewal of the
-sturdy self-reliance that we noted in Copley, Ryder’s for the really
-noble design he so often obtained and for the grand and moving fidelity
-to a vision.
-
-If their independence is so valuable a factor in both men’s work,
-there is also to be noted the heavy price that each paid for having
-been reared in a provincial school. With a boldness of character that
-recalls Courbet, Winslow Homer fails utterly to hold a place in art
-analogous to that of the French realist, because all the power and
-ability that went into his work were unequal to compensating for his
-lack of the knowledge of form, of structure, of optical effect that
-Ingres and Delacroix, among others, furnished ready to the hand of
-Courbet. Thus Homer’s painting goes on throughout his lifetime quite
-innocent of any real concern with the central problems of European
-picture-making and owes most of its strength to the second-rate quality
-of illustration. One hesitates to say that Ryder would have gone
-farther had he been born in France, yet the fact of his labouring for
-ten or fifteen years on many a small canvas, the very limited number of
-his works which has resulted from the difficulty he had in saying the
-thing that was in him, are marks of a bad training. His range is not a
-wide one, but the deep beauty he infused into his pictures is one of
-our chief reasons for confidence in the art-instinct that lies dormant
-in our people.
-
-None of the men in the next group we must consider, the artists who
-enter fully into European painting, have the foundation of talent that
-Ryder had. Whistler is, of course, the painter to whom most Americans
-pin their faith in searching among their compatriots for an essential
-figure in 19th-century art. But take the first opportunity to see him
-with the great Frenchmen of his time: beside Degas his drawing is of
-a sickly weakness but slightly relieved by his sense of rhythm in
-line and form; beside Manet his colour and painting seem even more
-etiolated, and to save one’s feeling for him from utter demolition
-one hastens to the usual American refuge of the sentiment and--in the
-etchings--to the Yankee excellence of the craftsmanship. The nocturnes
-really do have a felicity in their rendering of the poetry of the night
-that would make us regret their loss, and when the unhappy Whistlerian
-school has been forgotten (an artist must take _some_ responsibility
-for his followers) we shall have more satisfaction in the butterfly
-that Whistler knew himself to be, since he adopted it as his signature.
-It is merit of no such slightness that we love in Ryder, and yet
-when we reach Chase and Sargent we find even less of basic talent,
-for which their immersion in the current of European painting could
-have furnished a finely tempered instrument of expression. Both men
-show the natural bent for painting that is often a valuable asset and
-often--as in their case--a source of danger. They do not enrich our
-annals by any great works, but they do the country an immense service
-when they cause its students and collectors to take one of the final
-steps in the direction of the live tradition of Europe. They never
-appreciated what was greatest among their contemporaries, and failing
-to have this grasp of the creative impulse and of the new principles
-that were at work in Paris, they offered clever manipulations of the
-material as a substitute. Feeling the insufficience of this, Sargent
-has tried the grave style of the early Italians in his decorations at
-the Public Library in Boston. But his Biblical personages get him no
-nearer to the essentials of art than the society people of whom he has
-done so many likenesses. In Boston, it is Chavannes who shows which is
-the great tradition of the period and how it accords with the classic
-past. Sargent is perhaps most American in his unreadiness to perceive
-the immense things that Europe, modern and ancient, had to offer him.
-
-Even so, with Chase and Sargent we find ourselves far nearer the period
-when American artists shall partake in art-ideas during their moment
-of full fertility. Our Impressionists are only a decade or two behind
-the Frenchman, and while one must not slip into a too easy trick of
-rating talent by the time of its appearance, one cannot fail to be
-struck by the fact that John H. Twachtman and J. Alden Weir approached
-the quality of their French preceptors with far greater closeness than
-that with which the Inness-Wyant group followed the Barbizon men. Much
-as there is of charm and sound pictorial knowledge in Twachtman’s work
-and Weir’s, one feels that they are not yet deep enough in the great
-tradition to go on to an art of their own creation, and we have to
-content ourselves with giving them a place among the Impressionists of
-secondary rank.
-
-An interesting case among the Americans who made the serious study of
-European art that began soon after the middle of the 19th century, is
-that of John La Farge. We know the history of his seeking, his copying,
-his associations, speculations, and travels. All his life he is the man
-from the new country asking the dead and the living representatives of
-the classic tradition for help. How little we see of the man himself
-in the mosaic of charming things that make up his art. Winslow Homer
-exists as a personality, ill-educated and crude, but affirmative and
-arresting. La Farge disappears in the smoke of the incense that he
-burns before the various shrines to which his eclecticism led him.
-
-If not to be admired as a great artist, he was a man of great gifts
-and a genuine appreciator of the masters. Therefore, he is not to
-be confused for a moment with the ignoble _pasticheurs_ who achieve
-office and honours in the anæmic institutions with which we imitate the
-academies and salons of Europe. These are among the youthful errors I
-mentioned on an earlier page--depressing enough when one sees the acres
-of “decorative” abominations which fill our state-houses, courts, and
-libraries, but in reality of no great importance as a detriment to
-our culture. Like the soldiers’ monuments, the dead architecture, the
-tasteless manufactured articles of common use, they sink so far below
-any level of art that the public is scarcely affected by them. Only
-the persons trained in schools to admire the painting of a Mr. E. H.
-Blashfield or the sculpture of a Mr. Daniel C. French ever try to think
-of them as beautiful; the rest of the public takes them on faith as
-something that goes with the building, like the “frescoed” cupids to be
-found in the halls of apartment houses or the tin cupolas and minarets
-on the roof. The popular magazine-illustrators, poor as they are, have
-more power to mislead than our quasi-official nonentities.
-
-Between the pseudo-classic decorators and the frankly “lowbrow” artists
-of the commercial publications, the posters, and the advertisements,
-there is the large class of men whose work is seen at the annual
-exhibitions, the dealers’ galleries, and the American sections of the
-museums. They partake of the vice of each of the other two classes: the
-easily learned formula for their product being a more or less thorough
-schooling in some style derived from the past, plus an optimistic or
-“red-blooded” or else gently melancholy attitude toward the subject.
-Velasquez has been the main victim of their caricature in the later
-years, but a little Chinese, Florentine, Impressionist, or even Cubist
-style will often be added to give a look of “modernity” to the work.
-As long as there is a recognizable proficiency in drawing and painting
-(it is of course only for the cheaper trade that the picture has to
-be guaranteed as done by hand), the erudite patron or museum trustee
-is assured of the seriousness of the artist’s intentions, while to
-make the thing take with the general buyer, the most important matter
-is judgment as to the type of American girl, the virile male, or the
-romantic or homely landscape that our public likes to live with.
-
-The only excuse for mentioning such things in an essay on American art
-is that they help to define it by contrast--for these pictures are
-neither art nor American. The disease of which they are an outward sign
-infects Europe almost as much as it does our own country, and there is
-hardly a distinguishing mark to tell whether the Salon picture was done
-in Madrid, Berlin, or Indianapolis. A sentence from an eminent American
-critic, Russell Sturgis, gives the key to the situation. He said, “The
-power of abstract design is lost to the modern world,--we must paint
-pictures or carve expressional groups when we wish to adorn.” In the
-half generation that has passed since these words were spoken, the
-French have proven by several arts based entirely on abstract design
-that the power for it was not lost to the world and that men still know
-the difference between expression by form and colour and expression by
-concrete ideas.
-
-Throughout this survey I have taken painting as the index to the
-art-instinct of America, and as we glance again at even our best
-painters we see that it is on concrete ideas that they have built: on
-character in portraiture with Copley, on romantic vision with Ryder,
-on observation of appearances with Homer. Precisely the reason for
-Whistler’s great success among his countrymen was the promise of
-release he afforded by his reaching out for the design and colour
-of the Orient, with which one associates also his spoken words,
-offering us “harmonies” and “symphonies” in place of the art built on
-intellectual elements that we had had before. The fact that Whistler
-himself was not strong enough in his grasp of tradition, or of a nature
-to achieve an important result along the lines he pointed to, does
-not change the issue. We had begun to be aware of the repression of
-instinct that was marking American life. We had recognized that the
-satisfaction of the senses, quite as much as intellectual pleasure, is
-to be demanded of art. Puritan morality and Quaker drabness had turned
-us away from any such conception, and when they took notice of art at
-all, it was for its educational value, either to inculcate religious or
-patriotic ideas, or for its connection with the classic past.
-
-Add to this the utilitarian needs of a country that had to build
-rapidly, caring for cheapness more than for permanence (so little of
-the building, in fact, was intended to be permanent), and one has an
-explanation of the absence of architectural quality in the American
-houses of the last hundred years. The characteristic of building in
-the time is seen in the lifeless blocks of “brownstone fronts,” in
-the apartments that have so little of the home about them that in the
-restlessness of his search for a place to live satisfactorily, the
-American of the cities has earned the name of the “van-dweller,”--one
-sees the thing again in the abject monotony of farm-houses and country
-residences. Their spirit, or lack of it, is continued in furniture
-and decoration. One understands why Europe has been the magic word
-for countless thousands of Americans. Perhaps it was the palaces and
-museums that they set out to see and that they told about on their
-return, but more impressive to them--because more satisfying to their
-hunger for a beauty near to their daily lives--was the sight of an
-Italian village built with love for hillsides and with understanding of
-the forms of the hill and of the type of construction that would suit
-it. Or was it the cheeriness of the solid Dutch houses whose clear reds
-and blacks look out so robustly through the green of the trees that
-border the canals? The bright-coloured clothing of the peasants became
-delightful to the traveller, even if he still gave it a pitying smile
-when he saw it again on the immigrant here; and the humble foreigner,
-anxious to fit in to his new surroundings, hastened to tone down the
-vivacity of his native costume to the colourlessness of the American
-farmer’s or workman’s garb. In place of the gay pink or green stucco
-of his cottage at home, the immigrant got more or less of sanitary
-plumbing, higher wages, and other material benefits, to recompense him
-for the life he had left behind.
-
-The life! That was the magic that Europe held for our visitors. They
-might return to the big enterprises, the big problems here, and feel
-that America was home because they had a share in its growth, but
-their nostalgia for the old countries continued to grow in the measure
-that they came to appreciate the wisdom with which life was ordered
-there--as they realized how the stable institutions, the old religions,
-festivals, traditions, all the things that flower into art, had
-resisted the terrific change that the industrial revolution had brought
-into the 19th century. Behind all questions of the coming of objects of
-art into this country or the appearance of new artists or new schools
-here, lies this most pivotal matter of the elements of art in American
-life. They need not be, they cannot be the same as those in European
-life, but it is futile to think of having an art here if we deny
-ourselves the ideas and feelings of which art has been made--the joy
-and awe of life that the Greek responded to in his marbles, the Italian
-in his frescoes, the Spaniard, the Fleming, the Dutchman, and the
-Frenchman in his canvases. Copying the externals of their work without
-again living their lives can result only in academism--bad sculpture
-and bad pictures.
-
-It was not as a protest against bad art, local or foreign, that the
-International Exhibition of 1913 was organized, and it is very solidly
-to the credit of our public that it did not regard the event in that
-negative fashion--but as a positive thing, a revelation of the later
-schools of European painting of which it had been kept in ignorance
-by the will of the academies here and abroad. The “Armory Show,” as
-it was called, drew forth a storm of ridicule, but it also attracted
-such hundreds of thousands of visitors as no current exhibition had
-ever gathered in this country before. The first contact of our public
-with the arts that have succeeded Impressionism--with the painting
-of Cézanne, Redon, Gauguin, van Gogh, Matisse, the Cubists, and
-others--was made at this epoch-marking show. With the jeers that it
-received there were not a few hosannas, and even the vast majority of
-visitors--doubtful as to the exact value of the various exhibits, knew
-that qualities existed in the new schools that had never been seen
-here and that were needed. Some three hundred works went from the walls
-of the Armory to form a vanguard for the far more important purchases
-of modern art that have since been building up our collections; so
-that at the moment of this writing an exhibition can be opened at the
-Metropolitan Museum which, while representing a mere fraction of the
-wealth of such pictures in American possession, gives a superb idea of
-the great schools of the later 19th century and the 20th century in
-France. It is worthy of note that in its response to the great show of
-1913 and to the smaller ones that followed, America was only giving,
-in a stronger form, the measure of a power of appreciation it had
-shown before. Earlier examples of this are to be found in the great
-collections of Barbizon and Impressionist pictures here. A thing that
-should weigh against many a discouraging feature of our art-conditions
-is the fact that an American museum was the first in the world, and the
-only one during the lifetime of Manet, to hang works by that master.
-
-Returning now to our own painting, one man in this country resisted
-with complete success the test of an exhibition with the greatest of
-recent painters from abroad. It was Mr. Maurice B. Prendergast, who
-for thirty years had been joyously labouring at an art which showed
-its derivation from the best French painting of his day, its admirable
-acceptances of the teaching of Cézanne (scarcely a name even in
-Europe when Mr. Prendergast first studied him), and its humorous and
-affectionate appreciation of the American scenes that the artist had
-known from his youth. In original and logical design, in brilliant
-colour that yet had the mellowness of a splendid wine, he expresses
-the modern faith in the world we see and makes it lovable. At last
-we welcome an art in accord with the finest of the ancient-modern
-tradition, as European critics have since declared; yet it remains
-American in provenance and in the air of unconscious honesty that has
-always been a characteristic of the good work of this country.
-
-The latest wave of influence to come over American art has almost
-been the most far-reaching and invigorating. To go further than this
-assertion, at least in the matter of individuals, would be to forego
-the support of too large a part of that body of opinion that I know
-to be behind my statements throughout this essay. Art-matters must,
-in the final analysis, be stated dogmatically, but I am unwilling to
-speak of the schools now developing save in a general way, especially
-as the most interesting men in them have still to reach a definitive
-point in their evolution. They are abreast or nearly abreast of the
-ideas of Europe, and there is an admirable vigour in the work that some
-individuals are producing with those ideas. But the changes brought
-about by the International are still too recent for us to expect the
-most important results from them for a number of years. The general
-condition here has probably never been as good before.
-
-I have, till now, spoken only of the more traditional aspects of
-art--the kind one finds in museums--and that last word calls for at
-least a mention of the great wealth of art-objects that are heaping up
-in our public collections, and in the private galleries which so often
-come to the aid of the museums.
-
-There is, however, another phase of our subject that demands comment,
-if only as a point of departure for the study that will one day be
-given to the American art that is not yet recognized by its public or
-its makers as one of our main expressions. The steel bridges, the steel
-buildings, the newly designed machines, and utensils of all kinds we
-are bringing forth show an adaptation to function that is recognized
-as one of the great elements of art. Perhaps the process has not yet
-gone far enough for us to look on these things as fully developed works
-of art, perhaps we shall still need some influence from Europe to make
-us see the possibilities we have here, or again, it may be in America
-that the impetus to creation along such lines will be the stronger. At
-all events we may feel sure that the study of the classics, ancient
-and modern, which is spreading throughout the country has, in some
-men, reached a point of saturation which permits the going on to new
-discovery, and we may be confident of the ability of our artists to
-make good use of their advantage.
-
- WALTER PACH
-
-
-
-
-THE THEATRE
-
-
-Of the perceptible gradual improvement in the American popular taste so
-far as the arts are concerned, the theatre as we currently engage it
-offers, comparatively, the least evidence. The best-selling E. Phillips
-Oppenheims, Robert W. Chamberses, and Eleanor H. Porters of yesterday
-have given considerable ground to Wharton and Bennett, to Hergesheimer
-and Wells. The audiences in support of Stokowski, the Flonzaley
-Quartette, the Philharmonic, the great piano and violin virtuosos, and
-the recognized singers, are yearly augmented. Fine painting and fine
-sculpture find an increasing sober appreciation. The circulation of
-_Munsey’s Magazine_ falls, and that of the _Atlantic Monthly_ rises.
-But the best play of an American theatrical season, say a “Beyond the
-Horizon,” has still to struggle for full breath, while across the
-street the receipts of some “Ladies’ Night,” “Gold Diggers,” or “Bat,”
-running on without end, mount to the half-million mark.
-
-If one speaks of the New York theatre as the American theatre, one
-speaks with an exaggerated degree of critical charity, for the New
-York theatre--so far as there is any taste in the American theatre--is
-the native theatre at its fullest flower. Persons insufficiently
-acquainted with the theatre have a fondness for controverting this,
-but the bookkeeping departments offer concrete testimony that, if good
-drama is supported at all, it is supported in the metropolitan theatre,
-not in the so-called “road” theatre. The New York theatre supports
-an American playwright like Booth Tarkington when he does his best
-in “Clarence,” where the road theatre supports him only when he does
-his worst, as in “Mister Antonio.” The New York theatre, these same
-financial records prove, supports Shaw, O’Neill, Galsworthy, Bahr, and
-others of their kind, at least in sufficient degree to permit them to
-pay their way, where the theatre of Philadelphia, Boston, Cleveland,
-Chicago, St. Louis, Baltimore, and Pittsburgh spells failure for them.
-Save it be played by an actor or actress of great popular favour, a
-first-rate piece of dramatic writing has to-day hardly a chance for
-success outside of New York. These other cities of America, though
-they are gradually reading better books and patronizing better music
-and finer musicians, are almost drama-deaf. “There is, in New York,”
-the experienced Mr. William A. Brady has said to me, “an audience of
-at least fifteen thousand for any really good play. That isn’t a large
-audience; it won’t turn the play into a profitable theatrical venture;
-but it is a damned sight larger audience than you’ll be able to find
-in any other American city.” Let the native sons of the cities thus
-cruelly maligned, before they emit their habitual bellows of protest,
-consider, once they fared forth from New York, the fate of nine-tenths
-of the first-rate plays produced in the American theatre without the
-hocus-pocus of fancy box-office “stars” during the last ten years.
-
-The theatrical taste of America at the present time, outside of the
-metropolis, is demonstrated by the box-office returns to be one
-that venerates the wall-motto _opera_ of Mr. William Hodge and the
-spectacular imbecilities of Mr. Richard Walton Tully above the finest
-work of the best of its native dramatists like O’Neill, and above the
-finest work of the best of the modern Europeans. In the metropolis,
-an O’Neill’s “Beyond the Horizon,” a Galsworthy’s “Justice,” a Shaw’s
-“Androcles,” at least can live; sometimes, indeed, live and prosper.
-But for one respectable piece of dramatic writing that succeeds outside
-of New York, there are twenty that fail miserably. The theatrical
-culture of the American countryside is in the main of a piece with
-that of the French countryside, and to the nature of the latter the
-statistics of the French provincial theatres offer a brilliant and
-dismaying attestation. Save a good play first obtain the endorsement
-of New York, it is to-day impossible to get a paying audience for
-it in any American city of size after the first curiosity-provoking
-performance. These audiences buy, not good drama, but notoriety. Were
-all communication with the city of New York suddenly to be cut off for
-six months, the only theatrical ventures that could earn their way
-outside would be the Ziegfeld “Follies,” the Winter Garden shows, “Ben
-Hur,” and the hack dramatizations of the trashier best-sellers like
-“Pollyanna” and “Daddy Longlegs.” This is not postured for sensational
-effect. It is literally true. So true, in fact, that there is to-day
-not a single producer in the American theatre who can afford to, or
-who will, risk the loss of a mere four weeks’ preliminary “road” trial
-of a first-class play. If he cannot get a New York theatre for his
-production, he places it in the storehouse temporarily until he can
-obtain a metropolitan booking rather than hazard the financial loss
-that, nine times in ten, is certain to come to him.
-
-More and more, the better producing managers--men like Hopkins, William
-Harris, Jr., Ames, _et al._--are coming to open their plays in New
-York “cold,” that is, without the former experimental performances in
-thitherward cities. And more and more, they are coming to realize to
-their sorrow that, unless New York supports these plays of the better
-sort, they can look for no support elsewhere. Chicago, boasting of its
-hospitality to sound artistic endeavour, spent thirty-five hundred
-dollars on a drama by Eugene O’Neill in the same week that it spent
-forty-five thousand dollars on Al Jolson’s Winter Garden show. Boston,
-one of the first cities to rush frantically forward with proofs of
-its old New England culture, has turned into a prompt and disastrous
-failure every first-rate play presented in its theatres without a
-widely advertised star actor during the last five years, and at the
-same time has made a fortune for the astute Mr. A. H. Woods, who,
-gauging its culture accurately, has sent it “Up in Mabel’s Room,”
-“Getting Gertie’s Garter,” and similar spicy boudoir and hay-mow
-farces, together with Miss Theda Bara in “The Blue Flame.” (It is no
-secret among the theatrical managers that the only way to bring the
-culture of Boston to the box-office window is through a campaign of raw
-advertising: the rawer the better. Thus the Boston Sunday newspaper
-advertisements of “Up in Mabel’s Room” were made to display a girl
-lying on a bed, with the suggestive catch-lines, “10,000 Visitors
-Weekly” and “Such a Funny Feeling.” Thus, the advertisements of another
-exhibit presented a rear view of a nude female with the title of the
-show, “Oh, Mommer,” printed across the ample buttocks. Thus, the
-advertisements of a Winter Garden music show, alluding to the runway
-used in these exhibitions, christened it “The Bridge of Thighs.”) No
-play presented in Philadelphia since “The Girl with the Whooping Cough”
-(subsequently suppressed by the New York police authorities on the
-ground of indecency) has been patronized to the extent where it has
-been found necessary to call out the police reserves to maintain order,
-as was the case when the play in point was produced. Washington is a
-cultural wilderness; I have personally attended the premières of ten
-highly meritorious dramas in the national capital in the last six years
-and can report accurately on the quality of the receptions accorded to
-them. Washington would seem still to be what it was some fifteen years
-or so ago when, upon the initial revelation of Barrie’s “Peter Pan,”
-it essayed to boo it into permanent discard. Baltimore, Detroit (save
-during the height of the war prosperity when the poor bohicks, wops,
-and Greeks in the automobile works found themselves suddenly able to
-buy theatre seats regularly), Cleveland, St. Louis, San Francisco--the
-story is the same. Honourable drama spells ruin; legs, lewdness and
-sentimentality spell riches.
-
-In comparison with the taste of the great American cultural prairie
-whereon these cities are situated, the city of New York, as I have
-written, looms up an æsthetic Athens. In New York, too, there is
-prosperity for bare knees, bed humours, and “Peg o’ My Heart” bathos,
-but not alone for these. Side by side with the audiences that crowd
-into the leg shows, the couch farces, and the uplift sermons are
-audiences of considerable bulk that make profitable the production of
-such more estimable things as Shaw’s “Heartbreak House,” O’Neill’s
-“Emperor Jones,” the plays of St. John Ervine and Dunsany, of Tolstoy
-and Hauptmann, of Bahr and Benavente and Guitry. True enough, in
-order to get to the theatres in which certain of these plays are
-revealed, one is compelled to travel in a taxicab several miles from
-Broadway--and at times has to sit with the chauffeur in order to pilot
-him to far streets and alleyways that are not within his sophisticated
-ken--but, once one gets to the theatres, one finds them full, and their
-audiences enthusiastic and responsive. The culture of the American
-theatre--in so far as it exists--may be said, in fact, to be an
-alleyway culture. Almost without exception in the last dozen years
-and more have the best dramatists of Europe and of our own country
-been driven up alleyways and side-streets for their first American
-hearing. Up these dark alleys and in these remote malls alone have they
-been able to find a sufficient intelligence for their wares. Hervieu,
-Shaw, Echegaray, Strindberg, Björnson, Dunsany, Masefield, Ervine,
-Bergström, Chekhov, Andreyev, Benavente, O’Neill--these and many others
-of eminence owe their New York introduction to the side-street American
-who, in the majority of cases, is found upon analysis to be of fifty
-per cent. foreign blood. And what thus holds true of New York holds
-equally true in most of the other cities. In most of such cities, that
-is, as have arrived at a degree of theatrical polish sufficient to
-boast a little playhouse up an ulterior mews.
-
-The more general American theatrical taste, reflected perhaps most
-fairly in such things as the idiotic endorsements of the Drama
-League and the various “white lists” of the different religious
-organizations, is--for all the undeniable fact that it seems gradually
-to be improving--still in the playing-blocks and tin choo-choo-car
-stage. Satire, unless it be of the most obvious sort and approach
-easily assimilable burlesque, spells failure for a producer. A point
-of view that does not effect a compromise with sentimentality spells
-failure for a dramatist. Sex, save it be presented in terms of a
-seltzer-siphon, “Abendstern,” or the _Police Gazette_, spells failure
-for both. The leaders in the propagation of this low taste are not
-the American managers and producers, as is commonly maintained, but
-the American playwrights. During the seventeen years of my active
-critical interest in the theatre, I have not encountered a single
-honest piece of dramatic writing from an American hand that could not
-get a hearing--and an intelligent hearing--from one or another of these
-regularly abused managers and producers. And during these years I have,
-by virtue of my joint professional duties as critic and co-editor
-of a sympathetic literary periodical, read perhaps nine-tenths of
-the dramatic manuscripts which aspiring young America has confected.
-This young America, loud in its inveighing against the managers and
-producers, has in the space of time indicated produced very, very
-little that was worth producing, and that little has promptly found
-a market. A bad workman is always indignant. But I know of no good
-American play that either has not already been produced, or has not
-been bought for future production. Any good play by an American will
-find its producer readily enough. The first manager who read “Beyond
-the Horizon” bought it immediately he laid the manuscript down, and
-this, recall, was its professionally unknown author’s first three-act
-play. The American theatre has altered in this department; the last
-fifteen years have wrought a tonic change.
-
-No, the fault is not with the managers and producers, but with the
-playwrights. The latter, where they are not mere parrots, are cowards.
-Young and old, new and experienced, talented and talentless alike, they
-are in the mass so many _Saturday Evening Post_ souls, alone dreaming
-of and intent upon achieving a sufficient financial gain to transmute
-the Ford into a Rolls-Royce and the Hudson Bay seal collar into Russian
-sable. A baby cannot be nourished and developed physically upon water;
-a theatrical public, for all its potential willingness, cannot be
-developed aesthetically upon a diet of snide writing. In the American
-theatre of the present time there are not more than two, or at most
-three, playwrights out of all the hundreds, who retain in their hearts
-a determined and uncorrupted purpose. Take away young O’Neill, and give
-a bit of ground to Miss Rita Wellman (whose accomplishment is still
-too vague for fixed appraisal), and there is next to nothing left.
-Flashes of talent, yes, but only flashes. Craven’s “Too Many Cooks”
-and “The First Year” are observant, highly skilful depictions of the
-American scene, but they are dramatic literature only in the degree
-that “Main Street” and “This Side of Paradise” are literature. With
-the extraordinary “Papa,” Miss Zoë Akins gave up and surrendered--at
-least temporarily--to the box-office skull and cross-bones. Until
-Tarkington proves that “Clarence” was not a happy accident in the
-long and unbroken line of “Up from Nowhere,” “Mister Antonio,” “The
-Country Cousin,” “The Alan from Home,” “Cameo Kirby,” “Your Humble
-Servant,” “Springtime,” “Getting a Polish,” “The Gibson Upright,” and
-“Poldekin,” we shall have to hold up our decision on him. George Ade,
-the great promise of authentic American drama, is no more; he pulled
-in his oars, alas, in mid-stream. Joseph Medill Patterson, an honest
-dramatist, fell through the bridge while not yet half way across. The
-rest? Well, the rest are the Augustus Thomases, left-overs from the
-last generation, proficient technicians with empty heads, or youngsters
-still dramatically wet behind the ears. The rest of the rest? Ticket
-salesmen.
-
-In no civilized country in the world to-day is there among playwrights
-so little fervour for sound drama as in the United States. In England,
-they at least try, in a measure, to write well; in Germany, to
-experiment bravely in new forms; in France, to philosophize either
-seriously or lightly upon life as they find it; in Russia, to treat
-soberly of problems physical and spiritual; in Spain, to depict the
-Spanish heart and conscience and atmosphere; in Ireland, to reflect
-the life and thoughts, the humour and tragedy and encompassing
-aspirations, of a people. And in the United States--what? In the
-United States, with hardly more than two exceptions, there is at the
-moment not a playwright who isn’t thinking of “success” above honest
-work. Good and bad craftsmen alike, they all think the same. Gold,
-silver, copper. And the result is an endless procession of revamped
-crook plays, detective plays, Cinderella plays, boudoir plays, bucolic
-plays: fodder for doodles. The cowardice before the golden snake’s eye
-spreads to the highest as well as to the lowest. Integrity is thrown
-overboard as the ship is steered unswervingly into the Golden Gate. The
-unquestionable talent of an Avery Hopwood--a George M. Cohan--a George
-Bronson-Howard--is deliberately self-corrupted.
-
-The American professional theatre is to-day at once the richest theatre
-in the world, and the poorest. Financially, it reaches to the stars;
-culturally, with exception so small as to be negligible, it reaches to
-the drains. For both of these reaches, the American newspaper stands
-largely responsible. The American newspaper, in general, regards the
-theatre with contempt. My early years, upon leaving the university,
-were spent on the staff of one of them--the leading daily journal of
-America, it was in those days--and I shall never forget its attitude
-toward the theatre: cheap, hollow, debased. If a play was produced by
-a manager who advertised extensively in the paper, it was praised out
-of all reason. If a play was produced by a manager who happened to
-be _persona non grata_ in the office, it was dismissed with a brief
-reportorial notice. If a play was produced by a new and enterprising
-manager on the night of another production in a theatre patronized by
-fashionable audiences--the Empire, say--the former play, however worthy
-an effort it might be, was let down with a stick or two that there
-might be room to print the names of the fashionables who were in the
-Empire seats. The surface of things has changed somewhat since then,
-but the situation at bottom is much the same. A talented young reviewer
-writes honestly of a tawdry play in the _Evening Sun_; the producer
-of the play, an office favourite, complains; and the young reviewer
-is promptly discharged. A moving picture producer takes half-page
-advertisements of his forthcoming _opus_ in the New York newspapers,
-and the screen exhibit, a piece of trash, is hailed as a master work.
-Let a new drama by Gerhart Hauptmann be presented in the Park Theatre
-to-night and let Mr. John Barrymore also appear at eight-thirty in a
-play by some obscure hack at the Empire, and there will not be a single
-newspaper in the whole of New York City that will not review the latter
-flashy affair at the expense of the former.
-
-It is not that the newspapers, in New York as elsewhere, are
-dishonest--few of them are actually dishonest; it is that they are
-suburban, shoddy, cheap. With only four exceptions that I can think of,
-the American newspaper, wherever you find it, treats the theatre as if
-it were of very much less importance than baseball and of but a shade
-more importance than a rape in Perth Amboy, New Jersey. Two columns are
-given freely to the latest development in bootlegging in Harlem, and
-a begrudged half-column to a play by John Galsworthy. A society woman
-is accused by her husband of having been guilty of adultery with a
-half-breed Indian, and the allotment is four columns. On the same day,
-a Shakespearean production is mounted by the most artistic producer
-in the American theatre, and the allotment of space is two-thirds of
-a column. The reply of the newspapers is, “Well, we give the public
-what it wants! And it is more greatly interested in scandal than in
-Shakespeare.” Have not then the theatrical managers the right to reply
-in the same terms? And when they do, some of them, disgustedly reply in
-the same terms, what is the hypocritical appraisal of their offerings
-that the selfsame newspapers vouchsafe to them? If the New York _Times_
-devotes three columns to a dirty divorce case, I fail to see how it can
-with justice or reason permit its theatrical reviewer indignantly to
-denounce Mr. A. H. Woods in the same issue for devoting three hours to
-a dirty farce.
-
-The American drama, like the American audience, lacks repose. This is
-ever logically true of a new civilization. Time must mellow the mind
-and heart before drama may achieve depth and richness; time must mellow
-the mind and heart before an audience may achieve the mood of calm
-deliberation. Youth is a rare and precious attribute, but youth, for
-all its fine courage and derring-do, is inclined to be superficial.
-Its emotions and its reactions are respectively of and to the primary
-colours; the pastels it is impatient of. The American theatre, drama,
-and audience are the theatre, drama, and audience of the metaphysical
-and emotional primary colours: substantial, vivid, but all too obvious
-and glaring. I speak, of course, generally. For there are a few
-notable exceptions to the rule, and these exceptions portend in the
-American theatre the first signs of the coming dawn. A producer like
-Arthur Hopkins, perhaps the first American man of the theatre gifted
-with a genuine passion for fine and beautiful things and the talent
-with which to do--or at least try to do--them; a dramatist like young
-O’Neill, permitting no compromise or equivoke in the upward sweep of
-his dynamic imagination; an actor like Arnold Daly and an actress like
-Margaret Anglin to whom failure in the service of honest drama means
-absolutely nothing--these are they who inspire our faith in the future.
-Nor do they stand alone. Hume and Moeller, Jones, Peters, Simonson and
-Bel-Geddes, Glaspell, Wellman and Pottle--such youngsters, too, are
-dreaming their dreams, some of them, true enough, still silly dreams,
-but yet dreams. And the dreaming spreads, spreads....
-
-But in its slow and brave ascent, the American theatre is still
-heavily retarded by the insular forces that, as in no other theatre
-save the English, operate in the Republic. The fight against outworn
-convention is a brave and bitter fight, but victory still rests
-mainly on the banners of the Philistines. The drama that dismisses
-sentimentality for truth, that seeks to face squarely the tragedy
-and comedy of love and life, that declines to pigeon-hole itself,
-and that hazards to view the American scene with cosmopolitan eyes,
-is confronted at every turn by the native Puritanism (as often
-shammed as inborn), and by the native parochialism and hypocrisy. The
-production that derides all stereotype--all the ridiculous and mossy
-rubber-stamps--is in turn derided. The actor or actress who essays to
-filter a rôle through the mind of a human being instead of through the
-mind of a rouged marionette is made mock of. Here, the playgoing public
-finds its leaders in three-fourths of the newspaper reviewing chairs,
-chairs influenced, directly or indirectly, by an intrinsic inexperience
-and ignorance, or by an extrinsic suggestion of “policy.”
-
-The American theatre and drama have long suffered from being slaves
-to the national hypocrisy. Only on rare occasions have they been
-successful in casting off the shackles, and then but momentarily. The
-pull against them is stubborn, strong. Cracking the black snake across
-their backs are a hundred padrones: newspapers trembling at the thought
-of offending their advertisers, religious orders poking their noses
-into what should not concern them, corrupt moral uplift organizations
-and lecherous anti-vice societies itching for the gauds of publicity,
-meddling college professors augmenting their humble wage by writing
-twenty-dollar articles on subjects they know nothing about for the
-Sunday supplements, ex-real estate reporters and divorcée interviewers
-become “dramatic critics,” notoriety seeking clergymen, snide
-producers trying to protect their snide enterprises from the dangers
-of the invasion of truth and beauty. Let a group of drama-loving and
-theatre-loving young men, resourceful, skilful, and successful, come
-upon the scene, as the Washington Square Players came, let them bring
-flashes of authentic dramatic art into their native theatre, and
-against them is promptly hurled the jealous irony of the Old Guard
-that is dead, but never surrenders. Let a young playwright like Zoë
-Akins write an admirable fantastic comedy (“Papa”), and against her
-are brought all the weapons of the morals-in-art mountebanks. Let a
-producer like Hopkins break away from the mantel-leaning histrionism
-and palm-pot investiture, and against him is brought up the curt
-dismissal of freakishness.
-
-The native theatre, for all the fact that it is on the way, is not yet
-ready for such things as demand a degree of civilization for receptive
-and remunerative appreciation. The “Pegs o’ My Heart” and “Pollyannas,”
-the “Turn to the Rights” and “Lightnin’s” still make millions, while
-the bulk of finer things languish and perish. I speak, remember, not of
-the theatre of one city, but of the theatre of the land. This theatre,
-considering it in so far as possible as a unit, is still not much above
-the Midway Plaisance, the honk-a-tonk, the Sunday School charade. That
-one, or maybe two, foreign national theatres may not be much better is
-no apology. Such foreign theatres--the French, say--are less national
-theatres than one-city theatres, for Paris is France. But the American
-theatre spreads from coast to coast. What it spreads, I have herein
-tried to suggest.
-
- GEORGE JEAN NATHAN
-
-
-
-
-ECONOMIC OPINION
-
-
-IF there were conscious restriction upon the expression of opinion in
-America, this essay would possess the pompous certainty of an official
-document. Instead of threading its hazardous way through a mass of
-confused thought, it would record in formal terms acceptable utterance.
-In fact, the very restrictions upon thought and speech, with the aid
-of scissors and a license to speech, could easily be turned into a
-statement of the reputable theory of the welfare of the community.
-
-Unluckily, however, American life has not been arranged to make
-matters easy for the interpreter of economic opinion. Every American
-is conscious of a right to his own opinion about “why all of us taken
-together are as well off as we are” and “why some of us are better
-off and others of us worse off than the average of us.” Whether this
-privilege comes from the Bill of Rights, the constitution of the United
-States, or his Simian ancestry, he could not say; but he is fully
-assured that it is “inalienable” and “indefeasible.” No restriction of
-birth, breeding, position, or wealth limits his right to an opinion
-or persuades him to esteem his more fortunate neighbour’s more highly
-than his own. Nor do intellectual limitations check the flow of words
-and of ideas. No one is examined upon the growth of industrialism, the
-institutions which make up the economic order, or the nature of an
-industrial problem before he is allowed to speak. In fact, the idea
-that a knowledge of the facts about the subject under discussion,
-or of the principles to be applied to it, is essential to the right
-to an opinion is a strange notion little understood here. Even if
-occasionally some potentate attempts a mild restriction upon the
-spoken or the written word, it checks only those who talk directly and
-therefore clumsily. Its principal effect is through provocation to add
-mightily to the volume of opinion.
-
-The result is a conglomerate mass of opinion that sprawls through
-the known realm of economics and into regions uncharted. The mighty
-men of finance spin a theory of national welfare in terms of foreign
-concessions no more glibly than the knights of the road in solemn
-convention solve with words the riddle of unemployment. The newly
-enfranchised women compete with the members of the Dynamite Club in
-proposals for setting the industrial cosmos in order. Economic opinion
-bobs up in the financial journals, “the labour press,” the periodicals
-of the “learned” societies, and in all the “Christian” advocates. It
-shows itself boldly in political speeches, in directors’ reports, in
-public hearings, and in propagandist sheets. It lurks craftily in
-editorials, moving pictures, drawing-room lectures, poems, cartoons,
-and hymns. It ranges from the sonorous apologies for the existing order
-voiced by the Aaron Baal Professor of Christian Homiletics in the
-Midas Theological Seminary to the staccato denunciation of what is by
-the Sons of Martha Professor of Proletarian Tactics in the Karl Marx
-College for Workers.
-
-A mere semblance of order is given to this heterogeneous mass of
-opinion by the conditions which make it. A common system of legal,
-business, and social usages is to be found the country over. This
-has left its impress too firmly in the assumptions which underlie
-thought to allow this material to be separate bits from so many mental
-universes. The prevailing scheme of economic life is so definitely
-established as to force its imprint upon the opinion that moves about
-it. Acceptable opinion is created in its likeness, and unacceptable
-opinion becomes acceptable opinion when the negatives are skilfully
-extracted. Protestants are concerned rather with eliminating the
-“evils” of “capitalism” than with eradicating it root and branch.
-Protestantism is rather a variant of orthodox doctrine than an
-independent system of thought. Radical opinion that is likely to pass
-the decent bounds of negation is kept small in volume by a press which
-allows it little upon which to feed. Accordingly, varied doctrines wear
-the semblance of unity.
-
-Such elements, however, do not free this adventure into speculation
-from its perils. They merely make the hazards mortal. In the paragraphs
-below the economic opinion in America is recklessly resolved into four
-main classes. These are the _laissez-faire_ opinion of the mid-19th
-century, the conventional “case for capitalism,” the protestant demand
-for “control,” and the academic insistence upon conscious “direction”
-of industrial change. Radical opinion gets a competent judgment
-elsewhere in this volume. Even in this bold outline the opinions of
-small minorities are lost to sight, and views and doctrines, seemingly
-alien to the authors who know their subtle differences, are often
-blurred into a single picture. To avoid the charge that the lion and
-the lamb have been pictured as one, no names have been called. Here as
-elsewhere particulars will rise up to curse their generalizations, and
-the whole will be found to be entirely too scanty to be disbursed into
-its parts. But the chance must be taken, and, after all, truth does not
-reside in copy-book mottoes.
-
-
-I
-
-The current types of economic opinion in this country all have a common
-origin. The men who express them are but a scant generation or two
-removed from the country or the small town. The opinions are so many
-variants of a stream of thought which goes back to a mid-19th century
-America of small towns and open country. This primitive economic
-opinion was formed out of the dust of the ground in the likeness of
-an exploitative America. The conditions which shaped it might be set
-forth in two lines of a school history thus: First, abundant natural
-resources; second, a scanty population; and third, the principle of
-letting the individual alone.
-
-It was a chance at an economic opportunity which made America of the
-19th century the “land of promise.” The raw materials of personal
-wealth were here in soil, stream, and mine. The equipment necessary to
-the crude exploitative farming of the time was easy to possess. Since
-there was an abundance, the resources essential to a chance at a living
-were to be had for the asking. One with enterprise enough to “go it
-alone” lived upon what he himself and his wealth in wife and children
-produced. He did not have to drive a shrewd bargain for the sale of his
-labour nor purchase the wherewithal to be fed and clothed in a market.
-There was no confusing scheme of prices to break the connection between
-effort and reward; opportunity and responsibility went hand in hand;
-success or failure was of one’s own fashioning. Where nature does most,
-man claims all; and in rural America men were quite disposed to claim
-personal credit for nature’s accomplishments. Since ample resources
-smothered even mediocre effort in plenty, the voice of chronic failure
-which blamed circumstance, fate, or “the system” was unheard. A freedom
-to have and to hold economic resources plentiful enough to supply all
-was the condition of material prosperity.
-
-Even when the lure of natural resources drew men from agriculture to
-industrial exploitation conditions did not change materially. The
-population of the new towns for a while kept at least one foot upon
-the soil. When at last the city possessed its people, aliens came out
-of Southeastern Europe to do the “dirty work,” and the native born
-passed up into administrative, clerical, or professional positions.
-The alternative of farm employment and the rapid expansion of industry
-fixed a rough minimum beneath which wages could not fall. The expanding
-machine technique with large scale production by quantity methods
-turned out an abundance of goods evidenced alike in lower prices and in
-higher standards of living. The “captains of industry” were regarded by
-the community as the creators of the jobs which they dispensed and as
-the efficient cause of the prosperity of the neighbourhood. The trickle
-of immigration that swelled to a “stream” and rose to a “tide” is an
-eloquent testimonial of the time paid by the peasantry of Europe to the
-success of the American system of letting the individual alone in his
-business.
-
-These conditions brought forth the lay economic theory acceptable to
-the national community. Its precepts came from experience, rather
-than from books; by intuition, rather than by reason. The welfare of
-the individual and the wealth of the nation were alike due to free
-institutions. In business and industry the individual was to be free to
-do as he pleased unless specifically forbidden by the State. The State
-was powerless to interfere with the individual unless granted specific
-“constitutional” authority to do so. Each knew what he wanted and was
-able to take care of himself. The interests of all were an aggregate of
-the interests of individuals. The prevailing scheme of institutions
-was accepted as a part of the immutable world of nature. Private
-property, if defended at all, was good because it gave the individual
-security and enabled him to enjoy the fruits of his own labour. The
-right of contract, exercised in a market characterized by “higgling,”
-gave one an occasional adventure beyond the horizon of a household
-economy. If perchance the individual stumbled into a bad bargain
-occasionally, so much the better. The mistake was a useful exercise
-in the development of the cardinal virtue of self-reliance. When the
-coming of industrialism made contract the basis of all industrial
-relations, the older justification was still used. Competition, with
-which it was always associated, was regarded as the prime agency in the
-organization of industry. It forced the elements of production into
-order and exercised a moral restraint over them. Under its régime men
-were rewarded in accordance with their deserts. In general, it was true
-beyond peradventure that “opportunity” knocked once “at every gate”;
-that there was “plenty of room at the top”; that each built the ladder
-by which he rose; and that even the humblest was “master of his fate.”
-
-Out of such raw materials there was fashioned a body of professional
-economic theory. In a sense it was an imported product; for its earlier
-statement was that of English “classical” economics. But in reality
-it was the return of an earlier export, for accepted theory had been
-made from crude individualistic notions which England had got from
-America. In addition, at the hands of American economists it received
-a far more elaborate and articulate statement than had been given it
-overseas. These theorists used subtle analysis, ponderous logic, and
-circumlocution; but their decorous processes brought them to much
-the same conclusions that practical men gained from their limited
-experiences. Its strength and its acceptability were wholly due to
-the precision and verbiage with which it reduced to formal terms the
-common-sense economics of the day.
-
-In its terms the economic order is made up of individuals. Each of
-these is actuated by the motive of self-interest. Each has for disposal
-personal services, goods, or property rights. Each must live upon
-goods and services purchased from others. Each must compete with his
-fellows in the sale of his wares and the purchase of his articles of
-livelihood. Because of the competition of sellers the wages of labour,
-the profits of capital, and the prices of goods cannot be forced to
-untoward heights. Because of the competition of buyers they cannot be
-driven too low. The equilibrium of this double competitive process
-assures to each a return which represents the just value of the
-service, the property right, or the good. Prices, by moving up and down
-in response to changing conditions, stimulate and retard consumption
-and production. Their very movement constantly reallocates resources
-to the production of a variety of goods and services in just the
-proportion which the consumers demand. In this theory the institutions
-which comprise the framework of the economic order are taken for
-granted. It has no place for an interference by the State with “private
-business.” It regards monopoly as a thing to be abjured, whether
-appearing as a capitalistic combine or as a union of workingmen. In
-the Eden of free enterprise the community’s resources yield all they
-have and competition rewards justly all the faithful who by serving
-themselves serve society. It is small wonder that sermons were preached
-upon “The Relation of Political Economy to Natural Theology.”
-
-
-II
-
-The conditions which made the economic opinion of the America of small
-towns and open country are gone. With their passing the older theories
-have been reshaped to new purposes. There are no longer free economic
-opportunities for all comers. Natural resources have been appropriated,
-and the natural differences between men have been enhanced by the
-artificial ones of ownership and inheritance. Wealth and control have
-alike been stripped from the many and concentrated in the few. The
-prevailing unit in business is the corporation. Establishments have
-been gathered into industries, and these have been articulated into a
-mighty industrial system, with its established rights, its customary
-ways of doing things, and its compulsions upon those who serve it.
-The older personal relation of “master” and “servant” abides only in
-indices of the records of the law courts. The contract of employment
-is now between a “soulless” but “legal entity” and a mere creature of
-flesh and blood. The more human individual, the survival of a less
-mechanical age, no longer lives upon the fruit of his individual
-toil. His welfare is pent in between his wages and the prices which
-he must pay for his necessities. Beyond this immediate bargain lies a
-mysterious economic system filled with unknown causes which threaten
-his income and even his employment. Those who possess have come into
-succession to those who ventured. In short, free enterprise has given
-way to an established system.
-
-These events have left their mark upon economic opinion. It is
-altogether fitting that those who fell heir to the wealth piled up by
-free enterprise should gain its outer defences of theory and dialectic.
-So the older economics, with its logic and its blessing, has come
-as a legacy to those who have. Its newer statement, because of its
-well-known objective, may be called “the case for capitalism.” In its
-revision the adventurous militarism bent upon exploitation has given
-way to a pacifistic defence of security, possession, and things as they
-are.
-
-In outward form few changes were necessary to convert the older theory
-of _laissez-faire_ into a presentable case for capitalism. A more
-rigid and absolute statement of the classical doctrine was almost
-enough. In its terms the economic order is independent of other social
-arrangements. It is an automatic, self-regulating mechanism. Over it
-there rules an immutable and natural “law of supply and demand.” This
-maintains just prices, prevents exploitation, adjusts production and
-consumption to each other, secures the maximum of goods and services
-from the resources at hand, and disburses incomes in accordance with
-the merits of men and the verity of things. So just and impartial is
-the operation of this law that interference by the State amounts to
-meddlesome muddling. It cannot override natural law; therefore it
-should not.
-
-It differs most from the older economics in the more explicit statement
-of the function of institutions. The growing inequality of income,
-of control, and of opportunity have presented facts that have to be
-faced. But even here, instead of contriving new defences, the advocates
-of capitalism have refurbished the older ones. The thing that is
-finds its justification in that which was. Property rights are to be
-preserved intact, because private property is essential to personal
-opportunity; just as if the propertyless did not exist and each was
-to win his living from his own acres or his own shop. The right of
-contract is not to be abridged, because the interests of both parties
-are advanced by a bargain between equals; just as if the corporate
-employer and the individual employé were alike in their freedom, their
-capacity to wait, and their power to shape the terms of the bargain.
-Prices are to be self-determined in open market, because competition
-will best reconcile the conflicting interests of buyers and sellers;
-just as if there was no semblance of monopoly among producers, no open
-price agreements, and no informal understandings. Individual initiative
-is not to be abridged, because it creates the wealth of the nation;
-just as if routine had no value for efficiency and the masses of men
-still had discretion in economic matters. The arrangements which make
-up the economic order find their validity in the symbolic language of
-ritual rather than in a prosaic recital of current fact.
-
-This defence crosses the frontier which separates the economic from the
-political order only to appropriate the prestige of democracy. Its real
-concern is the preservation of the prevailing system wherein business
-controls industry for purposes of profit. Its formal solicitation
-is lest “the form of government” be changed. This concern finds
-expression in veneration for the work of the “fathers” (rather young
-men, by the way), not of machine technology and business enterprise,
-but of “representative government” and of “constitutional authority.”
-Its creed becomes propaganda, not for the defence of business, the
-security of corporations, or the preservation of managerial immunities,
-but for the defence of the nation, the security of America, and
-the preservation of “constitutional” rights. The newer economic
-arrangements are masked behind political rights and given the values
-of the political institutions which antedate them by many decades. In
-short, the staunchest defenders of the prevailing economic system
-believe that “their economic preferences are shared by the constitution
-of the United States.”
-
-If we may borrow a term from its advocates, this body of opinion
-must be pronounced “theoretical.” In their speech a “theory” is a
-generalization which goes much further than its particulars warrant.
-In that sense their conclusions are not “practical.” The essential
-question with which this body of opinion is concerned is whether the
-scheme of institutions which focus upon profit-making make the members
-of the community, severally and collectively, as well off as they ought
-to be. It seems offhand that a realistic defence of the prevailing
-order might be convincingly formulated. At any rate, “the case for
-capitalism” is good enough to get into the records. Instead, its
-advocates have confused their own pecuniary success with the well-being
-of the community and have argued that because profits have been made
-the system is good. Like the classical economists they vindicate the
-system by assumption.
-
-
-III
-
-In the wake of the new industrialism there has come an economic opinion
-of protest. It is being gradually formulated by professional men, by
-farmers, by trade unionists, and by the younger business men who have
-escaped being “self-made.” Its hesitating and confused statement is
-due to the disturbed conditions out of which it comes. The varied
-interests of its many authors prevents unity of words or of principles.
-Its origin in the contact of minds steeped in the older individualism
-with the arresting facts of the newer economic order explains its
-current inarticulate expression. It can be set forth briefly only
-by subordinating the reality of variety to the tendencies which are
-clearly inherent within it.
-
-The objective of this newer opinion is a modification of the prevailing
-order, rather than its overthrow. It is quite conscious of defects in
-its arrangements and knows that its fruits are not all good. It has
-never considered the question of the efficiency or inefficiency of the
-system as a whole. The older individualistic notions are strong enough
-to give an intuitive belief that the theory of the control of industry
-by business for profit is essentially sound. But it would eliminate
-the bad, patch up the indifferent, and retain the good. It would set up
-in the government an external authority which through regulation and
-repression would make business interests serve the community. Its faith
-is in private enterprise compelled by the State to promote “public
-welfare.” Its detail can best be suggested by typical illustrations.
-
-There is, first of all, the attitude of the protestants towards freedom
-of contract. They accept the prevailing theory that the relations of
-buyer and seller, employer and employé, owner and agent, can safely
-be left to the free choice of all concerned. But they point out that
-in practice the principle does not give its assumed results. For,
-whereas the theory assumes the parties to be equal in their power to
-determine the terms of the contract, it is a matter of common knowledge
-that employers and labourers occupy unequal bargaining positions.
-They would leave relations to be determined by free bargaining;
-but, as a preliminary, they would attempt to establish equality of
-bargaining power. To that end they would have the contract made by
-“collective bargaining” between employers and employés “through
-representatives” chosen by each. Moreover, they would use the State
-to better the position of the weaker party. Thus legislation has been
-passed depriving employers of their right of requiring employés, as
-a condition of employment, not to remain members of labour unions.
-Although the courts have found such legislation to be “an arbitrary
-interference with the liberty of contract which no government can
-justify in a free land,” its advocates will insist that their aim has
-been only “to establish that equality in position between the parties
-in which liberty of contract begins.”
-
-There is, in the next place, a growing opinion among the protestants
-that the State is “a moral agent” and should determine the rules under
-which business is to be carried on. They point out that in business
-there are bad as well as good conditions, that business men engage in
-proper as well as in improper practices, and that some activities harm
-while others help the community. In many instances the employer finds
-it to his advantage to establish conditions which the interests of the
-workers and of the consumers require. In others, the elevation of
-standards waits upon the pleasure of the most inconsiderate employer.
-The prohibition of child labour, the shortening of the working day, and
-the payment of a minimum wage may be advantageous alike to labourers
-and to the community; yet these innovations involve an increase in cost
-and cannot be made against the competition of the producer who will not
-establish them. In such cases it is the duty of the State to establish
-minimum conditions which must be met by all employers. The imposition
-of such standards in no way affects the system under which business is
-carried on; for the competition of rival sellers can be just as acute
-and just as considerate of the public, if all of them are forced to pay
-their employés a living wage, as if they are all free to force wages
-down to starvation. Upon this theory the State has established uniform
-weights and measures, prohibited the use of deleterious chemicals,
-stopped the sale of impure food, provided compensation for the human
-wear and tear of industry, and established minimum standards of safety,
-health, and service.
-
-There is, finally, a growing opinion that in some industries the
-profit-making motive must be superseded by some other. In the railway
-industry it has been repeatedly shown that the pecuniary interest of
-the management fails to coincide with that of either the owners or
-of the shippers. Long ago the determination of charges for service
-was put beyond the discretion of the officials. Of late there has
-been an increasing tendency to make accounts, services, expenditures,
-valuations, and other matters meet standards of public service. When
-this has been effected, as it will be, the officials of the roads
-will become mere subordinates responsible to a public authority. Then
-profit-making as a guide to administration will have given way to an
-official judgment of results in terms of established standards. Then
-it will be discovered that public control formally rejected has been
-achieved by indirection. But many times ere this American opinion has
-come by devious paths to goals which its individualism has not allowed
-it to regard as quite desirable.
-
-For the moment the medley of opinion here roughly characterized as a
-demand for control is dominant. Its proponents are almost as naïve
-as the advocates of capitalism in a belief in the essential goodness
-of a mythical system of “free enterprise.” They differ from them in
-placing greater emphasis upon voluntary associations and in demanding
-that the State from without compel business to serve the common good.
-As yet they have formulated no consistent theory of economics and
-no articulate programme for achieving their ends. Without a clear
-understanding of the development of industry and of the structure of
-the economic order, they are content to face specific problems when
-they meet them. They are far from ready to surrender an inherited
-belief in an individualistic theory of the common good.
-
-
-IV
-
-The changes of the last four decades, which make up “The Industrial
-Revolution in America,” have left their mark upon the economics of
-the schools. If there was a time when the thought of the professed
-economists was a thing apart from the common sense of the age, it
-ended with the coming of industrialism. Differ as it may in phrase, in
-method, and in statement, the economics in solid and dull treatises
-reflects, as it has always reflected, the opinions of the laity. If
-there were agreement among the sorts of men who gather at ball games
-and in smoking cars, the books on economics would all read alike. But
-when the plumber differs from the banker and the scrub woman refuses
-to take her ideas from the coupon clipper, it is futile to expect mere
-economists to agree. To some, the classical doctrine still serves as
-a sabbatical refuge from modern problems. Others, who “specialize”
-in trusts, tariffs, and labour are too busy being “scientific” to
-formulate general opinions. Still others insist upon creating a
-new economics concerned with the problem of directing industrial
-development to appointed ends. Each of these schools has a membership
-large enough to allow dissension within the ranks.
-
-The revolt against the classical economics began when it encountered
-modern fact. Beyond the pale of doctrine taught by certified theorists
-appeared studies upon corporations, international trade, railway rates,
-craft unionism, and other matters of the newer fact. For a time those
-who studied these subjects were content to describe in superficial
-terms the results of their observations. But as facts accumulated they
-provoked generalizations at variance with the accepted principles of
-the older competitive theory. At the same time the rise of a newer
-history concerned with development rather than chronology, a new ethics
-that recognized the existence of a social order, and a new psychology
-that taught that the content of men’s behaviour is poured in by the
-environment, together made the foundations of the older economics very
-insecure.
-
-For a time this protest found expression only in critical work. The
-picture of an economic order as a self-regulating mechanism, peopled
-with folk who could not but serve the community in serving themselves
-became very unreal. The complexity of industrialism made it hard to
-believe that the individual had knowledge enough to choose best for
-himself. The suspicion that frequently thought follows action made it
-hard to continue to believe in man’s complete rationality. The idea
-that incomes are different because opportunities are different led to
-a questioning of the justice of the ratings of men in the market. The
-unequal division of income made impossible pecuniary calculations in
-which each man counted for one and only for one. With these assumptions
-of 19th-century economics passed “the economic man,” “the Crusoe
-economy,” and the last of the divine theories, that of “enlightened
-self-interest.” It was no longer possible to build a defence of the
-existing order upon “the hedonistic conception of man” as “a lightning
-calculator of pleasures and pains, who oscillates like a homogeneous
-globule of desire of happiness under the impulse of stimuli that shift
-him about the area, but leave him inert.”
-
-The most immediate effect of this criticism was a change in method.
-The older process of juggling economic laws out of assumptions about
-human nature, human motives, and the beneficence of competition lost
-prestige. It was evident that if the system was to be appraised
-the facts must be had. Accordingly a veritable multitude of facts,
-good, bad, and mostly indifferent were treasured up. This process of
-garnering information soon made it evident that the facts about the
-relationship of industry to the welfare of the community were too
-varied and too numerous to be separately catalogued. Since only totals
-could be used, economics came to rely upon facts presented in the
-quantitative language of statistics.
-
-But since facts are not possessed of the virtue of self-determination,
-they did not yield an opinion which was very relevant or very truthful.
-Their use was for the moment nothing more than a substitution of the
-superstition of facts for that of logic. The facts were of value,
-because when properly interpreted they gave the story of what the
-economic system had done. But without the aid of standards it was
-impossible to determine whether it had worked well or ill, whether it
-had much or little to give in return for the solicitous concern about
-it. It was evident that modern industrialism was developing without
-conscious guidance. As long as no goal was fixed it was impossible
-to tell whether industrial development was proceeding in the right
-direction. As long as we were unmindful of the kind of society we
-wished ours to be, we could not appraise its accomplishments. Without
-standards all that could be said was that the system had worked as well
-as it had worked and that we were as well off as we were well off. The
-problem, therefore, became one of judging the system on the basis of
-the facts by means of standards.
-
-Thus the newer economics has been of service in stating the problem
-with which opinion must be concerned. The “prevailing” economic order
-is one of many schemes of arrangements for making industry serve the
-purposes of the community. The system has been slowly evolved out
-of the institutions of the past, is constantly being affected by
-circumstances, and for the future is capable of conscious modification.
-How well it has served its purpose cannot be attested by an abstract
-argument proceeding from assumptions about human nature and the cosmos.
-A judgment upon its relative goodness or badness requires an appraisal
-of the facts in terms of standards. These standards must be obtained
-from our notions of the kind of society we want this to be. These
-notions must proceed from a scientific study of the properties of
-things and the needs of human beings. That judgment will be one not of
-goodness or badness, but of the relative merits of a very human scheme
-of arrangements compared with its alternatives.
-
-The economists are reluctant to pass a judgment upon the prevailing
-order. The relevant facts are too scanty and the standards too inexact
-to warrant an appraisal of the virtues and the vices of “capitalism.”
-They distrust the eulogies of apologists because they do not square
-with the known facts. They are not convinced by the reformers, because
-they fear that they know as little about their own schemes as they
-do about current arrangements. They insist that a general judgment
-must be a progressive affair. The system will change through gradual
-modification; the larger problem will be solved by attention to an
-endless succession of minor problems. Each of these must be met with
-the facts and with an ideal of what our society should be. They have
-too little faith in the rationality of the collect to believe that
-problems can be faced in battalions or that a new order can emerge
-as a work of creation. They have little fear for “the future of the
-nation,” if only problems can be intelligently handled as they emerge.
-Their attitude towards the present system is one, neither of acceptance
-nor of rejection, but of doubt and of honest inquiry. Their faith is
-neither in the existing order nor in a hand-me-down substitute, but in
-a conscious direction of the process of change.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This tedious narrative has failed entirely in its purpose, if it has
-not revealed the strength and the weakness of economic opinion in
-America. Its merits stand out boldly in the preceding paragraphs; its
-defects are too striking to be concealed. The reader has already been
-informed; but the writer must inform himself. The essay, therefore,
-will close with an explicit statement of some three of the more obvious
-characteristics.
-
-First, its most striking characteristic is its volume. In quantity
-it contains enough verbal and intellectual ammunition to justify or
-to wreck a dozen contradictory economic orders. If, in an orderly
-way, opinion became judgment and judgment ripened into the society of
-to-morrow, it would stand condemned. For little of it has a practical
-consequence and our ways of expression are very wasteful. But it also
-affords a harmless outlet for the dangerous emotions aroused by the
-wear and tear of everyday work in a humdrum universe. And, if it is
-true that we are, all of us, Simians by lineage, this is by far the
-most important function it serves.
-
-Second, it is grounded none too well in information and principles.
-The ordinary mortal is busied with his own affairs. He lacks the time,
-the patience, and the equipment necessary to get at the facts about
-the material welfare of the nation. In the most casual way he makes up
-his mind, using for the purpose a few superficial facts, a number of
-prejudices, and a bit of experience. He has little idea of where we are
-in the course of social development, of the forces which have brought
-us here, or of where we ought to be going. Since the opinions of groups
-and of the nation are aggregates of individual opinion, the ideas of
-those who have an intellectual right to speak are not a large part of
-the compound.
-
-Third, despite its crudeness and variety, it possesses elements of
-real value. Its very volume creates at least a statistical probability
-that some of it is of high quality. The waste of much of it gives the
-rest a real chance of expression in social policy. The common features
-of industrialism are giving to men something of a common experience
-out of which there will come a more or less common-sense appreciation
-of problems and of ideals. This will dictate the larger features of a
-future social policy. The particularized opinion which finds expression
-in the detailed formulation of programmes must be left to the experts.
-The great masses of men must learn that these problems are technical
-and must trust the judgment of those who know. Despite the record
-of halting development and of confused statement, the pages above
-indicate that the economic opinion in America is coming slowly to an
-appreciation of the factors upon which “the good life for all” really
-rests.
-
-But enough. Opinion by being economic does not cease to be opinion, and
-an essay about it is only more opinion.
-
- WALTON H. HAMILTON
-
-
-
-
-RADICALISM
-
-
-The first obstacle to an assessment of radicalism in America is the
-difficulty of discovering precisely what American radicalism is.
-According to his enemies, a radical is a person whose opinions need
-not be considered and whose rights need not be respected. As a people
-we do not wish to understand him, or to deal with what he represents,
-but only to get him out of sight. We deport him and imprison him. If
-he writes a book, we keep it out of the schools and libraries. If he
-publishes a paper, we debar it from the mails. If he makes a speech,
-we drive him out of the hall and shoo him away from the street-corner.
-If by hook or crook he multiplies himself to considerable numbers,
-we expel his representatives from legislative chambers, break up his
-parades, and disperse his strikes with well-armed soldiery.
-
-These being the associations which cluster about the word, it has
-naturally become less a definition than a weapon. Statisticians in
-the Federal Trade Commission publish certain figures dealing with the
-business of the packing-houses--a Senator loudly calls these devoted
-civil servants “radicals,” and they are allowed to resign. A labour
-leader, following the precedent of federal law established for over a
-half a century, espouses the eight-hour day, but because he has the
-bad taste to do so in connection with the steel industry, he becomes a
-“radical,” and is soundly berated in the press. If one were to ask the
-typical American Legion member how he would describe a radical--aside
-from the fact that a radical is a person to be suppressed--he would
-probably answer that a radical is (a) a pro-German, (b) a Russian or
-other foreigner, (c) a person who sends bombs through the mail, (d) a
-believer in free love, (e) a writer of free verse, (f) a painter of
-cubist pictures, (g) a member of the I.W.W., (h) a Socialist, (i) a
-Bolshevist, (j) a believer in labour unions and an opponent of the open
-shop, and (k) any one who would be looked upon with disapproval by a
-committee consisting of Judge Gary, Archibald Stevenson, and Brander
-Matthews.
-
-There is scarcely more light to be had from the radicals themselves.
-Any one who feels a natural distaste for the censorious crowd of
-suppressors is likely to class himself with the free spirits whom
-they oppose. To call oneself a radical is in such circumstances a
-necessary accompaniment of self-respect. The content of the radicalism
-is of minor importance. There is an adventurous tendency to espouse
-anything that is forbidden, and so to include among one’s affirmations
-the most contradictory systems--such as Nietzscheanism and Communism,
-Christianity of the mystical sort and rebellion. And when these rebels
-really begin to think, the confusion is increased. Each pours his whole
-ardour into some exclusive creed, which makes him scorn other earnest
-souls who happen to disagree about abstruse technical points. Among
-economic radicals, terms like “counter-revolutionary” and “bourgeois”
-are bandied about in a most unpleasant fashion. If, for instance, you
-happen to believe that Socialism may be brought about through the
-ballot rather than through the general strike, numbers of radicals will
-believe you more dangerous than the Czar himself; it is certain that
-when the time comes you will be found fighting on the wrong side of
-the barricade. Creeds have innumerable subdivisions, and on the exact
-acceptance of the creed depends your eternal salvation. Calvinists,
-Wesleyans, Lutherans, and the rest in their most exigent days could not
-rival the logical hair-splitting which has lately taken place among
-the sectarian economic dissenters, nor has any religious quarrel ever
-surpassed in bitterness the dogmatic dissidence with which the numerous
-schools of authoritarian rebellion rebel against authority.
-
-There is a brilliant magazine published in New York which takes pride
-in edging a little to the left of the leftmost radical, wherever for
-the moment that may be. Its editor is a poet, and he writes eloquently
-of the proletariat and the worker. Not long ago I was speaking of this
-editor to an actual leader of labour--a man who is a radical, and who
-also takes a daily part in the workers’ struggles. “Yes,” he said, “he
-certainly can write. He is one of the best writers living.” And he
-went on wistfully, “If the labour movement only had a writer like that!”
-
-There is another brilliant magazine published in New York which takes
-exquisite pains to inform the reader that it is radical. In precise
-columns of elegant type, Puritan in its scorn of passion or sensation,
-it weekly derides the sentimental liberal for ignorance of “fundamental
-economics.” Not long ago it made the startling discovery that
-Socialists favour taking natural resources out of private ownership.
-And its “fundamental economics,” whenever they appear in language
-simple enough for the common reader to understand, turn out to be
-nothing more dangerous than that respectable and ancient heresy, the
-single tax.
-
-Another method of definition is now in common use--a method which
-seems easy because of its mechanical simplicity. People are arranged
-in a row from left to right, according to their attitude toward the
-existing order. At the extreme right are the reactionaries, who want
-to restore the discarded. Next to them are the conservatives, who wish
-to keep most of what exists. At their elbow are the liberals, who are
-ready to examine new ideas, but who are not eager or dogmatic about
-change. And at the extreme left are the radicals, who want to change
-nearly everything for something totally new. Such an arrangement is a
-confusing misuse of words based on a misconception of social forces.
-Society is not a car on a track, along which it may move in either
-direction, or on which it may stand still. Society is a complex, with
-many of the characteristics of an organism. Its change is continuous,
-although by no means constant. It passes through long periods of
-quiescence, and comparatively brief periods of rapid mutation. It
-may collect itself into a close order, or again become dispersed
-into a nebula. There is much in its development that is cyclical; it
-has yet undiscovered rhythms, and many vagaries. The radical and the
-reactionary may be agreed on essentials; they may both wish sudden
-change and closer organization. The conservative may be liberal because
-he wishes to preserve an order in which liberal virtues may exist. Or a
-liberal may be so cribbed and confined by an unpleasant constriction
-of social tissue that he becomes radical in his struggle for immediate
-release. The terms are not of the same class and should not be arranged
-in parallel columns.
-
-The dictionary definition is enlightening. “Radical--Going to the root
-or origin; touching or acting upon what is essential or fundamental;
-thorough.... _Radical reform_, a thorough reform.... Hence Radical
-Reformer equals Radical” (New English Dictionary). In this sense
-radicalism is an historic American tradition. The revolt of the
-Colonies against England and the formation of the Republic were,
-indeed, far from the complete break with the past which the schoolboy
-assumes them to have been, but what lives in the minds of the American
-people is, nevertheless, not the series of counterchecks which men
-like Hamilton and Madison wrote into the Constitution, but rather the
-daring affirmations of Jefferson which have a real kinship with the
-radical spirit of the French Revolution. Talk of “inalienable rights”
-such as life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness was genuine radical
-talk; it searched out the bases of human relationship, proclaimed them
-against authority, and sought to found on them a system of government.
-
-So strongly has this conception seized the imagination of Americans
-that it largely accounts for their almost instinctive hostility to new
-kinds of political change. The roots of politics have been uncovered,
-the change has in fact been made once for all--so they reason. To admit
-that any new fundamental alteration is necessary is to be disloyal to
-the historical liberation. Because the conservative American believes
-himself a complete democrat, because for him the “new order” was
-achieved in 1776, he is intolerant of modern radicals. Suggestions of
-new revolution touch him closely on his pride. In this sense Jefferson
-has been less a spur to future generations than an obstacle. If his
-fine frenzy about rights had been less eloquently expressed, if it had
-not obscured in a cloud of glory the true nature of the foundation of
-our government--a highly practical compromise which embodied a few
-moderate advances and many hesitancies--we should have a different
-temper about change to-day. We should not assume that all desirable
-fundamental modification of social and political structure had been
-completed nearly a century and a half ago.
-
-The greatest historic expression of American radicalism has thus
-become the altar of the conservatives. To the unlettered man it
-may seem strange that a Supreme Court of elderly radicals will not
-allow Congress to forbid child-labour because of their loyalty to an
-18th-century limitation of the federal government, presumably in the
-interest of freedom and humanity. To workmen voting for the eight-hour
-day the language of Jefferson did not seem hostile--they were
-struggling to pursue happiness in a way that he must have approved.
-And yet it is the sacred “right” of contract which deprived them, as
-voters, of the right to legislate for shorter hours. Workmen using
-their collective economic power to gain industrial freedom are met by
-a shower of injunctive denials, based chiefly on that same right of
-contract. In order to stay any further liberation of the human body
-and spirit, judges and officials and industrial barons have only to
-invoke the phrases of freedom thrown out against an ancient despotism.
-They have only to point out that freedom as defined abstractly over a
-hundred years ago forbids practical freedom to-day. Frozen radicalism
-of the past chills and destroys the new roots of American life.
-
-Some appreciation of this state of affairs underlies the prevailing
-tendency to believe that all new radicalism has a foreign origin. It
-is, indeed, part of the best nationalistic tradition to attribute
-subversive doctrines to foreigners. This is the habit in every country.
-But in the United States the habit is perhaps more deep-seated than
-elsewhere. Americans are by definition free and equal; if then any one
-talks or acts as if he were not free and equal, he must have been born
-somewhere else. The American Government, being not a faulty product of
-human growth, but a new creation sprung perfect out of the ineffable
-minds of the Fathers, is unassailable; if any one assails it, he
-cannot know it, and must be subjected to courses in English and Civics
-(Americanization) until he recognizes its perfection. Treason in this
-country is not simple treason to a ruler, to a class, or to a system
-as elsewhere; it is an act of sacrilege, by one uninitiated, upon a
-religious mystery.
-
-Of course there are and have been Americans whose radicalism is less
-crust and more meat. The spirit of Jefferson still lives, after all, to
-confute the interpretation put upon his words. And imported doctrine
-has actually had less to do with most of the radical movements in
-America than has American tradition itself. It is an easy step from the
-conception of political liberty to the conception of economic liberty,
-and the step has been made here as readily as in Europe. In a country
-which for so long offered extraordinary opportunities to the individual
-business man, it is only natural that economic liberty should have been
-conceived as a means of protecting his enterprise; and as a matter of
-fact our economic legislation for many years has been sprinkled with
-victories of the small business men and farmers over the interests
-which had already become large enough to seem to them oppressive.
-The regulation of the railroads, the succession of popular financial
-doctrines, and the anti-trust legislation, were all initiated by the
-interpretation of economic democracy naturally arising in the vigorous
-class of the small entrepreneurs. With the slow weakening of this class
-by its disintegration, on one hand into captains and lieutenants of the
-great principalities of industry, and on the other into permanently
-salaried or waged members of the rank and file, comes a corresponding
-tendency to change the prevailing conception of economic democracy.
-The radicalism of workmen in the United States has often been no less
-sweeping or assertive than the radicalism of workmen anywhere--witness
-the I.W.W. Even violence in the labour struggle has been practised
-chiefly by one hundred per cent. Americans--the steel workers in
-Homestead in 1892 and the West Virginia miners in Mingo County in 1921
-were of old American stock. And the moment the predominating group
-in American thought and activity is composed of those who expect to
-live by their daily work rather than of those who expect to accumulate
-property, we are likely to see the rise of an economic radicalism more
-akin to that which exists in Europe, and one which, because of its
-sanction in our tradition, will be twice as militant and convinced.
-
-For, after all, economic radicalism arises neither from a merely stupid
-desire for more material goods, nor from an intellectual adherence
-to a particular formula of industrial organization. It arises from a
-desire to be free, to achieve dignity and independence. Poverty is
-distressful not so much because of its physical hardships as because
-of its spiritual bondage. To be poor because one chooses to be poor is
-less annoying than to be moderately paid while the man who fixes one’s
-wages rides in a Rolls-Royce. The most modest aspects of the labour
-movement are attempts of the workmen to gain some voice in determining
-the conditions under which they must work--in other words, to extend
-democracy into industry. And when the workman wakes up to the fact
-that industrial policies are governed by a comparatively small class
-of owners, and that the visible result of those policies seems to be a
-large class of underemployed, undernourished, and under-housed families
-on one hand, and a small class of abundantly supplied families on the
-other, he feels that he is suffering an indignity. You may challenge
-him to prove that any other system would work better. You may argue
-that if all the wealth of the rich were distributed equally, he would
-receive but a trifle. Such reasoning will affect him little. If every
-one must be miserable, he at least wants to share and exercise whatever
-power exists to alter that misery. Kings have argued that the people
-could rule no better than they, but that has not prevented peoples from
-demanding representative government. The American tradition is sure to
-be as subversive a motive in industry as it has been in the State. The
-technical problem of how industry may be better organized, important as
-it is, is subordinate to this cry of the personality. Essentially, this
-sort of radicalism arises from the instinct of the workman to achieve
-an adult relationship to the industrial world.
-
-The impact of the war upon industry, and the reverberation of its
-social results abroad, for some time stimulated this latent feeling
-in American workmen. For the first time in decades the competition
-of the unemployed and the immigrant was virtually removed, and the
-wage-earner began to feel secure enough to assert his personality. He
-was necessary to the community in an immediate way. The policy of the
-government was to recognize this fact, and to prevent an unduly rapid
-increase in wages and in the power of organized labour by compromising
-with it on certain simple issues like collective bargaining and the
-eight-hour day. But larger aspirations arose in the rank and file, and
-when the Russian Revolution sent a word of emancipation around the
-world, they were ready to listen. In spite of the crushing force of
-the whole ruling propaganda machinery, which had been so successful in
-arousing hatred against Germany, countless American workmen sensed the
-approach of a new order as a result of the success of the Bolsheviki.
-A secondary impulse of the same sort, felt even more strongly in
-some quarters, arose from the Nottingham programme of the British
-Labour Party. But affairs moved slowly, hope was deferred, and at
-length the new spirit lost much of its freshness and power. The very
-acrimoniousness and volume of the controversy over what had or had
-not been done in Russia wearied most people of the whole matter. The
-many expected revolutions in other countries, which missed fire so
-many times, caused disillusionment. The doctrinaire and even religious
-adherents of the Russian Communists began to make trouble for every
-radical organization in the country by their quarrels and divisions. At
-length, the war being over, the American labour movement itself began
-to display a weakness in the face of renewed attack on the part of its
-opponents, which showed how illusory had been many of its recent gains
-and how seriously its morale had been injured.
-
-Economic radicalism never looked--on the surface--weaker than it does
-in the United States to-day. On the strength of statements by Mr.
-Gompers and some other leaders of the trade unions, we are likely to
-assume that organized labour will have nothing to do with it. The
-professed radicals themselves have been weakened by dissensions and
-scattered by persecution. Yet a brief survey of the formal groups which
-now profess radical theories will indicate why the future of American
-radicalism should not be assessed on the evidence of their present low
-estate.
-
-The Socialist Party, even more than the Socialist Parties in other
-countries, was placed by the war in a difficult situation. With its
-roots not yet firmly in the soil, except in a few localities and
-among diverse national elements, it was faced with the necessity,
-in accordance with its principles and tradition, of denouncing the
-entrance of the United States into hostilities. But this decision
-could command no effective support from the workers organized on the
-economic field, who under a different leadership adopted a different
-attitude. Nor was the party strong enough among any other element of
-the population to make its decision respected. The only immediate
-result of the gesture was therefore to place this unarmed little force
-in the most exposed position possible, where it drew the fire of all
-those who were nervously afraid the people would not sanction the war.
-Socialism was not judged on the basis of its economic tenets, but was
-condemned as disloyal and pro-German; and the effect was to render the
-party even more sectarian and unrepresentative than ever before. It had
-adopted a position in which it could not expect recruits except from
-moral heroes, and no nation nourishes a large proportion of these. Such
-episodes make good legend, but they do not lead to prompt victories.
-Even those who later have come to believe that the Socialists were
-right about the war are likely to express their belief in some other
-form than joining the party.
-
-In this weakened condition, the Socialist Party after the war developed
-internal fissures. Many bitter words have been exchanged as to whether
-the “Left Wingers” were or were not a majority of the party, whether
-they were or were not more orthodox than those in control of the party
-machinery, and whether, if they were more orthodox, their orthodoxy was
-wise. At any rate, they broke away and formed two new parties of their
-own, a fact which is the chief point of interest to one who is more
-concerned with the larger issues of American radicalism than with the
-minutiæ of Socialist politics. The Communist Party and the Communist
-Labour Party, whatever may have been the legitimacy of their gestation
-in the bowels of Socialism, certainly found their reason for being
-chiefly in logic which originated in Moscow and Berlin rather than in
-the American situation. At once selected for persecution by government
-officials, they burrowed underground, doubtless followed by a band of
-spies at least as numerous as they. From these subterranean regions
-have come rumours of a fourth party--the United Communist, which
-swallowed most of the Communist Labourites and some of the Communists.
-At last accounts the Communists and the United Communists were each
-attempting to prove the other counter-revolutionary by reference to the
-latest documents from international revolutionary headquarters.
-
-It is hazardous in the extreme for an outsider to speak of the
-differences in doctrine among these groups. It is probably fair to
-say, however, that the Communist parties are chiefly distinguished by
-their total lack of interest in anything save a complete revolution,
-because this is the only kind they believe possible. They reject
-as “compromises” partial gains of all sorts; piecemeal progress by
-evolutionary methods rather offends them than otherwise. Their eyes
-are turned always toward some future revolutionary situation; for
-this their organization and their theories are being prepared. This
-being the case, the validity of their position will be tested by the
-event. If, as the milder Socialists believe, economic changes may come
-gradually by process of growth and smaller shocks, the Communists are
-likely to remain a nearly functionless and tiny minority, even in the
-labour movement. If, as the Communists believe, the present order in
-the normal course of its development is destined to experience a sudden
-collapse similar to that which occurred in Russia near the end of the
-war, they will become the true prophets, and their mode of thought and
-action will presumably have fitted them to assume leadership.
-
-The Farmer-Labour Party is a recent growth far less doctrinaire than
-either the Socialist or the Communist groups. It has neither prophet
-nor Bible, but is based rather on the principle of gathering certain
-categories of people together for political action, trusting that
-as they become organized they will work out their own programme in
-relation to the situation, and that that programme will develop as time
-goes on. The categories to which it appeals are chiefly the industrial
-workers and the small farmers, who have in general common economic
-interests as opposed to the large owners of land and capital. It hopes
-that other elements in the population, realizing that their major
-interests are much the same as those of the unionists and the farmers,
-will join forces with them to produce a majority. As an illustration
-of the operation of such tactics, the Farmer-Labourites point to
-the success of the Independent Labour Party of Great Britain, first
-in aiding the foundation of the British Labour Party, and second in
-building up for that party an increasingly coherent radical programme.
-
-In all these cases, however, not much confidence is placed in the
-actual political machinery of elections. There is a widespread
-scepticism about the ability to accomplish industrial changes by the
-ballot, on account of experience with political corruption, broken
-election promises, adverse court decisions, and political buncombe
-in general. These parties are formed as much for the purpose of
-propagating ideas and creating centres of activity as for mobilizing
-votes. All radical parties lay great stress on the industrial power
-of the organized labour movement. This is not to say that they do not
-recognize the importance of the State in industrial matters. All agree
-that control of political machinery will in the long run be necessary,
-if only to prevent it from checking the advance of the people through
-the courts and police. But they also agree that control of the State
-is not held and cannot be attained by political machinery alone. The
-present influence of the proprietors of industry on politics is due,
-they see, chiefly to economic power, and the workers consequently
-must not neglect the development of their own economic organization.
-The Communists are completely hopeless of attaining results through
-the present election machinery; the Socialists and Farmer-Labourites
-believe it possible to secure a majority at the polls, which may
-then execute its will, if the workers are well enough organized for
-industrial action.
-
-Outwardly the most successful of the radical movements is the least
-doctrinaire of all. It is unnecessary to repeat the history and
-achievements of the Nonpartisan League--an attempt on the part of
-organized farmers to use the machinery of the State in order to
-gain economic independence from the banking, milling, and packing
-interests. Other groups of farmers have aimed at a similar result
-through co-operation, with varying success.
-
-In the industrial labour movement proper there have been numerous
-radical minorities. The most uncompromising of these, as well as
-the most characteristically American, was the Industrial Workers of
-the World, who aspired to build up a consciously revolutionary body
-to rival the unions composing the American Federation of Labour.
-This decline is due not so much to suppression as to their previous
-failure to enlist the continued support of the industrial workers
-themselves. Like the Communists, the I.W.W. predicated their success
-on a revolutionary situation, and lacking that situation they could
-not build a labour movement on an abstract idea. Over long periods not
-enough people are moved by a philosophy of salvation to give staying
-power to such an organization in the daily struggle with the employers.
-Other similar attempts, such as the W.I.I.U., and the more recent One
-Big Union, have encountered similar difficulties. They grow rapidly in
-crises, but fail under the strain of continued performance.
-
-The failure of American radicals to build up a strong movement is in
-part due, of course, to the natural difficulties of the social and
-economic situation, but it is also due to the mental traits which
-usually accompany remoteness from reality. This is illustrated in
-the history of the I.W.W., if we accept William Z. Foster’s acute
-analysis. The regular trade-union movement, slowly evolving towards
-a goal but half consciously realized, overcoming practical obstacles
-painfully and clumsily, as such obstacles usually are overcome, was too
-halting for these impatient radicals. They withdrew, and set up rival,
-perfectionist unions, founded in uncompromising revolutionary ardour.
-These organizations were often unable to serve the rank and file in
-their practical difficulties, and consequently could not supplant
-the historic labour movement. But they did draw out of that movement
-many of its most sincere and ardent spirits, thus depriving it of the
-ferment which was necessary to its growth. The I.W.W., for their part,
-failing to secure any large grip on reality, regressed into quarrels
-about theory, suffered divisions of their social personality, and
-at length--except in the far West--became little more than economic
-anchorites. As Foster says, “The I.W.W. were absolutely against
-results.”
-
-Too much of American radicalism has been diverted to the easy
-emotional satisfaction which is substituted for the arduous process
-of dealing with reality. We suffer a restriction of the personality,
-we cry out against the oppressor, we invent slogans and doctrines,
-we fill our minds with day dreams, with intricate mechanisms of some
-imaginary revolution. At the same time we withdraw from the actual
-next step. Here is the trade-union movement, built up painfully for
-over a century, a great army with many divisions which function every
-day in the industrial struggle. How many radicals know it in any
-detail? How many have paid the slightest attention to the technique
-of its organization, or have devoted any time to a working out of the
-smaller problems which must be worked out before it can achieve this
-or that victory? Here are our great industries, our complex systems
-of exchange. How many radicals really know the technique of even the
-smallest section of them? Radicals wish to reorganize the industrial
-system; would they know how to organize a factory?
-
-If radicalism arises from the instinct for economic maturity, then it
-can find its place in the world only by learning its function, only
-by expressing its emotion in terms of the actual with which it has to
-deal. A period of adolescence was to be expected, but to prolong the
-characteristics of that period is to invite futility. And as a matter
-of fact American radicalism now exhibits a tendency to establish more
-contacts with reality. Instead of withdrawing from established unions
-to start a new and spotless labour movement, radicals are beginning to
-visualize and to carry out the difficult but possible task of improving
-the organization of the existing unions, and of charging them with new
-energy and ideas. Unions which were founded by radicals--such as the
-Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America--are devoting their efforts not
-to talking of a future revolution, but to organizing the workers more
-firmly in the present, to establishing constitutional government in
-industry through which tangible advances may be made and safeguarded,
-and to improving the productivity of industry itself. Engineers,
-encouraged by labour organizations, and in some cases actually paid
-by them, are investigating the problem of economic waste, and are
-demonstrating by line upon line and precept upon precept how the chaos
-of competition, industrial autocracy, and a controlling profit motive
-are reflected in idle hours, low wages, high prices, and inferior
-products. The co-operative movement is slowly providing a new and
-more efficient machinery of distribution, while co-operative banks
-are building up a reserve of credit for those who wish to experiment
-with undertakings conducted for other purposes than the profit of
-the proprietor. Such functional use of the labour movement is more
-dangerous to the existing disorder than volumes of phrases or a whole
-battalion of “natural rights.”
-
-Extremists call such activities compromise. They are compromise in the
-sense that any hypothesis must be changed to fit the facts, but they
-involve no compromise with scientific truth. The alchemist compromised
-when he gave up the search for the philosopher’s stone and began to
-learn from the elements. He surrendered a sterile dogma for a fruitful
-science. In proportion as radicals learn how to put their emotions to
-work, in proportion as they devise ways to function in the world in
-which we live, will they make possible not only unity among themselves,
-but a rapprochement with other Americans. A man who believes there is
-no real possibility of change short of complete revolution can unite
-with a man who has no theory about the matter at all so long as they
-do not discuss abstract doctrine, but concentrate upon the problem of
-how to bring about a particular effect at a particular time. The most
-radical theories, if expressed in terms of concrete situations, will be
-accepted by those who are wary of generalities, or do not understand
-them. The theories will be tested in the fact. The operation of such a
-process may be blocked by those who dogmatically oppose all experiment,
-but in that case the forces of reason and of nature will be so clearly
-on the side of the radical that there can be no doubt about his
-ultimate fruitfulness.
-
- GEORGE SOULE
-
-
-
-
-THE SMALL TOWN
-
-
-America is a nation of villagers, once remarked George Bernard Shaw
-in a moment of his most exclusive scorn for what he believed was our
-crude and naïve susceptibility to the modes and moods, to say nothing
-of the manners, of the professional patriots during that hectic period
-when Wilhelm was training to become the woodman of Amerongen. Now Shaw
-is the oracle of the Occident, and when he speaks there is no docile
-dog this side of Adelphi Terrace presumptuous enough to bark. At least
-there should not be; and in any event, neither history nor H. G.
-Wells records any spirited protest on America’s part to the Shavian
-accusation. It was allowed to stand invulnerable and irrefutable. Of
-course, in our hearts we know Shaw is right. We may for the moment
-be signifying _rus in urbe_, but between you and me and the chief
-copy-reader of the Marion (Ohio) _Star_, _in urbe_ is a superfluous
-detail.
-
-Show me a native New Yorker and I will show you something as extinct
-as a bar-tender. There are no native New Yorkers. All New Yorkers
-come from small towns and farms. Ask Dad, ask the Sunday editor, ask
-the census-taker--they know. And what is true of New York is true of
-Boston and Chicago. The big men, the notable men of the big cities,
-hail from the small towns, the Springfields, the Jacksons, the
-Jamestowns, Georgetowns, Charlestowns--yes, and from the Elizabeths and
-Charlottes--of the nation.
-
-Under the circumstances any back-to-the-land movement in this country
-seems futile if not ridiculous. The land is still confident and
-capable of taking care of itself. It needs no aid from the city chaps
-and asks none. The Freudians are not deceived for a moment over the
-basis of a return-to-the-farm enterprise. They recognize it for what
-it is--a sentimental complex superinduced by the nervous hysteria of
-the city. But even the amazingly small proportion of the population
-that is not Freudian refuses to become influenced by the cry of the
-sentimentalists. Because it is keenly, though unpretentiously, aware of
-the genuinely rural state of its culture and civilization.
-
-The civilization of America is predominantly the civilization of
-the small town. The few libertarians and cosmopolites who continue
-to profess to see a broader culture developing along the Atlantic
-seaboard resent this fact, though they scarcely deny it. They are too
-intelligent, too widened in vision to deny it. They cannot watch the
-tremendous growth and power and influence of secret societies, of
-chambers of commerce, of boosters’ clubs, of the Ford car, of moving
-pictures, of talking-machines, of evangelists, of nerve tonics, of
-the _Saturday Evening Post_, of Browning societies, of circuses, of
-church socials, of parades and pageants of every kind and description,
-of family reunions, of pioneer picnics, of county fairs, of firemen’s
-conventions without secretly acknowledging it. And they know, if they
-have obtained a true perspective of America, that there is no section
-of this vast political unit that does not possess--and even frequently
-boast--these unmistakably provincial signs and symbols.
-
-I do not mean to imply that such aspects make America an unfit place
-in which to live. On the contrary, America’s very possession of them
-brings colour and rugged picturesqueness, if not a little pathos, to
-the individual with imagination sufficient to find them. Mr. Dreiser
-found them and shed a triumphant tear. “Dear, crude America” is to
-him a sweet and melancholy reality. It is a reality that has been
-expressed with a good deal of prophecy--and some profit--by the young
-novelists. Small-town realism with a vengeance, rather than a joy,
-has been the keynote of their remarkable success during the past
-year. However, they pulled the pendulum of cultural life too far in
-one direction. They failed, for the most part, of appreciating the
-similarity of human nature in city as in country, with the result that
-their triumph is ephemeral. Already the reaction has set in. There are
-now going on in the work-rooms of the novelists attempts to immortalize
-Riverside Drive, Fifth Avenue, Beacon Street, Michigan Boulevard, and
-Pennsylvania Avenue.
-
-Unless they penetrate into the soul of these avenues, unless they
-perceive that these avenues are not spiritually different from Main
-Street, though they may be clothed in the habiliments of metropolitan
-taste and fancy, they will fail to symbolize correctly America. They
-will be writing merely for money and controversial space in the
-literary supplements.
-
-For the soul of these avenues is a soul with an _i_ substituted
-for _u_. It is the soul of the land. It is a homely, wholesome
-provincialism, typifying human nature as it is found throughout the
-United States. We may herd in a large centre of population, assume
-the superficialities of cosmopolitan culture and genuinely believe
-ourselves devils of fellows. It takes all the force of a prohibition
-law to make us realize that we are more sinned against than sinning.
-Then are we confronted sharply by the fact that the herd is appallingly
-inefficient and inarticulate in a conflict with isolated individualism.
-
-The prohibition movement originated in farming communities and
-villages where the evils of alcohol are ridiculously insignificant. No
-self-respecting or neighbour-respecting villager could afford to be
-known as a drinking man. His business or his livelihood was at stake.
-Then why did he foster prohibition? Why did he seek to fasten it upon
-the city resident who, if he drank, did not lose apparently his own
-or his neighbour’s respect? Chiefly because of his very isolation.
-Because he was geographically deprived of the enjoyments which the city
-man shared. I can well imagine a farmer in the long sweating hours of
-harvest time or a small town storekeeper forced to currying favour with
-his friends and neighbours 365 days in a year, resolutely declaring
-that what he cannot have the man in the city shall not have. The
-hatching of all kinds of prohibitory plots can be traced to just such
-apparent injustices of life. Dr. Freud would correctly explain it under
-the heading of inferiority-complex.
-
-City men have marvelled at the remarkable organization of the
-reformers. It is not so much organization, however, as it is a national
-feeling perceived and expressed simultaneously. Cities may conduct the
-most efficient propaganda against such a feeling, they may assemble
-their largest voting strength to assail it. All in vain. The country
-districts roll up the majorities and the cities are left unmistakably
-high and dry.
-
-So it is with most of the laws and movements of America. The rural
-sections have but to will them and they become in due time established
-facts. An idea merely has to take root in the mind of some socially
-oppressed individual. He talks it over with his friends at lodge
-meeting or during an informal hour at a board of trade meeting. He
-receives encouragement. He imparts the idea to his wife, who carries it
-to her literary club, where it is given further airing. It spreads to
-the volunteer firemen’s clubrooms, to the grange picnics and the church
-socials. It is discussed in the pulpits. Finally it reaches the ears
-of the village and county politicians who, impressed by its appeal to
-the moral force of the community, decide after hours in the back room
-of the post-office or the national bank to interest the congressman or
-assemblyman from their district in its merits as a possible law upon
-the statute books. The congressman and assemblyman, acutely aware of
-the side on which their bread is buttered, agree to do “everything
-within their power” to put the measure through. Having the assistance
-of other congressmen and assemblymen, most of whom are from rural
-districts, their tasks assuredly are not difficult.
-
-Before the appearance of the automobile and the movie upon the national
-horizon, the small town was chiefly characterized by a distinctly rural
-and often melancholy peacefulness. A gentle air of depression hung
-over it, destructive of the ambitious spirit of youth and yet, by very
-reason of its existence, influencing this spirit to seek adventure and
-livelihood in wider fields. Amusements were few and far between. It was
-the day of the quilting party, of the Sunday promenade in the cemetery,
-of buggy-riding, of the ice-cream festival and the spelling bee. The
-bucolic note was ever present.
-
-Such an environment, while joyous to the small boy, became hopelessly
-dull and lifeless to the youth of vitality and imagination.
-Restlessness with it tormented him day and night until it grew into an
-obsession. Especially did he dislike Sunday, its funereal quiet with
-stores closed and other possible avenues of excitement and adventure
-forbidden. He began to cherish dreams of a life strange and teeming in
-distant cities.
-
-As he grew older and a measure of independence came to him he
-fled, provided there was no business established by a patient and
-hard-working ancestry which might lure him into remaining home. And
-even that did not always attract him. He was compelled to go by his
-very nature--a nature that desired a change from the pall of confining
-and circumscribed realism, the masks of respectability everywhere about
-him, the ridiculous display of caste, that saw a rainbow of fulfilled
-ideals over the hills, that demanded, in a word, romance.
-
-He, who did not feel this urge, departed because of lack of business
-opportunities. Occasionally he returned disillusioned and exhausted
-by the city and eager to re-establish himself in a line of work
-which promised spiritual contentment. But more often he stayed away,
-struggling with the crowd in the city, returning home only for short
-vacation periods for rest and reminiscence, to see his people and renew
-boyhood friendships. At such times he was likely to be impressed by
-the seeming prosperity of those boys he left behind, of the apparent
-enjoyment they found in the narrow environment. The thought may have
-occurred to him that the life of the small town had undergone a marked
-change, that it had adopted awkward, self-conscious urban airs.
-
-Suddenly he realizes that the automobile and the movie and to some
-extent the topical magazine are mainly responsible for the contrast.
-The motor-car has given the small town man an ever-increasing contact
-with the city, with life at formerly inaccessible resorts, with the
-country at large. And the movie and the magazine have brought him news
-and pictures of the outside world. He has patronized them and grown
-wiser.
-
-The basis, the underlying motive, of all cultural life in the small
-town is social. The intellectual never enters. It may try to get in but
-the doors are usually barred. There is practically no demand for the
-so-called intellectual magazines. Therefore, they are seldom placed on
-sale. But few daily papers outside of a radius of fifty miles are read.
-Plays which have exclusive appeal to the imagination or the intellect
-are presented to rows of empty seats. On the other hand, dramas teeming
-with primitive emotions and the familiar devices of hokum attract
-large audiences, provided the producing managers care to abide by the
-present excessive transportation rates. There is but little interest
-manifested in great world movements, such as the economic upheaval
-in Eastern Europe. Normalcy is, indeed, the watchword so far as
-intellectual development is concerned.
-
-It is in the social atmosphere that the American village has its real
-_raison d’être_. Therein do we meet the characteristics that have
-stamped themselves indelibly upon American life. The thousand and one
-secret societies that flourish here have particularly fertile soil in
-the small towns. Count all the loyal legionaries of all the chapters
-of all the secret societies between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans
-and you have a job suited only to the most irrepressible statistician.
-And the most loyal live in the small towns and villages of the United
-States. The choice is not limited. There are societies enough to suit
-all kinds of personalities and purses.
-
-The Knights of Pythias, the Knights of the Maccabees, the Odd Fellows,
-the Elks, the Eagles, the Loyal Order of the Moose, the Modern Woodmen,
-the Masons with their elaborate subdivisions of Shriners and Knights
-Templar--all count their membership throughout the nation. And the
-women, jealous of their husbands’ loyalty to various and complex forms
-of hocus-pocus, have organized auxiliary societies which, while not
-maintaining the secrecy that veils the fraternal orders, nevertheless
-build up a pretentious mystery intriguing to the male mind.
-
-No town is a self-respecting town unless it can boast half a dozen of
-these societies. They are the fabric of which the basis of the social
-structure is built. They are the very essence of America. They dot
-the national landscape. Every city, as if to prove conclusively its
-provincial nature, displays one or more temples devoted to the rituals
-of fraternal organization.
-
-Recently the South has revived the order of the Ku Klux Klan which
-flourished after the Civil War as a means of improving upon the
-orderly course of the law in dealing with the Negro race. Here is the
-apotheosis of the secret society, with its magnificent concealment of
-identity in a unique form of dress, its pretensions to 100 per cent.
-Americanism, its blatant proclamations of perpetuating the great and
-glorious traditions of the republic. The Negro has already organized to
-offset this propaganda. He knew that unless he could show secret orders
-of imposing strength he had no right even to the questionable heritage
-of habitation here. He would be outside the spirit of the times. He
-owed it to America, to “dear, crude America,” to organize lodges and
-secret societies; and he has done so.
-
-Undoubtedly the secret society plays a large part in the greatness of
-America. It has made the American class-conscious. It has made him
-recognize his own importance, his own right to the national distinction
-of good-fellowship. It provides him temporary surcease from domestic
-and business details, though there are countless numbers of men who
-join these orders to make business details, so far as they affect them,
-more significant.
-
-The amazing prevalence of conventions in America is an outgrowth of
-the secret societies. Life to many 100 per cent. Americans is just one
-lodge convention after another. Held in a different city each year,
-a distinction that is industriously competed for, the convention has
-become a fixed fact in American cultural life. Here is the one occasion
-of the year when the serious diddle-daddle is laid aside, and refuge
-and freedom are sought in such amusements as the convention city can
-offer. The secret order convention has inspired the assembly of all
-kinds and descriptions of conventions--trade conventions, religious
-conventions, educational conventions--until there is no city in the
-land boasting a first-class hotel that does not at one time or another
-during the year house delegates with elaborate insignia and badges.
-
-Probably the first parade held in America was that of a class-conscious
-fraternal organization eager to display its high standard of membership
-as well as a unique resplendence in elaborate regalia. The parade
-has continued an integral part of American life ever since. There
-is something of the vigour, the gusto and crudeness of America in a
-parade. It has come to represent life here in all its curious phases.
-
-The parade had become an event of colourful significance when P. T.
-Barnum organized the “greatest show on earth.” He decided to glorify
-it--in his dictionary “to glorify” really meant “to commercialize”--and
-once and for all time associate it chiefly with the circus. He
-succeeded, mainly because the residents of the villages were receptive
-to the idea. They saw a bizarre relief from the monotony of existence.
-The farmers rolled down from the hills in their lumber-wagons and
-found an inarticulate joy, storekeepers closed shop and experienced a
-tumultuous freedom from the petty bickerings of trade, men and women
-renewed their youth, children were suddenly thrown into a very ecstasy
-of delight. Thus, the circus parade became part and parcel of American
-civilization.
-
-And the precious and unique spirit created by the circus parade has
-been carried on in innumerable representations. To-day America shelters
-parades of every conceivable enterprise. Firemen have a day in every
-small town of the land on which they joyously pull flower-laden
-hose-carts for the entertainment of their fellow-citizens. Bearing such
-labels as Alerts, Rescues and Champion Hook and Ladder No. 1, they
-march proudly down Main Street--and the world goes hang. The volunteer
-firemen’s organization is an institution peculiar to the American small
-town,--an institution, too, that is not without class-consciousness.
-The rough-and-ready, comparatively illiterate young men form one group.
-The clerks, men engaged in the professions and social favourites
-compose another. This class is usually endowed by the wealthiest
-resident of the town, and its gratitude is expressed usually by naming
-the organization for the local Crœsus.
-
-The Elks parade, the Knights of Pythias parade, veterans of various
-wars parade, the Shriners and Knights Templar parade, prohibitionists
-parade, anti-prohibitionists parade, politicians parade, women parade,
-babies parade--everybody parades in America. Indeed, America can be
-divided into two classes, those who parade and those who watch the
-parade. The parade is indelibly identified with the small town. It is
-also inalienably associated with the large city, composed, as it is, of
-small-town men.
-
-There has lately taken place in the villages throughout the country a
-new movement that has civic pride as its basis. It is the formation
-of boosters’ clubs. Everybody is boosting his home town, at least
-publicly, though in the privacy of the front porch he may be justly
-depressed by its narrowness of opportunity, its subservience to social
-snobbery, its intellectual aridity. “Come to Our Town. Free Sites
-Furnished for Factories,” read the signs along the railroad tracks.
-“Boost Our Town” shout banners stretched across Main Street.
-
-Is there not something vitally poignant in such a proud provincialism?
-Is not America endeavouring to lift itself up by its boot-straps, to
-make life more comfortable and interesting? The groping, though crude,
-is commendable. It is badly directed because there is no inspiration
-back of it, because its organizers are only remotely aware how to make
-life here more interesting. However, there is the effort and it is
-welcome.
-
-Perhaps, when the towns--and for that matter the cities--realize that
-artistic sensitiveness is necessary to achieve comfort and interest we
-shall have boosters who are as enthusiastic on the front porch as in
-the board of trade meeting. When will our towns take artistic advantage
-of their river-fronts? The place for the most beautiful walk and
-drive and park presents usually unsightly piers, factories and sheds.
-Railroad tracks are often laid in the very heart of the town. For many
-years the leading hotels in practically all of our towns and cities
-were built in close proximity to the railroad station. In seeking to
-save a traveller time and convenience hotel proprietors subjected him
-to the bodily and mental discomforts that are related to the vicinity
-of a railroad station. Of late there is a marked tendency to erect
-hotels in quiet residential streets away from the noise and confusion
-of shops and railroad yards.
-
-The billboard menace, while diminishing, is still imposing. It is
-to the everlasting shame of the towns and cities that in an era of
-prohibitions no legislative effort has been made to stop the evil of
-desecrating our finest streets with advertising signs. Such commercial
-greed is inconceivable to the foreign visitor. It is one of his first
-impressions, though he charitably takes refuge in public in attributing
-it to the high tension of our existence.
-
-While the first symptoms of artistic appreciation are beginning to
-be faintly discerned upon the American horizon, the old and familiar
-phases of social life in the country are still being observed. The
-picnic of first settlers, the family reunion, the church supper, the
-sewing circle, the Browning society--all have national expression.
-The introduction of such modern industrial devices as the automobile
-has not affected them in the least. It can truly be asserted that the
-flivver has even added to their popularity. It has brought people of
-the country districts into closer contact than ever before. It has
-given a new prestige to the picnics and the reunions.
-
-What offers more rustic charm and simplicity than a family reunion?
-Practically every family in the farming districts that claims an
-ancestral residence in this country of more than fifty years holds
-one annually. It is attended by the great and the near-great from
-the cities, by the unaffected relatives back home. Babies jostle
-great-grandparents. Large and perspiring women bake for days the cakes
-and pies to be consumed. The men of the house are foolishly helping in
-making the rooms and the front lawn ready. At last the reunion is at
-hand--a sentimental debauch, a grand gorging. Everybody present feels
-the poignancy of age. But while the heart throbs the stomach is working
-overtime. The law of compensation is satisfied. “A good time was had
-by all” finds another expression in the weekly paper, and the reunion
-becomes a memory.
-
-At pioneer picnics one finds the family reunion on a larger scale.
-The whole township and county has for the time become related. It is
-the day of days, a sentimental tournament with handshaking as the
-most popular pastime. Organized in the rugged primitiveness of the
-early part of the 19th century by men who were first to settle in the
-vicinity, the pioneer picnic has been perpetuated, until to-day it
-is linked inalterably with America’s development. It has weathered
-the passing of the nation from an agricultural to a great industrial
-commonwealth. It has stood the gaff of time. And so it goes on for
-ever, a tradition of the small town and the farming community. While it
-has been divested almost entirely of its original purpose, it serves
-to bring the politicians in touch with the “peepul.” Grandiloquent
-promises are made for a day from the rostrum by a battalion of
-“Honourables”--and forgotten both by the “Honourables” and the public
-intent upon dancing and walking aimlessly about the grounds. The
-politicians smile as they continue to preserve their heroic pose,
-and the “peepul,” satisfied that all is well with the world, turn
-to various gambling devices that operate under the hypocritical
-eye of the sheriff and to the strange dances that have crept up
-from the jungle, for it is a day filled with the eternal spirit of
-youth. There is ingenuous appeal in the fair samples of the yokelry
-present. There is a quiet force beneath the bovine expressions of
-the boys. The soul of America--an America glad to be alive--is being
-wonderfully and pathetically manifested. No shams, no superficialities,
-no self-conscious sophistication are met. Merely the sturdy quality
-of the true American civilization, picturesque and haunting in its
-primitiveness.
-
-The county fair belongs in the same classification as the first-settler
-picnic. It is the annual relaxation by farmers and merchants from
-the tedious tasks of seeing and talking to the same people day after
-day. It offers them a measure of equality with the people in the city
-with their excursion boats, their baseball games, their park sports.
-And they make the most of their opportunity. They come to see and to
-be seen, to risk a few dollars on a horse race, to admire the free
-exhibitions in front of the side-shows, to watch with wide eyes the
-acrobatic stunts before the grandstand; to hear the “Poet and the
-Peasant” overture by the band, proud and serious in a stand of its own.
-
-Three or four days given to such pleasures naturally bestow a fine
-sense of illusion upon the visitors. They begin to believe that life
-has been specially ordered for them. They see through a glass lightly.
-They care not a whiff about the crowded excitements of the city. They
-have something infinitely more enjoyable than a professional baseball
-game or an excursion ride down the river. They have days of endless
-variety, of new adventures, of new thoughts. They, too, know that
-America cannot go wrong so long as they continue to find illusion. And
-they are correct. They may not suspect that American culture is crude.
-They do know, however, that it is dear. They should worry.
-
-Against such a background have the flavour and essence of American
-life been compounded. Their influence has extended in all directions,
-in all walks of industry. They have left their impress upon the
-character of the country, upon the mob and the individual. Sentimental
-attachment to the old ties, to boyhood ideals and traditions remains
-potent though a little concealed by the mask, be it affected or real,
-of sophistication. It is the voice of a new land, of a vigorous and
-curious nationalism that is being exerted. There obviously cannot
-be among such a naturally healthy people a supercilious contempt
-for sentiment. We may laugh a little haughtily at the amazing
-susceptibility of folks to the extravagant eloquence of itinerant
-evangelists. We may look on an “old home week” with a touch of urban
-disdain. We may listen to the band concert on a Saturday night in
-the Court House Square with a studied indifference. We may assume an
-attractive weariness in watching the promenaders on Main Street visit
-one ice-cream emporium after another. But deep down in our hearts is a
-feeling of invincible pride in the charming homeliness, the youthful
-vitality, the fine simplicity, yes, and the sweeping pathos of these
-aspects of small-town civilization.
-
- LOUIS RAYMOND REID
-
-
-
-
-HISTORY
-
- “Nescire autem quid antea quam natus sis
- acciderit id est semper puerum esse.”
-
- _Cicero._
-
- “History is bunk.”
-
- _Henry Ford_
-
-
-The burghers of Holland, being (like the Chinese) inclined towards
-a certain conservatism of both manners and habits, continued the
-tradition of the “front parlour”--the so-called “good-room”--well into
-the 20th century. Every farmer had his “front parlour” filled with
-stuffy air, stuffy furniture, and an engraving of the Eiffel Tower
-facing the lithographic representation of a lady in mid-seas clinging
-desperately to a somewhat ramshackle granite cross.
-
-But the custom was not restricted to the bucolic districts. His late
-Majesty, William III (whose funeral was the most useful event of
-his long life), had been married to an estimable lady of Victorian
-proclivities, who loved a “tidy” and an “antimacassar” better than
-life itself. An aristocracy, recruited from the descendants of East
-India Directors and West India sugar planters, followed the Royal
-Example. They owned modest homes which the more imaginative Latin
-would have called “Palazzi.” Most of the ground floor was taken up
-by an immense “front parlour.” For the greater part of the year it
-was kept under lock and key while the family clustered around the oil
-lamp of the “back parlour” where they lived in the happy cacophony of
-young daughters practising Czerny and young sons trying to master the
-intricacies of “paideuo--paideueis--paideuei.”
-
-As for the “front parlour” (which will form the main part of my text),
-it was opened once or twice a twelve-month for high family functions.
-A week beforehand, the cleaning woman (who received six cents per hour
-in those blessed Neanderthal days) would arrive with many mops and
-many brooms. The covers would be removed from the antique furniture,
-the frames of the pictures would be duly scrubbed. The carpets were
-submitted to a process which resembled indoor ploughing and for fully
-half an hour each afternoon the windows were opened to the extent of
-three or four inches.
-
-Then came the day of the reception--the birthday party of the
-grandfather--the betrothal of the young daughter. All the relatives
-were there in their best silks and satins. The guests were there in
-ditto. There was light and there was music. There was enough food and
-drink to keep an entire Chinese province from starving. Yet the party
-was a failure. The old family portraits--excellent pieces by Rembrandt
-or Terborch--looked down upon grandchildren whom they did not know.
-The grandchildren, on the other hand, were quite uncomfortable in the
-presence of this past glory. Sometimes, when the guests had expressed
-a sincere admiration of these works of art, they hired a hungry Ph.D.
-to write a critical essay upon their collection for the benefit of the
-“Studio” or the “Connoisseur.” Then they ordered a hundred copies,
-which they sent to their friends that they might admire (and perhaps
-envy) the ancient lineage of their neighbours. Thereafter, darkness and
-denim covers and oblivion.
-
-The history of our great Republic suffers from a fate similar to that
-of these heirlooms. It lives in the “front parlour” of the national
-consciousness. It is brought out upon a few grand occasions when it
-merely adds to the general discomfort of the assisting multitude.
-For the rest of the time it lies forgotten in the half dark of those
-Washington cellars which for lack of National Archives serve as a
-receptacle for the written record of our past.
-
-Our popular estimate of history and the value of a general historical
-background was defined a few years ago by Henry Ford. Mr. Ford, having
-made a dozen flivvers go where none went before and having gained
-untold wealth out of the motor-car industry, had been appointed an
-ex-officio and highly esteemed member of our national Council of Wise
-Men. His opinion was eagerly asked upon such subjects as child-raising,
-irrigation, the future of the human race, and the plausibility of
-the Einstein theory. During a now memorable trial the subject of
-history came up for discussion, and Mr. Ford (if we are to believe the
-newspaper accounts) delivered himself of the heartfelt sentiment that
-“history is bunk.” A grateful country sang Amen!
-
-When asked to elucidate this regrettable expression of dislike,
-the average citizen will fall back upon reminiscences of his early
-childhood and in terms both contrite and unflattering he will thereupon
-describe the hours of misery which he has spent reciting “dreary facts
-about useless kings,” winding up with a wholesale denunciation of
-American history as something dull beyond words.
-
-We cannot say much in favour of late Stuarts, Romanoffs, and Wasa’s,
-but we confess to a sincere affection for the history of these United
-States. It is true there are few women in it and no little children.
-This, to us, seems an advantage. “Famous women of history” usually
-meant “infamous trouble” for their much perturbed contemporaries. As
-for the ever-popular children motif, the little princes of the Tower
-would have given a great deal had they been allowed to whitewash part
-of Tom Sawyer’s famous fence, instead of waiting in silken splendour
-for Uncle Richard’s murder squad.
-
-No, the trouble is not with the history of this land of endless plains
-and a limitless sky. The difficulty lies with the reader. He is the
-victim of an unfortunate circumstance. The Muses did not reach these
-shores in the first-class cabin of the _Aquitania_. They were almost
-held up at Ellis Island and deported because they did not have the
-necessary fifty dollars. They were allowed to sneak in after they had
-given a solemn promise that they would try to become self-supporting
-and would turn their white hands to something useful.
-
-Clio, our revered mistress, has tried hard to live up to this vow.
-But she simply is not that sort of woman. An excellent counsellor,
-the most charming and trusted of friends, she has absolutely no gift
-for the practical sides of life. She was forced to open a little
-gift-shop where she sold flags and bunting and pictures of Pocahontas
-and Paul Revere. The venture was not a success. A few people took pity
-on her and tried to help. She was asked to recite poetry at patriotic
-gatherings and do selections from the “Founding Fathers.” She did not
-like this, being a person of shy and unassuming character. And so she
-is back in the little shop. When last I saw her, she was trying to
-learn the Russian alphabet. That is always a dangerous sign.
-
-And now, lest we continue to jumble our metaphors, let us state the
-case with no more prejudice than is strictly necessary.
-
-The earliest settlers of this country brought their history with them.
-Little Snorri, son of Gudrid and Thorfinn Karlsefni, playing amidst
-the vines of his father’s Labradorian garden, undoubtedly listened to
-the selfsame sagas that were being told at the court of good King Olaf
-Tryggvason in distant Norway. The children of San Domingo shared the
-glories of the Cid with the boys and girls who visited the schools of
-Moukkadir’s ancient capital. And the long-suffering infants of the
-early New England villages merely finished an historical education
-that had begun at Scrooby and had been continued at No. 21 of the
-_Kloksteeg_ in Leyden.
-
-During the 17th century, the greater part of the Atlantic coast became
-English. The Dutch and the French, the Spanish and Swedish traditions
-disappeared. The history of the British Kingdom became the universal
-history of the territory situated between the thirtieth and the
-fiftieth degree of latitude. Even the American Revolution was a quarrel
-between two conflicting versions of certain identical principles of
-history. Lord North and George Washington had learned their lessons
-from the same text-book. His Lordship, of course, never cut the pages
-that told of Runymede, and George undoubtedly covered the printed
-sheets which told of the fate of rebels with strange geometrical
-figures. But the historical inheritance of the men who fought on the
-left bank of the Fish Kill and those who surrendered on the right shore
-was a common one, and Burgoyne and Gates might have spent a profitable
-evening sharing a bottle of rum and complimenting each other upon the
-glorious deeds of their respective but identical ancestors.
-
-But during the ’twenties and ’thirties of the 19th century, the
-men of the “old régime”--the founder and fighters of the young
-Republic--descended into the grave and they took their traditions,
-their hopes, and their beliefs with them. The curtain rose upon a
-new time and upon a new people. The acquisition of the Northwestern
-Territory in 1787 and the purchase of Napoleon’s American real-estate
-in the year 1803 had changed a little commonwealth of struggling
-Colonies into a vast empire of endless plains and unlimited forests.
-It was necessary to populate this new land. The history of the Coast
-came to an end. The history of the Frontier began. English traditions
-rarely crossed the Alleghanies. The long struggle for representative
-government took on a new aspect in a land where no king had ever set
-foot and where man was sovereign by the good right of his own energy.
-
-It is true that the first fifty years of the last century witnessed the
-arrival upon these shores of millions of men and women from Europe who
-had enjoyed a grammar school education in the land of their birth. But
-dukes do not emigrate. Those sturdy fellows who risked the terrors and
-horrors of the Atlantic in the leaky tubs of the early forties came to
-the country of their future that they might forget the nightmare of the
-past. That nightmare included the biography of Might which was then
-the main feature of the European text-book. They threw it overboard as
-soon as they were well outside of the mouth of the Elbe or the Mersey.
-Settled upon the farms of Michigan and Wisconsin, they sometimes taught
-their children the songs of the old Fatherland but its history never.
-After two generations, this migration--the greatest of all “treks”
-since the 4th century--came to an end. Roads had been made, canals had
-been dug, railroads had been constructed, forests had been turned into
-pastures, the Indian was gone, the buffalo was gone, free land was
-gone, cities had been built, and the scene had been made ready for the
-final apotheosis of all human accomplishment--civilization.
-
-The schoolmaster has ever followed in the wake of the full dinner-pail.
-He now made his appearance and began to teach. Considering the
-circumstances he did remarkably well. But he too worked under a
-disadvantage. He was obliged to go to New England for his learning
-and for his text-books. And the historian of the Boston school,
-while industrious and patient, was not entirely a fair witness. The
-recollection of British red-coats drilling on the Common was still
-fresh in the minds of many good citizens. The wickedness of George III
-was more than a myth to those good men and women whose own fathers had
-watched Major Pitcairn as he marched forth to arrest Adams and Hancock.
-They sincerely hated their former rulers, while they could not deny
-their love for the old mother country. Hence there arose a conflict of
-grave consequence. With one hand the New England chronicler twisted the
-tail of the British lion. With the other he fed the creature little
-bits of sugar.
-
-Again the scene changed. The little red school-house had marched across
-the plains. It had followed the pioneer through the passes of the
-Rocky Mountains. It had reached the shores of the Pacific Ocean. The
-time of hacking and building and frying with lard came to a definite
-end. The little red school-house gave way for the academy of learning.
-College and University arose wherever a thousand people happened to be
-together. History became a part of the curriculum. The schoolmaster,
-jack of all learned trades and master of many practical pursuits,
-became extinct. The professional historian made his appearance. And
-thereby hangs a sad tale which takes us to the barren banks of the
-Spree.
-
-Ever since the Thirty Years War, Germany had been the battlefield of
-Europe. The ambitions of the Napoleon who was four feet tall and smooth
-shaven and the prospective ambitions of the Napoleon who was five feet
-tall and who waxed his moustachios, had given and were actually giving
-that country very little rest. The intelligentsia of the defunct Holy
-Roman Empire saw but a single road which could lead to salvation. The
-old German State must be re-established and the kings of Prussia must
-become heirs to the traditions of Charlemagne. To prove this point
-it was necessary that the obedient subjects of half a hundred little
-potentates be filled with certain definite historical notions about
-the glorious past of Heinrich the Fat and Konrad the Lean. The patient
-historical camels of the Teutonic universities were driven into the
-heart of _Historia Deserta_ and brought back those stupendous bricks
-of learning out of which the rulers of the land could build their
-monuments to the glorious memory of the Ancestors.
-
-Whatever their faults and however misguided the ambition of these
-faithful beasts of burden, they knew how to work. The whole world
-looked on with admiration. Here, at last, in this country of scientific
-precision, history had been elevated to the rank of a “_Wissenschaft_.”
-Carrying high their banners, “For God, for Country, _und wie es
-eigentlich dagewesen_,” all good historians went upon a crusade to save
-the Holy Land of the Past from the Ignorance of the Present.
-
-That was in the blessed days when a first-class passage to Hamburg and
-Bremen cost forty-six dollars and seventy-five cents. Henry Adams and
-John Lothrop Motley were among the first of the pilgrims. They drank a
-good deal of beer, listened to many excellent concerts, and assisted,
-“privatissime and gratis,” at the colloquia docta of many highly
-learned _Geheimräte_, and departed before they had suffered serious
-damage. Others did not fare as well. Three--four--five years they spent
-in the company of the Carolingians and the Hohenstaufens. After they
-had soaked themselves sufficiently in Ploetz and Bernheim to survive
-the _Examen Rigorosum_ of the _Hochgelehrte Facultät_, they returned to
-their native shore to spread the gospel of true _Wissenschaftlichkeit_.
-
-There was nothing typically American in this. It happened to the
-students of every country of the globe.
-
-Of course, in making this point, we feel that we expose ourselves to
-the accusation of a slight exaggeration. “How now,” the industrious
-reader exclaims, “would you advocate a return to the uncritical days
-of the Middle Ages?” To which we answer, “By no means.” But history,
-like cooking or fiddling, is primarily an art. It embellishes life. It
-broadens our tolerance. It makes us patient of bores and fools. It is
-without the slightest utilitarian value. A handbook of chemistry or
-higher mathematics has a right to be dull. A history, never. And the
-professional product of the Teutonic school resembled those later-day
-divines who tried to console the dying by a recital of the Hebrew verb
-_abhar_.
-
-This system of preaching the gospel of the past filled the pulpits but
-it emptied the pews. The congregation went elsewhere for its historical
-enlightenment. Those who were seriously interested turned to the works
-of a few laymen (hardware manufacturers, diplomats, coal-dealers,
-engineers) who devoted their leisure hours to the writing of history,
-or imported the necessary intellectual pabulum from abroad. Others took
-to the movies and since those temples of democratic delight do not open
-before the hour of noon, they spent the early morning perusing the
-endless volumes of reminiscences, memoirs, intimate biographies, and
-recollections which flood the land with the energy of an intellectual
-_cloaca maxima_.
-
-But all this, let us state it once more, did not matter very much.
-When all is peace and happiness--when the hospitals are empty of
-patients--when the weather is fine and people are dying at the usual
-rate--it matters little whether the world at large takes a deep
-interest in the work of the Board of Health. The public knows that
-somewhere, somehow, someway, there exists a Board of Health composed
-of highly trained medical experts. They also appreciate from past
-experiences that these watchful gentlemen “know their job” and that no
-ordinary microbe can hope to move from Warsaw to Chicago without prompt
-interference on the part of the delousing squad. But when an epidemic
-threatens the safety of the community, then the public hastens to the
-nearest telephone booth--calls up the Health Commissioners and follows
-their instructions with implicit faith. It demands that these public
-servants shall spend the days of undisturbed health to prepare for the
-hour of sickness when there is no time for meditation and experiment.
-
-The public at large had a right to expect a similar service from its
-historians. But unfortunately, when the crisis came, the scientific
-historical machine collapsed completely.
-
-In Germany, the home country of the system of _historische
-Wissenschaftlichkeit_, the historian became the barker outside the
-Hohenzollern main tent, shouting himself hoarse for the benefit of
-half-hearted fellow citizens and hostile neutrals, extolling the
-ancestral Teutonic virtues until the whole world turned away in
-disgust. In France, they arrange those things better. Even the most
-unhealthy mess of nationalistic scraps can be turned into a palatable
-dish by a competent cook of the Parisian school. In England, the
-historian turned propagandist, and for three years, the surprised
-citizens of Copenhagen, Bern, and Madrid found their mail boxes
-cluttered with mysterious bundles of state documents duly stamped,
-beautifully illustrated, and presented (as the enclosed card showed)
-with the compliments of Professor So-and-so of Such-and-such College,
-Oxford, England. In Russia, a far-seeing government had taken its
-measures many years before. Those historians who had refused to be used
-as _cheval de bataille_ for the glory of the house of Romanoff, were
-either botanising along the banks of the Lena or had long since found
-a refuge in the universities of Sofia and Geneva. I do not know what
-happened in Japan, but I have a suspicion that it was the same thing,
-the entire world over.
-
-The historian turned apologist. He was as useful as a doctor who would
-show a partiality to the native streptococcus on the grounds of loyalty
-to the land of his birth.
-
-What happened on this side of the ocean after the first three years of
-“peace without victory” had given place to “force to the uttermost” is
-too well known to demand repetition. Long before the first American
-destroyer reached Plymouth, the staunch old vessel of history had been
-_spurlos versenkt_ in the _mare clausum_ of the Western hemisphere.
-Text-books were recalled, rehashed, and revamped to suit the needs of
-the hour. Long and most deservedly forgotten treatises were called
-back to life and with the help of publishers’ blurbs and reviews by
-members of the self-appointed guardians of national righteousness
-they were sent forth to preach the gospel of domestic virtue. Strange
-encyclopædias of current information were concocted by volunteers from
-eager faculties. The public mind was a blank. For a hundred years
-the little children had learned to dislike history and grown-ups had
-revaluated this indifference into actual hate. This situation had been
-created to maintain on high the principles of scientific historical
-investigation. Let popular interest perish as long as the Truth stand
-firm. But in the hour of need, the guardians of the Truth turned
-gendarmes, the doors of Clio’s temple were closed, and the public
-was invited to watch the continuation of the performance in the next
-moving-picture house. At Versailles the curtain went down upon the
-ghastly performance.
-
-After the first outbreak of applause the enthusiasm waned. Who had
-been responsible for this terrible tragedy? The supposed authors were
-branded as enemies of mankind. Nations tottered and ancient Empires
-crumbled to dust and were hastily carried to the nearest historical
-scrapheap. The ambitious monarch, who for thirty years had masqueraded
-as a second Charlemagne, made his exit amidst properties borrowed from
-the late King Louis Philippe. The gay young leader of the Death Head
-Hussars developed into the amateur bicycle-repairer of the island of
-Wieringen. International reputations retailed at a price which could
-only be expressed in Soviet rubles and Polish marks and no takers. The
-saviour of the world became the invalid of the White House. But not a
-word was said about those inconspicuous authors of very conspicuous
-historical works who had been the henchmen of the _Oberste_ and
-_Unterste Kriegsherren_. They went back to the archives to prepare the
-necessary post-mortem statements. These are now being published at a
-price which fortunately keeps them well out of reach of the former
-soldiers.
-
-In certain dramas and comedies of an older day it was customary to
-interrupt the action while the Chorus of moralising Villagers reviewed
-what had gone before and drew the necessary conclusions. It is time for
-the “goat-singers” to make their appearance.
-
-“Are you, O Author,” so they speak, “quite fair when you pronounce
-these bitter words? Are we not all human--too human? Is it reasonable
-to demand of our historians that they shall possess such qualities of
-detached judgment as have not been seen on this earth since the last
-of the Mighty Gods departed from High Olympus? Has a historian no
-heart? Do you expect him to stand by and discuss the virtues of vague
-political questions, when all the world is doing its bit--while his
-children are risking their lives for the safety of the common land?”
-
-And when we are approached in this way, we find it difficult to answer
-“no.” For we too are an animated compound of prejudice and unreasonable
-preferences and even more unreasoning dislikes, and we do not like to
-assume the rôle of both judge and jury.
-
-The evidence, however, gives us no chance to decide otherwise. What
-was done in the heat of battle--what was done under the stress of
-great and sincere emotions--what was written in the agony of a thousand
-fears--all that will be forgotten within a few years. But enough will
-remain to convince our grandchildren that the historian was among those
-most guilty of creating that “state of mind” without which modern
-warfare would be an impossibility.
-
-Here the music of the flutes grows silent. The Chorus steps back
-and the main action of our little play continues. The time is “the
-present” and the problem is “the future.” The children who are now in
-the second grade will be called upon to bear the burden of a very long
-period of reconstruction. America, their home, has been compared to an
-exceedingly powerful and influential woman who is not very popular but
-who must not be offended on account of her eminent social position. The
-folk who live along our international Main Street are not very well
-disposed towards a neighbour who holds all the mortgages and lives in
-the only house that has managed to survive the recent catastrophe. It
-will not be an easy thing to maintain the peace in the neurasthenic
-community of the great post-war period. It has been suggested that the
-Ten Commandments, when rightly applied, may help us through the coming
-difficulties. We beg to suggest that a thorough knowledge of the past
-will prove to be quite as useful as the Decalogue. We do not make this
-statement hastily. Furthermore, we qualify it by the observation that
-both History and the Decalogue will be only two of a great many other
-remedies that will have to be applied if the world is to be set free
-from its present nightmare of poison gas and high-velocity shells. But
-we insist that History be included. And we do so upon the statement of
-a learned and famous colleague who passed through a most disastrous
-war and yet managed to keep a cool head. We mean Thucydides. In his
-foreword to the History of the Peloponnesian War he wrote: “The absence
-of romance in my history will, I fear, detract somewhat from its
-interest; but if it be judged by those inquirers who desire an exact
-knowledge of the past as an aid to the interpretation of the future,
-which in the course of human things, must resemble, if it does not
-reflect it, I shall be content.”
-
-When we measure out achievements in the light of this ancient Greek
-ideal, we have accomplished very little indeed. An enormous amount of
-work has been done and much of it is excellent. The great wilderness
-of the past has been explored with diligent care and the material
-lies, carefully classified, in those literary museums which we call
-libraries. But the public refuses to go in. No one has ever been able
-to convince the man in the street that time employed upon historical
-reading is not merely time wasted. He carries with him certain hazy
-notions about a few names, Cæsar and Joan of Arc (since the war) and
-Magna Charta and George Washington and Abraham Lincoln. He remembers
-that Paul Revere took a ride, but whither and for what purpose he
-neither knows nor cares to investigate. The historical tie which
-binds him to the past and which alone can make him understand his own
-position in relation to the future, is non-existent. Upon special
-occasions the multitude is given the benefit of a grand historical
-pyrotechnic display, paid for by the local Chamber of Commerce, and a
-few disjointed facts flash by amidst the fine roar of rockets and the
-blaring of a brass band. But this sort of historical evangelising has
-as little value as the slapstick vespers which delight the congregation
-of Billy Sunday’s circus tent.
-
-We live in an age of patent medicines. The short-cut to success is the
-modern _pons asinorum_ which leads to happiness. And remedies which
-are “guaranteed to cure” are advertised down the highways and byways
-of our economic and social world. But no such cure exists for the sad
-neglect of an historical background. History can never be detached from
-life. It will continue to reflect the current tendencies of our modern
-world until that happy day when we shall discontinue the pursuit of a
-non-essential greatness and devote our energies towards the acquisition
-of those qualities of the spirit without which human existence (at its
-best) resembles the proverbial dog-kennel.
-
-For the coming of that day we must be as patient as Nature.
-
- HENDRIK WILLEM VAN LOON
-
-
-
-
-SEX
-
- “The sin I impute to each frustrate ghost
- Is the unlit lamp and the ungirt loin.”
-
-
-In one of the popular plays of last season, a melodrama toned up with
-snatches of satire and farce, the wife was portrayed as a beaten dog
-heeling her master after he has crushed her down across the table the
-better to rowel off her nose. Not until the would-be mutilator was
-finally disposed of by an untrammelled Mexican did the woman feel free
-to go to her lover, and even then she took little or no satisfaction in
-the venture. As for the lover, he had to be robbed of his pistol by the
-husband and shot at, and then--the husband out of the way--threatened
-by the bandit with the loss of the woman, before he felt free to take
-her. The two New Englanders were made happy in spite of themselves--and
-in accordance with the traditions or conventions of the audience.
-
-To leave a husband for a lover is in theory un-American, unless the
-husband gives a legal ground for divorce and the divorce is secured. In
-several States cruelty is a legal ground, and so the conjugal fidelity
-of the stage-heroine was perhaps overdrawn. But the feeling that she
-was presumed to share with the audience--that the initiative towards
-freedom in love should not come from her--is a characteristic trait
-of American morality. If your husband is unrestrainedly a brute or a
-villain, you may leave him, in fact it behooves you to leave him, but
-if he is merely a bore, or perhaps a man you like well enough as a
-friend, but only as a friend, you must stay on with him in an intimacy
-where boredom readily becomes aversion and mere friendliness, disgust.
-The fact that you do not love a person is no reason at all, in American
-opinion, for not living as if you did.
-
-This opinion or attitude is explicit in American divorce law. In
-none of the States is divorce granted either by mutual consent or at
-the desire, the overt desire, of either person. In fact collusion,
-as mutual consent is called, is accounted a reason against granting
-divorce, and desire for divorce on the part of one remains ineffectual
-until the other has been forced into entertaining it. He or she must
-be given due ground. Disinclination to intimacy is not of itself due
-ground. You must express disinclination in a way so disagreeable that
-he or she will want to get rid of you. The law sets a premium on being
-hateful, declares indeed that in this case it is an indispensable
-condition to not being miserable.
-
-The grotesqueness, from either a social or psychological point of view,
-would be too obvious to emphasize, if the implications of this attitude
-towards divorce were not so significant of American attitudes at large
-towards sex--attitudes of repression or deception. Of deception or
-camouflage towards divorce there is one other conspicuous point I
-should like to note. “Strictness of divorce” is commonly argued to be
-protection of marriage for the sake of children, since brittle marriage
-is destructive of the family life. It is safe to say that from no
-contemporary discussion of divorce will this argument be omitted; and
-it is equally safe to say that the rejoinder that divorce laws should
-therefore discriminate between parents and non-parents will, by the
-opponents of divorce, pass unheeded. That this distinction should be so
-persistently ignored is accountable only, it seems to me, on the ground
-of emotional self-deception. What else but a covert emotional attitude
-could make tenable the irrationality, and what else is that attitude
-but that joy in mating is of negligible value, that sex emotion, if not
-a necessary evil, is at any rate a negligible good, deserving merely
-of what surplus of attention may be available from the real business
-of life? Indifference towards sex emotion is masked by concern for
-offspring.
-
-In France, we may note, this confusion between parenthood and mating
-does not exist. The parental relation in both law and custom is highly
-regulated, much more regulated than among English-speaking peoples,
-but it is unlikely that it would be argued in France that mating and
-parenthood were inseparable concepts. Unlikely, because the French
-attitude towards sex differs so radically from the Anglo-Saxon.
-
-To the French, as to many of the Continental peoples of Europe, sexual
-interest is normally to be kept stimulated, neither covered over nor
-suppressed. And in this case stimulation is seen to depend largely
-upon the factor of interrelation. Sex-facts are to be related to other
-facts of life, not rigidly or _a priori_, as in the American view that
-mating is inseparable from parenthood, but fluently and realistically,
-as life itself moves and finds expression. And sex-facts in European
-opinion are to be interrelated in a philosophy of sex. Failure to make
-these interrelations, together with the attitude of suppression, seem
-to me to be the outstanding aspects of the characteristically American
-attitude towards sex.
-
-There is no need in this post-Freudian day of dwelling upon the effects
-of suppression of sex instinct or impulse. Suppression leads, we are
-told, either to sublimation, in which case it is diversion, rather
-than suppression, or it leads to perversion or disease. Unfortunately
-sex-pathology in the United States has been given little or no study,
-statistically. We have no statistical data of health or disease in
-relation to the expression or suppression of sex instinct, and no data
-on the extent or the effects of homosexuality or of the direction
-of the sex impulses towards self. Opinion therefore becomes merely
-a matter of personal observation and conclusion, observation of
-individuals or small groups. My own conclusion or guess in regard
-to perversion in this country is that part of the commonly observed
-spirit of isolation or antagonism between the sexes, and part of
-the spirit of competition between individuals, are associated with
-homosexual or masturbatory tendencies which get expressed in varying
-degrees according to varying circumstances. More particularly the
-lack of warmth in personal intercourse which makes alike for American
-bad manners and, in the more intellectual circles, for cheerlessness
-and aridity is due, I think, to failure of one kind or another in sex
-relations. I mean cultural failure, not merely individual failure.
-
-May not some such theory of sex failure account also for that herd
-sense which is so familiar a part of Americanism, and which is not
-incompatible with the type of self-seeking or pseudo-individualism
-of which American individualism appears to be an expression? It is a
-tenable hypothesis that sexually isolated individuals become dependent
-upon the group for stimulus, whether of emotion or will, whereas
-persons in normal sex relations, although they may contribute to the
-group or co-operate with it, remain comparatively independent of it,
-finding stimulus in sex and its sublimations.
-
-If this theory is valid, we may expect to find a comparatively large
-number of sex failures in those circles which are characterized by
-what Everett Dean Martin has recently called crowd behaviour, reform
-circles intolerant of other mindedness and obsessed by belief in the
-paramountcy of their own dogma.
-
- “_Leur printemps sans jeunesse exige des folies,
- Leur sang brûlant leur dicte des propos amers,
- L’émeute est un remède à la mélancolie,
- Et nous aurions la paix si leurs yeux étaient clairs,
- Ou leur femme jolie._”
-
-Were a set of tests for sex failure or sex fulfilment applied to the
-more outstanding propagandists of this country, likewise, of course,
-for comparative purposes, to an adequate number of non-propagandists,
-the results might be of considerable significance. I recommend the
-undertaking to the National Research Council in co-operation with some
-organization for social hygiene.
-
-Meanwhile in what measure propagandism of various sorts may be a
-perversion of sex or a sublimation remains speculative; and in applying
-theory one should be thoroughly aware that from the day of Sappho and
-before to the day of Elizabeth Blackwell and after, even to the Russian
-Revolution, sex failure of one kind or another, the kind considered
-at the time most despicable, has commonly been imputed to persons or
-groups disapproved of on other grounds or reprobated. Some sublimation
-of sex in the United States there must be, of course, not only, in
-propaganda movements, but in other expressions of American culture, in
-American art and letters and science, in philanthropy, in politics,
-finance, and business. By and large, however, in all these cultural
-expressions does one see any conspicuous measure of sex sublimation? Is
-not the concern practical rather than devotional, a matter of getting
-rather than giving, of self-advancement or family support rather than
-of interest in ideas and their forms or in the values of taste or of
-faith?
-
-Interest in impersonal subjects in general is not an American trait.
-Personal concrete terms are the terms commonly used. Americans, as
-we say, are not given to abstract thought or philosophy. They are
-interested in facts as facts, not as related to other facts. How expect
-of Americans, therefore, that kind of curiosity about sex which leads
-to a philosophy of sex? Sex curiosity in American life does not lead
-past curiosity about isolated facts, and that means that it leads
-not to philosophy but to gossip and pruriency. Not long ago I was
-talking with a woman about a common acquaintance to whom I referred
-as singularly free through sophistication and circumstance to please
-any man she liked. “What do you mean? Have you heard any scandal about
-her?” snapped out my companion, not at all interested in the general
-reflection, but avid of information about illicit affairs.
-
-Facts which are not held together through theory call for labels.
-People who do not think in terms of relations are likely to be
-insistent upon names. Labels or names for sex disposition or acts
-are, as a matter of fact, very definite in the American vernacular.
-“Engaged,” “attentive,” “devoted,” “a married man,” “a man of family,”
-“a grass widow,” “a _good_ woman,” “a _bad_ woman”--there is no end
-to such tags. Again, intimacy between a man and a woman is referred
-definitely to the act of consummation, a sex relation is strictly
-classified according to whether or not it is physically consummated.
-In this attitude towards sex boundaries or captions may lie the
-explanation, incidentally, of what is a constant puzzle to the European
-visitor--the freedom of social intercourse allowed to the youth of
-opposite sexes. Since consummation only constitutes sexual intimacy in
-American opinion, and since consummation, it is assumed, is utterly
-out of the question, why raise barriers between boys and girls? The
-assumption that consummation is out of the question is, by and large,
-correct, which is still another puzzle. To this some clue may be found,
-I think, in our concluding discussion.
-
-Fondness for captions and for the sort of classification that is so
-likely to paralyze perception of the finer distinctions and to arrest
-thought, are natural enough in a child, learning language and so
-pressed upon by the multiplicity of phenomena that in self-protection
-he must make rough classifications and remain unaware of much. The
-old who are dying to life are also exclusive, and they, too, cling
-to formulas. Is American culture in the matter of sex childish and
-immature, as Americans imply when they refer to their “young country,”
-or is the culture representative of the aged; are Americans born old,
-as now and again a European critic asserts?
-
-Such terms of age are figurative, of course, unless we take them in
-a historical sense, meaning either that a new culture was developed
-in this country--or rather that there were fresh developments of an
-old culture--or that an old culture was introduced and maintained
-without significant change. This is not the place to discuss the
-cultural aspects of Colonial America, but it is important to bear in
-mind in any discussion of merely contemporaneous sex attitudes in this
-country the contributions of European, and more particularly, English
-morality. Without recalling the traditions of early Christianity or
-of English Puritanism, those attitudes of ignoring or suppressing
-the satisfactions of the impulses of sex to which we have referred
-were indeed incomprehensible and bewildering--mere psychological
-interpretation seems inadequate. But viewed as consequences of the
-sense of sin in connection with sex, which was a legacy from Paul
-and his successors in English Puritanism, interpretation is less
-difficult, and the American attitude toward sex becomes comparatively
-intelligible--the attitude seen in divorce and in the melodramas, and
-in the standardizing of sex relations, in accordance with that most
-significant of Pauline dogmas that marriage is the lesser of two evils,
-that it is better to marry than to burn. Without the key of Paul and of
-the obscenities of the early Christian Fathers how explain the recent
-legislation in Virginia making it a crime to pay attention to a married
-man or woman, or such a sermon as was recently preached somewhere
-in the Middle West urging a crusade against the practice of taking
-another man’s wife in to dinner or dancing round dances? “At a dinner
-of friends let every man take his own wife on his arm and walk in to
-their seats side by side at the dinner table to the inspiring music
-of ‘Onward Christian Soldiers,’” urged the minister. As to dancing,
-whenever a man is seen to put his arm around a woman who is not his
-wife, the band should cease playing. I do not quote the words of the
-latter injunction, as they are rather too indecent.
-
-Turning from the historical back to the psychological point of view--in
-one of those circles of cause and effect that are composed now of
-cultural inheritance or tradition, now of psychological trend or
-disposition--the American case of sex, whether a case of adolescence or
-of senescence, may be said to present symptoms of arrested development.
-Together with the non-realism of childish or senile formula, there is
-here the kind of emotionalism which checks emotional vitality and which
-is fed upon the sense of crisis; we may call it crisis-emotion. Life at
-large, the sex life in particular, is presented as a series of crises
-preceded and followed by a static condition, and in these conventional
-times of crisis only, the times when the labels are being attached,
-are the emotions aroused. In the intervals, in the stretches between
-betrothal, marriage, birth, christening, or divorce, there is little or
-no sense of change--none of the emotions that correspond to changing
-relations and are expressions of personal adjustment. The emotions of
-crisis are statutory, pre-determined, conventionalized; neither for
-oneself nor for others do they make any demands upon imagination, or
-insight, or spiritual concern.
-
-Here in this psychology of crisis is the clue--before mentioned--to
-an understanding of the freedom allowed our youth, of “bundling,”
-as the Colonials termed it, or, in current phrase, “petting.” In
-general, “keeping company” is accounted one kind of a relationship,
-marriage, another--one characterized by courtship without consummation,
-the other by consummation without courtship. Between the two kinds
-of relationship there is no transition, it is assumed, except by
-convention or ritual. So inrooted is this social attitude that the
-young cannot escape adopting it, at least the very young to whom, at
-any rate, uncritical conservatism seems to be natural. Indeed the taboo
-on unritualized consummation partakes enough of the absolutism of the
-taboo, shall we say, on incest, to preclude any risk of individual
-youthful experimentation or venture across the boundary lines set by
-the Elders.
-
-Given these boundary lines, given a psychology of crisis, all too
-readily the sex relations, in marriage or out, become stale, flat,
-colourless, or of the nature of debauch, which is only another
-aspect of crisis-psychology. Sex relations perforce become limited
-to two conventions, marriage and prostitution. Prostitute or wife,
-the conjugal or the disorderly house, these are the alternatives. In
-formulaic crisis-psychology there may be no other station of emotional
-experiment or range of emotional expression.
-
-That a man should “sow his wild oats” before marriage, and after
-marriage “settle down,” is becoming throughout the country a somewhat
-archaic formula, at least in so far as wild oats means exposure to
-venereal disease; but there has been no change, so far as I am aware,
-in the attitude towards the second part of the formula on settling
-down--in conjugal segregation. The married are as obtrusively married
-as ever, and their attitude towards persons of the opposite sex as
-dull and forbidding. Few “happily married” women but refer incessantly
-in their conversation to their husband’s opinion or stand; and what
-devoted husband will fail to mention his wife in one way or another
-as a notice of his immunity against the appeal of sex in any degree
-by any other woman? Shortly after the war, a certain American woman
-of my acquaintance who was travelling in France found herself without
-money and in danger of being put off her train before reaching Paris
-and her banker’s. She found a fellow-countryman and told him her
-predicament. He was quite willing to pay her fare; she was an American
-and a woman, but she was informed firmly and repeatedly that her knight
-was a married man, and besides, he was travelling with his business
-partner. Soon after I heard this anecdote I happened to repeat it to a
-Chicago lawyer who promptly joined in the laugh over the American man’s
-timidity. “Still, a married man travelling can’t be too prudent,” he
-finished off.
-
-Circumspection towards women, in travel or elsewhere, or, better still,
-indifference towards women, is the standardized attitude of American
-husbands. In marriage, too, a relationship of status rather than of
-attention to the fluctuations of personality, indifference to psychical
-experience, is a not uncommon marital trait. American men in general,
-as Europeans have noted, are peculiarly indifferent to the psychology
-of women. They are also peculiarly sentimental about women, a trait
-quite consistent with indifference or ignorance, but one which, in view
-of American prostitution and the persistent exclusion of many women
-from equal opportunities for education and for life, gives an ugly look
-of hypocrisy to the trumpeters of American chivalry.
-
-And yet subject the American concept of chivalry to a little scrutiny
-and the taunt, at least of hypocrisy, will miss the mark. For the
-concept is, both actually and historically, a part of the already
-noted classification of women as more or less sequestered, on the one
-hand, and unsequestered or loose on the other, as inexperienced and
-over-experienced or, more accurately, partially over-experienced. In
-this classification the claims of both classes of women are settled by
-men on an economic basis, with a few sentimentalities about womanhood,
-pure or impure, thrown in for good measure. The personality of the
-woman a man feels that he is supporting, whether as wife or prostitute,
-may, theoretically, be disregarded and, along with her personality, her
-capacity for sexual response. Whether as a creature of sin or as an
-object of chivalry, a woman becomes a depersonalized, and, sexually, an
-unresponsive being.
-
-People sometimes forget this when they discuss the relations between
-men and women in this country, and especially the sexlessness or
-coldness of American women. They forget it in arguing against the
-feminizing of education, the theatre, literature, etc., meaning,
-not that women run the schools or are market for the arts, but that
-immature, sexless women are in these ways too much to the fore. In
-part at least it is thanks to chivalry or to her “good and considerate
-husband” that the American woman, the non-wage earner at least, does
-not grow up, and that it is possible for so many women to marry without
-having any but the social consequences of marriage in mind. One
-surmises that there are numbers, very large numbers, of American women,
-married as well as unmarried, who have felt either no stirring of sex
-at all or at most only the generalized sex stir of pre-adolescence.
-What proportion of women marry “for a home” or to escape from a home,
-or a job, and what proportion marry for love? After marriage, with the
-advent of children, what of these proportions?
-
-Marriage for a home or for the sake of children, chivalry,
-“consideration” for the wife, all these attitudes are matters of
-status, not of personality, and to personality, not to status, love
-must look, since love is an art, not a formula. It often seems that
-in American culture, whether in marriage or out, little or no place
-is open to this patient, ardent, and discerning art, and that lovers
-are invariably put to flight. Even if they make good their escape,
-their adventure is without social significance, since it is perforce
-surreptitious. Only when adventurers and artists in love are tolerated
-enough to be able to come out from under cover, and to be at least
-allowed to live, if only as variants from the commonplace, may they
-contribute of their spirit or art to the general culture.
-
- ELSIE CLEWS PARSONS
-
-
-
-
-THE FAMILY
-
-
-The American family is the scapegoat of the nations. Foreign critics
-visit us and report that children are forward and incorrigible, that
-wives are pampered and extravagant, and that husbands are henpecked
-and cultureless. Nor is this the worst. It only skims the surface by
-comparison with the strictures of home-grown criticism. Our domestic
-arbiters of every school have a deeper fault to find: they see the
-family as a crumbling institution, a swiftly falling bulwark. Catholic
-pulpits call upon St. Joseph to save the ruins and Puritan moralists
-invoke Will Carlton, believing in common with most of our public
-guardians that only saints and sentimentalism can help in such a
-crisis. Meanwhile the American family shows the usual tenacity of form,
-beneath much superficial change, uniting in various disguises the most
-ancient and the newest modes of living. In American family life, if
-anywhere, the Neolithic meets the modern and one needs to be very rash
-or very wise to undertake the nice job of finding out which is which.
-But one at least refuses to defeat one’s normal curiosity by joining
-in the game of blind-man’s buff, by means of which public opinion
-about the family secures a maximum of activity along with a minimum of
-knowledge.
-
-A little science would be of great help. But popular opinion does not
-encourage scientific probing of the family. In this field, not honesty
-but evasion is held to be the best policy. Rather than venture where
-taboo is so rife and the material so sensitive, American science would
-much rather promote domestic dyes and seedless oranges. It is true
-that we have the Federal Census with its valuable though restrained
-statistics. But even the census has always taken less interest in
-family status and family composition, within the population, than in
-the classification of property and occupation and the fascinating
-game of “watching Tulsa grow.” In no country is the collection of
-vital statistics so neglected and sporadic and the total yield of
-grab-bag facts so unamenable to correlation. Through the persistent
-effort of the Children’s Bureau, this situation has been considerably
-improved during the past ten years; so that now there exist the
-so-called “registration areas” where births, marriages, and deaths
-are actually recorded. For the country as a whole, these vital facts
-still go unregistered. The prevailing sketchiness in the matter of
-vital statistics is in distinct contrast to the energy and thoroughness
-with which American political machinery manages to keep track of the
-individual who has passed the age of twenty-one.
-
-One of the tendencies, statistically verified, of the native family
-is its reduction in size. In the first place the circumference of the
-family circle has grown definitely smaller through the loss of those
-adventitious members, the maiden aunt and the faithful servant. The
-average number of adult females in the typical household is nowadays
-just one. The odd women are out in the world on their own; they no
-longer live “under the roofs” of their brothers-in-law. Miss Lulu
-Bett is almost an anachronism in 1920. The faithful servant has
-been replaced by the faithless one, who never by any chance remains
-long enough to become a familial appendage, or else she has not
-been replaced at all. Even “Grandma” has begun to manifest symptoms
-of preferring to be on her own. Thus the glory of the patriarchal
-household has visibly departed, leaving only the biological minimum in
-its stead.
-
-In the dwindling of this ultimate group lies the crux of the matter.
-The American grows less and less prolific, and panicky theorists can
-already foresee a possible day when the last 100 per cent. American
-Adam and the last 100 per cent. American Eve will take their departure
-from our immigrationized stage. It is providentially arranged--the
-maxim tells us--that the trees shall not grow and grow until they
-pierce the heavens; but is there any power on the job of preventing
-the progressive decline of the original Anglo-Saxon stock even to the
-point of final extinction? This is a poignant doubt in a country where
-the Anglo-Saxon strain enjoys a prestige out of all proportion to its
-population quota. The strain may derive what comfort it can from the
-reflection that the exit of the Indian was probably not due to birth
-control.
-
-Still, birth control is not new. If it did not originate with the
-Indians, it did at least with the Puritans. As the census books
-and genealogy books show, every succeeding American generation has
-manifested a tendency to reduce the birth-rate. The new aspects of the
-situation are the acceleration of the tendency and the propaganda for
-family limitation by artificial methods. In the birth registration
-area, which includes twenty-three States, the number of births for the
-year 1919 compared with those for 1918 showed a slump of seven per
-cent. Also the current assumption that children are more numerous on
-farms, where they are an economic asset, than they are in cities, where
-they became an economic handicap, has recently received a startling
-correction through a survey made by the Department of Agriculture.
-Among the surprises of the study, says the report, was the small
-number of children in farm homes:--“Child life is at a premium in
-rural districts.” The farm is not the national child reserve it has
-been supposed to be. As far as the salaried class is concerned, it
-has stood out as the national pace-setter in family limitation. The
-editorial writer of the New York _Times_, who may be trusted for a
-fairly accurate statement of the standards of this group, justifies
-its conduct thus: “Unless the brain-worker is willing to disclass his
-children, to subject them to humiliation, he must be willing to feed,
-clothe, and educate them during many years. In such circumstances, to
-refuse parenthood is only human.” It therefore remains for the manual
-worker, who cannot obtain from his Church the same absolution that the
-suburban resident can obtain from his _Times_, to produce the bulk of
-the population. This, as a whole, is not yet stationary; the recent
-census estimates an annual excess of births over deaths throughout
-the United States amounting to about one per cent. What will the next
-decade do with it?
-
-A peculiar feature of the American propaganda for birth control is its
-specific advocacy of artificial methods. The defenders of this cause
-have been compelled, it appears, to define a position which would be
-self-evident in any society not incorrigibly Puritan. People who regard
-celibacy as a state of grace and celibacy within marriage as a supreme
-moral victory are still growing, it would seem, on every bush. This
-unwholesome belief must have its effect upon the birth control methods
-of the married population. It is a matter of speculation how many
-marriages succumb to its influence, especially after the birth of a
-second or third child; but there is reason to believe that the ascetic
-method is by no means uncommon. You cannot hold up an ideal before
-people steadily for forty years without expecting some of them to try
-to follow it. This kind of rigorous negativism passes for morality in
-America and finds its strongest devotees among the middle-aged and the
-heads of families. Such people are greatly shocked at the wild conduct
-of the young who are certainly out of bounds since the war; but the
-most striking feature of the current wave of so-called immorality is
-the exposure of the bankruptcy of ideals among the older generation.
-There are thirty million families in the United States; presumably
-there are at least sixty million adults who have experimented with
-the sexual relationship with the sanction of society. But experience
-has taught them nothing if one may judge by the patented and soulless
-concepts which still pass for sexual morality among people who are
-surely old enough to have learned about life from living it.
-
-The population policies of the government are confined to the supply
-through immigration. A few years ago, an American president enunciated
-population policies of his own and conducted an energetic though
-solitary campaign against “race suicide.” But no faction rallied to his
-standard, no organization rose up to speed his message. His bugle-call
-was politely disregarded as the personal idiosyncrasy of a popular
-president who happened to be the proud father of six children. Mr.
-Roosevelt was evidently out of tune with his own generation, as, no
-doubt, Mr. Washington was with his, for exactly the opposite reason.
-But the more retiring nature of our first president saved him from the
-egoistic error of regarding his own familial situation as the only
-proper and desirable example. The complete failure of Mr. Roosevelt’s
-crusade is significant. There are clerical influences in America which
-actively fight race suicide, but with these obscurantist allies the
-doughty son of a Dutch Reform family had too little else in common.
-Among the men of his own class he stirred not an echo. Is it because
-the American husband is too uxorious or too indifferent? I have heard
-a married man say, “It is too much to expert of any woman;” and still
-another one explain, “The Missis said it was my turn next and so we
-stopped with one.” Or is there any explanation in the fact that the
-American father tends more and more to spend his life in a salaried job
-and has little land or business to bequeath? Whatever the reason, the
-Business Man is in accord with the Club Woman on the subject of birth
-control, in practice if not in theory.
-
-So far as relative distribution of income is concerned, the families
-of the United States fare much as those in the industrial countries
-of Europe. In 1910, the same relative inequality of wealth and income
-existed in feudal Prussia and democratic America. The richest fifth of
-the families in each country claimed about half the income while the
-poorest two-thirds of the families were thankful for about one-third.
-The same law of economic relativity falls alike on the just American
-and the unjust Prussian. But the American family, it appears, is
-in every case two or three times better off than the corresponding
-family in Prussia. You must multiply Herr Stinnes by two to get a
-Judge Gary and the wealth of a Silesian child labourer is only half
-that of a Georgia mill-child. This economic advantage of our American
-rich and poor alike is measured chiefly in dollars and marks and not
-in actual standards of living. It is apparently difficult to get real
-standards of living out into the open; otherwise the superior fortune
-of American families of every estate might be less evident. Some of us
-who may have visited middle-class Prussian people only half as well
-off as ourselves probably did not commiserate the poor things as they
-deserved. My hostess, I recall, had eight hundred dollars a year on
-which she maintained an apartment of two rooms, bath, and kitchen;
-kept a part-time maid; bought two new suits’ a year; drove out in a
-hired carriage on Sunday; and contributed generously to a society
-which stirred up women to call themselves Frau instead of Fräulein.
-Any “single woman” in an American city of equal size who could have
-managed as much in those days on fifteen hundred a year would certainly
-have deserved a thumping thrift-prize.... And then there were all
-those poor little children in a Black Forest village, who had to
-put up with rye bread six days in the week and white bread only on
-Sundays. Transported to America, they might have had package crackers
-every day and ice-cream sandwiches on Sunday. One wonders whether the
-larger income of the American family is not largely spent on things of
-doubtful value and pinchbeck quality.
-
-According to theory, the income of the family normally belongs to the
-man of the house. According to theory, he has earned it or derived
-it from some lawful business enterprise. “The head of the family
-ordinarily divides income between himself and his various dependents
-in the proportion that he deems best,” says Mr. Willford King.
-The American husband has a peculiarly unblemished reputation as a
-provider--and probably deserves it. Certainly few husbands in the world
-are so thoughtful of their widows; they invest extensively in life
-insurance but rarely in annuities against a period of retirement. Trust
-Companies remind them through advertisements every day to make their
-wills, and cemetery corporations nag them incessantly to buy their
-graves. “Statistics show that women outlive men!” says the promoter
-of America’s Burial Park. “They show that the man who puts off the
-selection of a burial place leaves the task to the widow in her grief.
-For the man it is easy now--for the woman an ordeal then.” The chivalry
-of the business man leads him to contrive all sorts of financial
-mechanisms for his widow’s convenience and protection. His will, like
-his insurance policy, is in her favour. Unlike the European husband, he
-hates to leave the man’s world of business and to spend his declining
-years in the society of his wife. After he is dead, she is welcome to
-his all, but so long as he lives he keeps business between them.
-
-Though in life and death a generous provider, he is not a systematic
-one. Financial arrangements between husband and wife are extremely
-casual. As the dowry hardly exists, so a regular cash allowance is
-very rare. He loves to hold the purse-strings and let her run the
-bills. This tendency is known in the outside business world, and the
-American wife, therefore, enjoys a command of credit which would amaze
-any solvent foreign housekeeper. She has accounts on every hand. She
-orders food by telephone or through the grocer’s boy and “charges it.”
-The department store expects her to have a charge account, and gives
-her better service if she does. For instance, the self-supporting woman
-who is, for obvious reasons, more inclined to pay as she goes, finds
-herself discriminated against in the matter of returning or exchanging
-goods. In numerous ways, the charge account has the inside track. This
-would not seem strange if credit were limited to the richest fraction.
-But that is not the case; almost every housewife in the country has
-credit, from the Newport ladies to the miners’ wives who “trade at the
-company store.” The only difference is that, in the case of these two
-extremes--Newport and the company store--longer credit than ususal
-seems to be the rule. In the meantime, the preaching of thrift to the
-American housewife goes on incessantly by apostles from a business
-world which is largely organized on the assumption that she does not
-possess it and which would be highly disconcerted if she actually
-developed it. American business loves the housewife for the same reason
-that it loves China--that is, for her economic backwardness.
-
-The record of the American husband as a provider is not uniform for
-all classes. In Congress it is now and then asserted with appropriate
-oratory that there are no classes in America. This is more or less true
-from the point of view of a Cabin Creek vote-getter, who lives in a
-factitious political world, where economic realities fail to penetrate;
-to him middle-class and working-class are much the same since they
-have equal rights not to “scratch the ticket.” But the economist finds
-it convenient, as has been said, to classify the totality of American
-families in definite income-groups corresponding to the Prussian
-classes. As one descends the income scale one finds that the American
-husband no longer fulfils his reputation for being sole provider for
-his family. According to Edgar Sydenstricker, “less than half of the
-wage-earners’ families in the United States, whose heads are at work,
-have been found to be supported by the earnings of the husband or
-father.” The earnings of the mother and the children are a necessary
-supplement to bring the family income up to the subsistence level. Half
-the workingmen, who have dutifully “founded” families, cannot support
-them. According to the latest figures published, it costs $2,334 a year
-to keep a family of five in New York. Have the young Lochinvars of the
-tenements never heard of those appalling figures? Very likely they have
-a premonition, if not an actual picture of the digits. In any case they
-have their mothers to warn them. “Henry’s brought it on himself,” said
-the janitress. “He had a right not to get married. He had his mother
-to take care of him.” If he had only chosen bachelorhood, he might
-have lived at home in comfort and peace on his twenty-five a week. But
-having chosen, or been chosen by, Mrs. Henry instead, it is now up
-to the latter to go out office-cleaning or operating, which she very
-extensively does. It is estimated that since the war fully one-third of
-all American women in industry are married.
-
-Going back up the scale to the middle-class wife, we find new
-influences at work upon her situation. Custom has relaxed its
-condemnation of the economically independent wife, and perhaps it
-is just as well that it has done so. For this is the class which
-has suffered the greatest comparative loss of fortune, during the
-last fifteen years. “If all estimates cited are correct,” writes Mr.
-Willford King, “it indicates that, since 1896, there has occurred a
-marked concentration of income in the hands of the very rich; that
-the poor have relatively lost but little; but that the middle class
-has been the principal sufferer.” It is, then, through the sacrifices
-of our middle-class families that our very richest families have
-been able to improve their standard of living. The poor, of course,
-have had no margin on which to practise such benevolence, but the
-generous middle-class has given till it hurts. The deficit had to be
-relieved, the only possible way being through the economic utilization
-of the women. At first daughters became self-supporting, while wives
-still tarried in the odour of domestic sanctity; then wives came to
-be sporadically self-supporting. The war, like peace still bearing
-hardest on the middle-class, enhanced all this. Nine months after the
-armistice, fifty per cent. more women were employed in industry than
-there were in the year before the war.
-
-In America, we have no surplus women. The countries of western Europe
-are each encumbered with a million or two, and their existence is
-regarded as the source of acute social problems. What shall be done
-with them is a matter of earnest consideration and anxious statecraft.
-America has been spared all this. She has also no surplus men--or none
-that anybody has ever heard of. It is true that the population in 1910
-consisted of ninety-one millions, of whom forty-seven millions were
-men and forty-four were women. There were three million more men than
-women, but for some reason they were not surplus or “odd” men and they
-have never been a “problem.” The population figures for 1920,--one
-hundred and five millions,--have not yet been divided by sexes, but the
-chances are that there is still a man for every woman in the country,
-and two men apiece for a great number of them. However, no one seems to
-fear polyandry for America as polygamy is now feared in Europe.
-
-The situation is exceptional in New England where the typical European
-condition is duplicated. Beyond the Berkshire Hills, all the surplus
-women of America are concentrated. In the United States as a whole
-there are a hundred and five men for each one hundred women, but in
-New England the balance shifts suddenly to the other side. Within the
-present century, a gradual increase has taken place in the masculine
-contingent owing to immigration. But the chances of marriage have not
-correspondingly improved, for matches are rarely made between New
-England spinsters and Armenian weavers or Neapolitan bootblacks.
-
-In America only the very rich and the very poor marry early. Factory
-girls and heiresses are, as a rule, the youngest brides. It is
-generally assumed that twenty-four for women and twenty-nine for
-men are the usual ages for marriage the country over. Custom varies
-enormously, of course, in so polyglot a population. Now and then an
-Italian daughter acquires a husband before the compulsory education
-law is through with her. In such cases, however, there is apparently a
-gentleman’s agreement between the truant officer and the lady’s husband
-which solves the dilemma. At the opposite extreme from these little
-working-class Juliets are the mature brides of Boston. As the result
-of a survey covering the last ten years, the registrar of marriage
-licenses discovered that the women married between twenty-seven and
-thirty-three and the men between thirty and forty. Boston’s average
-marriage age for both sexes is over thirty. This does not represent
-an inordinate advance upon the practice of the primitive Bostonians.
-According to certain American genealogists, the Puritans of the 17th
-century were in no great haste to wed--the average age of the bride
-being twenty-one and of the bridegroom twenty-five. The marriage
-age in the oldest American city has moved up about ten years in a
-couple of centuries. The change is usually ascribed to increasing
-economic obstacles, and nobody questions its desirability. Provided
-that celibacy is all that it seems to be, the public stands ready to
-admire every further postponement of the marriage age as evidence of an
-ever-growing self-control and the triumphant march of civilization.
-
-In the majority of marriages, the American wife outlives her husband.
-This is partly because he is several years older than she and partly
-because she tends to be longer-lived than he. Americans of the second
-and third generation are characterized by great longevity,--the
-American woman of American descent being the longest-lived human being
-on earth. Consequently the survivors of marriage are more likely to
-be widows than widowers. In the census of 1910, there were about two
-million and a half widows of forty-five or over as compared with about
-one million widowers of corresponding age. Nor do they sit by the
-fire and knit as once upon a time; they too must “hustle.” Among the
-working women of the country are a million and a quarter who are more
-than forty-five and who are probably to a very large extent--though
-the census provides no data on the subject--economically independent
-widows. As was said before, “Grandma” too is on her own nowadays.
-
-The widow enjoys great honour in American public life, although it
-usually turns out to be rather a spurious and sentimental homage.
-Political orators easily grow tearful over her misfortunes. For
-generations after the Civil War, the Republican Party throve on a
-pension-system which gathered in the youngest widow of the oldest
-veteran, and Tammany has always understood how to profit from its
-ostentatious alms-giving to widows and orphans. From my earliest
-childhood, I can recollect how the town-beautifiers, who wanted to
-take down the crazy board fences, were utterly routed by the aldermen
-who said the widow’s cow must range and people must therefore keep
-up their fences. Similarly, the Southern States have never been able
-to put through adequate child labour laws because the widow’s child
-had to be allowed to earn in order to support his mother. All this
-sentimentalism proved to be in time an excellent springboard for a
-genuine economic reform--the widow’s pension systems of the several
-states which would be more accurately described as children’s pensions.
-The legislatures were in no position to resist an appeal on behalf of
-the poor widow and so nicely narcotized were they by their traditional
-tender-heartedness that they failed to perceive the socialistic
-basis of this new kind of widow’s pensions. Consequently America has
-achieved the curious honour of leading in a socialistic innovation
-which European States are now only just beginning to copy. Maternity
-insurance, on the other hand, has made no headway in America although
-adopted years and even decades ago in European countries. With us the
-obstacle seems to be prudishness rather than capitalism--it makes a
-legislator blush to hear childbirth spoken of in public while it only
-makes him cry to hear of widowhood.
-
-One aspect of widowhood is seldom touched upon and that is its
-prevention. Aged widows, on the whole, in spite of their soap-boxing
-and their wage-earning, are a very lonely race. Why must they bring
-it on themselves by marrying men whose expectation of life is so much
-less than theirs? And yet so anxious are the marrying people to observe
-this conventional disparity of age, that if the bride happens to be
-but by three months the senior of the bridegroom, they conceal it
-henceforth as a sort of family disgrace. Even if this convention should
-prove to be immutable, is there nothing to be done about the lesser
-longevity of the American male? There is a life extension institute
-with an ex-president at the head but, as far as I am aware, it has
-never enlisted the support of the millions reported by the census as
-widows, who surely, if anybody, should realize the importance of such
-a movement. It is commonly assumed that the earlier demise of husbands
-is due to the hazardous life they lead in business and in industry;
-but domestic life is not without its hazards, and child-bearing is an
-especially dangerous trade in the United States, which has the highest
-maternal death-rate of seventeen civilized countries. If American
-husbands were less philosophical about the hardships of child-bed--the
-judgment of Eve and all that sort of thing--and American wives were
-less philosophical about burying their husbands--the Lord hath given
-and the Lord hath taken away and so on--it might result in greater
-health and happiness for all concerned.
-
-But the main trouble with American marriage, as all the world knows, is
-that divorce so often separates the twain before death has any chance
-to discriminate between them. The growing prevalence of divorce is
-statistically set forth in a series of census investigations. In 1890,
-there was one divorce to every sixteen marriages; in 1900, there was
-one to every twelve marriages; and in 1916, there was one to every nine
-marriages. The number of marriages in proportion to the population
-has also increased during the same period, though not at a rate equal
-to that of divorce. But divorce, being so much younger than marriage,
-has had more room to grow from its first humble scared beginnings of
-fifty years ago. Queen Victoria’s frown had a very discouraging effect
-on divorce in America; and Mrs. Humphry Ward, studying the question
-among us in the early 20th century, lent her personal influence
-towards the arrest of the American evil. We also have raised up on
-this side of the water our own apostles against divorce, among whom
-Mr. Horace Greeley perhaps occupies the first and most distinguished
-place. But in spite of all heroic crusades, divorce has continued to
-grow. One even suspects that the marked increase in the marriage rate
-is partly--perhaps largely--due to the remarriage of the divorced. At
-any rate, they constitute new and eligible material for marriage which
-formerly was lacking.
-
-The true cause of the increase of divorce in America is not easy to
-come by. Commissions and investigations have worried the question to
-no profitable end, and have triumphantly come out by the same door by
-which they went in. That seems to be the test of a successful divorce
-inquiry; and no wonder, for the real quest means a conflict with
-hypocrisy and prejudice, fear and taboo, which only the intrepid spirit
-of a John Milton or a Susan B. Anthony is able to sustain. The people
-who want divorces and who can pay for them seem to be able to get them
-nowadays, and since it is the truth only that suffers the situation has
-grown more tolerable.
-
-In the meantime, there are popular impressions and assumptions which
-do not tally with the known facts. It is assumed that divorce is
-frequent in America because it is easy, and that the logical way to
-reduce it would be to make it difficult. Certain States of the West
-have lenient divorce laws but other States have stringent laws, while
-South Carolina abolished divorce entirely in 1878. On the whole, our
-laws are not so lenient as those of Scandinavia, whose divorce rate is
-still far behind that of the United States. Neither is divorce cheap
-in America; it is enormously expensive. Therefore for the poor it is
-practically inaccessible. The Domestic Relations Courts do not grant
-divorce and the Legal Aid Societies will not touch it. The wage-earning
-class, like the inhabitants of South Carolina, just have to learn to
-get along without it. Then there is another belief, hardly justified by
-the facts, that most divorced wives get alimony. Among all the divorces
-granted in 1916, alimony was not even asked for by 73 per cent. of the
-wives and it was received altogether by less than 20 per cent. of them.
-The statistics do not tell us whether the actual recipients of alimony
-were the mothers of young children or whether they were able-bodied
-ladies without offspring. The average American divorce court could not
-be trusted to see any difference between them.
-
-The war has naturally multiplied the actions for divorce in every
-country. It was not for nothing that the British government called the
-stipends paid to soldiers’ wives “separation allowances.” The war-time
-conditions had a tendency to unmake marriages as well as to make them.
-The momentary spread of divorce has revived again the idea of a uniform
-divorce law embodied in an amendment to the Federal Constitution. As
-no reasonable law can possibly be hoped for, the present state of
-confusion is infinitely to be preferred as affording at least some
-choice of resources to the individual who is seeking relief. If
-there were any tendency to take divorce cases out of the hands of the
-lawyers, as has been done with industrial accidents, and to put it into
-domestic relations courts where it belongs; if there were the least
-possibility of curbing the vested interest of the newspapers in divorce
-news; if there were any dawning appreciation of the absurdity of
-penalizing as connivance the most unanswerable reason for divorce, that
-is, mutual consent; if there were any likelihood that the lying and
-spying upon which divorce action must usually depend for its success
-would be viewed as the grossest immorality in the whole situation;
-if there were any hope whatever that a statesman might rise up in
-Congress and, like Johan Castberg of Norway, defend a legal measure
-which would help ordinary men and women to speak the truth in their
-personal relationships--if there were any prospect that any of these
-influences would have any weight in the deliberations of Congress,
-one might regard the possibilities of Federal action with a gleam of
-hope. But since nothing of the kind can be expected, the best that
-can happen in regard to divorce in the near future is for Congress to
-leave it alone. There is a strong tradition in the historical suffrage
-movement of America which favours liberal divorce laws and which makes
-it improbable that a reactionary measure could gain sufficient support
-from the feminine electorate. Since the majority of those who seek
-divorce in this country are women, it seems to put them logically on
-the side of dissoluble marriage.
-
-Though home is a sacred word in America, it is a portable affair.
-Migration is a national habit, handed down and still retained from
-the days when each generation went out to break new ground. The
-disasters of the Civil War sent Southern families and New England
-families scurrying to the far West. The development of the railway
-and express systems produced as a by-product a type of family life
-that was necessarily nomadic. The men of the railway “Brotherhoods”
-have always been marrying men, and their families acquired the art of
-living on wheels, as it were. Rich farmers of the Middle West retire
-to spend their old age in a California cottage surrounded by an orange
-grove--and the young farmers move to the city. The American family
-travels on any and every excuse. The neurotic pursuit of health has
-built up large communities in Colorado, Arizona, and other points West.
-Whole families “picked up,” as the saying goes, and set out for the
-miraculous climate that was to save one of its members from the dreaded
-tuberculosis--and then later had to move again because somebody’s
-heart couldn’t stand the “altitude.” The extreme examples of this
-nomadic habit are found among the families of the very poor and the
-very rich, who have regular seasonal migrations. The oyster canners
-and strawberry-pickers have a mobility which is only equalled by that
-of the Palm Beachers. And finally there is the curious practice of New
-England which keeps boarders in the summer-time in order that it may be
-boarded by Florida in the winter-time.
-
-By contrast with all this geographical instability, the stable sway
-of convention and custom stands out impressively. With each change
-of environment, family tradition became more sacred. Unitarians who
-moved to Kansas were more zealous in the faith than ever, and F.F.V.’s
-who settled in Texas were fiercely and undyingly loyal to the memory
-of Pocahontas. Families that were always losing their background,
-tried to fixate in some form the ancestral prestige which threatened
-always to evaporate. Organizations composed of the Sons and Daughters
-of the Revolution, of the descendants of the Pilgrims, of Civil War
-Veterans, of the Scions of the Confederacy, and so on, sprang up and
-flourished on the abundant soil of family pride. All of which means
-that pioneering brought no spiritual independence or intellectual
-rebirth, and that new conditions were anxiously reformulated under
-the sanction of the old. Above all, sanction was important. That
-incredible institution, the “society column” of the local newspaper,
-took up the responsibility where the Past laid it down. Stereotyped
-values of yesterday gave way to stereotyped values of to-day. This
-was the commercial opportunity of a multitude of home journals and
-women’s magazines which undertook--by means of stories, pictures, and
-advertisements--to regiment the last detail of home life. But the
-perforated patterns, the foods “shot from guns,” and all the rest
-of the labour-saving ingenuities which came pouring into the home
-and which were supposed to mean emancipation for mothers and their
-families, brought little of the real spirit of freedom in their wake.
-Our materialistic civilization finds it hard to understand that liberty
-is not achieved through time-saving devices but only through the love
-of it.
-
-But the notorious spoiling of the American child--some one says--is
-not that a proper cradle of liberty for the personality? A spoilt
-child may be a nuisance, but if he is on the way towards becoming a
-self-reliant, self-expressive adult, the “American way” of bringing
-up children may have its peculiar advantages. But a spoilt child is
-really a babyish child, and by that token he is on the way towards
-becoming a childish adult. Neither is his case disposed of simply by
-adjudging him a nuisance; the consequence of his spoiling carry much
-further than that. They are seen, for instance, in malnutrition of
-the children of the American rich--a fact which has but recently been
-discovered and which came as a great surprise to the experts. “In
-Chicago,” one of them tells us, “it was found that a group of foreign
-children near the stockyards were only 17 per cent. underweight, while
-in the all-American group near the University of Chicago they were 57
-per cent. below normal.” The same condition of things was found in a
-select and expensive boarding school in the neighbourhood of Boston.
-A pathetic commentary--is it not?--on a country which leads the world
-in food-packing and food-profits, that it should contain so many
-parents who, with all the resources of the earth at their command, do
-not know how to feed their own children. Surely, the famous American
-spoiling has something to do with this. Whether it may not also be
-behind the vast amount of mental disturbance in the population may well
-be considered. The asylums are suddenly over-crowded. The National
-Committee for Mental Hygiene suggests for our consolation that this may
-be because the asylums are so much more humane than they used to be and
-the families of the sufferers are more willing than formerly to consign
-them to institutions.
-
-It is the fashion to attribute all these mental tragedies to the strain
-of business life and industry, and more recently to war-shock. But if
-we are to accept the results of the latest psychological research,
-the family must receive the lion’s share of blame. The groundwork
-for fatal ruptures in the adult personality is laid in childhood and
-in the home which produced the victim. For many years the discussion
-of American nerves has hinged on the hectic haste of business and
-industrial life, on the noise and bustle and lack of repose in the
-national atmosphere. But we have neglected to accuse the family to its
-face of failing to protect the child against the cataclysms of the
-future while it had the chance.
-
-The tremendous influence of the family on the individuals, old and
-young, composing it is not merely a pious belief. We are, alas,
-what our families make us. This is not a pleasant thought to many
-individuals who have learned through bitter experience to look on
-family relationships as a form of soul imprisonment. Yet it seems to be
-an incontestable fact that personality is first formed--or deformed--in
-the family constellation. The home really does the job for which the
-school, the press, the church, and the State later get the credit.
-It is a smoothly articulated course from the cradle onward, however,
-in which the subjugated parent produces a subjugated child, not so
-much by the rod of discipline--which figures very little in American
-family life--but by the more powerful and pervasive force of habit and
-attitude. Parents allow themselves to be a medium for transmitting the
-incessant pressure of standards which allow no room for impulse and
-initiative; they become the willing instrument of a public mania for
-standardization which tries to make every human soul into the image
-of a folded pattern. The babe is moulded in his cradle into the man
-who will drop a sentimental tear, wear a white carnation, and send a
-telegram on Mother’s Day--that travesty of a family festival which
-shames affection and puts spontaneous feeling to the blush.
-
-As the family itself grows smaller, this pressure of mechanistic and
-conventional standards encroaches more closely upon the child. A
-sizeable group of brothers and sisters create for themselves a savage
-world which is their best protection against the civilization that
-awaits them. But with one or two children, or a widely scattered
-series, this natural protection is lost. The youngster is prematurely
-assimilated to the adult world of parents who are nowadays, owing to
-later marriage, not even quite so young as formerly they were. It
-is a peculiarity of parents, especially of mothers, that they never
-entertain a modest doubt as to whether they might be the best of all
-possible company for their children. And obviously the tired business
-man cannot properly substitute in the evenings for a roistering,
-shouting brother who never came into the world at all; nor can all the
-concentrated care of the most devoted mother take the place of the
-companionship and discipline which children get from other children.
-These considerations deserve more attention than they usually receive
-in connection with the falling birth-rate. The figures mean that the
-environment of the young child is being altered in a fundamental
-respect. Parents of small families need to take effective steps to
-counteract the loss. Practical things, like nursery schools, would be a
-help. But, chiefly, if parents will insist on being companions of their
-children, they need themselves to understand and practise the art of
-common joy and happiness.
-
- KATHARINE ANTHONY
-
-
-
-
-THE ALIEN
-
-
-The immigrant alien has been discussed by the Anglo-Saxon as
-though he were an Anglo-Saxon “problem.” He has been discussed by
-labour as though he were a labour “problem”; by interpreters of
-American institutions as though man existed for institutions and for
-institutions which the class interpreting them found advantageous
-to its class. Occasionally the alien has been discussed from the
-point of view of the alien and but rarely from the point of view of
-democracy. The “problem” of the alien is largely a problem of setting
-our own house in order. It is the “problem” of Americanizing America.
-The outstanding fact of three centuries of immigration is that the
-immigrant alien ceases to be an alien when economic conditions are such
-as properly to assimilate him.
-
-There is something rather humorous about the way America discusses “the
-alien.” For we are all aliens. And what is less to our liking we are
-almost all descended from the peasant classes of Europe. We are here
-because our forebears were poor. They did not rule over there. They
-were oppressed; they were often owned. And with but few exceptions
-they came because of their poverty. For the rich rarely emigrate. And
-in the 17th and 18th centuries there was probably a smaller percentage
-of immigrants who could pass the literacy test than there are to-day.
-Moreover, in the early days only suffering could drive the poor of
-Europe from their poverty. For the conditions of travel were hazardous.
-The death toll from disease was very high. It required more fortitude
-to cross the Atlantic and pass by the ring of settlers out onto the
-unbroken frontier than it does to pass Ellis Island and the exploiters
-round about it to-day.
-
-The immigration question has arisen because America, too, has created a
-master class, a class which owns and employs and rules. And the alien
-in America is faced by a class opinion, born of the change which has
-come over America rather than any change in the alien himself. America
-has changed. The alien remains much the same. And the most significant
-phase of the immigration problem is the way we treat the alien and the
-hypocrisy of our discussion of the subject.
-
-Sociologists have given us a classification of the immigrant alien.
-They speak of the “old immigration” and the “new immigration.”
-The former is the immigration of the 17th and 18th and the first
-three-quarters of the 19th centuries. It was English, Scotch, Irish,
-German, Scandinavian with a sprinkling of French, Swiss, and other
-nationalities. From the beginning, the preponderance was British.
-During the 18th century there was a heavy Scotch inflow and during the
-first half of the 19th a heavy Irish and German immigration. The Irish
-came because of the famine of 1848, the Scotch in large part because of
-the enclosure acts and the driving of the people from the land to make
-way for deer preserves and grazing lands for the British aristocracy.
-Most of the British immigration was the result of oppressive land laws
-of one kind or another. The population of Ireland was reduced from
-eight million to slightly over four million in three-quarters of a
-century. The British immigrant of the 17th century, like the recent
-Russian immigration, was driven from home by economic oppression. Only
-a handful came to escape religious oppression or to secure political
-liberty. The cause of immigration has remained the same from the
-beginning until now.
-
-The “old immigration” was from the North of Europe. It was of Germanic
-stock. It was predominantly Protestant. But the most important fact
-of all and the fact most usually ignored is an economic fact. The
-early immigrant found a broad continent awaiting him, peopled only
-by Indians. He became a free man. He took up a homestead. He ceased
-to belong to any one else. He built for himself. He paid no rent, he
-took no orders, he kept what he produced, and was inspired by hope and
-ambition to develop his powers. It was economic, not political, freedom
-that distinguishes the “old immigration” from the “new.”
-
-The “new immigration” is from Southern and Central Europe. It is
-Latin and Slavic. It is largely Catholic. It, too, is poor. It, too,
-is driven out by oppression, mostly economic and for the most part
-landed. Almost every wave of immigration has been in some way related
-to changes for the worse in the landed systems of Europe. Wherever
-the poverty has been the most distressing, there the impulse to move
-has been the strongest. It has been the poverty of Europe that has
-determined our immigration from the 17th century until now.
-
-The ethnic difference is secondary. So is the religious. The
-fundamental fact that distinguishes the “old immigration” from the
-“new” is economic. The “new immigration” works for the “old.” It
-found the free land all taken up. The public domain had passed into
-the hand of the Pacific railroads, into great manorial estates. Land
-thieves had repeated the acts of the British Parliament of the 18th
-century. The Westward movement of peoples that had been going on from
-the beginning of time came to an end when the pioneer of the 80’s and
-90’s found only the bad lands left for settlement. That ended an era.
-It closed the land to settlement and sent the immigrant to the city.
-The peasant of Europe has become the miner and the mill worker. He left
-one kind of serfdom to take up another. It is this that distinguishes
-the “old immigrant” from the “new.” It is this that distinguishes the
-old America from the America of to-day. And the problem of immigration,
-like the problem of America, is the re-establishment of economic
-democracy. The protective tariff bred exotic industry. The employer
-wanted cheap labour. The mine owners and mill owners combined with the
-steamship companies to stimulate immigration. They sent agents abroad.
-They brought in gangs from Southern and Central Europe. They herded
-them in mining camps, in mill towns, in the tenements. The closing of
-the public domain and the rise of monopoly industry marks the turning
-point in immigration. It marks the beginning of the immigration
-“problem.” It is partly ethnic, but largely economic.
-
-The “new immigration” from Southern and Central Europe began to
-increase in volume about 1890. It came from Southern rather than
-Northern Italy, from Poland, Hungary, Bohemia, Russia, the Balkans,
-and the Levant. There was a sprinkling of Spanish and Portuguese
-immigrants. In 1914 South and Central European immigration amounted
-to 683,000, while the North European immigration was but 220,000. Of
-the former 296,000 came from Italy, 123,000 from Poland, 45,000 from
-Russia, and 45,000 from Hungary. These figures do not include Jewish
-immigrants, who numbered 138,000. Of the North European immigrants
-105,000 came from the British Isles, 80,000 came from Germany, and
-36,000 from the Scandinavian countries.
-
-Of the 14,000,000 persons of foreign birth now in the country, a very
-large percentage is of South and Central European stock.
-
-We are accustomed to think of the old immigration and the new
-immigration in terms of races and religions. And much of the
-present-day hostility to immigration comes from the inexplicable
-prejudice which has recently sprung up against persons of differing
-races and religions. It is assumed that the new immigration is poor
-and ignorant because it is ethnically unfitted for anything different
-and that it prefers the tenement and the mining camp to American
-standards of living and culture. But the newly arrived immigrant goes
-to the mines and the crowded city not from choice but from necessity.
-He lives in colonies with his fellows largely because the employing
-class prefers that he be segregated and has no interest in his physical
-comfort or welfare. The alien has been a commodity, not a human being;
-he has been far cheaper than a machine because he provided his own
-capital cost and makes provision for his own depreciation and decay. He
-has been bought in the slums of Europe for his passage money and he can
-be left to starve when bad times or industrial power throws him on his
-own resources. The important difference between the “old immigration”
-and the “new immigration” is not ethnic. It is not religious. It is
-economic. The “old immigration” has become the owning and employing
-class, while the “new immigration” is the servile and dependent
-class. This is the real, the important difference between the “old
-immigration” and the “new.” The former owns the resources of America.
-The economic division coincides roughly with the race division.
-
-When economic privilege becomes ascendant fear is born. It is born of
-a subconscious realization on the part of the privileged classes that
-their privileges rest on an unjust if not an unstable foundation. Fear
-is the parent of hate, and back of other explanations of the present
-demand for exclusion of the alien is fear. It is fear that gave birth
-to the persecution and ruthless official and semi-official activity
-first against all aliens under the White Slave Act and similar laws,
-next against the Germans, and later against the “reds.” An economic
-psychology born of injustice explains our present attitude toward the
-alien just as a different economic psychology explained our attitude
-during the first two and a half centuries of our life when it was the
-consuming desire of statesmen, real-estate speculators, and exploiters
-to people the continent and develop our industries and resources as
-rapidly as possible.
-
-The “immigration problem,” so called, has always been and always will
-be an economic problem. There are many people who feel that there
-is an inherent superiority in the Anglo-Saxon race; that it has a
-better mind, greater virtue, and a better reason for existence and
-expansion than any other race. They insist there are eugenic reasons
-for excluding immigration from South and Central Europe; they would
-preserve America for people of Anglo-Saxon stock. As an immigration
-official I presided over Ellis Island for five years. During this
-time probably a million immigrants arrived at the port of New York.
-They were for the most part poor. They had that in common with the
-early immigrant. They had other qualities in common. They were
-ambitious and filled with hope. They were for the most part kindly
-and moved by the same human and domestic virtues as other peoples.
-And it is to me an open question whether the “new immigration,” if
-given a virgin continent, and the hope and stimulus which springs
-from such opportunity, would not develop the same qualities of mind
-and of character that we assume to be the more or less exclusive
-characteristics of the Anglo-Saxon race. There is also reason for
-believing that the warmer temperament, the emotional qualities, and the
-love of the arts that characterize the South and Central European would
-produce a race blend, under proper economic conditions, that would
-result in a better race than one of pure Northern extraction. For it is
-to be remembered that it was not political liberty, religious liberty,
-or personal liberty that changed the early immigrant of Northern
-Europe into the American of to-day. His qualities were born of economic
-conditions, of a free continent, of land to be had for the asking, of
-equal opportunity with his fellows to make his life what he would have
-it to be. The old immigrant recognized no master but himself. He was
-the equal of his neighbours in every respect. He knew no inferiority
-complex born of a servile relationship. It was this rather than our
-constitutions and laws that made the American of the first three
-centuries what he was. It was this alchemy that changed the serf of
-Northern Europe into the self-reliant freeman of America.
-
-The immigration problem was born when this early economic opportunity
-came to an end. When the free land was all gone, the immigrant had to
-work for somebody else. He went to the mines and the city tenement
-not from the choice but from necessity. He took the first job that
-offered. When established he sent for his brother, his neighbour, or
-his friend. He, too, went to the mining camp or the slum. Colonies
-appeared. The alien became segregated. He lived by himself. And he
-developed the qualities that would be developed by any race under
-similar conditions. He, too, feared. He was known as a Dago, Wop,
-Hunkie. To him government meant a policeman, a health officer, and an
-immigration inspector--all agencies to be feared. He slowly learned to
-unionize. He came to understand group action. He found in his craft
-organization the only protection against the employers, and in the
-political boss the only protection against agencies that interfered
-with his personal and domestic life. The immigrant soon learned that
-our immigration laws were shaped by economic motives. He learned that
-he was in danger of being deported if he did not work. The menace which
-hangs over the immigrant during his early years is the phrase “likely
-to become a public charge.” And this alleged reason for deportation
-covers a multitude of other excuses which can be used as it is used--as
-a drag-net accusation. So the immigrant feels and justly feels that
-what we want of him is to work, to work for some one else, and to
-accept what is offered and be content. For within the last few years
-the doctrine has become accepted by him and by the nation as well that
-the alien must not complain, he must not be an agitator, he must not
-protest against the established industrial order or the place which he
-occupies within it. This has heightened his fear complex. It has tended
-to establish his inferiority relationship.
-
-Our legislative attitude toward the alien has mirrored the economic
-conditions of the country. Up to about the middle of the last century
-we had no restrictive laws of any kind. America was free to all comers.
-We wanted population. Western States pleaded for settlers. They drew
-them from the East as they drew them from Europe. We were hospitable
-to the oppressed. We opened our arms to revolutionary leaders. We had
-no fears. Experience had shown that the poorest of Europe, even the
-classified criminals of Europe, would quickly Americanize themselves
-under the stimulus of new opportunity in a virgin land where all
-men were potentially equal. For generations there was fear that the
-American continent could never be fully peopled.
-
-But the free lands were all gone about 1890. The Western drift of
-peoples, which had been in movement since the earliest times, came
-to an end. Population closed in on the Pacific. Cities grew with
-unprecedented rapidity. Factories needed men. Employers looked to
-Europe. They sent agents abroad who employed them in gangs. Often
-they were used to displace American-born workers. They were used to
-break up labour organizations. The aliens were mixed to prevent them
-organizing. Wages were temporarily at least forced down. For some years
-our immigration policy was shaped by the big industrials who combined
-with the steamship companies to induce immigration.
-
-Organized labour began to protest. It, too, was moved by economic
-motives. It secured the passage of the contract labour law, which
-prevents the landing of any worker for whom employment has been
-provided in advance by an employer. Organized labour began to demand
-restrictive legislation to protect its standard of living. But the
-country was not ready for restrictive legislation. Congress instead
-adopted a selective policy. We excluded paupers, the insane and
-diseased, criminals, immoral persons, and those who were likely to
-become a public charge. Later we extended the selective idea to
-persons who did not believe in organized government, to anarchists,
-and to persons of revolutionary beliefs. We now exclude and deport for
-opinions as well as for physical and mental conditions. The percentage
-of rejections under these selective laws was not great. Of the
-1,200,000 aliens who came to the country in 1914 only one and one-third
-per cent. were denied admission by the immigration authorities.
-
-The war stimulated the anti-alien feeling. It provided an opportunity
-for crusades. The press aided the hue and cry. In 1915 there was a
-nation-wide round-up of immoral cases. Thousands of prostitutes, of
-procurers, and of persons guilty of some personal irregularity were
-arrested all over the country. Many of them were deported. The demand
-for restrictive legislation was supported by many different groups. It
-had the backing of organized labour, of the Southern States, of many
-protestant organization and churches. It was strongly supported in the
-West.
-
-The “literacy test,” which went into effect in 1917, requiring of the
-alien an ability to read some language selected by him, was the first
-restrictive measure enacted. Its purpose was to check the South and
-Central European inflow. For in these countries illiteracy is very
-high. It rises as high as sixty and seventy per cent. in the Central
-European states. With the test of literacy applied it was felt that
-the old immigration from Northern Europe would reassert itself. Our
-industrial needs would be supplied from Great Britain, from Germany and
-from the Scandinavian countries. The same motive underlies the recently
-enacted law which arbitrarily fixes the number who may come in any one
-year from any one country to three per cent. of the aliens already here
-from that country. This will still further shift the immigration to the
-Northern countries, and if continued as the permanent policy of the
-Government will insure a predominant Anglo-Saxon-Germanic-Scandinavian
-stock as the racial stock of America.
-
-Despite all of the Congressional concern over the alien and the recent
-nation-wide movement for his Americanization, there has never been any
-official concern for the alien, for his protection from exploitation
-and abuse, or any attempt to work out a policy of real Americanization.
-Not that the task is impossible. Not that it is even experimental.
-Australia, Brazil, and Canada have more or less well-developed agencies
-for aiding the alien on landing, for protecting him until he is able
-to protect himself, and for adjusting him as speedily as possible
-to new conditions of life. In all of these countries the aim of the
-government is to give the immigrant a stake in the land, to bring about
-his permanent residence in the country, and, if possible, to induce him
-to become a farmer rather than an industrial worker. This has not been
-done by agencies of distribution alone, but by conscious selection in
-the country from which the immigrant comes, by grants of land to those
-who are ready to take up land holdings, and by the extension of credit
-from state agencies to enable the settlers to stock and equip their
-farms. The policy of Brazil has been so successful that many colonies
-of Northern Italians have been induced to settle there who have become
-prosperous and contented farmers. In other words, these countries have
-consciously aimed to work out a continuing policy similar to that which
-prevailed in this country up to about 1890 when the immigrant drifted
-naturally to the land as a means of securing the freedom from the
-exploiting class that had driven him from Europe.
-
-It is not to be inferred that our policy of hands off the alien
-after his landing has worked only evil. Viewed in the perspective
-of two centuries, it has worked amazingly well. The rapidity with
-which practically all immigrants rise in the world in spite of the
-obstacles of poverty, illiteracy, and unfamiliarity with our language
-is little short of a miracle. This is true of the older generation as
-it is of the younger. It is most true in the cities, least true in
-the mining camps and smaller industrial centres about the steel mills
-and slaughter houses where the tyranny of the employing class is most
-pronounced. For the newcomer speedily acquires the wants of those with
-whom he associates. He becomes dissatisfied with his shack. He demands
-more and better food and clothes. He almost always wants his children
-to have a schooling and to rise in the scale, which to him means
-getting out of the hod-carrying, day-labour, or even artisan class.
-And the next generation does rise. It rises only less rapidly than did
-the early immigrant. It increases its wants and demands. It finds the
-trades union a weapon with which it can combat the employer who seeks
-to bring about a confusion of tongues, a confusion of religion, and
-a confusion of races as a means of maintaining the open shop. As an
-evidence of this, the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America is almost
-exclusively Jewish, Italian, and Latin in its membership. It is the
-most intelligent, the most social-minded, and the most highly developed
-labour organization in the country. The coal miners are largely men of
-foreign birth. They, too, have adopted an advanced social programme.
-The alien has found the trades union the most efficient if not the only
-agency through which he can Americanize himself. And in Americanizing
-himself he is merely doing what the aliens of earlier centuries who
-preceded him have done--he is seeking for economic freedom from a
-master class.
-
-America is a marvellous demonstration of the economic foundations of
-all life. It is a demonstration of what happens to men when economic
-opportunities call forth their resourcefulness and latent ability on
-one hand and when the State, on the other, keeps its hands off them in
-their personal relationships. For the alien quickly adopts a higher
-standard of culture as he rises in the industrial scale, while his
-morals, whatever they may have been, quickly take on the colour of
-his new environment, whatever that may be. And if all of the elements
-which should enter into a consideration of the subject were included,
-I am of the opinion it would be found that the morals, the prevalence
-of vice and crime among the alien population is substantially that of
-the economic class in which he is found rather than the race from which
-he springs. In other words, the alleged prevalence of crime among the
-alien population is traceable to poverty and bad conditions of living
-rather than to ethnic causes, and in so far as it exists it tends
-disappear as the conditions which breed it pass away.
-
-Despite the fact that our hands-off policy of the past has worked
-amazingly well, the time has come when it must be changed. Not because
-of any change in the character of the alien, but because of the change
-which has taken place in our own internal life. Economic conditions
-make it impossible for the alien, as it does for the native born, to
-become a farmer. Exploiting agencies are making it difficult and
-often impossible for the farmer to make a living. Land speculation has
-shot up the price of farm land to prohibitive figures. The railroads
-and middle men and banking agencies are putting the American farmer
-into a semi-servile status. He is unable to market his crop after it
-is produced or he markets it at a figure that ultimately reduces him
-to bankruptcy. The immigration problem remains an economic problem.
-It has become an American problem. The policy we should adopt for
-Americanizing the alien is a policy we should adopt for our own people
-as well, for when economic opportunity came to an end for our own
-people, it created not only an immigration problem, but a domestic
-problem. The solution of one is the solution of the other.
-
-The alien will Americanize himself if he is given the opportunity to
-do so. The bird of passage will cease to migrate when he possesses a
-stake in the land of his adoption. The best cure for Bolshevism is
-not deportation but a home, a farm, a governmental policy of land
-settlement. A constructive immigration policy and Americanization
-policy is one that will:
-
-1. Direct the alien as well as the native born to opportunities of
-employment and especially to agencies that will enable them to become
-home owners and farm owners;
-
-2. Provide government grants, as is done in Australia, Denmark, and
-some of the South American countries, to which the would-be farmer or
-home owner can go for financial assistance. In Denmark and Australia
-any man who shows aptitude and desire for farming and who is able to
-satisfy a local commission of his abilities, can secure a small farm
-in a farm colony, fully equipped for planting. The grant includes a
-house and barn, some cattle and machinery, and sufficient capital to
-carry the settler over the first season. The applicant must provide a
-certain portion of the initial outlay himself. He is aided by experts
-from the colony, he is advised as to what to plant and how to care
-for his cattle. His produce is marketed co-operatively, while much
-of the machinery is owned either by the community or by co-operative
-agencies identified with the community. The land is purchased in large
-tracts by the State in advance of settlement to prevent speculation,
-while settlers are required to develop their holdings. They may not
-purchase for speculative purposes. The State of Denmark has planted
-thousands of home-owning farmers in this way and has all but ended farm
-tenancy in a generation’s time. The farm tenant and farm labourer have
-become owners. A similar policy has been developed in Australia, where
-millions of dollars have been advanced by the State to settlers. In
-both of these countries the land settlement colonies have been a great
-success. There have been few failures and no losses to the State.
-
-3. The savings of the alien should be used for the benefit of the
-alien. Hundreds of millions of dollars leave this country annually in
-the form of remittances. Much of it goes abroad because of fear of
-American banks. Many millions more are in hiding for the same reason.
-The deposits in the Postal Savings banks are largely the deposits of
-the immigrant. They are turned over to the National banks and find
-their way into commercial activities. If these funds were mobilized in
-co-operative banks, as is done all over Europe, or if the Government
-would dedicate them to a revolving fund for aiding persons to build
-homes, to buy farms, and to aid the alien with credit, which he now has
-no means of securing; he would be lured from the city to the land, he
-would become a home and farm owner rather than an industrial worker,
-and would rapidly develop those qualities of mind and character that
-are associated in our minds with the early Anglo-Saxon settler but
-which are rather the qualities which spring up of themselves when the
-economic conditions encourage them.
-
-4. Our deportation laws are a disgrace to any country. They are an
-adaptation of the fugitive slave laws. The offending alien is subject
-to lynch law sanctioned by the State. He is arrested on complaint by an
-inspector. He is then tried by the man who arrests him. His friends and
-relatives are excluded from the trial. The judge who made the arrest
-is often the interpreter and the clerk who transcribes the testimony.
-He also is his jailer. He can and does hold the alien incommunicado.
-Often the alien scarcely knows why he has been arrested. Often he does
-not understand the testimony. The local findings have to be approved
-at Washington by the Department of Labour. But the approval is by a
-clerk who, like the inspector, often wants to make a record. The
-opportunity for collusion with police, with crusaders, with employers,
-with Chambers of Commerce, and with organization bent on “ridding the
-country of disturbers” is manifest. Often men are arrested, tried,
-convicted, and possibly placed on ships for their home countries before
-their families are aware of what has happened to them.
-
-The alien is denied every protection of our constitution. The Bill of
-Rights does not apply to him. He has no presentment before a Grand
-Jury, there is no jury trial, he rarely has counsel, and he is often
-held incommunicado by the official who has taken him into custody and
-who wants to justify his arrest. The only recourse the alien has is
-the writ of habeas corpus. But this is of practically no avail. For
-the courts have held that if there is a scintilla of evidence on which
-the inspector could act the court will not review the finding. And
-a scintilla is any evidence at all. When to this is added the fact
-that the charge “likely to become a public charge” has come to cover
-almost any condition that might arise, and as this charge is usually
-added to the others as a recourse on which the inspector may fall
-back, the chance of relief in the court is practically nil. Under the
-laws as they now exist the alien is a man without a country. He has no
-protection from the constitution and little protection under the laws.
-The alien knows this. He feels that he is defenceless. American liberty
-to him means the liberty of a policeman, a health or school official,
-an immigration inspector, and agents of the department of justice to
-invade his home, to seize his papers, to arrest without warrant, to
-hold incommunicado, and to deport on a charge that is often as foreign
-to the facts as anything could be.
-
-It is this more than anything else that has embittered the alien
-towards America during the last few years. It is this that makes him
-feel that he is not wanted here. It is this that is sending hundreds of
-thousands back to Europe, many of them among the best of the aliens and
-many of them worthy in every way of our confidence and welcome.
-
-A proper immigration policy should be a national policy. Not something
-for the alien alone but for our own people. For the immigration problem
-is merely another form of the domestic problem. When we are ready to
-settle the one we will settle the other. A cross section of one branch
-of our political State is a cross section of another. The alien of
-to-day is not very different from the alien of yesterday. He has the
-same instincts and desires as did those who came in the _Mayflower_.
-Only those who came in the _Mayflower_ made their own laws and their
-own fortunes. Those who come to-day have their laws made for them by
-the class that employs them and they make their own fortunes only as
-those aliens who came first permit them to do so.
-
- FREDERIC C. HOWE
-
-
-
-
-RACIAL MINORITIES
-
- “... not to laugh at the actions of men, nor yet to deplore or
- detest them, but simply to understand them.”--_Spinoza._
-
-
-In America, the race-problem is not only without answer; thus far it is
-even without formulation. In the face of ordinary economic, political,
-and religious difficulties, people habitually formulate creeds
-which give a kind of rhyme and reason to their actions; but where
-inter-racial relations are concerned, the leaders go pussy-footing
-all around the fundamental question, while the emotions of the masses
-translate themselves into action, and action back again into emotion,
-with less consideration of means and ends than one expects of the
-maddest bomb-thrower. Everybody has some notion of the millennial aims
-of the Communist Party, the National Association of Manufacturers, the
-W.C.T.U., the Holy Rollers; but what are the Southerners getting at,
-when they educate the Negro, and refuse him the ballot; what ultimate
-result does the North expect from the granting of the franchise and
-the denial of social equality? Do both the North and the South hope
-to maintain a permanent racial division of the country’s population?
-If so, are the Indians, the Jews and the Asiatics to be classed
-with the Negroes, as unassimilable minorities? How is the conduct
-of the American majority suited to this aim, if it is an aim? How
-can permanent division be maintained, except by permanent prejudice?
-What do the racial liberators, ameliorators, uplifters, and general
-optimists think about it; or do they think about it at all?
-
-From the moment of initial contact between the mass of the American
-population and the country’s most important racial minorities--the
-Indian, the Jew, the Oriental, and the Negro--the self-congratulatory
-feelings of the majority have always found a partial or complete
-counterpart everywhere except among the slaves and the children of
-the slaves. The long delay in the inception of All-Africanism in
-America, and the groping uncertainty which still characterizes its
-manifestations, are due in large part to the cultural youthfulness of
-the American Negro. Biologically, the black race was matured in Africa;
-culturally it had made considerable advances there, before the days of
-the slave-trade. The process of enslavement could not strip away the
-physical characteristics of the race, but in all that has to do with
-cultural life and social inheritance, the Negro was re-born naked in
-the new world.
-
-When one compares the condition of the Negro with that of the other
-three racial minorities at the moment of contact with the miscellaneous
-white population, the Indian seems closer to the Jew and the Oriental
-than to the slave. In a general way, the condition of the Indian
-tribes resembled that of the Negroes in Africa, but the Indians were
-left in possession of most of the elements of savage culture and were
-never entirely deprived of the means of maintaining themselves in this
-stage of development. Needless to say, the Jews and the Orientals were
-in still better case than the Indians, for their imported cultural
-equipment was far more elaborate and substantial, and their economic
-position much better.
-
-The four racial minorities thus varied widely in the degree of their
-self-sufficiency, and likewise, inversely, in the degree of their need
-for absorption into the current of American life. Quite obviously the
-Negro was least independent and most in need of assimilation. However,
-the necessity of the alien group has not been the only factor of
-importance in this matter of assimilation. Each of the minorities has
-been from the beginning subjected to the prejudice of the majority, and
-that group which first lost all life of its own through contact with
-the whites has been singled out for the maximum amount of persecution.
-
-The standard explanation or excuse for race-prejudice is the theory
-of the inequality of racial stocks. However, for all their eagerness
-to bolster up a foregone conclusion, the race-patriots have not been
-able to prove by any sort of evidence, historical, biological, or
-psychological, that racial differences are not simply indications
-of unlikeness, rather than of inherent superiority or inferiority.
-The anthropologists are pretty well agreed that physical differences
-divide mankind into three major groups, European (including the Jews),
-Mongoloid (including the American Indians), and Negroid; but science
-has set no definite limit to the respective potentialities of these
-groups. In other words, it has remained for race-prejudice to assume an
-unproved inferiority, and to devise all possible measures for making
-the life of the objectionable races exactly what it would be, in the
-absence of interference, if the assumed inferiority were real.
-
-To accept the term “race-prejudice” as accurately descriptive of the
-feelings to which it is usually applied, is to assume that these
-feelings originate in race-differences, if not in the inequality
-of races. This, however, is still to be proved. Race-differences
-are a factor of the situation wherever two races are in contact,
-but it is a matter of common knowledge that the members of two
-or more racial groups sometimes intermingle on terms of greatest
-friendliness. To attribute “race-prejudice” to race-difference, and
-to leave race-friendliness entirely unexplained, is to blind oneself
-deliberately to the existence of variable causes which alone can
-account for the variable results that appear in the presence of racial
-constants. Racial inequality of intelligence, if it actually exists,
-is simply one of a number of ever-present race-differences, and in all
-these differences taken together one can find no adequate explanation
-of the variable phenomenon commonly called “race-prejudice,” but so
-designated here only for the sake of convenience.
-
-Any serious attempt to get at the non-racial causes of “race-prejudice”
-in America would necessarily involve the comparison, point by point,
-of economic, social, political, and intellectual conditions in various
-localities in the United States with corresponding local conditions
-in other countries where the races here in conflict are more nearly
-at peace. In the present state of knowledge, the racial theory of
-race-prejudice is demonstrably inadequate, while the non-racial theory
-is an hypothesis which can neither be proved nor disproved. Such being
-the case, the haphazard speculations which follow are not offered as
-a proof of this hypothesis, or as an explanation of the existence of
-race-prejudice in America, but simply as a stimulus to inquiry.
-
-Beginning with these speculations, it may be said that the goods and
-opportunities of the material life, unlike those of the intellectual
-life, are frequently incapable of division without loss to the original
-possessor. On this account, competition is likely to be particularly
-keen and vindictive where material interests are given the foremost
-place. It is also perhaps safe to say that the long preoccupation of
-the American majority with the development of its material inheritance
-has brought to the majority a heavy heritage of materialism. One may
-hazard the statement that the prejudice of America’s native white
-majority against the Negroes, the Indians, the Jews and the Asiatics,
-is now and has always been in some sense attributable and proportional
-to the majority’s fear of some action on the part of the minority
-which might injure the material interests of the majority, while the
-only race-differences which have had any real importance are those
-superficial ones which serve to make the members of the minorities
-recognizable at sight. At any rate, an examination of some of the facts
-that come most easily to hand shows an interesting coincidence between
-the prejudice of the majority and the power of the minority.
-
-Before the Civil War, the structure of Southern society was bottomed
-on slavery, and the fear of any humanization of the Negro which would
-make him appear worthy of emancipation was strong enough to arouse any
-degree of prejudice, and any amount of repression. The prejudice of
-the Southern white populace as a whole reached its maximum intensity
-when emancipation threatened to place the blacks in permanent
-political and economic control of certain portions of the South.
-Even to-day, fear of the political power of the Negroes, and perhaps
-also the over-emphasized fear of black “outrages,” still acts upon
-the white population as a unifying force; but in spite of this fact,
-class-interests have become plainly visible. When Black Republicanism
-had once been driven to cover, the masters set about rebuilding their
-privileges upon the foundation of Negro labour which is still their
-chief support. Only a few Negroes have been able to compete directly
-for a share in these privileges, and accordingly most of the fears
-of the well-to-do people of the South are anticipatory rather than
-immediate.
-
-With the “poor whites,” the case is altogether different. Here there
-is no question of keeping the Negro in his place, for ever since the
-Emancipation the place of the Negro has been very much that of the poor
-white himself, at least in so far as economic status is concerned. In
-the view of the white labourer, the Negro rises too high the moment
-he becomes a competitor for a job, and every Negro is potentially
-just that. Accordingly, the prejudice of the poorer whites is bitter
-and indiscriminate, and is certainly not tending to decrease with the
-cityward drift of the Negro population.
-
-With the appearance of Negro workers in large numbers in Northern
-industrial centres, race-prejudice has begun to manifest itself
-strongly among the white workers. The Northern masters have, however,
-shown little tendency to reproduce the sentiments of their Southern
-peers, for in the North there is no fear of political dominance by the
-blacks, and a supply of cheap labour is as much appreciated as it is
-south of the Line.
-
-In spite of the fact that the proportion of Negroes in the total
-population of the United States has declined steadily from 15.7
-per cent. in 1850 to 9.9 per cent. in 1920, the attitude of both
-Northerners and Southerners is somewhat coloured by the fear that
-the blacks will eventually overrun the country. If prejudice had no
-other basis than this, there would perhaps be no great difficulty in
-effecting its cure. As a matter of course, immigration accounts in
-part for the increasing predominance of the white population; but this
-hardly disposes of the fact that throughout the South, during the
-years 1890–1910, the percentage of native whites of native parentage
-advanced in both urban and rural communities. Discussion of comparative
-birth-rates also gives rise to numerous alarums and excursions, but the
-figures scarcely justify the fears expressed. Statistics show that,
-in spite of the best efforts of the people who attempt to hold the
-black man down, and then fear him all the more because he breeds too
-generously, the improvement in the material condition of the Negro is
-operating inevitably to check the process of multiplication.
-
-If the case of the Negro is complicated in the extreme, that of the
-Indian is comparatively simple. Here race-prejudice has always followed
-the frontier. As long as the Indian interfered with the exploitation
-of the country, the pioneers feared him, and disliked him cordially.
-Their feelings worked themselves out in all manner of personal cruelty,
-as well as in a process of wholesale expropriation, but as soon as the
-tribes had been cooped up on reservations, the white man’s dislike
-for the Indian began to cool off perceptibly. From the beginning, the
-Indian interfered with expansion, not as an economic competitor, but as
-a military enemy; when the dread of him as a fighter disappeared, there
-was no new fear to take its place. During the years 1910 to 1920 the
-Indian population actually decreased 8.6 per cent.
-
-If the Indian has neither shared the privileges nor paid the price
-of a generous participation in American life, the Jew has certainly
-done both. In every important field of activity, the members of this
-minority have proved themselves quite able to compete with the native
-majority, and accordingly the prejudice against them is not confined
-to any one social class, but is concentrated rather in those regions
-where the presence of Jews in considerable numbers predicates their
-competitive contact with individuals of all classes. Although as a
-member of one branch of the European racial family, the Jew is by
-no means so definitely distinguished by physical characteristics as
-are the members of the other minorities here under discussion, it
-is nevertheless true that when the Jew has been identified by his
-appearance, or has chosen to identify himself, the anti-Semite takes on
-most of the airs of superiority which characterize the manifestations
-of prejudice towards the other minorities. Nevertheless, the ordinary
-run of anti-Semitic talk contains frequent admissions of jealousy
-and fear, and it is safe to say that one must look chiefly to such
-emotions, as intensified by the rapid increase of the Jewish population
-from 1,500,000 in 1906 to 3,300,000 in 1918, rather than to the
-heritage of European prejudice, for an explanation of the growth of
-anti-Semitism in America. The inclusion of anti-Semitism with the
-other types of race-prejudice here under discussion follows naturally
-enough from the fact that the Jew is thought of as primarily a Jew,
-whatever the country of his origin may have been, while the Slav,
-for instance, is popularly regarded as a Russian, a Pole, a Serb--a
-_national_ rather than a _racial_ alien.
-
-Like the Jew, the Oriental has come into the United States as a
-“foreigner,” as well as a member of an alien race. The absence of this
-special disqualification has not particularly benefitted the Negro
-and the Indian, but its presence in the case of the Japanese has been
-of considerable service to the agitators. The prevalent dislike and
-fear of the new Japan as a world-power has naturally coloured the
-attitude of the American majority toward the Japanese settlers in this
-country; but this in itself hardly explains why the Californians, who
-were burning Chinamen out of house and home in the ’seventies, are now
-centring their prejudice upon the Japanese agriculturist. The fact is
-that since the passage of the Exclusion Laws the Chinese population
-of the United States has fallen off more than 40 per cent., and the
-importance of Chinese competition has decreased accordingly, while on
-the other hand the number of Japanese increased 53.9 per cent. between
-1910 and 1920, and the new competitors are showing themselves more
-than a match for the white farmers. With a frankness that neither
-Negrophobia nor anti-Semitism has made us familiar with, many of the
-Californians have rested their case against the Japanese on an economic
-foundation, and have confessed that they are unable to compete with
-the Japanese on even terms. As a matter of course, there is the usual
-flow of talk about the inferiority of the alien race, but the fear of
-competition, here so frankly admitted, would be enough in itself to
-account for this new outbreak of “race-prejudice.”
-
-When one considers thus the course that prejudice has taken in the
-case of the Negro, the Indian, the Jew, and the Oriental, it begins
-to appear that this sentiment may wax and wane and change about
-astonishingly in the presence of racial factors that remain always
-the same. Such being the case, one is led to wonder what the attitude
-of the native majority would be, if the minorities were recognizable
-simply as groups, but _not_ as _racial_ groups. In other words, what
-would be the result if the racial factor were reduced simply to
-recognizability? The question has a more than speculative interest.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If the causes of race-prejudice lie quite beyond the reach of any
-simple explanation, the manifestation of this prejudice on the part of
-the American majority are perhaps capable of an analysis which will
-render the whole situation somewhat more comprehensible. By and large,
-and with all due allowance for exceptions, it may be said that, in its
-more familiar manifestations, race-prejudice takes a direction exactly
-opposite to that taken by prejudice against the ordinary immigrant
-of European stock; in the former case, a conscious effort is made to
-magnify the differences between the majority and the minority, while
-in the latter, a vast amount of energy is expended in the obliteration
-of these differences. Thus race-prejudice aspires to preserve and even
-to increase that degree of unlikeness which is its excuse for being,
-while alien-prejudice works itself out of a job, by “Americanizing”
-the immigrant and making him over into an unrecognizable member of
-the majority. On one hand, enforced diversity remains as a source of
-friction, while on the other, enforced uniformity is demanded as the
-price of peace.
-
-Although no purpose can be served by cataloguing here all the means
-employed in the South to keep the black man in his place, a few
-examples may be cited, in order to show the scope of these measures
-of repression. In the economic field, there is a pronounced tendency
-to restrict Negro workers to the humblest occupations, and in the
-agricultural areas the system of peonage or debt-slavery is widely
-employed for the purpose of attaching Negro families to the soil.
-Residence-districts are regularly segregated, Jim Crow regulations
-are everywhere in force, and inter-racial marriages are prohibited
-by law in all the States of the South. The administration of justice
-is in the hands of white judges and white juries, and the Negro’s
-chances in such company are notoriously small. In nearly one-fourth of
-the counties of the South, the population is half, or more than half
-black, but the denial of the ballot excludes the Negroes from local,
-State, and national political activities. In religious organizations,
-segregation is the invariable rule. Theatres and even public libraries
-are regularly closed to the Negro, and in every State in the South
-segregation in schools is prescribed by law. Some idea of the
-significance of the latter provision may be drawn from O. G. Ferguson’s
-study of white and Negro schools in Virginia. In this comparatively
-progressive State, the general rating of the white schools is 40.8, as
-against 22.3 for the coloured schools, the latter figure being seven
-points lower than the lowest general rating for any State in the Union.
-
-Such are some of the legal, extra-legal, and illegal manifestations of
-that prejudice which finds its supreme expression in the activities of
-the lynching-mob and the Ku Klux Klan. There is still a considerable
-annual output of lynchings in this country (in 1920 the victims
-numbered sixty-five, of whom fifty were Negroes done to death in
-the South), but the casualty-list for the South and for the country
-as a whole has decreased steadily and markedly since 1889, and the
-proportion of Negro victims who were accused of rape or attacks on
-women has also decreased, from 31.8 per cent. in 1889–1893 to 19.8 per
-cent. in 1914–1918.
-
-On the other hand, the Ku Klux Klan has now re-commenced its
-ghost-walking activities under the command of an “Imperial Wizard” who
-claims that he has already enlisted 100,000 followers in the fight to
-maintain the “God-ordained” pre-eminence of the Anglo-Saxon race in
-America. Other statements from the lips of the Wizard seem to indicate
-that his organization is not only anti-African, but anti-Semitic,
-anti-Catholic, and anti-Bolshevik as well. Indeed, the bearers of the
-fiery cross seem bent upon organizing an all-American hate society, and
-the expansion of the Klan in the North is already under way.
-
-However, the Klansmen might have succeeded in carrying the war into the
-enemy’s country even without adding new prejudices to their platform.
-There has always been some feeling against the Negro in the North, and
-the war-time migration of the blacks to Northern industrial centres
-certainly has not resulted in any diminution of existing prejudice.
-The National Urban League estimates that the recent exodus from
-Dixie has produced a net increase of a quarter of a million in the
-coloured population of twelve cities above the Line. This movement has
-brought black and white workers into competition in many industries
-where Negroes have hitherto been entirely unknown, and frequently the
-relations between the two groups have been anything but friendly. Since
-about half the “internationals” affiliated with the American Federation
-of Labour still refuse to accept Negro members, the unions themselves
-are in no small part to blame for the use that employers have made of
-Negro workers as strike-breakers.
-
-In twelve Northern and Western States there are laws on the
-statute-books prohibiting marriage between whites and blacks. Jim
-Crow regulations are not in force north of Maryland, but in most of
-the cities there has been a continuous effort to maintain residential
-segregation, and the practice of discrimination in hotels and
-restaurants is the rule rather than the exception. Lynchings are
-infrequent, but the great riots of Washington and Chicago were not
-exactly indicative of good feeling between the races. One situation
-which revealed a remarkable similarity of temper between the North
-and the South was that which arose in the army during the war. It is
-notorious that Northerners in uniform fell in easily with the Southern
-spirit, and gave all possible assistance in an energetic Jim-Crowing of
-the Negroes of Michigan and the Negroes of Mississippi, from the first
-day of their service right through to the last.
-
-The treatment of the Negro in literature and on the stage also reveals
-an unconscious but all the more important unanimity of opinion. It is
-true the North has produced no Thomas Dixons, but it is also true that
-the gentle and unassuming Uncle Tom of Northern song and story is none
-other than the Uncle Remus whom the South loves so much. In Boston, as
-in Baton Rouge, the Negro who is best liked is the loyal, humble, and
-not too able mammie or uncle of the good old days before the war. If
-an exception be made in the case of Eugene O’Neill’s “Emperor Jones,”
-it may be said that American literature has not yet cast a strong,
-upstanding black man for any other rôle than that of beast and villain.
-
-And yet all these forms of discrimination and repression are not fully
-expressive of the attitude of the white population. The people of the
-South are fully sensible of the necessity of keeping the Negro in his
-place; still they do not keep him from attending school. Educational
-facilities, of a sort, are provided, however reluctantly, and in half
-the States of the South school attendance is even made compulsory by
-laws (which may or may not be enforced). The schooling is not of a kind
-that will fit the Negroes for the permanent and contented occupancy of
-a servile position. Generally speaking, the coloured children do not
-receive a vocational education that will keep them in their place, but
-an old-style three-R training that prepares for nothing but unrest.
-If unrest leads to urbanization, the half-hearted education of the
-Negro perhaps serves the interests of the new industrialists; but
-these industrial employers are so few in number that their influence
-cannot outweigh that of the planters who lose their peons, and the
-poor whites who find the Negro with one grain of knowledge a somewhat
-more dangerous competitor than the Negro with none. Hence there is
-every reason to believe that if the white South had rationalized
-this situation, the Negro would be as ruthlessly excluded from the
-school as he now is from the ballot-box. In fact, the education of the
-Negro seems quite inconsistent with race-prejudice as it is generally
-preached and practised in the South.
-
-In the North there is no discrimination in the schools, and black
-children and white are put through the same mill. In the industrial
-field, prejudice cannot effectually close to the Negroes all those
-openings which are created by general economic conditions, and in
-politics the Northern Negro also finds some outlet for his energies.
-
-While it would be quite impossible to show that the existence of these
-miscellaneous educational, industrial, and political opportunities
-is due to any general desire upon the part of the members of the
-white majority to minimize the differences between themselves and the
-Negroes, it is certainly true that this desire exists in a limited
-section of the white population. At the present time, white friends of
-the Negro are actively engaged in efforts to eliminate certain legal
-and illegal forms of discrimination and persecution, and are giving
-financial support to much of the religious work and most of the
-private educational institutions among the blacks. The Inter-racial
-Committee of the War Work Council of the Y.M.C.A. has listed
-thirty-three social and economic agencies, and twenty-three religious
-agencies, in which members of both races are working co-operatively.
-It must be admitted, however, that many, if not most, of the white
-participants in work of this sort are affected by race-prejudice to the
-extent that they desire simply to ameliorate the lowly condition of the
-Negro, without altogether doing away with a certain wholesome degree
-of racial segregation. For the complete elimination of the flavour
-of condescension, one must usually seek out those extreme socialist
-and syndicalist agitators who preach political or non-political
-class-organization, as a substitute for the familiar national and
-racial groupings.
-
-In the case of the American Indian, the prejudice and self-interest of
-the white majority have placed the emphasis on geographic rather than
-social segregation. Here the demand of the whites has been for land
-rather than for labour, and by consequence servility has never been
-regarded as a prime virtue of Indian character.
-
-If the early white settlers had so desired, they of course could
-have enslaved a considerable portion of the Indian population, just
-as the Spaniards did, in regions farther to the southward. However,
-the Americans chose to drive the Indians inland, and to replace them
-in certain regions with African tribesmen who in their native state
-had been perhaps as war-like as the Indians themselves. Thus in the
-natural course of events the African warrior was lost in the slave,
-while the Indian chief continued to be the military opponent rather
-than the economic servant of exploitation, and eventually gained
-romantic interest by virtue of this fact. The nature of this operation
-of debasement on one hand, and ennoblement on the other, is plainly
-revealed in American literature. The latter phase of the work is
-carried forward to-day with great enthusiasm by the Camp Fire Girls and
-the Boy Scouts, whose devotion to the romantic ideal of Indian life is
-nowhere paralleled by a similar interest in African tribal lore.
-
-If the Indian has been glorified by remote admirers, he has also
-been cordially disliked by some of his nearest neighbours, and indeed
-the treatment he has received at the hands of the Government seems to
-reflect the latter attitude rather than the former. In theory, most of
-the Indian reservations are still regarded as subject principalities,
-and the Indians confined within their boundaries are almost entirely
-cut off from the economic, social, and political life of the
-neighbouring white communities. Many of the tribes still receive yearly
-governmental grants of food, clothing, arms, and ammunition, but these
-allowances only serve to maintain them in a condition of dependence,
-without providing any means of exit from it. In justice it should be
-said, however, that the Government has declared an intention to make
-the Indian self-supporting, and accordingly it restricts the grants,
-in principle, to the old and the destitute. Several States have shown
-their complete sympathy with the system of segregation by enacting laws
-prohibiting the inter-marriage of Indians and whites.
-
-On the other hand, the mental and moral Americanization of the red
-man has been undertaken by Protestant and Catholic missions, and more
-recently by Government schools. The agencies of the latter sort are
-especially systematic in their work of depriving the Indian of most of
-the qualities for which he has been glorified in romance, as well as
-those for which he has been disliked by his neighbours. Many a Western
-town enjoys several times each year the spectacle of Indian school-boys
-in blue uniforms and Indian school-girls in pigtails and pinafores,
-marching in military formation through its streets. As long as these
-marchers are destined for a return to the reservation, the townsmen
-can afford to look upon them with mild curiosity. The time for a new
-adjustment of inter-racial relations will not come until the procession
-turns towards the white man’s job on the farm and in the factory--if it
-ever does turn that way.
-
-Attention has already been called to the fact that the Jewish immigrant
-normally marches from the dock directly to the arena of economic
-competition. Accordingly his progress is not likely to be at any time
-the object of mere curiosity. On the other hand, the manifestations
-of prejudice against the Jew have been less aggressive and much less
-systematic than those repressive activities which affect the other
-minorities. Where anti-Semitism is present in America, it seems to
-express itself almost entirely in social discrimination, in the
-narrow sense. On the other hand, economic, political, and educational
-opportunities are opened to the Jews with a certain amount of
-reluctance. A major exception to this rule of discrimination must be
-made in the case of those socialists, syndicalists and trade-unionists
-who have diligently sought the support of the Jewish workers.
-
-The Chinaman has also some friends now among the people who once
-regarded him as the blackest of villains. Indeed, the Californian’s
-attitude toward the Orientals has in it an element of unconscious irony
-which somewhat illuminates the character of the race-problem. The
-average Easterner will perhaps be surprised to learn that in Western
-eyes the Chinaman is an inferior, of course, but nevertheless an honest
-man, noted for square dealing and the prompt payment of his debts,
-while the Jap is a tricky person whom one should never trust on any
-account.
-
-In California the baiting of the Japanese is now almost as much a part
-of political electioneering as is the abuse of the Negro in the South.
-The Native Sons of the Golden West and the American Legion have gone on
-record in determined opposition to any expansion of Japanese interests
-in California, while the Japanese Exclusion League is particularly
-active in trouble-making propaganda. Economic discrimination has taken
-statutory form in the Alien Land Laws of 1913 and 1920; discriminatory
-legislation of the same general type has been proposed in Texas and
-Oregon; a bill providing for educational segregation has been presented
-for a second time at Sacramento; Congress has been urged to replace
-the “gentlemen’s agreement” with an absolute prohibition of Japanese
-immigration; and there is even a demand for a constitutional amendment
-which will deny citizenship to the American-born children of aliens who
-are themselves ineligible for naturalization. The method of legislation
-is perhaps preferable to the method of force and violence, but if the
-previous history of race-prejudice means anything, it means that force
-will be resorted to if legislation fails. At bottom, the spirit of
-the California Land Laws is more than a little like that of a Georgia
-lynching; in the one case as in the other, the dominant race attempts
-to maintain its position, not by a man-to-man contest, with fair
-chances all around, but by depositing itself bodily and _en masse_ on
-top of the subject people and crushing them.
-
-If in the realm of individual conduct this sort of behaviour works
-injury to the oppressor, as well as to the oppressed, it is not
-otherwise where masses of men are concerned. Stephen Graham, in his
-recent book, “The Soul of John Brown,” says that “in America to-day,
-and especially in the South, there is a hereditary taint left by
-slavery, and it is to be observed in the descendants of the masters
-as much as in the descendants of the slaves. It would be a mistake to
-think of this American problem as exclusively a Negro problem.” Indeed,
-it is true that in every case the race-problem is the problem of the
-majority as well as of the minority, for the former can no more escape
-the reaction of prejudice than the latter can escape its direct effects.
-
-To-day the white South is still under the influence of a system of
-life and thought that is far more enduring than the one institution
-which gave it most complete expression. The Emancipation abolished
-slavery, but it did not rid the master of the idea that it is his
-right to live by the labour of the slave. The black man is not yet
-relieved of the duty of supporting a certain proportion of the white
-population in leisure; nor does it appear that the leisured Southerner
-of to-day makes a better use of his time than his ancestors did before
-him. Indeed, an historian who judged the peoples chiefly by their
-contribution to science and the arts would still be obliged to condemn
-the white South, not for enslaving the Negro, but for dissipating in
-the practices of a barren gentility the leisure that Negro labour
-created, and still creates, so abundantly. It is notorious also that in
-the South the airs of gentility have been more widely broadcast among
-the white population than the leisure necessary for their practice,
-with the result that much honest work which could not be imposed upon
-the black man has been passed on to posterity, and still remains
-undone.
-
-Any one who seeks to discover the cause of the mental lethargy that
-has converted the leisure of the South so largely into mere laziness
-must take some account of a factor that is always present where
-race-prejudice exists. The race which pretends to superiority may not
-always succeed in superimposing itself economically upon the inferior
-group; and yet the pride and self-satisfaction of the members of the
-“superior” race will pretty surely make for indolence and the deadening
-of the creative spirit. This will almost inevitably be true where the
-superiority of the one race is acknowledged by the other, and where no
-contest of wits is necessary for the maintenance of the _status quo_.
-This is the condition that has always obtained, and still obtains in
-most of the old slave territory. In Dixie it is a career simply to go
-through life inside of a white skin. However ignorant and worthless
-the white man may be, it is still his privilege to proclaim on any
-street corner that he is in all respects a finer creature than any
-one of several million human beings whom he classes all together as
-“good-for-nothin’ niggers.” If the mere statement of this fact is not
-enough to bring warm applause from all the blacks in the neighbourhood,
-the white man is often more than willing to use fire and sword to
-demonstrate a superiority which he seldom stoops to prove in any
-other fashion. Naturally this feeling of God-given primacy tends to
-make its possessors indolent, immune to new ideas of every sort, and
-quite willing to apply “the short way with the nigger” to any one who
-threatens the established order of the universe.
-
-It would be foolish indeed to suppose that the general intolerance,
-bigotry, and backwardness which grow out of race-prejudice have
-affected the South alone. The North and the West have their prejudices
-too, their consciousness of a full-blooded American superiority that
-does not have to be proved, their lazy-mindedness, their righteous
-anger, their own short way with what is new and strange. No sane man
-will attribute the origin of all these evils to race-prejudice alone,
-but no honest man will deny that the practice of discrimination against
-the racial minorities has helped to infect the whole life and thought
-of the country with a cocky and stupefying provincialism.
-
-Perhaps the most interesting phase of the whole racial situation in
-America is the attitude which the minorities themselves have maintained
-in the presence of a dominant prejudice which has constantly emphasized
-and magnified the differences between the minorities and majority, and
-has even maintained the spirit of condescension, and the principle of
-segregation in such assimilative activities as education and Christian
-mission work. One would naturally expect that such an attitude on
-the part of the majority would stimulate a counter race-prejudice in
-each of the minorities, which would render them also intent upon the
-maintenance of differentiation.
-
-Although such a counter prejudice has existed from the beginning among
-the Indians, the Jews, and the Asiatics, it is only now beginning to
-take form among the Negroes. The conditions of the contact between the
-black minority and the white majority have thus been substantially
-different from those which existed in the other cases, and the results
-of this contact seem to justify the statement that, so long as it
-remains _one-sided_, the strongest race-prejudice cannot prevent the
-cultural and even the biological assimilation of one race to another.
-In other words, prejudice defeats itself, in a measure, just so long
-as one of the parties accepts an inferior position; in fact, it
-becomes fully effective only when the despised group denies its own
-inferiority, and throws the reproach back upon those with whom it
-originated. Thus the new racial self-consciousness of a small section
-of the Negro population gives the prejudiced whites a full measure of
-the differentiation they desire, coupled with an absolute denial of the
-inferiority which is supposed to justify segregation.
-
-It has already been pointed out that the enslavement of the Negroes
-deprived them of practically everything to which racial pride might
-attach itself, and left them with no foundation of their own on which
-to build. Thus they could make no advances of any sort except in so
-far as they were permitted to assimilate the culture of the white man.
-In the natural course of events, the adoption of the English language
-came first, and then shortly the Negro was granted such a share in the
-white man’s heaven as he has never yet received of the white man’s
-earth. As the only available means of self-expression, religion took a
-tremendous hold upon the slaves, and from that day to this, the black
-South has wailed its heart out in appeals to the white man’s God for
-deliverance from the white man’s burden. The Negro “spirituals” are not
-the songs of African tribesmen, the chants of free warriors. Indeed,
-the white man may claim full credit for the sadness that darkens the
-Negro’s music, and put such words as these into the mouth of the Lord:
-
- Go down, Moses,
- Way down in Egyp’ lan’
- Tell ole Pharaoh
- Le’ ma people go!
- Israel was in Egyp’ lan’
- Oppres’ so hard dey could not stan’,
- Le’ ma people go!
-
-When casual observers say that the black man is naturally more
-religious than the white, they lose sight of the fact that the number
-of church-members per thousand individuals in the Negro population is
-about the same as the average for the United States as a whole; and
-they forget also the more important fact that the Negro has never had
-all he wanted of anything except religion--and in segregated churches
-at that. It is more true of the black men than of Engel’s proletarians,
-that they have been put off for a very long time with checks on the
-bank of Heaven.
-
-Emancipation and the Fourteenth Amendment seemed to open the path to
-an earthly paradise; but this vision was soon eclipsed by a second
-Civil War that resulted in a substantial victory for the white South.
-Economic repression could not be made entirely effective, however, and
-in the fifty-three years from 1866 to 1919 the number of American Negro
-homeowners increased from 12,000 to 600,000 and the number of Negroes
-operating farms from 20,000 to 1,000,000. In 1910 the Negro population
-still remained 72.6 per cent. rural, but the cityward movement of the
-blacks during the years 1890 to 1910 was more rapid than that of the
-whites. Education has directly facilitated economic progress, and has
-resulted in an increase of literacy among the Negroes from ten per
-cent. in 1866 to eighty per cent. in 1919. During the period 1900 to
-1910, the _rate_ of increase of literacy among the blacks was much more
-rapid than that among the whites. Thus from the day he was cut off from
-his own inheritance, the American Negro has reached out eagerly for an
-alien substitute, until to-day, in practically everything that has to
-do with culture, he is not black but white--and artificially retarded.
-
-Since America has deprived the Negro of the opportunity to grow up as
-an African, and at the same time has denied him the right to grow up
-as a white man, it is not surprising that a few daring spirits among
-the Negroes have been driven at last to the conclusion that there is no
-hope for their race except in an exodus from the white man’s culture
-and the white man’s continent. The war did a great deal to prepare
-the way for this new movement; the Negroes of America heard much
-talk of democracy not meant for their ears; their list of wrongs was
-lengthened, but at the same time their economic power increased; and
-many of them learned for the first time what it meant to fight back.
-Some of them armed themselves, and began to talk of taking two lives
-for one when the lynching-mob came. Then trouble broke in Chicago and
-Washington--and the casualties were not all of one sort. Out of this
-welter of unrest and rebellion new voices arose, some of them calling
-upon the Negro workers to join forces with their white brothers;
-some fierce and vengeful, as bitterly denunciatory of socialism and
-syndicalism as of everything else that had felt the touch of the white
-man’s hand; some intoxicated, ecstatic with a new religion, preaching
-the glory of the black race and the hope of the black exodus.
-
-With much travail, there finally came forth, as an embodiment of the
-extreme of race-consciousness, an organization called the Universal
-Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League. This clan
-lays claim to a million members in the United States, the West Indies,
-South America and South Africa, and announces as its final object the
-establishment of a black empire in Africa. Connected with the U.N.I.A.
-are the Black Star Line, capitalized at $10,000,000, and the Negro
-Factories Corporation, capitalized at $2,000,000. Just what these
-astonishing figures mean in actual cash it is impossible to say, but
-this much is certain: the Black Star Line already owns three of the
-many vessels which--say the prophets of the movement--will some day ply
-among the Negro lands of the world.
-
-To cap the climax, the U.N.I.A. held in New York City during the month
-of August, 1920, “the first International Negro Convention,” which drew
-up a Negro Declaration of Independence, adopted a national flag and
-a national anthem, and elected “a Provisional President of Africa, a
-leader for the American Negroes, and two leaders for the Negroes of the
-West Indies, Central and South America.”
-
-The best testimony of the nature of this new movement is to be found
-in an astonishing pamphlet called the “Universal Negro Catechism,” and
-issued “by authority of the High Executive Council of the Universal
-Negro Improvement Association.” In this catechism one discovers such
-items as the following, under the head of “Religious Knowledge”:
-
- Q. Did God make any group or race of men superior to another?
-
- A. No; He created all races equal, and of one blood, to dwell
- on all the face of the earth.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Q. What is the colour of God?
-
- A. A spirit has neither colour, nor other natural parts, nor
- qualities.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Q. If ... you had to think or speak of the colour of God, how
- would you describe it?
-
- A. As black; since we are created in His image and likeness.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Q. What did Jesus Christ teach as the essential principle of
- true religion?
-
- A. The universal brotherhood of man growing out of the
- universal Fatherhood of God.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Q. Who is responsible for the colour of the Ethiopians?
-
- A. The Creator; and what He has done cannot be changed. Read
- Jeremiah 13:23.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Q. What prediction made in the 68th Psalm and the 31st Verse is
- now being fulfilled?
-
- A. “Princes shall come out of Egypt, Ethiopia shall soon
- stretch out her hands unto God.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- Q. What does this verse prove?
-
- A. That Negroes will set up their own government in Africa with
- rulers of their own race.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Q. Will Negroes ever be given equal opportunity and treatment
- in countries ruled by white men?
-
- A. No; they will enjoy the full rights of manhood and liberty
- only when they establish their own nation and government in
- Africa.
-
-Perhaps enough has already been said to make it clear that there exists
-in America no distinctive black culture which could spontaneously give
-rise to such a movement as this. Culturally the black man is American;
-biologically he is African. It is solely and entirely the prejudice of
-the American majority that has forced this group of Negroes to attempt
-to reconstruct a cultural and sentimental connection that was destroyed
-long ago. The task which faces the leaders of the new movement is one
-of almost insurmountable difficulty, for in spite of every sort of
-persecution, the general life and thought of America are still far more
-easily accessible to the Negro than is anything distinctively his own.
-
-The cultural shipwreck of the Negro on the American shore has thus
-placed him more completely at the mercy of the majority than the other
-minorities have ever been. In the case of the Indians, the Jews, and
-the Orientals, the race-name has not stood simply for an incomplete
-Americanism, but for a positive cultural quality which has persisted in
-the face of all misfortune. These races were provisioned, so to speak,
-for a long siege, while the Negro had no choice but to eat out of the
-white man’s hand, or starve.
-
-The reservation-system has reduced many of the Indian tribes to a
-state of economic dependence, but it has also helped to preserve
-their cultural autonomy. In most cases the isolated communities on
-the reservations are distinctly Indian communities. The non-material
-inheritance of the past has come down to the present generation in a
-fairly complete form, with the result that the Indian of to-day may
-usually take his choice between Indian culture and white. Under these
-conditions the labours of missionaries and educators have not been
-phenomenally successful, as is witnessed by the fact that the number
-of Protestant Christians per thousand Indians is still only about
-one-seventh as large as that for the Negroes, while the percentage
-of illiterates is much larger among the Indians. However, school
-attendance is increasing at a more rapid rate than among the whites,
-and the prospect is that the Government schools will eventually deprive
-the country of all that is attractive in Indian life.
-
-Toward the close of the 19th century, the Indian’s resentment of
-the white man’s overbearing actions found expression in a religious
-movement which originated in Nevada and spread eastward till it
-numbered among its adherents nearly all the natives between the Rocky
-Mountains and the Missouri River. This messianic faith bore the name
-of a ceremonial connected with it, the Ghost Dance, and was based upon
-a divine revelation which promised the complete restoration of the
-Indian’s inheritance. Such doctrines have, of course, been preached
-in many forms and in many lands, but it is no great compliment to the
-amiability of American civilization that the gospel of deliverance has
-found so many followers among the Negroes, the Indians, and the Jews
-who dwell within the borders of the country.
-
-It does not seem likely that the Zionist version of this gospel will
-produce any general exodus of the last-named minority from this
-country, for in spite of prejudice, the Jews have been able to make a
-large place for themselves in the United States. Since the movements
-of the Jews have not been systematically restricted, as those of the
-Negroes and the Indians have been, the great concentration of the
-Jewish population in the cities of the East would seem to be due in
-large measure to the choice of the Jews themselves. At the present time
-they dominate the clothing industry, the management of the theatre,
-and the production of motion-pictures. Approximately one-tenth of
-the trade-unionists in the United States are Jews, and the adherence
-of a considerable number of Jews to the doctrines of socialism and
-syndicalism has unquestionably been one of the causes of prejudice
-against the race.
-
-In matters that pertain more directly to the intellectual life, the
-Jews have exhibited every degree of eagerness for, and opposition to,
-assimilation. There are among them many schools for the teaching of
-the Hebrew language, and some other schools--private and expensive
-ones--in which only non-Jewish, “all-American” teachers are employed.
-Of the seventy-eight Jewish periodicals published in the United States,
-forty-eight are printed in English. In every Jewish centre, Yiddish
-theatres have been established for the amusement of the people; but
-Jewish managers, producers, actors, and playwrights have also had a
-large part in the general dramatic activities of the country. Finally,
-in the matter of religion, the response of the Jews to Christian
-missionary work has been very slight indeed, while, on the other
-hand, the number of synagogue-members per thousand Jews is only about
-one-fourth the general average of religious affiliation for the United
-States as a whole. When one considers the fact that in some fields the
-Jews have thus made advances in spite of opposition, while in others
-they have refused opportunities offered to them, it seems at least
-probable that the incompleteness of their cultural assimilation is due
-as much to their own racial pride as to the prejudice of the majority.
-
-Similarly in the case of the Orientals, the pride and self-sufficiency
-of the minority has helped to preserve for it a measure of cultural
-autonomy. In the absence of such a disposition on the part of the
-Chinese, it would be difficult to account for the fact that their
-native costume has not disappeared during the thirty-nine years
-since the stoppage of immigration. San Francisco’s Chinatown still
-remains very markedly Chinese in dress largely because the Chinese
-themselves have chosen to keep it so. The Japanese have taken much
-more kindly to the conventional American costume, but one is hardly
-justified in inferring from this that they are more desirous for
-general assimilation. Indeed, one would expect the opposite to be the
-case, for most of the Japanese in America had felt the impress of
-the nationalistic revival in Japan before their departure from that
-country. In a measure this accounts for the fact that Japanese settlers
-have established a number of Buddhist temples and Japanese-language
-schools in the United States. However, figures furnished by the “Joint
-Committee on Foreign Language Publications,” which represents a number
-of Evangelical denominations, seem to indicate that the Japanese in the
-United States are much more easily Christianized than the Chinese, and
-are even less attached to Buddhism than are the Jews to their native
-faith. In the nature of things, the domestic practice of Shinto-worship
-among the Japanese is incapable of statistical treatment.
-
-Thus the combination of all the internal and external forces that
-affect the racial minorities in America has produced a partial, but by
-no means a complete, remodelling of minority-life in accordance with
-standards set by the majority. Prejudice and counter-prejudice have not
-prevented this change, and there is no accounting for the condition of
-the American minorities to-day without due attention to the positive
-factor of cultural assimilation, as well as to the negative factor of
-prejudice.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Since it has already been implied that a greater or less assimilation
-by the minorities of the culture of the majority is inevitable, it
-is apparent that the relation of this assimilative change to the
-biological fusion of the groups is a matter of ultimate and absolute
-importance. Wherever friction exists between racial groups, the mere
-mention of biological fusion is likely to stir up so much fire and
-smoke that all facts are completely lost to sight; and yet it is quite
-obvious that the forces of attraction and repulsion which play upon the
-several races in America have produced biological as well as cultural
-results.
-
-The mulatto population of the United States is the physical embodiment
-of a one-sided race-prejudice. By law, by custom, even by the
-visitation of sudden and violent death, the master-class of the South
-expresses a disapproval of relations between white women and coloured
-men, which does not apply in any forcible way to similar relations
-between white men and coloured women. The white male is in fact the
-go-between for the races. The Negroes have not the power, and sometimes
-not even the will, to protect themselves against his advances, and the
-result is that illegitimate mulatto children in great numbers are born
-of Negro mothers and left to share the lot of the coloured race.
-
-If the infusion of white blood were stopped entirely, the proportion
-of mulattoes in the Negro race would nevertheless go on increasing,
-since the children of a mulatto are usually mulattoes, whether the
-other parent be mulatto or black. There is, however, no reason for
-supposing that under such conditions the proportion of mulattoes to
-blacks would increase _more_ rapidly in one geographic area than in
-another. The fact is that during the period 1890 to 1910 the number of
-mulattoes per 1,000 blacks _decreased_ in the North from 390 to 363,
-and _increased_ in the South from 159 to 252; the inference as to white
-parenthood is obvious. During the same period the black population of
-the entire United States increased 22.7 per cent., while the mulatto
-population increased 81.1 per cent. The mulatto group is thus growing
-far more rapidly than either the black or the white, and the male
-white population of the South is largely responsible for the present
-expansion of this class, as well as for its historical origin.
-
-Thus the South couples a maximum of repression with a maximum of racial
-intermixture; indeed, the one is naturally and intimately associated
-with the other. The white population as a whole employs all manner
-of devices to keep the Negro in the social and economic status most
-favourable to sexual promiscuity, and aggressive white males take full
-advantage of the situation thus created.
-
-While it is not generally admitted in the South that the progressive
-whitening of the black race is a natural result of the maintenance of
-a system of slavery and subjection, the converse of this proposition
-is stated and defended with all possible ardour. That is to say, it
-is argued that any general improvement in the condition of the Negro
-will increase the likelihood of racial intermixture on a higher level,
-through inter-marriage. The Southerners who put forth this argument
-know very well that inter-marriage is not likely to take place in the
-presence of strong race-prejudice, and they know, too, that the Negro
-who most arouses their animosity is the “improved” Negro who will not
-keep his place. They are unwilling to admit that this increase in
-prejudice is due largely, if not wholly, to the greater competitive
-strength of the improved Negro; and likewise they prefer to disregard
-the fact that such a Negro resents white prejudice keenly, and tends to
-exhibit on his own part a counter prejudice which in itself acts as an
-additional obstacle to inter-marriage.
-
-In the absence of such factors as Negro self-consciousness and
-inter-racial competition, it would be difficult to account for the
-extreme rarity of marriages between blacks and whites in the Northern
-States. No comprehensive study of this subject has been made, but an
-investigation conducted by Julius Drachsler has shown that of all the
-marriages contracted by Negroes in New York City during the years
-1908 to 1912, only 0.93 per cent. were mixed. The same investigation
-revealed the fact that Negro men contracted mixed marriages about four
-times as frequently as Negro women.
-
-Marriages between whites and Indians have not been so vigorously
-condemned by the American majority as those between whites and Negroes,
-and the presumption is that the former have been much more frequent.
-However, it appears that no systematic investigation of Indian mixed
-marriages has been made, and certainly no census previous to that of
-1910 gives any data of value on the subject of mixed blood among the
-Indians. The enumeration of 1910 showed that 56.5 per cent. of the
-Indians were full-blooded, 35.2 per cent. were of mixed blood, and
-8.4 per cent. were unclassified. Although it is impossible to fix the
-responsibility as definitely here as in the case of the Negro, it is
-obvious that an infusion of white blood half again as great as that
-among the Negroes cannot be accounted for in any large part by racial
-inter-marriages. Without question, it is chiefly due to the same sort
-of promiscuity that has been so common in the South, and the present
-and potential checks upon the process of infusion are similar to those
-already discussed.
-
-In the case of the Jews and the Asiatics, it seems that the only
-figures available are those gathered by Drachsler. He found that only
-1.17 per cent. of the marriages contracted by Jews in New York City
-during the years 1908 to 1912 were classifiable as “mixed,” while
-the corresponding percentages for the Chinese and the Japanese were
-55.56 and 72.41 respectively. The largeness of the figures in the
-case of Orientals is accounted for in part by the fact that there are
-comparatively few women of Mongolian race in New York City. Besides
-this, it must be remembered that, whatever the degree of their cultural
-assimilation, the Chinese and Japanese residents of the metropolis are
-not sufficiently numerous to form important competitive groups, while
-the Jews constitute one-quarter of the entire population of the city.
-Does any one doubt that the situation in regard to mixed marriages
-would be partially reversed in San Francisco?
-
-When due allowance is made for special conditions, Drachsler’s
-figures do not seem to run contrary to the general proposition that
-an improvement in the economic and social condition of one of the
-minorities, and a partial or complete adoption by the minority of the
-culture of the majority, does not necessarily prepare the way for
-racial fusion, but seems to produce exactly the opposite effect by
-increasing the competitive power of the minority, the majority’s fear
-of its rivals, and the prejudice of each against the other.
-
-In spite of all that prejudice can do to prevent it, the economic,
-social, and intellectual condition of the minorities is becoming
-increasingly like that of the majority; and yet it is not to be
-expected that as long as the minorities remain physically recognizable
-this change will result in the elimination of prejudice, nor is it
-likely that the cultural assimilation which checks the process of
-racial intermixture through promiscuous intercourse will result
-automatically in intermixture on a higher level, and the consequent
-disappearance of the recognizability of the minorities. Prejudice does
-not altogether prevent cultural assimilation; cultural assimilation
-increases competitive strength without eliminating recognizability;
-competitive strength _plus_ recognizability produces more prejudice;
-and so on ... and so on.... Thus it seems probable that race-prejudice
-will persist in America as long as the general economic, social,
-political, and intellectual system which has nurtured it endures. No
-direct attack upon the race-problem, as such, can alter this system in
-any essential way.
-
-Is this conception sound, or not? It stands very high upon a slim
-scaffolding of facts, put together in pure contrariness after it had
-been stated that no adequate foundation for such a structure could be
-found anywhere. But, after all, it is no great matter what happens
-to the notion that race-prejudice can be remedied only incidentally.
-If the conditions which surround race-prejudice are only studied
-comparatively, this notion and others like it will get all the
-attention they deserve.
-
-
-_RACE PROBLEMS_
-
-(The answers are merely by way of suggestion, but the questions may
-prove to be worthy of serious attention.)
-
- Q. Has the inherent inferiority of any human race been
- established by historical, biological or psychological evidence?
-
- A. No.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Q. Does the theory of the inequality of human races offer a
- satisfactory explanation of the existence of race-prejudice?
-
- A. No.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Q. Do physical characteristics make the members of the several
- races recognizable?
-
- A. Yes.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Q. Is race-prejudice inherent and inevitable, in the sense that
- it always exists where two recognizably different races are in
- contact?
-
- A. No.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Q. How does it happen that in the presence of _racial_
- factors which remain constant, race-prejudice exists in some
- localities, and is absent in others?
-
- A. No satisfactory explanation of these local variations in
- inter-racial feeling has yet been given; however, the existence
- of the variations themselves would seem to indicate that
- the primary causes of race-prejudice are _not racial_ but
- _regional_.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Q. What study will lead most directly to an understanding of
- race-prejudice--that of universal racial differences, or that
- of regional environmental differences which are associated with
- the existence and non-existence of racial prejudice?
-
- A. The latter.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Q. Does the systematic study of regional environmental
- differences in the United States, in their relation to
- race-prejudice, yield any results of importance?
-
- A. No such systematic study has ever been made; a casual
- glance seems to reveal an interesting coincidence between
- race-prejudice and the fear of competition.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Q. Is competition more likely to produce race-prejudice in the
- United States than elsewhere?
-
- A. Because of the general preoccupation of the American people
- with material affairs, _economic_ competition is likely to
- produce unusually sharp antagonisms.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Q. Does the coincidence between race-prejudice and the fear of
- competition offer a complete explanation of the existence and
- strength of race-prejudice in the United States?
-
- A. No; no such claim has been advanced.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Q. Is the assimilation by the minorities of the culture of the
- majority taking place continuously, in spite of the prejudice
- of the majority and the counter-prejudice of three of the
- minorities?
-
- A. Yes.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Q. Does this cultural assimilation make for better inter-racial
- feeling?
-
- A. Probably not, because as long as physical race-differences
- remain, cultural assimilation increases the strength of the
- minority as a _recognizable_ competitive group, and hence
- it also increases the keenness of the rivalry between the
- minorities and the majority.
-
- Q. How can the recognizability of the minorities be eliminated?
-
- A. By blood-fusion with the majority.
-
- Q. How can blood-fusion come about if cultural assimilation
- increases rivalry and prejudice?
-
- A.  ............................... .
-
- Q. Is it then true that, as things stand, the future of
- inter-racial relations in the United States depends upon the
- ratio between cultural assimilation, which seems inevitable,
- and biological assimilation, which seems unlikely?
-
- A. It so appears.
-
- Q. Does the race-problem in the United States then seem
- practically insoluble as a separate problem?
-
- A. It does.
-
- Q. Has the race-problem ever been solved anywhere by direct
- attack upon it as a _race_ problem?
-
- A. Probably not.
-
- Q. Does not this conclusion involve a return to the assumption
- that race-prejudice is inevitable wherever race-differences
- exist; and has this not been emphatically denied?
-
- A. On the contrary, the implication is that race-prejudice is
- inevitable where _race-prejudice_ exists. The conclusion in
- regard to the United States is based on the single assumption
- that the _non-racial_ conditions under which race-prejudice has
- arisen will remain practically unchanged.
-
- Q. Is it then conceivable that a complete alteration of
- non-racial conditions--as, for instance, an economic
- revolution which would change the whole meaning of the word
- “competition”--might entirely revise the terms of the problem?
-
- A. It is barely conceivable--but this paper is not an accepted
- channel for divine revelation.
-
- GEROID TANQUARY ROBINSON
-
-
-
-
-ADVERTISING
-
-
-Do I understand you to say that you do not believe in advertising?
-Indeed! Soon you will be telling me that you do not believe in God.
-Though, to be sure, in so doing you would be committing less of a crime
-against the tenets of modern American civilization than in doubting
-the existence of a power so great that overnight it can raise up in
-our midst gods, kings, and other potentates, creating a world which
-for splendour and opulence far surpasses our own poor mortal sphere--a
-world in which every prospect pleases and only the reluctant spender is
-vile.
-
-True, we can only catch a fleeting glimpse of its many marvels. True,
-we have scarcely time to admire a millionth part of the joys and
-magnificence of one before a new and greatly improved universe floats
-across the horizon, and, from every corner news-stand, smilingly
-bids us enter its portals. True, I repeat, our inability to grasp or
-appreciate the full wonder of these constantly arriving creations,
-yet even the narrow limitations of our savage and untutored minds can
-hardly prevent us from acclaiming a miracle we fail to understand.
-
-If it were only given me to live the life led by any one of the
-fortunate creatures that dwell in these advertising worlds, I should
-gladly renounce my home, my wife, and my evil ways and become the
-super-snob of a mock creation. All day long should I stand smartly
-clad in a perfectly fitting union-suit just for the sport of keeping
-my obsequious butler waiting painfully for me with my lounging-gown
-over his exhausted arm. On other days I should be found sitting in mute
-adoration before a bulging bowl of breakfast food, and, if any one
-should chance to be listening at the keyhole, they might even catch me
-in the act of repeating reverently and with an avid smile on my lips,
-“I can never stir from the table until I have completely crammed myself
-with Red-Blooded American Shucks,” adding in a mysterious whisper, “To
-be had at all good grocers.”
-
-There would be other days of course, days when I should ride in a
-motor of unrivalled power with companions of unrivalled beauty, across
-canyons of unrivalled depth and mountains of unrivalled height. Then
-would follow still other days, the most perfect days of all, days when
-the snow-sheathed earth cracks in the clutches of an appalling winter
-and only the lower classes stir abroad. This would be the time that I
-should select for removing the lounging gown from my butler’s arm and
-bask in the glowing warmth of my perfect heater, with my chair placed
-in such a position as to enable me to observe the miserable plight of
-my neighbours across the way as they strive pitifully to keep life in
-their bodies over the dying embers of an anæmic fire. The sight of
-the sobbing baby and haggard mother would only serve to intensify my
-satisfaction in having been so fortunate and far-sighted as to have
-possessed myself of a Kill Kold Liquid Heat Projector--That Keeps the
-Family Snug.
-
-What days I should spend! Take the literary days, for instance. Could
-anything be more edifying than to dip discriminatingly into a six-inch
-bookshelf with the absolute assurance that a few minutes spent thus
-each day in dipping would, in due course of time, give me complete
-mastery of all the best literature of the world--and incidentally
-gain for me a substantial raise at the office? Nor could any of the
-literature of the past ages equal my hidden library of books containing
-Vital Secrets. In this room there would linger a never-failing thrill.
-Here I should retreat to learn the secret of success, the secret of
-salesmanship, the secret of vigour, the secret of bull-dozing one’s
-boss, the secret of spell-binding, the secret of personality and social
-charm, all bearing a material value measured in dollars and cents. In
-time I should so seethe with secrets that, unable to bear them any
-longer, I should break down before my friends and give the whole game
-away.
-
-But why should I lacerate my heart in the contemplation of happiness I
-shall never experience? Why should I dwell upon the pipe-filling days,
-or the days when I should send for samples? Why torture my mind with
-those exquisitely tailored days when, with a tennis racket in one hand
-and a varsity crew captain on my shoulder, I should parade across the
-good old campus in a suit bereft of wrinkles and a hat that destroyed
-the last shreds of restraint in all beholding women? No, I can go no
-further.
-
-For when I consider the remarkable characters that so charmingly infest
-my paradise never found, I cannot help asking myself, “How do they
-get that way?” How do the men’s legs grow so slim and long and their
-chins so smooth and square? Why have the women always such perfect
-limbs and such innocent but alluring smiles? Why are families always
-happy and children always good? What miracle has banished the petty
-irritations and deficiencies of life and smoothed out the problems of
-living? How and why--is there an answer? Can it all be laid at the door
-of advertising, or do we who read, the great, sweltering mass of us,
-insist upon such things and demand a world of artificial glamour and
-perfectly impossible people? The crime is committed by collusion, I am
-forced to conclude. Advertising, for the most part, makes its appeal to
-all that is superficial and snobbish in us, and we as a solid phalanx
-are only too glad to be appealed to in such a manner.
-
-In only the most unscholarly way can I lay my reflections before you,
-and the first one is this: advertising is America’s crudest and most
-ruthless sport, religion, or profession, or whatever you choose to call
-it. With an accurate stroke, but with a perverted intent, it coddles
-and toys with all that is base and gross in our physical and spiritual
-compositions. The comforts and happiness it holds out to the reader
-are for ever contrasted with the misery and misfortune of another.
-Thus, if I ride in a certain make of motor, I have the satisfaction of
-knowing that every one who rides in a motor of another make is of a
-lower caste than myself and will certainly eat dust for the rest of his
-life. There is a real joy in this knowledge. Again, if I wear a certain
-advertised brand of underwear, I have the pleasure of knowing that my
-fellow-men not so fortunately clad are undoubtedly foolish swine who
-will eventually die of sunstroke, after a life devoted entirely to
-sweating. Here, too, is a joy of rare order. If I brush my teeth with
-an advertised tooth paste, my satisfaction is enhanced by the knowledge
-that all other persons who fail to use this particular paste will in a
-very short time lose all of their teeth. In this there is a savage, but
-authentic delight. Even if I select a certain classic from my cherished
-six-inch bookshelf, I shall have a buoyant feeling in knowing that all
-men, who, after the fatigue of the day, take comfort in the latest
-murder or ball-game, are of inferior intellect and will never succeed
-in the world of business.
-
-This is one of the most successful weapons used in advertising, and
-there is no denying that a great majority of people take pleasure
-in being struck by it. It is a pleasure drawn from the same source
-that feeds so many people’s sense of satisfaction when they attend
-a funeral, or call on a sick friend, or a friend in misfortune
-and disgrace. It was the same source of inner satisfaction which
-made it possible for many loyal citizens to bear not only with
-fortitude, but with bliss, the sorrows of the late war. It is the
-instinct of self-preservation, toned down to a spirit of complacent
-self-congratulation, and it responds most readily to the appeal of
-selfishness and snobbery. Advertising did not create this instinct,
-nor did it discover it, but advertising uses it for its own ends. Who
-is to blame, the reader or the advertiser, hardly enters in at this
-point. The solid fact to take into consideration is that day in and day
-out the susceptible public is being worked upon in an unhealthy and
-neurotic manner which cannot fail to effect harmful results.
-
-At this tragic moment I purpose briefly to digress to the people who
-create advertisements, before returning to a consideration of the
-effects of their creations.
-
-To begin with, let it never be forgotten that advertising
-is a red-blooded, two-fisted occupation, engaged in for the
-most part by upstanding Americans of the kiss-the-flag or
-knock-’em-down-and-drag-’em-out variety. Yet years of contact with
-the profession compel me for the sake of truth to temper this remark
-by adding that it also contains, or rather confines, within its
-mystic circle a group of reluctant and recalcitrant “creatures that
-once were men,” who, moving through a phantasmagoria of perverted
-idealism, flabby optimism, and unexamined motives, either deaden their
-conscience in the twilight of the “Ad. Men’s Club,” or else become so
-blindly embittered or debauched that their usefulness is lost to all
-constructive movements.
-
-Generally speaking, however, advertising is the graveyard of literary
-aspiration in which the spirits of the defeated aspirants, wielding a
-momentary power over a public that rejected their efforts, blackjack
-it into buying the most amazing assortment of purely useless and
-cheaply manufactured commodities that has ever marked the decline of
-culture and common sense. These men are either caught early after
-their flight from college, or else recruited from the newspaper world.
-Some--the most serious and determined--are products of correspondence
-schools. Others are merely robust spirits whose daily contact with
-their fellow-men does not give them sufficient opportunity to disgorge
-themselves of the abundance of misinformation that their imaginations
-manufacture in wholesale quantities. This advertising brotherhood is
-composed of a heterogeneous mass of humanity that is rapidly converted
-into a narrow-minded wedge of fanatics. And this wedge is continually
-boring into the pocketbook of the public and extracting therefrom a
-goodly quantity of gold and silver. Have you ever conversed with one
-of the more successful and important members of this vast body? If
-so have you been able to quit the conversation with an intelligent
-impression of its subject-matter? For example: do you happen to know
-what a visualizer is? If not, you would be completely at the mercy of a
-true advertising exponent. Returning to my Edisonian method of attack,
-do you happen to know by any chance what a rough-out man is, or what is
-the meaning of dealer mortality, quality appeal, class circulation, or
-institutional copy? Probably not, for there is at bottom very little
-meaning to them; nevertheless, they are terms that are sacred to a
-great number of advertising men, and which, if unknown, would render
-all intelligent communication with them quite impossible.
-
-If you should ever attend a session of these gentlemen in full cry--and
-may God spare you this--you would return from it with the impression
-that all was not well with the world. You would have heard speeches on
-the idealism of meat-packing, and other kindred subjects. The idealism
-would be transmitted to you through the medium of a hireling of some
-large packing organization, a live-wire, God-bless-you, hail-fellow
-type. Assuming that you had been there, you would have witnessed this
-large fellow with a virile exhalation of cigar-smoke, heave himself
-from his chair; you would have observed a good-natured smile play
-across his lips, and then you would have suddenly been taken aback
-by the tenderly earnest and masterfully restrained expression that
-transformed our buffoon into a suffering martyr, as, flinging out his
-arms, he tragically exclaimed, “Gentlemen, you little know the soul
-of the man who has given the Dreadnought Ham to the world!” From this
-moment on your sense of guilt would have increased by leaps and bounds
-until at last you would have broken down completely and agreed with
-everything the prophet said, as long as he refrained from depriving
-you of an opportunity to make it up to the god-like man who gave
-Dreadnought Hams to the world.
-
-The orator would go on to tell you about the happiness and sunlight
-that flood the slaughter-house in which Dreadnought Hams are made.
-You would hear about the lovely, whimsical old character, who, one
-day, when in the act of polishing off a pig, stood in a position
-of suspended animation with knife poised above the twitching ear
-of the unfortunate swine, and seizing the hand of the owner as he
-passed benevolently by, kissed it fervently and left on it a tear of
-gratitude. Perhaps you would not hear that in the ardour of loyal
-zeal this lovable old person practically cut the pig to ribbons, thus
-saving it from a nervous collapse, nor would you be permitted to hear a
-repetition of the imprecations the old man muttered after the departing
-back of the owner, for these things should not be heard,--in fact,
-they do not exist in the world of advertising. Nothing would be said
-about the red death of the pig, the control of the stock-raiser, the
-underpaying of the workers, the daughter who visits home when papa is
-out and the neighbours are not looking, the long years of service and
-the short shrift of age, the rottenness and hypocrisy of the whole
-business--no, nothing should be said about such things. But to make up
-for the omission, you would be told in honied words of the workers who
-lovingly kiss each ham as it is reverently carried from the plant to
-receive the patriarchal blessing of the owner before it is offered up
-as a sacrifice to a grateful but greedy public. The whole affair would
-suggest to you a sort of Passion Play in which there was neither Judas
-nor Pilot, but just a great, big happy family of ham producers.
-
-This speech, as I have said, would soon appear in the principal papers
-of the country. It would be published in installments, each one bearing
-its message of peace on earth, good-will to men, and the public--always
-preferring Pollyanna to Blue Beard--would be given an altogether false
-impression of Dreadnought Hams, and the conditions under which they
-were produced. But this particular speech would be only a small part of
-the idealism you would be permitted to absorb. There would also be a
-patriotic speech about Old Glory, which would somehow become entangled
-with the necessity for creating a wider demand for a certain brand of
-socks. There would perhaps be a speech on the sacredness of the home,
-linked cunningly with the ability of a certain type of talking-machine
-to keep the family in at nights and thus make the home even more
-sacred. There would be speeches without end, and idealism without
-stint, and at last every one would shake hands with every one else and
-the glorious occasion would come to an end only to be repeated with
-renewed vigour and replenished optimism on the following Friday.
-
-But the actual work of creating advertisements is seldom done in this
-rarefied and rose-tinted atmosphere; it is done in the more prosaic
-atmosphere of the advertising agency. (And let it be said at once that
-although, even in the case of agencies engaging in “Honest Advertising”
-campaigns, many such firms indulge in the unscrupulous competitive
-practice of splitting their regular commission with their clients in
-order to keep and secure accounts, there are still honest advertising
-agencies.)
-
-Now there are two important classes of workers in most agencies--the
-copy-writer and the solicitor--the man who writes the advertisements
-and the man who gets the business. This latter class contains the
-wolves of advertising, the restless stalkers through the forests
-of industry and the fields of trade. They are leather-lunged and
-full-throated; death alone can save their victims from hearing their
-stories out. Copywriters, on the other hand, are really not bad at
-heart; sometimes they even possess a small saving spark of humour, and
-frequently they attempt to read something other than _Printer’s Ink_.
-But the full-fledged solicitor is beyond all hope. Coming in close
-touch with the client who usually is an industrialist, capitalist,
-stand-patter, and high-tariff enthusiast, the solicitor gradually
-becomes a small edition of the man he serves, and reflects his ideas
-in an even more brutal and unenlightened manner. In their minds there
-is no room for change, unless it be change to a new kind of automobile
-they are advertising, for new furniture, unless it be the collapsible
-table of their latest client, for spring cleaning, unless thereby one
-is introduced to the virtues of Germ-Destroying Soap. Things must
-remain as they are and the leaders of commerce and industry must be
-protected at all costs. To them there are no under-paid workers, no
-social evil, no subsidized press, no restraint of free speech, no
-insanitary plants, no child-labour, no infant mortality due to an
-absence of maternity legislation, no good strikers, and no questionable
-public utility corporations. Everything is as it should be, and any one
-who attempts to effect a change is a socialist, and that ends it all.
-
-Advertising is very largely controlled by men of this type. Is it any
-wonder that it is of a reactionary and artificial nature, and that any
-irresponsible promoter with money to spend and an article to sell, will
-find a sympathetic and wily minister to execute his plans for him,
-regardless of their effect on the economic or social life of the nation?
-
-Turning, for the moment, from the people who create advertisements to
-advertising as an institution, what is there to be said for or against
-it? What is there to advance in justification of its existence, or
-in favour of its suppression? Not knowing on which side the devil’s
-advocate pleads his case, I shall take the liberty of representing
-both sides, presenting as impartially as possible the cases for the
-prosecution and defence and allowing the reader to bring in the verdict
-in accordance with the evidence.
-
-The first charge--that the low state of the press and the magazine
-world is due solely to advertising--is not, I believe, wholly
-fair. There is no use denying that advertising is responsible for
-the limitation of free utterance and the nonexistence of various
-independent and amusing publications. However, assuming that
-advertising were utterly banished from the face of the earth, would
-the murky atmosphere be cleared thereby? Would the press become free
-and unafraid, and would the ideal magazine at last draw breath in the
-full light of day? I think not. Years before advertising had attained
-the importance it now enjoys, public service corporations and other
-powerful vested interests had found other and equally effective methods
-of shaping the news and controlling editorial policies. The fact
-remains however, and it is a sufficiently black one, that advertising
-is responsible for much of the corruption of our papers and other
-publications, as well as for the absence of the type of periodicals
-that make for the culture of a people and the enjoyment of good
-literature. When a profiteering owner of a large department store
-can succeed in keeping the fact of his conviction from appearing in
-the news, while a number of smaller offenders are held up as horrid
-examples, it is not difficult to decide whether or not it pays to
-advertise. When any number of large but loosely conducted corporations
-upon which the people and the nation depend, can prevent from
-appearing in the press any information concerning their mismanagement,
-inefficiency, and extravagance, or any editorial advocating government
-control, one does not have to ponder deeply to determine the efficacy
-of advertising. When articles or stories dealing with the unholy
-conditions existing in certain industries, or touching on the risks of
-motoring, the dangers of eating canned goods, or the impossibility of
-receiving a dollar’s value for a dollar spent in a modern department
-store, are rejected by many publications, regardless of their merit,
-one does not have to turn to the back pages of the magazine in order
-to discover the names and products of the advertisers paying for the
-space. Indeed, one of the most regrettable features of advertising is
-that it makes so many things possible for editors who will be good,
-and so many things impossible for editors who are too honest and too
-independent to tolerate dictation.
-
-Another charge against advertising is that it promotes and encourages
-the production of a vast quantity of costly articles many of which
-duplicate themselves, and that this over-production of commodities,
-many of them of highly questionable value, is injurious to the country
-and economically unsound. This charge seems to be well founded in
-fact, and illustrated only too convincingly in the list of our daily
-purchases. Admitting that a certain amount of competition creates a
-stimulating and healthy reaction, it still seems hardly reasonable that
-a nation, to appear with a clean face each morning, should require the
-services of a dozen producers of safety razors, and several hundred
-producers of soap, and that the producers of razors and soap should
-spend millions of dollars each year in advertising in order to remind
-people to wash and shave. Nor does it seem to be a well-balanced
-system of production when such commodities as automobiles, sewing
-machines, face powders, toilet accessories, food products, wearing
-apparel, candy, paint, furniture, rugs, tonics, machinery, and so
-on _ad infinitum_ can exist in such lavish abundance. With so many
-things of the same kind to choose from, there is scarcely any reason
-to wonder that the purchasing public becomes addle-brained and fickle.
-The over-production of both the essentials and non-essentials of
-life is indubitably stimulated by advertising, with the result that
-whenever business depression threatens the country, much unnecessary
-unemployment and hardship arises because of an over-burdened market and
-an industrial world crowded with moribund manufacturing plants. “Give
-me a strong enough motor and I will make that table fly,” an aviator
-once remarked. It could be said with equal truth, “Give me money enough
-to spend in advertising and I will make any product sell.” Flying
-tables, however, are not nearly so objectionable as a market glutted
-with useless and over-priced wares, and an army of labour dependent for
-its existence upon an artificially stimulated demand.
-
-The claim that advertising undermines the habits of thrift of a
-nation requires no defence. Products are made to be sold and it
-is the principal function of advertising to sell them regardless
-of their merits or the requirements of the people. Men and women
-purchase articles to-day that would have no place in any socially and
-economically safe civilization. As long as this condition continues,
-money will be drawn out of the savings accounts of the many and
-deposited in the commercial accounts of the few--a situation which
-hardly makes for happy and healthy families.
-
-It has been asserted by many that advertising is injurious to literary
-style. I am far from convinced that this charge is true. In my belief
-it has been neither an injurious nor helpful influence. If anything,
-it has forced a number of writers to say a great deal in a few words,
-which is not in itself an undesirable accomplishment. Nor do I believe
-that advertising has recruited to its ranks a number of writers or
-potential writers who might otherwise have given pearls of faith to the
-world. However, if it has attracted any first-calibre writers, they
-have only themselves to blame and there is still an opportunity for
-them to scale the heights of literary eminence.
-
-The worst has been said of advertising, I feel, when we agree that
-it has contributed to the corruption of the press, that it does help
-to endanger the economic safety of the nation, and that, to a great
-extent, it appeals to the public in a false and unhealthy manner. These
-charges certainly are sufficiently damaging. For the rest, let us admit
-that advertising is more or less like all other businesses, subject to
-the same criticisms and guilty of the same mistakes. Having admitted
-this, let us assume the rôle of the attorney for the defence and see
-what we can marshal in favour of our client.
-
-First of all, I submit the fact that advertising has kept many artists
-alive--not that I am thoroughly convinced that artists should be kept
-alive, any more than poets or any other un-American breed; but for
-all that I appeal to your humanitarian instincts when I offer this
-fact in support of advertising, and I trust you will remember it when
-considering the evidence.
-
-In the second place, advertising is largely responsible for the
-remarkable strides we have taken in the art of typography. If you will
-examine much of the literature produced by advertising, you will find
-there many excellent examples of what can be done with type. To-day no
-country in the world is producing more artistic and authentic specimens
-of typography than America, and this, I repeat, is largely due to the
-influence of advertising.
-
-We can also advance as an argument in favour of advertising that it has
-contributed materially to a greater use of the tooth-brush and a more
-diligent application of soap. Advertising has preached cleanliness,
-preached frantically, selfishly and for its own ends, no doubt, but
-nevertheless it has preached convincingly. It matters little what
-means are used to achieve the end of cleanliness as long as the end is
-achieved. This, advertising has helped to accomplish. The cleanliness
-of the body and the cleanliness of the home as desirable virtues are
-constantly being held up before the readers of papers and magazines. As
-has been said, there are altogether too many different makes of soap
-and other sanitary articles, but in this case permit us to modify the
-statement by adding that it is much better to have too many of such
-articles than too few. This third point in favour of advertising is no
-small point to consider. The profession cannot be wholly useless, if
-it has helped to make teeth white, faces clean, bodies healthy, homes
-fresh and sanitary, and people more concerned with their bodies and the
-way they treat them.
-
-The fourth point in favour of advertising is that through the medium
-of paid space in the papers and magazines certain deserving movements
-have been able to reach a larger public and thus recruit from it new
-and valuable members. This example illustrates the value of advertising
-when applied to worthy ends. In all fairness we are forced to conclude,
-that, after all, there is much in advertising that is not totally
-depraved.
-
-Now that we are about to rest the case, let us gaze once more through
-the magic portals of the advertising world and refresh our eyes with
-its beauty. On second glance we find there is something strangely
-pathetic and wistfully human about this World That Never Was. It is
-a world very much after our own creation, peopled and arranged after
-our own yearnings and desires. It is a world of well regulated bowels,
-cornless feet, and unblemished complexions, a world of perfectly
-fitting clothes, completely equipped kitchens, and always upright and
-smiling husbands. To this world of splendid country homes, humming
-motors, and agreeable companions, prisoners on our own poor weary
-world of reality may escape for a while to live a few short moments of
-unqualified comfort and happiness. Even if they do return from their
-flight with pockets empty and arms laden with a number of useless
-purchases, they have had at least some small reward for their folly.
-They have dwelt and sported with fascinating people in surroundings of
-unsurpassed beauty. True, it is not such a world as Rembrandt would
-have created, but he was a grim old realist, who, when he wanted to
-paint a picture of a person cutting the nails, selected for his model
-an old and unscrupulous woman, and cast around her such an atmosphere
-of reality that one can almost hear the snip of the scissors as it
-proceeds on its revolting business. How much better it would be done
-in the advertising world! Here we would be shown a young and beautiful
-girl sitting gracefully before her mirror and displaying just enough
-of her body to convince the beholder that she was neither crippled nor
-chicken-breasted, and all day long for ever and for ever she would sit
-thus smiling tenderly as she clipped the pink little moon-flecked nails
-from her pink little pointed fingers.
-
-Yes, I fear it is a world of our own creation. Only a few persons
-would stand long before Rembrandt’s crude example, while many would
-dwell with delight on the curves and allurements of the maid in the
-advertising world. Of course one might forget or never even discover
-what she was doing, and assuming that one did, one would hardly dwell
-upon such an unromantic occupation in connection with a creature so
-fair and refined as this ideal young woman; but for all that, one would
-at least have had the pleasure of contemplating her loveliness.
-
-So many of us are poor and ill-favoured in this world of ours, so many
-girls are not honestly able to purchase more than one frock or one hat
-a year, that the occasion of the purchase takes on an importance far
-beyond the appreciation of the average well-to-do person. It is fun,
-therefore, to dwell upon the lines and features of a perfectly gowned
-woman and to imagine that even though poor and ill-favoured, one might
-possibly resemble in a modified way, the splendid model, if one could
-only get an extra fifteen minutes off at lunch-time in order to attend
-the bargain sale. There are some of us who are so very poor that from
-a great distance we can enjoy without hope of participation the glory
-and triumph of others. The advertising world supplies us with just this
-sort of vicarious enjoyment, and, like all other kinds of fiction,
-enables us to play for a moment an altogether pleasing rôle in a world
-of high adventure.
-
-Therefore let us not be too uncharitable to the advertising world.
-While not forgetting its faults, let us also strive to remember its
-virtues. Some things we cannot forgive it, some things we would prefer
-to forget, but there are others which require less toleration and
-fortitude to accept when once they have been understood.
-
-As long as the printed word is utilized and goods are bought and sold,
-there will be a place and a reason for advertising--not advertising
-as we know it to-day, but of a saner and more useful nature. He would
-be a doughty champion of the limitation of free speech who would
-deny a man the right to tell the world that he is the manufacturer
-of monkey-wrenches, and that he has several thousands of these same
-wrenches on hand, all of which he is extremely anxious to sell.
-
-Advertising, although a precocious child, is but in its infancy. In
-spite of its rapid development and its robust constitution, it has not
-yet advanced beyond the savage and bragging age. It will appeal to our
-instincts of greed as quickly as to our instincts of home-building.
-It will make friends with the snob that is in us, as readily as it
-will avail itself of the companionship of our desire to be generous
-and well-liked. It will frighten and bulldoze us into all sorts of
-extravagant purchases with the same singleness of purpose that it will
-plead with our self-respect in urging us to live cleaner and better
-lives. It will use our pride and vanity for its own ends as coolly as
-it will use our good nature or community spirit. It will run through
-the whole gamut of human emotions, selecting therefrom those best
-suited to its immediate ends. Education alone will make the child
-behave--not the education of the child so much as the education of the
-reader.
-
-Advertising thrives to-day in the shadows created by big business,
-and, as a consequence, if it would retain its master’s favour it must
-justify his methods, and practise his evil ways. Here it must be
-added that there are some honest advertising agencies which refuse to
-accept the business of dishonest concerns. It must also be added that
-there are some magazines and newspapers which will refuse to accept
-unscrupulous advertisements. These advertisements must be notoriously
-unscrupulous, however, before they meet this fate. There are even such
-creatures as honest manufacturers, but unfortunately for the profession
-they too rarely advertise. As a whole, advertising is committed to the
-ways of business, and as the ways of business are seldom straight and
-narrow, advertising perforce must follow a dubious path. We shall let
-it rest at that.
-
-We have made no attempt in this article to take up the subject of
-out-door advertising. There is nothing to say about this branch of
-the profession save that it is bad beyond expression, and should be
-removed from sight with all possible haste. In revolting against the
-sign-board, direct action assumes the dignity of conservatism, and
-although I do not recommend an immediate assault on all sign-boards,
-I should be delighted if such an assault took place. Were I a judge
-sitting on the case of a man apprehended in the act of destroying one
-of these eyesores, I should give him the key to my private stock, and
-adjourn the court for a week.
-
- J. THORNE SMITH
-
-
-
-
-BUSINESS
-
-
-Modern business derives from three passions in this order, namely: The
-passion for things, the passion for personal grandeur and the passion
-for power. Things are multiplied in use and possession when people
-exchange with each other the products of specialized labour. Personal
-grandeur may be realized in wealth. Gratification of the third passion
-in this way is new. Only in recent times has business become a means to
-great power, a kind of substitute for kingship, wherein man may sate
-his love of conquest, practise private vengeance, and gain dominion
-over people.
-
-These passions are feeble on the Oriental side of the world, strong
-in parts of Europe, powerful in America. Hence the character of
-American business. It is unique, wherein it is so, not in principle
-but in degree of phenomena. For natural reasons the large objects of
-business are most attainable in this country. Yet this is not the
-essential difference. In the pursuit of them there is a characteristic
-American manner, as to which one may not unreasonably prefer a romantic
-explanation. No white man lives on this continent who has not himself
-or in his ancestry the will that makes desire overt and dynamic, the
-solitary strength to push his dream across seas. Islands had been
-peopled before by this kind of selection, notably England; never a
-continent. A reckless, egoistic, experimental spirit governs, betrays,
-and preserves us still.
-
-The elemental hunger for food, warmth, and refuge gives no direct
-motive to business. People may live and reproduce without business.
-Civilization of a sort may exist without its offices. The settler who
-disappears into the wilderness with a wife, a gun, a few tools, and
-some pairs of domestic beasts, may create him an idyllic habitation,
-amid orchards and fields, self-contained in rude plenty; but he is lost
-to business until he produces a money crop, that is, a surplus of the
-fruits of husbandry to exchange for fancy hardware, tea, window glass,
-muslin, china, and luxuries.
-
-The American wilderness swallowed up hundreds of thousands of such
-hearth-bearers. Business was slow to touch them. What they had to sell
-was bulky. The cost of transportation was prohibitive. There were no
-highways, only rivers, for traffic to go upon. Food was cheap, because
-the earth in a simple way was bounteous; but the things for which food
-could be exchanged were dear. This would naturally be true in a new
-country, where craft industry must develop slowly. It was true also
-for another reason, which was that the Mother Country regarded the New
-World as a plantation to be exploited for the benefit of its own trade
-and manufactures.
-
-Great Britain’s claim to proprietary interest in America having been
-established against European rivals by the end of the 17th century, her
-struggle with the colonists began. The English wanted (1) raw materials
-upon which to bestow their high craft labour, (2) an exclusive market
-for the output of their mills and factories, and (3) a monopoly of
-the carrying trade. The colonists wanted industrial freedom. As long
-as they held themselves to chimney-corner industries, making nails,
-shoes, hats, and coarse cloth for their own use, there was no quarrel.
-But when labour even in a small way began to devote itself exclusively
-to handicraft, so that domestic manufactures were offered for sale in
-competition with imported English goods, that was business--and the
-British Parliament voted measures to crush it. The weaving of cloth for
-sale was forbidden, lest the colonists become independent of English
-fabrics. So was the making of beaver hats; the English were hatters.
-It was forbidden to set up an iron rolling-mill in America, because
-the English required pig iron and wished to work it themselves. To all
-these acts of Parliament the colonists opposed subterfuge until they
-were strong enough to be defiant. That impatience of legal restraints
-which is one of the most obstinate traits of American business was then
-a patriotic virtue.
-
-Meanwhile the New England trader had appeared--that adorable, hymning,
-unconscious pirate who bought molasses in the French West Indies,
-swapped it for rum at Salem, Mass., traded the rum for Negroes on the
-African coast, exchanged the Negroes for tobacco in Virginia, and sold
-the tobacco for money in Europe, at a profit to be settled with God.
-This trade brought a great deal of money to the colonies; and they
-needed money almost more than anything else. Then the British laid a
-ban on trade with the French West Indies, put a tax upon coastwise
-traffic between the colonies; and decreed that American tobacco should
-be exported nowhere but to English ports, although--or because--tobacco
-prices were higher everywhere else in Europe. The natural consequence
-of this restrictive British legislation was to make American business
-utterly lawless. As much as a third of it was notoriously conducted in
-defiance of law. Smuggling both in domestic and foreign trade became
-a folk custom. John Hancock, the first signer of the Declaration of
-Independence, was a celebrated smuggler.
-
-During the War of Independence domestic craft industry was stimulated
-by necessity. But the means were crude and the products imperfect; and
-when, after peace, British merchants with an accumulation of goods
-on their hands began to offer them for sale in the United States at
-low prices, hoping to recover their new-world trade in competitive
-terms, the infant industries cried out for protection. They got
-it. One of the first acts of the American Congress was to erect a
-tariff against foreign-made goods in order that the country might
-become self-sufficing in manufactures. This was the beginning of our
-protectionist policy.
-
-Fewer than four million unbusiness-like people coming into free
-possession of that part of the North American continent which is
-named America was a fabulous business event. We cannot even now
-comprehend it. They had not the dimmest notion of what it was they were
-possessed of, nor what it meant economically. Geography ran out at the
-Mississippi. The tide of Westward immigration was just beginning to
-break over the crest of the Alleghany mountains.
-
-Over-seas trade grew rapidly, as there was always a surplus of food and
-raw materials to be exchanged abroad for things which American industry
-was unable to provide. Foreign commerce was an important source of
-group-wealth and public interest was much concerned with it. Besides,
-it was easier to trade across seas than inland. Philadelphia until
-about 1835 was nearer London than Pittsburgh, not as the crow flies
-but as freight moves. Domestic business, arising from the internal
-exchange of goods, developed slowly, owing partly to the wretched state
-of transportation and partly to the self-contained nature of families
-and communities. The population was more than nine-tenths rural; rural
-habits survived even in the towns, where people kept cows and pigs,
-cured their own meats, preserved their own fruits and vegetables, and
-thought ready-made garments a shocking extravagance. Business under
-these conditions performed a subservient function. People’s relations
-with it were in large measure voluntary. Its uses were more luxurious
-than vital. There was not then, nor could any one at this time have
-imagined, that interdependence of individuals, groups, communities,
-and geographical sections which it is the blind aim of business
-increasingly to promote, so that at length the case is reversed and
-people are subservient to business.
-
-In Southern New Jersey you may see a farm, now prosperously devoted to
-berry and fruit crops, on which, still in good repair, are the cedar
-rail fences built by a farmer whose contacts with business were six or
-eight trips a year over a sand road to Trenton with surplus food to
-exchange for some new tools, tea, coffee, and store luxuries. That old
-sand road has become a cement pavement--a motor highway. Each morning
-a New York baking corporation’s motor stops at the farm-house and the
-driver hands in some fresh loaves. Presently a butcher’s motor stops
-with fresh meat, then another one with dry groceries, and yet another
-from a New York department store with parcels containing ready-made
-garments, stockings and shoes.
-
-Consider what these four motors symbolize.
-
-First is an automobile industry and a system for producing, refining
-and distributing oil which together are worth as much as the whole
-estimated wealth of America three generations ago.
-
-Back of the bakery wagon what a vista! An incorporated baking industry,
-mixing, kneading, roasting, and wrapping the loaf in paraffine paper
-without touch of human hands, all by automatic machinery. Beyond the
-Mississippi, in a country undiscovered until 1804, the wheat fields
-that are ploughed, sown, reaped by power-driven machinery. In Minnesota
-a milling industry in which the miller has become an impersonal flour
-trust. A railroad system that transports first the grain and then the
-flour over vast distances at rates so low that the cost of two or three
-thousand miles of transportation in the loaf of bread delivered to the
-New Jersey farm-house is inexpressible.... Back of the butcher’s motor
-is a meat-packing industry concentrated at Chicago. It sends fresh meat
-a thousand miles in iced cars and sells it to a New Jersey farmer for
-a price at which he can better afford to buy it than to bother about
-producing it for himself.... Back of the grocer’s motor are the food
-products and canning industries. By means of machinery they shred,
-peel, hull, macerate, roll, cook, cool, and pack fruits, cereals, and
-vegetables in cartons and containers which are made, labelled, and
-sealed by other automatic machinery.... And back of the department
-store motor are the garment-making, shoe-making, textile, and knitting
-industries.
-
-If one link in all this ramified scheme of business breaks there is
-chaos. If the State of New Jersey were suddenly cut off from the
-offices of business for six months, a third of her population might
-perish; not that the State is unable potentially to sustain her own,
-but that the people have formed habits of dependence upon others, as
-others depend upon them, for the vital products of specialized labour.
-
-All this has happened in the life of one cedar rail fence. You say
-that is only fifty or sixty years. Nevertheless it is literally so.
-The system under which we live has been evolved since 1860. The
-transformation was sudden. Never in the world were the physical
-conditions of a nation’s life altered so fast by economic means. Yet
-it did not happen for many years. The work of unconscious preparation
-occupied three-quarters of a century.
-
-Man acts upon his environment with hands, tools, and imagination; and
-business requires above everything else the means of cheap and rapid
-transportation. In all the major particulars save one the founders
-were ill-equipped for their independent attack upon the American
-environment. At the beginning of the 19th century there were no
-roads, merely a few trails fit only for horseback travel. There were
-no canals yet. And the labour wherewith to perform heavy, monotonous
-tasks was dear and scarce and largely self-employed. Though the hands
-of the pioneer are restless they are not patiently industrious. There
-was need of machinery such as had already begun to revolutionize
-British industry, but the English jealously protected their mechanical
-knowledge.
-
-There is a tradition that the Americans were marvellously inventive
-with labour-saving devices. That is to be qualified. Their special
-genius lay rather in the adaptation and enthusiastic use of such
-devices. The introduction of them was not resisted as in the older
-countries by labour unwilling to change its habits and fearful of
-unemployment. This was an important advantage.
-
-The American textile industry was founded by British artisans who
-came to this country carrying contraband in their heads, that is, the
-plans of weaving, spinning, and knitting machines which the English
-guarded as carefully as military secrets.... The pre-eminence of this
-country in the manufacture and use of agricultural implements is set
-out in elementary school-books as proof of American inventiveness; yet
-the essential principles of the reaper were evolved in Great Britain
-forty years before the appearance of the historic McCormick reaper
-(1831) in this country, and threshing-machines were in general use in
-England while primitive methods of flailing, trampling, and dragging
-prevailed in America. As recently as 1850 the scythe and cradle reaped
-the American harvest and there still existed the superstition that
-an iron plough poisoned the soil and stimulated weeds. Of all the
-tools invented or adopted the one which Americans were to make the
-most prodigious use of was the railroad; yet the first locomotive was
-brought from England in 1829, the embargo on machinery having by this
-time been lifted--and it failed because it was too heavy!
-
-Twenty years passed and still the possibilities of rail transportation
-were unperceived, which is perhaps somewhat explained by the fact
-that the one largest vested interest of that time existed in canals.
-On the map of 1850 the railroads resemble earthworms afraid to leave
-water and go inland. The notion of a railroad was that it supplemented
-water transportation, connecting lake, canal, and river routes, helping
-traffic over the high places.
-
-But in the next ten years--1850 to 1860--destiny surrendered. There
-was that rare coincidence of seed, weather, deep ploughing, and
-mysterious sanction which the miracle requires. The essential power of
-the American was suddenly liberated. There was the discovery of gold
-in California. There was the Crimean War, which created a high demand
-abroad for our commodities. The telegraph put its indignities upon
-time and space. The idea of a railroad as a tool of empire seized the
-imagination. Railroads were deliriously constructed. The map of 1860
-shows a glistening steel web from the seaboard to the Mississippi.
-
-The gigantesque was enthroned as the national fetich. Votive offerings
-were mass, velocity, quantity. True cities began. The spirit of Chicago
-was born. Bigness and be-damnedness. In this decade the outlines of our
-economic development were cast for good.
-
-In the exclusive perspective of business the Civil War is an indistinct
-episode. It stimulated industry in the North, shattered it in the
-South. The net result in a purely economic sense is a matter of free
-opinion. The Morse telegraph code probably created more wealth than the
-war directly destroyed. Or the bitter sectional row over the route of
-the first transcontinental railroad which postponed that project for
-ten years possibly cost the country more than the struggle to preserve
-the Union. But that is all forgotten.
-
-After 1860 the momentum of growth, notwithstanding the war and two
-terrible panics, was cumulative. In the next fifty years, down to
-1910, we built half as much railroad mileage as all the rest of
-the world. Population trebled. This fact stands alone in the data
-of vital statistics. Yet even more remarkable were the alterations
-of human activity. The number of city dwellers increased 3½ times
-faster than the population; the number of wage-earners, 2 times
-faster; clerks, salesmen, and typists, 6½ times faster; banks, 7
-times faster; corporations, 6½ times faster; miners, 3 times faster;
-transportation-workers, 20 times faster, and the number of independent
-farmers decreased. Wealth in this time increased from about $500 to
-more than $1,500 _per capita_.
-
-If America in its present state of being had been revealed to the
-imagination of any hard-headed economist in, say, 1850, as a mirage or
-dream, he would have said: “There is in all the world not enough labour
-and capital to do it.” He could not have guessed how the power of both
-would be multiplied.
-
-First there was the enormous simple addition to the labour supply
-in the form of immigration. Then the evolution of machinery and
-time-saving methods incredibly increased the productivity of labour
-per human unit. Thirdly, the application of power to agriculture and
-the opening of all that virgin country west of the Mississippi to
-bonanza-farming so greatly increased the production of food per unit
-of rural labour that at length it required only half the population to
-feed the whole. The other half was free. Business and industry absorbed
-it.
-
-Of what happened at the same time to capital, in which term we include
-also credit, there could have been no prescience at all. Even now when
-we think of building a railroad, a telephone system, or an automobile
-factory the thought is that it will take capital, as of course it will
-at first, but one should consider also how anything that increases the
-velocity with which goods are exchanged, or reduces the time in which
-a given amount of business may be transacted, adds to the functioning
-power of capital. To illustrate this: the merchant of 1850 did business
-very largely with his own capital unaided. He was obliged to invest
-heavily in merchandise stocks. The turn-over was slow. His margin
-of profit necessarily had to be large. But with the development of
-transportation and means of communication--the railroad, telegraph,
-and telephone--and with the parallel growth of banking facilities,
-the conditions of doing business were fundamentally changed. All the
-time-factors were foreshortened.
-
-A merchant now has to lock up much less capital in merchandise, since
-his stocks are easily and swiftly replenished. The turn-over is
-much faster because people using suburban railways and street-cars
-go oftener to shop. And not only is it possible for these reasons to
-do a larger volume of business with a given amount of capital, but
-the merchant now borrows two-thirds, maybe three-quarters, of his
-capital at the bank in the form of credit. The same is true of the
-manufacturer. Formerly he locked up his capital, first in raw materials
-and then in finished products to be sold in season as the demand was;
-and there was great risk of loss in this way of matching supply to
-an estimated demand. Now he sells his goods before he makes them,
-borrows credit at the bank to buy his raw materials, even to pay his
-labour through the processes of manufacture, and when the customer
-pays on delivery of the goods with credit which he also has borrowed
-at the bank, the manufacturer settles with _his_ bank and keeps the
-difference. An exporter was formerly one who bought commodities with
-his own money, loaded them on ship, sent them on chance to a foreign
-market, and waited for his capital to come back with a profit. Now he
-first sells the goods to a foreign customer by cable, then buys them on
-credit, loads them on ship, sells the bill of lading to a bank, uses
-the proceeds to pay for the goods, and counts his profit. All large
-business now is transacted in this way with phantom capital, called
-credit; money is employed to settle differences only.
-
-The effect of this revolution of methods upon the morals and manners
-of business was tremendous. It destroyed the aristocracy of business
-by throwing the field open to men without capital. Traders and brokers
-over-ran it. The man doing business on borrowed capital could out-trade
-one doing business on his own. The more he borrowed, the harder he
-could trade. Salesmanship became a specialized, conscienceless art.
-There was no rule but to take all the traffic would bear: let the
-buyer look out. Dishonesty in business became so gross that it had
-to be sublimated in the national sense of humour. There are many
-still living who remember what shopping was like even in the largest
-city stores when nobody dreamed of paying the price first asked and
-counter-higgling was a universal custom. Indeed, so ingrained it
-was that when A. T. Stewart in New York announced the experiment of
-treating all buyers alike on a one-price basis his ruin was predicted
-by the whole merchant community.
-
-As credit both increases competition and enables a larger business
-to be done on a small base of invested capital, the margin of profit
-in business tends to fall. Under conditions of intense rivalry among
-merchants and manufacturers operating more and more with phantom
-capital the margin of profit did fall until it was very thin indeed.
-This led to the abasement of goods by adulteration and tricks of
-manufacture, which became at length so great an evil that the
-government had to interfere with pure-food acts and laws forbidding
-wilful misrepresentation.
-
-There was a limit beyond which the cost of production could not be
-reduced by degradation of quality. It was impossible to control prices
-with competition so wild and spontaneous and with cheapness the
-touchword of success. Therefore the wages of business were low, and
-things apparently had come to an impasse. Yet out of this chaos arose
-what now we know as big business. The idea was simple--mass production
-of standardized foods. The small, fierce units of business began to be
-amalgamated. As society is integrated by steps--clan, tribe, nation,
-State--so big business passed through mergers, combines, and trusts
-toward the goal of monopoly.
-
-When a number of competing manufacturers unite to produce standard
-commodities in quantity, much duplication of effort is eliminated,
-time-saving methods are possible as not before, the cost of production
-is reduced. There are other advantages. They are stronger than they
-were separately, not only as buyers of labour, raw materials, and
-transportation, but as borrowers of capital. The individual or firm
-is the customer of a bank. The corporation makes a partnership with
-finance.
-
-Now a curious thing happens. The corporation with its mass production
-restores the quality of goods. It is responsible for its products and
-guarantees them by brands, labels and trade-marks. Sugar and oatmeal
-come out of the anonymous barrel behind the grocer’s counter and go
-into attractive cartons on his shelf, bearing the name of the producer.
-Gloves, shirts, stockings, cutlery, furniture, meat products, jams,
-watches, fabrics, everything in fact becomes standardized by name
-and price and is advertised by the producer directly to the public
-over the retailer’s head, so that the small retailer is no longer a
-merchant in the old sense but a grumbling commission-man. Big business
-has delivered itself from the impasse; it has recovered control of
-its profits; but now the retailer’s margin of profit tends to become
-fixed. What does the retailer do? He applies the same principle to the
-last act of selling. Enter the chain-store. Obviously a corporation
-owning a chain of several hundred stores and working, like the
-manufacturer, with borrowed capital, is stronger than any one retailer
-to bargain with the powerful producers, and as the chain-store tends
-to displace the little retailer a balance is restored between the
-business of production and the business of retailing. Mass production
-is met by mass selling. The consumer as the last subject may resort to
-legislation for his protection.
-
-Big business could not have evolved in this way without the aid of the
-railroads. Their dilemma was similar. Strife and competition had ruined
-their profits. To begin with, nobody knew what it cost to produce
-transportation. When a new line was opened it made rates according to
-circumstances. At points where it met water competition it charged
-very little, sometimes less than the cost of its fuel, and at points
-where there was no competition it charged all the traffic would stand.
-Then as competitive railroad-building excessively increased the high
-rates steadily fell. Once they got started people were obsessed to make
-railroads. They made them for speculative reasons, for feudal reasons,
-for political reasons, for any reason at all. Two men might quarrel in
-Wall Street, and one would build a thousand miles of railroad to spite
-the other--build it with the proceeds of shares sold to the public or
-hypothecated at the bank. Then there would be two roads to divide the
-business of one. Railroads under these conditions were unscientifically
-planned and over-built. The profit was rather in the building than
-in the working of them. There was scandal both ways. Quantities of
-fictitious capital were created and sold to the public. And when a
-railroad was built it became the plaything of its traffic manager, who
-conspired with other traffic managers to sell favours to shippers and
-to invent disastrous rate-wars in order to profit by the fall of shares
-on the stock market.
-
-Rates could not be raised or held up, owing to the irresponsible
-nature of the competition. Transportation is a commodity that cannot
-be adulterated. How was the profit to be restored in this field of
-business? Why, by the same method as in industry. That is, by mass
-production.
-
-Some one discovered that once you got a loaded train out of the
-terminal and rolling on the right-of-way it cost almost nothing to
-keep it moving. There was no money in hauling small lots of freight
-short distances at the highest rates that could be charged; but there
-was profit in moving large quantities of freight in full cars over
-long distances at very low rates. At this the railroad people went mad
-over the long, heavy haul. Here was industry seeking to concentrate
-itself in fewer places for purposes of mass production; and here were
-the railroads wanting masses of freight to move long distances. Their
-problems coincided.
-
-Result: mass production gravitates to those far-apart long-haul points
-to get the benefit of low rates, there is congestion of industrial
-population at those points, industry at intermediate points is
-penalized by higher freight rates, and the railroads henceforth equip
-themselves with mass tonnage primarily in view. You begin now to have
-steel towns, meat towns, flour towns, textile towns, garment towns, and
-so on. That interdependence of communities and geographical sections
-which makes business is in full development.
-
-However, the second state of the railroad is worse than the first. It
-is overwhelmed by the monster it has suckled. It is at the mercy of
-a few big shippers, masters of mass production, who bully it, extort
-lower and lower rates still, and at length secret rebates, under threat
-of transferring their tonnage to another railroad or in some cases of
-building their own railroad, which now they are powerful enough to do.
-The railroad yields; and whereas before only such industry as survived
-at intermediate points was penalized by higher freight rates, now
-all industry outside of big business is at a disadvantage, since big
-business is receiving secret benefits from the railroads.
-
-There was no philosophy in any of this, not even a high order of
-intelligence. The will of business is anarchistic; its religion is
-fatalism. If let alone, it will seek its profit by any means that serve
-and then view the consequences as acts of Providence.
-
-It has been noted that big business, going in for mass production,
-restored the honesty of goods. The motive was not ethical. It paid. The
-public’s good will toward a brand or a trade-mark was an asset that
-could be capitalized, sometimes for more than plant and equipment, and
-the shares representing such capitalization could be sold to the public
-on the Stock Exchange. But what was gained for morality in the honesty
-of goods was lost again in new forms of dishonesty. Standard Oil
-products were always cheap and honest; its oil was never watered. But
-the means by which the Standard Oil Company gained its dangerous trade
-eminence were dishonest, and the trust was dissolved for that reason by
-the United States Supreme Court. It happens to be only the most notable
-instance. There were and are still many others--combines and trusts
-whose products are honest but whose tradeways are either illegal or
-ethically repugnant.
-
-One cannot say that business is either honest or dishonest. It is both.
-Evidence of permanent gain in a kind of intrinsic commercial honesty is
-abundant. Wild-cat banking has disappeared. A simple book entry between
-merchants is as good as a promissory note. The integrity of merchandise
-now is a trade custom. Vulgar misrepresentations have ceased save in
-the slums of business. The practice of making open prices to all buyers
-alike, wholesale and retail, is universal. It is no longer possible to
-print railroad shares surreptitiously overnight and flood the Stock
-Exchange with them the next morning, as once happened in Erie. Nowhere
-is character more esteemed than in business.
-
-And yet, in spite of all this and parallel with it, runs a bitter feud
-between society and business. People are continually acting upon big
-business through the agencies of government to make it behave. What is
-the explanation?
-
-Well, in the first place, the improvement in commercial honesty
-has been owing not so much to ethical enlightenment as to internal
-necessity. Big business must do its work on credit; there is no other
-way. Therefore credit is a sacred thing, to be preserved by all
-means. Men know that unless they are scrupulous in fulfilling their
-obligations toward it, the system will collapse. As the use of credit
-increases the code of business become more rigid. It must. One who
-breaks faith with the code is not merely dishonest, man to man; he is
-an enemy of credit.
-
-If a stock-market coterie of this day could print Erie shares without
-notice and sell them the public would suffer of course but Wall Street
-would suffer much more. Its own affairs would fall into hopeless
-disorder. That kind of thing cannot happen again. The code has been
-improved. You now may be sure that anything you buy on the Stock
-Exchange has been regularly issued and listed. No institution is more
-jealous of the integrity of its transactions--transactions as such.
-Purchases and sales involving millions are consummated with a nod
-of the head and simple dishonesty is unknown. Nevertheless, it is a
-notorious fact that the amount of money nowadays lost on the Stock
-Exchange by the unwary public is vastly greater than in Jay Gould’s
-time. There is, you see, an important difference between formal and
-moral honesty.
-
-Secondly, business morality is a term without meaning. There is no
-such thing. Business is neither moral nor immoral. It represents man’s
-acquisitive instinct acting outside of humanistic motives. Morals are
-personal and social. Business is impersonal and unsocial.
-
-So far we come clear. Only now, what shall be said of the man in
-business? He is not a race apart. He may be any of us. How then shall
-we account for the fact that those evils and tyrannies of big business
-with which the Congress, the Interstate Commerce Commission, the
-Department of Justice, the Federal Trade Board, and other agencies
-of the social will keep open war are not inhibited at the head by an
-innate social sense? Does the business man lose that sense? Or by
-reason of the material in which he works does he become an unsocial
-being? No. The answer is that the kind of business we now are talking
-about is not conducted by men. It is conducted by corporations.
-
-A thing of policy purely, with only legal responsibilities and no
-personality, free from hope of heaven or fear of hell, the corporation
-is both a perfect instrument for the impersonal ends of business and a
-cave of refuge for the conscience. Business by corporations is highly
-responsible in all that pertains to business. Business by corporations
-is in all ethical respects anonymous. A corporation does many things
-which no one of its directors would do as an individual. The head
-of a corporation says: “If it were my own business, I should handle
-this labour problem very differently. But it isn’t. I am a trustee,
-answerable to five thousand stockholders for the security of their
-dividends.” Each of the five thousand stockholders says: “It isn’t my
-business. I am merely one of a great number of stockholders. What can I
-do about it?”
-
-Nobody is personally responsible.
-
-More than two-thirds of our national wealth is owned by corporations.
-They control at some point every process of economic life. Their power
-is so great that many have wondered whether in time it might not
-overwhelm popular government. Yet in all this realm of power there is
-nowhere that sense of personal moral liability which is acknowledged
-between men and without which civilized human relationships would
-become utterly impossible. A corporation is like a State in this
-respect: it cannot, if it would, make moral decisions. The right to do
-that is not delegated by people to a State nor by stockholders to a
-corporation. Both therefore are limited to material decisions.
-
-It is probably owing as much to the power-thirsty, law-baiting
-temperament of the American in business as to the magnitude of the
-work to be done that the use of the corporation, like the use of
-labour-saving machinery, has been carried further here than in any
-other country. Railroads naturally were the first great corporations.
-The amount of capital required to build a railroad is beyond the
-resources of any small group of individuals; it must be gathered from
-a large number, who become shareholders. The original railroads were
-subsidized by the government with loans of money and enormous grants
-of land. Industrial and trading corporations came later. For a long
-time America was to all corporations a Garden of Eden. They were
-encouraged, not precisely that they were presumed to be innocent but
-because they were indispensable. Then they ate of the Tree of Political
-Power and the feud was on. When people began really to fear them their
-roots were already very deep and touched nearly everything that was
-solid. The sinister alliance between big business and high finance was
-accomplished.
-
-One of the absurdities of the case was and is that any State according
-to its own laws may grant corporation-charters which carry rights of
-eminent domain in all other states. The Standard Oil Company was once
-dissolved in Ohio. It took out a new charter in New Jersey, and went on
-as before, even in Ohio.
-
-Every attempt to reform their oppressive ways by law they have resisted
-under the constitution as an attack upon the rights of property. And
-there has always been much confusion as to what the law was. In one
-case it was construed by the United States Supreme Court to mean that
-bigness itself, the mere power of evil, was illegal whether it had been
-exercised or not; in another, that each instance must be treated on its
-merits by a rule of reason, and, in still another, that the potential
-power to restrain trade in a monopolistic manner was not in itself
-illegal provided it had never been used.
-
-Nevertheless the doubt as to which should control the other--the State
-the corporations or the corporations the State--has been resolved.
-Gradually the authority of the State has been asserted. The hand of the
-corporation in national politics is branded. The Federal Government’s
-control over the rates and practices of the railroads is complete; so
-likewise is the control of many of the several separate States over the
-rates and practices of public-utility corporations. Federal authority
-over the tradeways of the great industrial and trading corporations
-whose operations are either so large or so essential, to economic
-life as to become clothed with public interest is far advanced; and
-supervision of profits is beginning.
-
-Now what manner of profit and loss account may we write with American
-business?
-
-Given to begin with an environment superb, it has made wealth available
-to an aggregate extent hitherto unimaginable in the world. But in doing
-this it has created a conscious, implacable proletariat in revolt
-against private profit.
-
-In production it has brought about a marvellous economy of human
-effort. At the same time it has created colossal forms of social
-waste. It wastes the spirit by depriving the individual of that sense
-of personal achievement, that feeling of participation in the final
-result, which is the whole joy of craftsmanship, so that the mind is
-bored and the heart is seared. It wastes all things prodigally in the
-effort to create new and extravagant wants, reserving its most dazzling
-rewards for him that can make two glittering baubles to sell where only
-one was sold before. It wastes the living machine in recurring periods
-of frightful and unnecessary idleness.
-
-For the distribution of goods it has perfected a web of exchange, so
-elaborate that the breaking of one strand is a disaster and yet so
-trustworthy that we take its conveniences every day for granted and
-never worry. But the adjustment of supply to demand is so rude and
-uncontrolled that we suffer periodic economic calamities, extreme
-trade depression, and social distress, because there has been an
-over-production of some things at a price-impasse between producer and
-consumer.
-
-In the field of finance and credit it has evolved a mechanism of the
-highest dynamic intensity known; yet the speculative abuse of credit is
-an unmitigated scandal, and nothing whatever has been done to eliminate
-or diminish those alternations of high and low prices, inflation and
-deflation, which produce panics and perilous political disorder. On the
-contrary, business continues fast in the antique superstition that such
-things happen in obedience to inexorable laws.
-
-In the Great War American business amazed the world, itself included.
-In 1914 the United States was a debtor nation, owing Europe 3 billions
-of dollars. By the end of 1920 we were the largest creditor nation
-on earth, other nations owing us 15 billions. This means simply
-that in six years this country produced in excess of its own needs
-and sent abroad commodities amounting to 18 billions of dollars. In
-1921, to the naïve astonishment of business, the foreign demand
-for American goods slumped because foreign countries had not the
-means to go on buying at any such rate. The result was an acute
-panic in prices here, trade prostration, unemployment, and sounds of
-despair. The case was stated by leaders of business and finance in
-these ominous terms: “America is over-equipped. It has the capacity
-to produce more of everything than it needs. Therefore unless we
-continuously sell our surplus abroad, unless the American government
-will lend foreign countries the credit with which to buy our excess
-production, prosperity is shattered. Factories will shut up, fields
-will lie fallow, labour will suffer for want of work. Moreover, we are
-threatened with a deluge of foreign goods, for presently the countries
-that owe us 18 billions of dollars will be trying to pay us with
-commodities. If we open our markets to their goods our own industries
-will be ruined. So we must have high tariffs to protect American
-producers from the competition of foreign merchandise.”
-
-Ruined by over-plenty!
-
-We are equipped to produce more of the goods that satisfy human wants
-than we can use, our command over the labour of foreign countries by
-reason of the debt they owe us is enormous, and _business desponds_.
-
-Attend. To keep our prosperity we must sell away our surplus, or if
-necessary give it away to foreign countries on credit, and then protect
-ourselves against their efforts to repay us! The simple absurdity
-of this proposition is self-evident. We mention it only for what
-it signifies. And it signifies that business is a blind, momentous
-sequence, with extravagant reflex powers of accommodation and extension
-and almost no faculty of original imagination.
-
-American business despairing at over-production and the American Indian
-shivering on top of the Pennsylvania coalfields--these are twin ironies.
-
-John Law’s Mississippi Bubble dream three centuries ago was a phantasy
-of escape from the boredom of toil. The bubble itself has been
-captured. That is the story of American business. But who has escaped,
-save always a few at the expense of many? There may be in fact no other
-way. Still, the phantasy will not lie. And nobody knows for sure what
-will happen when business is no longer a feudal-minded thing, with
-rights and institutions apart, seeking its own profit as the consummate
-end, and perceives itself in the light of a subordinate human function,
-justified by service.
-
- GARET GARRETT
-
-
-
-
-ENGINEERING
-
-
-American engineering made its beginning almost immediately after
-the end of the War for Independence. The pursuits of the colonists
-under British domination were mainly agricultural. Manufacturing was
-systematically thwarted in order that the Colonies might become a
-market for the finished goods of England. Objection to this form of
-sabotage subsequently developed into one of the main causes of the
-Revolutionary War. It was but natural, therefore, as soon as the
-artificial restrictions imposed upon Colonial enterprise were removed,
-for the new citizens of America to devise machinery, build roads and
-canals, and plan cities.
-
-The early engineers who carried on this work were seldom formally
-trained. They were little more than higher types of artisans. It was
-only after thirty-odd years of discussion and agitation that the first
-scientific schools were established in this country--two in number. And
-it was only after the enactment of the Morrill Act by Congress (1862)
-that formal engineering training as we know it to-day was put on a firm
-national basis. By 1870, 866 engineers had been graduated from American
-technical schools and colleges. The real advent of the typical American
-engineer, however, has only occurred since 1870. At present he is being
-supplied to the industries of the country at the rate of 5,000 a year.
-
-The coming of the formally trained technologist or scientist of
-industry lagged somewhat behind the development of the industrial
-revolution. This was particularly true in America. Originally all
-attention was centered on the training of so-called civil engineers,
-i.e., canal, bridge, road, dam and building designers and constructors.
-The rapid rise of the mechanical arts after the Civil War focused
-attention on the training of engineers expert in manufacturing. To-day
-the mechanical and electrical engineers are more numerous than any
-other group and have far outstripped the civil engineers.
-
-The original function of the engineer, especially in the first
-days of his systematic training, was to deal scientifically with
-purely mechanical problems. Thus the oft quoted definition of the
-British Institution of Civil Engineers that “Engineering is the art
-of directing the great sources of power in nature for the use and
-convenience of man” reveals quite clearly the legitimate field within
-which the engineer was supposed to operate. He was to harness the
-untamed energies of nature. That this conception was then sufficient,
-and that the careers of most engineers were shaped accordingly, is
-hardly to be disputed. Nor, judging from the achievement of American
-engineers in the last fifty years, can it be contended that their
-function was conceived in too narrow a light. Undoubtedly, the problems
-of mechanical production, power-creation and transmission, bridge and
-building construction, and railway and marine transportation, during
-this period were largely material ones, and the opportunities for
-their solution were especially good. To these the engineers directed
-their attention. Thanks to their training, technique, and accumulated
-experience, they became more and more successful in solving them.
-At the same time, their relative freedom of thought and action with
-reference to technological problems brought them into more or less
-coherent groups which, as time went on, began to conceive a larger
-function for the engineer--service to society as a whole rather than
-the solving of mere concrete, specific difficulties.
-
-For while the material problems of production are undoubtedly as
-important as ever, the present-day industrial system has begun to
-reveal new problems which the engineer in America has, to a limited
-extent, come to realize must be faced. These new problems are not
-material in the old sense of the word; they concern themselves with the
-control and administration of the units of our producing system. Their
-nature is psychological and economic.
-
-Certain groups in the American engineering profession have become quite
-conscious that these deeper problems are not being solved; at the same
-time they consider it a necessary duty to help in their solution,
-inasmuch as the engineer, they feel, is peculiarly fitted to see his
-way clearly through them. Thus is being split off from the main body
-of old-line engineers, a new wing not so much concerned with wringing
-power from nature as with adjusting power to legitimate social needs.
-As against the old engineer, concerned primarily with design and
-construction, there is to be recognized the new engineer, concerned
-mainly with industrial management.
-
-Unfortunately, however, a strict evaluation of the engineer’s status
-with reference to the influence he may have on the solution of these
-social and economic problems causes serious doubts to arise regarding
-his ultimate possibilities in this field. Despite his great value and
-recognized indispensability as a technologist, expert in problems
-of materials and processes of manufacture, he can at best but serve
-in an advisory capacity on questions affecting the division of the
-national surplus or the control of industry. Nevertheless, it is of
-fundamental significance that the American engineering profession has
-of late considerably widened the scope of the British Institution of
-Civil Engineers’ definition of engineering, namely, to the effect that
-“Engineering is the science of controlling the forces and utilizing the
-materials of nature for the benefit of man _and the art of organizing
-and of directing human activities in connection therewith_.” The
-implications of this much broader definition, if widely accepted,
-will bring the American engineers sooner or later squarely before a
-fundamental issue.
-
-The ideal of service is profoundly inherent in the profession of
-engineering. But so, also, is the ideal of creative work. The
-achievements of engineering enterprise are easily visualized and
-understood, and from them the engineer is wont to derive a great
-deal of satisfaction. Recently, however, the exactions of the modern
-complex economic system, in which the engineer finds himself relatively
-unimportant compared with, say, the financier, have contrived to rob
-him of this satisfaction. And as his creative instincts have been
-thwarted, he has turned upon business enterprise itself a sharp and
-inquiring eye. From isolated criticisms of wastes and inefficiencies in
-industry, for instance, he has not found it a long or difficult step to
-the investigation of industry on a national basis for the purpose of
-exposing technical and managerial shortcomings.
-
-It appears, however, that the majority of American engineers
-to-day believe that their position as a class is such that they can
-effectively maintain an impartial position when differences which arise
-between large economic groups of society such as those of the merchant,
-the manufacturer, the labourer, the farmer, although these differences
-frequently lead to economic waste and loss. At all events, it is on
-this basis that attempts are being made to formulate a general policy
-for engineers as a class to pursue. It is very doubtful, however,
-whether a group such as the engineers, constituting the “indispensable
-general staff of industry,” can long take an impartial attitude towards
-two such conflicting forces as capital and labour so long as they (the
-engineers) adhere to the ideal of maximum service and efficiency. The
-pickets of the fence may eventually prove unduly sharp.
-
-A minority group which believes otherwise has already organized
-into an international federation of technicians affiliated with the
-standard organized labour movement of America. This group holds that
-the engineer is a wage-earner like all other industrial workers, and
-that his economic welfare in many instances is no better than that
-of ordinary wage-earners. In addition, this group maintains that in
-the last analysis it is flatly impossible for engineers to take an
-impartial attitude in the struggle between capital and labour. Hence
-they advocate the engineer affiliating with the organized labour
-movement like other wage earners and, in times of crisis, throwing his
-influence with the workers of industry.
-
-The organized labour movement of America has indicated in clear terms
-its estimate of the American engineer’s true value and opportunity. The
-American Federation of Labour in 1919 issued the following statement:
-
- “To promote further the production of an adequate supply of the
- world’s needs for use and higher standards of life, we urge
- that there be established co-operation between the scientist of
- industry and the representatives of the organized workers.”
-
-This conviction has also been expressed in the following terms:
-
- “The trades-union movement of America understands fully the
- necessity for adequate production of the necessities of life.
- American labour understands, perhaps more fully than do
- American statesmen, the needs of the world in this hour, and it
- is exerting every effort to see that those needs are met with
- intelligence and with promptness. The question of increased
- productivity is not a question of putting upon the toilers
- a more severe strain; it is a question of vast fundamental
- changes in the management of industry; a question of the
- elimination of outworn policies; a question of the introduction
- of the very best in machinery and methods of management.”
-
-The fundamental significance of these attitudes of the engineers and
-the organized workers of the country will perhaps be better understood
-when it is realized how indispensable the engineers have become in
-the conduct of industrial affairs to-day. While virtually the product
-of the last fifty years, they have already fallen heir to one of the
-most strategic positions in society. To them are entrusted the real
-“trade secrets” of industry. Only they understand how far the intricate
-material processes of manufacture are interdependent, and how they can
-be kept in harmony. The engineers have the skill and the understanding
-which is absolutely necessary for industrial management. Without their
-guidance the present highly complicated system of production would
-quickly tumble into chaos.
-
-The ownership of industry has frequently been suggested as the key
-to the true emancipation of the great mass of workers of a nation.
-Leastwise many theoretical arguments on the process of workers’
-liberation have been premised on the necessity of eventually
-liquidating the institution of private property. How futile such a
-programme is without recognizing the indispensable part which technical
-and managerial skill plays in any system of production has been
-emphasized again and again by individuals, notably in Russia and Italy,
-where the experiment of securing production without the assistance
-of adequate technical control has been tried. In fact, the whole
-question of property control is secondary when once the true value of
-engineering management is understood. In so far as the American workers
-see this, and make it possible for American engineers to co-operate
-with them in their struggle for liberation, will they make the task
-of the worker more easy and avoid the frequent recurrence of wasteful
-and often tragic conflict. The burden, however, is equally upon the
-shoulders of the engineer to meet labour half way in this enterprise.
-
-It is very much to be doubted if most American engineers really have
-a clear understanding of the position in which they find themselves,
-beyond a general conception of their apparent impartiality. The
-progressive economic concepts and activities which have been outlined,
-while advanced by representatives of national associations of
-engineers, are not necessarily the reflection of the great mass of
-American engineers to-day, over 200,000 strong. Nevertheless, it is
-fortunate that an otherwise conservative and socially timid body of
-individuals, such as the engineers frequently have been in the past,
-should now find itself represented by a few spokesmen at least who are
-able to promulgate clear statements on fundamental issues. The rank and
-file of engineers have a long road to travel before they will be in a
-position to command adequate consideration for their basic ideals and
-purposes as expressed in their new definition of engineering, and as
-proposed by some of their leaders.
-
-It is, indeed, seriously to be doubted if many engineers of America
-have really had the training to grasp the relation of their position
-to the economic developments of to-day. Conventional engineering
-education has been entirely too narrow in its purpose. It has succeeded
-in turning out good technical practitioners, not far-seeing economic
-statesmen. In recent years many engineering schools have placed
-emphasis on what has aptly been termed “The business features of
-engineering practice.” This, while conceivably a good thing from the
-standpoint of the limits within which engineering enterprise must
-ordinarily function to-day, is bound to over-emphasize the _status
-quo_, and so confine the vision of the engineer.
-
-Engineers in this country have frequently taken a sort of pharisaic
-attitude on the desirability--offhand--of delegating the entire running
-of things human to technical experts. While such experts may usually
-have been quite successful in operating engineering enterprises, it
-hardly follows that this necessarily qualifies them for the wholesale
-conduct of the affairs of society.
-
-Yet the demand on the part of certain engineers for a more fundamental
-participation in the conduct of the larger economic and political
-affairs of society should be construed as a healthy sign. It is an
-outgrowth of an intellectual unrest among the profession, precipitated
-by the thwarting of a genuine desire to build and serve. This unrest,
-in the absence of a constructive outlet combined with the past failure
-of engineering education to provide a real intellectual background, has
-resulted from time to time in some amusing phenomena. Thus not a few
-engineers have developed a sort of symbolism or mysticism, expressed
-in the terminology of their profession, with a view to building a
-new heaven and a new earth whose directing head they propose to be.
-From this they derive a peculiar satisfaction and perhaps temporary
-inspiration, and incidentally they often seem to confound laymen who
-do not understand the meaning of their terms. Instead of deriving
-comfort from symbolic speculations and futurist engineering diagrams,
-one would rather expect engineers to be realists, especially in the
-larger affairs of their profession. The seriousness with which the
-speculations concerning “space-binding” and “time-binding” have been
-taken is an example of how engineers with their present one-sided
-intellectual development may seize upon metaphysical cobwebs for
-spiritual solace in their predicament.
-
-Another aspect of the intellectual limitations of many American
-engineers is revealed by some of the controversies which engage the
-technical societies and the technical periodicals. A notable and
-recurring instance is the debate concerning the relative merits of
-steam and electrical operation of railways. The real question which
-underlies replacing a going system with one which is better but more
-costly in capital outlay is primarily economic in nature. Consequently
-such a change is contingent upon a revised distribution of the national
-surplus rather than on the comparative merits of detail parts. This
-fact seldom seems to get home to the engineers. They have been arguing
-for the last fifteen years the relative advantages of this or that
-detail, failing all the while to understand that the best, in the
-large, from an engineering standpoint, can be secured only when
-unrestricted, free enterprise has given way to some form of enterprise
-regulated principally in the interest of public service.
-
-The profession of engineering, especially in America, is still young
-enough not to have become ridden with tradition and convention. It has
-developed rapidly along essentially pragmatic though perhaps narrow
-lines. Certainly it is not bound and circumscribed by precedent and
-convention like the legal profession, or even the medical profession.
-Above all, it derives its inspiration from powerful physical realities,
-and this constitutes its bulwark.
-
-What the profession really lacks are two fundamentals, absolutely
-necessary for any group strategically located and desirous of
-leadership in society. These are: (1) an intellectual background based
-squarely upon a comprehensive study of the economic and political
-institutions of society, their history, growth, and function, together
-with a study of the larger aspects of human behaviour and rights;
-and, (2) the development of a facility for intelligent criticism,
-especially of engineering and economic enterprises. A wholesome
-intellectual background is necessary to interpret the new position and
-its prerogatives which the application of science has created for the
-engineer. A development of the critical faculty is desirable in order
-to enable him to detect the blandishments of cult, the temptations of
-formulas and systems expressed in indefinable abstractions, and the
-pitfalls of the _status quo_.
-
-The responsibility for the American engineer’s function in society
-rests largely upon the schools which train him. Engineering education
-in America has done its task relatively well considered from the simple
-technical point of view. Of late, progressive engineering educators
-have stressed the necessity for paying more attention to the humanistic
-studies in the engineering curriculum. The beginning made in this
-respect is, however, entirely too meagre to warrant much hope that
-younger American engineers will soon acquire either that intellectual
-background or genuine critical faculty which will entitle them to a
-larger share of responsibility for the affairs of men.
-
-The most hopeful sign in this direction is rather the fusion of the
-engineers into a large federation of societies, with service to the
-community, State, and Nation as their motto; a growing tendency,
-collectively, at least, to investigate the conduct of national
-industrial enterprises; and, finally, an attempt at a rapprochement,
-in the interest of society, between labour and the engineers. Ere
-long these developments will reflect themselves in the schools of
-engineering, and then, it is reasonable to expect, will the process of
-developing a truly worthy class of industrial leaders in this country
-really make its beginning. In America to-day no such leadership exists.
-
-
- O. S. BEYER, JR.
-
-
-
-
-NERVES
-
-
-Young as America is, she is nevertheless old enough to have known the
-time when there were no such things as nerves. Our earliest settlers
-and colonists, our proverbially hardy pioneers apparently managed to
-get along with a very modest repertory of diseases. They died, if
-not from malnutrition or exposure or from Indians, then from some
-old-fashioned, heaven-sent seizure or sudden pain, not to mention
-from “old age,” long a favourite diagnosis of a pious and not too
-inquisitive school of medicine even where the patient’s age had to be
-entered by the coroner as of forty or thereabouts. As for the various
-forms of nervousness which belong to our age of indulgence and luxury,
-they were unknown to those sturdier times, and would undoubtedly have
-put their unhappy victims under the quick suspicion of having had
-forbidden converse with the Devil.
-
-If, nevertheless, we feel justified in assuming that this golden age
-of health and disease probably hid beneath its tinsel a good many of
-the nervous afflictions which had already made the Middle Ages so
-interesting, we must bear in mind that the pioneer neurotic of those
-days had at his command a number of disguises and evasions to which
-his fellow-sufferer of to-day can no longer have recourse. One of his
-favourite expedients for concealing his neurotic maladjustment was to
-take refuge in some form of religion or rather in some new variation of
-religious belief or practice, for it is, of course, not claimed here
-that religion itself can be exhaustively explained as a manifestation
-of nervous maladjustment. But the colonial period was an era when it
-was still good form, so to speak, for a neurosis to express itself
-in some religious peculiarity, and as this was a country without
-monasteries (which had proved to be such a haven for the neurotically
-afflicted during the Middle Ages), the neurotic was forced to exhibit
-his neo-religionism in the open. Often he blossomed forth in some new
-form of religious segregation, which allowed him to compensate for his
-social defect and often gave him positive advantages.
-
-The neurotic legacy which he thus bequeathed to the nation can still
-be seen all around us to-day in the extraordinary multiplicity of
-religious variations, not to say eccentricities, which dot the
-theological heavens in America. For the neurotic as a religion
-founder--or better, inventor--quickly gathered similarly inclined
-adherents, formed a sect, and moved a little further West, so that
-the country was rather plentifully sown with strange creeds. He was
-thus freed from the criticism which would have overtaken him in a more
-settled society and his neurotic disguise remained undetected to a
-degree no longer possible to-day. For if nowadays we still occasionally
-encounter a brand-new and crassly individual religion all registered
-and patented like any temperance elixir, we usually discover that its
-prophet is either a defective or even an illiterate person who has
-distorted some biblical text in favour of a bizarre interpretation,
-or else a psychopathic individual who already has highly systematized
-ideas of the delusioned type. This class of neurotic has tended
-to disappear by somewhat the same process through which the more
-flamboyant type of hysteric such as flourished in the Middle Ages has
-gradually succumbed to progressive exposure--an analogy to which I
-refer with some diffidence in the face of one of the supreme ironies
-of the 20th century, namely, the canonization of Joan of Arc. But that
-lapse into the darkness of mediævalism is probably to be explained as a
-by-product of the war mind.
-
-The other great loophole for the early American neurotic was purely
-geographical. He could always move on. In view of the tendency towards
-social avoidance so characteristic of the neurotic, this was of
-inestimable advantage. It is, of course, generally supposed that when
-the embryonic American trekked Westward it was either in response to
-some external pressure of political oppression or religious intolerance
-or to the glad, free call of wider horizons and more alluring
-opportunities, as was the case with the earliest colonists in their
-flight from Europe. In both cases, however, the assumption may be
-challenged as a sufficient explanation. For it is extremely probable
-that a good many of these pioneers were, like Mr. Cohan’s “Vagabond,”
-fugitives from their own thoughts quite as much as from the tyranny
-of others. They felt an urge within them that made a further abidance
-in their social environment intolerable. This geographical flight of
-the neurotic has always been the most natural and the most obvious,
-checked though it is to-day to a large extent by the disappearance of
-further virgin territory and the sophistication born of the knowledge
-wrought by a world-wide intercommunication which says that mankind is
-everywhere much the same, a truth which can again be translated into an
-internal realization that we cannot escape from ourselves.
-
-Certainly our pioneers have been too much romanticized. The neurotic
-legacy which they bequeathed to us can plainly be seen in many
-characteristics of our uncouth Westerners with their alternate coldness
-towards visitors and their undignified warmth towards the casual
-stranger who really cannot mean anything to them. There is something
-wrong about man as a social animal when he cannot live happily in a
-valley where he sees more than the distant smoke of his neighbour’s
-chimney. When at last the pressure of population forces him to live
-socially his suspicion and distrust are likely to turn him into a
-zealot and reformer and make possible the domination in American life
-of such a sub-cultural type as Bryan or the beatitudes of a State
-like Kansas. The favourite Western exhortation to be able to look a
-man in the eye and tell him to go to Hell is worthy of an anti-social
-community of ex-convicts, and the maxim about minding your own business
-can only be understood as a defence against the prevalent tendency of
-everybody to mind his neighbour’s business. Thus the self-isolating
-neurotic ends by revenging himself upon society by making it
-intolerable.
-
-But this is to anticipate. It must be said that until after the Civil
-War America remained singularly free from “nerves.” This is perhaps
-largely due to the fact, as I have tried to show, that they were not
-known as such. The only serious epidemic was the witchcraft hunting of
-the 17th century. It is certainly most charitable towards a religion
-which had so many other repellent features to characterize this as an
-hysterical epidemic and let it go at that, though it also freshly
-illustrates the time-worn truth that intolerance does not seem to
-make its victims any more tolerant in their turn. The passing of this
-epidemic also marked the last irruption of State intolerance towards
-religion, with the exception of later incidents in connection with the
-Mormon Church, though it has rarely been understood that especially
-in this country State tolerance of religion was compensated for by
-individual and social intolerance in matters that quite transcended the
-religious sphere. The vast importance of this phenomenon in relation to
-our modern nervous tension will be referred to again later on.
-
-The first typical manifestation of American nerves on an imposing scale
-began to develop in the sixties and seventies of the last century in
-the form of neurasthenia. Until then the typical American, despite
-his religious obsessions and his social deficiencies, had, to a large
-extent, remained externally minded, a fact which is sufficiently
-attested by his contempt for the arts and his glorification of his
-purely material achievements. He had been on the make, an absorbing
-process while it lasts, though rather dangerous in the long run because
-it never comes to an end. Neurasthenia developed rapidly as soon as it
-had been properly labelled, and claimed a notable number of victims
-among our captains of industry and high-pressure men: indeed, the
-number might easily lead to the perhaps rather unkindly conclusion that
-business dishonesty, even though successful, is likely to result in
-nervous breakdown in a generation piously reared on the unimpeachable
-maxims of a Benjamin Franklin or a Herbert Smiley. More fundamentally
-it was, of course, the logical penalty for cultivating the purely
-energetic side of man at the expense of his contemplative nature. The
-philosophy of hurry and hustle had begun to totter.
-
-The discoverer, expounder, and popularizer of neurasthenia was Doctor
-George M. Beard, under whose ægis neurasthenia came to be known as
-“the American disease.” Dr. Beard was a sound neurologist within
-the limits of his generation of medicine, but with a dangerous gift
-of imagination. His conception of neurasthenia was truly grandiose.
-According to him this fascinating disease was endemic in the United
-States and was the result of our peculiar social conditions. Its
-cause, he claimed, was “modern civilization, which has these five
-characteristics--steam power, the periodical press, the telegraph,
-the sciences, the mental activity of women.” Among the secondary
-and tertiary causes of neurasthenia or nervousness he threw in such
-things as climate, the dryness of our air and the extremes of heat
-and cold, civil and religious liberty, our institutions as a whole,
-inebriety, and the general indulgence of our appetites and passions.
-In a remarkable chapter he also assigned as one of the causes of our
-nervousness the remarkable beauty of American women, though he does
-not clearly state whether this made only the men nervous or the women
-as well. Such a diagnosis was to turn sociologist with a vengeance and
-Doctor Beard lived up to his implications by saying that the cure of
-neurasthenia would mean “to solve the problem of sociology itself.”
-
-The inevitable result of such a broad and confident diagnosis was to
-make of neurasthenia a kind of _omnium gatherum_ of all the ills of
-mankind less obvious than a broken leg. To explain the affliction
-in terms of America rather than in terms of the patient and his
-symptoms had about the value of a foreigner’s book about America
-written on his home-bound steamer after a six-weeks’ sojourn in
-this country. In fact, the wildest diagnoses were made, and such
-perfectly well-defined medical entities as tabes, arteriosclerosis,
-parathyroidism, myasthenia, and incipient tumours of the brain were
-frequently given the neurasthenic label. Various theories of exhaustion
-and nervous strain were also advanced and the attempt was made to feed
-and strengthen the nervous system directly on the analogy of Professor
-Agassiz’s famous assumption that the phosphates in fish could be
-directly absorbed as material for brain-cells, a theory which did not
-account for the fact that comparatively few intellectual giants have
-sprung from fisher-folk. This naturally opened up a wide field for
-quackery and ushered in the era of “nerve tonics” which are still with
-us to-day. The craze for sanitariums also started at about this time,
-and with every doctor having a little sanitarium of his own the public
-was pretty well fleeced both by its “medicine men” and its men of
-medicine.
-
-Of course no treatment could possibly be successful in curing such
-a wide variety of diseases the very existence of many of which was
-hidden from the physician under the blanket term of neurasthenia;
-and in those cases where an actual neurasthenia was present the
-treatment as developed by Beard and his followers made only superficial
-progress. The S. Weir Mitchell formula, for instance, with its emphasis
-upon quiet, diet, and rest, remained, in the majority of cases,
-essentially a treatment of symptoms rather than of causes. The tired
-and over-wrought business man was given a pacifying vacation from his
-dubious labours and was then promptly sent back to them, like a dog to
-his vomit. The American woman, grown nervous from being insufficiently
-occupied, was initiated into a different form of doing nothing, whereat
-she felt much relieved for a time. Neurasthenia was soon moving in a
-vicious and ever-widening circle; the more it spread the more it had
-to include and thus became less and less digested medically; it played
-havoc especially among American women who exploited their “nervousness”
-much as their European sisters had exploited their “migraine” or
-their “vapours” in previous generations. By the nineties, however,
-neurasthenia had run its course as a fashionable affliction, other
-countries had succeeded in surviving without erecting a quarantine
-against it, and medical circles had begun to debate whether there was
-such a thing as neurasthenia at all.
-
-But, despite the breakdown of neurasthenia and the sins that were
-committed in its name, it would be a mistake to be merely amused at
-Doctor Beard for the pretentiousness of his concept or to criticize
-him too severely for being too much of a medical popularizer. His
-insight was, after all, of considerable value. For he realized, however
-imperfectly, that the neuroses as a class are cultural diseases and
-that they cannot be properly understood without taking into account the
-background of modern civilization. This is a rare virtue in American
-medicine where the specialist is constantly in danger of isolating
-himself, a tendency which is particularly harmful in the study of the
-mental sciences. Unfortunately Doctor Beard did not follow through. He
-seems to have become frightened at his own diagnosis. For no sooner
-had he drawn the worst possible picture of American civilization as
-a breeder of neurasthenia than he turned around and assured the
-public that things were not so bad after all. He accomplished this by
-enriching his sociology with a philosophy which is a prodigy in itself.
-This philosophy of his he called the “omnistic philosophy” and claimed
-for it the peculiar virtue of being able to include “optimism on the
-one hand and pessimism on the other and make the best of both,” which
-is undoubtedly as uplifting a piece of American metaphysics as one is
-likely to find on the whole Chautauqua circuit. In criticizing the slow
-advance of American medicine as a whole it is always well to remember
-the atmosphere of intellectual quackery in which our physicians no less
-than our early metaphysicians so confidently moved.
-
-By the end of the 19th century the study of functional nervous
-disorders in America was, as I have said, pretty well strewn with the
-_disjecta membra_ of neurasthenia which still breathed slightly under
-the stimulus of electro- and hydrotherapeutics and of the “health
-foods” industry. Meanwhile hypnotism also had come to do its turn upon
-the American medical stage, where it ran through a swift cycle of use
-and abuse. Neurology as a special department, like the rest of American
-medicine, had been greatly enriched by contact with continental
-medicine, and the works of Kraepelin had come into honour among the
-psychiatrists. Dr. Morton Prince had begun to publish some interesting
-studies of double personalities, and a number of tentative systems of
-psycho-therapy based on a rather mixed procedure had been set up only
-to be knocked down again as a beneficial exercise for the critical
-faculty.
-
-But now the stage was set for the appearance of the two modern theories
-of the neuroses as presented in Europe by Janet and Freud. In the
-rivalry that immediately ensued between these two opposing theories
-that of Janet was soon outdistanced. His fundamental conception of
-hysteria as a form of degeneration was in a way quite as repugnant
-to American optimism as the sexual interpretation of Freud was to
-American prudery. Janet had indeed been of invaluable help to the
-hysteric by taking him seriously, but his presentation of the subject
-was so narrow and his theory in the end proved so static that his views
-have made little headway. Janet was also under the disadvantage of
-working as an isolated figure in a prescribed field and did not come
-into any revolutionary relation to psychology as a whole or find those
-immensely suggestive analogies in the field of psychiatry, especially
-in dementia præcox and paranoia, which have given the work of Freud
-such a wide range. He had, besides, the defects common to so much of
-French medicine which is often so peculiarly insular and, so to speak,
-not made for export. His contribution more or less began and ended
-with the theory of the dissociation of the personality which is not
-characteristic of hysteria alone and could not successfully be grafted
-upon the old psychology to which Janet clung.
-
-On the other hand, Freud after an initial resistance rapidly became
-epidemic in America. As was the case in Europe, he enjoyed considerable
-vogue among the lay public while still violently opposed in medical
-circles. His visit to America, however, in 1909, on the occasion
-of the twentieth anniversary of Clark University, created a very
-favourable impression and brought him to the attention of such American
-psychologists as William James, Edwin B. Holt, Adolf Meyer, and others.
-His works appeared in this country in translations by Doctor A. A.
-Brill, and in a short while Freud was “taken up” with a vengeance.
-
-He has had both the advantages and the handicaps of a boom. His
-admirers have obscured or exaggerated him and his enemies have derided
-his popularity as proof of a reputation based upon sensationalism. In
-fact, Freud met with three fates: he was either wildly embraced, or
-rejected in toto with an appropriate academic lynching, or else he was
-accepted with “improvements.”
-
-He was fortified by previous experience against the second alternative
-and probably resigned to the third: it was the embrace that most nearly
-proved fatal to him. For America was to see the most extravagant
-development of the so-called “wild” psychoanalysis, a danger against
-which Freud himself had issued a warning. In 1916, for instance, an
-informal canvas revealed that approximately five hundred individuals
-were quite willing to psychoanalyze patients in the city of New
-York alone, whereas there were probably not more than six properly
-qualified medical practitioners in the whole State. Advertisements
-offered to teach the psychoanalytic technique by mail and instructors
-in chiropractic included it in their curriculum. This gross abuse was
-due to the general laxness of medical law in this country which still
-remains to be remedied. It was not only the amateurs that offended;
-doctors themselves were often at fault. For it cannot be too often
-emphasized that a psychoanalyst must have something more than the
-conceit of psychological subtlety common to most of us; he must be
-a trained neurologist and must have had considerable experience
-in psychiatry if he would escape the pitfalls of differential
-diagnosis--a case of hysteria can be dangerously like an incipient
-tumour of the brain and a compulsion-neurosis may simulate a paranoid
-condition. These abuses are, of course, no criticism of the intrinsic
-value of psychoanalysis. It has been the history of so many medical
-discoveries that they are recommended as a cure-all; we need but
-recall vaccination, or the present vitamine craze. On the other hand,
-it is regrettable that the direct attack upon Freud in this country
-has rarely risen above the level of denunciation. Quite recently, for
-instance, one of our socially eminent neurologists allowed himself
-to indulge in the teleological, or rather disguised theological,
-argument that if the unconscious is really so full of dreadful things
-as Freud says, they should be left there. And yet it is just serious
-and sympathetic criticism of which the science of psychoanalysis stands
-most in need.
-
-The attempts to assimilate Freud were of two kinds. The first of these,
-like Professor Holt’s book on “The Freudian Wish” or Doctor Edward J.
-Kempf’s “The Autonomic Functions and the Personality,” were sincere
-attempts of critical dignity to relate psychoanalysis to American
-behaviouristic psychology on the part of men who are not altogether
-professed Freudians. The second were more in the nature of somewhat
-pompous criticisms which attempted to reconcile and soften what seemed
-to be the more repellent features of the Freudian theories. There is a
-prevalent tendency among medical men in America to indulge in criticism
-without any due regard to the proportions between the magnitude of a
-subject and their familiarity with it, somewhat after the manner of the
-green theological student who is confident of his ability to subvert
-the theory of evolution in a casual thesis of his own. The scientist in
-many fields is constantly facing this debasement of standards, making
-science not too scientific or logic not too logical lest it should
-be misunderstood; it is certainly a commentary that the majority of
-Americans, for instance, look upon Edison as our greatest scientist.
-The tendency to sweeten and refine Freud has taken some peculiar forms,
-due, in great part, to Doctor Jung who, on having re-introduced the
-libido theory to American audiences with a number of philosophical
-and mystical trimmings of his own, felt that he had made Freud more
-palatable over here.
-
-Ironically enough, it would have been a very simple matter to “put
-over” Freud in this country with all the éclat of the Bergsonian
-craze which just preceded him. It was merely a question of the right
-kind of publicity, for the problem of how to handle sex in America
-has been solved long ago. The way to do it is to sentimentalize it.
-If Freud, instead of saying that the incestuous longing of the child
-for the parent of opposite sex is a natural impulse, though normally
-sublimated during the period of adolescence, had put the same idea into
-the phraseology of so many of our popular songs which reiterate the
-theme about mother being her boy’s first and last and truest love, he
-would have encountered no opposition. And if he had given his theory
-of the unconscious a slightly religious setting by emphasizing the
-fact that the unconscious has no sense of the passage of time and
-cannot conceive its own annihilation, he would have been hailed as the
-latest demonstrator of the immortality of the soul. A little personal
-press-agenting to the effect that he led a chaste life and was the
-father of a flourishing family would have completed the prescription.
-He would have gone over with a bang, though he probably would have been
-quite as amiably misunderstood as he is now viciously misunderstood.
-
-Freud, however, presented his case at its own value and, aside from
-informing an astonished American audience that Doctor Sanford Bell had
-preceded him in announcing the preadolescent sexuality of children,
-shouldered the responsibility for his theories. What he has said,
-carefully and repeatedly, is that ever since, for a long period in our
-development, the difficulties of satisfying the hunger impulse have
-been overcome in so far as civilized man has pretty well solved the
-problem of nutrition; it is the sex impulse to which the individual
-has the greatest difficulty in adjusting himself. This difficulty
-increases rather than decreases with the advance of culture and at
-certain stages leads to the group of diseases known as the neuroses. In
-a normal sexual life there is no neurosis. But our civilization has in
-many ways become so perverse that we find something akin to an official
-preference for a neurosis rather than a normal sexual life, in spite
-of the fact that the neurosis ultimately will destroy civilization.
-This is the vicious circle which Freud attacked. In doing so he
-had first to enlarge the concept of sexuality and show its complex
-relation to our whole culture. In studying civilization at its breaking
-point he naturally had to study what was breaking it up, namely, the
-individual’s maladjustment to his sexual impulses. But he has never
-attempted to sexualize the universe, as has been claimed, nor has he
-ever lost sight of the fact that while man as an egocentric being must
-put the self-regarding instincts first, man regarded as one of the
-processes of nature remains to be studied in terms of his reproductive
-instincts. Freud has been persistently oversexualized both by his
-admirers and his opponents, and the degree to which this has been done
-in America is at least some indication of how close he has come home to
-conditions here.
-
-Freudian research in this country has been limited almost entirely
-to cases. Our physicians who practise psychoanalysis have lacked
-either the leisure or the culture to apply their science to wider
-cultural questions to which the Freudian psychology applies, and
-among the lay scholars using the psychoanalytic technique there has
-been no outstanding figure like that of Otto Rank who has done such
-notable work in Vienna. But the study of specific cases of hysteria
-and neurosis as they occur in America already permit of some general
-conclusions as to the character of the national matrix from which they
-spring. One of the most striking features of our emotional life is
-the exaggerated mother-love so frequently displayed by Americans. The
-average American, whether drunk or sober, can grow maudlin about his
-mother’s perfections and his devotion to her in a way that must shock
-the European observer. Not that the European loves his mother less:
-it is simply that he is more reticent about expressing an emotion
-which he feels has a certain private sanctity; he would experience
-a decided constraint or αἰδώς in boasting about it, just as a woman
-of breeding would not parade her virtue. The American adult knows no
-such restraint; he will “tell the world” how much he loves his mother,
-will sing sentimental songs about her and cheerfully subscribe to the
-advice to “choose a girl like your mother if you want to be happily
-married,” and then grows violent when the incest-complex is mentioned.
-This excessive mother worship has reached almost cultic proportions. It
-is reflected in our fiction, in our motion-pictures, in the inferior
-position of the American husband, and in such purely matriarchal
-religions as Christian Science where a form of healing is practised
-which is not very far removed from a mother’s consolation to her boy
-when he has bruised his knees. All this points to a persistent sexual
-infantilism and an incomplete sublimation, which are such fertile
-breeders of hysteria. One is involuntarily reminded of Doctor Beard’s
-rather enigmatic statement that the extraordinary beauty of our women
-is one of the causes of nervousness in America. In so far as they
-offer a maximum of enticement with a minimum of conjugal satisfaction
-the charge is certainly justified. It is as if they did not even know
-their own business in terms of their sexual function of weaning their
-husbands from their mothers and thus completing the necessary exogamic
-process. We thus have the condition where the husband, in further
-seeking to overcome his incest-complex, becomes everything in his
-business and nothing in his home, with an ultimate neurotic breakdown
-or a belated plunge into promiscuity. The wife, on her part, either
-becomes hysterical or falls a victim to religious or reformatory
-charlatanism.
-
-The study of compulsion-neuroses and allied paranoid states which are
-so prevalent among us has given us further insights into the neurotic
-character of the American temperament. One of the most valuable of
-these is the recognition of the compulsive nature of so much of our
-thinking. This has also been well observed by a foreign critic like
-Santayana who says of America, “Though it calls itself the land of
-freedom, it is really the land of compulsions, and one of the greatest
-compulsions is that we must think and feel alike.” This is a rather
-fatal indictment of our boasted individualism, which is, as a matter of
-fact, an individualism born of fear and distrust such as already marked
-our early pioneers. We are indeed ultra-conformists, and our fear of
-other-mindedness amounts almost to a phobia. But such an atmosphere
-constitutes a paradise for the compulsion-neurotic because he finds
-it easy to impose his compulsions upon the rest of society. The fact
-that compulsion-neurotics are constantly indulging in neo-religious
-formations through which they are enabled temporarily to accommodate
-their taboos and phobias in religious ceremonials, enables them to make
-use of the general religious sanctions of society in order to impose
-their compulsions upon their fellow-beings.
-
-Herein probably lies a better explanation of American intolerance
-than in the indictment of Puritanism which furnishes such a favourite
-invective for our iconoclasts. Puritanism has become a literary
-catchword and by no means covers the case. For it must be remembered
-that we are dealing with offshoots of deteriorated religions which
-spring from a very wide range of individuals. Religion, having been
-cut off from direct interference with the State, and having gradually
-lost its primitive anthropomorphism which really was one of its sources
-of strength, proceeded to project itself more and more outwardly upon
-social questions. As the personality of God grew dim the figure of the
-Devil also lost its vividness and the problem between good and evil
-could not longer be fought out entirely in the individual’s own bosom;
-he was no longer tempted by the figure of the Devil appearing to him
-in person. Christian religion in its prime saw very clearly that the
-soul must put its own salvation to the fore, and constantly used many
-apt similes, such as the beam in our own eye, to remind us that while
-our neighbour might also have his hands full in fighting the Devil, he
-probably was capable of taking care of himself. Our modern reformer
-has no use for any such simile; he would have to go out of business
-if he could not keep picking at the mote in his neighbour’s eye. He
-finds the equivalent of the Devil in our social vices, in alcohol, in
-tobacco, in tea and coffee, in practically all forms of amusements. He
-preaches a crusade which no longer has an ideal object, and enlists
-a vague religious emotion which is inaccessible to reason and mocks
-intellectual criticism. The device of using religious associations as
-carriers of propaganda has often been used for political purposes with
-consummate skill. Bryan’s famous Cross of Gold speech and Roosevelt’s
-Armageddon appeal are excellent examples of it.
-
-The question has often arisen why the fanatical reformer is so
-omnipotent in America. Why does he succeed so well in imposing his
-compulsions upon others? Why are we so defenceless against his
-blackmail? Why, in plain language, do we stand for him? Foreign
-observers have frequently commented upon the enormous docility of the
-American public. And it is all the more curious because ordinarily
-the average American prides himself upon his assertiveness and his
-quickness in detecting false pretensions. Yet it is a common occurrence
-to meet people with valid claims to hard-headedness who nevertheless
-submit to every form of compulsion. They do not believe in prohibition
-but vote for it, they smoke but think smoking ought to be stopped, they
-admit the fanatical nature of reform movements and yet continue their
-subscriptions.
-
-In giving what can at best be only a partial answer to this national
-enigma, we may briefly consider two types which profoundly contribute
-to our atmosphere of compulsion: our immigrant and our native
-aristocrat. The first, from the very nature of the case, becomes the
-victim of compulsion, while the second imposes the compulsion and then
-in turn, however unwillingly, succumbs to it himself. Our society,
-with its kaleidoscopic changes of fortune and its unchannelled social
-distinctions, presents a problem of adjustment with which even those
-who are at home in America find it difficult to cope. People on the
-make, people who are not sure of themselves on a new social ladder, are
-likely to conform: we find an astonishing amount of social imitation,
-in its milder and more ludicrous form, in all our pioneer communities.
-The immigrant faces the same problem to an intensified degree. He
-comes to us in an uprooted state of mind, with many of his emotional
-allegiances still lingering in his native country, and often with an
-entirely alien tradition. His mind is set to conform, to obey at first
-without much asking. He is like a traveller arriving in a strange
-town who follows the new traffic directions even though he does not
-understand their purpose. But even with the best of will he cannot
-entirely conform. He finds himself in a new world where what formerly
-seemed right to him is now considered wrong, his household gods have
-lost their power, his conscience is no longer an infallible guide.
-It is a sign of character in him to resist, to refuse to sink his
-individuality entirely, to struggle somewhat against the democratic
-degradation which threatens to engulf him too suddenly. But his
-struggle leads to a neurotic conflict which is often not resolved
-until the third generation. It is thus quite permissible to talk of an
-immigrant’s neurosis, which has considerable sociological importance
-even though it does not present an integral clinical picture. It leads
-either to the formation of large segments of undigested foreigners
-in American society who sullenly accept the forms we impose upon
-them while remaining comparatively inarticulate in our cultural and
-political life, or else it produces a type of whom our melting-pot
-romanticists are foolishly proud, the pseudo-American who has sunk from
-individualism to the level of the mob, where he conforms to excess in
-order to cover his antecedents and becomes intolerant in order that he
-may be tolerated.
-
-Ordinarily, the mob tyranny which has become such an alarming feature
-of our public life would be checked by the aristocratic element in
-society. It is part of the aristocratic function to foster cultural
-tolerance and to resist herd suggestion: the aristocratic or dominant
-type, in enjoying the most privileges, is normally least subject to
-compulsions and taboos. With us that is not the case. The Southerner,
-for instance, our most traditional aristocrat, finds himself paralyzed
-by the consciousness of a black shadow behind him who constantly
-threatens both his political and his sexual superiority. He moves in
-an atmosphere of taboos from which he himself cannot escape, for it
-is an established fact that interdiction in one line of thought has
-a crippling effect upon a man’s intellectual activity as a whole.
-Elsewhere our native aristocrat frequently finds himself in the
-position of a lonely outpost of a thin Anglo-Saxon tradition which he
-must defend against the constant onslaughts of alien civilizations, in
-the desperate attempt to uphold the fiction that spiritually, at least,
-we are still an English colony. He is in a state of tension where he
-himself cannot move with any of the freedom which he vaunts as one of
-the outstanding characteristics of the country of his fathers. In his
-hands his own latest hope, our war-born Americanization programme,
-which should really be an initiation into freedom, has quickly become
-little more than a forced observance of sterile rites with which to
-impress the alien. He already sees its failure, and, like a general who
-is afraid of his own army, he does not sleep very well.
-
- ALFRED B. KUTTNER
-
-
-
-
-MEDICINE
-
-
-From time immemorial the doctor has been the object of respect and awe
-by the generality of mankind. It is true that he has occasionally been
-made the butt of the satirical humour of such dramatists as Molière and
-Shaw, but the majority of people have regarded these jests as amiable
-buffooneries, and not as penetrating criticisms. In ancient days the
-veneration of the medico was based upon his supposed association with
-gods and devils, and upon the belief that he could cure disease by
-wheedling propitiation of _deus_, or by the exorcism of _diabolus_. In
-modern times he holds sway by his supposed possession of the secrets of
-science.
-
-In spite of his pretension to scientific attainment, many vestiges
-of his former priesthood remain, and this _mélange_ of scientist and
-priest has produced curious contradictions and absurdities. But these
-absurdities must by an inexorable law remain concealed from all save
-a few, and the general failure to recognize them has led to a great
-increase in the importance and prosperity of the medical cult. In
-America, of all civilized nations, medical magnificence has reached its
-most formidable proportions. This exaggeration, characteristic of all
-social phenomena in the new world, makes the real importance of the
-doctor to society easy to inspect and to analyze.
-
-A friend not long ago asked me to explain the co-existence, in the same
-city, of the elaborate installation of the Harvard Medical School and
-the magnificent temple of the religion of Mrs. Eddy. “What is it in our
-culture,” said he, “that permits the symbol of such obvious quackery
-as that of Mrs. Eddy to flourish within a stone’s throw of such an
-embodiment of scientific enlightenment as the medical college?”
-
-I replied that the reason for this must be sought in the gullibility
-of our citizens, who are capable of entertaining most incompatible and
-contradictory credos. Thus, the average American can believe firmly and
-simultaneously in the therapeutic excellence of yeast, the salubrious
-cathartic effects of a famous mineral oil, the healing powers of
-chiropractors, and in the merits of the regimen of the Corrective
-Eating Society. His catholicity of belief permits him to consider such
-palpable frauds seriously, and at the same time to admire and respect
-authentic medical education and even the scientific study of disease.
-But the teachers, students, and alumni of medical colleges are drawn
-from our excessively credulous populace. So it is dangerous to consider
-the votaries of the profession of medicine as sceptical and open-minded
-_savants_, in contrast to the promulgators of the afore-mentioned
-imbecilities and to _Homo sapiens americanus_, who is the unconscious
-victim of such charlatanry. In reality the great majority of the
-medical profession is credulous and must always remain so, even in
-matters of health and disease.
-
-The tendency to consider physicians in general as men of science is
-fostered by the doctors themselves. Even the most eminent among them
-are guilty in this respect. Thus the Director of the Hospital of the
-Rockefeller Institute maintains that medicine must be considered
-not as an applied science but as an independent science (R. Cole,
-_Science_, N. S., Vol. LI, p. 329). And an eminent ex-President of the
-American Medical Association holds a similar view, at the same time
-preposterously asserting that “medicine has done more for the growth of
-science than any other profession, and that its best representatives
-have been among the leaders in the advancement of knowledge....” (V. C.
-Vaughan, _Journal_, A. M. A., 1914, Vol. LXII, p. 2003.)
-
-Such pronunciamentoes rest upon the almost universal confusion of the
-_art_ of the practice of medicine with the _science_ of the study of
-disease. Science, in its modern definition, is concerned with the
-quantitative relationship of the factors governing natural phenomena.
-No favourites are to be played among these factors. They are to be
-weighed and measured meticulously and coldly, without enthusiasm
-for one, or disdain and enmity toward another. Now, in the case of
-relationship of doctor to patient, it is clear that such emotions must
-enter. The physician must entertain enthusiasm for the defensive powers
-of his patient, John Smith, and at the same time hate virulently the
-pneumococcus that attacks him. This emotional state of the soldier of
-health prevents the employment of what is known in the language of the
-laboratory as the “control.” For example, a doctor wishes to test the
-efficacy of a serum against pneumonia. In America it is practically
-unknown for him to divide his cases of pneumonia into two groups of
-equal size, to administer his serum to group A and to leave group B
-untreated. He almost invariably has a _parti-pris_ that the serum will
-work, and he reflects with horror that if he holds his remedy from
-group B, some members of this group will die, who might otherwise have
-been saved. So he injects his serum into all of his patients (A and B),
-and if the mortality in the entire group appears to him to be lower by
-statistics than that observed in previous series of cases, he concludes
-that the value of his nostrum is proved. This is an illustration of the
-fallacy of the notion that medicine is a science in the modern sense.
-
-Modern study of disease, conducted in the laboratory upon experimental
-animals, has furnished medical practitioners with a few therapeutic
-and prophylactic weapons. In the use of these the American medico
-has not lagged behind his European colleague. But the great majority
-of the malaises that plague us are not amenable to cure, and it is
-with these that the doctor has since the beginning of time played
-his most important rôle, i.e., that of a “professional sympathizer.”
-The encouraging conversation with the family of the sufferer; the
-mumbling of recondite Latin phrases; the reassuring hopeful hand on
-the patient’s shoulder; the grave use of complicated gimcracks; the
-prescription of ineffective but also innocuous drugs or of water
-tinted to pleasing hues; all these are of incalculable value to the
-_ménage_ stricken by disease. It is my lamentable duty to point out
-the danger of the decline of this essential rôle among the doctors of
-America. The general practitioner of the _ancien régime_ was sincere
-in his performance of his quasi-religious function. He was unsparing
-of his energies, stern in his devotion to duty, deeply altruistic in
-sentiment, and charmingly negligent in economic matters.
-
-But at the present time this adorable figure is disappearing from the
-land, to be replaced by another, more sinister type, actually less
-learned in the important folklore of the bedside, pseudo-scientific,
-given to rigidly defined office hours, and painfully exact in the
-extortion of his emolument. What are the factors that give rise to
-the appearance of this new figure on the American scene? The most
-important of these is to be found in the high development of the craft
-of surgery in the United States. Of all the dread afflictions that
-plague us, a few may be cured or ameliorated by the administration of
-remedies, and an equally small number improved or abolished by surgical
-interference. But in spite of the relatively few diseases to which
-surgery is beneficial, the number of surgeons that flourish in the land
-is enormous. The fundamental discoveries of Pasteur and their brilliant
-application by Lister were quickly seized upon in America. The names
-of Bull, Halstead, Murphy, the brothers Mayo, Cushing, and Finney are
-to be ranked with those of the best surgeons of any nation. In fact,
-we may be said to lead the world--to use an apt Americanism--in the
-production of surgeons, just as we do in that of automobiles, baby
-carriages, and antique furniture.
-
-The success of these protagonists in the higher carpentry at once
-attracted a horde of smaller fry, imitators, men of inferior ability.
-The rapid advances made by the leaders resulted in the development of
-a diversified and complicated technic, which the ordinary surgeon was
-able to master in sections but not _in toto_. From this, specialization
-in surgery has developed rapidly and naturally, so that now certain men
-devote their lives exclusively to the enthusiastic and indiscriminate
-removal of tonsils, others are death on gall bladders, some the foes of
-the vermiform appendix, and yet others practise exclusively the radical
-cure of phimosis. It is obvious that such narrow specialization,
-practised in isolation, would lead to most amusing results, which
-may best be left to the imagination. But these absurdities were
-finally apparent even to the surgeons themselves, with the resulting
-development of what is now known as “group medicine.”
-
-In brief, surgeons with special _penchants_ for the removal of various
-organs, form partnerships, calling to their aid the internist for the
-diagnosis of their prospective victims. The internist gathers about
-him, in turn, a group of less important fry, known as radiographers,
-bacteriologists, pathologists, and serologists. Frequently a dentist
-is added to the coterie. The entire organization is welded into a
-business partnership of typically American efficiency. These groups are
-forming over the entire nation, are appearing even in the tank-towns
-of the hinterland. They occupy elegant suites in important office
-buildings, their members are generally considered the arbiters of the
-medical opinion of the community. Their more or less intelligent use
-of the paraphernalia of pathology, bacteriology, _et cetera_, gives
-them an enormous advantage over their more humble brother, the general
-practitioner. This last, indeed, is being rapidly routed in his battle
-with such associations of “best minds,” equipped with the armamentarium
-of modern science.
-
-The remuneration required by the “super-docs” of group medicine is
-naturally far in excess of that demanded by the general practitioner.
-It is right that this should be so, if not for the results obtained,
-then by reason of the elaborate organization and expensive equipment
-that the group system demands. This increase in reward has made the
-profession of medicine in America what it never was before, a paying
-proposition--again to use an apt Americanism. The result of this entry
-of crass materialism into a previously free-and-easy, altruistic,
-anything but business-like profession is, once more, better left to the
-imagination than described. The brigandage of many of these medical
-banditti is too painful even to think about. It will be apparent that
-relatively few of our citizens are able to pay for group medicine.
-So, it is interesting to observe that the best in medical treatment
-and advice is accessible only to the highest and lowest castes of our
-plutocracy. The rich receive this at the elegant offices and private
-hospitals of the groups, the miserably poor at the teaching hospitals
-of medical colleges.
-
-The service of the “super-doc” to such of our citizens as can afford
-him cannot at this time be properly estimated. It is true that he
-is progressive, that he leans heavily upon the subsidiary sciences
-of pathology, _et cetera_, that he publishes papers in medical
-periodicals, that he visits medical libraries, frequents medical
-congresses. It has just been insisted that the doctor has benefitted
-himself to a great extent economically by forming the group; it is
-for the future to divulge whether his ministrations have resulted in
-a perceptible reduction of human suffering or in a prolongation of
-human life. Certainly he has perpetrated some astounding hoaxes, the
-kind-hearted will say unwittingly. Probably the most interesting of
-these is to be observed in the focal infection mania just now subsiding.
-
-Focal infection came into prominence as the theory, so called, of a
-group of eminent physicians in Chicago. It is, in brief, the doctrine
-that many of our aches and pains whose direct etiology it is impossible
-to demonstrate are due to the presence in the body of foci of harmful
-microbes, at the roots of the teeth, in the tonsils, accessory sinuses,
-or the appendix. Discover the focus, remove it, and presto!--the ache
-disappears like the card up the sleeve of the expert American poker
-player. The advantages of this theory to the various specialists of
-a group will be obvious. To illustrate. Henry Doolittle is plagued
-by a persistent and annoying pain over his left shoulder-blade. He
-goes to the office of a group of “super-docs,” is referred to the
-diagnostician, who makes a careful record of his _status præsens_, then
-orders his satellites to perform the Wassermann reaction, make the
-luetin test, do differential blood counts, perform the determination
-of his blood urea, and carry out a thorough chemical study of his
-basal metabolism. If the results of these tests show no departure from
-the normal, or if they seriously contradict each other, the cause of
-the pain is probably focal infection. The patient is then subjected
-to examination by X-ray, his teeth are pulled by the dentist, his
-tonsils excised by the otolaryngolist, who also takes a swipe, in
-passing, at his accessory sinuses, and should these mutilations fail
-to relieve him, his appendix is removed by the abdominal surgeon. If
-relief still fails to occur, the theory is not given up, but the focus
-is presumed to exist elsewhere. If Mr. Doolittle’s patience is equal
-to the test, and if his purse is not by this time completely empty,
-additional operations are advised. These continue until all organs and
-appendages not actually necessary to mere existence have been removed.
-Henry then returns to his former mode of life, depleted and deformed,
-it is true, but occasionally minus his original pain. It is not the
-intention to deny that infected teeth and tonsils have no significance
-in pathology. But it is certain that their importance has been greatly
-exaggerated by many physicians. The question needs more investigation,
-with fewer preconceived ideas. The “science” underlying this astounding
-practice is admirably outlined in the book of Billings called “Focal
-Infection.” It is the most striking example of medical _Ga-Ga-ism_
-that has appeared in our country. It is, as its author himself admits,
-a triumph of the new idea of team-work and co-operative research in
-medicine. The factors giving rise to this lamentable _Ga-Ga_ are the
-gullibility of patient and doctor, the emotional element entering into
-the interpretation of all of the phenomena observed by the physician,
-commercialism, and, finally, the self-limiting nature of most disease.
-
-So much for the Art of Healing as practised by the physicians of
-America. What of our activities in the second aim of medicine, that
-is, the prevention of disease? While superficial examination is enough
-to lay bare the many hollow pretensions of the practice of medicine,
-it would appear _a priori_ that the work of disease prevention might
-at least approach the category of the applied sciences. This would
-seem to be so, since the greater part of this field must of necessity
-concern itself with infectious disease. Now the etiologic agents of the
-majority of infectious diseases are known. It is easy to see that the
-labour of their prevention rests upon an exact knowledge of the nature
-of the disease-producing microbes, the analysis of the delicate balance
-between the virulence of the microbic invader and the resistance of the
-human host, and, most important of all, upon the exact path by which
-the germ in question travels from one individual to another.
-
-In the early days of preventive medicine, following shortly upon the
-fundamental researches of Pasteur, several important contributions
-were made by Americans. These include the brilliant investigations
-of Theobald Smith on the etiology and mode of transmission of the
-Texas fever of cattle, and, later on, the differentiation of bovine
-and human tuberculosis. America had again reason to be proud when,
-in 1901, Reed, Carroll, Agramonte, and Lazear demonstrated that
-yellow fever was spread exclusively by the mosquito, _Ædes calopus_.
-These investigators showed a beautiful spirit of self-sacrifice and
-devotion to their science. The construction of the Panama Canal was
-made possible by the application of these researches by Gorgas. Again,
-the American Russell was the first to show that vaccination against
-typhoid and allied infections is feasible. In the New York Board of
-Health, Park, Krumwiede, and their associates have made careful and
-valuable studies on the prevention of diphtheria. These constitute the
-high lights of American achievement in preventive medicine. It must be
-admitted that the majority of these examples are to be placed in the
-category of the science of the study of disease, rather than in that of
-its application--preventive medicine.
-
-It is noticeable even by cursory survey of recent American work that
-such striking achievements have become distinctly fewer in recent
-years, despite an enormous increase in personnel, equipment, and money
-devoted to the prevention of disease. Along with this decrease in solid
-contributions there has been an augmentation of fatuous propaganda and
-windy theory. All of the judicious must view this tendency with alarm
-and sadness, since it seemed for a time that science was really about
-to remove the vestigia of witchcraft and high-priesthood from this
-branch of medicine at least.
-
-What is the cause of this retrogression? It must be laid at the door
-of _Religio Sanitatis_, the Crusade of Health. This is one of the most
-striking examples of the delusion of most Americans that they are the
-Heaven-appointed uplifters of the human race. Just as all Baptists,
-Presbyterians, and Methodists deprecate the heathen happiness of
-the benighted Oriental, so the International Health Board seeks to
-mitigate his contented squalour and to eradicate his fatalistically
-born disease. Just as Billy Sunday rages against John Barleycorn and
-the Dionysians who worship him, so the Great Hygienists seek to point
-out the multiform malaises arising from such worship. Just as the now
-extinct Wilson strove to show the world that it was horrid and wrong to
-fight, so the Public Health Service seeks to propagate the notion that
-chastity and adherence to marital vows are the sole alternatives to a
-universal syphilization.
-
-Thus we observe with horror the gradual replacement of those Nestors
-of preventive medicine who had the dispassionate view of science,
-and who applied its methods of cold analysis, by a group of dubious
-Messiahs who combine the zealous fanaticism of the missionary with the
-Jesuitical cynicism of the politician. For most of the organizations
-for the promotion of health are closely dependent upon state and
-municipal politics, and must become contaminated with the obscenity of
-political practice. Finally, it is apparent that the great privately
-endowed foundations are animated by the spirit of proselytism common
-to the majority of religions, but especially to Baptists. It will be
-objected that such charges are vague generalizations. It is necessary,
-therefore, to bring forward one or two specific instances in support of
-these contentions.
-
-The soldiers of the recent successful campaign for national prohibition
-were supported by battalions of noted hygienists who made excellent
-practice with a heavy artillery of so-called scientific evidence upon
-the confused ranks of brewers, distillers, and their customers, the
-American bibuli. What is the value of their “scientific evidence”? Two
-charges are made against the use of alcohol as a beverage. _Primo_,
-that its moderate or excessive use is the direct cause of various
-maladies. _Secondo_, that the children of alcoholic parents are often
-deformed, degenerates, or imbeciles, and that such lamentable stigmata
-are the direct results of the imbibitions of their parents.
-
-Now it is vain to argue that alcohol, taken in great excess, is not
-injurious. Mania a potu (Korsakow’s disease) is without doubt its
-direct result, at least in some instances. On the other hand, excessive
-indulgence in water is also not without its harmful effects, and I,
-for one, would predict evil days for our Great Commoner, should he so
-far lose control of himself as to imbibe a gallon of grape juice _per
-diem_. Many enthusiastic hygienists advance the opinion that alcohol is
-filling our insane asylums! This generalization is a gorgeous example
-of _post hoc propter hoc_ reasoning, and is based upon the idiotic
-statistical research which forms so large a part of the activity of
-the minions of public health. The recent careful work of Clouston and
-others tends more and more to indicate that chronic alcoholics do
-not go crazy because they drink, but become alcoholics because they
-already were crazy, or had the inherited tendency toward insanity.
-This embarrassing fact is carefully suppressed by the medico-hygienic
-heavy artillerists of the prohibition army. What is more, diseases with
-definite pathologic pictures, such as cirrhosis of the liver, have by
-no means been definitely proved to be caused by alcohol. Indeed, the
-researches of Friedenwald, who endeavoured to produce such effects by
-direct experiment, have led to negative results.
-
-The second indictment, i.e., that alcoholism in parents causes
-degenerate offspring, rests upon still more dubious scientific
-foundations. The most important animal experimentation in this field
-is that of Stockard, who used guinea-pigs as his subjects, and of
-Pearl, who had recourse to chickens. Both of these researches are
-sound in scientific method. Unfortunately for hygienists, they lead to
-completely contradictory conclusions. Stockard and his collaborators
-found the offspring of alcoholic guinea-pigs to be fewer in number
-than those of his normal controls. What is more, the children of the
-alcoholics were frequently smaller, had a higher post-natal mortality,
-and were prone to suffer from epileptiform convulsions. These results
-brought forth _banzais_ from the hygienists and were extensively
-quoted, though their application by analogy to the problems of human
-heredity is not to be made too hastily.
-
-Pearl, on the other hand, discovered that while the number of offspring
-from his inebriated chickens was distinctly fewer, yet these were
-unquestionably superior to normal chickens in eight of the twelve
-hereditary characters amenable to quantitative measurement. Now if
-one can generalize Stockard’s results to human beings, then it is
-equally permissible to do the same with Pearl’s. Of the two, the latter
-generalization would be preferable, and of greater benefit to the
-human race, were the analogy valid. For who will not whoop for “fewer
-children, but better ones”? Do the votaries of preventive medicine
-place the results of Pearl along side of those of Stockard? Indeed,
-who even mentions Pearl’s results at all? If satisfactory evidence is
-adduced that this has been done, I hereby promise to contribute one
-hundred dollars in cash toward the foundation of a home for inebriated
-prohibition agents. Again, while much is heard of the results of
-Bezzola in regard to the _Rauschkinder_ resulting from the Swiss
-bacchanalia, the negative findings of Ireland in similar investigations
-of the seasonal debauches of Scotland are carefully avoided. Once more,
-Elderton and Karl Pearson have failed utterly to find increase in the
-stigmata of degeneracy among the children of alcoholic parents as
-compared with those of non-alcoholics. This research, published in a
-monograph of the Francis Galton Laboratory of London, is the one really
-careful one that has been made in the case of human beings. It was
-directed by Pearson, admittedly a master of biometrical science. Yet,
-turning to Rosenau’s “Preventive Medicine and Hygiene,” the bible of
-this branch, I find the Elderton-Pearson report relegated to a footnote
-in the edition of 1913, _and omitted completely from the 1920 edition_.
-
-A discussion of the fatuity to which American preventive medicine
-descends cannot be terminated without touching upon the current
-propaganda of the syphilophobes. For just as practitioners of medicine
-exploit human credulity, so the preventers of disease play upon
-the equally universal instinct of fear. There is no intention of
-minimizing the seriousness of syphilis. Along with cancer, pneumonia,
-and tuberculosis, it is one of the major afflictions of humanity. It
-causes thousands of deaths yearly; it leads to great misery. Paresis,
-one of the important psychoses, is definitely known to be one of its
-manifestations. It is obvious, therefore, that its eradication is one
-of the major tasks of social hygiene.
-
-But by what means? Let one of the most noted of our American
-syphilophobes give the answer! This gentleman, a professor of pathology
-in one of the most important medical schools of the Middle West, yearly
-lectures over the length and breadth of the land on the venereal
-peril. He begins his expostulation with reduction of his audiences to
-a state of terror by a lantern-slide display of the more loathsome
-manifestations of the disease. He does not state that modern treatment
-makes these more and more rare. He insists upon the utter impossibility
-of its cure, a fact by no means established. He advocates early
-marriage to a non-syphilitic maiden as the best means of prevention,
-and failing that, advises that chastity is both possible and
-salubrious. Then follows a master stroke of advice by innuendo--_the
-current belief that masturbation causes insanity is probably untrue_.
-Finally he denies the value of venereal prophylaxis, which was first
-experimentally demonstrated by Metchnikoff and Roux, and which the
-medical department of the Army and Navy know to be of almost perfect
-efficacy when applied early and thoroughly.
-
-Lack of space prevents the display of further examples of the new
-phenomenon of the entrance of religion and morals into medicine. It is
-not my intention for a moment to adopt a nihilistic attitude toward the
-achievement of preventive medicine. But it is necessary to point out
-that its contamination by moralism, Puritanism, proselytism, in brief,
-_by religion_, threatens to reduce it to absurdity, and to shake its
-authority in instances where its functions are of unmistakable value to
-our republic. At present the medical profession plays a minor rôle in
-the more important functions of this branch. These are performed in the
-first place by bacteriologists who need not be doctors at all, and in
-the second by sanitary engineers, whose splendid achievements in water
-supply and sewage disposal lead those of all other nations.
-
-It has been remarked above that one of the chief causes of the
-unscientific nature of medicine and the anti-scientific character
-of doctors lies in their innate credulity and inability to think
-independently. This contention is supported by the report on the
-intelligence of physicians recently published by the National Research
-Council. They are found by more or less trustworthy psychologic tests
-to be the lowest in intelligence of all of the professional men
-excepting only dentists and horse doctors. Dentists and horse doctors
-are ten per cent. less intelligent. But since the quantitative methods
-employed certainly carry an experimental error of ten per cent. or even
-higher, it is not certain that the members of the two more humble
-professions have not equal or even greater intellectual ability. It is
-significant that engineers head the list in intelligence.
-
-In fact, they are rated sixty per cent. higher than doctors. This
-wide disparity leads to a temptation to interesting psychological
-probings. Is not the lamentable lack of intelligence of the doctor
-due to lack of necessity for rigid intellectual discipline? Many
-conditions conspire to make him an intellectual cheat. Fortunately
-for us, most diseases are self-limiting. But it is natural for the
-physician to turn this dispensation of nature to his advantage and
-to intimate that _he_ has cured John Smith, when actually nature has
-done the trick. On the contrary, should Smith die, the good doctor can
-assume a pious expression and suggest that, despite his own incredible
-skill and tremendous effort, it was God’s (or Nature’s) will that John
-should pass beyond. Now the engineer is open to no such temptation. He
-builds a bridge or erects a building, and disaster is sure to follow
-any mis-step in calculation or fault in construction. Should such a
-calamity occur, he is presently discredited and disappears from view.
-Thus he is held up to a high mark of intellectual rigour and discipline
-that is utterly unknown in the world the doctor inhabits.
-
-A survey of the present condition of American medical education offers
-little hope for a higher intellectual status of the medical profession
-or of any fundamental tendency to turn medicine as a whole from a
-_mélange_ of religious ritual, more or less accurate folk-lore, and
-commercial cunning, toward the rarer heights of the applied sciences.
-
-Such a reform depends absolutely upon the recognition that the
-bodies of all the fauna of the earth (including _Homo sapiens_) are
-essentially physico-chemical mechanisms; that disease is a derangement
-of one sort or another of this mechanism; and that real progress
-in knowledge of disease can only come from quantitatively exact
-investigation of such derangements.
-
-Up to the present, the number of professors in any branch of medicine
-who are aware of this fact is pitifully few. The men, who, being
-aware of it, have the training in physics and chemistry to put their
-convictions into practice are less in number. So, it is vain to hope
-that medical students are being educated from this point of view.
-
-This casual glance at American medicine may be thought to be an unduly
-pessimistic one. It has not been my intention to be pessimistic or to
-be impertinently critical. Indeed, turning from the art of the practice
-of medicine, and the religion and folk-lore of sanitation, to the
-science of the study of disease, we have much of which to be proud.
-American biochemists of the type of Van Slyke and Folin are actually in
-the lead of their European brothers. Their precise quantitative methods
-furnish invaluable tools in the exact study of the ills that afflict us.
-
-Finally, the greatest figure of all, Jacques Loeb, working in
-an institution that declares its purpose to be the dubious one
-of _medical_ research, has in the last three years published
-investigations which throw a flood of light upon the dark problems
-of the chemistry of proteins. His work is of most fundamental
-significance, will have far-reaching results, and is measurably in
-advance of that of any European in the same field. Loeb, like all men
-of the first rank, has no spirit of propaganda or proselytism. His
-exact quantitative experiments rob biology of much of its confused
-romantic glamour. The comprehension of his researches demands thorough
-knowledge of physical chemistry. However, it is encouraging to note
-that among a few younger investigators his point of view is being
-accepted with fervour and enthusiasm. But it is time to stop. We are
-straying from our subject which was, if I remember, American medicine.
-
- ANONYMOUS
-
-
-
-
-SPORT AND PLAY
-
-
-Bartlett does not tell us who pulled the one about all work and no
-play, but it probably was the man who said that the longest way round
-was the shortest way home. There is as much sense in one remark as in
-the other.
-
-Give me an even start with George M. Cohan, who lives in Great Neck,
-where I also live, without his suspecting it--give us an even start in
-the Pennsylvania Station and route me on a Long Island train through
-Flushing and Bayside while he travels via San Francisco and Yokohama,
-and I shall undertake to beat him home, even in a blizzard. So much for
-“the longest way round.” Now for the other. If it were your ambition to
-spend an evening with a dull boy, whom would you choose, H. G. Wells,
-whose output indicates that he doesn’t even take time off to sleep, or
-the man that closes his desk at two o’clock every afternoon and goes to
-the ball-game?
-
-You may argue that watching ball-games is not play. It is the American
-idea of play, which amounts to the same thing, and seventy-five per
-cent, of the three hundred thousand citizens who do it daily, in
-season, will tell you seriously that it is all the recreation they get;
-moreover, that deprived of it, their brain would crack under the strain
-of “business,” that, on account of it, they are able to do more work in
-the forenoon, and do it better, than would be possible in two or three
-full days of close sticking on the job. If you believe them, inveterate
-baseball fans can, in a single morning, dictate as many as four or five
-twenty-word letters to customers or salesmen, and finish as fresh as a
-daisy; whereas the non-fan, the grind, is logy and torpid by the time
-he reaches the second “In reply to same.”
-
-But if you won’t concede, in the face of the fans’ own statement, that
-it is recreation to look on at baseball or any other sport, then let
-me ask you to invite to your home some evening, not a mere spectator,
-but an active participant in any of our popular games--say a champion
-or near-champion golfer, or a first string pitcher on a big league
-baseball club. The golfer, let us say, sells insurance half the year
-and golfs the rest. The pitcher plays eight months of the year and
-loafs the other four. Bar conversation about their specialty, and
-you won’t find two duller boys than those outside the motion-picture
-studios.
-
-No, brothers, the bright minds of this or any other country are owned
-by the men who leave off work only to eat or go to bed. The doodles are
-the boys who divide their time fifty-fifty between work and play, or
-who play all the time and don’t even pretend to work. Proper exercise
-undoubtedly promotes good health, but the theory that good health
-and an active brain are inseparable can be shot full of holes by the
-mention of two names--Stanislaus Zbyzsk and Robert Louis Stevenson.
-
-It is silly, then, to propound that sport is of mental benefit. Its
-true, basic function is the cultivation of bodily vigour, with a view
-to longevity. And longevity, despite the fact that we profess belief
-in a post-mortem existence that makes this one look sick, is a thing
-we poignantly desire. Bonehead and wise guy, believer and sceptic--all
-of us want to postpone as long as possible the promised joy-ride to
-the Great Beyond. If to participate in sport helps us to do that, then
-there is good reason to participate in sport.
-
-Well, how many “grown-ups” (normal human beings of twenty-two and under
-need not be considered; they get all the exercise they require, and
-then some) in this country, a country that boasts champions in nearly
-every branch of athletics, derive from play the physical benefit there
-is in it? What percentage take an active part in what the sporting
-editors call “the five major sports”--baseball, football, boxing,
-horse racing, and golf? Let us take them one by one and figure it out,
-beginning with “the national pastime.”
-
-_Baseball._ Twenty or twenty-one play. Three hundred to forty thousand
-look on. The latter are, for two hours, “out in the open air,” and
-this, when the air is not so open as to give them pneumonia and when
-they don’t catch something as bad or worse in the street-car or subway
-train that takes them and brings them back, is a physical benefit.
-Moreover, the habitual attendant at ball-games is not likely to die of
-brain fever. But otherwise, the only ones whose health is appreciably
-promoted are the twenty or twenty-one who play. And they are not doing
-it for their health.
-
-_Football._ Thirty play. Thirty thousand look on. One or two of the
-thirty may be killed or suffer a broken bone, but the general health
-of the other twenty-nine or twenty-eight is improved by the exercise.
-As for the thirty thousand, all they get is the open air--usually a
-little too much of it--and, unless they are hardened to the present-day
-cheer-leader, a slight feeling of nausea.
-
-_Boxing._ Eight to ten play. Five thousand to sixty thousand look
-on. Those of the participants who are masters of defence may profit
-physically by the training, though the rigorous methods sometimes
-employed to make an unnatural weight are certainly inimical to health.
-The ones not expert in defensive boxing, the ones who succeed in the
-game through their ability to “take punishment” (a trait that usually
-goes with a low mentality) die, as a rule, before reaching old age,
-as a result of the “gameness” that made them “successful.” There is a
-limit to the number of punches one can “take” and retain one’s health.
-The five or sixty thousand cannot boast that they even get the air. All
-but a few of the shows are given indoors, in an atmosphere as fresh and
-clean as that of the Gopher Prairie day-coach.
-
-_Horse Racing._ Fifty horses and twenty-five jockeys play. Ten thousand
-people look on. I can’t speak for the horses, but if a jockey wants to
-remain a jockey, he must, as a rule, eat a great deal less than his
-little stomach craves, and I don’t know of any doctor who prescribes
-constant underfeeding as conducive to good health in a growing boy.
-
-Racing fans, of course, are out for financial, not physical, gain.
-They, like the jockeys, are likely to starve to death while still young.
-
-_Golf._ Here is a pastime in which the players far outnumber the
-lookers-on. It is a game, if it is a game, that not only takes you out
-in the open air, but makes you walk, and walking, the doctors say, is
-all the exercise you need, if you walk five miles or more a day. Golf,
-then, is really beneficial, and it costs you about $25.00 a week the
-year round.
-
-So much for our “five major sports.” We look on at four of them, and if
-we can support the family, and pay taxes and insurance, on $1250 a year
-less than we earn, we take part in the fifth.
-
-The minor sports, as the editor will tell you, are tennis, boating,
-polo, track athletics, trap-shooting, archery, hockey, soccer, and so
-on. Not to mention games like poker, bridge, bowling, billiards, and
-pool (now officially known as “pocket billiards” because the Ladies’
-Guild thought “pool” must have something to do with betting), which we
-may dismiss as being of doubtful physical benefit, since they are all
-played indoors and in a fog of Camel smoke.
-
-Of the outdoor “minors,” tennis is unquestionably the most popular. And
-it is one whale of a game--if you can stand it. But what percentage
-of grown-ups play it? I have no statistics at hand, and must guess.
-The number of adult persons with whom I am acquainted, intimately or
-casually, is possibly two thousand. I can think of ten who play as many
-as five sets of tennis a year.
-
-How many of the two thousand play polo or have ever played polo? One.
-How many are trap-shooters? Two. How many have boats? Six or seven. How
-many run footraces or jump? None. How many are archers? None. How many
-play hockey, soccer, la crosse? None.
-
-If I felt like indulging in a game of cricket, which God forbid, whom
-should I call up and invite to join me?
-
-Now, how many of my two thousand acquaintances are occasional or
-habitual spectators at baseball games, football games, boxing matches,
-or horse races? All but three or four. The people I know (I do not
-include ball-players, boxers, and wrestlers, who make their living
-from sport) are average people; they are the people you know. And the
-overwhelming majority of them don’t play.
-
-Why not? If regular participation in a more or less interesting outdoor
-game is going to lengthen our lives, why don’t we participate? Is it
-because we haven’t time? It takes just as much time to look on, and we
-do that. Is it because we can’t afford it? We can play tennis for as
-little as it costs to go to the bail-game and infinitely less than it
-costs to go to the races.
-
-We don’t play because (1) we lack imagination, and because (2) we are a
-nation of hero-worshippers.
-
-When we were kids, the nurse and the minister taught us that, if we
-weren’t good, our next stop would be hell. But, to us, there was no
-chance of the train’s starting for seventy years. And we couldn’t
-visualize an infernal excursion that far off. It was too vague to be
-scary. We kept right on swiping the old man’s cigars and giggling in
-the choir. If they had said that misdemeanours such as those would
-spell death and eternal fire, not when we were old, but to-morrow, most
-of us would have respected father’s property rights and sat through
-the service with a sour pan. If the family doctor were to tell us now
-that unless we got outdoors and exercised every afternoon this week,
-we should die next Tuesday before lunch, you can bet we should get
-outdoors and exercise every afternoon this week. But when he tells us
-that, without healthful outdoor sport, we shall die in 1945 instead of
-1949, why, it doesn’t mean anything. It’s a chimera, a myth, like the
-next war.
-
-But hero-worship is the national disease that does most to keep the
-grandstands full and the playgrounds empty. To hell with those four
-extra years of life, if they are going to cut in on our afternoon at
-the Polo Grounds, where, in blissful asininity, we may feast our eyes
-on the swarthy Champion of Swat, shouting now and then in an excess
-of anile idolatry, “Come on, you Babe. Come on, you Baby Doll!” And
-if an hour of tennis is going to make us late at the Garden, perhaps
-keep us out of our ringside seats, so close to Dempsey’s corner that
-(O bounteous God!) a drop of the divine perspiration may splash our
-undeserving snout--Hang up, liver! You’re on a busy wire!
-
- RING W. LARDNER
-
-
-
-
-HUMOUR
-
-
-With the aid of a competent bibliographer for about five days I believe
-I could supply the proof to any unreflecting person in need of it that
-there is no such thing as an American gift of humorous expression, that
-the sense of humour does not exist among our upper classes, especially
-our upper literary class, that in many respects almost every other
-civilized country in the world has more of it, that quiet New England
-humour is exceedingly loud and does not belong to New England, that
-British incomprehension of our jokes is as a rule commendable, the
-sense of humour generally beginning where our jokes leave off. And
-while you can prove anything about a race or about all races with the
-aid of a bibliographer for five days, as contemporary sociologists are
-now showing, I believe these things are true. Belief in American humour
-is a superstition that seldom outlasts youth in persons who have been
-exposed to American practice, and hardly ever if they know anything
-of the practice elsewhere. Of course I am not speaking of the sad
-formalism of the usual thing as we see it in newspapers and on movie
-screens or of the ritual of magazines wholly or in part sanctified to
-our solemn god of fun. I mean the best of it.
-
-In the books and passages collated by my bibliographer the American
-gift of humour would be distributed over areas of time so vast and
-among peoples so numerous, remote, or savage, that no American
-would have the heart to press his claim. The quaintness, dryness,
-ultra-solemnity with or without the wink, exaggeration, surprise,
-contrast, assumption of common misunderstanding, hyperbolical
-innocence, quiet chuckle, upsetting of dignity, _éclat_ of spontaneity
-with appeals to the everlasting, dislocation of elegance or
-familiarity, imperturbability, and twinkle--whatever the qualities
-may be as enumerated by the bacteriologists who alone have ever
-written on the subject, the most American of them would be shown in
-my bibliographer’s report to be to a far greater degree un-American.
-Patriotic exultation in their ownership is like patriotic exultation
-in the possession of the parts of speech. Humour is no more altered
-by local reference than grammar is altered by being spoken through
-the nose. And if the bibliography is an ideal one it will not only
-present American humour at all times and places but will produce almost
-verbatim long passages of American humorous text dated at any time and
-place, and will show how by a few simple changes in local terms they
-may be made wholly verbatim and American. It will show that American
-humorous writing did in fact begin everywhere but only at certain
-periods was permitted to continue and that these periods were by no
-means the happiest in history. I have time to mention here only the
-laborious section that it will probably devote to Mark Twain in the Age
-of Pericles, though for the more active reader the one on Mr. Cobb,
-Mr. Butler, and others around the walls of Troy might be of greater
-contemporary interest.
-
-Mark Twain, according to the citations in this section, would seem
-actually to have begun all of his longer stories, including “Pudd’nhead
-Wilson,” and most of the shorter ones, essays, and other papers, at
-Athens or thereabouts during this period, but not to have finished a
-single one, not even the briefest of them. He started, gave a clear
-hint as to how the thing would naturally run, and then he stopped.
-The reason for this was that owing to the trained imagination of the
-people for whom he wrote, the beginning and the hint were sufficient,
-and from that point on they could amuse themselves along the line
-that Mark Twain indicated better than he would have amused them, had
-he continued. Mark Twain finally saw this and that is why he stopped,
-realizing that there was no need of his keeping the ball rolling when
-to their imaginative intelligence the ball would roll of itself. He did
-at first try to keep on, and being lively and observant and voluble
-even for a Greek he held large crowds on street-corners by the sheer
-repetition of a single gesture of the mind throughout long narratives
-of varied circumstance. In good society this was not tolerated even
-after supper, and there was never the slightest chance of publication.
-But the streets of Athens were full of the suppressed writings of Mark
-Twain.
-
-Every man of taste in Athens loved Mark Twain for the first push of his
-fancy but none could endure the unmitigated constancy of his pushing
-of it, and as Mark Twain went everywhere and was most persistent,
-the compression of his narrative flow within the limits of the good
-breeding of the period was an embarrassing problem to hosts, unwilling
-to be downright rude to him. Finally he was snubbed in public by his
-friends and a few of the more intimate explained to him afterwards the
-reason why.
-
-The gist of their explanation was evidently this: The hypothesis of
-the best society in town nowadays is that the prolongation of a single
-posture of the mind is intolerable, no matter how variegated the
-substance in which the mind reposes. That sort of thing belongs to an
-earlier day than ours, although, as you have found, it is still much
-relished in the streets. If all the slaves were writers; if readers
-bred like rabbits so that the pleasing of them assured great wealth;
-if the banausic element in our life should absorb all the rest of it
-and if, lost in the external labour process, with the mechanism of it
-running in our minds, we turned only a sleepy eye to pleasure; then
-we might need the single thought strung with adventures, passions,
-incidents and need only that--infinitudes of detail easily guessed but
-inexorably recounted; long lists of sentiments with human countenances
-doing this and that; physiological acts in millions of pages and
-unchanging phrase; volumes of imaginary events without a thought among
-them; invented public documents equalling the real; enormous anecdotes;
-and all in a strange reiterated gesture, caught from machines,
-disposing the mind to nod itself to sleep repeating the names of what
-it saw while awake. But the bedside writer for the men in bed is not
-desired at the present moment in our best society.
-
-All these things are now carried in ellipsis to the reader’s head,
-if the reader’s head desires them; they are implied in dots at ends
-of sentences. We guess long narratives merely from a comma; we do
-not write them out. In this space left free by us with deliberate
-aposiopesis, a literature of countless simplicities may some day
-arise. At present we do not feel the need of it. And in respect to
-humour the rule of the present day is this: never do for another what
-he can do for himself. A simple process of the fancy as in contrast,
-incongruity, exaggeration, impossibility, must be confined in public
-to one or two displays. Let us take the simplest of illustrations--a
-cow in the dining-room, for example--and proceed with it as simply as
-we can. If by a happy stroke of fancy a cow in the dining-room is made
-pleasing to the mind, never argue that the pleasure is doubled by the
-successive portrayal of two cows in two dining-rooms, assuming that the
-stroke of fancy remains the same. Realize rather that it diminishes,
-and that with the presentation of nine cows in nine dining-rooms it has
-changed to pain. Now if for cows in dining-rooms be substituted gods in
-tailor shops, tailors in the houses of gods, cobblers at king’s courts,
-Thebans before masterpieces, one class against another, one age against
-another, and so on through incalculable details, however bizarre, all
-in simple combination, all easily gathered, without a shift of thought
-or wider imagery, the fancy mechanistically placing the objects side
-by side, picked from the world as from a catalogue--even then the
-situation to our present thinking is not improved.
-
-“Distiktos,” said they, playfully turning the name of the humourist
-into the argot of the street, “we find you charming just at the turn of
-the tide, but when the flood comes in, _ne Dia!_ you are certainly _de
-trop_. And in your own private interest, Distiktos, unless you really
-want to lead a life totally anexetastic and forlorn, how can you go on
-in that manner?”
-
- FRANK MOORE COLBY
-
-
-
-
-_American Civilization from the Foreign Point of View_
-
- I. ENGLISH
- II. IRISH
- III. ITALIAN
-
-
-
-
-I. AS AN ENGLISHMAN SEES IT
-
-
-A little less than two years ago--on the 14 July, 1919, to be exact--it
-fell to my lot, as an officer attached to one of the many military
-missions in Paris, to “assist,” from a reserved seat in a balcony of
-the Hotel Astoria, at the _défilé_, or triumphal entry of the Allied
-troops into Paris.
-
-The march _à Berlin_ not having eventuated owing to the upset in
-schedule brought about by the entry of dispassionate allies at the
-eleventh hour, it was felt that the French must be offered something
-in exchange, and this took the happy form of a sort of community march
-along the route once desecrated by Prussian hoof-beats--a vast military
-_corbeille_ of the allied contingents, with flags, drums, trumpets, and
-all the rest of the paraphernalia that had been kept in cold storage
-during four years of gas, shell, and barbed wire. Such a _défilé_, it
-was calculated, would be something more than a frugal gratification
-to the French army and people. It would offer to the world at large,
-through the medium of a now unmuzzled press, a striking object lesson
-in allied good feeling and similarity of aims.
-
-My purpose in referring to the _défilé_ is merely to record one
-unrehearsed incident in it but I would say in passing that the
-affair, “for an affair,” as the French say, was extraordinarily well
-stage-managed. A particularly happy thought was the marshalling of the
-allied contingents by alphabetical order. This not only obviated any
-international pique on what we all wanted to be France’s day, but left
-the lead of the procession where everybody, in the rapture of delivery,
-was well content it should remain. Handled with a little tact, the
-alphabet had once more justified itself as an impartial guide:
-
- B is for Britain, Great.
- A is for America, United States of.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For impressiveness I frankly and freely allot the palm to what it was
-the fashion then to term the American effort. Different contingents
-were impressive in different ways. The Republican Guard, jack-booted,
-with buckskin breeches, gleaming helmets, flowing _crinières_, and
-sabres _au clair_, lent just the right subtle touch of the _épopée_ of
-Austerlitz and Jena to make us feel 1871 had been an evil dream; the
-Highlanders, the voice of the hydra squalling and clanging from their
-immemorial pipes, stirred all sorts of atavistic impulses and memories.
-Nevertheless, had I been present that day in Paris as a newspaper man
-instead of as the humblest and most obscure of soldiers, neither one
-nor the other would have misled my journalistic instinct. I should have
-put the lead of my “story” where alphabetical skill had put the lead of
-the procession--in the American infantry.
-
-In front the generalissimo, martial and urbane, on a bright coated
-horse that pranced, curvetted, “passaged” from side to side under
-a practised hand. At his back the band, its monster uncurved horns
-of brass blaring out the Broadway air before which “over there”
-the walls of pacifism had toppled into dust in a day. Behind them,
-platoon by platoon, the clean shaved, physically perfect fighting
-youth of the great republic. All six feet high--there was not one,
-it was whispered, but had earned his place in the contingent by a
-rigorous physical selection: moving with the alignment of pistons in
-some deadly machine--they had been drilled, we were told, intensively
-for a month back. In spotless khaki, varnished trench helmets, spick
-and span, scarcely touched by the withering breath of war. Whenever
-the procession was checked, platoon after platoon moved on to the
-regulation distance and marked time. When it resumed, they opened out
-link by link with the same almost inhuman precision, and resumed their
-portentous progress. How others saw them you shall hear, but to me they
-were no mere thousand fighting men; rather the head of a vast battering
-ram, the simple threat of which, aimed at the over-taxed heart of the
-German Empire, had ended war. A French _planton_ of the Astoria staff,
-who had edged his way into the ticketed group was at my back. “Les
-voilà qui les attendaient,” he almost whispered. “Look what was waiting
-for _them_.”
-
-The next balcony to mine had been reserved for the civil employés
-of British missions, and here was gathered a little knot of average
-English men and women--stenographers, typists, clerks, cogs of
-commercialism pressed into the mechanical work of post-war settlement.
-As the Americans moved on after one of the impressive checks of which
-I have just spoken, something caught my ears that made me turn my head
-quickly, even from a spectacle every lost moment of which I grudged. It
-was, of all sounds that come from the human heart, the lowest and the
-most ominous--the sound that makes the unwary walker through tropical
-long grass look swiftly round his feet and take a firmer grasp on the
-stick he has been wise enough to carry.
-
-It is impossible--it is inconceivable--and it’s true. On this great
-day of international congratulation, one of the two branches of the
-Anglo-Saxon race was hissing the other.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I spoke about the matter later to a friend and former chief, whom I
-liked but whose position and character were no guarantee of tact or
-good judgment. I said I thought it rather an ominous incident, but
-he refused to be “rattled.” With that British imperturbability which
-Americans have noted and filed on the card index of their impressions
-he dismissed the whole thing as of slight import.
-
-“Very natural, I dare say. Fine show all the same. Perhaps your friends
-on the other balcony thought they were slopping over in front.”
-
-“‘Slopping over...?’”
-
-“Well--going a little too far. Efficiency and all that. Bit out of step
-with the rest of the procession.”
-
-I have often wondered since whether this homely phrase, uttered by a
-simple soldier man, did not come nearer to the root of the divergence
-between British and American character than all the mystifying and
-laborious estimates which nine out of ten of our great or near-great
-writers seem to think is due at a certain period in their popularity.
-
-To achieve discord, you see, it is not necessary that two instruments
-should play different tunes. It is quite sufficient that the tempo of
-one should differ from the tempo of the other. All I want to indicate
-in the brief space which the scope of this work, leaves at my disposal
-are just a few of the conjunctures at which I think the beat of the
-national heart, here and across the Atlantic, is likely to find itself
-out of accord.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Englishmen do not emigrate to the United States in any large numbers,
-and it is many years since their arrival contributed anything but an
-insignificant racial element to the “melting pot.” They do not come
-partly because their own Colonies offer a superior attraction, and
-partly because British labour is now aware that the economic stress is
-fiercer in the larger country and the material rewards proportionately
-no greater. Those who still come, come as a rule prepared to take
-executive positions, or as specialists in their several lines. Their
-unwillingness to assume American citizenship is notorious, and I think
-significant; but it is only within quite recent years that it has been
-made any ground of accusation--and among the class with which their
-activities bring them into closest contact it is, or was until a year
-or two ago, tacitly and tactfully ignored. During a review of the
-“foreign element” in Boston to which I was assigned two years before
-the war, I found business men of British birth not only reluctant to
-yield “copy” but resentful of the publicity to which the enterprise of
-my journal was subjecting them.
-
-There are many reasons why eminent English writers and publicists are
-of little value in arriving at an estimate of “how Americans strike an
-Englishman.” While not asserting anything so crude as that commercial
-motives are felt as a restraining force when the temptation arises to
-pass adverse judgment on the things they see and hear, it is evident
-that the conditions under which they come--men of achievement in their
-own country accredited to men of achievement here--keep them isolated
-from much that is restless, unstable, but vitally significant in
-American life. None of them, so far as I know, have had the courage or
-the enterprise to come to America, unheralded and anonymous, and to pay
-with a few months of economic struggle for an estimate that might have
-real value.
-
-To this lack of real contact between the masses in America and Great
-Britain is due the intrinsic falsity of the language in which the
-racial bond is celebrated on the occasions when some political crisis
-calls for its reiteration. It is felt easier and safer to utter it
-in consecrated _clichés_--to refer to the specific gravity of blood
-and water, or the philological roots of the medium used by Milton
-and Arthur Brisbane. The banality, the insincerity, of the public
-utterances at the time that America’s entry into the European struggle
-first loomed as a possible solution of the agony on the Western Front
-was almost unbelievable. Any one who cares to turn up the files of the
-great dailies between September, 1916, and March, 1918, may find them
-for himself.
-
-To a mind not clouded by the will to believe, this constant invocation
-of common aims, this perpetual tug at the bond to ensure that it has
-not parted overnight, would be strong corroboration of a suspicion
-that the two vessels were drifting apart, borne on currents that flow
-in different directions. It is not upon the after-dinner banalities of
-wealthy and class-conscious “pilgrims” nor the sonorous platitudes of
-discredited laggards on the political scene, still less is it upon the
-sporting proclivities of titled hoydens and hawbucks to whom American
-sweat and dollars have arrived in a revivifying stream, that we shall
-have to rely should the cable really part and the two great vessels of
-State grope for one another on a dark and uncharted sea. It is upon
-the sheer and unassisted fact of how American and Englishman like or
-dislike one another.
-
-It is a truism almost too stale to restate that we are standing to-day
-on the threshold of great changes. What is not so well realized is
-that many of these changes have already taken place. The passing of
-gold in shipment after shipment from the Eastern to the Western side
-of the Atlantic and the feverish hunt for new and untapped sources
-of exploitation are only the outward signs of a profound European
-impoverishment in which Britain for the first time in her history has
-been called upon to bear her full share. The strikes and lock-outs that
-have followed the peace in such rapid succession might possibly be
-written off as inevitable _sequelæ_ of a great war. The feeble response
-to the call for production as a means of salvation, the general change
-in the English temper faced with its heavy task are far more vital and
-significant matters. They seem to mark a shift in moral values--a
-change in the faith by which nations, each in the sphere that character
-and circumstance allot, wax and flourish.
-
-Confronted with inevitable competition by a nation more populous,
-more cohesive, and richer than itself, it seems to me that there are
-three courses which the older section of the English race may elect
-to follow. One is war, before the forces grow too disparate, and on
-the day that war is declared one phase of our civilization will end.
-It will really not matter much, to the world at large, who wins an
-Anglo-American world conflict. The second, which is being preached
-in and out of season by our politicians and publicists, who seldom,
-however, dare to speak their full thought, is a girding up of the
-national loins, a renewed consecration to the gospel of effort, a
-curtailment, if necessary--though this is up to now only vaguely
-hinted--of political liberties bestowed in easier and less strenuous
-days. The third course may easily be guessed. It is a persistence in
-proclivities, always latent as I believe in the English temperament,
-but which have only revealed themselves openly since the great war,
-a clearer questioning of values till now held as unimpeachable, a
-readier ear to the muttering and murmuring of the masses in Continental
-Europe, internationalism--revolution. No thoughtful man in England
-to-day denies the danger. Even references to that saving factor, the
-“common sense of the British workman,” no longer allays the spectre of
-a problem the issues of which have only to be stated to stand forth in
-all their hopeless irreconcilability. Years ago, long before the shadow
-fell on the world, in a moment of depression or inspiration, I wrote
-that cravings were stirring in the human heart on the very eve of the
-day when the call would be to sacrifice. That is the riddle, nakedly
-stated, to which workers and rulers alike are asked to find an answer
-to-day.
-
-In this choice that lies before the British worker a great deal may
-depend upon how American experiments and American achievements strike
-him. In England now there is no escaping from the big transatlantic
-sister. Politicians use her example as a justification; employers hold
-up her achievements as a reproach. A British premier dare not face the
-House of Commons on an “Irish night” unequipped with artful analogies
-culled from the history of the war of secession. The number of bricks
-per hour America’s bricklayers will lay or the tons of coal per week
-her stolid colliers will hew are the despair of the contractor face
-to face with the loafing and pleasure-loving native born. You will
-hear no more jokes to-day in high coalition places over her political
-machine replacing regularly and without the litter and disorder of a
-general election tweedledum Democrat by a tweedledee Republican. She is
-recognized--and this, I think, is the final value placed upon her by
-the entire ruling and possessing classes in my own country--as better
-equipped in her institutions, her character, and her population for the
-big economic struggle that is ahead of us.
-
-This is the secret of the unceasing court paid to Washington by all
-countries, but pre-eminently by Britain. It is not fear of her power,
-nor hunger for her money bags and harvests, nor desire to be “on the
-band-wagon,” as light-hearted cartoonists see it, that prompts the
-nervous susceptibility and the instantaneous response to anything that
-will offend those in high places on the banks of the Potomac. It is the
-sense, among all men with a strong interest in maintaining the present
-economic order, that the support in their own countries is crumbling
-under their hands, and that that fresh support, stronger and surer, is
-to be found in a new country with a simpler faith and a cleaner, or
-at any rate a shorter, record. To fight proletarianism with democracy
-is a method so obvious and safe that one only wonders its discovery
-had to wait upon to-day. Its salient characteristic is a newly aroused
-interest and enthusiasm in one country for the political forces that
-seem to make stability their watchword in the other. The coalition has
-become the hero of the New York _Times_ and _Tribune_--the triumph
-of the Republican party was hailed almost as a national victory in
-the London _Times_ and Birmingham _Post_. Intransigeance in foreign
-policies finds ready forgiveness in London; in return, a blind eye is
-turned to schemes of territorial aggrandisement at Washington.
-
-If a flaw is to be discerned in what at first sight seems a perfectly
-adjusted instrument for international comity, it is that this new
-Anglo-American understanding seems to be founded on class rather
-than on national sympathy. Even offhand some inherent inconsistency
-would seem to be sensed from the fact that the appeal of the great
-republic comes most home, in the parent country, to the class that is
-least attached to democratic forms and the most fearful of change.
-References to America arouse no enthusiasm at meetings of the labour
-element in England, and it is still felt unwise to expose the Union
-Jack to possible humiliation in parades on a large scale in New York or
-Chicago. A sympathy that flowers into rhetoric at commercial banquets
-or at meetings of the archæologically inclined may have its roots in
-the soundest political wisdom. But to infer from such demonstrations
-of class solidarity any national community of thought or aim is both
-unwarranted and unsafe. This much is evident, that should a class
-subversion, always possible in a country the political fluidity of
-which is great, leave the destinies of Great Britain in the hands of
-the class that is silent or hostile to-day when the name of America is
-mentioned, an entire re-statement of Anglo-American unity would become
-necessary, in terms palatable to the average Englishman.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This average Englishman is a highly complicated being. Through the
-overlay which industrialism has imposed on him, he has preserved to
-quite an extraordinary extent the asperities, the generosities, the
-occasional eccentricities of the days when he was a free man in a free
-land. No melting process has ever subdued the sharp bright hues of
-his individuality into the universal, all-pervading drab that is the
-result of blending primary colours. No man who has employed him to
-useful purpose has ever succeeded in reducing his personality to the
-proportions of a number on a brass tag. The pirate and rover who looked
-upon Roman villadom and found it not good, the archer who brought the
-steel-clad hierarchy of France toppling from their blooded horses at
-Crécy and Agincourt, the churl who struck off the heads of lawyers in
-Westminster Palace yard survive in him.
-
-If I am stressing this kink in the British character it is because one
-of its results has been to make the Englishman of all men the least
-impressed by scale, and the one to whom appeals made on the size of an
-experiment or the vastness of a vision will evoke the least response,
-and especially because I think I perceive a tendency to approach him
-in the interests of Anglo-American unity precisely from the angle that
-will awake antagonism where co-operation is sought. The attachment of
-the Englishman to little things and to hidden things, which no one
-except Chesterton has had the insight to perceive, or at all events
-which Chesterton was the first to place in its full relation to his
-inconsistencies, explains his strangely detached attitude to that
-British Empire of which his country is the core. Its discovery as
-an entity calling for a special quality in thought and action dates
-no further back than that strange interlude in history, when the
-personality of Roosevelt and the vision of Kipling held the imagination
-of the world.
-
-This refusal to be impressed by greatness, whether his own or others’,
-has its disadvantages, but at least it has one saving element. It
-leaves an Englishman quite capable of perceiving that it is possible
-for a thing to be grandiose in scale and mean in quality. It leaves
-intact his frank and childlike confidence that the little things of
-the world confound the strong; his implicit conviction that David
-will always floor Goliath, and that Jack’s is the destined sword to
-smite off the giant’s head. The grotesqueness of the Kaiser’s upturned
-moustaches, the inadequacy of a mythical “William the Weed” to achieve
-results that would count, were his guiding lights to victory, the
-touchstones by which he tested in advance the vast machine that finally
-cracked and broke under its own weight. It was the “contemptible”
-little army of shopmen and colliers which seized his imagination and
-held his affection throughout, not the efficient mechanical naval
-machine that fought one great sea battle, which was a revelation of
-the risks inherent in its own monstrousness and complexity, and made
-its headquarters in Scapa Flow. I recall the comments heard at the
-time of Jutland in the artillery camp where fate had throwm me. They
-served to confirm a dawning conviction that the navy, while it still
-awes and impresses, lost its hold on the British heart the day wooden
-walls were exchanged for iron and steel. It is perhaps the “silent
-service” to-day because its appeal awakes so little response. It has
-been specialized and magnified out of the average Englishman’s power to
-love it.
-
-In America the contrary seems the case. The American heart appears to
-go out to bulk, to scale, and to efficiency. The American has neither
-the time nor the temperament to test and weigh. His affections, even
-his loyalties, seem to be at the mercy of aspects that impose and
-impress. I know no other country where the word “big” is used so
-constantly as a token of affection. Every community has its “Big Tims,”
-“Big Bills,” “Big Jacks,” great hearty fellows who gambol and spout on
-public occasions with the abandonment of a school of whales. Gargantuan
-“Babe Ruth,” mountainous Jack Dempsey are the idols of its sport-loving
-crowds. “Mammoth in character,” the qualification which on the lips of
-the late Mr. Morgan Richards stirred laughter throughout England, is to
-the American no inconsequential or slipshod phrase. He does perceive a
-character and justification in bigness. It was perhaps to this trait
-in his mental make-up that the puzzling shift of allegiance to the
-beginning of the great war was due. The scale and completeness of the
-German effort laid hold of his imagination to an extent that only
-those who spent the first few months of agonizing doubt in the West
-and the Middle West can appreciate. Something that was obscurely akin,
-something that transcended racial affinities and antipathies, awoke
-in him at the steady ordered flow of the field-grey legions Westward,
-so adequately pictured for him by Richard Harding Davis. He is quite
-merciless to defeat.
-
-Nothing conceived on such a scale can indulge complexities. Its ideals
-must be ample, rugged, and primitive, adequate to the vast task. Hence
-the velocity, the thoroughness, the apparent ruthlessness with which
-American enterprises are put through. It is the fashion among a certain
-school of thought to call America the country of inhibitions. But there
-is little inhibition to be perceived on that side of his temperament,
-which the American has chosen to cultivate, leaving all else to those
-who find perverse attraction in weed and ruin. His language--and he is
-amazingly vocal--is as simple and direct as his thought. The appeals
-and admonitions of his leaders reverberate from vast and resonant
-lungs. They are calculated rather to carry far than to penetrate
-deeply. They are statements and re-statements rather than arguments. If
-their verbiage often aims at and sometimes seems to attain the sublime,
-if the American leader is forever dedicating, consecrating, inspiring
-something, the altitude is like the elevation given a shell in order
-that it may travel further. The nimble presentation of antithesis
-of a Lloyd George, the dagger-play of sarcasm of an Asquith, are
-conspicuously absent from the speeches of American leaders. There is
-something arrogant and ominous, like the clenching of a fist before
-the arm is raised, in this sonorous presentation of a faith already
-securely rooted in the hearts of all its hearers.
-
-This primitiveness and single-mindedness of the American seem to
-intensify as his historical origins recede further and further into
-the past. It is idle to speculate on what might have happened had the
-development of his country remained normal and homogeneous, as, up to
-the Civil War, it admittedly did. It is an even less grateful task to
-look back on the literature of the Transcendental period and register
-all that American thought seems to have lost since in subtlety and
-essential catholicity. What is really important is to realize that
-not only the language but the essence of Occidental civilization has
-called for simplification, for sacrifice, year by year. It is hard to
-see what other choice has lain before the American, as wave after wave
-of immigration diluted his homogeneity, than to put his concepts into
-terms easily understood and quickly grasped, with the philological
-economy of the traveller’s pocket manual and the categorical precision
-of the drill book. If in the very nature of things, this evangel is
-oftener pointed with a threat than made palatable with the honey of
-reason and sympathy, the task and not the taskmaster is to blame. On
-no other country has ever been imposed similar drudgery on a similar
-scale. It is idle to talk about the spiritual contribution of the
-foreigner when his first duty is to cast that contribution into the
-discard. It is futile to appeal to his traditions where the barrier of
-language rears itself in a few years between parents who have never
-learnt the new tongue and children who are unable or ashamed to speak
-the old.
-
-But such a régime cannot endure for many years without a profound
-influence, not only on those to whom it is prescribed, but on those
-who administer it. The most heaven-born leader of men, put into a
-receiving depot to which monthly and fortnightly contingents of bemused
-recruits arrive, quickly deteriorates into something like a glorified
-and commissioned drill sergeant. The schoolmaster is notoriously a
-social failure in circles where intercourse must be held on the level
-to which the elevation of his _estrade_ has dishabituated him. Exact
-values--visions, to use a word that misuse has made hateful--disappear
-under a multiplicity of minor tasks. It is one of the revenges taken by
-fate that those who must harass and drive become harassed and sterile
-in turn.
-
-No one yet, so far as I know, has sought to place this amazing
-simplification in its true relation to the aridity of American life,
-an aridity so marked that it creates a positive thirst for softer and
-milder civilizations, not only in the foreigner who has tasted of
-them, but at a certain moment in their life in almost every one of the
-native born whose work lies outside the realm of material production.
-It is not that in England, as in every community, entire classes do
-not exist who seek material success by the limitation of interests
-and the retrenchment of sympathies. But in so doing they sacrifice
-to a domestic, not a national God; they follow personal not racial
-proclivities. There is no conscious subscription to a national ideal
-in their abandonment of æsthetic impulses. Side by side with them
-live other men whose apparent contentment with insecure and unstable
-lives at once redresses their pride and curtails their influence. They
-are conscious of the existence around them of a whole alien world,
-the material returns from which are negligible but in which other
-men somehow manage to achieve a fullness of experience and maintain
-self-respect. This other world reacts not only on employer but on
-employed. For the worker it abates the fervour and stress of his task,
-lends meaning and justification to his demand for leisure in the face
-of economic demands that threaten or deny. No one in England has yet
-dared to erect into an evangel the obvious truth that poor men must
-work. No compulsion sets the mental attitude a man may choose when
-faced with his task. The speeder-up and the efficiency expert is
-hateful and alien. “A fair day’s wage for a fair day’s work” may seem
-a loose and questionable phrase, but its implications go very deep. It
-sets a boundary mark on the frontier between flesh and spirit by which
-encroachments are registered as they occur.
-
-In America no such frontier exists. Here the invasion seems to be
-complete. The spirit that would disentangle material from immaterial
-aims wanders baffled and perplexed through a maze of loftily conceived
-phrases and exhortations each one of which holds the promise of rescue
-from the drudgery of visionless life, yet each one of which leads back
-to an altar where production is enthroned as God. Manuals and primers,
-one had almost written psalters, pour out from the printing presses
-in which such words as “inspiration,” “dedication,” “consecration”
-urge American youth not to the renunciation of material aims but to
-their intensive pursuit. This naïve and simple creed is quite free of
-self-consciousness or hypocrisy. In its occasional abrupt transitions
-from the language of prayer to such conscience-searching questions
-as “Could you hold down a $100.00 a week job?” or “Would you hire
-yourself?” no lapse from the sublime to the ridiculous, far less to the
-squalid, is felt. It has the childlike gravity and reverence of all
-religions that are held in the heart.
-
-But its God is a jealous God. No faltering in his service, no divided
-allegiance is permitted. His rewards are concrete and his punishments
-can be overwhelming. For open rebellion, outlawry; for secret revolt,
-contempt and misunderstanding are his inevitable visitations. For
-this reason those who escape into heresy not unfrequently lose their
-integrity and are gibbeted or pilloried for the edification of the
-faithful. The man who will not serve because the service starves and
-stunts his soul is all too likely to find himself dependent for company
-upon the man who will not serve because his will is too weak or his
-habits too dissipated.
-
-That this service is a hard one, its most ardent advocates make no
-attempt to conceal. Its very stringency is made the text of appeals for
-ever and ever fresh efficiency, intensive training, specialization.
-“The pace they must travel is so swift,” one advocate of strenuousness
-warns his disciples, “competition has become so fierce that brains
-and vision are not enough. One must have the _punch_ to put things
-through.” The impression grows that the American business man, new
-style, is a sombre gladiator, equipped for his struggle by rigorous
-physical and mental discipline. The impression is helped by a host
-of axioms, plain and pictured, that feature a sort of new cant of
-virility. “Red-blooded men,” “Two-fisted men,” “Men who do things,”
-“Get-there fellows,” are a few headliners in this gospel of push and
-shove.
-
-The service is made still more difficult by its uncertainty, since no
-gospel of efficiency can greatly change the proportion of rewards,
-though it can make the contest harder and the marking higher. Year in
-year out, while competition intensifies and resources are fenced off,
-insecurity of employment remains, an evil tradition from days when
-opportunity was really boundless and competition could be escaped by
-a move of a few score miles Westward. Continuity in one employment
-still remains the exception rather than the rule, and when death or
-retirement reveals an instance it is still thought worthy of space in
-local journals. “Can you use me?” remains the customary gambit for the
-seeker after employment. The contempt of a settled prospect, of routine
-work, the conception of business as something to work _up_ rather
-than to work _at_ is still latent in the imagination of atavistic and
-ambitious young America. Of late years this restlessness, even though
-in so worthy a cause as “getting on,” has been felt as a hindrance to
-full efficiency, and the happy idea has been conceived of applying the
-adventurous element of competition at home. Territorial or departmental
-spheres are allotted within or without the “concern” to each employé;
-the results attained by A, B, and C are then totalled, analyzed,
-charted, and posted in conspicuous places where all may see, admire,
-and take warning. In the majority of up-to-date houses “suggestions”
-for the expansion or improvement of the business are not only welcomed
-but expected, and the employé who does not produce them in reasonable
-bulk and quality is slated for the “discard.” When inventiveness
-tires, “shake-ups” on a scale unknown in England take place, and new
-aspirants eager to “make good” step into the shoes of the old. The
-business athletes strain and pant toward the goal. There is no rest for
-the young man “consecrated” to merchandising effort. Like the fly in
-the fable, he must struggle and swim until the milk around his legs is
-churned into the butter of executive position.
-
-The American press, hybrid, highly coloured, and often written by men
-of erratic genius who prefer the poor rewards of news writing to the
-commercial yoke, conveys but a partial idea of this absorption of an
-entire race in a single function. A far more vivid impression is to be
-gained from the “house organs,” and publicity pamphlets which pour from
-the press in an unceasing stream and the production of which within
-recent years has become a large and lucrative industry. Here articles
-and symposia on such themes as “Building Character into Salesmanship,”
-“Hidden Forces that bring Sales,” and “Capitalizing Individuality,”
-often adorned with half-tones of tense and joyless faces, recur on
-every page. No sanctuary is inviolable, no recess unexplored. The
-demand of the commercial God is for the soul, and he will be content
-with no less.
-
-This demand implies a revised conception of the relation between
-employé and employer. The old contract under which time and effort
-were hired for so many hours a day at a stated remuneration, leaving
-life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness outside those hours a
-matter of personal predilection, is now abrogated, or at least sharply
-questioned. It is recognized, and with entire logic, that the measure
-of accomplishment within working hours will depend largely on the
-environment amid which hours of recreation are spent; and that though
-detection of inefficiency is a task of keen brains that seldom fail,
-this detection, in the nature of things, may not take place until
-damage has been done the commercial structure. This is the real
-inwardness of a whole new gospel of “Welfare” and “Uplift,” under whose
-dispensation employés are provided with simple and tested specifics
-for recreation, with the watchful and benevolent eye of department
-heads upon them, in which it is presumed and stated with entire candour
-that the physical, moral, and mental efficiency of the staffs and
-“salesforce” has become the concern of the organization that has
-allotted them a place in its economy. The organism works, plays, rests,
-moves on together.
-
-Nothing is more terrifying, as that master of terror, Edgar Allan
-Poe, perceived, than an organism that is at once mean and colossal.
-Properties of efficiency and adaptation to one definite end are
-bestowed in an eminent degree only on the lower orders of animal life.
-With rigid bodies, encasing organs that are designed for simple,
-metabolic purposes, armed with an elaborate mechanism of claws, hinges,
-borers, valves, and suckers the lepidoptera are living tools that fly
-or creep. Absorbed in one tireless function, with all distractions of
-love and war delegated to specialized subspecies, they neither love,
-hate, nor rebel. As the scale ascends, efficiency dwindles, until in
-the litter and loneliness of the den, lazy domesticity with dam and
-cubs, the joy of prey hunt and love hunt, between the belly pinch of
-hunger and the sleep of repletion, the lives of the big carnivora pass
-in a sheer joy of living for living’s sake until the gun of the hunter
-ends the day dream.
-
-It has been left for man--hapless and inventive--to realize a life
-that touches both ends of the scale, to feel at his heart the pull of
-hive-life and jungle-life in turn. Something of the ant and something
-of the tiger lurks in every normal human creature. If he has immense
-powers of assertion, his faculty for abdication seems to be as
-limitless. It is just this dual nature in man that makes prophecy as to
-what “will happen the world” so difficult and unsafe. But one prophecy
-may be ventured on and that is, that in proportion as acquiescence or
-revolt seize the imaginations of separated nations will those nations
-coalesce or drift apart into antagonism.
-
-If a life spent during the last twenty years between England and
-the United States is any title to judge, I should say that at the
-present moment the dominant note in America is acquiescence in, and in
-England revolt against the inordinate demands of commercialism. Here,
-to all appearances, the surrender for the moment is complete. There
-are revolts, but they are sporadic and misguided and their speedy
-suppression seems to stir no indignation and to awaken no thrill of
-common danger among the body of workers. Strikes confined to wage
-issues are treated more indulgently, but even they are generally
-strangled at their birth by injunctions, and a sour or hostile attitude
-of authority makes success difficult. In any display of opposition
-to established conditions, even when based on the most technical
-grounds, authority appears to sense a challenge to larger issues and
-to meet them half way with a display of force that to an Englishman
-appears strangely over-adequate. It is evident the ground is being
-tested. Interpretations of liberty that date from easier and roomier
-days are under revision, and where they are found at variance with
-a conception of society as a disciplined and productive force, they
-are being roughly retrenched. The prevailing character of the labour
-mass, at once heterogeneous and amorphous, makes it a safe and ductile
-medium for almost any social experiment. “If you don’t like it, go
-back,” is an argument to which no answer has been found. Native-born
-labour shares in the universal dis-esteem and takes refuge from it
-in aristocratic and doctrinaire federations whose ineffectiveness is
-apparent whenever a labour issue arises. For the rebel who, under these
-conditions, chooses to fight on, rougher methods are found. He may
-become _fera natura_. Tarring and feathering, ducking and rubbing with
-acid, and deportation from State to State may be his portion. Under any
-social condition conformity is the easiest course. When the prison cell
-and social pillory are its alternatives, to resist requires a degree
-of fanatical courage and interior moral resources possessed only by a
-handful of men in a generation.
-
-To this conception of a disciplined community harnessed to the purpose
-of production, thousands of the possessing and capitalistic classes
-look wistfully from the other side of the Atlantic. But there are many
-obstacles to its realization in England. The English proletarian is no
-uprooted orphan, paying with docile and silent work for the citizenship
-of his children and grandchildren. That great going concern, the
-British Empire, is his personal work, built on the bones and cemented
-with the blood of his forebears. His enfranchisement is as complete as
-his disinheritance, and the impoverishment of his country, evidenced
-in the stream of gold that pours Westward like arterial blood, has
-not reached to his spirit. Even the Great War, with its revelation
-to him of how ruthless and comprehensive the demands of the State on
-the individual can be, has only reinforced his sense of being a very
-deserving person and has added to the long debt which he is frankly
-out to collect. The promises, the appeals to national pride and
-tradition with which he had to be appeased while, for the first time
-in his history, the yoke of universal service was laid upon his neck,
-trip up the feet of his rulers to-day. It is difficult to tell him to
-go elsewhere, for he “belongs” in England. Even suggestions that he
-should emigrate wholesale to British colonies in order to relieve the
-congested labour market are received with mocking laughter in which a
-threat lurks. He is, I am sure, because I know him, looking on with a
-certain sardonic relish and enjoyment at the flurries, the perplexities
-of his rulers, their displays of force alternated with appeals to
-sweet reason, their brave words succeeded by abject denials and
-qualifications. He is waiting until the naked economic question, which
-he knows well underlies all the rhodomontade of national greatness
-and imperial heritage, shall be put to him. It will be a great and
-momentous day when the Englishman is given his choice. A choice it must
-be. The means to compulsion are not here.
-
- * * * * *
-
-To America just now Europeans as a whole must seem a helpless race,
-bewildered actors in a vast and tragic blunder. To thousands of
-Red Cross workers, Knights of Columbus, and welfare auxiliaries in
-devastated districts, the spectacle of suffering and want must have
-come home to reinforce impressions already gained from sights witnessed
-at Ellis Island or Long Wharf. None the less, it is an historical
-misfortune that the first real contact between the people of the two
-continents should have come at a time when the older was bankrupt and
-had little to show save the rags and tatters of its civilization. The
-reverse of the tenderness to the stricken European abroad has been a
-hardening of the heart to the immigrant at home, and it is difficult
-for the American, schoolmaster and lawgiver to so many alien peoples
-in his own country, to divest himself of a didactic character in his
-foreign relations. To many countries he is “saying it with flour,” and
-those who accept the dole can do little else than swallow the sermon.
-Even to those countries who were his allies he does shine forth in a
-certain splendour of righteousness. His sacrifice was deliberate--which
-is, perhaps, its best excuse for being a little conscious. It was
-self-imposed, and fifty thousand of his dead, wrested from productive
-enterprises to lie in France, attest its sincerity. No Englishman,
-at any rate, believes in his heart that its material reward, great
-and inevitable as it is now seen to be, was the driving force at the
-time the sacrifice was accepted. There are a host of reasons, some
-creditable, others less so, that make Europe curb its restiveness under
-American homilies.
-
-With England the case is different. No one knows just how hard Britain
-has been hit, but she is managing to put a good face on her wounds.
-No relief organization from the big sister has landed its khaki-clad
-apostles of hygiene and its grey-cloaked sisters of mercy on English
-shores. The façade is intact, the old masters in possession. With a
-few shifts and changes in political labelling that are a matter of
-domestic concern, those who steered the big concern into the bankruptcy
-of war are still entrusted with its extrication. No great subversion
-stands as a witness of a change of national faith. The destinies, the
-foreign relations, the aspects that attract or antagonize remain in the
-hands of men who secured a fresh lease of power by a clever political
-trick. The skeleton at the feast of racial reunion is not Ireland, nor
-Mesopotamia, nor Yap, nor the control of the seas. It is the emergence
-into political power, sooner or later, but inevitably from the very
-nature of British political institutions, of the British proletariat.
-
-Frankly I do not see, when this moment arrives, who is going to
-put the gospel of American civilization into terms that will be, I
-shall not say acceptable, but even significant, to the emancipated
-British worker. Ruling classes in the older country who rely on
-a steadying force from across the Atlantic in possible political
-upheavals must have strange misgivings when they take account of
-their own stewardship. It will be an ungrateful task to preach the
-doctrine of salvation through work to a people that has tried it
-out so logically and completely that the century which has seen the
-commercial supremacy of their country has witnessed the progressive
-impoverishment and proletarization of its people. Homilies on
-discipline will sound strangely in the ears of those who, while America
-was enjoying her brief carnival of spacious and fruitful endeavour in
-a virgin land, went under an industrial yoke that has galled their
-necks and stunted their physical growth. Appeals to pride of race
-will have little meaning coming from a stock that has ceased through
-self-indulgence or economic upward pressure to resist ethnologically
-and whose characteristics are disappearing in the general amalgam.
-
-The salient fact that stands out from all history is that
-inordinateness of any sort has never failed to act upon the English
-character as a challenge. His successes, whatever his libellists may
-seek to believe, have seldom been against the small or weak. It has
-been his destiny, in one recurrent crisis after another, to find
-himself face to face with some claimant to world power, some “cock of
-the walk.” To use a homely phrase, it has always been “up to him.”
-And the vision of his adversary which has nerved his arm has always
-been an excess in some quality easily understandable by the average
-man. Bigotry is not the monopoly of the Spaniard, nor commercial greed
-of the Hollander, nor vanity of the Frenchman, nor pomposity of the
-German. It would be an easy task to convict the Englishman of some
-share in each vice. Nevertheless history in the main has justified his
-instinct for proportion, his dislike for “slopping over.” In something
-far beyond the accepted phrase, the English struggle has been a
-struggle for the “balance of power.”
-
- HENRY L. STUART
-
-
-
-
-II. AS AN IRISHMAN SEES IT
-
-
-The application of the term “shirt-sleeve” to American diplomacy
-is perhaps the most concise expression of the conception we have
-formed in Europe of life in the United States. We imagine that it is
-only necessary to cross the Atlantic Ocean to find a people young
-and vigorous in its emancipation from ancient forms and obsolete
-ceremonies. The average visitor returns, after a brief tour through
-the more urbane centres of European imitation, and tries to startle
-us with a narrative in which a few picturesque crudities are supposed
-to indicate the democratic ease of American civilization. His mind is
-filled with an incoherent jumble of skyscrapers, express elevators,
-ice water, chewing-gum, and elevated railroads, so that his inevitable
-contribution to the literature relating to America becomes the
-mere chronicle of a tourist’s experiences. Every deviation from
-European practice is emphasized, and in proportion to the writer’s
-consequent personal discomfort, he will conjure up a hideous picture
-of uncouthness, whose effect is to confirm us in our estimate of
-American progress ... or barbarism, as the case may be. If the critical
-stranger happens to be a well-known poet or dramatist, he will probably
-succeed in passing lightly over those minor inconveniences, which the
-generosity of wealthy admirers has prevented him from experiencing at
-first hand.
-
-The consequence is that there is no subject more hopelessly involved in
-a cloud of voluminous complaint and banal laudation than American life
-as seen by the foreigner. Neither the enthusiasts nor the fault-finders
-have contributed much of any assistance either to Europeans or to the
-Americans themselves. The former accept America at its own valuation,
-the latter complain of precisely those things upon which the average
-citizen prides himself. It is not easy to decide which class of critics
-has helped most effectively to perpetuate the legend of American
-freedom; the minor commentators who hold democracy to be the cause of
-every offence, or the higher critics, like Viscount Bryce, who, finding
-no American commonwealth, proceeded to invent one. The objectors are
-dismissed as witnesses to the incapacity of the servile European to
-appreciate true liberty and equality; the well-disposed are gratefully
-received as evangelists of a gospel to which Americans subscribe
-without excessive introspection. There is something touching in the
-gratitude felt towards the author of “The American Commonwealth.” Who
-would have believed that a foreigner, and a Britisher at that, could
-make a monument of such imposing brick with the straws of political
-oratory in the United States?
-
-On one point all observers have involuntarily agreed. Whether with
-approval or disapproval, they have depicted for us a society which
-presents such marked divergencies from our own manners and customs that
-there is not one of us but comes to America believing that his best or
-worst hopes will be confirmed. It is, therefore, somewhat disconcerting
-to confess that neither presentment has been realized. To have passed
-from Continental Europe to New York, via London, is to deprive oneself
-of that social and intellectual shock which is responsible for the
-uniformly profound impression which transatlantic conditions make
-upon the European mind. So many continentals enjoy in the United
-States their first direct contact with Anglo-Saxon institutions and
-modes of thought that the revelation cannot fail to stimulate them.
-Their writings frequently testify to a naïve ignorance of the prior
-existence in England of what excites their dismay or admiration in
-America. If it be asked why, then, have Englishmen similarly reacted
-to the same stimuli, if acquaintance with England blunts the fine
-edge of perception, the reply must be: the quality of their emotion
-is different. The impression made upon a mind formed by purely Latin
-traditions necessarily differs from that received by a mind previously
-subjected to Anglo-Saxon influences. Consequently, the student of
-American life who has neither the motive of what might be called
-family jealousy, in the Englishman, nor the mentality, wholly innocent
-of alien culture, of the Latin, would seem well equipped to view the
-subject from another angle.
-
-To the good European the most striking characteristic of the United
-States is a widespread intellectual anæmia. So far from exhibiting
-those traits of freedom and progress which harrow the souls of
-sensitive aristocrats in Europe, the American people alarm the outsider
-in search of stimulating ideas by their devotion to conventions
-and formulæ. As soon as one has learnt to discount those lesser
-manifestations of independence, whose perilous proximity to discourtesy
-gives them an exaggerated importance in the eyes of superficial
-critics, the conventionality of the American becomes increasingly
-evident. So many foreigners have been misled--mainly because of an
-apparent rudeness--by this show of equality, this ungraciousness
-in matters of service, that one hesitates at first to dismiss the
-unconventional American as a myth closely related to that of the
-“immoral Frenchman.” It is only when prolonged association has revealed
-the timid respectability beneath this veneer of informality that it
-becomes possible to understand the true position of America. From
-questioning individuals one proceeds to an examination of the public
-utterances of prominent men, and the transition from the press to
-literature is easily made. At length comes the discovery that mentally
-the United States is a generation or two behind Western Europe. The
-rude and vigorous young democracy, cited by its admirers in extenuation
-of æsthetic sins of omission and commission, suddenly stands forth
-attired in the garment of ideas which clothed early Victorian England.
-
-This condition is largely due to the absence of an educated class
-accustomed to leisure. To the American work for work’s sake has a
-dignity unknown in Europe, where it is rare to find anybody working
-for mere wages if he has any means of independent subsistence, however
-small. In America the contrary is the case, and people who could afford
-to cultivate their own personalities prefer to waste their energies
-upon some definite business. Almost all the best that has come out
-of Europe has been developed in that peculiar class which sacrificed
-money-making for the privilege of leisure and relative independence.
-The only corresponding class in the United States is that of the
-college professors, who are an omnipresent menace to the free interplay
-of ideas. Terrorized by economic fears and intellectual inhibitions,
-they have no independence. They are despised by the plain people
-because of their failure to make money; and to them are relegated all
-matters which are considered of slight moment, namely, learning and
-the arts. In these fields the pedants rule unchallenged, save when
-some irate railroad presidents discover in their teachings the heresy
-of radicalism. Æsthetics is a science as incomprehensible to them as
-beauty, and they prefer to substitute the more homely Christian ethics.
-Moral preoccupations are their sole test of excellence. The views of
-these gentlemen and their favourite pupils fill the bookshelves and the
-news-stands.
-
-The professorial guardians of Colonial precedents and traditions
-determine what the intellectual life of America shall be. Hence the
-cult of anæmia. Instead of writing out of themselves and their own
-lives, they aspire to nothing greater than to be classed as English.
-They are obsessed by the standards imposed from without, and their
-possible achievement is thwarted. While they are still shaking their
-heads over Poe, and trying to decide whether Whitman is respectable, a
-national literature is growing up without the guidance and help which
-it should expect from them. At the same time, as the official pundits
-have the ear of Europe, and particularly of England, American culture
-is known only as they reflect it. It is natural, therefore, that the
-European attitude should be as contemptuous as it so often is.
-
-When the reviews publish some ignorant and patronizing dissertation on
-the American novel or American poetry, by an English writer, they are
-pained by the evident lack of appreciation. The ladies and gentlemen
-whose works are respectfully discussed by the professors, and warmly
-recommended by the reviewers, do not seem to receive the consideration
-due to them for their unflinching adherence to the noblest standards
-of academic criticism. When these torch-bearers of the purest Colonial
-tradition are submitted to the judgment of their “big” cousins in
-England, there is a noticeable condescension in those foreigners.
-But why should they profess to admire as the brightest stars in the
-American firmament what are, after all, the phosphorescent gleams of
-literary ghosts? Is it any wonder that the majority of Britishers
-can continue in the comfortable belief that there is practically no
-American literature worthy of serious attention?
-
-The academic labours of American professors of literature are an
-easy and constant butt for English critics. Yet, they rarely think
-of questioning the presentation of literary America for which these
-gentlemen are so largely responsible. When have the Stuart Shermans and
-Paul Elmer Mores (and their diminutives) recognized the existence of
-a living American writer of genius, originality, or distinction? The
-only justification for their existences is their alleged capacity to
-estimate literary values. If they cannot do so, it is hardly surprising
-that their English patrons, who imagine that they are representative
-men, do not often penetrate the veil of Colonialism. Whatever their
-outward professions, the majority of Englishmen regard all other
-English-speaking countries as Colonies. Since they are stubborn enough
-when faced with undeniable proof of the contrary, as in Ireland, it is
-unlikely they will persuade themselves unaided that they are mistaken.
-When will American criticism have the courage to base the claims of
-contemporary literature on those works which are essentially and
-unmistakably American?
-
-The mandarins, of course, have stood for reaction in all countries,
-and there is no intention here to acquit the European of the species.
-So many of his worst outrages are matters of history that it would be
-futile to pretend that he is untrue to type. Nevertheless, his position
-in Europe is measurably more human than in this country, owing to the
-greater freedom of intellectual intercourse. In America the mandarin is
-firmly established on a pedestal which rests upon the vast unculture
-of an immense immigrant population, enjoying for the first time the
-benefits of sufficient food and heat. He is obviously secure in his
-conviction that those qualified to challenge him--except perhaps
-some isolated individual--are not likely to do so, being of the same
-convention as himself. He belongs to the most perfect trade-union, one
-which has a practical monopoly of its labour. His European colleagues,
-on the contrary, live in constant dread of traitors from their ranks,
-or worse still, the advance of an opposing force manned with brains of
-no inferior calibre. France, for example, can boast of a remarkable
-roll of names which never adorned the councils of pedantry, or not
-until they had imposed a new tradition. The two finest minds of
-modern French literature, Anatole France and Rémy de Gourmont, are
-illustrations of this fact. France has never allowed his academic
-honours to restrict the daring play of his ideas; Gourmont died in the
-admiration of all cultivated men, although his life was a prolonged
-protest against the orthodox, who never succeeded in taming him.
-
-What America requires is an unofficial _intelligentsia_ as strong and
-as articulate as the political and literary pundits, whose purely
-negative attitude first exasperates, and finally sterilizes, every
-impulse towards originality. Only when a survey is made of the leading
-figures in the various departments of American life is it possible
-fully to realize the weight of inertia which presses upon the intellect
-of the country. While the spirit of enterprise and progress is
-stimulated and encouraged in all that relates to material advancement,
-the artistic and reasoning faculties are deadened. Scientific study,
-when directed to obviously practical ends, is the only form of mental
-effort which can count upon recognition and reward. It is not without
-its significance that the Johns Hopkins Medical School is the one
-learned institution in America whose fame is world-wide amongst
-those who appreciate original research, otherwise the names of few
-universities are mentioned outside academic circles. Even in the field
-of orthodox literary culture the mandarins have, in the main, failed
-to do anything positive. They have preferred to bury their talent
-in anæmic commentary. The reputed intellectuals are still living on
-a tradition bequeathed by the attenuated transcendentalism of the
-Bostonian era.
-
-That tradition was, after all, but a refinement of the notorious
-Puritanism of New England. Having lost whatever semblance of
-dignity the Emersons and Thoreaus conferred upon it, its subsequent
-manifestations have been a decadent reversion to aboriginal barbarism.
-This retrograde movement, so far as it affects social life, is
-noticeable in the ever-increasing number of crusades and taboos, the
-constant probing of moral and industrial conditions, unrelated to any
-well-considered desire for improvement, or intelligent conception of
-progress. The orgies of prohibition and suppression are unbelievable to
-the civilized European, who has no experience of a community in which
-everything from alcohol to Sunday tennis has attracted the attention
-of the “virtuosi of vice”--to quote the phrase of a discerning critic.
-Innumerable commissions, committees, and boards of enquiry supplement
-the muck-raking of yellow journalism, and encourage espionage in social
-reformers. But what has the country to show for this? Probably the
-greatest number of bungled, unsolved, and misunderstood problems of all
-industrial nations of the same rank.
-
-These debauches of virtue, however, are the direct outcome of the
-mental conditions fostered by those who are in a position to mould
-public opinion. The crowd which tolerates, or participates in, the
-Puritanical frenzy is merely reflecting the current political and
-social doctrine of the time. Occasionally the newspapers will hold a
-symposium, or the reviews will invite the aid of some foreign critic,
-to ascertain the reasons for the prevailing puerility of American
-fiction. Invariably it is urged, and rightly, that the novel is
-written by women for women. Where almost all articles of luxury are
-produced for female consumption, and the arts are deemed unessential to
-progress, the latter are naturally classed with uneconomic production
-destined to amuse the idle. They are left to the women, as the men
-explain, who have not yet understood the true dignity of leisure.
-They are abandoned, in other words, to the most unreal section of the
-community, to those centres of culture, the drama leagues and literary
-clubs, composed of male and female spinsters. Needless to say, any
-phrase or idea likely to have disturbed a mid-Victorian vicarage will
-be ruled out as unseemly.
-
-The malady of intellectual anæmia is not restricted to any one
-department of American life. In politics, as in art and literature,
-there is a dread of reality. The emasculation of thought in general
-is such as to render colourless the ideas commonly brought to the
-attention of the public. Perhaps the most palpable example of
-this penchant for platitude is the substantial literature of a
-pseudo-philosophic character which encumbers the book-stores, and is
-read by thousands of right-thinking citizens. Namby-pamby works, it
-is true, exist to some extent in all Protestant countries, but their
-number, prevalence, and cost in America are evidence of the demand they
-must meet. It is not for nothing that the books of thoughtful writers
-are crowded from shelves amply stocked with the meditations of an
-Orison Swett Marden, a Henry van Dyke, or a Hamilton Wright Mabie--to
-mention at random some typical authors.
-
-These moral soothsayers successfully compete with moving-picture
-actors, and novelists whose claim to distinction is their ability to
-write the best-seller of the season. If they addressed themselves only
-to the conventicles, the phenomenon would have less significance,
-but the conventicles have their own minor prophets. The conclusion,
-therefore, suggests itself, that these must be the leaders and moulders
-of American thought. The suspicion is confirmed when men of the same
-stamp, sometimes, indeed, the actual authors of this evangelical
-literature, are found holding the most important public offices.
-To have written a methodist-tract would appear to be an unfailing
-recommendation for promotion. It is rare to find the possessor of such
-a mentality relegated to the obscurity he deserves.
-
-A wish to forestall the accusation of exaggeration or inaccuracy
-imposes the painful obligation of citing specific instances of the
-tendency described. Who are the leading public men of this country,
-and what have they written? Besides the classic volumes of Thiers and
-Guizot must we set such amiable puerilities as “The New Freedom,” “On
-Being Human,” and “When a Man Comes to Himself.” Even the essays of
-Raymond Poincaré do not sound the depths indicated by the mere titles
-of these presidential works. But the author of “The State,” for all
-his antiquated theories of government, writes measurably above the
-level of that diplomatist whose copious bibliography includes numerous
-variations upon such themes as “The Gospel for a World of Sin,” “The
-First Christmas Tree,” and “The Blue Flower.” A search through the
-underworld of parish magazines in England, France, and Germany would
-probably reveal something to be classed with the works of Dr. Lyman
-Abbott, but the authors would not be entrusted with the editorship of
-a leading weekly review. As for the writings of his associate, the
-existence of his book on Shakespeare is a testimony to Anglo-Saxon
-indifference to the supreme genius of the race.
-
-It is hardly necessary to dwell upon the literary labours of William
-Jennings Bryan, ex-Secretary of State, except to wonder that they did
-not alone suffice to disqualify him for such an office. They belong
-to the same category as those volumes of popular American philosophy
-whose titles are: “Character the Grandest Thing in the World,”
-“Cheerfulness as a Life Power,” and “The Miracle of Right Thought.” If
-those quoted are to be laid to the charge of Mr. Orison Swett Marden,
-every department of American life contains prominent men who might say:
-There, but for the grace of God, speak I. The sanctimonious breath of
-the uplifter tarnishes the currency of ideas in almost every circle of
-society. Irrespective of party, Republicans, Democrats, and Socialists
-help to build up this monument of platitude which may one day mark
-the resting place of the American brain. Books, reviews, magazines,
-and newspapers are largely conceived in the evangelical spirit. The
-average contributor, when not a foreigner, suggests a Sunday-school
-superintendent who has (perhaps) missed his vocation. Where the
-subject excludes the pedantry of the professors, the tone is intensely
-moral, and the more it is so the surer one may be that the writer is
-a colonel, a rear-admiral, or a civil officer of the State or Federal
-government. Imagination refuses to conceive these functionaries as
-fulfilling their duties efficiently in any service, other than that of
-the Salvation Army or a revivalist campaign.
-
-The stage of culture which these phenomena presuppose cannot but be
-hostile to artistic development in such as escape contamination. It has
-already been postulated that the just claims of ethics and æsthetics
-are hopelessly confounded in America, to the evident detriment of art
-in all its branches. To the poor quality of the current political and
-social philosophy corresponds an equally mediocre body of literary
-criticism. A recent historian of American literature accords a high
-place amongst contemporary critics, to the author of “Shelburne
-Essays,” and other works. These volumes are dignified as “our nearest
-approach to those ‘Causeries du Lundi’ of an earlier age,” and may well
-be taken as representative. Typical of the cold inhumanity which a
-certain type of “cultured person” deems essential is the circumstance
-related, by Mr. Paul Elmer More himself, in explanation of the genesis
-of these essays. “In a secluded spot,” he writes, “in the peaceful
-valley of the Androscoggin I took upon myself to live two years as
-a hermit,” and “Shelburne Essays” was the fruit of his solitary
-mediations. The historian is mightily impressed by this evidence of
-superiority. “In another and far more unusual way he qualified himself
-for his high office of critic,” says Professor Pattee, “he immured
-himself for two years in solitude.”... “The period gave him time to
-read leisurely, thoughtfully, with no nervous subconsciousness that the
-product of that reading was to be marketable.”
-
-What a revelation of combined timidity and intellectual snobbishness
-there is in this attitude so fatuously endorsed by a writer for the
-schools! We can imagine what the effect of such a pose must be upon the
-minds of the students whom the professor would constrain to respect.
-Only a young prig could pretend to be favourably impressed by this
-pseudo-Thoreau in the literary backwoods. The impulse of most healthy
-young men would be to turn in contempt from an art so unnatural as this
-conception of criticism implies. How are they to know that the Taines,
-Sainte-Beuves, Brunetières, and Arnolds of the world are not produced
-by expedients so primitive as to suggest the _mise en scène_ of some
-latter-day Messiah, a Dowie, or a Mrs. Baker Eddy? The heralds of new
-theologies may find the paraphernalia of asceticism and aloofness a
-useful part of their stock in trade--neither is associated with the
-great criticism of literature. The _causeries_ of Sainte-Beuve were not
-written in an ivory tower, yet they show no traces of that “nervous
-subconsciousness” which our professor finds inseparable from reading
-that is “marketable.”
-
-The suspicion of insincerity in this craving for the wilderness will be
-strengthened by reference to the first of Mr. More’s volumes. Whatever
-may have been the case of its successors, this work was certainly
-the product of his retirement. What, then, are the subjects of such
-a delicate nature that they could not be discussed within the sound
-of “the noisy jargon of the market-place”? Of the eleven essays, only
-four deal with writers whose proximity to the critic’s own age might
-justify a retreat, in order that they be judged impartially, and
-without reference to popular enthusiasm and the prevalent fashion of
-the moment. The seven most substantial studies in the book are devoted
-to flogging horses so dead that no fear of their kicking existed. “A
-Hermit’s Notes on Thoreau,” “The Solitude of Nathaniel Hawthorne,” “The
-Origins of Hawthorne and Poe,” “The Influence of Emerson,” “The Spirit
-of Carlyle”--these are a few of the startling topics which Mr. More
-could discuss only with fasting and prayer! Any European schoolmaster
-could have written these essays in the leisure moments of his Sunday
-afternoons or Easter vacation.
-
-No more remarkable profundity or originality will be found in the
-critic’s essays in contemporary literature. His strictures upon Lady
-Gregory’s versions of the Irish epic, and his comments upon the Celtic
-Renaissance in general are the commonplaces of all hostile English
-criticism. “The shimmering hues of decadence rather than the strong
-colours of life” is the phrase in which he attempts to estimate the
-poetry of the Literary Revival in Ireland. In fact, for all his
-isolation Mr. More was obsessed by the critical cant of the hour, as
-witness his readiness to apply the term “decadent” to all and sundry.
-The work of Arthur Symons is illuminated by this appellation, as is
-also that of W. B. Yeats. The jargon of the literary market-place,
-to vary Mr. More’s own _cliché_, is all that he seems to have found
-in that “peaceful valley of the Androscoggin.” Even poor Tolstoy
-is branded as “a decadent with the humanitarian superimposed,”
-an application of the word which renders its previous employment
-meaningless. As a crowning example of incomprehension may be cited Mr.
-More’s opinion that the English poet, Lionel Johnson, is “the one great
-... and genuinely significant poet of the present Gaelic movement.”
-In the circumstances, it is not surprising that he should pronounce
-Irishmen incapable of exploiting adequately the themes of Celtic
-literature. For this task he considers the Saxon genius more qualified.
-
-With these examples before us it is unnecessary to examine the
-remaining volumes of “Shelburne Essays.” Having started with a
-distorted conception of the critical office, the author naturally
-contributed nothing helpful to the literature of American criticism.
-His laborious platitudes do not help us to a better appreciation of
-the dead, his dogmatic hostility nullifies his judgments upon the
-living. Not once has he a word of discerning censure or encouragement
-for any rising talent. Like most of his colleagues, Mr. More prefers
-to exercise his faculties at the expense of reputations already
-established, save when he condescends to repeat the commonplaces of
-complaint against certain of the better known modern writers. He is so
-busy with Mrs. Gaskell, Charles Lamb, Milton, Plato, and Dickens that
-he can find time to mention only some fifteen Americans, not one of
-them living.
-
-Such is the critic whom Professor Pattee salutes as “consistent” and
-“courageous,” having “standards of criticism” which make him comparable
-to Sainte-Beuve. As editor of “the leading critical review of America,”
-we are assured that Mr. More had “a dominating clientèle and a leader’s
-authority.” Alas! There can be no doubt as to this, though it is very
-doubtful if the fact can be regarded as “one of the most promising
-signs for that new literary era which already is overdue.” That era
-will long continue overdue while criticism remains absorbed in the
-past, aloof from life and implacably hostile to every manifestation of
-originality. If the new literary generation were merely ignored its lot
-would be comparatively happy. But the mandarins come down periodically
-from their Olympic communings with George Eliot and Socrates, to fill
-the reviews with verbose denunciations of whatever is being written
-independently of their idols. The oracles having spoken, the newcomers
-are left with an additional obstacle in the way of their reaching
-the indifferent ear of the crowd. The crowd wallows in each season’s
-literary novelties, satisfied that whatever is well advertised is good.
-Rather than face the subjects endorsed by the frigid enthusiasm of Mr.
-Paul Elmer More or Stuart Sherman, Mr. W. C. Brownell and Professor
-Brander Matthews, it takes refuge in fields where the writ of pedantry
-does not run. Meanwhile, the task of welcoming new talent is left to
-amiable journalists, whose casual recommendations, usually without any
-background of critical experience, are accepted as the judgments of
-competent experts. The “colyumist” has to perform the true function of
-the critic.
-
-Although anæmia is the dominant characteristic of intellectual life in
-the United States, the reaction against that condition is none the less
-worthy of notice. When we remember that the fervour of righteousness
-is the very breath of current philosophy, we are also reminded that
-crudeness, sensationalism, and novelty are commonly held by Europeans
-to be the quintessence of America. It might be replied, in answer to
-this objection, that Hearst newspapers, and the vaudeville theology of
-Billy Sunday, are the only alternatives to the prim conventionality of
-authoritative journalism, and the sanctimoniousness of popular leaders.
-The man in the street obtains the illusion of strenuous cerebral
-activity when he contrasts the homely qualities of those prophets of
-democracy with the spinster-like propriety and beatific purity of
-prominent publicists and statesmen. He likes to hear his master’s
-voice, it is true, but he likes even more to hear his own, especially
-where his personal interests are at issue. The æsthetic _obiter dicta_
-of the professors, like the language of diplomacy, are concerned with
-questions sufficiently remote to make sonority an acceptable substitute
-for thought.
-
-In the realm of ideas, nevertheless, there is a more or less articulate
-expression of reaction, mainly concentrated in the larger cities of the
-East. There the professional supermen and their female counterparts
-have come together by tacit agreement, and have attempted to shake off
-the incubus of respectability. The extremists impress one as being
-overpowered by a sense of their own sinful identity. In a wild burst of
-hysterical revolt they are plunged into a debauch of ideas from which
-they are emerging in a very shaken and parlous condition. For the most
-part their adventures, mental and otherwise, have been in the domain
-of sex, with a resultant flooding of the “radical” market by varied
-tomes upon the subject. What the bookstores naïvely catalogue as the
-literature of advanced thought is a truly wonderful _salade russe_, in
-which Krafft-Ebbing and Forel compete with Freud and Eugene Debs. Karl
-Marx, and Signora Montessori, Professor Scott Nearing, and Havelock
-Ellis engage the same attention as the neo-Malthusian pamphleteers,
-and the young ladies whose novels tell of what Flaubert called “_les
-souillures du mariage et les platitudes de l’adultère_.”
-
-The natural morbidity of the Puritan mind is exasperated in advanced
-circles, whose interest is nothing if not catholic. Let Brieux
-discourse of venereal disease, or Strindberg expound his tragedies of
-prurience, their success is assured amongst those who would believe
-them geniuses, rather than risk the ignominy of agreement with the
-champions of orthodoxy. So long as our European pornographers are
-serious and inartistic, they need have no fear of America. Unbalanced
-by prolonged contemplation of the tedious virtues of New England, a
-generation has arisen whose great illusion is that the transvaluation
-of all values may be effected by promiscuity. Lest they should ever
-incur the suspicion of conservatism the emancipated have a permanent
-welcome for everything that is strange or new. The blush on the cheek
-of the vice-crusader is their criterion of excellence.
-
-By an irony of fate, however, they are condemned to the disheartening
-spectacle of their moral bogies being received into a society but one
-removed from the Olympians themselves. In recent years it has been
-the practice of the latter to accept certain reputations, when they
-have passed through the sieve of the literary clubs and drama leagues.
-In fact, candidates for academic immortality frequently serve on the
-board of these literary filtration plants. While the mandarins execute
-their ritual in the cult of Longfellow and Bryant, and excommunicate
-heretical moderns, their servitors are engaged upon an ingenious task.
-They discover the more innocuous subjects of “radical” enthusiasm,
-deprive them of whatever sting of originality their work possessed,
-and then submit the result discreetly to the official pundits. When
-these judges have satisfied themselves as to the sterility of the
-innovations, their imprimatur is granted, and another mediocrity is
-canonized. Ibsen is saluted because of his “message,” and “Anna
-Karenina” becomes a masterpiece, because Tolstoy was a Christian. While
-remarkable talents at home are ignored or vilified, the fifth-rate
-European is in the process of literary naturalization. Mr. Masefield
-receives the benediction of Paul Elmer More, who in the same breath
-tries to convince us that he is qualified to pronounce “The Spoon River
-Anthology” a bad joke.
-
-Nothing more clearly demonstrates the futility and disrepute of
-criticism in this country than the constant surrenders to the prestige
-of the foreigner. A cheap fashion in European literature has only to be
-thrust with sufficient publicity upon the women’s literary clubs, and
-parish meeting-houses, to ensnare the uneasy wearers of the academic
-crown. Give them time and they will be found praising a translated
-French poet for precisely those qualities which offend them in the
-protégés of Miss Harriet Monroe. The young Englishman, Rupert Brooke,
-might have contributed to “Poetry” for ten years without securing any
-more recognition than did the American, Robert Frost. But now both
-reputations, made in England, are widely accepted, and the inevitable
-professor is found to tread respectfully where Henry James rushed in.
-Compare the critical essays which James wrote during a period of thirty
-years with the stereotyped Bostonian theses of the men he left behind
-him. Yet nobody will accuse James of a disregard for tradition.
-
-The American word “standpatter” is curiously precise as a designation
-of the species. The conservative critic in Europe, Brunetière, for
-example, is never so purely negative as his counterpart on this side
-of the Atlantic. When Brunetière adversely criticized the Symbolist
-movement in French poetry he did so intelligently, not in that
-laboriously facetious fashion which is affected by the Stuart Shermans
-and W. H. Boyntons when they are moved to discuss _les jeunes_.
-Brunetière, in a word, was a man of education and culture, capable of
-defending rationally his own theories, without suggesting that the
-unfamiliar was necessarily bad. He condemned the excesses of the new
-school, not the school itself. If he had been in America, he would
-have denied the Symbolists even the right to exist. Edward Dowden
-might also be cited as a similar example, in English literature, of
-enlightened conservatism. Dowden was partly responsible for bringing
-Whitman to the favourable notice of the English public, and his work
-stands as a proof that respect for the classics does not involve
-hostility to the moderns. Just as he was able to write a masterpiece
-of Shakespearean criticism without retiring into hermitage, so he was
-qualified to appreciate original genius when it presented itself. He
-was not paralyzed, in short, by the weight of his literary traditions
-and conventions.
-
-A thousand and one reasons have been advanced to explain the absence
-of a genuine American literature, and all of them are probably true.
-The country is comparatively young, and its energies have been, are
-still, directed chiefly towards the exploitation of material resources
-and the conquest of natural difficulties. Racially the nation is
-in an embryonic stage, and until some homogeneity is attained the
-creation of a native tradition must be slow. Moreover, the conflict
-of diverse races implies, in a broad sense, the clash of two or more
-civilizations, one of which must impose its culture if any organized
-progress is to be made. The language of the Hyphenated States is
-English, but to what extent will the nation in being evolve in
-accordance with this linguistic impulse? Will it be Anglo-Saxon,
-Teutonic, Latin, or Slav? These are a few of the problems which have a
-direct bearing upon the intellectual development of the country. They
-must be solved before America can give her imprint to the arts. They
-cannot be solved by the assumption that the Anglo-Saxon hyphen is alone
-authentic. The permanent hypothesis of Colonialism must be abandoned,
-if “Americanization” is ever to be more than the silliest political
-cant. Puritanism must be confined to the conventicles, to its natural
-habitat. It must not be allowed to masquerade as art, philosophy, and
-statesmanship. The evangelical tyranny exists elsewhere, but only in
-America has it invaded every branch of the national life. In the more
-impatient and realistic generation which has emerged from the world
-war this monstrous extension of prohibitions is arousing a violent
-reaction. It is rare now to find a young American who does not cry out
-against American civilization.
-
-To the disinterested European, this spectacle is an affecting
-illustration of what may be called the enchantment of distance.
-Evidently these disconsolate citizens imagine that there is a way of
-escape from the Presbyterian wilderness, an oasis in the desert of one
-hundred per cent. Americanism, where every prospect pleases and man is
-only relatively vile. One listens to the _intelligentsia_, rendered
-more than usually loquacious by generous potations of unconstitutional
-Scotch whiskey, cursing the subtle blow to the arts administered by the
-Volstead denial of the necessary ambrosia. Advanced thinkers revelling
-in the delights of a well-organized polygamy, have taken me aside to
-explain how the prophets of Methodism have laid waste this fair land.
-I have read desperate appeals to all young men of spirit to shake off
-the yoke of evangelistic philistinism by expatriation to more urbane
-centres of culture.
-
-These are brave words, coming as they do, for the most part, from those
-who are in no wise incommoded by the ukases of the gospel-tent tyrants,
-and who have taken appropriate measures to defeat the Eighteenth
-Amendment. Back of all their plaints is the superstition that Europe
-is free from the blight which makes America intolerable in their eyes.
-They do not know that the war has almost destroyed the Europe of a
-civilized man’s affections. Socially, politically, and intellectually
-that distracted continent is rapidly expiring in the arms of profiteers
-and class-conscious proletarians, who have decided between them to
-leave not a blade of culture upstanding. The leisured class, which
-was rarely the wealthiest, is being ground out of existence by the
-plutocracy and the proletariat. That was the class which made the old
-Europe possible, yet there are Americans who go on talking as if its
-extinction did not knock the bottom out of their utopia. Most of these
-disgruntled Americans are radicals, who strive to forward the designs
-of the plain people and their advocates.
-
-Yet, every European knows that if prohibition is making the headway it
-surely is, the chief reason must be sought in the growth of radicalism.
-From Bernard Shaw to Trotsky, our revolutionaries are “dry.” Their
-avowed ideal is a state of society in which the allurements of love
-are reduced to a eugenic operation, the mellowing influences of liquor
-are abolished, and compulsory labour on the Taylor efficiency plan of
-scientific management is substituted. In fine, by the benign workings
-of democratic progress Europe is moving steadily toward the state of
-affairs attributed here by disillusioned intellectuals to the sinister
-machinations of Wall Street and the evangelists.
-
-No doubt America was a purer and happier place in 1620 than in 1920.
-No Sumner was needed to keep the eyes of the settlers from the dimpled
-knees of Ziegfeld’s beauties, and the platitudes of the Wilsonian epoch
-were the brightest flowers of wisdom in 1776. Alas! that it should be
-so, and in every country of our Western World. If the Magna Charta were
-to be offered for signature in London now, some nasty Bolshevik would
-be sure to prove that the document was drawn up in a private conclave
-of the international financiers. If Lincoln were to make his Gettysburg
-speech to-day the world would snicker irreverently, and a dreadfully
-superior person, with a Cambridge accent (like John Maynard Keynes,
-C.B.), would publish the “Economic Consequences of the Civil War,” full
-of sardonic gibes at the innocent evangelism of Springfield. As for the
-Declaration of Independence--well, during “the late unpleasantness” we
-saw what happened to such un-American sedition-mongers. In fine, things
-are not what they used to be; we pine for what is not, and so forth.
-Of this only we may be sure, that America corresponds neither more nor
-less than any other country to the dreams of its ancestors.
-
-Indeed, to be more affirmative in this plea for America, it is probable
-that this country has followed more closely the intentions of its
-founders than the critics will admit. Unlike most European nations, the
-Americans have preserved, with an almost incomprehensible reverence,
-the constitution laid down to meet conditions entirely unlike those of
-the 20th century. Ancestor worship is the cardinal virtue of America
-and surpasses that of China and Japan, where revolutionary changes
-have been made in the whole social and political structure. America
-was created as a political democracy for the benefit of staunch
-individualists, and both these ends have been achieved to perfection.
-Everything against which the super-sensitive revolt has come about
-_planmaessig_, and existed in the germ from the day when the Pilgrim
-Fathers first brought the blessings of Anglo-Saxon civilization to the
-shores of Cape Cod.
-
-In the South alone were traces of a _Weltanschauung_ which might have
-given an impulse in another direction, but the South went under, in
-obedience to the rules of democratic Darwinism. Once the dissatisfied
-American can bring himself to look the facts of his own history and
-of contemporary Europe in the face, he may be forced to relent. He
-will grant, at least, that it is useless to cherish the notion that
-the ills the American mind is heir to are spared to other peoples. He
-may even come to recognize the positive virtues of this country, where
-the stories in the _Saturday Evening Post_ actually come true. Here a
-man can look his neighbour straight in the eye and subscribe--without
-a smile--to the romantic credo that all men are equal, in so far as
-it is possible by energy, hard work, and regular attendance at divine
-service, to reach the highest post in any career. Class barriers are
-almost unknown, and on all sides there is an endlessly generous desire
-to learn, to help, and to encourage. The traditional boy can still
-arrive from the slums of Europe and finish up in the editorial chair of
-a wealthy newspaper. If he ever fails to do so it can only be because
-he starts by reading the _Liberator_, and devotes to the deciphering
-of Thorstein Veblen’s hieroglyphics of socialism the time which
-should have been given to mastering the more profitable technique of
-Americanism.
-
- ERNEST BOYD
-
-
-
-
-III. AS AN ITALIAN SEES IT
-
-
-In a typical form of primitive society, where institutions and ideals,
-collective representations and individual reactions, coincide, no
-distinction can be made between culture and civilization. Every element
-of the practical culture is a spiritual symbol, and there is no other
-logic or reason than that which is made manifest by the structure and
-habits of the social group. Life is a religion, in the two meanings of
-the word, that of a binding together of men, and the deeper one--of
-gathering the manifold activities of the individual in one compact
-spiritual mass. The mythical concepts, which limit and integrate the
-data of experience, in a sphere which is neither purely imaginative nor
-purely intellectual, present to the individual mind as irresistibly
-as to the mind of the group, a world of complementary objects which
-are of the same stuff as the apprehended data. Thought--practical,
-æsthetic, ethical--is still undifferentiated, unindividualized, as if a
-collective mind were an active reality, a gigantic, obscure, coherent
-personality, entering into definite relations with a world homogeneous
-with itself.
-
-Such an abstract, ideal scheme of the life of the human spirit before
-it has any history, before it is even capable of history, affords,
-in its hypothetical indistinction (within the group, within the
-individual), a prefiguration of a certain higher relationship of
-culture with civilization, of a _humana civilitas_, in which the
-practical should be related to the spiritual, nature to the mind,
-in the full light of consciousness, with a perfect awareness of the
-processes of distinction and individualization. In the twilight and
-perspective of historical knowledge, if not in their actuality, Greece
-before Socrates, Rome before Christ, the Middle Ages before Saint
-Francis (each of them, before the apparition of the disrupting and
-illuminating element of growth), are successive attempts or _étapes_
-towards the creation of a civilization of such a kind--a human
-civilization.
-
-Between these two limits--the primitive and the human--the ideal
-beginning and the ideal end--we can recognize, at any given moment in
-history, through the segmentation and aggregation of a multitude of
-cultures, different ages and strata of culture coexisting in the same
-social group; and the individual mind emerges at the confluence of
-the practical cultures, with science and philosophy and the ethical,
-non-tribal ideals, germs and _initia_, of the human civilization
-remaining above the given society as a soul that never entirely
-vivifies its own body. History begins where first the distinction
-between civilization and culture appears, or, to state the same fact
-from a different angle, where individual consciousness is born. It
-ends, ideally, where the same distinction fades away into Utopia, or
-death, or the Kingdom of Heaven; where the highest form of individual
-consciousness is at no point higher than the consciousness of the group
-from which it originally differentiated itself.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The writer of these pages belongs, by birth, education, and election,
-to the civilization of Rome and to the culture, or cultures, of Italy.
-The civilization of Rome, the _latina civilitas_, is a complex mind,
-whose successive phases of growth are the abstract humanism of ancient
-Greece, the civic and legal humanism of Rome, the moral and spiritual
-humanism of the Latin church, the æsthetic and metaphysical humanism
-of the Renaissance. Each phase is an integration of the preceding one
-and the acquisition of a new universal principle, made independent of
-the particular social body in which it has partially realized itself
-before becoming a pure, intelligible ideal, an essential element of
-the human mind. The first three phases, Greece, Rome, and the Church,
-are still more or less closely associated, in relation to the forms of
-humanism which are peculiar to each of them, with particular cultures.
-But the last one, which, in its progress from the 13th century to
-our days, has been assimilating, purifying, and clarifying all the
-preceding ones, does not, at any given moment, directly connect itself
-with any definite social body. In its inception, as a purely Italian
-Renaissance, it may appear as the spiritual form of Italian society
-from the 13th to the 15th century; but its apparition coincides
-with the natural growth of the several, sharply defined European
-nationalities, and very soon (and apart from the evident insufficiency
-of any individual nation to fulfil its spiritual exigencies) it
-manifests its intrinsic character of universality by overflowing the
-frontiers of Italy and becoming the law of the whole Western European
-world.
-
-The history of Europe during the last six centuries is the history
-of the gradual penetration of that idea within the circle of the
-passively or actively resistant, or inert, local, national cultures.
-The Reformation, of all active resistances, is the strongest and
-most important. The Germanic tribes rebel against the law of Rome,
-because a delay of from five to ten centuries in the experience of
-Christianity, and an experience of Christianity to be made not on a
-Græco-Roman, but on an Odinic background, create in them the spiritual
-need of an independent elaboration of the same universal principles.
-Germany is practically untouched by the spirit of the Renaissance until
-the 18th century, and Italy herself is for two centuries reduced to
-spiritual and political servitude by the superior material strength
-which accompanies and sustains the spiritual development of the
-nations of the North. Through the whole continent, within the single
-national units, as well as between nation and nation, the contrast and
-collaboration of the Romanic and Germanic elements, of Renaissance and
-Reformation, is the actual dialectic of the development of European
-civilization: of the successive approximations of the single cultures,
-or groups of cultures, in a multitude of more or less divergent
-directions, with alternating accelerations and involutions, towards the
-common form, the _humana civilitas_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Of all the nations of Europe, Italy is the only one that, however
-contingently and imperfectly, has actually realized all of the four
-phases of humanism in a succession of historical cultures: Magna
-Græcia, the Roman Empire, the Catholic Church, the Renaissance. And
-as each of these successive cultures was trying to embody in itself
-a universal, not a particular, principle, nationality in Italy is
-not, as for other nations, the acceptance of certain spiritual limits
-elaborated from within the social body, but a reaction to the pressure
-of adjoining nationalities, which presented themselves as obstacles and
-impediments, even within the life of Italy herself, to the realization
-of a super-national principle. This is the process through which
-the humanism of the Renaissance, after having received its abstract
-political form at the hands of the thinkers and soldiers of the French
-Revolution, becomes active and militant in Mazzini’s principle of
-nationality, which is a heroic effort towards the utilization of the
-natural growth of European nations for the purposes of a universal
-civilization.
-
-The distance between that civilization and the actual cultures of the
-nations of Europe can easily be measured by the observer of European
-events during the last seven years. To that civilization belong the
-ideals, to those cultures, the realities, of the Great War. And all of
-us who have thought and fought in it have souls which are irremediably
-divided between that civilization and those cultures. If we should
-limit ourselves to the consideration of present facts and conditions,
-we might well give way to despair: not for a good many years in the
-past have nationalities been so impervious to the voice of the common
-spirit as they are in Europe to-day. And the sharp contrast between
-ideals and realities which has been made visible even to the blind by
-the consequences of the war, has engendered a temper of violence and
-cynicism even among those rare men and parties who succeeded in keeping
-their ideals _au dessus de la mêlée_, and therefore did not put them to
-the destructive test of a promise which had to be broken.
-
-The moral problem which every nation of Europe will have to labour at
-in the immediate future, is that of the relations of its historical
-culture or cultures with the exigencies of the _humana civilitas_. It
-is the problem that presents itself more or less dimly to the most
-earnest and thoughtful of Europeans, when they speak of the coming
-“death of our civilization,” or of the “salvaging of civilization.” To
-many of them, it is still a problem of institutions and technologies:
-its essentially spiritual quality does not seem to have been thoroughly
-grasped as yet. But it is also the problem that confronts, less
-tragically, with less urgency, but not less inevitably, this great
-European Commonwealth which has created its own life on the North
-American continent for the space of the last three centuries.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This European Commonwealth of America owes its origin to a small number
-of adventurers and pilgrims, who brought the seeds of English culture
-to the new world. Let us very rapidly attempt a characterization of
-that original culture.
-
-England holds as peculiar and distinctive a position among the nations
-of Europe as Italy. She is the meeting-point of the Romanic and
-Germanic elements in European history; and if her culture may appear
-as belonging to the family of mediterranean cultures (to what we have
-called the _latina civilitas_), to an English Catholic, like Cardinal
-Newman, there was a time, and not very remote, when the Protestant
-could be proud of its Teutonic associations. From a Catholic and
-Franco-Norman mediæval England, logically emerges, by a process similar
-to that exemplified by Italy and France and Spain, the England of Henry
-VIII and Elizabeth, of Shakespeare and the Cavaliers: Renaissance
-England. She flourishes between the suppression of the monasteries
-and the suppression of the theatres. She moulds, for all centuries
-to come, the æsthetic and political mind of the English people. But
-she carries the germs of a widely different culture in her womb: she
-borrows from them, already during the Elizabethan age, some traits that
-differentiate her from all other Renaissance cultures. And these germs,
-slowly gaining impetus through contrast and suppression, ultimately
-work her overthrow with the short-lived triumph of Cromwell and the
-Puritans.
-
-After 1688, the law of English life is a compromise between Puritan and
-Cavalier, between Renaissance and Reformation, which sends the extreme
-representatives of each type out of the country, builders of an Empire
-of adventurers and pilgrims--while at home the moderate Cavalier, and
-the moderate Puritan, the Tory and the Whig, establish a Republic with
-a King, and a Parliamentary feudal régime. But the successive stages
-of English culture do not interest us at this point, except in so far
-as America has always remained closer to England than to any other
-European nation, and has again and again relived in her own life the
-social, political, spiritual experiences of the Mother Country.
-
-It is from the two main directions of English spiritual life that
-America, through a double process of segmentation, Elizabethan or
-Cavalier in the South, Puritan in the North, draws the origins of her
-own life. It is in the Cavalier and the Puritan, still within the
-circle of English life, that the germs of American culture must be
-sought. The peculiar relations of the Cavalier and the Puritan to the
-general design of European civilization define the original attitude of
-this Commonwealth beyond the sea towards the other European cultures,
-and are the origins of the curves which, modified in their development
-by the addition of new elements and by the action of a new, distinctive
-environment, American culture has described and will describe in the
-future.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Puritanism is essentially a culture and not a civilization. The Puritan
-mind, in its quest for an original Christian experience, falls upon
-the Old Testament and the Ancient Law. The God of the tribes of Israel
-becomes its God, a God finding a complete expression in the law that
-rules his chosen people. A compact, immovable spiritual logic, a set
-of fixed standards, a rhetoric of the virtues, the identification of
-any element of growth and change with the power of evil, a dualistic
-morality, and the consequent negation of a spiritually free will,
-these are the characteristics of Puritanism, constituting at the same
-time, and with the same elements, a system of truth and a system of
-conduct. In both the meanings in which we have used the word religion
-at the beginning of this essay, Puritanism is a perfect, final
-religion. Transplanted to America when Europe was slowly becoming
-conscious of the metaphysical implications of the destruction of the
-old Cosmology--when the discovery of an infinite universe was depriving
-a purely transcendent divinity of the place it had been given beyond
-the limits of a finite universe--the infinite universe itself being
-manifest, in the words of Bruno, as _lo specchio della infinita
-deità_,--it gave birth to an intrinsically static culture, standing out
-against a background of transcendental thought.
-
-The principles of growth in Puritanism were not specifically
-Puritan: they were those universal values that Puritan discipline
-succeeded in rediscovering because every moral discipline, however
-fettered by its premises, will inevitably be led towards them. Quite
-recently, a sincere and ardent apologist of Puritanism recognized
-in a document which he considers as the highest expression of that
-culture in America, a paraphrase of the Roman _dulce et decorum_.
-The irrationality which breaks through the most hermetically closed
-system of logic, in the process of life, asserts itself by extracting
-from a narrowly institutional religion values which are not dependent
-upon a particular set of institutions, nor are valid for one people
-only. But we might detect the germs of that irrationality already in
-the very beginnings of the system, when Milton adds the whole weight
-of the Roman tradition to the Puritan conception of democracy--or
-in the divine words of the Gospels, through which in all times and
-places every _anima naturaliter christiana_ will hear the cry of Love
-rebelling against the letter of the Ancient Law.
-
-What the Cavalier brought to America, we should have to investigate
-only if we were tracing the history of divergent directions, of local
-cultures: because the original soul of America is undoubtedly the
-Puritanic soul of New England, and the South, even before the War of
-Secession, in relation to the main direction, to the general culture,
-has a merely episodical significance. Yet, though the founders of New
-England were only Puritans, certain traits of the Cavalier spirit,
-the adventurer in the pilgrim, will inevitably reappear in their
-descendants, repeating the original dichotomy in the generations
-issuing from an apparently pure stock: partly, because a difference
-in beliefs is not always the mark of a fundamental difference in
-temperaments, and partly because those traits correspond to some of the
-generally human impulses suppressed by the choice of the Puritan.
-
-There is one element which is common to Puritan and Cavalier in
-America, and which cannot be said to belong in precisely the same
-fashion to their ancestors in England. It is, in England and the rest
-of Europe, a mythology formed by similar hopes and desires, by a
-similar necessity of giving an imaginary body to certain thoughts and
-aspirations, on the part of the spirit of the Renaissance as well as
-of the spirit of the Reformation: a mythology which, in the mind of
-the European during the centuries between the discovery of America
-and the French Revolution, inhabits such regions as the island of
-Utopia, the city of the Sun, and the continent of America. In that
-mythology, Utopism and American exoticism coincide. But the adventurer
-and the pilgrim were actually and firmly setting their feet on one
-of the lands mapped in that purely ideal geography, and thoughts and
-aspirations confined by the European to the continent of dreams, became
-the moral exigencies of the new Commonwealth. Thus America set herself
-against Europe as the ideal against the real, the land of the free,
-and the refuge of the oppressed; and was confirmed in such a position
-by her natural opportunities, by the conditions of pioneer life, by
-contrast to European despotism--finally, by the Revolution and the
-Constitution, in which she felt that the initial moral exigencies were
-ultimately fulfilled. It is to this myth of a Promised Land, which
-is neither strictly Puritan nor strictly Cavalier, and yet at times
-seems to coincide with the less static aspects of Puritanism, that a
-peculiarly American idealism, unconquerable by defeat and even by the
-evidence of facts, abstract, self-confident, energetic, youthful and
-optimistic, owes its strength and its courage: an idealism which is
-hardly conscious of what Europe has been taught by centuries of dire
-experience--the irreparable contingency and imperfection of history;
-and which believes, as firmly as the Puritan legislator believes it,
-that such institutions have been devised, or can be devised, through
-which the ideal law, when thought out and written, will not fail to
-become the law of reality for all times to come.
-
-From two contrasting elements, a firm belief in a Law which was at the
-beginning, and a romantic mythology, a third characteristic of the
-American mind is thus engendered: a full confidence in the power of
-intellect conceived as a mechanism apt to contrive practical schemes
-for the accomplishment of ideal ends. This intellectual faith is
-similar in its static nature to the moral faith of the Puritan: it is
-the material weapon of Puritanism. Perfectibility is within its reach,
-but not the actual processes of evolution. The intellect that does not
-conceive itself as a process or function, but as a mechanism, can
-tend towards, and theoretically possess, a state of perfection, but
-will resent and condemn the gropings and failings of actual, imperfect
-growth and change. Not without reason, the greatest individual tragedy
-of the war, in a typically American mind confronted with the sins and
-misery of Europe, was a tragedy of intellectual pride: of the inability
-of a static intellect to become charitably active in the tragic flux of
-European life; a tragedy which a little moral and intellectual humility
-might well have spared to the generous hopes of America, and the
-childish, messianic faith which irradiated for only too short a time
-the bleeding soul of Europe.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If we have called Puritanism a culture, what name shall we reserve for
-that vast and complicated collection of mechanical contrivances which
-constitute the material body of American society to-day? We are in the
-presence of a technology, a more highly developed one, perhaps (with
-the possible exception of Germany before the war), than any that has
-ever existed in the world. Technologies have a logic of their own, and
-that logic is apt to take the place of higher spiritual constructions;
-either when conditions of life lend a miraculous character to the
-means of sustaining life itself and invest the practical actions of
-hunting or agriculture with a religious significance; or when the
-complexity of their organization is such that the workings of that
-practical logic inevitably transcend the power of observation of the
-individual agent, however highly placed in the machinery itself, and
-moral or intellectual myths are born of an imperfect knowledge. This is
-the case of America, and in America this technological or industrial
-mythology has crushed out of existence the rival myths of the farms
-and the prairie, allowing them a purely romantic value and decorative
-function, through the industrially controlled power of the press.
-Even pioneering, and the conquest of the West, a process in which
-Americans of another age found an energetic, if partly vicarious,
-satisfaction for certain moral and ideal yearnings, has receded, in the
-mind of Americans of to-day, into the shades of a fabulous and solemn
-background.
-
-The industrial revolution followed in America the lines of development
-of its early English model. This commonwealth beyond the sea,
-agricultural and democratic, found in itself the same elements which
-gave birth in the original country to an industrial feudalism, grafting
-itself, without any solution of continuity, on a feudalism of the
-land. The ineradicable optimism of the American invested the whole
-process with the same halo of moral romance which had coloured the age
-of pioneering, and accepted as a useful substitute (or rather, as a
-new content) for Puritanic moralism the philosophy of opportunity and
-of success constantly commensurate with true merit. The conception of
-intellect as a mechanism to be used for moral and ideal ends, gave
-way to a similar though more complex conception, modelled not on the
-methods of pure science, from whose early conquests the revolution
-itself had been started, but on those of applied science or of
-practical machinery.
-
-When, in the natural course of events, the bonds which kept together
-the purely economic elements of the country became more powerful and
-real than any system of political institutions, when, in fact, a
-financial syndicalism became the structure underlying the apparent
-organs of government, all the original ideals of America had already
-gathered to the defence of the new order. Hence the extraordinary
-solidity of the prevailing economic system in this country, when
-compared with any European country. Economic, as well as political
-systems, ultimately rest on convictions rather than on sheer force,
-and the radical in America, in all spheres of thought, is constantly
-in the necessity of fighting not mere institutions, as in Europe, but
-institutionalized ideals, organisms and personalities which establish
-their right on the same assumptions which prompt him in his rebellion.
-There is less difference in fundamentals between a Carnegie and a Debs
-than between any two individuals placed in similar positions in Europe.
-
-An interesting by-product of this particular development is the myth of
-the captain of industry, possessed, in the popular imagination, of all
-the virtues. And a consequence of this myth is an unavoidable revision
-of the catalogue of virtues, from which some were expunged that do
-not lead to industrial success, and others were admitted because
-industrial success is thought to be impossible without them. This myth
-is not believed in by the aspiring multitudes only, but by a good many
-among the captains of industry themselves, who accept their wealth as a
-social trust, and conceive of their function in a manner not dissimilar
-from that of the old sovereign by the grace of God.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This transposition of ideals from the religious and moral field to the
-practical and economic, leaves only a very thin ground for personal
-piety and the religion of the Churches. Yet there is no country in
-the world (again, with the only possible exception of Northern Africa
-during the first centuries of the Christian Era) which has produced
-such a wealth and such a variety of religious movements as America. The
-substance of that very thin ground is diluted Puritanism, Puritanism
-which, in a vast majority of the population, converts itself, strangely
-enough, as we have seen, into social optimism, a belief sufficient to
-the great active masses, but not to the needs of “the heart,” when the
-heart is given enough leisure to consider itself, through either too
-much wealth or too little hope: through the discovery of its emptiness,
-when the possession of the means makes manifest the absence of an end,
-or through the spasms of its hunger, when means are beyond reach,
-in the hands of the supposed inferior and unworthy. In this second
-case, even a purely sensual craving dignifies itself with the name
-of the Spirit. The more or less official Churches, in an attempt to
-retain the allegiance of their vast congregations, have followed the
-masses in their evolution: they pride themselves essentially on their
-social achievements, a little doubtfully, perhaps, knowing that their
-particular God has no more reason to inhabit a church than a factory,
-and that the highest possible embodiment of their doctrine is an
-orderly and paternally governed industrial organization.
-
-To the needs of “the heart” minister the innumerable sects (and
-here again, the American religious history repeats, in magnified
-proportions, the characteristics of English religious life). But
-because of the gradual impoverishment of the central religious
-tradition of the country, because of the scanty cultural background
-of both apostles and neophytes, it is hard to recognize in the whole
-movement an intimate spiritual dialectic which might lend strength and
-significance to the individual sects. A vague mysticism appropriates to
-itself, in a haphazard and capricious fashion, shadows and ghosts of
-religious experiences and opinions, whose germs of truth lie in other
-ages and other climates. The only common feature seems to be a distrust
-of intellect, derived from the original divorce of the intellectual
-from the spiritual in the Puritan, a distrust which at times becomes
-active in the denunciation of the supposed crimes of science. It is
-this fundamental common feature which will for ever prevent any of them
-from becoming what all sects fail to be, a religion.
-
-The two states of mind which are nearer to-day to being true religions
-are, on one side, Americanism (a religion as a common bond), and on the
-other, Radicalism (a religion as a personal experience). Americanism is
-the more or less perfect expression of the common belief that American
-ideals realize themselves in American society. Radicalism is the more
-or less spasmodic protest against such a belief, sometimes coupled
-with an individual attempt at realizing those ideals in one’s life
-and actions. The sharpest contrast between the two attitudes is to be
-found in their ideas of political and spiritual freedom; which to one
-is a condition actually existing by the mere fact of the existence of
-American society such as it is, and to the other a dynamic principle
-which can never be permanently associated with any particular set of
-institutions.
-
-The original spirit of Puritanism can hardly be said to be alive to-day
-in America. In a few intellectuals, it confuses itself with other high
-forms of moral discipline in the past, and reappears with a strange
-fidelity to form rather than substance, as Platonism, Classicism,
-Mediævalism, Catholicism, or any other set of fixed standards that can
-be accepted as a whole, and can give the soul that sense of security
-which is inherent in the illusion of possessing the final truth.
-The consequence of such a deviation is that these truly religious
-souls, after having satisfied themselves with a sufficiently vast and
-beautiful interpretation of their creed, resent any cruder and more
-dangerous form of intellectual experience much more keenly than they
-resent crudities and dangers actually present in the nature of things.
-They are intellectuals, but again, with no faith in intellect; they
-are truly isolated among their fellow-countrymen, and yet they believe
-in conformity, and assume the conformity of American society to be the
-conformity of their dreams.
-
-Such a static apprehension of truth, such an identification of
-universal spiritual values with one or another particular tradition,
-is in fact as much an obstacle to the new life of the human spirit as
-the external conformity enforced by social optimism. But the polemic
-against the older intellectuals is carried on by younger men, many
-of them of recent immigrant blood, but all of them reared in the
-atmosphere of American culture, and who differ from them more in the
-objects of their preference than in the vastness or depth of their
-outlook. There is a way of clinging to the latest fashion in philosophy
-or in art which is not a progress in any sense in relation to older
-faiths; of combating a manifest logical fallacy by the use of the same
-sophism; of embracing sin with the same moral enthusiasm that in less
-enlightened times was kept in reserve for the highest virtues only.
-
-More important, for their influence on certain phases of American
-life, than these intellectual echoes, are the moralistic remnants of
-Puritanism. It is always possible, for small groups of people, strongly
-endowed with the sense of other people’s duties, to intimidate large
-sections of public opinion into accepting the logical consequences of
-certain undisputed moral assumptions, however widely they may differ
-from the realities of American life. It is under such circumstances
-that the kind-hearted, easy-going American pays the penalty for his
-identification of realities with ideals, by being deprived of some very
-dear reality in the name of an ideal which had long since ceased to
-have any meaning for him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-From whatever side we look at American culture, we are constantly
-brought face to face with a disregard or distrust, or a narrow
-conception, of purely intellectual values, which seems to be the common
-characteristic of widely divergent spiritual attitudes. The American
-does not, as the Englishman, glory in his capacity for muddling
-through: he is proud of certain logical achievements, and has a
-fondness for abstract schemes, an earnest belief in their validity and
-efficiency; but no more than the English does he believe that intellect
-is an integral part of the human personality. He recognizes the
-identity of goodness and truth, provided that truth can be found out by
-other means than purely intellectual: by common sense, by revelation,
-by instinct, by imagination, but not by intellect. It is here that even
-the defenders, among Americans, of the classical tradition miss the
-true meaning of the message of Socrates and Plato, the foundation of
-humanism.
-
-What is peculiarly American in the opinions of American philosophers is
-a clear and distinct expression of the common attitude. The official
-philosophy of America has repeated for a century the views of English
-empiricists and of German idealists, sometimes with very interesting
-and illuminating personal variations. It has even, and it is an
-original achievement, brought them to lose their peculiar accents and
-to coincide in new theories of knowledge. But the heart of American
-philosophy is not there: it is in pragmatism, in instrumentalism,
-in whatever other theory clearly establishes the purely functional
-character of truth, the mechanical aspect of intellect. Having put the
-criterion of truth outside the intellect, and considered intellect as
-the mere mechanism of belief, these doctrines try to re-establish the
-dignity of intellect by making of it a machine for the reproduction of
-morally or socially useful beliefs. The operation is similar to that of
-an anatomist who, having extracted the heart from a living body, would
-presume to reconstruct the body by artificially promoting the movements
-of the heart. The doctrine of the purely pragmatic or instrumental
-nature of intellect, which is the logical clarification of the
-popular conception, is a doctrine of radical scepticism, whatever the
-particular declarations of faith of the philosophers themselves might
-say to the contrary: it destroys not the objects of knowledge only, but
-the instrument itself.
-
-American philosophers came to this doctrine through the psychological
-and sociological approach to the problems of the mind. Such an
-approach is in keeping with the general tendency towards assuming
-the form of natural and mathematical sciences, which moral sciences
-in American universities have been obeying during the last thirty or
-forty years, partly under the influence of a certain kind of European
-positivism, and partly because of the prestige that natural and
-mathematical sciences gained from their practical applications. Even
-now it is easier to find a truly humanistic mind, a sound conception
-of intellectual values, among the great American scientists than among
-the philosophers and philologists: but pure science has become the
-most solitary of occupations, and the scientist the most remote of
-men, since his place in society has been taken by the inventor and
-by the popularizer. Psychology and sociology, those half-literary,
-half-scientific disciplines, gave as a basis to philosophy not the
-individual effort to understand and to think, but the positive
-observation of the more or less involuntary processes of thought in
-the multitude. Intellect was sacrificed to a democratic idea of the
-equality of minds: how could the philosopher presume to think, I do
-not say better or more efficiently than, but differently from the
-multitude? To European philosophy the reproach has been made again and
-again, and with some justice, of imposing laws upon reality which are
-only the laws of individual philosophic thought; and yet what else
-does the scientist ultimately do? But both scientist and philosopher
-find their justification in their faith in the validity of their
-instruments: in a spirit of devotion and humility, not in a gratuitous
-presumption. The typical American philosopher has sold his birthright,
-not for a pottage of lentils, but for mere love.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I am painfully aware of the fact that, through the meshes of this
-necessarily abstract and sketchy analysis, a good deal of the beauty
-and vastness, the vigour and good-humour of American life inevitably
-escapes. The traveller from the old countries experiences here a sense
-of great spaces and of practically unbounded possibilities, which
-reflects itself in an unparalleled gaiety and openness of heart, and
-freedom of social intercourse. The true meaning of the doctrine of
-opportunity lies much more in these individual attitudes than in any
-difference between the structures of American and European societies.
-And I do not believe that the only explanation for them is in the
-prosperity of America when compared to the misery of Europe, because
-this generosity stands in no direct relation with individual wealth.
-The lumberman and the longshoreman are as good as, if not better than,
-the millionaire.
-
-These individual attitudes find their collective expression in the idea
-of, and readiness for, service, which is universal in this country.
-Churches, political parties, movements for social reform, fraternal
-orders, industrial and business organizations, meet on this common
-ground. There is no material interest or spiritual prejudice that
-will not yield to an appeal for service: and whenever the object of
-service is clearly defined, action follows the impulse, intolerant of
-any delay. But Service is a means and not an end: you can serve a God,
-or a man, or a group of men, and in that man or group of men what you
-conceive to be his or their need, but you cannot serve Service. And
-the common end can only be given by a clear intellectual vision of the
-relations between a set of ideals and the realities of life.
-
-This intrinsic generosity of the American people is the motive of
-the song, and the substance of the ideal, of the one great poet that
-America has added to the small family of European poets: Walt Whitman.
-In him that feeling and that impulse became a vision and a prophecy.
-There is a habit on the part of American intellectuals to look with a
-slight contempt on the admiration of Europeans for the poetry of Walt
-Whitman, as just another symptom of their ignorance of American things.
-But I, for one, will confess that what I have loved passionately, as
-little more than a boy, in that poetry, is that same quality whose
-presence I have now recognized as the human flower of American culture,
-and which makes me love this country as passionately as I loved that
-poetry.
-
-It is one of the many paradoxes of American intellectual life that
-even the cultural preparation of a Walt Whitman should have been
-deeper and more substantial, if not more systematic, than that of any
-professor or writer of his times. These were minds which had as fully
-imbibed European thought and imagination as any professor or writer in
-Europe: but that thought, that imagination, transplanted to the new
-country, stood in no real relation with the new practical and moral
-surroundings, and were therefore thin and sterile. Walt Whitman knew
-and understood the great traditions of European civilization, and tried
-to express them in the original idiom, moral and literary, of his
-America.
-
-But _nemo propheta_, and it takes centuries to understand a poet. Walt
-Whitman still waits for his own generation. The modern schools of
-American poetry, curious of all winds of fashion, working for the day
-rather than for the times, have not yet fully grasped, I do not say
-the spirit of his message, but even, for all their free-versifying,
-the mystery of his magnificent rhythms. His successors are rather
-among some of the younger novelists, and in a few men, spiritually
-related to them, who approach the study of American conditions from a
-combined economic and psychological point of view. The novelists are
-busy in discovering the actual traits of the American physiognomy, with
-sufficient faith in the future to describe the shades with as much care
-as the lights, and with a deeper passion; the economists are making way
-for the highest and purest American ideals by revealing the contingent
-and merely psychological basis of the supposedly scientific axioms of
-classical economics.
-
- * * * * *
-
-My own experience of American life, between the autumn of 1919 and the
-summer of 1921, has brought me in contact with all sorts and manners of
-people from one end to the other of the country, from the Atlantic to
-the Pacific. It is from this direct intercourse with Americans, rather
-than from my readings of American literature, continued for a much
-longer time, that I have formed the opinions expressed in this paper.
-But as my work has brought me in closer communion with colleges and
-universities than with any other kind of institutions, I feel a little
-more assured in writing of the educational aspect of the American
-problem.
-
-A university is in any case more a _universitas studentium_ than
-a corporation of professors. I have enjoyed my life in American
-faculties, and I have gained a good deal from the many noble souls
-and intellects that I have met among them; but, whenever it has been
-possible to me, I have escaped from the faculties to the students and
-tried to understand the tendencies of the coming generations.
-
-The students of the American college or university, from the
-comparatively ancient institutions of the East, to the young
-co-educational schools of the Middle and Far West, form a fairly
-homogeneous, though very widely representative, cross-section of
-the American community. They are, in a very precise and inclusive
-meaning, young America, the America of to-morrow. A good many of their
-intellectual and spiritual characteristics are the common traits of
-American culture which we have studied in the preceding paragraphs;
-and yet, because of the social separation of individuals according
-to ages, which is carried in this country much farther than in any
-European country, they develop also a number of independent traits,
-which are peculiar to each one of the “younger generations” in their
-turn. The life of the American boy or girl, up to the time of their
-entrance into college, is mainly the life of a beautiful and healthy
-young organism, not subject to any too strict intellectual or spiritual
-discipline. The High Schools seem to understand their function in a
-spirit which is substantially different from that of the European
-secondary schools, owing especially to certain prevailing educational
-doctrines founded on a fiction which is used also in many other fields
-of American life, but which in the field of education has wrought
-more harm than in any other one, the fiction of the public demand--in
-this particular case of one or another type of education. A fiction
-undoubtedly it is, and used to give prestige and authority to the
-theories of individual educationalists, since in no country and in no
-time there have existed educational opinions outside the circle of the
-educators themselves. But this fiction has unfortunately had practical
-consequences because American educators, subject to big business in the
-private institutions, and to the politicians in the State schools and
-universities, have not found in themselves the energy, except in a few
-isolated instances, to resist what came to them strengthened by such
-auspices. And the public itself was easily convinced that it wanted
-what it was told that it wanted. The students, more sinned against
-than sinning, enjoy the easy atmosphere of the school, and it is only
-when they reach college that they become aware of their absolute
-unpreparedness for the higher studies.
-
-This consciousness of their inferiority manifests itself in an attitude
-of “low-browism,” which is not contempt of that which they think is
-beyond them, but rather an unwillingness to pretend that they are
-what they know they are not. It is practically impossible for them to
-acquire any standards in matters of scholarship, and they are thus
-forcibly thrown back on that which they know very well, the sports, and
-social life among themselves. A Chinese friend of mine once quaintly
-defined an American university as an athletic association in which
-certain opportunities for study were provided for the feeble-bodied.
-Now, in athletics and social life, the student finds something that
-is real, and therefore is an education: there is no pretence or fraud
-about football, and in their institutions within the college and the
-university the students obey certain standards and rules which are
-not as clearly justified as those of athletics, but still are made by
-themselves, and therefore readily understood. They are standards and
-rules that sometimes strangely resemble those of primitive society,
-as it is only too natural when the ground on which they grow is a
-community of the very young only, and yet undoubtedly they are a
-preparation for a life after college in which similar features are
-very far from being the exception. And besides, that social life
-has a freedom and beauty of its own, evident in one at least of its
-most hallowed institutions, the dance. American dances, with those
-captivating and vital rhythms which American music has appropriated
-for itself from the Negro, are a perfect expression of the mere joy
-of life. The older generations are shocked and mystified by these
-dances, and also by many other ways and by the implicit opinions of
-the young; but so they have been in all ages and countries. To a
-curious and passionate observer, the youth of America seems to be
-obscurely labouring at a liberation of the sexual life from pretences
-and unjustified inhibitions, and, through an original experience of
-the elements of love, at a creation of new values, perhaps of a new
-morality.
-
-But the student is an object of perplexity and wonder to the professor,
-who generally ends by taking very seriously, very literally, as
-something that cannot be changed, his attitude towards athletics and
-the social life of the college. Starting from such an assumption,
-the professor becomes shy of teaching; that is, he keeps for himself
-whatever true intellectual and spiritual interests he may have, and
-deals out to the students in the classroom rations of knowledge, which
-go up to form a complicated system of units and credits symbolizing
-the process of education. There is, to my mind, no more tragic
-misunderstanding in American life.
-
-My own experience (and I give it for what it is worth) tells me that
-athletics and the social life are vicarious satisfactions for much
-deeper spiritual and intellectual needs. The student receives from
-the common American tradition a desire for spiritual values; from his
-individual reaction to that tradition, a craving for intellectual
-clarity. But he is handicapped by his scholastic unpreparedness, and
-disillusioned by the aloofness of the professor, by the intricacies
-and aridity of the curriculum: by the fact, only too evident to him,
-that what he is given is not science or thought, but their scholastic
-version. Whenever a man stands before him, and without trying to “put
-himself at his level,” talks to him as one talks to a man, thinking for
-him as one thinks for oneself, there is no more ready and enthusiastic
-response to be had than from the American student. He is not afraid of
-the difficulties or dangers, but he must trust his guide, and know that
-his guide trusts him. There is evidence for this in the cases which are
-too frequent to be called mere exceptions, of those American professors
-who are truly popular in the colleges and universities. But until many
-more of them realize what splendid material is in their hands, what big
-thirst there is for them to quench, and go back to their work with this
-new faith, the gulf will not be bridged, and young America will have
-to attempt to solve her own problems without the help of the spiritual
-experience of the centuries.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This condition in the institutions of higher learning is a symbol and a
-mirror of the condition of the country. With an impoverished religious
-tradition, with an imperfect knowledge of the power of intellect,
-America is starving for religious and intellectual truth. No other
-country in the world has, as the phrase goes, a heart more full of
-service: a heart that is constantly _quaerens quem amet_. With the war,
-and after the war, America has wished to dedicate herself to the world,
-and has only withdrawn from action when she has felt that she could not
-trust her leaders, what was supposed to be her mind.
-
-In a few years, the children of the recent millions of immigrants
-from all regions of Europe will come forward in American life and ask
-for their share in the common inheritance of American tradition, in
-the common work of American civilization. They will not have much to
-contribute directly from their original cultures, but they will add an
-unexampled variety of bloods, of intellectual and moral temperaments,
-to the population of America. Their Americanization, in habits and
-language and manners, is a natural process which, left to itself,
-invariably takes place in the second generation. America must clarify
-and intensify her tradition, the moral discipline of the Puritan,
-the moral enthusiasm of the Discoverers and Pioneers, for them, and
-they will gladly embrace her heritage; but this clarification and
-intensification is only possible through the revision of the original
-values in the light of the central humanistic tradition of European
-thought.
-
-The dreams of the European founders of this Commonwealth of Utopia may
-yet come true, in the way in which human dreams come true, by becoming
-the active, all-pervading motive of spiritual effort, the substance
-of life. Exiles, voluntary or forced, from England and Ireland, from
-Russia and Italy, from Germany and Israel, children of one mother,
-unified in America as they will not be unified for centuries to come
-in Europe, will thus have a chance to anticipate, in the _civilitas
-americana_, the future developments of the _humana civilitas_.
-
-And if this generation needs a motto, I would suggest one line of Dante:
-
- _luce intellettual piena d’amore_:
- the light of intellect, in the fulness of love.
-
- RAFFAELLO PICCOLI
-
-
-
-
-BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES
-
-
-THE CITY
-
-There is no adequate literature of cities in America. Some of the
-larger cities possess guide-books and local histories; but the most
-valuable illuminations on the history and development of the American
-city lie buried in contemporary papers, narratives of travel, and
-speeches. The reader who wishes to explore the ground farther should
-dip into volumes and papers drawn from all periods. The recent editions
-of “Valentine’s Manual” should be interesting to those who cannot
-consult the original “Manual of the Common Council of New York.”
-During the last twenty years a great many reports and surveys have
-been printed, by city planning commissions and other bodies: these are
-valuable both for showing the limitations of the established régime
-and for giving hints of the forces that are working, more or less,
-for improvement. “The Pittsburgh Survey” (Russell Sage Foundation) is
-the great classic in this field. A compendious summary of American
-city developments during the last generation is contained in Charles
-Zueblin’s “American Municipal Progress” (Macmillan). Standing by
-itself in this literature is a very able book by Paul Harlan Douglass,
-called “The Little Town,” published by Macmillan. (A book which
-shall deal similarly with the Great Town is badly needed.) The best
-general approach to the city is that of Professor Patrick Geddes in
-“Cities in Evolution” (Williams and Norgate, London.) Those who are
-acquainted with Professor Geddes’s “A Study in City Development” or his
-contributions to “Sociological Papers” (Macmillan, 1905, 1906, 1907)
-will perhaps note my debt to him: I hasten heartily to acknowledge
-this, as well as my debt, by personal intercourse, to his colleague,
-Mr. Victor V. Branford. If the lay reader can learn nothing else
-from Professor Geddes, he can learn the utility of throwing aside
-the curtains of second-hand knowledge and studying cities and social
-institutions by direct observation. The inadequacy of American civic
-literature will not be altogether a handicap if it forces the reader to
-obtain by personal explorations impressions which he would otherwise
-get through the blur of the printed page. Every city and its region
-is in a sense an exhibition of natural and social history. Let the
-reader walk the streets of our cities, as through the halls of a
-museum, and use the books that have been suggested only as so many
-tickets and labels. Americans have a reputation in Europe as voracious
-sightseers. One wonders what might not happen if Americans started to
-see the sights at home--not the Grand Canyon and the Yosemite, but a
-“Broadway,” and its back alleys, and the slums and suburbs that stretch
-beyond. If observation led to criticism, and criticism to knowledge,
-where might not knowledge lead?
-
- L. M.
-
-
-POLITICS
-
-The standard works on the history of American politics are so well
-known (and so few) that they scarcely need mention. Bryce, Ostrogorski
-and de Tocqueville, I assume, have been read by all serious students,
-as have also such personal memoirs as those of Blaine and John Sherman.
-Bryce’s work is a favourite, but it suffers from the disingenuousness
-of the man. Dr. Charles A. Beard’s “Economic Interpretation of the
-Constitution” is less a complete treatise than a prospectus of a
-history that is yet to be written. As far as I know, the valuable
-suggestions in his preface have never inspired any investigation of
-political origins by other American historians, most of whom are simply
-unintelligent school-teachers, as their current “histories” of the
-late war well show. All such inquiries are blocked by the timorousness
-and stupidity that are so characteristic of American scholarship. Our
-discussion of politics, like our discussion of economics, deals chiefly
-with superficialities. Both subjects need ventilation by psychologists
-not dependent upon college salaries, and hence free to speak. Certainly
-the influence of religious enthusiasm upon American politics deserves
-a careful study; nevertheless, I have never been able to find a book
-upon it. Again, there is the difficult question of the relations
-between politics and journalism. My belief is that the rising power of
-newspapers has tended to drive intelligent and self-respecting men out
-of politics, for the newspapers are chiefly operated by cads and no
-such man wants to be at their mercy. But that sort of thing is never
-studied in the United States. We even lack decent political biography,
-so common in England. The best light to be obtained upon current
-politics is in the _Congressional Record_. It costs $1.50 a month and
-is well worth it. Soon or late the truth gets into the _Record_; it
-even got there during the war. But it seldom gets into the newspapers
-and it never gets into books.
-
- H. L. M.
-
-
-JOURNALISM
-
-I know of no quite satisfactory book on American journalism. “History
-of Journalism in the United States” by George Henry Payne and “History
-of American Journalism” by James Melvin Lee are fairly good in their
-treatment of the past, but neither of them shows any penetration in
-analyzing present conditions. The innocence of Mr. Payne may be judged
-by his opinion that the Kansas City _Star_, under Nelson, exemplifies
-a healthier kind of “reform journalism” than the _Post_ under Godkin!
-“Liberty and the News” by Walter Lippmann is suggestive, but it does
-not pretend to contain any specific information. More specific in
-naming names and giving modern instances is a short essay by Hamilton
-Holt, “Commercialism and Journalism.” “The Brass Check” by Upton
-Sinclair contains much valuable material, and perhaps what I have said
-of it does not do it justice; certainly it should be read by everybody
-interested in this subject. Will Irwin published in _Collier’s Weekly_
-from January to July, 1911, a valuable series of articles, “The
-American Newspaper: A Study of Journalism.” I cannot find that these
-articles have been reprinted in book form. There is some information
-in autobiographies and biographies of important journalists, such as
-“Recollections of a Busy Life” by Horace Greeley, “Life of Whitelaw
-Reid” by Royal Cortissoz, “Life and Letters of E. L. Godkin” by
-Rollo Ogden, “Life of Charles A. Dana” by J. H. Wilson, “Life and
-Letters of John Hay” by William Roscoe Thayer, “An Adventure with
-Genius: Recollections of Joseph Pulitzer,” by Alleyne Ireland; also
-“The Story of the _Sun_” by Frank M. O’Brien. Biographies, however,
-celebrate persons and only indirectly explain institutions. A useful
-bibliography, which includes books and magazine articles, is “Daily
-Newspapers in U. S.” by Wieder Callie of the Wisconsin University
-School of Journalism. But after all the best source of information is
-the daily newspaper, if one knows how to read it--and read between the
-lines.
-
- J. M.
-
-
-THE LAW
-
-“Bryce’s Modern Democracies,” Chapter XLIII, is a recent survey of the
-American legal system; Raymond Fosdick, “American Police Systems,”
-Chapter I, states the operation of criminal law. For legal procedure,
-see Reginald Heber Smith, “Justice and the Poor,” published by the
-Carnegie Endowment for the Advancement of Teaching and dealing with
-legal aid societies and other methods of securing more adequate legal
-relief; Charles W. Eliot and others, “Efficiency in the Administration
-of Justice,” published by the National Economic League; Moorfield
-Storey, “The Reform of Legal Procedure;” and many other books and
-articles; the reports of the American and New York Bar Associations
-are of especial value. John H. Wigmore, “Evidence,” vol. V (1915
-edition) discusses recent progress; see his “Cases on Torts, Preface,”
-on substantive law. A very wide range of topics in American law,
-philosophical, historical, procedural, and substantive, is covered
-by the writings of Roscoe Pound, of which a list is given in “The
-Centennial History of the Harvard Law School.” The same book deals with
-many phases of legal education; see also “The Case Method in American
-Law Schools,” Josef Redlich, Carnegie Endowment. For the position of
-lawyers, the best book is, Charles Warren, “A History of the American
-Bar;” a recent discussion of their work is Simeon E. Baldwin, “The
-Young Man and the Law.” No one interested in this field should fail to
-read the “Collected Legal Papers of Justice Holmes;” see also John H.
-Wigmore, “Justice Holmes and the Law of Torts” and Felix Frankfurter,
-“The Constitutional Opinions of Justice Holmes,” both in the
-_Harvard Law Review_, April, 1916, and Roscoe Pound, “Judge Holmes’s
-Contributions to the Science of Law,” _ibid._, March, 1921. A valuable
-essay on Colonial legal history is Paul S. Reinsch, “English Common
-Law in the Early American Colonies.” A mass of material will be found
-in the law reviews, which are indexed through 1907 by Jones, “Index
-to Legal Periodicals,” 3 vols., and afterwards in the _Law Library
-Journal_, cumulative quarterly.
-
- Z. C., JR.
-
-
-EDUCATION
-
-The ideas contained in the article are so commonplace and of such
-general acceptance among educators that it is impossible to give
-specific authority for them. In addition to the articles mentioned,
-one of the latest by Dr. D. S. Miller, “The Great College Illusion”
-in the _New Republic_ for June 22, 1921, should be referred to. For
-the rest the report of the Committee of Ten of the National Education
-Association, and the reports of President Eliot and President Lowell
-of Harvard, President Meiklejohn of Amherst, and President Wilson of
-Princeton, may be cited, with the recognition that any such selection
-is invidious.
-
- R. M. L.
-
-
-SCHOLARSHIP AND CRITICISM
-
-There has been no really fundamental discussion of American scholarship
-or American criticism. Those who merely seek a good historical sketch
-of our older literary scholarship, along conventional lines, will
-find one in the fourth volume of the “Cambridge History of American
-Literature” that is at all events vastly superior to the similar
-chapters in the “Cambridge History of English Literature.” But more
-illuminating than any formal treatise are the comments on our scholarly
-ideals and methods in Emerson’s famous address on “The American
-Scholar,” in “The Education of Henry Adams,” and in the “Letters” of
-William James. The “Cambridge History of American Literature” contains
-no separate chapter on American criticism, and the treatment of
-individual critics is pathetically inadequate. The flavour of recent
-criticism may be savoured in Ludwig Lewisohn’s interesting anthology,
-“A Modern Book of Criticism,” where the most buoyant and “modern” of
-our younger men are set side by side with all their unacademic masters
-and compeers of the contemporary European world. All that can be said
-in favour of the faded moralism of the older American criticism is
-urged in an article on “The National Genius” in the _Atlantic Monthly_
-for January, 1921, the temper of which may be judged from this typical
-excerpt: “When Mr. Spingarn declares that beauty is not concerned with
-truth or morals or democracy, he makes a philosophical distinction
-which I have no doubt that Charles the Second would have understood,
-approved, and could, at need, have illustrated. But he says what the
-American schoolboy knows to be false to the history of beauty in
-this country. Beauty, whether we like it or not, has a heart full of
-service.” The case against the conservative and traditional type of
-criticism is presented with slapdash pungency in the two volumes of
-H. L. Mencken’s “Prejudices.” But any one can make out a case for
-himself by reading the work of any American classical scholar side by
-side with a book by Gilbert Murray, or any history of literature by an
-American side by side with Francesco de Sanctis’s “History of Italian
-Literature,” or the work of any American critic side by side with the
-books of the great critics of the world.
-
- J. E. S.
-
-
-SCHOOL AND COLLEGE LIFE
-
-The “distinguished Englishman” to whom the Martian refers is of course
-Viscount Bryce, whose “American Commonwealth” discusses the external
-aspects of our uniformity, the similarity of our buildings, cities,
-customs, and so on. Our spiritual unanimity has been most thoroughly
-examined by George Santayana, both in his earlier essays--as notably in
-“The Genteel Tradition”--and in his recent “Character and Opinion in
-the United States.”
-
-For all the welter of writing about our educational establishment,
-only infrequent and incidental consideration has been bestowed, either
-favourably or unfavourably, on its regimental effect. As custodians of
-a going concern, the educators have busied themselves with repairs and
-replacements to the machinery rather than with the right of way; and
-lay critics have pretty much confined themselves to selecting between
-machines whose slightly differing routes all lie in the same general
-direction. The exception that proves the rule is “Shackled Youth,” by
-Edward Yeomans.
-
-But undergraduate life in America has a genre of its own, the form
-of fiction known as “college stories.” Nearly every important school
-has at some time had written round it a collection of tales that
-exploit its peculiar legends, traditions, and customs--for the most
-part a chafing-dish literature of pranks, patter, and athletic prowess
-whose murky and often distorted reflection of student attitudes is
-quite incidental to its business of entertaining. Owen Johnson’s
-Lawrenceville stories--“The Prodigious Hickey,” “Tennessee Shad,” “The
-Varmint,” “The Humming Bird”--are the classics of preparatory school
-life. Harvard has “Pepper,” by H. E. Porter, “Harvard Episodes” and
-“The Diary of a Freshman,” by Charles Flandrau, and Owen Wister’s
-“Philosophy 4,” the best of all college yarns. Yale has the books
-of Ralph D. Paine and of others. The Western universities have such
-volumes as “Ann Arbor Tales,” by Karl Harriman, for Michigan, and
-“Maroon Tales,” by W. J. Cuppy, for Chicago. George Fitch writes
-amusingly about life in the smaller Western colleges in “Petey Simmons
-at Siwash” and “At Good Old Siwash.”
-
-The catalogue of serious college fiction is brief, and most of the
-novels are so propagandist that they are misrepresentative. For
-example, Owen Johnson’s “Stover at Yale,” which was some years out of
-date when it was published, misses the essential club spirit in New
-Haven by almost as wide a margin as Arthur Train’s “The World and
-Thomas Kelly” departs from the normal club life in Cambridge; both
-authors set up the straw man of snobbery where snobs are an unimportant
-minority. Two recent novels, however, deal more faithfully with
-the college scene for the very reason that their authors were more
-interested in character than in setting: “This Side of Paradise,” by
-Scott Fitzgerald, is true enough to have provoked endless controversy
-in Princeton; and “Salt: The Education of Griffith Adams,” by Charles
-G. Norris, is a memorable appraisal of student ideals in a typical
-co-educational institution. Dorothy Canfield’s “The Bent Twig” is
-also laid in a co-educational college. Booth Tarkington’s “Ramsay
-Milholland” attends a State University; and the hero of “Gold Shod,” by
-Newton Fuessle, is a revelatory failure of the University of Chicago
-regimen. To these add an autobiography--“An American in the Making,
-The Life Story of an Immigrant,” by M. E. Ravage, whose candid report
-on his fellows at the Missouri State University is a masterpiece of
-sympathetic criticism.
-
- C. B.
-
-
-THE INTELLECTUAL LIFE
-
-To attempt to give references to specific books on so general and
-inclusive a topic would be an impertinence. But one may legitimately
-suggest the trends of investigation one would like to see thoroughly
-explored. In my own case they would be: (1) a study of the pioneer from
-the point of view of his cultural and religious interests, correlating
-those interests with his general economic status; (2) a study of the
-revolutionary _feeling_ of America (not formulas) in psychological
-terms and of its duration as an emotional driving force; (3) a study of
-the effects of the post-Civil War period and the industrial expansion
-upon the position of upper-class women in the United States; (4) a
-study of sexual maladjustment in American family life, correlated
-again with the economic status of the successful pioneer; (5) a very
-careful study of the beginnings, rise, and spread of women’s clubs,
-and their purposes and accomplishments, correlated chronologically
-with the development of club life of men and the extent of vice,
-gambling, and drunkenness; (6) a study of American religions in more
-or less Freudian terms as compensations for neurotic maladjustment;
-(7) a study of instrumentalism in philosophy and its implications for
-reform; (8) a serious attempt to understand and appraise the more
-or less disorganized _jeunes_, with some attention to comparing the
-intensity of their bitterness or optimism with the places of birth and
-upbringing. No special study of American educational systems or of the
-school or college life would be necessary, it seems to me, beyond, of
-course, a general knowledge. The intellectual life of the nation, after
-all, has little relation to the academic life.
-
-When such special studies had been finished by sympathetic
-investigators, probably one of several writers could synthesize the
-results and give us a fairly definitive essay on the intellectual life
-of America. Such studies, however, have not yet been done, and without
-them I have had to write this essay to a certain extent _en plein air_.
-Thus it has been impossible entirely to avoid giving the impression of
-stating things dogmatically or intuitively. But as a matter of fact on
-all the topics I have suggested for study I have already given much
-thought and time, and consequently, whatever its literary form, the
-essay is not pure impressionism.
-
- H. E. S.
-
-
-SCIENCE
-
-There is no connected account of American achievement in science.
-Strangely enough, the most pretentious American book on the history
-of science, Sedgwick and Tyler’s “Short History of Science” (New
-York: Macmillan, 1917), ignores the most notable figures among the
-author’s countrymen. A useful biographical directory under the title of
-“American Men of Science” (New York Science Press, 1910, 2d edition),
-has been compiled by Professor James McKeen Cattell; a third revised
-edition has been prepared and issued this year prior to the appearance
-of the present volume.
-
-On the tendencies manifest in the United States there are several
-important papers. An address by Henry A. Rowland entitled “A Plea
-for Pure Science” (_Popular Science Monthly_, vol. LIX, 1901, pp.
-170–188), is still eminently worth reading. The external conditions
-under which American scientists labour have been repeatedly discussed
-in recent years in such journals as _Science_ and _School and
-Society_, both edited by Professor Cattell, who has himself appended
-very important discussions to the above-cited biographical lexicon.
-Against over-organization Professor William Morton Wheeler has recently
-published a witty and vigorous protest (“The Organization of Research,”
-_Science_, January 21, 1921, N. S. vol. LIII, pp. 53–67).
-
-In order to give an understanding of the essence of scientific activity
-the general reader cannot do better than to trace the processes by
-which the master-minds of the past have brought order into the chaos
-that is at first blush presented by the world of reality. In this
-respect the writings of the late Professor Ernst Mach are unsurpassed,
-and even the least mathematically trained layman can derive much
-insight from portions of his book “Die Mechanik” (Leipzig, 7th edition,
-1912), accessible in T. J. McCormack’s translation under the title of
-“The Science of Mechanics” (Chicago: Open Court Publishing Co.). The
-section on Galileo may be specially recommended. Mach’s “Erkenntnis
-und Irrtum” (Leipzig, 1906) contains most suggestive discussions of
-the psychology of investigation, dealing with such questions as the
-nature of a scientific problem, of experimentation, of hypothetical
-assumptions, etc. Much may also be learned from the general sections
-of P. Duhem’s “La theorie physique, son objet et sa structure” (Paris,
-1906). E. Duclaux’s “Pasteur: Histoire d’un Esprit” has fortunately
-been rendered accessible by Erwin F. Smith and Florence Hedges under
-the title “Pasteur, the History of a Mind” (Philadelphia; Saunders,
-1920). It reveals in masterly fashion the methods by which a great
-thinker overcomes not only external opposition but the more baneful
-obstacles of scientific folk-lore.
-
- R. H. L.
-
-
-PHILOSOPHY
-
-The omission of Mr. Santayana’s philosophy from the above account
-indicates no lack of appreciation of its merits. Although written
-at Harvard, it is hardly an American philosophy. On one hand, Mr.
-Santayana is free from the mystical religious longings that have
-given our Idealisms life, and on the other, he is too confident of
-the reality of culture and the value of the contemplative life to
-sanction that dominance of the practical which is the stronghold of
-instrumentalism.
-
-The only histories of American Philosophy are those by Professor
-Woodbridge Riley. His “Early Schools” (Dodd, Mead & Co., 1907), is a
-full treatment of the period in question, but his “American Thought
-from Puritanism to Pragmatism” (H. Holt, 1915) is better reading and
-comes down to date. These are best read in connection with some history
-of American Literature such as Barrett Wendell’s “Literary History
-of America” (Scribner’s Sons, 1914). Royce’s system is given in good
-condensed form in the last four chapters of his “Spirit of Modern
-Philosophy” (Houghton Mifflin, 1899). Its exhaustive statement is “The
-World and the Individual” (2 vols., Macmillan, 1900–1). The “Philosophy
-of Loyalty” (Macmillan, 1908) develops the ethics, and the “Problem of
-Christianity” (2 vols., Macmillan, 1913), relates his philosophy to
-Christianity. Hocking’s religious philosophy is given in his “Meaning
-of God in Human Experience” (Yale University Press, 1912). His general
-position is developed on one side in “Human Nature and Its Remaking”
-(Yale University Press, 1918). Anything of James is good reading. His
-chief work is the “Principles of Psychology” (H. Holt, 1890), but the
-“Talks to Teachers on Psychology and Some of Life’s Ideals” (H. Holt,
-1907) and the “Will to Believe” (Longmans, Green & Co., 1899), better
-illustrate his attitude toward life. “Pragmatism” (Longmans, Green
-& Co., 1907) introduces his technical philosophizing. His religious
-attitude can be got from the “Varieties of Religious Experience”
-(Longmans, Green & Co., 1902). Dewey has nowhere systematized his
-philosophy. Its technical points are exhibited in the “Essays in
-Experimental Logic” (University of Chicago Press, 1916). The “Influence
-of Darwin on Philosophy” (H. Holt, 1910) has two especially readable
-essays, one the title-essay, the other on “Intelligence and Morals.”
-The full statement of his ethics is the “Ethics” (Dewey and Tufts, H.
-Holt, 1908). He is at his best in “Education and Democracy” (Macmillan,
-1916). “German Philosophy and Politics” (H. Holt, 1915) is a war-time
-reaction giving an interesting point of view as to the significance
-of German Philosophy. “The New Realism” (Macmillan, 1912) is a volume
-of technical studies by the Six Realists. “Creative Intelligence”
-(H. Holt, 1917), by John Dewey and others, is a similar volume of
-pragmatic studies. The reviews are also announcing another co-operative
-volume, “Essays in Critical Realism” by Santayana, Lovejoy and others.
-In a technical fashion Perry has discussed the “Present Tendencies
-in Philosophy” (Longmans, Green & Co., 1912), but the best critical
-reaction to American philosophy is that of Santayana: “Character and
-Opinion in the United States” (Scribner’s Sons, 1920). Santayana’s own
-chief philosophic contributions are the “Sense of Beauty” (Scribner’s
-Sons, 1896), and the “Life of Reason” (5 vols., Scribner’s Sons,
-1905–6). The first two chapters of his “Winds of Doctrine” (Scribner’s
-Sons, 1913), on the “Intellectual Temper of the Age” and “Modernism and
-Christianity,” are also relevant. Brief but excellent expositions of
-Royce, Dewey, James, and Santayana by Morris R. Cohen have appeared in
-the _New Republic_, vols. XX-XXIII.
-
- H. C. B.
-
-
-LITERATURE
-
-Perhaps the most illuminating books for any one interested in the
-subject of the essay on literature are the private memorials of
-certain modern European writers. For a sense of everything the
-American literary life is _not_, one might read, for instance,
-the Letters of Ibsen, Dostoievsky, Chekhov, Flaubert, Taine and
-Leopardi--all of which have appeared, in whole or in part, in English.
-
- V. W. B.
-
-
-MUSIC
-
-What little there is that is worth reading concerning American music is
-scattered through magazine articles and chapters in books upon other
-musical subjects. Daniel Gregory Mason has a sensible and illuminating
-chapter, “Music in America,” in his “Contemporary Composers.” The
-section, “America,” in Chapter XVI of the Stanford-Forsyth “History of
-Music” contrives to be tactful and at the same time just. Two books
-that should be read by any one interested in native composition are
-Cecil Forsyth’s “Music and Nationalism” and Lawrence Gilman’s “Edward
-MacDowell.” Rupert Hughes’s “Contemporary American Composers” is twenty
-years old, but still interesting; it contains sympathetic--not to say
-glowing--accounts of the lives and works of an incredibly large number
-of Americans who do and did pursue the art of musical composition. To
-know what an artist means when he asks to be understood read pages 240
-and 241 of Cabell’s “Jurgen”--if you can get it; also the volume, “La
-Foire sur la Place,” of “Jean Christophe.”
-
- D. T.
-
-
-POETRY
-
-Bodenheim, Maxwell: “Minna and Myself” (Pagan Publishing Co.); “Advice”
-(Alfred A. Knopf).
-
-“H. D.”: “Sea-Garden” (Houghton Mifflin).
-
-Eliot, T. S.: “Poems” (Alfred A. Knopf).
-
-Fletcher, John Gould: “Irradiations: Sand and Spray” (Houghton
-Mifflin); “Goblins and Pagodas” (Houghton Mifflin); “The Tree of Life”
-(Macmillan); “Japanese Prints” (Four Seas Co.); “Breakers and Granite”
-(Macmillan).
-
-Frost, Robert: “North of Boston” (Holt); “A Boy’s Will” (Holt);
-“Mountain Interval” (Holt).
-
-Kreymborg, Alfred: “Plays for Poem-Mimes” (Others); “Blood of Things”
-(Nicholas Brown); “Plays for Merry Andrews” (Sunwise Turn).
-
-Lindsay, Vachel: “The Congo” (Macmillan); “The Chinese Nightingale”
-(Macmillan).
-
-Lowell, Amy: “Men, Women and Ghosts” (Houghton Mifflin); “Can Grande’s
-Castle” (Houghton Mifflin); “Pictures of the Floating World” (Houghton
-Mifflin); “Legends” (Houghton Mifflin).
-
-Masters, Edgar Lee: “Spoon River Anthology” (Macmillan); “The Great
-Valley” (Macmillan); “Domesday Book” (Macmillan).
-
-Pound, Ezra: “Umbra” (Elkin Matthews); “Lustra” (Alfred A. Knopf).
-
-Robinson, Edwin Arlington: “Children of the Night” (Scribners);
-“The Town Down the River” (Scribners); “The Man Against the Sky”
-(Macmillan); “Merlin” (Macmillan); “Captain Craig” (Macmillan); “The
-Three Taverns” (Macmillan); “Avon’s Harvest” (Macmillan); “Lancelot”
-(Scott and Seltzer).
-
-Sandburg, Carl: “Smoke and Steel” (Harcourt, Brace & Co.).
-
-Stevens, Wallace: See “The New Poetry;” “Others” Anthology.
-
-Teasdale, Sara: “Rivers to the Sea” (Macmillan).
-
-Untermeyer, Louis: “The New Adam” (Harcourt, Brace & Co.); “Including
-Horace” (Harcourt, Brace & Co.).
-
-Anthologies: “The New Poetry.” Edited by Harriet Monroe and Alice
-Corbin Henderson (Macmillan); “An American Miscellany” (Harcourt, Brace
-& Co.); “Others for 1919” edited by Alfred Kreymborg (A. A. Knopf);
-“Some Imagist Poets” First, Second and Third Series (Houghton Mifflin).
-
-Criticism: Untermeyer, Louis, “The New Era in American Poetry” (Henry
-Holt), a comprehensive, lively, but sometimes misleading survey.
-
- C. A.
-
-
-ART
-
-The reader may obtain most of the data on the history of American
-art from Samuel Isham’s “History of American Painting,” and Charles
-H. Caffin’s “Story of American Painting.” Very little writing of an
-analytical nature has been devoted to American art, and nearly all of
-it is devoid of a sense of perspective and of anything approaching a
-realization of the position that American work holds in relation to
-that of Europe. Outside of the writing that is only incompetent, there
-are the books and articles by men whose purpose is to “boost” the home
-product for nationalistic or commercial reasons. In contrast with all
-this is Mr. Roger E. Fry’s essay on Ryder, in the _Burlington Magazine_
-for April, 1908--a masterful appreciation of the artist.
-
- W. P.
-
-
-THE THEATRE
-
-The bibliography of this subject is extensive, but in the main
-unilluminating. It consists chiefly in a magnanimous waving aside of
-what is, and an optimistic dream of what is to be. Into this category
-fall most, if not all, of the many volumes written by the college
-professors and such of their students as have, upon graduation, carried
-with them into the world the college-professor manner of looking at
-things. Nevertheless, Professor William Lyon Phelps’ “The Twentieth
-Century Theatre,” for all its deviations from fact, and Professor
-Thomas H. Dickinson’s “The Case of American Drama,” may be looked
-into by the more curious. Mr. Arthur Ruhl’s “Second Nights,” with its
-penetrating humour, contains several excellent pictures of certain
-phases of the native theatre. Section IV of Mr. Walter Prichard Eaton’s
-“Plays and Players,” Mr. George Bronson-Howard’s searching series of
-papers entitled, “What’s Wrong with the Theatre,” and perhaps even Mr.
-George Jean Nathan’s “The Popular Theatre,” “The Theatre, The Drama,
-The Girls,” “Comedians All,” and “Mr. George Jean Nathan Presents” may
-throw some light upon the subject. Miss Akins’ “Papa” and all of Mr.
-O’Neill’s plays are available in book form. The bulk of inferior native
-dramaturgy is similarly available to the curious-minded: there are
-hundreds of these lowly specimens on view in the nearest book store.
-
- G. J. N.
-
-
-ECONOMIC OPINION
-
-The literature of economic opinion in America is almost as voluminous
-as the printed word. It ranges from the ponderous treatises of
-professed economists, wherein “economic laws” are printed in italics,
-to the sophisticated novels of the self-elect, in which economic
-opinion is a by-product of clever conversation. Not only can one find
-economic opinion to his taste, but he can have it in any form he likes.
-Perhaps the most human and reasonable application of the philosophy
-of laissez-faire to the problems of industrial society is to be found
-in the pages of W. G. Sumner. Of particular interest are the essays
-contained in the volumes entitled “Earth Hunger,” “The Challenge of
-Facts,” and “The Forgotten Man.” The most subtle and articulate account
-of the economic order as an automatic, self-regulating mechanism
-is J. B. Clark, “The Distribution of Wealth.” An able and readable
-treatise, characterized alike by a modified classical approach and
-by a recognition of the facts of modern industrial society, is F. W.
-Taussig, “The Principles of Economics.” The “case for capitalism”
-has never been set forth as an articulate whole. The theoretical
-framework of the defence is to be found in any of the older treatises
-upon economic theory. A formal _apologia_ is to be found in the last
-chapter of almost every text upon economics under some such title
-as “A Critique of the Existing Order,” “Wealth and Welfare,” or
-“Economic Progress.” A defence of “what is,” whatever it may chance
-to be, characterized alike by brilliancy and ignorance, is P. E.
-More’s “Aristocracy and Justice.” Contemporary opinion favourable to
-capitalism may be found, in any requisite quantity and detail, in
-_The Wall Street Journal_, _The Commercial and Financial Chronicle_,
-and the publications of the National Association of Manufacturers.
-_The Congressional Record_, a veritable treasure house of economic
-fallacy, presents fervent pleas both for an unqualified capitalism
-and for capitalism with endless modifications. The literature of the
-economics of “control” is beginning to be large. The essay by H. C.
-Adams, “The Relation of the State to Industrial Activity,” elaborating
-the thesis that the function of the state is to regulate “the plane of
-competition,” has become a classic. The best account of the economic
-opinion of organized labour is to be found in R. F. Hoxie, “Trade
-Unionism in the United States.” Typical examples of excellent work done
-by men who do not profess to be economists are W. Lippmann, “Drift and
-Mastery,” the opinions (often dissenting) delivered by Mr. Justice
-Holmes and Mr. Justice Brandeis, of the United States Supreme Court,
-and the articles frequently contributed to periodicals by T. R. Powell
-upon the constitutional aspects of economic questions. The appearance
-of such studies as the brief for the shorter working day in the case
-of _Bunting v. Oregon_, prepared by F. Frankfurter and J. Goldmark,
-and of the “Report on the Steel Strike of 1919,” by the Commission
-of Inquiry of the Interchurch World Movement indicates that we are
-beginning to base our opinions and our policies upon “the facts.” Among
-significant contributions are the articles appearing regularly in
-such periodicals as _The New Republic_ and _The Nation_. At last the
-newer economics of the schools is beginning to assume the form of an
-articulate body of doctrine. The books of T. B. Veblen, particularly
-“The Theory of Business Enterprise,” and “The Instinct of Workmanship,”
-contain valuable pioneer studies. In “Personal Competition” and in the
-chapters upon “Valuation” in “Social Process,” C. H. Cooley has shown
-how economic institutions are to be treated. The newer economics,
-however, begins with the publication in 1913 of W. C. Mitchell,
-“Business Cycles.” This substitutes an economics of process for one of
-statics and successfully merges theoretical and statistical inquiry. It
-marks the beginning of a new era in the study of economics. The work
-in general economic theory has followed the leads blazed by Veblen,
-Cooley, and Mitchell. W. H. Hamilton, in “Current Economic Problems,”
-elaborates a theory of the control of industrial development,
-interspersed with readings from many authors. L. C. Marshal, in
-“Readings in Industrial Society,” attempts, through selections drawn
-from many sources, an appraisal of the institutions which together make
-up the economic order. D. Friday, in “Profits, Wages, and Prices,”
-shows how much meaning a few handfuls of figures contain and how much
-violence they can do to established principles. The National Bureau
-of Economic Research is soon to publish the results of a careful
-and thorough statistical inquiry into the division of income in the
-United States. Upon particular subjects such as trusts, tariffs,
-railroads, labour unions, etc., the literature is far too large to be
-catalogued here. There is no satisfactory history of economic opinion
-in the United States. T. B. Veblen’s “The Place of Science in Modern
-Civilization” contains a series of essays which constitute the most
-convincing attack upon the classical system and which point the way to
-an institutional economics. Many articles dealing with the development
-of economic doctrines are to be found in the files of _The Quarterly
-Journal of Economics_ and of _The Journal of Political Economy_.
-An excellent statement of the present situation in economics is an
-unpublished essay by W. C. Mitchell, “The Promise of Economic Science.”
-
- W. H. H.
-
-
-RADICALISM
-
-For exposition of the leading radical theories the reader is urged to
-go, not to second-hand authorities, but to their foremost advocates.
-“Capital” by Karl Marx (Charles H. Kerr) is of course the chief basis
-of Socialism. There is nothing better on Anarchism than the article in
-the “Encyclopedia Britannica” by Prince Kropotkin. For revolutionary
-industrial unionism it is important to know “Speeches and Editorials”
-by Daniel de Leon (New York Labor News Co.). De Leon was one of
-the founders of the I.W.W., and his ideas not only influenced the
-separatist labour movements in the United States but the shop-steward
-movement in England and the Soviets of Russia. “Guild Socialism” by
-G. D. H. Cole is the best statement of this recent theory, while “The
-State and Revolution” by Nikolai Lenin (George Allen and Unwin)
-explains the principles and tactics of modern Communism. To these
-should be added another classic, “Progress and Poverty” by Henry George
-(Doubleday Page).
-
-On the origins of the American government it is important to
-read “Economic Origins of Jeffersonian Democracy” and “Economic
-Interpretation of the Constitution” by Charles A. Beard (Macmillan).
-
-The “History of Trade Unionism” by Sidney and Beatrice Webb (Longmans,
-Green), is an invaluable account of the growth of the British labour
-movement, which has many similarities to our own. “Industrial
-Democracy” by the same authors, issued by the same publisher, is the
-best statement of the theories of trade unionism. The “History of Labor
-in the United States” by John R. Commons and associates (Macmillan), is
-a scholarly work, while “Trade Unionism in the United States” by Robert
-F. Hoxie (Appleton), is a more analytical treatment. “The I. W. W.” by
-Paul F. Brissenden (Longmans, Green), is a full documentary history.
-Significant recent tendencies are recorded in “The New Unionism in
-the Clothing Industry” by Budish and Soule (Harcourt, Brace). The
-last chapters of “The Great Steel Strike” by William Z. Foster (B. W.
-Huebsch), expound his interesting interpretation of the trade unions.
-
-For a statement of the functional attitude toward public problems one
-should read “Authority, Liberty and Function” by Ramiro de Maeztu (Geo.
-Allen and Unwin). For a brief and readable application of this attitude
-to economics, “The Acquisitive Society” by R. H. Tawney (Harcourt,
-Brace), is to be recommended.
-
-“Modern Social Movements” by Savel Zimand (H. W. Wilson), is an
-authoritative guidebook to present radical movements throughout the
-world, and contains an excellent bibliography. And we must not forget
-the voluminous Report of the New York State Legislative Committee on
-Radicalism (the Lusk Committee), which not only collects a wealth of
-current radical literature, but offers an entertaining and instructive
-example of the current American attitude toward such matters.
-
- G. S.
-
-
-THE SMALL TOWN
-
-Bibliography: “A Hoosier Holiday,” by Theodore Dreiser. “Winesburg,
-Ohio,” by Sherwood Anderson. “Main Street,” by Sinclair Lewis.
-
- L. R. R.
-
-
-HISTORY
-
-The late Henry Adams had much in common with Samuel Butler, that other
-seeker after an education. He knew that he had written a very good
-book (his studies on American history were quite as excellent in their
-way as “Erewhon” was in a somewhat different genre) and he was equally
-aware of the sad fact that his work was not being read. In view of
-the general public indifference towards history it is surprising how
-much excellent work has been done. Three names suggest themselves when
-history in America is mentioned, Robinson, Beard, and Breasted. Their
-works for the elementary schools have not been surpassed in any country
-and their histories (covering the entire period from ancient Egypt down
-to the present time) will undoubtedly help to overcome the old and
-firmly established prejudice that “history is dull” and will help to
-create a new generation which shall prefer a good biography or history
-to the literature of our current periodicals.
-
-The group of essays published last year by Professor Robinson--the
-pioneer of our modern historical world--under the title of “The New
-History” contains several papers of a pleasantly suggestive nature and
-we especially recommend “History for the Common Man” for those who want
-to investigate the subject in greater detail, and “The New Allies of
-History” for those who want to get an idea of the struggle that goes on
-between the New and the Old Movements in our contemporary historical
-world.
-
-But it is impossible to suggest a three- four- or five-foot bookshelf
-for those who desire to understand the issues of the battle that is
-taking place. The warfare between the forces of the official School
-and University History and those who have a vision of something quite
-different is merely a part of the great social and economic and
-spiritual struggle that has been going on ever since the days of the
-Encyclopedists. The scene is changing constantly. The leaders hardly
-know what is happening. The soldiers who do the actual fighting are too
-busy with the work at hand to waste time upon academic discussions of
-the Higher Strategy. And the public will have to do what the public did
-during the great war--study the reports from all sides (the relevant
-and the irrelevant--the news from Helsingfors-by-way-of-Geneva and from
-Copenhagen-by-way-of Constantinople) and use its own judgment as to the
-probable outcome of the conflict.
-
- H. W. V. L.
-
-
-SEX
-
-As might be supposed, there has been little writing on sex in this
-country--such discussion, more or less superficial, of the social
-aspects as may be found in books on the family, on marriage or
-prostitution, some quasi-medical treatises and of late a few books
-along the lines of Freudian psychology, that is all. Among all the
-organizations of the country there is no society corresponding to
-the British Society for the Study of Sex. I doubt if such a society
-or its publications would be tolerated, since even novelists who,
-like Dreiser, express an interest in sex comparatively directly, run
-afoul of public opinion, and a book such as “Women in Love” by D. H.
-Lawrence, its publisher felt called upon to print without his name.
-
-It is not surprising, therefore, that in English the most adequate
-discussions of sex have been made by an Englishman, Havelock
-Ellis--“Studies in the Psychology of Sex.” Among less well known
-writing on the subject by Ellis I would note in particular an
-illuminating page or two in his essay on Casanova (“Affirmations”).
-
-Discussion of the theories of distinguishing between mating and
-parenthood and of crisis psychology may be found in articles by the
-writer in the _International Journal of Ethics_, July, 1915, January,
-1916, October, 1917, and in _The American Anthropologist_, March, 1916,
-and _The Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods_,
-March, 1918.
-
-“The Behaviour of Crowds” by E. D. Martin, and “French Ways and
-Their Meaning” by Edith Wharton are recent books that the reader of
-a comparative turn of mind will find of interest, and if he is not
-already familiar with the writings of the Early Christian Fathers I
-commend to him some browsing in the “Ante-Nicene Christian Library” and
-the “Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers.”
-
- E. C. P.
-
-
-THE FAMILY
-
-For statistical facts which have a bearing on the tendencies of the
-family in the United States, the following group of sources has been
-consulted:
-
-“Abstract of the Census, 1910;” the preliminary sheets of the “Census
-of 1920;” Report on “Marriage and Divorce in 1916,” published by
-the Bureau of the Census; Bulletin of the Woman’s Bureau, U. S.
-Department of Labour on “What Became of Women Who Went Into War
-Industries;” Bulletin of the U. S. Department of Agriculture on “The
-Farm Woman;” Bulletin of the U. S. Children’s Bureau on “Standards
-of Child Welfare.” Economic aspects of the family and income data
-were acquired from “Conditions of Labour in American Industries,” by
-Edgar Sydenstricker, and “The Wealth and Income of the People of the
-United States,” by Willford I. King. For facts concerning longevity,
-the aid of the Census was supplemented by “The Trend of Longevity in
-the United States,” by C. H. Forsyth, in the _Journal of the American
-Statistical Association_, Vol. 128. For the long biological perspective
-to counteract the near-sighted view of the Census, “The New Stone Age
-in Northern Europe,” by John M. Tyler may be commended. Psychological
-aspects of family relationships are discussed in a scientific and
-stimulating way in the published “Proceedings of the International
-Women Physicians’ Conference, 1919.”
-
- K. A.
-
-
-RACIAL MINORITIES
-
-No author or group of authors has yet attempted to treat in any
-systematic and comprehensive way the position and the problem of the
-several racial minorities in the United States. A perfect bibliography
-of existing materials on the subject would be most helpful, but it
-could not make good the existing shortage of fact, and of thoughtful
-interpretation.
-
-The anthropological phase of the subject is discussed with authority
-by Franz Boas in “The Mind of Primitive Man” (Macmillan, 1913), and
-by Robert H. Lowie in “Culture and Ethnology” (McMurtrie, 1917). Some
-information on racial inter-marriage is to be found in Drachsler’s
-“Democracy and Assimilation--The Blending of Immigrant Heritages in
-America” (Macmillan, 1920). Among recent reports of psychological
-tests of race-difference, the following are of special interest: “A
-Study of Race Differences in New York City,” by Katherine Murdock,
-(_School and Society_, vol. XI, no. 266, p. 147, 31 January, 1920);
-“Racial Differences in Mental Fatigue,” by Thomas R. Garth (_Journal
-of Applied Psychology_, vol. IV, nos. 2 and 3, p. 235, June-Sept.
-1920); “A Comparative Study in the Intelligence of White and Colored
-Children,” by R. A. Schwegler and Edith Winn (_Journal of Educational
-Research_, vol. II, no. 5, p. 838, December, 1920); “The Intelligence
-of Negro Recruits,” by M. R. Trabue (_Natural History_, vol. XIX, no.
-6, p. 680, 1919); “The Intelligence of Negroes at Camp Lee, Virginia,”
-by George Oscar Ferguson, Jr. (_School and Society_, vol. IX, no. 233,
-p. 721, 14 June, 1919); and the Government’s official report of all the
-psychological tests given in the cantonments (“Memoirs of the National
-Academy of Science,” vol. XV, Washington, Government Printing Office,
-1921).
-
-The most important single source of information on the present status
-of the coloured race in the United States is “The Negro Year Book,”
-edited by Monroe N. Work (Negro Year Book Pub. Co., Tuskegee Institute,
-Alabama); the edition for 1918–19 contains an extensive bibliography.
-Brawley’s “Short History of the American Negro” (Macmillan, rev. ed.,
-1919) presents in text-book form a general narrative, together with
-supplementary chapters on such topics as religion and education among
-the Negroes. The Government report on “Negro Population, 1790–1915”
-(Washington, Bureau of the Census, Government Printing Office, 1918),
-is invaluable. Important recent developments are treated in “Negro
-Migration in 1916–17” and “The Negro at Work During the World War and
-During Reconstruction” (Washington, Dep’t of Labour, 1919 and 1920
-respectively). Some notion of the various manifestations of prejudice
-against the Negro may be gathered from the following sources: “Negro
-Education” (_U. S. Bureau of Education Bulletin_, 1916, nos. 38 and
-39); “The White and the Colored Schools of Virginia as Measured by the
-Ayres Index,” by George Oscar Ferguson, Jr. (_School and Society_, vol.
-XII, no. 297, p. 170, 4 Sept., 1920); “Thirty Years of Lynching in the
-United States, 1889–1918,” and “Disfranchisement of Colored Americans
-in the Presidential Election of 1920” (New York, National Association
-for the Advancement of Coloured People, 1919 and 1921 respectively).
-A few representative expressions from the Negroes themselves are: “Up
-from Slavery, an Autobiography,” by Booker T. Washington (Doubleday,
-1901); “Darkwater,” by W. E. Burghardt Du Bois (Harcourt, 1920); _The
-Messenger_ (a Negro Socialist-syndicalist magazine, 2305 Seventh
-Avenue, New York); and the “Universal Negro Catechism” (Universal Negro
-Improvement Association, 56 West 135th Street, New York).
-
-A great body of valuable information on the Indians is collected in two
-publications of the Government, the second of which contains a very
-extensive bibliography; “Indian Population in the United States and
-Alaska, 1910” (Washington, Bureau of the Census, Government Printing
-Office, 1915), and the “Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico,”
-edited by Frederick Webb Hodge (Washington, Bureau of Ethnology,
-Government Printing Office, 1907–10, 2 vols.). An annual report
-containing current data on the status of the Indian is published by
-the Commissioner of Indian Affairs. Francis Ellington Leupp, who held
-this title from 1905 to 1909, was the author of a volume which presents
-in popular form the results of official experience (“The Indian and His
-Problem,” Scribner, 1910).
-
-The “American Jewish Year Book” (Philadelphia, Jewish Publication
-Society of America) is an extremely useful volume, and particularly
-so because one must refer to it for statistical information which in
-the case of the other racial minorities is available in the reports
-of the national census. In the _American Magazine_ for April, 1921,
-Harry Schneiderman, the editor of the “Year Book,” assembles a great
-many facts bearing upon the relation of the Jews to the economic,
-social, political, and intellectual life of the country (“The Jews of
-the United States,” p. 24). Of special interest to students of the
-Semitic problem is Berkson’s “Theories of Americanization; a Critical
-Study with Special Reference to the Jewish Group” (Teachers’ College,
-Columbia University, 1920).
-
-The standard works on the Oriental question are Coolidge’s “Chinese
-Immigration” (Holt, 1909), and Millis’s “Japanese Problem in the United
-States” (Macmillan, 1915). The Japanese problem in California is
-treated statistically in a booklet prepared recently by the State Board
-of Control (“California and the Oriental,” Sacramento, State Printing
-Office, 1920), and in a symposium which appeared in _The Pacific
-Review_ for December, 1920 (Seattle, University of Washington).
-
- G. T. R.
-
-
-ADVERTISING
-
-Expect from me no recommendation of the “scientific” treatises on
-advertising or of the professional psychological analyses of the
-instincts. Books, books in tons, have been written about advertising,
-and as far as I am concerned, every single one of them is right. Read
-these, if you have the hardihood, and remain mute. Read them, I should
-say, and be eternally damned. Read them and retire rapidly to a small
-room comfortably padded and securely locked.
-
- J. T. S.
-
-
-BUSINESS
-
-Within the limits of this space anything like an adequate reference
-to the source books of fact and thought is impossible. All that
-may be attempted is to suggest an arbitrary way through the whole
-of the subject--a thoroughfare from which the reader may take off
-where he will as his own interests develop. For the foundations of an
-economic understanding one needs only to read “Principles of Political
-Economy,” by Simon Newcomb, the American astronomer, who in a mood
-of intellectual irritation inclined his mind to this mundane matter
-and produced the finest book of its kind in the world. For the rough
-physiognomy of American economic phenomena there is “A Century of
-Population Growth,” Bureau of the Census, 1909, a splendid document
-prepared under the direction of S. N. D. North. Katharine Coman’s
-“Industrial History of the United States” is an important work in
-itself and contains, besides, an excellent and full bibliography.
-“Crises and Depressions” and “Corporations and the State,” by Theodore
-E. Burton; “Forty Years of American Finance,” by Alexander D. Noyes;
-“Railroad Transportation, Its History and Its Laws,” by A. T. Hadley;
-“Trusts, Pools and Corporations,” by Wm. Z. Ripley; and “The Book of
-Wheat,” by Peter Tracy Dondlinger, are books in which the separate
-phases indicated by title are essentially treated. For dissertation,
-interpretation, and universal thought every student will find himself
-deeply indebted to “Trade Morals, Their Origin, Growth and Province,”
-by Edward D. Page; “The Economic Interpretation of History,” by James
-E. Thorold Rogers; “History of the New World Called America,” by E. J.
-Payne; “Economic Studies,” by Walter Bagehot; “Essays in Finance,”
-by R. Giffen; “Recent Economic Changes,” by David A. Wells, and “The
-Challenge of Facts and Other Essays,” by William Graham Sumner.
-
- G. G.
-
-
-ENGINEERING
-
-Literature covering the function of the engineer in society, especially
-in America, is very limited compared with books of information on
-most subjects. Engineering activities such as are usually described
-cover the technical achievements of the profession. Useful material,
-however, will be found scattered throughout the technical literature
-and engineering society proceedings especially among the addresses
-and articles of leading engineers prepared for special occasions. A
-comprehensive history of engineering has never been written, although
-there are many treatises dealing with particular developments in this
-field. Among these may be mentioned Bright’s “Engineering Science,
-1837–1897”; Matschoss’s “Beiträge zur Geschichte der Technik und
-Industrie” (“Jahrbuch des Vereines deutscher Ingenieure”); and Smiles’s
-“Lives of the Engineers.” On engineering education, the “Proceedings of
-the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education” and Bulletin
-No. 11 of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching,
-“A Study of Engineering Education,” by Charles R. Mann, offer useful
-information. Concerning the status of the engineer in the economic
-order, Taussig’s “Inventors and Money Makers,” Veblen’s “The Engineers
-and the Price System,” together with Frank Watts’s “An Introduction to
-the Psychological Factors of Industry,” will be found of value. On the
-relation between labour and the engineer, much can be found in _The
-Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science_ for
-September, 1920, on “Labor, Management and Production.”
-
- O. S. B., JR.
-
-
-NERVES
-
-Complete works of Cotton Mather; also of Jonathan Edwards. Complete
-works of Dr. George M. Beard, notably his “American Nervousness,”
-Putnam, 1881. Medical publications of Dr. S. Weir Mitchell. Dr. George
-M. Parker: “The Discard Heap--Neurasthenia,” _N. Y. Medical Journal_,
-October 22, 1910. Dr. William Browning: “Is there such a thing as
-Neurasthenia?” _N. Y. State Medical Journal_, January, 1911. Dr. Morton
-Prince: “The Unconscious,” Macmillan, 1914. Professor Edwin B. Holt:
-“The Freudian Wish.” Dr. Edward J. Kempf: “The Autonomic Function and
-the Personality.” Complete works of Professor Freud, in translation and
-in the original.
-
-Files of _Journal of Abnormal Psychology_, to date. Files of
-_Psychoanalytic Review_, to date. Files of _Imago_, to date. Files
-of _Internationale Zeitschrift fuer Aerztliche Psychoanalyse_, to
-date. Dr. A. A. Brill, “Psychoanalysis,” third edition. “Character
-and Opinion in the United States,” by George Santayana. “Studies in
-American Intolerance,” by Alfred B. Kuttner, _The Dial_, March 14 and
-28, 1918.
-
- A. B. K.
-
-
-MEDICINE
-
-No attempt is here made to give any exhaustive, or even suggestive,
-bibliography. Only specific references in the text itself are here
-given in full, so that the reader may find them for himself, if he so
-desires. But on the general subject of “Professionalism,” although it
-deals more with the profession of law than of medicine, some valuable
-and stimulating observations can be found in the chapter of that name
-in “Our Social Heritage,” by Graham Wallas (Yale University Press,
-1921).
-
-Bezzola: Quoted from “Preventive Medicine and Hygiene,” Rosenau, 1920,
-p. 340.
-
-Clouston: “The Hygiene of the Mind,” 1909.
-
-Cole: “The University Department of Medicine,” Science, N. S., vol. LI,
-No. 1318, p. 329.
-
-Elderton and Pearson: “A First Study of the Influence of Parental
-Alcoholism on the Physique and Ability of the Offspring,” Francis
-Galton Eugenics Laboratory _Memoirs_, 1910, No. 10.
-
-Pearl: “The Effect of Parental Alcoholism upon the Progeny in the
-Domestic Fowl,” _Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci._, 1916, vol. II, p. 380.
-
-Peterson: “Credulity and Cures,” _Jour. Amer. Med. Assn._, 1919, vol.
-LXXIII, p. 1737.
-
-Rosenau: “Preventive Medicine and Hygiene,” 1920.
-
-Stockard: _Interstate Medical Jour._, 1916, vol. XXIII, No. 6.
-
-Vaughan: “The Service of Medicine to Civilization,” _Jour. Amer. Med.
-Assn._, 1914, vol. LXII, p. 2003.
-
-Vincent: “Ideals and Their Function in Medical Education,” _Jour. Amer.
-Med. Assn._, 1920, vol. LXXIV, p. 1065.
-
- ANON.
-
-
-SPORT AND PLAY
-
-Mr. Spalding, the well-known sporting goods manufacturer, is also the
-publisher of the Spalding Athletic Library, which contains, besides
-rule books and record books of various sports, a series of text-books,
-at ten cents the copy, bearing such titles as “How to Play the
-Outfield,” “How to Catch,” “How to Play Soccer,” “How to Learn Golf,”
-etc. Authorship of these works is credited to famous outfielders,
-catchers, soccer players, and golfers, but as the latter can field,
-catch, play soccer, and golf much better than they can write, the
-actual writing of the volumes was wisely left to persons who make their
-living by the pen. The books are recommended, as a cure for insomnia
-at least. The best sporting fiction we know of, practically the only
-sporting fiction an adult may read without fear of stomach trouble, is
-contained in the collected works of the late Charles E. Van Loan.
-
- R. W. L.
-
-
-AMERICAN CIVILIZATION FROM THE FOREIGN POINT OF VIEW[1]
-
-Frances Milton Trollope: “The Domestic Manners of the Americans,”
-London, 1832.
-
- The rest is silence ... or repetition.
-
- E. B.
-
- [1] The views of foreign travellers in the United States are
- summarized in John Graham Brooks’s “As Others See Us,” New
- York, 1908.--_The Editor._
-
-
-
-
-WHO’S WHO OF THE CONTRIBUTORS TO THIS VOLUME
-
-
-=Conrad Aiken= was born in Savannah, Georgia, in 1889, and was
-graduated from Harvard in 1912. His books include several volumes of
-poems, “Earth Triumphant,” “Turns and Movies,” “The Jig of Forslin,”
-“Nocturne of Remembered Spring,” “The Charnel Rose,” “The House of
-Dust,” and “Punch: The Immortal Liar,” and one volume of critical
-essays, “Scepticisms: Notes on Contemporary Poetry.”
-
-=Anonymous=, the author of the essay on “Medicine,” is an American
-physician who has gained distinction in the field of medical research,
-but who for obvious reasons desires to have his name withheld.
-
-=Katharine Anthony= was born in Arkansas, and was educated at the
-Universities of Tennessee, Chicago, and Heidelberg. She has done
-research and editorial work for the Russell Sage Foundation, National
-Consumers’ League, The National Board, Y. W. C. A., and other national
-reform organizations, and is the author of “Feminism in Germany and
-Scandinavia,” “Margaret Fuller: A Psychological Biography,” and other
-books.
-
-=O. S. Beyer, Jr.=, was graduated from the Stevens Institute of
-Technology as a mechanical engineer in 1907, and did graduate work in
-railway and industrial economics in the Universities of Pennsylvania
-and New York. After some experience as an engineering assistant and
-general foreman on various railways, and as research engineer in the
-University of Illinois, he helped organize the U. S. Army School of
-Military Aeronautics during the War, and later took charge of the
-Department of Airplanes. He was subsequently requested by the U. S.
-Army Ordnance Department to organize and operate schools for training
-ordnance specialists and officers, and in order to conduct this
-work, he was commissioned Captain. After the termination of the War,
-he helped promote, and subsequently assumed charge in the capacity
-of Chief, Arsenal Orders Section, of the significant industrial
-developments carried forward in the Army arsenals. He has contributed
-numerous articles to technical periodicals and proceedings of
-engineering and other societies.
-
-=Ernest Boyd= is an Irish critic and journalist, who has lived in
-this country for some years, and is now on the staff of the New York
-_Evening Post_. He was educated in France, Germany, and Switzerland
-for the British Consular Service, which he entered in 1913. After
-having served in the United States, Spain, and Denmark, he resigned
-from official life in order to take up the more congenial work of
-literature and journalism. He has edited Standish O’Grady’s “Selected
-Essays” for Every Irishman’s Library and translated Heinrich Mann’s
-“Der Untertan” for the European Library, and is the author of three
-volumes dealing with modern Anglo-Irish Literature: “Ireland’s Literary
-Renaissance,” “The Contemporary Drama of Ireland,” and “Appreciations
-and Depreciations.”
-
-=Clarence Britten= was born in Pella, Iowa, in 1887, and was graduated
-from Harvard in 1912 as of 1910. He was Instructor of English in the
-Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, in the Department of
-University Extension, State of Massachusetts, and in the University of
-Wisconsin. He has been editor of the _Canadian Journal of Music_, and
-from 1918 to 1920 was an editor of the _Dial_.
-
-=Van Wyck Brooks= was born in Plainfield, New Jersey, in 1886, and
-was graduated from Harvard in 1907, as of 1908. He was instructor in
-English in Leland Stanford University from 1911 to 1913, and is now
-associate editor of the _Freeman_. Among his books are “America’s
-Coming-of-Age,” “Letters and Leadership,” and “The Ordeal of Mark
-Twain.”
-
-=Harold Chapman Brown= was born in Springfield, Mass., in 1879, and
-was educated at Williams and Harvard, from which he received the
-degree of Ph.D. in 1905. He was instructor in philosophy in Columbia
-University until 1914, and since then has been an instructor in Leland
-Stanford University. During the War he was with the American Red Cross,
-Home Service, at Camp Fremont. He has contributed numerous articles
-on philosophy to technical journals, and is co-author of “Creative
-Intelligence.”
-
-=Zechariah Chafee, Jr.=, was born in Providence, R. I., in 1885, and
-was educated at Brown University and the Harvard Law School. After
-several years’ practice of the law in Providence, and executive work in
-connection with various manufacturing industries, he became Assistant
-Professor of Law in Harvard University in 1916, and Professor of Law in
-1919. He is the author of “Cases on Negotiable Instruments,” “Freedom
-of Speech,” and various articles in law reviews and other periodicals.
-
-=Frank M. Colby= was born in Washington, D. C., in 1865, and was
-graduated from Columbia in 1888. He was Professor of Economics in New
-York University from 1895 to 1900, and has been editor of the “New
-International Encyclopedia” since 1900, and of the “New International
-Year Book” since 1907. He is the author of “Outlines of General
-History,” “Imaginary Obligations,” “Constrained Attitudes,” and “The
-Margin of Hesitation.”
-
-=Garet Garrett= was born in Pana, Ill., in 1878, and from 1900 to 1912
-was a financial writer on the New York Sun, the _Wall Street Journal_,
-the New York _Evening Post_, and the New York _Times_. He was the first
-editor of the New York _Times Annalist_ in 1913–1914, and was executive
-editor of the New York _Tribune_ from 1916 to 1919. He is the author
-of “The Driver,” “The Blue Wound,” “An Empire Beleaguered,” “The Mad
-Dollar,” and various economic and political essays.
-
-=Walton H. Hamilton= was born in Tennessee in 1881, was graduated from
-the University of Texas in 1907, and received the degree of Ph.D. from
-the University of Michigan in 1913. After teaching at the Universities
-of Michigan and Chicago, he became Olds Professor of Economics in
-Amherst College in 1915. He was formerly associate editor of the
-_Journal of Political Economy_, and is associate editor of the series,
-“Materials for the Study of Economics,” published by the University of
-Chicago Press. During the War he was on the staff of the War Labour
-Policies Board. He is co-editor with J. M. Clark and H. G. Moulton of
-“Readings in the Economics of War,” and the author of “Current Economic
-Problems” and of various articles in economic journals.
-
-=Frederic C. Howe= was born in Meadville, Pa., in 1867, and was
-educated at Allegheny College and Johns Hopkins University, from the
-latter receiving the degree of Ph.D. in 1892. After studying in the
-University of Maryland Law School and the New York Law School, he was
-admitted to the bar in 1894, and practised in Cleveland until 1909. He
-was director of the People’s Institute of New York from 1911 to 1914,
-and Commissioner of Immigration in the Port of New York from 1914 to
-1920. He has been a member of the Ohio State Senate, special U. S.
-commissioner to investigate municipal ownership in Great Britain,
-Professor of Law in the Cleveland College of Law, and lecturer on
-municipal administration and politics in the University of Wisconsin.
-Among his books are “The City, the Hope of Democracy,” “The British
-City,” “Privilege and Democracy in America,” “Wisconsin: An Experiment
-in Democracy,” “European Cities at Work,” “Socialized Germany,” “Why
-War?” “The High Cost of Living,” and “The Land and the Soldier.”
-
-=Alfred Booth Kuttner= was born in 1886, and was graduated from Harvard
-in 1908. He was for two years dramatic critic of the _International
-Magazine_, and is a contributor to the _New Republic_, _Seven Arts_,
-_Dial_, etc. He has pursued special studies in psychology, and has
-translated several of the books of Sigmund Freud.
-
-=Ring W. Lardner= was born in Niles, Michigan, in 1885, and was
-educated in the Niles High School and the Armour Institute of
-Technology at Chicago. He has been sporting writer on the Boston
-_American_, Chicago _American_, Chicago _Examiner_, and the Chicago
-_Tribune_, and writer for the Bell Syndicate since 1919. Among his
-books are “You Know Me Al,” “Symptoms of Thirty-five,” “Treat ’Em
-Rough,” and “The Big Town.”
-
-=Robert Morss Lovett= was born in Boston in 1870, and was graduated
-from Harvard in 1892. He has been a teacher in the English Departments
-of Harvard and the University of Chicago, and dean of the Junior
-Colleges of the latter institution from 1907 to 1920. He was formerly
-editor of the _Dial_, and is at present on the staff of the _New
-Republic_. He is a member of the National Institute of Arts and
-Letters, and is the author of two novels, “Richard Gresham” and “A
-Winged Victory,” of a play, “Cowards,” and with William Vaughn Moody of
-“A History of English Literature.”
-
-=Robert H. Lowie= was born in Vienna in 1883, and came to New York at
-the age of ten. He was educated at the College of the City of New York
-and Columbia University, from which he received the degree of Ph.D. in
-1908. He has made many ethnological field trips, especially to the Crow
-and other Plains Indians. He was associate curator of Anthropology in
-the American Museum of Natural History, New York, until 1921, and since
-then has become Associate Professor of Anthropology in the University
-of California. He is associate editor of the _American Anthropologist_,
-and was secretary of the American Ethnological Society from 1910
-to 1919, and president, 1920–1921. He is the author of “Culture
-and Ethnology” and “Primitive Society,” as well as many technical
-monographs dealing mainly with the sociology and mythology of North
-American aborigines.
-
-=John Macy= was born in Detroit in 1877, and was educated at Harvard,
-from which he received the degree of A.B. in 1899, and A.M. in 1900.
-After a year as assistant in English at Harvard, he became associate
-editor of _Youth’s Companion_, and later literary editor of the Boston
-_Herald_. Among his books are “Life of Poe” (Beacon Biographies),
-“Guide to Reading,” “The Spirit of American Literature,” “Socialism in
-America,” and “Walter James Dodd: a Biography.”
-
-=H. L. Mencken= was born in Baltimore in 1880, and was educated in
-private schools and at the Baltimore Polytechnic. He was engaged in
-journalism until 1916, and is now editor and part owner with George
-Jean Nathan of the _Smart Set Magazine_, and a contributing editor
-of the _Nation_. His books include “The Philosophy of Friedrich
-Nietzsche,” “A Book of Burlesques,” “A Book of Prefaces,” “The
-American Language,” and two volumes of “Prejudices.” In collaboration
-with George Jean Nathan he has published “The American Credo,” and
-“Heliogabalus,” a play.
-
-=Lewis Mumford= was born in Flushing, Long Island, in 1895. He
-was associate editor of the Dial in 1919, acting editor of the
-_Sociological Review_ (London), a lecturer at the Summer School of
-Civics, High Wycombe, England, and has contributed to the _Scientific
-Monthly_, the _Athenaeum_, the _Nation_, the _Freeman_, the _Journal of
-the American institute of Architects_, and other periodicals. He was a
-radio operator in the United States Navy during the War.
-
-=George Jean Nathan= was born in Fort Wayne, Indiana, in 1882, and was
-graduated from Cornell University in 1904. He has been dramatic critic
-of various newspapers and periodicals, and is at present editor and
-part owner with H. L. Mencken of the _Smart Set Magazine_. Among his
-books are “The Popular Theatre,” “Comedians All,” “Another Book on the
-Theatre,” “Mr. George Jean Nathan Presents,” “The Theatre, the Drama,
-the Girls,” and, with H. L. Mencken, of “The American Credo,” and
-“Heliogabalus.”
-
-=Walter Pach= was born in New York in 1883, and was graduated from the
-College of the City of New York in 19013. He studied art under Leigh
-Hunt, William M. Chase, and Robert Henri, and worked during most of the
-eleven years before the War in Paris and other European art-centres,
-exhibiting both here and abroad. He was associated with the work of
-the International Exhibition of 1913, as well as other exhibitions of
-the modern masters in America, and with the founding and carrying on
-of the Society of Independent Artists. He is represented by paintings
-and etchings in various public and private collections, has lectured
-at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, University of California,
-Wellesley College, and other institutions, has contributed articles on
-art subjects to the _Gazette des Beaux-Arts_, _L’Arts et les Artistes_,
-_Scribner’s_, the _Century_, the _Freeman_, etc., and is the translator
-of Elie Faure’s “History of Art.”
-
-=Elsie Clews Parsons= was graduated from Barnard College in 1896, and
-received the degree of Ph.D. from Columbia University in 1899. She has
-been Fellow and Lecturer in Sociology at Barnard College, Lecturer in
-Anthropology in the New School of Social Research, assistant editor
-of the _Journal of American Folk-Lore_, treasurer of the American
-Ethnological Society, and president of the American Folk-Lore Society.
-She is married and the mother of three sons and one daughter. Among
-her books are “The Family,” “The Old-Fashioned Woman,” “Fear and
-Conventionality,” “Social Freedom,” and “Social Rule.”
-
-=Raffaello Piccoli=, who has written the article on “American
-Civilization from an Italian Point of View,” was born in Naples in
-1886, and was educated at the Universities of Padua, Florence, and
-Oxford. In 1913 he was appointed Lecturer in Italian Literature in the
-University of Cambridge, and in 1916 was elected Foreign Correspondent
-of the Royal Society of Literature. During the War he was an officer
-in the First Regiment of Italian Grenadiers, was wounded and taken
-prisoner while defending a bridge-head on the Tagliamento, and spent a
-year of captivity in Hungary. After the Armistice he was appointed to
-the chair of English Literature in the University of Pisa. During the
-years 1919–21 he has acted as exchange professor at various American
-universities. He has published a number of books, including Italian
-translations of Oscar Wilde and of several Elizabethan dramatists.
-
-=Louis Raymond Reid= was born in Warsaw, N. Y., and was graduated from
-Rutgers College in 1911. Since then he has been engaged in newspaper
-and magazine work in New York City. He was for three years the editor
-of the _Dramatic Mirror_.
-
-=Geroid Tanquary Robinson= was born in Chase City, Virginia, in 1892,
-and studied at Stanford, the University of California, and Columbia. He
-was a member of the editorial board of the _Dial_ at the time when it
-was appearing as a fortnightly, and is now a member of the editorial
-staff of the _Freeman_, and a lecturer in Modern European History at
-Columbia University. He served for sixteen months during the War as a
-First Lieutenant (Adjutant) in the American Air Service. Residence in
-Virginia, North Carolina, Colorado, Arizona, and California has given
-him the opportunity to observe at first hand some of the modes and
-manners of race-prejudice.
-
-=J. Thorne Smith, Jr.=, was born in Annapolis, Md., in 1892, and was
-graduated from Dartmouth College in 1914. He was Chief Boatswain’s
-Mate in the U. S. Naval Reserve during the War, and editor of the navy
-paper, _The Broadside_. He is the author of “Haunts and By-Paths and
-Other Poems,” “Biltmore Oswald,” and “Out-O’-Luck.”
-
-=George Soule= was born in Stamford, Conn., in 1887, and was graduated
-from Yale in 1908. He was a member of the editorial staff of the _New
-Republic_ from 1914 to 1918, and during 1919 editorial writer for the
-New York _Evening Post_. He drafted a report on the labour policy of
-the Industrial Service Sections, Ordnance Department and Air Service,
-for the War Department, and was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in
-the Coast Artillery Corps. He is a director of the Labour Bureau,
-Inc., which engages in economic research for labour organizations, and
-is co-author with J. M. Budish of “The New Unionism in the Clothing
-Industry.”
-
-=J. E. Spingarn= was born in New York in 1875, was educated at Columbia
-and Harvard, and was Professor of Comparative Literature in Columbia
-University until 1911. Among his other activities he has been a
-candidate for Congress, a delegate to state and national conventions,
-chairman of the board of directors of the National Association for the
-Advancement of Coloured People, vice-president of a publishing firm,
-and editor of the “European Library.” During the War he was a Major of
-Infantry in the A. E. F. His first book, “Literary Criticism in the
-Renaissance,” was translated into Italian in 1905, with an introduction
-by Benedetto Croce; he has edited three volumes of “Critical Essays of
-the 17th Century” for the Clarendon Press of Oxford, and contributed a
-chapter to the “Cambridge History of English Literature;” his selection
-of Goethe’s “Literary Essays,” with a foreword by Lord Haldane, has
-just appeared; and his other books include “The New Hesperides and
-Other Poems” and “Creative Criticism.”
-
-=Harold E. Stearns= was born in Barre, Mass., in 1891, and was
-graduated from Harvard in 1913. Since then he has been engaged in
-journalism in New York, and has been a contributor to the _New
-Republic_, the _Freeman_, the _Bookman_, and other magazines and
-newspapers. He was associate editor of the _Dial_ during the last six
-months of its appearance as a fortnightly in Chicago. Among his books
-are “Liberalism in America” and “America and the Young Intellectual.”
-
-=Henry Longan Stuart= is an English author and journalist who has
-spent a considerable part of his life since 1901 in the United States.
-He served through the War as a Captain in the Royal Field Artillery,
-was attached to the Italian Third Army after Caporetto, and was press
-censor in Paris after the Armistice and during the Peace Conference.
-He is the author of “Weeping Cross,” a study of Puritan New England,
-“Fenella,” and a quantity of fugitive poetry and essays.
-
-=Deems Taylor= was born in New York in 1885, and was graduated from
-New York University in 1906. He studied music with Oscar Coon from
-1908 to 1911. He has been connected with the editorial staff of the
-“Encyclopedia Britannica,” and has been assistant Sunday editor of the
-New York _Tribune_ and associate editor of _Collier’s Weekly_, and at
-present is a critic of the New York _World_. He has composed numerous
-musical works, including “The Siren Song” (symphonic poem, awarded the
-orchestral prize of the National Federation of Music Clubs in 1912),
-“The Chambered Nautilus” (cantata), “The Highwaymen” (cantata written
-for the MacDowell festival), and “Through the Looking Glass” (suite for
-symphonic orchestra).
-
-=Hendrik Willem Van Loon= was born in Holland in 1882, and received
-his education in Dutch schools, at Cornell and Harvard, and at the
-University of Munich, from which he received his Ph.D., magna cum
-laude, in 1911. He was a correspondent of the Associated Press in
-various European capitals, and for some time was a lecturer on modern
-European history in Cornell University. He is at present Professor
-of the Social Sciences in Antioch College, and is the author of “The
-Fall of the Dutch Republic,” “A Short History of Discovery,” “Ancient
-Man,” “The Story of Mankind for Boys and Girls,” “The Rise of the Dutch
-Kingdom,” etc.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Abbott, Lyman, 497
-
- Abolitionists, 58
-
- Absolute, 166
-
- Academic life, 95
-
- Accident lawyers, 59
-
- Acoustics, 159
-
- Adams, Henry, 11, 77, 303, 547;
- quoted on a school of literature, 196
-
- Ade, George, 249
-
- Administrative officers, 32, 33
-
- Adolescence, 436
-
- Adulteration, 406
-
- Advertising, 381–395;
- appeal, 383;
- bibliography, 551;
- effects on the writers, 384;
- efficacy, 389;
- honest, 387;
- justification, 388;
- newspaper, 44;
- newspaper control, 46, 47;
- objectionable, 395;
- outdoor, 395;
- over-production and, 390;
- pro and con, 391;
- signs, 293, 395;
- solicitor and writer, 387;
- value, 391, 392;
- writers, 387
-
- Æsthetic emotion, 204, 214, 480
-
- Æsthetics, vii, 14, 100, 105, 108, 492, 497
-
- Africa, association of negroes to establish empire, 369
-
- “Age of Innocence, The,” 179
-
- Agnosticism, 171
-
- Agricultural implements, 402
-
- Aiken, Conrad, on poetry, 215–226
-
- Akins, Zoë, 248, 253
-
- Alcohol, 451
-
- Alcoholics, children of, 452, 453
-
- Alien Land Laws, 364
-
- Aliens, 337–350;
- economics and, 339;
- legislative attitude to, 343;
- protection, 349
-
- Alfieri, Vittorio, 104
-
- Alimony, 331
-
- Alleghany mountains, 4, 30, 399
-
- Allied troops, 469
-
- Alphabetical order, 469
-
- Amalgamated Clothing Workers, 346
-
- America, as economic support for Europe, 475;
- feminization, 135, 143;
- germinal energy, 148, 150;
- original culture, 512;
- provincialism, 286;
- “real America,” 138
-
- “America First” Publicity Association, 47
-
- “American ideals,” 104
-
- American infantry in Paris, 470
-
- American Legion, 88
-
- American literature. _See_ Literature, American
-
- American Philosophical Association, 177
-
- American Revolution, 300, 399, 417, 515
-
- Americanism, 133, 519
-
- Americanization, 337, 344, 346, 347, 442, 528;
- spirit, 88, 89
-
- Americans, uniformity, 36, 109
-
- Ames, Winthrop, 245
-
- Amusements, 8, 13, 440;
- music, 204, 205
-
- Anæmia, intellectual, 491, 492, 495, 501
-
- Ancestor worship, 506
-
- Anderson, Sherwood, 137
-
- Anglin, Margaret, 251
-
- Anglo-American relations, 471, 473, 474, 476
-
- Anglo-Saxonism, 320, 341, 442, 471, 504
-
- Anthony, Katharine, on the family, 319–336
-
- Anthropological groups, 353
-
- Anthropology, 154
-
- Anti-Saloon League, 29
-
- Anti-Semitism, 356, 364
-
- Appleseed, Johnny, 4
-
- Applied science, 146, 155–156
-
- Architecture, 238;
- city, debasement, 10;
- industrial city, 11
-
- Aridity of American life, 480
-
- Aristocracy, 193
-
- Aristocrats, 441, 442
-
- Armageddon, 440
-
- Armory Show, 239
-
- Art, 100, 204, 207, 227–241;
- bibliography, 542;
- colonial, 230, 231;
- conditions and opportunities, 228;
- definition, 107;
- feminization, 229;
- morals and, 101;
- poetry, 225;
- tariff on works of art, 230
-
- Art for art’s sake, 102
-
- Artists, advertising as a benefit, 391;
- definition, 107;
- respect for, 208
-
- Asiatics. _See_ Orientals
-
- Associated Press, 47
-
- Asylums, 334, 451
-
- Athletics, 526, 527;
- college, 117
-
- Atlantic City, 9
-
- _Atlantic Monthly_, 243
-
- Attorney-General, 66
-
- Austin, Mrs. Mary, 144
-
- Australia, farm policy, 347, 348
-
- Australian Courts of Conciliation, 73
-
- Authority, 160;
- educational, 85
-
- Automobile industry, 400
-
-
- Back to the land, 285
-
- Backgrounds, historical, 308;
- intellectual, 146
-
- Bacteriologists, 454
-
- Baking industry, 400
-
- Ballot, 281
-
- Bar Associations, 65–66
-
- Bargaining, collective, 264;
- _see also_ Contract
-
- Barnum, P. T., 292
-
- Barrie’s “Peter Pan,” 246
-
- Barrymore, John, 250
-
- Baseball, 458
-
- Baseball fans, 457
-
- Beard, C. A., 532, 547
-
- Beard, G. M., 430, 431, 432, 438
-
- Beautiful necessity, 165, 168
-
- Beauty, 14, 204, 238, 492, 535
-
- Beer-garden, 10
-
- Behaviour, 173;
- crowd, 312
-
- Behaviourism, 169
-
- Belief, 171
-
- Bell, Sanford, 436
-
- Bergson, Henri, 167, 172
-
- Bett, Miss Lulu, 320
-
- Beyer, O. S., Jr., on engineering, 417–425
-
- “Beyond the Horizon,” 243, 244, 248
-
- Bibliographical notes, 531
-
- Big business, 406, 407, 409
-
- Bigness, contrary effect on English and Americans, 477, 478
-
- Billboards, 293, 395
-
- Billiards, 460
-
- Billings, Frank, 449
-
- Biochemistry, 456
-
- Biographical notes on contributors to this volume, 559–564
-
- Biographies, 96;
- political, 532
-
- Biology, 456;
- experimental, 153
-
- Birth control, 320, 321, 322, 323;
- artificial, 321
-
- Birth-rate, 321, 336
-
- Black Star Line, 369
-
- Blackburn, J. B., 231
-
- Blashfield, E. H., 236
-
- Blind Tom, 207–208
-
- Board of Health, 304
-
- Boas, Franz, 154
-
- Bodenheim, Maxwell, 218, 221, 222, 223
-
- “Book of Daniel Drew, The,” 72
-
- Boosters, 293
-
- Bosses, political, 24
-
- Boston, 4, 15;
- dramatic taste, 245;
- marriage age, 328;
- Public Library, 11, 235;
- Trinity Church, 11
-
- Boxing, 459
-
- Boyd, Ernest, on American civilization, 489–507
-
- Brady, W. A., 244
-
- Brandeis, L. D., brief on Oregon law, 73
-
- Branford, V. V., 531
-
- “Brass Check, The,” 41
-
- Breasted, J. H., 547
-
- Brewer, Justice P. J., 73–74
-
- Brill, A. A., 434
-
- British Institution of Civil Engineers, 418, 419
-
- Britten, Clarence, on school and college life, 109–133
-
- Broadway, 8
-
- Brokers, 405
-
- Bronson-Howard, George, 249
-
- Brooke, Rupert, 503
-
- Brookline, Mass., 15
-
- Brooks, Van Wyck, iii;
- on the literary life, 179–197
-
- Brown, H. C., on philosophy, 163–177
-
- Brown University, 125
-
- Brunetière, Ferdinand, 498, 503
-
- Bryan, W. J., 25, 429, 440, 451, 497
-
- Bryce, James, 196, 490, 532, 536
-
- Buddhism, 373
-
- Bundling, 315
-
- Bush Terminal Tower, 12
-
- Business, 397–415;
- American conception, 482;
- bibliography, 551;
- blind sequence, 414;
- government and, 48;
- honour, 405, 409, 410, 430;
- individual and corporate, 409, 410;
- revolution of methods, 405;
- State and, 264
-
- Business education, 80
-
- Business life, 186
-
- Business man’s chivalry, 324
-
- Business world, 143
-
- Butler, Samuel, 188, 547
-
-
- California, early law, 54;
- gold discovery, 403;
- Land Laws, 365;
- race-prejudice, 357, 364
-
- Calvinism, 164, 168
-
- Cambridge, Mass., 4, 6
-
- Canals, 403
-
- Canning industry, 401
-
- Capital, 404, 405
-
- Capital and labour, engineers and, 420
-
- Capitalism, 544;
- case for, 257, 261
-
- Captains of industry, 517
-
- Carnegie, Andrew, 18
-
- Carnegie Institution, 158
-
- Case-system, 68, 69
-
- Castberg, Johan, 332
-
- Caste system in college, 121
-
- Catechism, Negro, 370
-
- Catholic Church, 193
-
- Cattell, J. Nick, 538
-
- Cavalier and Puritan, 512, 513, 514
-
- Celibacy, 321, 328
-
- Cézanne, Paul, 239, 240
-
- Chafee, Zechariah, Jr., on the law, 53–75
-
- City, bibliography, 531
-
- Chain-store, 407
-
- Chambers, R. W., 192
-
- Character in business, 409
-
- Charm, personal, 112
-
- Chase, W. M., 234, 235
-
- Chastity, 454
-
- Chautauqua, 6, 83, 142
-
- Chekhov, A. P., 190
-
- Chemistry of proteins, 456
-
- Chesterton, G. K., 477;
- on American genius, 183
-
- Chicago, 8, 10, 403;
- dramatic taste, 245
-
- Chickens, alcoholic, 452
-
- Chief Justice, 67
-
- Child labour, 275, 329
-
- Childhood, family influence, 335;
- shortness, 185
-
- Children, fewer and better, 452;
- on farms, 321;
- sexuality, 436;
- spoiling, 334
-
- Children’s Bureau, 320
-
- Chinese, 373;
- Californians and, 364;
- in America, 357
-
- Chiropractors, 444
-
- Chivalry of the business man, 324
-
- Christian Science, 438, 443
-
- Christianity, 166, 167
-
- Church, 35, 77, 85, 146
-
- Church-college, 163, 168
-
- Cincinnati, 4, 8
-
- Circus parade, 292
-
- Cirrhosis of the liver, 452
-
- Cities, 3–20;
- architectural debasement, 10;
- civic equipment, 16;
- civic life, 16;
- country versus, 17;
- drama, outside New York, 245;
- future, 19;
- growth and improvement, 15;
- improvements, 14;
- industrial, 9, 10;
- provincial, 3;
- shifts of population and institutions, 7;
- spiritual failure, 9;
- State legislatures and, 24;
- three periods, 3
-
- Citizenship, good, 175
-
- City Beautiful movement, 14
-
- Civil engineers, 417
-
- Civil War, 139
-
- Civilization, human, 508;
- Roman, 509
-
- Civilization, American, as seen by an Englishman, 469–488;
- as seen by an Irishman, 489–507;
- as seen by an Italian, 508–528
-
- Clark University, 434
-
- Classics, 79, 81, 94, 146
-
- Cleanliness, 392
-
- Clients and lawyers, 59
-
- Clouston, T. S., 452
-
- Clubs, college, 121, 128
-
- Coeducational forms, 129
-
- Cohan, G. M., 249, 457
-
- Cohen, M. R., 168
-
- Colby, F. M., on humour, 463–466
-
- Cole, R., 444
-
- Collective bargaining, 264
-
- College “Bible,” 118
-
- College life, 109–133;
- athletics, 117;
- avocations, 128;
- bibliography, 536;
- caste system, 121;
- clubs, 121, 128;
- course system, 126;
- democracy, 118;
- examination and passing, 126;
- extra-collegiate social regimen, 129;
- fellowship, 123;
- moral crusades, 124–125;
- political management of affairs, 124;
- recreation, 130;
- sex lines and forms, 129;
- social life, 117–118;
- study, 125;
- traditions, 118
-
- College professors, 491;
- _see also_ Professors
-
- College stories, 536
-
- Colleges, early church-college, 163, 168;
- _see also_ Education
-
- Colonial culture, 138
-
- Colonial law, 54
-
- Colonialism, 97
-
- Colonies, 301, 493
-
- Colonists, 398
-
- Colour of God, 370
-
- Commercial city, 5
-
- Commercial God, 480, 481, 483
-
- Commercialism, 484
-
- Common Law, American conditions and, 56;
- New England and, 54
-
- Communist parties, 279, 280
-
- Community, New England, 5
-
- Compensation acts, 72
-
- Competition, 259, 260, 406, 482
-
- Composers, 199, 208, 210
-
- Compromise, 284
-
- Compulsions, 439, 440
-
- Concord, Mass., 4
-
- Coney Island, 13
-
- Conformity, 439, 520;
- college, 118
-
- Congress, 31
-
- _Congressional Record_, 27, 532, 544
-
- Congressmen, character, 22, 27, 33
-
- Conjugal fidelity, 309
-
- Connecticut, early land act, 55
-
- Conservatives, 273
-
- Constitution, U. S., 140, 506, 515
-
- Contingent fee, 60
-
- Contract, 275;
- right of, 259, 262, 264
-
- Contract labour law, 343
-
- Contributors to this volume, brief biographies, 559–564
-
- Control of industry, 257, 263, 419
-
- Conventions, 291;
- “iron hand of convention,” 182
-
- Conventionalities, 252, 491;
- college, 129
-
- Co-operative movement, 284
-
- Copley, J. S., 231, 232, 233, 237
-
- Cornell University, tradition, 120
-
- Corporation lawyers, 59
-
- Corporations, 406, 411, 412;
- State and, 412
-
- Corrective Eating Society, 444
-
- Correspondence schools, 385
-
- Country, 287, 288;
- envy of the city, 17;
- social life, 294;
- _see also_ Small town
-
- County fair, 295
-
- Crisis-emotion, 315
-
- Courage in journalism, 40
-
- Courts, diversity, 71
-
- Craftsmanship, 413
-
- Crane, Frank, 44
-
- Cranks, 147
-
- Craven, Frank, 248
-
- Credit, 405, 410, 413
-
- Credulity, 454;
- medical, 444
-
- Criminal law, 60, 70
-
- Criminals and lawyers, 60
-
- Criticism, 497, 503;
- American, 99;
- bibliography, 535;
- definition, 100, 108;
- dogmatic or intellectual, 100, 108;
- music, 209;
- need, 105;
- scholarship and, 93–108;
- scholarship the basis, 99;
- schools of, 100
-
- Cross of Gold, 440
-
- Crowd behaviour, 312
-
- Culture, 93, 106, 175, 508;
- original American, 512
-
- Curiosity, 130, 131, 175
-
-
- Daly, Arnold, 251
-
- Dancing, 526
-
- Dante, scholarship, 96
-
- Darwin, Charles, 163
-
- Days of grace, 64
-
- Declaration of independence, 132, 133, 140, 506
-
- Decorators, 236
-
- De Leon, Daniel, 545
-
- Demand and supply, 261
-
- Dementia præcox, 434
-
- Democracy, college, 118
-
- Denmark, farmers, 347
-
- Department stores, 8;
- advertising in the newspapers, 389;
- newspapers and, 46;
- private tribunals, 70
-
- Dependence, habits of, 401
-
- Deportation, 342, 344, 348
-
- Devil, 439, 440
-
- Dewey, John, 168, 540;
- on education, 175;
- psychology, 173;
- weakness of his philosophy, 176
-
- Dickinson, Emily, 218
-
- Differentiations, regional, 111
-
- Diphtheria, 450
-
- Diplomacy, shirt-sleeve, 489
-
- Discipline, 471, 480, 482, 488
-
- Disease, 443, 445, 449, 455;
- prevention, 449
-
- Dishonesty in business, 405, 409, 410, 430
-
- Divorce, attitude to, 309, 310;
- growing prevalence, 330
-
- Doctors, 443;
- _see also_ Disease; Physicians
-
- Dogmatic criticism, 100, 108
-
- Domestic Relations Courts, 72, 331, 332
-
- Double personality, 433
-
- Dowden, Edward, 504
-
- Drachsler, Julius, 375, 376, 377
-
- Drama. _See_ Theatre
-
- Drama League, 247
-
- Dreadnought Hams, 386
-
- Dreiser, Theodore, 181, 182, 189, 196, 286
-
-
- East, the, 112
-
- Economic democracy, 339
-
- Economic liberty, 276
-
- Economic opinion, 255–270;
- basis and value, 270;
- opportunities, 346;
- bibliography, 543;
- radicalism, 276, 277, 278;
- volume, 269–270
-
- Economics, classical, 259;
- facts and statistics, 268;
- “fundamental,” 273;
- immigration and, 338;
- newer, 544;
- protest, 263;
- system, 517;
- waste, 284
-
- Eddy, Mrs. Mary Baker, 443, 498
-
- Edison, T. A., 436
-
- Editors, 36
-
- Education, 77–92, 524, 525;
- bibliography, 534;
- corrupt practices, 90;
- Dewey’s philosophy, 175;
- engineering, 423, 424;
- enthusiasm for, 109;
- feminization, 317;
- general and special, 81;
- medical, 455;
- State and, 89;
- superficial, 82;
- superstitious mood toward, 77, 78
-
- Edwards, Jonathan, 164, 165
-
- Efficiency, 471, 478, 481, 482, 484;
- social, 175
-
- Egoism, 197
-
- Eight-hour day, 275
-
- Elderton-Pearson report, 453
-
- Election machinery, 281
-
- Elections, 281
-
- Elective system in education, 79, 119
-
- Electric lighting, 14
-
- Electrical engineers, 417
-
- Eliot, C. W., 79
-
- Eliot, T. S., 218, 221, 222, 223, 224
-
- Elizabethan literature, 220
-
- Ellis Island, 341
-
- Emerson, R. W., 138, 164, 165, 184, 195, 494
-
- Emotion, 203, 209;
- crisis, 315;
- lack, vii;
- mother-love, 437, 438;
- sex, 310, 317
-
- Emotionality, 176
-
- “Emperor Jones,” 360
-
- Empiricism, 172
-
- Employer and employé, 483
-
- Employés’ welfare, 484
-
- Employment, 482
-
- Engineering, 417–425;
- bibliography, 552;
- bulwark and inspiration, 424;
- new problems, 418
-
- Engineers, capital and labour, relation to, 420;
- educational background, 423, 424;
- formulating a policy, 420;
- intellectual limitations, 423;
- intelligence, 455;
- larger function, 418;
- original function, 418;
- position, 432;
- symbolic speculations, 423;
- typical, 417
-
- England, 512;
- bond with America, 473;
- competition with America, and courses open, 474;
- proletariat, 485, 487;
- war and post-war conditions, 487
-
- English language professors, 96
-
- Englishman’s view of American civilization, 469–488
-
- Englishmen, as immigrants, 472;
- character, 476, 477, 478
-
- Erie Railroad, 72, 409
-
- Ethics, 174
-
- Ettinger, W. L., 87, 88
-
- Eucken, R. C., 167
-
- Europe, American attitude to, 486;
- attraction, 238, 239;
- civilization and culture, 511;
- history, 510;
- impoverishment, 473;
- problem, 511
-
- Evangelical literature, 496, 497
-
- _Evening Sun_, 250
-
- Exchange, 413
-
- Exercise, 458, 461
-
-
- Factory workers, 9
-
- Facts, 313
-
- Faith, 78;
- defending, 163;
- intellectual, 515
-
- Faithful servant, 320
-
- Family, 319–336;
- bibliography, 548;
- financial arrangements, 324;
- income, and distribution, 323;
- influence on children 335;
- nomadic habit, 333;
- public opinion, 319;
- reduction in size, 320;
- reunions, 294
-
- Farmer-Labour Party, 280
-
- Farming and alien immigrants, 346, 347
-
- Fear, 340, 341
-
- Federated Press, The, 50
-
- Feminization, 135, 143;
- education, 317;
- music, 205
-
- Ferguson, O. G., 359
-
- Fiction, American, 495;
- college, 536;
- sporting, 554
-
- Fish phosphates, 431
-
- Fiske, John, 185
-
- Five and ten cent store, 9
-
- Fletcher, J. G., 218, 220, 221, 222, 223, 226
-
- Flexner, Simon, 154
-
- Focal infection, 448, 449
-
- Folin, Otto, 456
-
- Folksong, 211
-
- Food, children’s, 334
-
- Food products, 401
-
- Football, 459
-
- Ford, Henry, 298, 299
-
- Foreign relations, 486
-
- Foreign trade, 414
-
- Foreign views of American civilization, bibliography, 555;
- Englishman’s, 469–488;
- Irishman’s, 489–507;
- Italian’s, 508–528
-
- Foreigners, 275, 441;
- musical composers, 199;
- _see also_ Aliens; Immigration
-
- Fosdick, Raymond, 70
-
- Foster, W. Z., 282
-
- France, journalism, 39;
- medicine, 434
-
- France, Anatole, 142, 180, 494
-
- Francis Galton Laboratory, 453
-
- Fraternal orders, 6, 34, 290, 291
-
- Fraternities, 5, 6
-
- Freedom, 275, 489, 490, 491, 519;
- in love, 309;
- sexes in youth, 313, 315;
- speech, 74, 75;
- thought, 86, 87;
- _see also_ Liberty
-
- _Freeman_, 51
-
- Frémont, J. C., 151
-
- French, D. C., 236
-
- Freshmen, 119, 120
-
- Freud, Sigmund, 433, 434, 435, 436, 437;
- books on, 435
-
- Friedenwald, Julius, 452
-
- Front parlour, 297
-
- Frontier, 301
-
- Frost, Robert, 184, 218, 221, 222, 226, 503
-
- Freude, J. A., on Americans, 184
-
- Fugitive slave law, 58
-
- “Fundamental economics,” 273
-
- “Fussing,” 129
-
-
- _Ga-Ga_, 449
-
- Galileo, 152
-
- Galli-Curci, Amelita, 206
-
- Galsworthy, John, 243, 244, 250
-
- Galton (Francis) Laboratory, 453
-
- Garrett, Garet, on business, 397–415
-
- Gary, Ind., 12
-
- Gauguin, Paul, 189
-
- Geddes, Patrick, 531
-
- Generosity, 523
-
- Genius, 183, 188, 190, 194
-
- Genteel tradition, the, 147, 148, 163, 167
-
- “Gentleman and scholar,” 94
-
- Georgia, legislature, 64
-
- German beer-garden, 10
-
- German idealism, 164
-
- German State, 302
-
- Ghost Dance, 372
-
- Gibbs, Willard, 152
-
- Gilbert, G. K., 153
-
- Gimbel Brothers, 46
-
- Glad hand, 5
-
- God, 166, 439;
- colour of, 370
-
- Gold in California, 403
-
- Golf, 459
-
- Gopher Prairie, 19
-
- Gorgas, W. C., 450
-
- Gorky, Maxim, 180, 190, 192
-
- Gould, Jay, 410
-
- Gourmont, Rémy de, 494
-
- Government, 275;
- business and, 48
-
- Grade schools, 84
-
- Graham, Stephen, 365
-
- Grandeur, 397
-
- Grape juice, 451
-
- “Great American novel,” 93
-
- Greatness, 190, 191
-
- Greeley, Horace, 37, 330
-
- Griffes, Charles, 212
-
- Group medicine, 446–447
-
- Group opinions, 161
-
- Grub Street, 189
-
- Guinea-pigs, 452
-
- Gullibility, 443, 449
-
-
- Hamilton, W. H., on economic opinion, 255–270
-
- Hamsun, Knut, 180, 192
-
- Hancock, John, 399
-
- Hardy, Thomas, 180, 190
-
- Harris, William, Jr., 245
-
- Harvard College, 78, 79;
- democracy, 119
-
- Harvard Medical School, 443
-
- Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 185, 195
-
- “H. D.,” 221, 223
-
- Health, exercise and, 458;
- politics and, 451
-
- Health, Board of, 304
-
- Health crusade, 450
-
- Hearst newspapers, 43, 139, 501
-
- Heathen, 450
-
- Helmholtz, H. L. F. von, 159, 160
-
- Herbert, Victor, 209
-
- Herd sense, 311
-
- Hero-worship, 461
-
- High schools, 83, 114, 525
-
- Highbrow, 131, 209
-
- Higher law, 58
-
- Hill, G. W., 153
-
- Historians, 95, 302, 306, 307;
- scientific, 303, 304
-
- History, 95, 297–38, 509;
- American, 298, 299;
- as an art, 303;
- bibliography, 547;
- early settlers, 300;
- popular estimate, 298, 308
-
- Hoar, E. R., quoted on law and private judgment, 58
-
- Hocking, W. E., 167, 168, 172
-
- Holmes, Justice O. W., quoted on criminal law, 70;
- quoted on the law, 75
-
- Holt, E. B., 435
-
- Home, 332
-
- Homer, Winslow, 233, 234, 236, 237
-
- Honesty in business, 405, 409, 410
-
- Honourables, 295
-
- Hopkins, Arthur, 245, 251, 253
-
- Hopkins, E. M., quoted on propaganda, 86
-
- Hopwood, Avery, 249
-
- Horse racing, 459
-
- Hotels, 293
-
- Hours of work for women, 73
-
- Housewife, 325
-
- Howe, F. C., on the alien, 337–350
-
- Howells, W. D., 184, 191, 192, 194
-
- Hubbard, Elbert, 42
-
- Hughes, C. E., 50, 63
-
- Human civilization, 508
-
- Humanism, 509;
- Italy, 510
-
- Humboldt, Alexander von, 151
-
- Humour, viii, 463–466
-
- Husbands, 316;
- as providers, 324, 325
-
- Hypnotism, 433
-
- Hypocrisy, 252, 338
-
- Hysteria, 433, 438
-
-
- Ibsen, Henrik, 197, 503
-
- Idealism, advertising, 385, 394;
- American, 164;
- German, 164;
- peculiar American, 515;
- reaction to, 167
-
- Ideas, 501;
- political, 28;
- real test, 144
-
- Ignorance, 113
-
- Illusion, 295
-
- Imagination, 102, 103, 461
-
- Immigrants, 440;
- English, 472;
- law and, 57;
- neurosis, 441;
- protection, 349;
- rapid rise and progress, 345;
- savings, 348
-
- Immigration, 301, 404;
- cause, 338;
- constructive policy, 347;
- economic cause, 338;
- hostility, 340;
- old and new, 338;
- percentage law, 344;
- problem, 337
-
- Immortality, 171, 436
-
- Impressionism, 105
-
- Impressionist criticism, 108
-
- Impressionists, 235
-
- Inalienable rights, 274
-
- Incest-complex, 438
-
- Independence Hall, 11
-
- Indian reservations, 363
-
- Indians, American, 351, 356;
- Americanization, 363;
- art influence, 227–228;
- bibliography, 550;
- culture and education, 371;
- marriage with whites, 376;
- religious movement, 372;
- treatment, 362
-
- Individual, 258
-
- Individualism, 287, 311, 439, 506
-
- Individuality, lack, 36
-
- Industrial accidents, 72, 73
-
- Industrial management, 419, 421
-
- Industrial revolution, 266, 516
-
- I. W. W., 276, 282
-
- Industrialism, birth, 9–10;
- city life, 9, 10, 11;
- culture and, 12;
- disputes, 72;
- system, 260;
- _see also_ Labour movement
-
- Industry, control, 257, 263, 419;
- secrets, 421
-
- Inhibitions, 478
-
- Injustice, 341
-
- Inness, George, 233
-
- Insanity, 452
-
- Instrumentalism, 145, 168, 521
-
- Intellect, 521;
- distrust of, 519, 520;
- needs, 527
-
- Intellectual anæmia, 491, 492, 495, 501
-
- Intellectual faith, 515
-
- Intellectual life, 135–150, 523;
- backgrounds, 146;
- bibliography, 537;
- contempt for real values, 145;
- cranks and mountebanks, 147;
- pioneer point of view and, 136
-
- Intellectualist, 100
-
- Intellectualist criticism, 108
-
- Intelligence, 174
-
- International Exhibition of 1913, 239
-
- Interstate Commerce Commission, 68
-
- Intolerance, 430
-
- Investigators, 156
-
- Ireland, 493
-
- Irish, 338
-
- Irishman’s view of American civilization, 489–507
-
- Irving, Washington, 186
-
- Isolation, 188, 287
-
- Italian’s view of American civilization, 508–528
-
- Italy, humanism, 510
-
-
- James, Henry, 183, 190, 503
-
- James, William, 82, 540;
- eminence, 152, 154, 155;
- on genius, 194;
- pragmatism, 171;
- psychology, 170
-
- Janet, Pierre, 433
-
- Japanese, 373;
- Californians and, 364;
- dislike and fear of, 357
-
- Jefferson, Thomas, 274, 275, 276
-
- Jensen, J. V., 180
-
- Jews, 351;
- bibliography, 551;
- jealousy and fear of, 356;
- manifestations of prejudice against, 363;
- mixed marriages, 376;
- place, 372;
- religion, 373
-
- Jim Crow regulations, 358, 360
-
- Joan of Arc, canonization, 428
-
- Johnson, Lionel, 499
-
- Jokes, 463
-
- Journalism, 35–51, 180, 501;
- bibliography, 533;
- England, 38;
- European continent, 39;
- musical, 209
-
- Journalists, 36;
- courage and integrity, 40;
- “training and outlook,” 41
-
- Judges, 65;
- selection and training, 66;
- unfair treatment, 67
-
- Judiciary, 66
-
- Jumel Mansion, 231
-
- Jung, C. G., 436
-
- Justice, Minister of, 66
-
-
- Kallen, H. M., quoted on control of education, 91
-
- Kansas, 429;
- industrial court, 73
-
- Kempf, E. J., 435
-
- Kent, James, 56, 62
-
- Keynes, J. M., 506
-
- King, Willford, 324, 326
-
- Knowledge, 131
-
- Kodak, 18
-
- Korsakow’s disease, 451
-
- Kraepelin, Emil, 433
-
- Kreymborg, Alfred, 221, 223, 224
-
- Ku Klux Klan, 290, 359
-
- Kuttner, A. B., on nerves, 427–442
-
-
- Labour, American and English, 485, 486
-
- Labour movement, 193, 277, 278, 281, 282;
- engineers and, 420
-
- Labour organization, 72
-
- Labour-saving devices, 402
-
- La Forge, John, 235
-
- _Laissez-faire_ economics, 256, 257, 543
-
- Land, colonies and settlement, 347, 348;
- free, 339, 343;
- immigration and, 339;
- speculation, 7, 8, 347
-
- Landscape painters, 232
-
- Langdell, C. C., 69
-
- Language of American leaders, 478, 479
-
- Lanier, Sidney, 187
-
- Lardner, R. W., on sport and play, 457–461
-
- Law, 53–75;
- bibliography, 533;
- delays, expenses, etc., 71;
- disrespect for, 57, 58;
- early hostility to English, 54, 56;
- flings at, 53;
- lack of progress, 63;
- newspaper discussion needed, 63;
- obligation, 57, 58;
- private judgment and, 58;
- real defect, 62
-
- Law schools, 68
-
- Lawyers, 53;
- changing function, 58–59;
- laymen and, 60, 61
-
- Laziness, 366
-
- Leadership, industrial, 425
-
- League of nations, 53
-
- Learning, 96, 108
-
- Legal aid societies, 72, 331
-
- Legal education, 68
-
- Legal systems, various, 65
-
- Legislation and lawyers, 60
-
- Legislatures and law reforms, 64
-
- Leisure, 139, 141
-
- Leisure class, 491, 505
-
- Lenin, Nicolai, lying about, 49
-
- Lewis, Sinclair, 192
-
- Liberals, 273
-
- Liberty, 485;
- economic, 276;
- _see also_ Freedom
-
- Libido theory, 436
-
- Lick Observatory, 158
-
- Lindsay, Vachel, 218, 219, 220, 221, 222
-
- Lippmann, Walter, quoted on journalism, 40, 43
-
- Literary test, 344
-
- Literary theory, 108
-
- Literature, morals and, 101;
- three conceptions, 101
-
- Literature, American, 93, 492–493;
- absence, and reasons therefor, 504;
- bibliography, 540;
- colonial, 195;
- impotence of creative spirit, 179;
- lack of leadership, 189;
- namby-pamby books, 495–496;
- radical, 501, 502;
- school, 196;
- variety, 216
-
- Little red school-house, 302
-
- Lloyd George, David, 50
-
- Lodge, G. C., 183, 184
-
- Loeb, Jacques, 456
-
- London, Jack, 182, 183, 192
-
- London _Labour Herald_, 50
-
- London _Times_, 38, 63
-
- Long haul, 408
-
- Longevity, 328
-
- Louisiana, early law, 56
-
- Love, as an art, 318;
- freedom in, 309
-
- Lovett, R. M., on education as degradation of energy, 77–92
-
- Low-browism, 526
-
- Lowell, Amy, 218, 220, 221, 222, 223, 226;
- on our poetry, 215
-
- Lowie, R. H., on science--lack of fruitful background, 151–161
-
- Lusk Committee, 546
-
- Lusk law, 88, 90
-
- Lyceum, 6
-
- Lynching, 359, 360
-
-
- Mabie, H. W., 496
-
- McCormick reaper, 402
-
- MacDowell, E. A., 210
-
- Mach, Ernst, 155, 156, 161, 539
-
- Machine politics, 24, 26
-
- Machinery, 402, 404
-
- McKim, C. F., 11
-
- Macy, John, on journalism, 35–51
-
- Madison Square Garden, 11
-
- Magazines, 189;
- radical, 272, 273
-
- Maiden aunt, 320
-
- Main Street, 14, 204, 248, 287, 307
-
- Malnutrition, 334
-
- Manchester _Guardian_, 38
-
- Mandarins, 493, 494, 500
-
- Manet, Edouard, 240
-
- Mania a potu, 451
-
- Mann, Horace, 84
-
- Marden, O. S., 496, 497
-
- Marriage, 314, 315, 316;
- ages for, 327, 328;
- Indians and whites, 376;
- mixed, 374, 375, 376;
- Negroes and whites, 374, 375;
- protection, 310;
- war and, 331
-
- Married persons, 316
-
- Mars, visitor from, and his thoughts, 109
-
- Martians, 110
-
- Martin, E. D., 312
-
- Martin, Homer, 233
-
- Masculine and feminine, 143
-
- Masefield, John, 503
-
- Mass fatalism, 196
-
- Mass production, 408
-
- Masters, E. L., 184, 218, 221, 222
-
- Masturbation, 311, 454
-
- Materialism, 97, 354, 481, 494, 516
-
- Mather, F. J., 188
-
- Mating, 310
-
- Maury, M. F., 151
-
- _Mayflower_, 350
-
- Mazzini, Giuseppe, 511
-
- Meat-packing, 401;
- idealism, 385
-
- Mechanical engineers, 417
-
- Mechanics’ Hall, 10
-
- Medical education, 455
-
- Medicine, 443–456;
- art of healing in America, 446;
- bibliography, 553;
- French, 434;
- preventive, 449;
- preventive, contamination by religion, 454;
- preventive, retrogression, 450;
- science and, 444;
- specialization, and “group medicine,” 446
-
- Melville, Herman, 188
-
- Men and women, dichotomy, 142
-
- Mencken, H. L., on aristocracy, 193;
- on politics, 21–34
-
- Mental hygiene, 334
-
- Metaphysics, 176, 433
-
- Metropolitan Opera House, 199
-
- Metropolitanism, 16, 17, 19
-
- Michelson, A. A., 152
-
- Microbes, 448
-
- Middle classes, 326
-
- Middle West, towns, 5
-
- Migration, 301
-
- Miller, C. G., 46
-
- Milling industry, 401
-
- Milton, John, and Satan, 103
-
- Minister of Justice, 66
-
- Minorities, racial, 351–379
-
- Mitchell, S. Weir, 432
-
- Mob tyranny, 441
-
- Money, 112, 140;
- in college, 118
-
- Morality, vi, 526;
- alien population, 346;
- art and literature and, 101;
- business, 405, 409, 410;
- realistic, 170
-
- More, P. E., 493, 498, 499, 500, 503, 544
-
- Morellet, Abbe, 103
-
- Morgan, L. H., 154
-
- Morgan, T. H., 154
-
- Mormon Church, 430
-
- Morrill Act, 417
-
- Morse telegraph code, 403
-
- Moses, M. J., 180
-
- Mosquitoes and yellow fever, 450
-
- Mother-love, 437, 438
-
- Motion pictures, 13;
- music accompaniment, 212
-
- Motley, J. L., 195, 303
-
- Mulattoes, 374
-
- Mumford, Lewis, on the city, 3–20
-
- Municipal Art societies, 14
-
- _Munsey’s Magazine_, 243
-
- Murry, J. M., on our poetry, 215
-
- Music, 199–214;
- American spirit, 214;
- bibliography, 541;
- classical and popular, 209;
- composers, 210;
- criticism, 209;
- exotic, 211;
- feminization, 205;
- German, 210;
- journalism, 209;
- motion pictures and, 212;
- Negro, 211;
- technique, 159
-
- Musical comedy, 208
-
- Musical festivals, 207
-
- _Musical Quarterly_, 209
-
- Mysticism, 172, 519
-
- Mythology, 514, 515
-
-
- Napoleonic code, 56
-
- Nathan, G. J., on the theatre, 243–253
-
- National Education Association, 78, 88
-
- National Federation of Musical Clubs, 205
-
- National Research Council, report on intelligence, 454
-
- Nationality, 511
-
- Natural resources, 257, 260
-
- Natural science, 80
-
- Nature, 164, 168
-
- Necessity, 165, 168
-
- Negro Catechism, 370
-
- Negro Declaration of Independence, 370
-
- Negroes, 351;
- bibliography, 549;
- culture, 371;
- decreasing proportion, 355;
- economic progress, 368;
- education, 361;
- exodus organization, 369;
- exodus to the North, 360;
- in literature, 360;
- international convention, 370;
- marriage with whites, 374, 375;
- music and religion, 211, 368;
- new defiance of whites, 367;
- Northern prejudice against, 355, 359;
- repression in the South, 358;
- Southern feeling about, 354;
- white friends, 361
-
- Nerve tonics, 431
-
- Nerves, 335, 427–442;
- bibliography, 553
-
- Neurasthenia, 430, 432, 433
-
- Neuroses, 437
-
- Neurotics, 427
-
- New England, 179, 216, 301, 494, 502, 514;
- common law, 54;
- culture, 138;
- early trade, 398;
- surplus women, 327;
- town, 3
-
- New Jersey, 400
-
- New Realism, 168
-
- New Realists, 168, 169
-
- _New Republic_, 51, 544;
- exposure of false nature of Russian news, 49
-
- New York (City), 16, 17;
- dominance, 18;
- plan, 7;
- School Board and trial of a teacher, 86;
- theatre, 243, 246
-
- New York (State), early law, 55
-
- New York Board of Health, 450
-
- New York _Call_, 44
-
- New York Code of Civil Procedure, 64
-
- New York _Globe_, 44
-
- New York _Herald_, 27
-
- New York _Nation_, 46, 51, 544;
- exposure of false nature of Russian news, 49
-
- New York _Sun_, 250
-
- New York _Times_, 27, 43, 46, 251;
- on parenthood, 321;
- Russian news, character, 49
-
- New York _Tribune_, 36, 43
-
- New York _World_, 36
-
- New Yorkers, 285
-
- Newcomb, Simon, 153, 155, 552
-
- News, rough recipe, 38;
- sensational, 45;
- world, 48
-
- News services, 47
-
- Newspaper writers’ organization, 41
-
- Newspapers, 483, 532;
- advertising and corruption, 389;
- advertisements, 44;
- advertising, control by, 46, 47;
- attitude toward the theatre, 249;
- circulation, 35, 43;
- Congressional reports, 27;
- correspondents, 37;
- counting-room control, 45;
- influence, 35;
- legal questions, 63;
- readers uncritical, 43, 44;
- stories, 45;
- _see also_ Journalism
-
- Nietzsche, F. W., 187, 190
-
- Nomadism, 333
-
- Non-conformism, reasoned, 160
-
- Non-conformists, 149
-
- Nonpartisan League, 281
-
- Novelists, 495, 496, 524
-
-
- Ochs, Adolph, 49
-
- Offences, minor legal, 70
-
- Office-holders, 24
-
- Oil industry, 400
-
- Old Guard, 252
-
- Omnistic philosophy, 433
-
- On the make, 430, 440
-
- One Big Union, 282
-
- O’Neill, Eugene, 243, 244, 245, 248, 251, 360
-
- Open shop, 346
-
- Opera, 199
-
- Ophthalmoscope, 159
-
- Opinion, 148, 255;
- _see also_ Economic opinion
-
- Opportunity, 522
-
- Optimism, 517, 518
-
- Orchestras, 199, 202
-
- Orchestration, 201
-
- Orders, fraternal, 6, 34, 290, 291
-
- Orientals, 351, 357, 450;
- bibliography, 551;
- culture, 373;
- mixed marriages, 376
-
- “Origin of Species,” 163
-
- Over-production, 413, 414;
- advertising and, 390
-
-
- Pach, Walter, on art, 227–241
-
- Panama Canal, 450
-
- Panics, 413
-
- Parades, 291, 292
-
- Paranoia, 434
-
- Parenthood, 310, 321
-
- Paresis, 453
-
- Paris, entry of Allied troops on July 14, 1919, 469
-
- Parsons, E. C., on sex, 309–318
-
- Party system, 30
-
- Parvenus, 106, 139
-
- Pasteur, Louis, 446, 449, 539
-
- Pattee, F. L., 498, 500
-
- Patterson, J. M., 249
-
- Paul, the Apostle, 314
-
- Pavements, 14
-
- Payne, S. H., 533
-
- Pearl, Raymond, 452, 453
-
- Pearson, Karl, 453
-
- Pedants, 94, 97, 104, 108, 492
-
- Peirce, Charles, 173
-
- Pensions, widows’, 329
-
- Perfectibility, 515
-
- Periodicals, 50, 51
-
- Perry, R. B., 170
-
- Personal charm, 112
-
- Personality, 106, 175;
- double, 433;
- home and, 335;
- lack, 97;
- university life and, 95;
- women, 317, 318
-
- Petting, 315
-
- Phase rule, 152
-
- Philadelphia, dramatic taste, 246
-
- Philadelphia _Press_, 46
-
- Philosophers, American, 522
-
- Philosophy, 163–177, 517;
- American, 521;
- bibliography, 539
-
- Phosphates of fish, 431
-
- Physicians, importance, 443;
- intelligence, rank, 454;
- modern kind, 445–446;
- quasi-religious rôle, 445;
- testimony, 65
-
- Piccoli, Raffaello, on American civilization, 508–528
-
- Picnics, pioneer, 294
-
- Pictures, 204, 236, 237
-
- Pioneers, 97, 136, 137, 185, 193, 203, 294, 429, 441, 515, 516;
- hostility to law, 57
-
- Pittsburgh, 4, 10;
- newspapers and the steel strike, 46
-
- Pittsburgh Survey of 1908, 14, 531
-
- Platitude, 497
-
- Play, 457–461
-
- Playwrights, 247, 248;
- foreign and American, 249
-
- Plough, 402
-
- Plumbing, 14
-
- Poe, E. A., 187, 194, 217
-
- Poetry, 102, 215–226, 524;
- bibliography, 541;
- definition, 107;
- modern vigorousness, 217;
- the “nonsense” of, 103, 104;
- poetic consciousness, 224, 225
-
- _Poetry: a Magazine of Verse_, 217
-
- Poets, 100, 102, 208;
- definition, 108
-
- Police and law enforcement, 70
-
- Political biography, 532
-
- Political economy, bibliography, 552
-
- Political ideas, 28
-
- Political machinery, 281
-
- Politicians, 29;
- local, 22, 23
-
- Politics, 21–34;
- bibliography, 532;
- health movements and, 451
-
- Pool, 460
-
- Poor. _See_ Poverty
-
- Poor whites, 355
-
- Population policies, 322
-
- Pound, Ezra, 217, 221, 223
-
- Poverty, 187, 188, 277, 346;
- college life, 118;
- injustice, 71, 72;
- our forebears, 337
-
- Power, 397
-
- Practical, the, 186
-
- Pragmatism, 145, 170, 171, 173, 192, 521
-
- Preaching and practice, vi
-
- Prendergast, M. B., 240
-
- Preparatory school, 116
-
- Presidency, 31
-
- Presidential campaigns, 25
-
- Press. _See_ Journalism; newspapers
-
- Prevention of disease, 449;
- _see also_ Disease; Medicine
-
- Prices, open, 409
-
- Primitiveness, 479
-
- Primogeniture, 55
-
- Prince, Morton, 433
-
- Private property, 259, 262
-
- Production, engineers and, 421;
- mass, 408
-
- Professionalism, 554
-
- Professors, 96, 97, 193, 491, 527
-
- Profit, private, 412, 413
-
- Profit-making, 265
-
- Progress, legal lack of, 63
-
- Prohibition, 24, 29, 440, 451, 495, 505;
- consequences, 71;
- origin of movement, 287
-
- Promenade, 8
-
- Promiscuity, 438, 502
-
- Promised Land, 515
-
- Propaganda, 85, 86, 312, 440
-
- Property, governmental power over, 74;
- private, 259, 262;
- rights, 259, 262, 412
-
- Protection, beginnings, 399;
- _see also_ Tariff
-
- Protest, economic, 263
-
- Provincial city, 3
-
- Provincialism, 286, 287, 366
-
- Prostitution, 316, 317
-
- Prussia, educational system, 84;
- family income, 323
-
- Psychoanalysis, 434, 435, 437
-
- Psychoanalysts, 435, 437
-
- Psychology, James’, 170
-
- Psychotherapy, 433
-
- Public Health Service, 450
-
- Public opinion. _See_ Economic opinion; Opinion
-
- Public service commissions, 72
-
- Publicists, writings, 496, 501
-
- Publicity pamphlets, 483
-
- Publishing, 112, 188; music, 210
-
- “Punch,” American, 482
-
- Pure-food acts, 406
-
- Puritan and Cavalier, 512, 513, 514
-
- Puritanism, 54, 57, 101, 104, 130, 203, 209, 212, 238, 252, 314, 439,
- 494, 504;
- culture, 513;
- morbidity, 502;
- original spirit, 519;
- remnants, 520
-
- Pushkin, A. S., 190
-
-
- Quackery, 431, 433, 443, 444
-
- Quality of commodities, 406
-
-
- Race-prejudice, 352, 353, 355, 377;
- manifestations, 358;
- questions, 378–379
-
- Race suicide, 322
-
- Races, a quality or inequality, 352, 353
-
- Rachmaninoff, S. V., 206
-
- Racial minorities, 351–379;
- attitude, in face of race-prejudice, 367;
- bibliography, 549;
- biological results, 374;
- four most important, 351;
- questions, 378–379
-
- Radicalism, 131, 174, 271–284, 505, 519;
- associations of the word, 271;
- bibliography, 545;
- definition, 274;
- economic, 276, 277, 278;
- historic American, 274, 275;
- reality and, 283;
- tendency, 283
-
- Radicals, 272
-
- Railroad stations, 293
-
- Railroads, 265, 401, 402, 403, 407, 411;
- rates and hauls, 407, 408;
- rebates, 408
-
- Rank, Otto, 437
-
- Rates, railroad, 407, 408
-
- Raw materials, 257
-
- Reactionaries, 273
-
- Realism, 169, 204;
- new, 168;
- small town, 286
-
- Realistic morality, 170
-
- Realists, 168, 169
-
- Reaper, 402
-
- Rebates, 408
-
- Reconstruction, 307
-
- Recreation, 457;
- college, 130
-
- Reform, 174
-
- Reformation, Protestant, 510
-
- Reformers, 439–440
-
- Regional differentiations, 111
-
- Registration areas, 320
-
- Registration of deeds, 55
-
- Reid, L. R., on the small town, 285–296
-
- Relativity, 152
-
- Religion, v, 78, 167, 176, 427, 439, 508;
- founders, 428;
- Puritan, 513
-
- Religious movements, 518
-
- Renaissance, 94, 509;
- England, 512
-
- Representatives, 21
-
- Research, 156, 157
-
- Resources, natural, 257, 260
-
- Responsibility in business, 410
-
- Results, 174
-
- Revolution, 280;
- England, prospect, 474;
- Russian, 278
-
- Revolutionary War, 300, 399, 417, 515
-
- Rhode Island, Colonial legal training, 55
-
- Richardson, H. H., 11
-
- Riesenfeld, Hugo, 213
-
- Rights and duties, 72, 274
-
- Robinson, E. A., 184, 217, 221, 222, 226
-
- Robinson, G. T., on racial minorities, 351–379
-
- Robinson, J. H., vi, 547
-
- Rockefeller Institute, 158
-
- Rome, civilization, 509
-
- Roosevelt, Theodore, 26, 440;
- on race suicide, 322
-
- Rosenau’s “Preventive Medicine and Hygiene,” 453
-
- Rothafel, S. L., 212
-
- Rowland, H. A., 153, 158
-
- Royce, Josiah, 165;
- ethics, 166;
- philosophy of religion, 167
-
- Russia, false news, 49
-
- Russian Revolution, 278
-
- Ryder, A. P., 187, 233, 234, 237, 542
-
- Rymer, Thomas, 103
-
-
- St. Louis, Mo., 8, 10
-
- Sainte-Beuve, C. A., 498
-
- Salesmanship, 405
-
- Sandburg, Carl, 103, 220, 221, 222
-
- Sanitariums, 431
-
- Sanitary engineers, 454
-
- Sankey, Justice, 68
-
- Santayana, George, 539, 540
-
- Sargent, J. S., 234, 235
-
- Satire, 247
-
- _Saturday Evening Post_, 248, 286, 507
-
- Savings of aliens, 348
-
- Scholarship, definition, 94, 105, 108
-
- Scholarship and criticism, 93–108;
- bibliography, 535
-
- School and college life, 109–133;
- bibliography, 536
-
- School of literature, 196
-
- Schoolmaster, 301
-
- Schools, function, 113;
- suppression of freedom of mind, 86, 87
-
- Science, 80, 436, 519, 522;
- American contributions, 151–152;
- applied, 146;
- applied and pure, 155–156;
- bibliography, 538;
- hothouse growth in America, 155;
- individual and organized, 156–157;
- lack of fruitful background, 151–161;
- medicine and, 444;
- results and self-doubt, 169;
- theology versus, 163
-
- Scientific schools, first, 417
-
- Scientists, equipment, 158;
- spirit, 160
-
- Scope of the present volume, iv
-
- Scotch, 338
-
- Scott, C. P., 38
-
- Secondary schools, 83, 114, 115;
- private, 115–116
-
- Secret societies, 290, 291
-
- Sects, 518, 519
-
- Sensational news, 45
-
- Sense and poetry, 104
-
- Sentimentality, 247, 252
-
- Servants, 320
-
- Service, 523
-
- Settlers, early, 300;
- immigrant, 343
-
- Sewers, 14
-
- Sex, 247, 309–318, 501;
- attitudes, 314;
- bibliography, 548;
- college relations, 129;
- concept of sexuality, 437;
- emotion, 310, 317, 437;
- in children, 436;
- morality, 322;
- problem, 436;
- relations, 316;
- relations classified, 313, 314;
- sublimation, 312;
- suppression of instinct, 311;
- youth and, 526
-
- Shakespeare, William, 220, 250
-
- Shaw, G. B., 179, 192, 243, 244;
- on America, 285
-
- “Shelburne Essays,” 498, 500
-
- Sherman, Stuart, 493, 500, 503
-
- Shirt-sleeve diplomacy, 489
-
- Simplification of American life, 479, 480
-
- Sinclair, Upton, and “The Brass Check,” 41
-
- Single Tax, 273
-
- Sissies, 142
-
- Slang, 112
-
- Slavery, 354, 365
-
- Slopping over, 471, 488
-
- Small Claims Courts, 71
-
- Small town, 285–296;
- bibliography, 546;
- character, 288;
- life, 289
-
- Smith, J. Thorne, on advertising, 381–395
-
- Smith, Reginald H., 71
-
- Smith, Theobald, 449
-
- Smoking, 440
-
- Smuggling, 399
-
- Soap, 392
-
- Social hygiene, 453
-
- Social life, 526, 527;
- freedom of youth, 313, 315
-
- Socialist Party, 278, 279
-
- Society, 516
-
- Society column, 333
-
- Solicitor, advertising, 388
-
- Soul and scholarship, 98
-
- Soule, George, on radicalism, 271–284
-
- Southern States, 139;
- Negro repression, 358;
- society, 354, 365;
- white superiority, 366
-
- Specialists, 80
-
- Specialization, 79, 80, 158;
- surgical, 446
-
- Speculation in city land, 7, 8
-
- Spingarn, J. E., 535;
- on scholarship and criticism, 93–108
-
- Spirit, 518
-
- Spiritual activity, 93, 98
-
- Spiritual needs, 527
-
- Spiritual values, 520
-
- Spoiled child, 334
-
- “Spoon River Anthology,” 221, 222, 226, 503
-
- Sport and play, 457–461;
- bibliography, 554
-
- Springfield _Republican_, 38
-
- Standard Oil Co., 409, 412
-
- Standardization, 149, 150, 335;
- American, 111;
- newspapers and readers, 36
-
- Standards, economic, 268
-
- State, business and, 264;
- corporations and, 412;
- diversity of legal systems, 65;
- education and, 89;
- German, 302;
- legislatures, 24, 31
-
- Stearns, H. E., on the intellectual life, 135–150
-
- Sterility, 148
-
- Stevens, Wallace, 218, 221, 223, 224
-
- Stewart, A. T., 405
-
- Stock Exchange, 410
-
- Stockard, C. R., 452
-
- Stories, newspaper, 45
-
- Story, Joseph, 54, 56, 62
-
- Strikes and the newspapers, 46
-
- Stuart, H. L., on American civilization, 469–488
-
- Student Councils, college, 124
-
- Sturgis, Russell, quoted on art, 237
-
- Style, 106
-
- Sublimation of sex, 312
-
- Suburbia, 15, 19
-
- Success, 517, 518
-
- Suffrage, 143
-
- Sumner, W. G., 543
-
- “Super-docs,” 447
-
- Superstition, 78
-
- Supply and demand, 261
-
- Suppression of sex impulse, 311
-
- Surgeons, 446
-
- Swift, M. I., 172
-
- Sydenstricker, Edgar, 325
-
- Symbolists, 503
-
- Symons, Arthur, 499
-
- Sympathy, 175;
- professional physician, 445
-
- Symphony orchestras, 199, 202
-
- Syphilis, 453
-
-
- Taboos, 315, 441, 494
-
- Talk, college, 130
-
- Tariff, 399, 414;
- works of art, 230
-
- Tarkington, Booth, 243, 248
-
- Taste, 106;
- definition, 100, 107–108;
- musical, 200;
- theatrical, improvement, 243
-
- Taylor, Deems, on music, 199–214
-
- Teachers, control of teaching, 90;
- status, 90;
- suppression of freedom of mind, 86, 87;
- unions, 91
-
- Teasdale, Sara, 221, 222
-
- Teeth, infected, 448, 449
-
- Telegraph, Morse code, 403
-
- Ten Commandments, 307
-
- Tennis, 460
-
- Teutonic school, 303
-
- Texas fever, 449
-
- Textile industry, 402
-
- Theatre, 243–253;
- bibliography, 543;
- New York City, 243, 246;
- newspapers and, 249
-
- Theology versus science, 163
-
- Things, 397
-
- Thomas, Augustus, 249
-
- Thomas, Theodore, 213
-
- Thoreau, H. D., 184, 194, 494
-
- Thorndike’s tests, 154
-
- Thought, 105, 148, 479;
- uniformity, 439
-
- Threshing-machines, 402
-
- Thrift, family, 325
-
- Thucydides, 307
-
- Ticknor, George, 95, 96
-
- Tildsley, John, 87
-
- Tolstoy, Leo, 190, 499, 503
-
- Tom, Blind, 207–208
-
- Tonsils, 448, 449
-
- Towns, New England, 3;
- _see also_ Small town
-
- Trade-mark, 409
-
- Trade secrets, 421
-
- Trade-union movement, 283
-
- Traditions, 528;
- college, 118;
- college and life at large, 131–132
-
- Transportation, 401, 402, 408
-
- Trinity Church, Boston, 11
-
- Truth, 86, 92;
- love of, 144
-
- Tschaikovsky, P. I., 200, 213
-
- Tuberculosis, bovine and human, 449
-
- Turgeniev, I. S., 190
-
- Twachtman, J. H., 235
-
- Twain, Mark, 182, 187, 191, 194, 464
-
- Typhoid, 450
-
- Typography, 391
-
-
- Unconscious, the, 435, 436
-
- Undergraduate, 116
-
- Unemployment, 414
-
- Uniform Negotiable Instruments Law, 64
-
- Uniformity, colleges and life, 131–132
-
- Unions, 283
-
- U. S. Geological Survey, 158
-
- Universal Negro Improvement Assn., 369
-
- Universities, 524, 526;
- materialism, 97;
- mediocity of life and scholarship, 95, 96, 97;
- professors, 96, 97, 193, 491, 527;
- _see also_ College life; Colleges
-
- Untermeyer, Louis, on our poetry, 215
-
- Uplifters, 450, 497
-
-
- Vaccination for typhoid, 450
-
- Valparaiso University, 119, 124
-
- Van Dyke, Henry, 496
-
- Van Loon, H. W., on history, 297–308
-
- Van Slyke, D. D., 456
-
- Vanderlyn, John, 232
-
- Vaughan, V. C., 444
-
- Veblen, T. B., 544, 545
-
- Venereal peril, 453
-
- Venereal prophylaxis, 454
-
- Verihood, 86
-
- Versailles, 305
-
- Victrolas, 212
-
- Villagers, 285
-
- Villages, atmosphere, 290
-
- Virginia schools, white and Negro, 359
-
- Vision, 177, 480, 481
-
- Vital statistics, 319, 320
-
- Volstead Act, debate on, 28
-
- Volunteer firemen’s organizations, 292
-
-
- Wanamaker, John, 46
-
- War. _See_ World War
-
- Washington, D. C., dramatic taste, 246
-
- Washington Square Players, 252
-
- Waste, business, 413;
- economic, 284;
- industrial, 419
-
- Water, danger of excessive use, 451
-
- Wealth, 413
-
- Weir, J. A., 235
-
- Welfare of employés, 483
-
- Wellman, Rita, 248
-
- Wells, H. G., 457
-
- _Weltanschauung_, 101, 102
-
- Wendell, Barrett, quoted on education, 77
-
- Werner, Judge, W. E., 73
-
- West, the, 112
-
- Wharton, Mrs. Edith, 179
-
- Whistler, J. A. M., 234, 237
-
- White, Stanford, 11
-
- White City, 13
-
- White Ways, 13
-
- Whitman, Walt, 149, 185, 186, 187, 188, 190, 194, 215, 217, 504, 523
-
- Who’s who in this volume, 559–564
-
- Widowhood, prevention, 329
-
- Widows, 328, 329
-
- Wigmore, J. H., 69, 75
-
- Wild oats, 316
-
- Wilson, Woodrow, 25, 450
-
- “Winesburg, Ohio,” 137
-
- Winsett, Ned, 179
-
- _Wissenschaftlichkeit_, 303, 304
-
- Witchcraft, 429
-
- Wives, thrifty, 324, 325
-
- Women, beauty, 431, 438;
- dominance in art, 229;
- dominance in intellectual life, 135;
- dominance in music, 205;
- hours of work, 73;
- in industry, 326;
- interests, 142;
- longevity, 328;
- maintenance at leisure, 139, 141;
- men and, dichotomy, 142;
- men’s circumspection as to, 316;
- nervous, 432;
- personality, 317, 318;
- psychology, 317;
- surplus, 326, 327
-
- Women’s clubs, 142
-
- Woodberry, G. E., 101
-
- Woods, A. H., 245, 251
-
- Work for work’s sake, 491
-
- Workmen’s compensation, 72
-
- Workmen’s families, 325, 326
-
- World news, 48
-
- World War, business and, 413;
- historians and, 304
-
- World’s Fair, Chicago, 13
-
- Wyant, A. H., 233
-
-
- Yeast, 444
-
- Yeats, W. B., 499
-
- Yellow fever, 450
-
- Y.M.C.A., 144;
- instruction, 83
-
- Youth, sex life, 526
-
-
- Zenger, Peter, 55
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent within
-each article when a predominant preference was found in that article;
-otherwise, they were not changed.
-
-Simple typographical errors were corrected; unbalanced quotation
-marks were remedied when the change was obvious, and otherwise left
-unbalanced.
-
-Duplicate hemi-titles were removed.
-
-Table of Contents: replaced ditto marks with the actual words above
-them.
-
-The index was not systematically checked for proper alphabetization or
-correct page references.
-
-Page 352: “singled out” was printed as “signalled out”; changed here.
-
-Page 388: “full-fledged” was printed as “full-edged”; changed here.
-
-Page 573: “New York _Herald_” was misprinted as “New York _World_”;
-changed here.
-
-Page 576: “mediocity” was printed that way; may be a misprint for
-either “mediocrity” “meritocracy.”
-
-Page 576, under “State, business and”: “corporations” was misprinted as
-“co-operations”; changed here.
-
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-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.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Civilization in the United States</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>An inquiry by thirty Americans</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Various</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Editor: Harold E. Stearns</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 23, 2022 [eBook #68385]</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: Emmanuel Ackerman, Charlie Howard, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CIVILIZATION IN THE UNITED STATES ***</div>
-
-<div class="transnote covernote">
-<p class="center larger">Transcriber’s Note</p>
-
-<p>Cover image created by Transcriber, using part of
-an image of the original book’s Title page,
-and placed into the Public Domain.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="newpage p2 center wspace">
-<h1>
-CIVILIZATION IN THE<br />
-UNITED STATES</h1>
-
-<p class="p2 larger"><i>AN INQUIRY BY THIRTY AMERICANS</i></p>
-
-<p class="p4 b4">EDITED BY HAROLD E. STEARNS</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowe4">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_001.png" alt="Publisher Logo" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="smaller">NEW YORK</span><br />
-HARCOURT, BRACE AND COMPANY
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p class="newpage p4 center wspace">
-<span class="smaller">COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY<br />
-HARCOURT, BRACE AND COMPANY, INC</span></p>
-
-<p class="p4 center"><span class="xxsmall">PRINTED IN THE U. S. A. BY<br />
-THE QUINN &amp; BODEN COMPANY<br />
-RAHWAY, N. J.</span>
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_iii">iii</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="PREFACE">PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">This</span> book has been an adventure in intellectual co-operation.
-If it were a mere collection of haphazard essays, gathered
-together to make the conventional symposium, it would have
-only slight significance. But it has been the deliberate and
-organized outgrowth of the common efforts of like-minded men
-and women to see the problem of modern American civilization
-as a whole, and to illuminate by careful criticism the
-special aspect of that civilization with which the individual
-is most familiar. Personal contact has served to correct overemphasis,
-and slow and careful selection of the members of a
-group which has now grown to some thirty-odd has given to
-this work a unity of approach and attack which it otherwise
-could not possibly have had.</p>
-
-<p>The nucleus of this group was brought together by common
-work, common interests, and more or less common assumptions.
-As long ago as the autumn of last year Mr. Van Wyck
-Brooks and I discussed the possibility of several of us,
-who were engaged in much the same kind of critical examination
-of our civilization, coming together to exchange ideas, to
-clarify our individual fields, and to discover wherein they coincided,
-overlapped, or diverged. The original desire was the
-modest one of making it possible for us to avoid working at
-cross-purposes. I suggested that we meet at my home, which
-a few of us did, and since that time until the delivery of this
-volume to the publishers we have met every fortnight. Even
-at our first meeting we discovered our points of view to have
-so much in common that our desire for informal and pleasant
-discussions became the more serious wish to contribute a definite
-and tangible piece of work towards the advance of intellectual
-life in America. We wished to speak the truth about
-American civilization as we saw it, in order to do our share
-in making a real civilization possible—for I think with all of
-us there was a common assumption that a field cannot be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_iv">iv</span>
-ploughed until it has first been cleared of rocks, and that constructive
-criticism can hardly exist until there is something
-on which to construct.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally the first problem to arise was the one of ways and
-means. If the spirit and temper of the French encyclopædists
-of the 18th century appealed strongly to us, certainly their
-method for the advancement of knowledge was inapplicable in
-our own century. The cultural phenomena we proposed to
-survey were too complicated and extensive; besides, we wished
-to make a definite contribution of some kind or another while,
-so to speak, there was yet time. For the cohesiveness of the
-group, the good-humoured tolerance and cheerful sacrifice of
-time, were to some extent the consequence of the intellectual
-collapse that came with the hysterical post-armistice days,
-when it was easier than in normal times to get together intelligent
-and civilized men and women in common defence against
-the common enemy of reaction. We wished to take advantage
-of this strategic situation for the furtherance of our co-operative
-enterprise, and decided, finally, that the simplest plan
-would be the best. Each of us was to write a single short
-essay on the special topic we knew most thoroughly; we were
-to continue our meetings in order to keep informed of the
-progress of our work and to see that there was no duplication;
-we were to extend the list of subjects to whatever legitimately
-bore upon our cultural life and to select the authors by common
-agreement; we were to keep in touch with each other
-so that the volume might have that inner consistency which
-could come only from direct acquaintance with what each of
-us was planning.</p>
-
-<p>There were a few other simple rules which we laid down
-in the beginning. Desirous of avoiding merely irrelevant criticism
-and of keeping attention upon our actual treatment of
-our subjects rather than upon our personalities, we provided
-that all contributors to the volume must be American citizens.
-For the same reason, we likewise provided that in the list there
-should be no professional propagandists—except as one is a
-propagandist for one’s own ideas—no martyrs, and no one who
-was merely disgruntled. Since our object was to give an uncompromising,
-and consequently at some points necessarily<span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">v</span>
-harsh, analysis, we desired the tone to be good-natured and
-the temper urbane. At first, these larger points of policy were
-decided by common agreement or, on occasion, by majority
-vote, and to the end I settled no important question without
-consultation with as many members of the group as I could
-approach within the limited time we had agreed to have this
-volume in the hands of the publisher. But with the extension
-of the scope of the book, the negotiations with the publisher,
-and the mass of complexities and details that are inevitable in
-so difficult an enterprise, the authority to decide specific questions
-and the usual editorial powers were delegated as a matter
-of convenience to me, aided by a committee of three. Hence
-I was in a position constantly to see the book as a whole,
-and to make suggestions for differentiation, where repetition
-appeared to impend, or for unity, where the divergence
-was sharp enough to be construed by some as contradictory.
-In view both of the fact that every contributor has full liberty
-of opinion and that the personalities and points of view finding
-expression in the essays are all highly individualistic, the underlying
-unity which binds the volume together is really
-surprising.</p>
-
-<p>It may seem strange that a volume on civilization in the
-United States does not include a specific article on religion,
-and the omission is worth a paragraph of explanation. Outside
-the bigger cities, certainly no one can understand the social
-structure of contemporary American life without careful study
-of the organization and power of the church. Speaking generally,
-we are a church-going people, and at least on the surface
-the multiplicity of sects and creeds, the sheer immensity
-of the physical apparatus by which the religious impulse is
-articulated, would seem to prove that our interest in and
-emotional craving for religious experience are enormous. But
-the omission has not been due to any superciliousness on our
-part towards the subject itself; on the contrary, I suppose I
-have put more thought and energy into this essay, which has
-not been written, than into any other problem connected with
-the book. The bald truth is, it has been next to impossible
-to get any one to write on the subject; most of the people I
-approached shied off—it was really difficult to get them to talk<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vi">vi</span>
-about it at all. Almost unanimously, when I did manage to
-procure an opinion from them, they said that real religious
-feeling in America had disappeared, that the church had become
-a purely social and political institution, that the country
-is in the grip of what Anatole France has aptly called Protestant
-clericalism, and that, finally, they weren’t interested in
-the topic. The accuracy of these observations (except the
-last) I cannot, of course, vouch for, but it is rather striking
-that they were identical. In any event, the topic as a topic
-has had to be omitted; but it is not neglected, for in several
-essays directly—in particular, “Philosophy” and “Nerves”—and
-in many by implication the subject is discussed. At one
-time Mr. James Harvey Robinson consented to write the article—and
-it would have been an illuminating piece of work—but
-unfortunately ill health and the pressure of official duties made
-the task impossible for him within the most generous time
-limit that might be arranged.</p>
-
-<p>I have spoken already of the unity which underlies the volume.
-When I remember all these essays, and try to summon
-together the chief themes that run through them, either by
-explicit statement or as a kind of underlying rhythm to all,
-in order to justify the strong impression of unity, I find three
-major contentions that may be said to be basic—contentions
-all the more significant inasmuch as they were unpremeditated
-and were arrived at, as it were, by accident rather than design.
-They are:</p>
-
-<p>First, That in almost every branch of American life there
-is a sharp dichotomy between preaching and practice; we let
-not our right hand know what our left hand doeth. Curiously
-enough, no one regards this, and in fact no one consciously
-feels this as hypocrisy—there are certain abstractions and
-dogmas which are sacred to us, and if we fall short of these
-external standards in our private life, that is no reason for
-submitting them to a fresh examination; rather are we to
-worship them the more vociferously to show our sense of sin.
-Regardless, then, of the theoretical excellence or stupidity of
-these standards, in actual practice the moral code resolves itself
-into the one cardinal heresy of being found out, with the chief
-sanction enforcing it, the fear of what people will say.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">vii</span></p>
-
-<p>Second, That whatever else American civilization is, it is not
-Anglo-Saxon, and that we shall never achieve any genuine
-nationalistic self-consciousness as long as we allow certain
-financial and social minorities to persuade us that we are still
-an English Colony. Until we begin seriously to appraise and
-warmly to cherish the heterogeneous elements which make up
-our life, and to see the common element running through all
-of them, we shall make not even a step towards true unity;
-we shall remain, in Roosevelt’s class-conscious and bitter but
-illuminating phrase, a polyglot boarding-house. It is curious
-how a book on American civilization actually leads one back
-to the conviction that we are, after all, Americans.</p>
-
-<p>Third, That the most moving and pathetic fact in the social
-life of America to-day is emotional and æsthetic starvation,
-of which the mania for petty regulation, the driving, regimentating,
-and drilling, the secret society and its grotesque regalia,
-the firm grasp on the unessentials of material organization of
-our pleasures and gaieties are all eloquent stigmata. We have
-no heritages or traditions to which to cling except those that
-have already withered in our hands and turned to dust. One
-can feel the whole industrial and economic situation as so
-maladjusted to the primary and simple needs of men and
-women that the futility of a rationalistic attack on these infantilisms
-of compensation becomes obvious. There must be
-an entirely new deal of the cards in one sense; we must change
-our hearts. For only so, unless through the humbling of
-calamity or scourge, can true art and true religion and true
-personality, with their native warmth and caprice and gaiety,
-grow up in America to exorcise these painted devils we have
-created to frighten us away from the acknowledgment of our
-spiritual poverty.</p>
-
-<p>If these main contentions seem severe or pessimistic, the
-answer must be: we do not write to please; we strive only
-to understand and to state as clearly as we can. For American
-civilization is still in the embryonic stage, with rich and
-with disastrous possibilities of growth. But the first step in
-growing up is self-conscious and deliberately critical examination
-of ourselves, without sentimentality and without fear. We
-cannot even devise, much less control, the principles which are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">viii</span>
-to guide our future development until that preliminary understanding
-has come home with telling force to the consciousness
-of the ordinary man. To this self-understanding, this book is,
-in our belief, a genuine and valuable contribution. We may
-not always have been wise; we have tried always to be honest.
-And if our attempt will help to embolden others to an equally
-frank expression of their beliefs, perhaps in time wisdom will
-come.</p>
-
-<p>I am glad that, however serious, we are never solemn in these
-essays. Often, in fact, we are quite gay, and it would be a
-humourless person indeed who could not read many of them,
-even when the thrusts are at himself, with that laughter which
-Rabelais tells us is proper to the man. For whatever our defects,
-we Americans, we have one virtue and perhaps a saving
-virtue—we still know how to laugh at ourselves.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-H. E. S.
-</p>
-
-<p class="in0">New York City, July Fourth, 1921.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table id="toc">
-<tr class="small">
- <td> </td>
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdr">PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Preface</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>The Editor</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#PREFACE">iii</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The City</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Lewis Mumford</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_3">3</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Politics</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>H. L. Mencken</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_21">21</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Journalism</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>John Macy</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_35">35</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Law</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Zechariah Chafee, Jr.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_53">53</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Education</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Robert Morss Lovett</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_77">77</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Scholarship and Criticism</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>J. E. Spingarn</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_93">93</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">School and College Life</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Clarence Britten</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_109">109</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Intellectual Life</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Harold E. Stearns</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_135">135</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Science</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Robert H. Lowie</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_151">151</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Philosophy</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Harold Chapman Brown</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_163">163</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Literary Life</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Van Wyck Brooks</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_179">179</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Music</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Deems Taylor</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_199">199</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Poetry</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Conrad Aiken</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_215">215</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Art</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Walter Pach</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_227">227</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Theatre</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>George Jean Nathan</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_243">243</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Economic Opinion</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Walter H. Hamilton</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_255">255</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Radicalism</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>George Soule</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_271">271</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Small Town</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Louis Raymond Reid</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_285">285</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">History</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>H. W. Van Loon</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_297">297</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Sex</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Elsie Clews Parsons</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_309">309</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Family</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Katharine Anthony</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_319">319</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Alien</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Frederic C. Howe</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_337">337</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Racial Minorities</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Geroid Tanquary Robinson</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_351">351</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Advertising</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>J. Thorne Smith</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_381">381</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Business</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Garet Garrett</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_397">397</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Engineering</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>O. S. Beyer, Jr.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_417">417</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Nerves</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Alfred B. Kuttner</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_427">427</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Medicine</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Anonymous</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_443">443</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Sport and Play</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Ring W. Lardner</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_457">457</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Humour</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Frank M. Colby</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_463">463</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="3"><span class="smcap">American Civilization from the Foreign Point of View</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">  I  <span class="smcap">As an Englishman Sees It</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="in2"><i>Henry L. Stuart</i></span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_469">469</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"> II  <span class="smcap">As an Irishman Sees It</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="in2"><i>Ernest Boyd</i></span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_489">489</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">III  <span class="smcap">As an Italian Sees It</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="in2"><i>Raffaello Piccoli</i></span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_508">508</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Bibliographical Notes</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_527">527</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Who’s Who of the Contributors</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_557">557</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Index</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_565">565</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_3" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CIVILIZATION_IN_THE_UNITED_STATES"><span class="smaller">CIVILIZATION IN THE UNITED STATES</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_CITY">THE CITY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">Around</span> us, in the city, each epoch in America has been
-concentrated and crystallized. In building our cities we
-deflowered a wilderness. To-day more than one-half the population
-of the United States lives in an environment which
-the jerry-builder, the real estate speculator, the paving contractor,
-and the industrialist have largely created. Have we
-begotten a civilization? That is a question which a survey of
-the American city will help us to answer.</p>
-
-<p>If American history is viewed from the standpoint of the
-student of cities, it divides itself roughly into three parts. The
-first was a provincial period, which lasted from the foundation
-of Manhattan down to the opening up of ocean commerce after
-the War of 1812. This was followed by a commercial period,
-which began with the cutting of canals and ended with the
-extension of the railroad system across the continent, and an
-industrial period, that gathered force on the Atlantic seaboard
-in the ’thirties and is still the dominant economic phase of
-our civilization. These periods must not be looked upon as
-strictly successive or exclusive: the names merely express in a
-crude way the main aspect of each era. It is possible to
-telescope the story of America’s colonial expansion and industrial
-exploitation by following the material growth and the
-cultural impoverishment of the American city during its transformations.</p>
-
-<p>The momentum of the provincial city lasted well on to the
-Civil War. The economic basis of this period was agriculture
-and petty trade: its civic expression was, typically, the small
-New England town, with a central common around which were
-grouped a church—appropriately called a meeting-house—a
-school, and perhaps a town hall. Its main street would be
-lined with tall suave elms and bordered by reticent white
-houses of much the same design as those that dotted the countryside.
-In the growing towns of the seaboard this culture was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span>
-overthrown, before it had a chance to express itself adequately
-in either institutions or men, and it bloomed rather tardily,
-therefore, in the little towns of Concord and Cambridge, between
-1820 and the Civil War. We know it to-day through
-a largely anonymous architecture, and through a literature created
-by the school of writers that bears the name of the chief
-city. Unfortunately for the further development of what we
-might call the Concord culture, the agricultural basis of this
-civilization shifted to the wheat-growing West; and therewith
-channels of trade were diverted from Boston to ports that
-tapped a richer, more imperial hinterland. What remained
-of the provincial town in New England was a mummy-case.</p>
-
-<p>The civilization of the New England town spent itself in
-the settlement of the Ohio Valley and the great tracts beyond.
-None of the new centres had, <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">qua</i> provincial towns, any fresh
-contribution to make. It had taken the culture of New England
-more than three centuries before it had borne its Concord
-fruit, and the story of the Western movement is somehow
-summed up in the legend of Johnny Appleseed, who
-planted dry apple seeds, instead of slips from the living tree,
-and hedged the roads he travelled with wild apples, harsh and
-puny and inedible. Cincinnati and Pittsburgh jumped from
-a frustrate provincialism into the midst of the machine era;
-and so for a long time they remained destitute of the institutions
-that are necessary to carry on the processes of civilization.</p>
-
-<p>West of the Alleghanies, the common, with its church and
-school, was not destined to dominate the urban landscape: the
-railroad station and the commercial hotel had come to take
-their place. This was indeed the universal mark of the new
-industrialism, as obvious in 19th-century Oxford as in Hoboken.
-The pioneer American city, however, had none of the
-cultural institutions that had been accumulated in Europe during
-the great outbursts of the Middle Age and the Renaissance,
-and as a result its destitution was naked and apparent. It is
-true that every town which was developed mainly during the
-19th century—Manchester as well as Milwaukee—suffered
-from the absence of civic institutes. The peculiarity of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span>
-New World was that the facilities for borrowing from the
-older centres were considerably more limited. London could
-export Madox Brown to Manchester to do the murals in the
-Town Hall: New York had still to create its schools of art
-before it had any Madox Browns that could be exported.</p>
-
-<p>With the beginning of the 19th century, market centres which
-had at first tapped only their immediate region began to reach
-further back into the hinterland, and to stretch outward, not
-merely for freight but for immigrants, across the ocean. The
-silly game of counting heads became the fashion, and in the
-literature of the ’thirties one discovers that every commercial
-city had its statistical lawyer who was bold enough to predict
-its leadership in “population and wealth” before the century
-was out. The chief boast of the American city was its prospective
-size.</p>
-
-<p>Now the New England town was a genuine community. In
-so far as the New England community had a common social
-and political and religious life, the town expressed it. The
-city which was representative of the second period, on the
-other hand, was in origin a trading fort, and the supreme
-occupation of its founders was with the goods life rather than
-the good life. New York, Pittsburgh, Chicago, and St. Louis
-have this common basis. They were not composed of corporate
-organizations on the march, as it were, towards a New
-Jerusalem: they were simply a rabble of individuals “on the
-make.” With such a tradition to give it momentum it is
-small wonder that the adventurousness of the commercial period
-was exhausted on the fortuities and temptations of trade. A
-state of intellectual anæsthesia prevailed. One has only to
-compare Cist’s <cite>Cincinnati Miscellany</cite> with Emerson’s <cite>Dial</cite> to
-see at what a low level the towns of the Middle West were
-carrying on.</p>
-
-<p>Since there was neither fellowship nor social stability nor
-security in the scramble of the inchoate commercial city, it
-remained for a particular institution to devote itself to the
-gospel of the “glad hand.” Thus an historian of Pittsburgh
-records the foundation of a Masonic lodge as early as 1785,
-shortly after the building of the church, and in every American<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span>
-city, small or big, Odd Fellows, Mystic Shriners, Woodmen,
-Elks, Knights of Columbus, and other orders without
-number in the course of time found for themselves a prominent
-place. (Their feminine counterparts were the D.A.R.
-and the W.C.T.U., their juniors, the college Greek letter fraternities.)
-Whereas one will search American cities in vain
-for the labour temples one discovers to-day in Europe from
-Belgium to Italy, one finds that the fraternal lodge generally
-occupies a site of dignity and importance. There were doubtless
-many excellent reasons for the strange proliferation of
-professional fraternity in the American city, but perhaps the
-strongest reason was the absence of any other kind of fraternity.
-The social centre and the community centre, which
-in a singularly hard and consciously beatific way have sought
-to organize fellowship and mutual aid on different terms, are
-products of the last decade.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the only other civic institution of importance that
-the commercial towns fostered was the lyceum: forerunner
-of the elephantine Chautauqua. The lyceum lecture, however,
-was taken as a soporific rather than a stimulant, and if it
-aroused any appetite for art, philosophy, or science there was
-nothing in the environment of the commercial city that could
-satisfy it. Just as church-going became a substitute for religion,
-so automatic lyceum attendance became a substitute for
-thought. These were the prayer wheels of a preoccupied
-commercialism.</p>
-
-<p>The contrast between the provincial and the commercial
-city in America was well summed up in their plans. Consider
-the differences between Cambridge and New York. Up to the
-beginning of the 19th century New York, at the tip of Manhattan
-Island, had the same diffident, rambling town plan that
-characterizes Cambridge. In this old type of city layout the
-streets lead nowhere, except to the buildings that give onto
-them: outside the main roads the provisions for traffic are so
-inadequate as to seem almost a provision against traffic. Quiet
-streets, a pleasant aspect, ample domestic facilities were the
-desiderata of the provincial town; traffic, realty speculation,
-and expansion were those of the newer era. This became evident
-as soon as the Empire City started to realize its “manifest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span>
-destiny” by laying down, in 1808, a plan for its future
-development.</p>
-
-<p>New York’s city plan commissioners went about their work
-with a scarcely concealed purpose to increase traffic and raise
-realty values. The amenities of city life counted for little in
-their scheme of things: debating “whether they should confine
-themselves to rectilinear and rectangular streets, or
-whether they should adopt some of those supposed improvements,
-by circles, ovals, and stars,” they decided, on grounds
-of economy, against any departure from the gridiron design.
-It was under the same stimulus that these admirable philistines
-had the complacency to plan the city’s development up to
-155th Street. Here we are concerned, however, with the
-results of the rectangular plan rather than with the
-motives that lay behind its adoption throughout the country.</p>
-
-<p>The principal effect of the gridiron plan is that every street
-becomes a thoroughfare, and that every thoroughfare is potentially
-a commercial street. The tendency towards movement
-in such a city vastly outweighs the tendency towards
-settlement. As a result of progressive shifts in population,
-due to the changes to which commercial competition subjects
-the use of land, the main institutions of the city, instead of
-cohering naturally—as the museums, galleries, theatres, clubs,
-and public offices group themselves in the heart of Westminster—are
-dispersed in every direction. Neither Columbia
-University, New York University, the Astor Library, nor the
-National Academy of Design—to seize but a few examples—is
-on its original site. Yet had Columbia remained at Fiftieth
-Street it might have had some effective working relation with
-the great storehouse of books that now occupies part of
-Bryant Park at Forty-second Street; or, alternatively, had the
-Astor Library remained on its old site it might have had some
-connection with New York University—had that institution not
-in turn moved!</p>
-
-<p>What was called the growth of the commercial city was
-really a manifestation of the absence of design in the gridiron
-plan. The rectangular parcelling of ground promoted speculation
-in land-units and the ready interchange of real property:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span>
-it had no relation whatever to the essential purposes for
-which a city exists. It is not a little significant that Chicago,
-Cincinnati, and St. Louis, each of which had space set aside
-for public purposes in their original plans, had given up these
-civic holdings to the realty gambler before half of the 19th
-century was over. The common was not the centre of a
-well-rounded community life, as in New England, but the centre
-of land-speculation—which was at once the business, the
-recreation, and the religion of the commercial city. Under
-the influence of New York the Scadders whom Martin Chuzzlewit
-encountered were laying down their New Edens throughout
-the country.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>It was during the commercial period that the evolution of
-the Promenade, such as existed in New York at Battery
-Park, took place. The new promenade was no longer a park
-but a shop-lined thoroughfare, Broadway. Shopping became
-for the more domesticated half of the community an exciting,
-bewildering amusement; and out of a combination of Yankee
-“notions,” Barnum-like advertisement, and magisterial organization
-arose that <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">omnium gatherum</i> of commerce, the
-department store. It is scarcely possible to exaggerate the
-part that Broadway—I use the term generically—has played
-in the American town. It is not merely the Agora but the
-Acropolis. When the factory whistle closes the week, and
-the factory hands of Camden, or Pittsburgh, or Bridgeport pour
-out of the buildings and stockades in which they spend the
-more exhausting half of their lives, it is through Broadway
-that the greater part of their repressions seek an outlet. Both
-the name and the institution extend across the continent from
-New York to Los Angeles. Up and down these second-hand
-Broadways, from one in the afternoon until past ten at night,
-drifts a more or less aimless mass of human beings, bent upon
-extracting such joy as is possible from the sights in the windows,
-the contacts with other human beings, the occasional or
-systematic flirtations, and the risks and adventures of purchase.</p>
-
-<p>In the early development of Broadway the amusements were
-adventitious. Even at present, in spite of the ubiquitous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span>
-movie, the crowded street itself, at least in the smaller communities,
-is the main source of entertainment. Now, under
-normal conditions, for a great part of the population in a
-factory town one of the chief instincts to be repressed is that
-of acquisition (collection). It is not merely that the average
-factory worker cannot afford the luxuries of life: the worst
-is that he must think twice before purchasing the necessities.
-Out of this situation one of Broadway’s happiest achievements
-has arisen: the five and ten cent store. In the five and ten
-cent store it is possible for the circumscribed factory operative
-to obtain the illusion of unmoderated expenditure—and even
-extravagance—without actually inflicting any irreparable rent
-in his purse. Broadway is thus, in more than one sense, the
-great compensatory device of the American city. The dazzle
-of white lights, the colour of electric signs, the alabaster architecture
-of the moving-picture palaces, the æsthetic appeals of
-the shop windows—these stand for elements that are left out
-of the drab perspectives of the industrial city. People who
-do not know how to spend their time must take what satisfaction
-they can in spending their money. That is why, although
-the five and ten cent store itself is perhaps mainly an institution
-for the proletariat, the habits and dispositions it encourages
-are universal. The chief amusement of Atlantic City, that
-opulent hostelry-annex of New York and Philadelphia, lies
-not in the beach and the ocean but in the shops which line the
-interminable Broadway known as the Boardwalk.</p>
-
-<p>Broadway, in sum, is the façade of the American city: a
-false front. The highest achievements of our material civilization—and
-at their best our hotels, our department stores, and
-our Woolworth towers are achievements—count as so many
-symptoms of its spiritual failure. In order to cover up the
-vacancy of getting and spending in our cities, we have invented
-a thousand fresh devices for getting and spending. As a consequence
-our life is externalized. The principal institutions
-of the American city are merely distractions that take our eyes
-off the environment, instead of instruments which would help
-us to mould it creatively a little nearer to humane hopes and
-desires.</p>
-
-<p>The birth of industrialism in America is announced in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span>
-opening of the Crystal Palace in Bryant Park, Manhattan, in
-1853. Between the Crystal Palace Exhibition and the Chicago
-World’s Fair in 1893 lies a period whose defects were
-partly accentuated by the exhaustion that followed the Civil
-War. The debasement of the American city during this period
-can be read in almost every building that was erected. The
-influence of colonial architecture had waned to extinction during
-the first half of the century. There followed a period of
-eclectic experiment, in which all sorts of Egyptian, Byzantine,
-Gothic, and Arabesque ineptitudes were committed—a period
-whose absurdities we have only in recent years begun to escape.
-The domestic style, as the century progressed, became
-more limited. Little touches about the doors, mouldings, fanlights,
-and balustrades disappeared, and finally craftsmanship
-went out of style altogether and a pretentious architectural
-puffery took its place. The “era of good feeling” was an era
-of bad taste.</p>
-
-<p>Pittsburgh, St. Louis, and Chicago give perhaps the most
-naked revelation of the industrial city’s characteristics.
-There were two institutions that set their mark upon the early
-part of this period. One of them was the Mechanics’ Hall.
-This was usually a building of red brick, structural iron, and
-glass, whose unique hideousness marks it as a typical product
-of the age of coal-industrialism, to be put alongside the
-“smoke-halls” of the railroad termini. The other institution
-was the German beer-garden—the one bright spot on the edge
-of an urban landscape that was steadily becoming more dingy,
-more dull, and more depressing. The cities that came to life
-in this period had scarcely any other civic apparatus to boast
-of. Conceive of Pittsburgh without Schenley Park, without
-the Carnegie Institute, without the Library or the Museum
-or the Concert Hall, and without the institutions that have
-grown up during the last generation around its sub-Acropolis—and
-one has a picture of Progress and Poverty that Henry
-George might have drawn on for illustration. The industrial
-city did not represent the creative values in civilization: it
-stood for a new form of human barbarism. In the coal towns
-of Pennsylvania, the steel towns of the Ohio and its tributaries,
-and the factory towns of Long Island Sound and Narragansett<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span>
-Bay was an environment much more harsh, antagonistic,
-and brutal than anything the pioneers had encountered.
-Even the fake exhilaration of the commercial city was lacking.</p>
-
-<p>The reaction against the industrial city was expressed in
-various ways. The defect of these reactions was that they
-were formulated in terms of an escape from the environment
-rather than in a reconstruction of it. Symptomatic of this
-escape, along one particular alley, was the architecture of
-Richardson, and of his apprentices, McKim and White. No
-one who has an eye for the fine incidence of beautiful architecture
-can avoid a shock at discovering a monumental Romanesque
-building at the foot of Pittsburgh’s dingy “Hump,”
-or the hardly less monstrous beauty of Trinity Church, Boston,
-as one approaches it from a waste of railroad yards that
-lie on one side of it. It was no accident, one is inclined to
-believe, that Richardson should have returned to the Romanesque
-only a little time before Henry Adams was exploring
-Mont St. Michel and Chartres. Both men were searching
-for a specific against the fever of industrialism, and architects
-like Richardson were taking to archaic beauty as a man
-who was vaguely ill might have recourse to quinine, in the
-hope that his disease had sufficient similarity to malaria to be
-cured by it.</p>
-
-<p>The truth is that the doses of exotic architecture which
-Richardson and his school sought to inject into the American
-city were anodynes rather than specifics. The Latin Renaissance
-models of McKim and White—the Boston Public Library
-and Madison Square Garden, for example—were perhaps
-a little better suited to the concrete demands of the new
-age; but they were still a long way from that perfect congruence
-with contemporary habits and modes of thought which
-was recorded in buildings like Independence Hall. Almost
-down to the last decade the best buildings of the industrial
-period have been anonymous, and scarcely ever recognized for
-their beauty. A grain elevator here, a warehouse there, an
-office building, a garage—there has been the promise of a
-stripped, athletic, classical style of architecture in these buildings
-which shall embody all that is good in the Machine Age:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span>
-its precision, its cleanliness, its hard illuminations, its unflinching
-logic. Dickens once poked fun at the architecture of
-Coketown because its infirmary looked like its jail and its jail
-like its town hall. But the joke had a sting to it only because
-these buildings were all plaintively destitute of æsthetic inspiration.
-In a place and an age that had achieved a well-rounded
-and balanced culture, we should expect to find the same spirit
-expressed in the simplest cottage and the grandest public
-building. So we find it, for instance, in the humble market
-towns of the Middle Age: there is not one type of architecture
-for 15th-century Shaftesbury and another for London; neither
-is there one style for public London and quite another for
-domestic London. Our architects in America have only just
-begun to cease regarding the Gothic style as especially fit for
-churches and schools, whilst they favour the Roman mode
-for courts, and the Byzantine, perhaps, for offices. Even the
-unique beauty of the Bush Terminal Tower is compromised by
-an antiquely “stylized” interior.</p>
-
-<p>With the beginning of the second decade of this century
-there is some evidence of an attempt to make a genuine culture
-out of industrialism—instead of attempting to escape from
-industrialism into a culture which, though doubtless genuine
-enough, has the misfortune to be dead. The schoolhouses
-in Gary, Indiana, have some of the better qualities of a Gary
-steel plant. That symptom is all to the good. It points perhaps
-to a time when the Gary steel plant may have some of
-the educational virtues of a Gary school. One of the things
-that has made the industrial age a horror in America is the
-notion that there is something shameful in its manifestations.
-The idea that nobody would ever go near an industrial plant
-except under stress of starvation is in part responsible for the
-heaps of rubbish and rusty metal, for the general disorder
-and vileness, that still characterize broad acres of our factory
-districts. There is nothing short of the Alkali Desert that
-compares with the desolateness of the common American industrial
-town. These qualities are indicative of the fact that
-we have centred attention not upon the process but upon the
-return; not upon the task but the emoluments: not upon what
-we can get out of our work but upon what we can achieve when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>
-we get away from our work. Our industrialism has been in
-the grip of business, and our industrial cities, and their institutions,
-have exhibited a major preoccupation with business.
-The coercive repression of an impersonal, mechanical technique
-was compensated by the pervasive will-to-power—or
-at least will-to-comfort—of commercialism.</p>
-
-<p>We have shirked the problem of trying to live well in a
-régime that is devoted to the production of T-beams and toothbrushes
-and TNT. As a result, we have failed to react creatively
-upon the environment with anything like the inspiration
-that one might have found in a group of mediæval peasants
-building a cathedral. The urban worker escapes the mechanical
-routine of his daily job only to find an equally mechanical
-substitute for life and growth and experience in his amusements.
-The Gay White Way with its stupendous blaze of
-lights, and Coney Island, with its fear-stimulating roller coasters
-and chute-the-chutes, are characteristic by-products of an
-age that has renounced the task of actively humanizing the
-machine, and of creating an environment in which all the fruitful
-impulses of the community may be expressed. The movies,
-the White Ways, and the Coney Islands, which almost every
-American city boasts in some form or other, are means of
-giving jaded and throttled people the sensations of living
-without the direct experience of life—a sort of spiritual masturbation.
-In short, we have had the alternative of humanizing
-the industrial city or de-humanizing the population. So far
-we have de-humanized the population.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>The external reactions against the industrial city came to a
-head in the World’s Fair at Chicago. In that strange and
-giddy mixture of Parnassus and Coney Island was born a new
-conception of the city—a White City, spaciously designed,
-lighted by electricity, replete with monuments, crowned with
-public buildings, and dignified by a radiant architecture. The
-men who planned the exposition knew something about the
-better side of the spacious perspectives that Haussmann had
-designed for Napoleon III. Without taking into account the
-fundamental conditions of industrialism, or the salient facts
-of economics, they initiated what shortly came to be known<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span>
-as the City Beautiful movement. For a couple of decades
-Municipal Art societies were rampant. Their programme had
-the defects of the régime it attempted to combat. Its capital
-effort was to put on a front—to embellish Main Street and
-make it a more attractive thoroughfare. Here in æsthetics,
-as elsewhere in education, persisted the brahminical view of
-culture: the idea that beauty was something that could be
-acquired by any one who was willing to put up the cash; that
-it did not arise naturally out of the good life but was something
-which could be plastered on impoverished life; in short,
-that it was a cosmetic.</p>
-
-<p>Until the Pittsburgh Survey of 1908 pricked a pin through
-superficial attempts at municipal improvement, those who
-sought to remake the American city overlooked the necessity
-for rectifying its economic basis. The meanness, the spotty
-development, and the congestion of the American city was at
-least in some degree an index of that deep disease of realty
-speculation which had, as already noted, caused cities like
-Chicago to forfeit land originally laid aside for public uses.
-Because facts like these were ignored for the sake of some
-small, immediate result, the developments that the early reformers
-were bold enough to outline still lie in the realms of
-hopeless fantasy—a fine play of the imagination, like Scadder’s
-prospectus of Eden. Here as elsewhere there have been
-numerous signs of promise during the last decade; but it is
-doubtful whether they are yet numerous enough or profound
-enough to alter the general picture.</p>
-
-<p>At best, the improvements that have been effected in the
-American city have not been central but subsidiary. They
-have been improvements, as Aristotle would have said, in the
-material bases of the good life: they have not been improvements
-in the art of living. The growth of the American
-city during the past century has meant the extension of paved
-streets and sewers and gas mains, and progressive heightening
-of office buildings and tenements. The outlay on pavements,
-sewers, electric lighting systems, and plumbing has been stupendous;
-but no matter what the Rotary Clubs and Chambers
-of Commerce may think of them, these mechanical ingenuities
-are not the indices of a civilization. There is a curious confusion<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span>
-in America between growth and improvement. We use
-the phrase “bigger and better” as if the conjunction were
-inevitable. As a matter of fact, there is little evidence to show
-that the vast increase of population in every urban area has
-been accompanied by anything like the necessary increase of
-schools, universities, theatres, meeting places, parks, and so
-forth. The fact that in 1920 we had sixty-four cities with
-more than 100,000 population, thirty-three with more than
-200,000, and twelve with more than 500,000 does not mean
-that the resources of polity, culture, and art have been correspondingly
-on the increase. The growth of the American city
-has resulted less in the establishment of civilized standards of
-life than in the extension of Suburbia.</p>
-
-<p>“Suburbia” is used here in both the accepted and in a more
-literal sense. On one hand I refer to the fact that the growth
-of the metropolis throws vast numbers of people into distant
-dormitories where, by and large, life is carried on without the
-discipline of rural occupations and without the cultural resources
-that the Central District of the city still retains in its
-art exhibitions, theatres, concerts, and the like. But our metropolises
-produce Suburbia not merely by reason of the fact
-that the people who work in the offices, bureaus, and factories
-live as citizens in a distant territory, perhaps in another state:
-they likewise foster Suburbia in another sense. I mean that
-the quality of life for the great mass of people who live within
-the political boundaries of the metropolis itself is inferior to
-that which a city with an adequate equipment and a thorough
-realization of the creative needs of the community is capable
-of producing. In this sense, the “suburb” called Brookline
-is a genuine city; while the greater part of the “city of Boston”
-is a suburb. We have scarcely begun to make an adequate
-distribution of libraries, meeting places, parks, gymnasia,
-and similar equipment, without which life in the city tends to
-be carried on at a low level of routine—physically as well as
-mentally. (The blatantly confidential advertisements of constipation
-remedies on all the hoardings tell a significant story.)
-At any reasonable allotment of park space, the Committee on
-Congestion in New York pointed out in 1911, a greater number
-of acres was needed for parks on the lower East Side than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span>
-was occupied by the entire population. This case is extreme
-but representative.</p>
-
-<p>It is the peculiarity of our metropolitan civilization, then,
-that in spite of vast resources drawn from the ends of the
-earth, it has an insufficient civic equipment, and what it does
-possess it uses only transiently. Those cities that have the
-beginnings of an adequate equipment, like New York—to
-choose no more invidious example—offer them chiefly to those
-engaged in travelling. As a traveller’s city New York is near
-perfection. An association of cigar salesmen or an international
-congress of social scientists, meeting in one of the
-auditoriums of a big hotel, dining together, mixing in the
-lounge, and finding recreation in the theatres hard by, discovers
-an environment that is ordered, within its limits, to a nicety. It
-is this hotel and theatre district that we must charitably think
-of when we are tempted to speak about the triumphs of the
-American city. Despite manifold defects that arise from want
-of planning, this is the real civic centre of America’s Metropolis.
-What we must overlook in this characterization are the long
-miles of slum that stretch in front and behind and on each
-side of this district—neighbourhoods where, in spite of the
-redoubtable efforts of settlement workers, block organizers, and
-neighbourhood associations, there is no permanent institution,
-other than the public school or the sectarian church, to remind
-the inhabitants that they have a common life and a common
-destiny.</p>
-
-<p>Civic life, in fine, the life of intelligent association and common
-action, a life whose faded pattern still lingers in the old
-New England town, is not something that we daily enjoy, as
-we work in an office or a factory. It is rather a temporary
-state that we occasionally achieve with a great deal of time,
-bother, and expense. The city is not around us, in our little
-town, suburb, or neighbourhood: it lies beyond us, at the end
-of a subway ride or a railway journey. We are citizens occasionally:
-we are suburbanites (<em>denizens</em>, <em>idiots</em>) by regular
-routine. Small wonder that bathtubs and heating systems and
-similar apparatus play such a large part in our conception of
-the good life.</p>
-
-<p>Metropolitanism in America represents, from the cultural<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
-angle, a reaction against the uncouth and barren countryside
-that was skinned, rather than cultivated, by the restless, individualistic,
-self-assertive American pioneer. The perpetual
-drag to New York, and the endeavour of less favourably situated
-cities to imitate the virtues and defects of New York,
-is explicable as nothing other than the desire to participate
-in some measure in the benefits of city life. Since we have
-failed up to the present to develop genuine regional cultures,
-those who do not wish to remain barbarians must become
-metropolitans. That means they must come to New York,
-or ape the ways that are fashionable in New York. Here
-opens the breach that has begun to widen between the metropolis
-and the countryside in America. The countryman,
-who cannot enjoy the advantages of the metropolis, who has
-no centre of his own to which he can point with pride, resents
-the privileges that the metropolitan enjoys. Hence the periodical
-crusades of our State Legislatures, largely packed with
-rural representatives, against the vices, corruptions, and follies
-which the countryman enviously looks upon as the peculiar
-property of the big city. Perhaps the envy and resentment
-of the farming population is due to a genuine economic grievance
-against the big cities—especially against their banks,
-insurance companies, and speculative middlemen. Should the
-concentration of power, glory, and privilege in the metropolis
-continue, it is possible that the city will find itself subject to
-an economic siege. If our cities cannot justify their existence
-by their creative achievements, by their demonstration of the
-efficacy and grace of corporate life, it is doubtful whether they
-will be able to persuade the country to support them, once the
-purely conventional arrangements by means of which the city
-browbeats the countryside are upset. This, however, brings
-us to the realm of social speculation; and he who would enter
-it must abandon everything but hope.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Metropolitanism is of two orders. At its partial best it is
-exhibited in New York, the literal mother city of America.
-In its worst aspect it shows itself in the sub-metropolises which
-have been spawning so prolifically since the ’eighties. If we
-are to understand the capacities and limitations of the other<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span>
-great cities in America, we must first weigh the significance of
-New York.</p>
-
-<p>The forces that have made New York dominant are inherent
-in our financial and industrial system; elsewhere those
-same forces, working in slightly different ways, created London,
-Rome, Paris, Berlin, Vienna, Petrograd, and Moscow.
-What happened in the industrial towns of America was that
-the increments derived from land, capital, and association went,
-not to the enrichment of the local community, but to those who
-had a legal title to the land and the productive machinery. In
-other words, the gains that were made in Pittsburgh, Springfield,
-Dayton, and a score of other towns that became important
-in the industrial era were realized largely in New York,
-whose position had been established, before the turn of the
-century, as the locus of trade and finance. (New York passed
-the 500,000 mark in the 1850 census.) This is why, perhaps,
-during the ’seventies and ’eighties, decades of miserable depression
-throughout the industrial centres, there were signs of
-hope and promise in New York: the Museums of Art and
-Natural History were built: <cite>Life</cite> and <cite>Puck</cite> and a batch of
-newspapers were founded: the Metropolitan Opera House and
-Carnegie Hall were established: and a dozen other evidences
-of a vigorous civic life appeared. In a short time New York
-became the glass of fashion and the mould of form, and through
-the standardization, specialization, and centralization which
-accompany the machine process the Metropolis became at
-length the centre of advertising, the lender of farm mortgages,
-the distributor of boiler-plate news, the headquarters
-of the popular magazine, the publishing centre, and finally the
-chief disseminator of plays and motion pictures in America.
-The educational foundations which the exploiter of the Kodak
-has established at Rochester were not characteristic of the early
-part of the industrial period—otherwise New York’s eminence
-might have been briskly challenged before it had become, after
-its fashion, unchallengeable. The increment from Mr. Carnegie’s
-steel works built a hall of music for New York long
-before it created the Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh. In
-other words, the widespread effort of the American provincial
-to leave his industrial city for New York comes to something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
-like an attempt to get back from New York what had been
-previously filched from the industrial city.</p>
-
-<p>The future of our cities depends upon how permanent are
-the forces which drain money, energy, and brains from the various
-regions in America into the twelve great cities that now
-dominate the countryside, and in turn drain the best that is in
-these sub-metropolises to New York. To-day our cities are at
-a crossing of the ways. Since the 1910 census a new tendency
-has begun to manifest itself, and the cities that have grown
-the fastest are those of a population from 25,000 to 100,000.
-Quantitatively, that is perhaps a good sign. It may indicate
-the drift to Suburbia is on the wane. One finds it much
-harder, however, to gauge the qualitative capacities of the
-new régime; much more difficult to estimate the likelihood of
-building up, within the next generation or two, genuine regional
-cultures to take the place of pseudo-national culture which
-now mechanically emanates from New York. So far our provincial
-culture has been inbred and sterile: our provincial
-cities have substituted boosting for achievement, fanciful
-speculation for intelligent planning, and a zaniacal optimism
-for constructive thought. These habits have made them an
-easy prey to the metropolis, for at its lowest ebb there has
-always been a certain amount of organized intelligence and
-cultivated imagination in New York—if only because it is the
-chief point of contact between Europe and America. Gopher
-Prairie has yet to take to heart the fable about the frog
-that tried to inflate himself to the size of a bull. When Gopher
-Prairie learns its lessons from Bergen and Augsburg and Montpellier
-and Grenoble, the question of “metropolitanism versus
-regionalism” may become as active in America as it is now in
-Europe.</p>
-
-<p>Those of us who are metropolitans may be tempted to think
-that the hope for civilization in America is bound up with the
-continuance of metropolitanism. That is essentially a cockney
-view of culture and society, however, and our survey of the
-development of the city in America should have done something
-to weaken its self-confident complacence. Our metropolitan
-civilization is not a success. It is a different kind of wilderness
-from that which we have deflowered—but the feral<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
-rather than the humane quality is dominant: it is still a wilderness.
-The cities of America must learn to remould our
-mechanical and financial régime, for if metropolitanism continues
-they are probably destined to fall by its weight.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Lewis Mumford</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_21" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="POLITICS">POLITICS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="in0">No person shall be a Representative who ... shall not, when
-elected, be an inhabitant of that State in which he shall be chosen....
-No person shall be a Senator who ... shall not, when
-elected, be an inhabitant of that State for which he shall be chosen.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Specialists</span> in political archæology will recognize these
-sentences: they are from Article I, Sections 2 and 3, of
-the constitution of the United States. I have heard and forgotten
-how they got there; no doubt the cause lay in the fierce
-jealousy of the States. But whatever the fact, I have a notion
-that there are few provisions of the constitution that have had
-a more profound effect upon the character of practical politics
-in the Republic, or, indirectly, upon the general colour of American
-thinking in the political department. They have made
-steadily for parochialism in legislation, for the security and
-prosperity of petty local bosses and machines, for the multiplication
-of pocket and rotten boroughs of the worst sort, and,
-above all, for the progressive degeneration of the honesty and
-honour of representatives. They have greased the ways for
-the trashy and ignoble fellow who aspires to get into Congress,
-and they have blocked them for the man of sense, dignity, and
-self-respect. More, perhaps, than any other single influence
-they have been responsible for the present debauched and
-degraded condition of the two houses, and particularly of the
-lower one. Find me the worst ass in Congress, and I’ll show
-you a man they have helped to get there and to stay there.
-Find me the most shameless scoundrel, and I’ll show you
-another.</p>
-
-<p>No such centripedal mandate, as far as I have been able to
-discover, is in the fundamental law of any other country practising
-the representative system. An Englishman, if ambition
-heads him toward St. Stephen’s, may go hunting for a willing
-constituency wherever the hunting looks best, and if he fails<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
-in the Midlands he may try again in the South, or in the
-North, or in Scotland or Wales. A Frenchman of like dreams
-has the same privilege; the only condition, added after nineteen
-years of the Third Republic, is that he may not be a candidate
-in two or more <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">arrondissements</i> at once. And so with
-a German, an Italian, or a Spaniard. But not so with an
-American. He must be an actual inhabitant of the State he
-aspires to represent at Washington. More, he must be, in all
-save extraordinary cases, an actual inhabitant of the congressional
-district—for here, by a characteristic American process,
-the fundamental law is sharpened by custom. True enough,
-this last requirement is not laid down by the constitution. It
-would be perfectly legal for the thirty-fifth New York district,
-centring at Syracuse, to seek its congressman in Manhattan, or
-even at Sing Sing. In various iconoclastic States, in fact, the
-thing has been occasionally done. But not often; not often
-enough to produce any appreciable effect. The typical congressman
-remains a purely local magnifico, the gaudy cock of
-some small and usually far from appetizing barnyard. His
-rank and dignity as a man are measured by provincial standards
-of the most puerile sort, and his capacity to discharge the
-various and onerous duties of his office is reckoned almost exclusively
-in terms of his ability to hold his grip upon the local
-party machine.</p>
-
-<p>If he has genuine ability, it is a sort of accident. If he is
-thoroughly honest, it is next door to a miracle. Of the 430-odd
-representatives who carry on so diligently and obscenely at
-Washington, making laws and determining policies for the
-largest free nation ever seen in the world, there are not two
-dozen whose views upon any subject under the sun carry any
-weight whatsoever outside their own bailiwicks, and there are
-not a dozen who rise to anything approaching unmistakable
-force and originality. They are, in the overwhelming main,
-shallow fellows, ignorant of the grave matters they deal with
-and too stupid to learn. If, as is often proposed, the United
-States should adopt the plan of parliamentary responsibility
-and the ministry should be recruited from the lower house,
-then it would be difficult, without a radical change in election
-methods, to fetch up even such pale talents and modest decencies<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
-as were assembled for their cabinets by Messrs. Wilson
-and Harding. The better sort of congressmen, to be sure,
-acquire after long service a good deal of technical proficiency.
-They know the traditions and precedents of the two houses;
-they can find their way in and out of every rathole in the
-Capitol; they may be trusted to carry on the legislative routine
-in a more or less shipshape manner. Of such sort are the specialists
-paraded in the newspapers—on the tariff, on military
-affairs, on foreign relations, and so on. They come to know,
-in time, almost as much as a Washington correspondent, or one
-of their own committee clerks. But the average congressman
-lifts himself to no such heights of sagacity. He is content to
-be led by the fugelmen and bellwethers. Examine him at
-leisure, and you will find that he is incompetent and imbecile,
-and not only incompetent and imbecile, but also incurably
-dishonest. The first principles of civilized law-making are
-quite beyond him; he ends, as he began, a local politician, interested
-only in jobs. His knowledge is that of a third-rate country
-lawyer—which he often is in fact. His intelligence is that
-of a country newspaper editor, or evangelical divine. His
-standards of honour are those of a country banker—which he
-also often is. To demand sense of such a man, or wide and
-accurate information, or a delicate feeling for the public and
-private proprieties, is to strain his parts beyond endurance.</p>
-
-<p>The constitution, of course, stops with Congress, but its
-influence is naturally powerful within the States, and one finds
-proofs of the fact on all sides. It is taking an herculean effort
-everywhere to break down even the worst effects of this influence;
-the prevailing tendency is still to discover a mysterious
-virtue in the office-holder who was born and raised in the State,
-or county, or city, or ward. The judge must come from the
-bar of the court he is to adorn; the mayor must be part and
-parcel of the local machine; even technical officers, such as engineers
-and health commissioners, lie under the constitutional
-blight. The thing began as a belief in local self-government,
-the oldest of all the sure cures for despotism. But it has gradually
-taken on the character of government by local politicians,
-which is to say, by persons quite unable to comprehend the
-most elemental problems of State and nation, and unfitted by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span>
-nature to deal with them honestly and patriotically, even if they
-could comprehend them. Just as prohibition was forced upon
-the civilized minorities collected in the great cities against their
-most vigorous and persistent opposition, so the same minorities,
-when it comes to intra-state affairs, are constantly at the mercy
-of predatory bands of rural politicians. If there is any large
-American city whose peculiar problems are dealt with competently
-and justly by its State legislature, then I must confess
-that twenty years in journalism have left me ignorant of it.
-An unending struggle for fairer dealing goes on in every State
-that has large cities, and every concession to their welfare is
-won only at the cost of gigantic effort. The State legislature
-is never intelligent; it represents only the average mind of the
-county bosses, whose sole concern is with jobs. The machines
-that they represent are wholly political, but they have no political
-principles in any rational sense. Their one purpose and
-function is to maintain their adherents in the public offices,
-or to obtain for them in some other way a share of the State
-funds. They are quite willing to embrace any new doctrine,
-however fantastic, or to abandon any old one, however long
-supported, if only the business will promote their trade and
-so secure their power.</p>
-
-<p>This concentration of the ultimate governmental authority
-in the hands of small groups of narrow, ignorant, and unconscionable
-manipulators tends inevitably to degrade the actual
-office-holder, or, what is the same thing, to make office-holding
-prohibitive to all men not already degraded. It is almost
-impossible to imagine a man of genuine self-respect and dignity
-offering himself as a candidate for the lower house—or, since
-the direct primary and direct elections brought it down to the
-common level, for the upper house—in the average American
-constituency. His necessary dealings with the electors themselves,
-and with the idiots who try more or less honestly to lead
-them, would be revolting enough, but even worse would be his
-need of making terms with the professional politicians of his
-party—the bosses of the local machine. These bosses naturally
-make the most of the constitutional limitation; it works
-powerfully in their favour. A local notable, in open revolt
-against them, may occasionally beat them by appealing directly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
-to the voters, but nine times out of ten, when there is any sign
-of such a catastrophe, they are prompt to perfume the ticket
-by bringing forth another local notable who is safe and sane,
-which is to say, subservient and reliable. The thing is done
-constantly; it is a matter of routine; it accounts for most
-of the country bankers, newspaper owners, railroad lawyers,
-proprietors of cement works, and other such village bigwigs
-in the lower house. Here everything runs to the advantage
-of the bosses. It is not often that the notable in rebellion
-is gaudy enough to blind the plain people to the high merits of
-his more docile opponent. They see him too closely and know
-him too well. He shows none of that exotic charm which accounts,
-on a different plane, for exogamy. There is no strangeness,
-no mysteriousness, above all, no novelty about him.</p>
-
-<p>It is my contention that this strangle-hold of the local machines
-would be vastly less firm if it could be challenged, not
-only by rebels within the constituency, but also by salient men
-from outside. The presidential campaigns, indeed, offer plenty
-of direct proof of it. In these campaigns it is a commonplace
-for strange doctrines and strange men to force themselves upon
-the practical politicians in whole sections of the country, despite
-their constant effort to keep their followers faithful to
-the known. All changes, of whatever sort, whether in leaders
-or in ideas, are opposed by such politicians at the start, but
-time after time they are compelled to acquiesce and to hurrah.
-Bryan, as every one knows, forced himself upon the Democratic
-party by appealing directly to the people; the politicians, in
-the main, were bitterly against him until further resistance
-was seen to be useless, and they attacked him again the moment
-he began to weaken, and finally disposed of him. So with
-Wilson. It would be absurd to say that the politicians of his
-party—and especially the bosses of the old machines in the
-congressional districts—were in favour of him in 1912. They
-were actually against him almost unanimously. He got past
-their guard and broke down their resolution to nominate some
-more trustworthy candidate by operating directly upon the
-emotions of the voters. For some reason never sufficiently
-explained he became the heir of the spirit of rebellion raised
-by Bryan sixteen years before, and was given direct and very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
-effective aid by Bryan himself. Roosevelt saddled himself
-upon the Republican party in exactly the same way. The
-bosses made heroic efforts to sidetrack him, to shelve him, to
-get rid of him by any means short of homicide, but his bold
-enterprises and picturesque personality enchanted the people,
-and if it had not been for the extravagant liberties that he took
-with his popularity in later years he might have retained it until
-his death.</p>
-
-<p>The same possibility of unhorsing the machine politicians, I
-believe, exists in even the smallest electoral unit. All that is
-needed is the chance to bring in the man. Podunk cannot produce
-him herself, save by a sort of miracle. If she has actually
-hatched him, he is far away by the time he has come to his
-full stature and glitter—in the nearest big city, in Chicago
-or New York. Podunk is proud of him, and many other
-Podunks, perhaps, are stirred by his ideas, his attitudes, his
-fine phrases—but he lives, say, in some Manhattan congressional
-district which has the Hon. Patrick Googan as its representative
-by divine right, and so there is no way to get him
-into the halls of Congress. In his place goes the Hon. John
-P. Balderdash, State’s attorney for five years, State senator for
-two terms, and county judge for a brief space—and always a
-snide and petty fellow, always on the best of terms with the
-local bosses, always eager for a job on any terms they lay down.
-The yokels vote for the Hon. Mr. Balderdash, not because they
-admire him, but because their only choice is between him and
-the Hon. James Bosh. If anything even remotely resembling
-a first-rate man could come into the contest, if it were lawful
-for them to rid themselves of their recurrent dilemma by soliciting
-the interest of such a man, then they would often
-enough rise in their might and compel their parish overlords,
-as the English put it, to adopt him. But the constitution protects
-these overlords in their business, and in the long run the
-voters resign all thought of deliverance. Thus the combat
-remains one between small men, and interest in it dies out.
-Most of the men who go to the lower house are third-raters,
-even in their own narrow bailiwicks. In my own congressional
-district, part of a large city, there has never been a candidate
-of any party, during the twenty years that I have voted, who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span>
-was above the intellectual level of a corner grocer. No successful
-candidate of that district has ever made a speech in
-Congress (or out of it) worth hearing, or contributed a single
-sound idea otherwise to the solution of any public problem.
-One and all, they have confined themselves exclusively to the
-trade in jobs. One and all, they have been ciphers in the house
-and before the country.</p>
-
-<p>Well, perhaps I labour my point too much. It is, after all,
-not important. The main thing is the simple fact that the
-average representative from my district is typical of Congress—that,
-if anything, he is superior to the normal congressman
-of these, our days. That normal congressman, as year chases
-year, tends to descend to such depths of puerility, to such
-abysses of petty shysterism, that he becomes offensive alike to
-the intelligence and to the nose. His outlook, when it is honest,
-is commonly childish—and it is very seldom honest. The
-product of a political system which puts all stress upon the
-rewards of public office, he is willing to make any sacrifice,
-of dignity, of principle, of honour, to hold and have those
-rewards. He has no courage, no intellectual <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">amour propre</i>, no
-ardent belief in anything save his job, and the jobs of his
-friends. It was easy for Wilson to beat him into line on the
-war issue; it was easy for the prohibitionists to intimidate and
-stampede him; it is easy for any resolute man or group of men
-to do likewise. I read the <cite>Congressional Record</cite> faithfully,
-and have done so for years. In the Senate debates, amid
-oceans of tosh, I occasionally encounter a flash of wit or a
-gleam of sense; direct elections have not yet done their work.
-But in the lower house there is seldom anything save a garrulous
-and intolerable imbecility. The discussion of measures
-of the utmost importance—bills upon which the security and
-prosperity of the whole nation depend—is carried on in the
-manner of the Chautauqua and the rural stump. Entire days
-go by without a single congressman saying anything as intelligent,
-say, as the gleams that one sometimes finds in the New
-York <cite>Herald</cite>, or even in the New York <cite>Times</cite>. The newspapers,
-unfortunately, give no adequate picture of the business.
-No American journal reports the daily debates comprehensively,
-as the debates in the House of Commons are reported<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
-by the London <cite>Times</cite>, <cite>Daily Telegraph</cite>, and <cite>Morning Post</cite>.
-All one hears of, as a rule, is the action taken, and only too
-often the action taken, even when it is reported fairly, is unintelligible
-without the antecedent discussion. If any one who
-reads this wants to know what such a discussion is like, then
-I counsel him to go to the nearest public library, ask for the
-<cite>Record</cite> for 1918, and read the debate in the lower house on the
-Volstead Act. It was, I believe, an average debate, and on a
-subject of capital importance. It was, from first to last, almost
-fabulous in its evasion of the plain issue, its incredible timorousness
-and stupidity, its gross mountebankery and dishonesty.
-Not twenty men spoke in it as men of honour and self-respect.
-Not ten brought any idea into it that was not a silly idea and
-a stale one.</p>
-
-<p>That debate deserves a great deal more study than it will
-ever get from the historians of American politics, nearly all of
-whom, whether they lean to the right or to the left, are bedazzled
-by the economic interpretation of history, and so seek
-to account for all political phenomena in terms of crop movements,
-wage scales, and panics in Wall Street. It seems to me
-that that obsession blinds them to a fact of the first importance,
-to wit, the fact that political ideas, under a democracy as under
-a monarchy, originate above quite as often as they originate
-below, and that their popularity depends quite as much upon
-the special class interests of professional politicians as it depends
-upon the underlying economic interests of the actual
-voters. It is, of course, true, as I have argued, that the people
-can force ideas upon the politicians, given powerful leaders of
-a non-political (or, at all events, non-machine) sort, but it is
-equally true that there are serious impediments to the process,
-and that it is not successful very often. As a matter of everyday
-practice the rise and fall of political notions is determined
-by the self-interest of the practical politicians of the country,
-and though they naturally try to bring the business into harmony
-with any great popular movements that may be in progress
-spontaneously, they by no means wait and beg for mandates
-when none are vociferously forthcoming, but go ahead
-bravely on their own account, hoping to drag public opinion
-with them and so safeguard their jobs. Such is the origin of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span>
-many affecting issues, later held dear by millions of the plain
-people. Such was the process whereby prohibition was foisted
-upon the nation by constitutional amendment, to the dismay of
-the solid majority opposed to it and to the surprise of the
-minority in favour of it.</p>
-
-<p>What lay under the sudden and melodramatic success of the
-prohibitionist agitators was simply their discovery of the incurable
-cowardice and venality of the normal American politician—their
-shrewd abandonment of logical and evidential
-propaganda for direct political action. For years their cause
-had languished. Now and then a State or part of a State
-went dry, but often it went wet again a few years later. Those
-were the placid days of white-ribbon rallies, of wholesale
-pledge-signings, of lectures by converted drunkards, of orgiastic
-meetings in remote Baptist and Methodist churches, of a childish
-reliance upon arguments that fetched only drunken men
-and their wives, and so grew progressively feebler as the country
-became more sober. The thing was scarcely even a
-nuisance; it tended steadily to descend to the level of a joke.
-The prohibitionist vote for President hung around a quarter
-of a million; it seemed impossible to pull it up to a formidable
-figure, despite the stupendous labours of thousands of eloquent
-dervishes, lay and clerical, male and female. But then, out of
-nowhere, came the Anti-Saloon League, and—sis! boom! ah!
-Then came the sudden shift of the fire from the people to the
-politicians—and at once there was rapid progress. The people
-could only be wooed and bamboozled, but the politicians could
-be threatened; their hold upon their jobs could be shaken; they
-could be converted at wholesale and by <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">force majeure</i>. The
-old prohibition weepers and gurglers were quite incapable of
-this enterprise, but the new janissaries of the Anti-Saloon
-League—sharp lawyers, ecclesiastics too ambitious to pound
-mere pulpits, outlaw politicians seeking a way back to the
-trough—were experts at every trick and dodge it demanded.
-They understood the soul of the American politician. To him
-they applied the economic interpretation of history, resolutely
-and with a great deal of genial humour. They knew that his
-whole politics, his whole philosophy, his whole concept of honesty
-and honour, was embraced in his single and insatiable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span>
-yearning for a job, and they showed him how, by playing with
-them, he could get it and keep it, and how, by standing against
-them, he could lose it. Prohibition was rammed into the constitution
-by conquering the politicians; the people in general
-were amazed when the thing was accomplished; it may take
-years to reconcile them to it.</p>
-
-<p>It was the party system that gave the Anti-Saloon League
-manipulators their chance, and they took advantage of it with
-great boldness and cleverness. The two great parties divide
-the country almost equally; it is difficult to predict, in a given
-year, whether the one or the other musters the most votes.
-This division goes down into the lowest electoral units; even
-in those backward areas where one party has divine grace and
-the other is of the devil there are factional differences that
-amount to the same thing. In other words, the average American
-politician is never quite sure of his job. An election (and,
-if not an election, then a primary) always exposes him to a
-definite hazard, and he is eager to diminish it by getting help
-from outside his own following, at whatever cost to the principles
-he commonly professes. Here lies the opportunity for
-minorities willing to trade on a realistic political basis. In the
-old days the prohibitionists refused to trade, and in consequence
-they were disregarded, for their fidelity to their own
-grotesque candidates protected the candidates of both the regular
-parties. But with the coming of the Anti-Saloon League
-they abandoned this fidelity and began to dicker in a forthright
-and unashamed manner, quickly comprehensible to all professional
-politicians. That is, they asked for a pledge on one
-specific issue, and were willing to swallow any commitment on
-other issues. If Beelzebub, running on one ticket, agreed to
-support prohibition, and the Archangel Gabriel, running on another,
-found himself entertaining conscientious doubts, they
-were instantly and solidly for Beelzebub, and they not only
-gave him the votes that they directly controlled, but they also
-gave him the benefit of a campaign support that was ruthless,
-pertinacious, extraordinarily ingenious, and overwhelmingly effective.
-Beelzebub, whatever his swinishness otherwise, was
-bathed in holy oils; Gabriel’s name became a thing to scare
-children.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span></p>
-
-<p>Obviously, the support thus offered was particularly tempting
-to a politician who found himself facing public suspicion
-for his general political practices—in brief, to the worst type
-of machine professional. Such a politician is always acutely
-aware that it is not positive merit that commonly gets a man
-into public office in the United States, but simply disvulnerability.
-Even when they come to nominate a President, the
-qualities the two great parties seek are chiefly the negative
-ones; they want, not a candidate of forceful and immovable
-ideas, but one whose ideas are vague and not too tenaciously
-held, and in whose personality there is nothing to alarm or
-affront the populace. Of two candidates, that one usually wins
-who least arouses the distrusts and suspicions of the great
-masses of undifferentiated men. This advantage of the safe
-and sane, the colourless and unprovocative, the apparently
-stodgy and commonplace man extends to the most trivial contests,
-and politicians are keen to make use of it. Thus the job-seeker
-with an aura of past political misdemeanour about him
-was eager to get the Christian immunity bath that the prohibitionists
-offered him so generously, and in the first years of
-their fight they dealt almost exclusively with such fellows.
-He, on his side, promised simply to vote for prohibition—not
-even, in most cases, to pretend to any personal belief in it.
-The prohibitionists, on their side, promised to deliver the votes
-of their followers to him on election day, to cry him up as one
-saved by a shining light, and, most important of all, to denounce
-his opponent as an agent of hell. He was free, by this agreement,
-to carry on his regular political business as usual. The
-prohibitionists asked no patronage of him. They didn’t afflict
-him with projects for other reforms. All they demanded was
-that he cast his vote as agreed upon when the signal was given
-to him.</p>
-
-<p>At the start, of course, such scoundrels frequently violated
-their agreements. In the South, in particular, dry legislature
-after dry legislature sold out to the liquor lobby, which, in those
-days, still had plenty of money. An assemblyman would be
-elected with the aid of the prohibitionists, make a few maudlin
-speeches against the curse of drink, and then, at the last minute,
-vote wet for some thin and specious reason, or for no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
-avowed reason at all. But the prohibition manipulators, as I
-have said, were excellent politicians, and so they knew how
-to put down that sort of treason. At the next election they
-transferred their favour to the opposition candidate, and inasmuch
-as he had seen the traitor elected at the last election
-he was commonly very eager to do business. The punishment
-for the treason was condign and merciless. The dry rabble-rousers,
-lay and clerical, trumpeted news of it from end to end
-of the constituency. What was a new and gratifying disvulnerability
-was transformed into a vulnerability of the worst
-sort; the recreant one became the county Harry Thaw, Oscar
-Wilde, Captain Boy-Ed, and Debs. A few such salutary examples,
-and treason became rare. The prohibitionists, indeed,
-came to prefer dealing with such victims of their reprisals.
-They could trust them perfectly, once the lesson had been
-learned; they were actually more trustworthy than honest believers,
-for the latter usually had ideas of their own and interfered
-with the official plans of campaign. Thus, in the end,
-the professional politicians of both parties came under the yoke.
-The final battle in Congress transcended all party lines; democrats
-and republicans fought alike for places on the band-wagon.
-The spectacle offered a searching and not unhumorous
-commentary on the party system, and on the honour of
-American politicians no less. Two-thirds, at least, of the votes
-for the amendment were cast by men who did not believe in it,
-and who cherished a hearty hope, to the last moment, that some
-act of God would bring about its defeat.</p>
-
-<p>Such holocausts of frankness and decency are certainly not
-rare in American politics; on the contrary, they glow with
-normalcy. The typical legislative situation among us—and
-the typical administrative situation as well—is one in which
-men wholly devoid of inner integrity, facing a minority that is
-resolutely determined to get its will, yield up their ideas, their
-freedom, and their honour in order to save their jobs. I say
-administrative situation as well; what I mean is that in these
-later days the pusillanimity of the actual law-maker is fully
-matched by the pusillanimity of the enforcing officer, whether
-humble assistant district attorney or powerful judge. The
-war, with its obliteration of customary pretences and loosening<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
-of fundamental forces, threw up the whole process into high
-relief. For nearly two long years there was a complete abandonment
-of sense and self-respect. Rowelled and intimidated
-by minorities that finally coalesced into a frantic majority,
-legislators allowed themselves to be forced into imbecility after
-imbecility, and administrative officers, including some of the
-highest judges in the land, followed them helter-skelter. In
-the lower house of Congress there was one man—already forgotten—who
-showed the stature of a man. He resigned his
-seat and went home to his self-respect. The rest had no
-self-respect to go home to. Eager beyond all to hold their
-places, at whatever cost to principle, and uneasily conscious of
-their vulnerability to attack, however frenzied and unjust, they
-surrendered abjectly and repeatedly—to the White House, to
-the newspapers, to any group enterprising enough to issue orders
-to them and resolute enough to flourish weapons before
-them. It was a spectacle full of indecency—there are even
-congressmen who blush when they think of it to-day—but
-it was nevertheless a spectacle that was typical. The fortunes
-of politics, as they now run, make it overwhelmingly probable
-that every new recruit to public office will be just such a poltroon.
-The odds are enormously in favour of him, and enormously
-against the man of honour. Such a man of honour
-may occasionally drift in, taken almost unawares by some
-political accident, but it is the pushing, bumptious, unconscionable
-bounder who is constantly <em>fighting</em> to get in, and only
-too often he succeeds. The rules of the game are made to fit
-his taste and his talents. He can survive as a hog can survive
-in the swill-yard.</p>
-
-<p>Go to the Congressional Directory and investigate the origins
-and past performances of the present members of the lower
-house—our typical assemblage of typical politicians, the cornerstone
-of our whole representative system, the symbol of our
-democracy. You will find that well over half of them are
-obscure lawyers, school-teachers, and mortgage-sharks out of
-almost anonymous towns—men of common traditions, sordid
-aspirations, and no attainments at all. One and all, the members
-of this majority—and it is constant, no matter what party
-is in power—are plastered with the brass ornaments of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
-more brummagem fraternal orders. One and all, they are devoid
-of any contact with what passes for culture, even in their
-remote bailiwicks. One and all their careers are bare of
-civilizing influences.... Such is the American <em>Witenagemot</em>
-in this 146th year of the Republic. Such are the men who
-make the laws that all of us must obey, and who carry on our
-dealings with the world. Go to their debates, and you will
-discover what equipment they bring to their high business.
-What they know of sound literature is what one may get out of
-McGuffey’s Fifth Reader. What they know of political science
-is the nonsense preached in the chautauquas and on the
-stump. What they know of history is the childish stuff taught
-in grammar-schools. What they know of the arts and sciences—of
-all the great body of knowledge that is the chief intellectual
-baggage of modern man—is absolutely nothing.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">H. L. Mencken</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_35" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="JOURNALISM">JOURNALISM</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">According</span> to the <cite>World Almanac</cite> for 1921 the daily circulation
-of newspapers in the big cities of the United
-States in 1914 (evidently the most recent year for which the
-figures have been compiled) was more than forty million. For
-the six months ending April 1, 1920, the average daily circulation
-of five morning newspapers and eleven evening newspapers
-in Greater New York City was, as shown by sworn
-statements, more than three and a third million. These statistics
-cover only daily newspapers, not weekly or monthly
-journals; and the figures for New York do not include papers
-in languages other than English. The American certainly
-buys newspapers. To what extent he reads them it is impossible
-to determine. But we may fairly assume that the great
-majority of literate inhabitants of the United States of all ages
-are every day subjected in some measure to the influence of the
-newspaper. No other institution approaches the newspaper in
-universality, persistence, continuity of influence. Not the
-public school, with all other schools added to it, has such
-power over the national mind; for in the lives of most people
-formal schooling is of relatively short duration, ceasing with
-adolescence or earlier. The church? Millions of people never
-go to church, and the day when the clergy dominated human
-thought is gone for ever. If we add to the daily press the
-weekly and monthly periodicals, with a total circulation per
-issue of two hundred million (for the year 1914), we shall not
-be far wrong in saying that the journalist, with the powers
-behind him, has more to do, for good or for evil, than the
-member of any other profession, in creating and shaping the
-thoughts of the multitude. Compared with him the teacher,
-the preacher, the artist, the politician, the man of science, are
-restricted, interrupted, indirect in reaching the minds of their
-fellow-men.</p>
-
-<p>So that in estimating the capacities and contents of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
-American mind, which we have no means of lining up in its
-hundred million individual manifestations and examining directly,
-an analysis of the American newspaper is a fair rough-and-ready
-method. What everybody reads does not tell the
-whole story of what everybody is, but it tells a good deal.
-Moreover, it is not necessary to analyze any one newspaper
-or to separate its clientèle from that of any other newspaper.
-For though everybody knows that the New York <cite>Tribune</cite> and
-the New York <cite>World</cite> have distinct qualities which differentiate
-them from each other, that some papers are better and some
-are worse, yet on the whole the American newspaper is amazingly
-uniform from Portland, Maine, to Portland, Oregon. It
-is, indeed, a more or less unified institution fed by the same
-news services and dominated by kindred financial interests.
-If you travel much, as actors do, without interest in local
-affairs, when you go to the hotel news-stand in the morning,
-you cannot tell from the general aspect of the newspaper you
-pick up what city you are in; and in a small city it is likely
-to be a metropolitan paper that has come a hundred miles or
-more during the night. Indeed, this is the first thing to be
-learned about the American from a study of his newspapers,
-that he lacks individuality, is tediously uniform, and cut according
-to one intellectual pattern. He may have his “favourite”
-newspaper, and with no sense that his confession of
-habitude is shameful he may write the editor that he has read
-it constantly for forty years. But if it goes out of existence,
-like his favourite brand of chewing-gum or cigarettes, there is
-no aching void which cannot be comfortably filled by a surviving
-competitor. Editors, except those in charge of local news,
-move with perfect ease from one city to another; it is the same
-old job at a different desk.</p>
-
-<p>The standardization of the newspaper reader and the standardization
-of the journalist are two aspects of the same thing.
-As a citizen, a workman, a human being, the journalist is simply
-one of us, a victim of the conformity which has overwhelmed
-the American. When we speak of the influence of
-the journalist, we are not speaking of an individual, but of “the
-powers behind him,” of which he is nothing but the wage-earning
-servant, as impotent and unimportant, considered as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span>
-an individual, as a mill-hand. Journalism in America is no
-longer a profession, through which a man can win to a place
-of real dignity among his neighbours. If we had a Horace
-Greeley to-day, he would not be editor of a newspaper. He
-would not wish to be, and he would not be allowed to be. Certainly
-his vigorous integrity would not be tolerated in the modern
-unworthy successor of the newspaper which he founded.
-The editor of a newspaper is no doubt often a man of intelligence
-and experience and he may be well paid, like the manager
-of a department store; but he is usually submerged in
-anonymity except that from time to time the law requires the
-newspaper to publish his name. His subordinates, assistant
-editors, newswriters, reporters, and the rest, are as nameless
-as floor-walkers, shipping clerks, salesladies, and ladies engaged
-in more ancient forms of commerce.</p>
-
-<p>It is true that during the last generation there has been
-a tendency in the newspaper to “feature” individuals, such
-as cartoonists, conductors of columns, writers on sport, dramatic
-critics, and so on. But these men are artists, some of them
-very clever, who have nothing to do with the news but contribute
-to the paper its vaudeville entertainment. During
-the war there was a great increase in the amount of signed
-cable matter and correspondence. This was due to the necessity
-of the prosperous newspaper to show its enterprise and to
-cajole its readers into believing that it had men of special ability
-in close touch with diplomats and major-generals collecting and
-cabling at great expense intimate information and expert opinion.
-The circumstances were so difficult that the wisest and
-most honest man could not do much, except lose his position,
-and nobody will blame the correspondents. But it is significant
-that not a single American correspondent emerged from
-the conflict who is memorable, from the point of view of a
-more or less careful reader, as having been different from the
-rest. If from a miscellaneous collection of clippings we should
-cut off the dates, the alleged place of origin and the names
-of the correspondents, nobody but an editor with a long and
-detailed memory could tell t’other from which, or be sure
-whether the despatch was from Mr. Jones, the special correspondent
-of the <cite>Christian Science Monitor</cite> (copyright by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span>
-Chicago <cite>News</cite>) or an anonymous cable from the London office
-of the Associated Press. And even the editor, who may be
-assumed to know the names of hundreds of his colleagues and
-competitors, would begin his attempt at identification by examining
-the style of type to see if it looked like a column from
-the <cite>Sun</cite> or from the <cite>World</cite>. Almost all the war news was a
-hopeless confusion of impressions, of reports of what somebody
-said somebody else, “of unquestionable authority,” had
-heard from reliable sources, and of sheer mendacity adapted to
-the momentary prejudices of the individual managing editor,
-the American press as a whole, and the American people. And
-this is a rough recipe for all the news even in times of peace,
-for the war merely aggravated the prevalent diseases of the
-newspapers.</p>
-
-<p>Since the purpose of this book is to discuss peculiarly American
-characteristics, it should be said at once that the tendency
-of the newspaper to obliterate the journalist as a person immediately
-responsible to the public is not confined to America.
-Economic conditions in Europe and America are fundamentally
-alike, and the modern newspaper in every country must be a
-business institution, heavily capitalized, and conducted for
-profit. In England the decline of journalism as a profession
-and the rise of the “stunt” press has been noted and deplored
-by Englishmen. Years ago it meant something to be editor
-of the London <cite>Times</cite>, and the appointment of a new man to
-the position was an event not less important than a change in
-the cabinet. Who is editor of the <cite>Times</cite> now is a matter of no
-consequence except to the man who receives the salary check.
-English journalism is in almost as bad a case as American. In
-England, however, there is at least one exception which
-has no counterpart in America, the Manchester Guardian;
-this admirable newspaper has the good fortune to be owned
-by people who are so rich that they are not obliged, and so
-honest that they are not willing, to sell out. It is this fact
-which has afforded Mr. Scott, the editor-in-chief for nearly
-half a century, an opportunity adequate to his courage and
-ability. There are few such opportunities in England, and
-none in America. Even the Springfield <cite>Republican</cite> has largely
-lost its old character.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span></p>
-
-<p>As for the continental papers, one who does not read any of
-them regularly is in no position to judge. In 1900 William
-James, a shrewd observer, wrote in a letter: “The Continental
-papers of course are ‘nowhere.’ As for our yellow papers—every
-country has its criminal classes, and with us and in
-France, they have simply got into journalism as part of their
-professional evolution, and they must be got out. Mr. Bosanquet
-somewhere says that so far from the ‘dark ages’ being
-over, we are just at the beginning of a new dark-age period.
-He means that ignorance and unculture, which then were
-merely brutal, are now articulate and possessed of a literary
-voice, and the fight is transferred from fields and castles and
-town walls to ‘organs of publicity.’” This is only a passing
-remark in an informal letter. But it is a partial explanation
-of American yellow journalism which in twenty years has
-swamped the whole press, including papers that pretend to be
-respectable, and it suggests what the state of things was, and
-is, in France.</p>
-
-<p>It should be noted, however, that personal journalism has
-not entirely disappeared in France, that the editor can still be
-brought to account, sometimes at the point of a pistol, for lies
-and slander, and that a young French <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">littérateur</i>, before he
-has won his spurs in poetry, drama, or fiction, can regard journalism
-as an honourable occupation in which it is worth while
-to make a name.</p>
-
-<p>With the decadence in all countries, certainly in America, of
-the journalist as a professional man in an honourable craft,
-there might conceivably have been a gain in objectivity, in the
-right sort of impersonality. Anonymity might have ensured a
-dispassionate fidelity to facts. But there has been no such
-gain. Responsibility has been transferred from the journalist
-to his employers, and he is on his mettle to please his employers,
-to cultivate whatever virtues are possible to journalism,
-accuracy, clearness of expression, zeal in searching out
-and interpreting facts, only in so far forth as his employers
-demand them, only as his livelihood and chances of promotion
-depend on them. The ordinary journalist, being an ordinary
-human being, must prefer to do honest work; for there is no
-pleasure in lying, though there is a temptation to fill space with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span>
-unfounded or unverified statements. And if his manager orders
-him to find a story where there is no story, or to find a
-story of a certain kind where the facts lead to a story of another
-kind, he will not come back empty-handed lest he go
-away empty-handed on pay-day. Any one who has worked in
-a newspaper office knows that the older men are likely to be
-weary and cynical and that the younger men fall into two
-classes, those who are too stupid to be discontented with any
-aspect of their position except the size of their salaries, and
-those who hope either to rise to the better paid positions, or
-to “graduate,” as they put it, from daily journalism to other
-kinds of literary work.</p>
-
-<p>The journalist, then, should be acquitted of most of the
-faults of journalism. Mr. Walter Lippmann says in his sane
-little book, “Liberty and the News”: “Resistance to the
-inertias of the profession, heresy to the institution, and willingness
-to be fired rather than write what you do not believe,
-these wait on nothing but personal courage.” That is a little
-like saying that the harlot can stop harlotry by refusing to ply
-her trade—which is indeed the attitude of some people in comfortable
-circumstances. I doubt if Mr. Lippmann would have
-written just as he did if he had ever had to depend for his
-dinner on pleasing a managing editor, if he had not been from
-very early in his brilliant career editor of a liberal endowed
-journal in which he is free to express his beliefs. Most newspaper
-men are poor and not brilliant. The correspondents
-whom Mr. Lippmann mentions as “eminences on a rather
-flat plateau” are nearly all men who have succeeded in other
-work than newspaper correspondence, and if not a newspaper
-in the world would hire them, most of them could afford to
-thumb their noses at the Ochses, Reids, and Harmsworths.
-Personal courage is surely a personal matter, and it can seldom
-be effective in correcting the abuses of an institution, especially
-when the institution can hire plenty of men of adequate if not
-equal ability to take the place of the man of stubborn integrity.
-I know one journalist who lost his position as managing editor
-of two wealthy newspapers, one in Boston, the other in New
-York, in the first instance because he refused to print a false
-and cowardly retraction dictated by a stockholder whom the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span>
-editor-in-chief desired to serve, in the second instance because
-he refused to distort war news. But what good did his single-handed
-rebellion do, except to make a few friends proud of
-him? Did either newspaper lose even one mournful subscriber?
-Did the advertising department suffer? Far from it. Another
-man took his place, a man not necessarily less honest, but of
-more conformable temperament. The muddy waters of journalism
-did not show a ripple. Paradoxically, the journalist is
-the one man who can do little or nothing to improve journalism.
-Mr. Lippmann’s suggestion that our salvation lies “ultimately
-in the infusion of the news-structure by men with a new training
-and outlook,” is, as he knows, the expression of a vague hope,
-too remotely ultimate to have practical bearing on the actual
-situation. The man of training and outlook, especially of outlook,
-is the unhappiest man in the employ of a newspaper. His
-salvation, if not ours, lies in getting out of newspaper work and
-applying his ability and vision in some occupation which does
-not discourage precisely the merits which an honest institution
-should foster. This is not merely the opinion of a critical
-layman but represents accurately if not literally the advice
-given to me by a successful editor and writer of special articles.
-“In this game,” he said, “you lose your soul.”</p>
-
-<p>The stories of individuals who have tried to be decent in
-newspaper work and have been fired might be valuable if they
-were collated and if the better journalists would unite to lay
-the foundation in fact of more such stories. But a profession,
-a trade, which has so little sense of its own interest that it
-does not even make an effective union (to be sure, the organization
-of newspaper writers met with some success, especially
-in Boston, but to-day the organization has practically disappeared)
-to keep its wages up can never be expected to unite
-in the impersonal interests of truth and intellectual dignity.
-The individual who charges against an enormous unshakable
-institution with the weapons of his personal experience is too
-easily disposed of as a sore-head and is likely to be laughed
-at even by his fellow-journalists who know that in the main
-he is right.</p>
-
-<p>This has happened to Mr. Upton Sinclair. I have studied
-“The Brass Check” carefully for the selfish purpose of getting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
-enough material so that the writing of this chapter should be
-nothing but a lazy man’s task of transcription, not to speak of
-the noble ethical purpose of reforming the newspaper by exposing
-its iniquities. I confess I am disappointed. “The
-Brass Check” is a mixture of autobiography, valuable in its way
-to those who admire Mr. Sinclair, as I do most sincerely, and
-of evidence which, though properly personal, ought to be
-handled in an objective manner. I am puzzled that a man of
-“training and outlook,” who has shown in at least one of his
-novels an excellent sense of construction, could throw together
-such a hodge-podge of valid testimony, utterly damning to
-his opponents, and naïve trivialities, assertions insecurely
-founded and not important if they were well founded. I am
-so sure that Mr. Sinclair is on the whole right that I am reluctant
-to criticize him adversely, to lend a shadow of encouragement
-to the real adversary, who is unscrupulous and securely
-entrenched. But as a journalist of “training and outlook”
-I lament that another journalist of vastly more ability,
-experience, and information should not have done better work
-in selecting and constructing his material. As a lawyer said to
-his client, “You are a saint and you are right, but a court-room
-is no place for a saint and you are a damn bad witness.”
-Mr. Sinclair’s evidence, however, is all there to be dug out
-by whoever has the will and the patience. If one-tenth of it
-is valid and nine-tenths of doubtful value, the one-tenth is
-sufficient to show the sinister forces behind the newspapers and
-to explain some of the reasons why the newspapers are untrustworthy,
-cowardly, and dishonest.</p>
-
-<p>Though Mr. Sinclair tells some damaging stories about the
-sins of anonymous reporters and of the prostitution of writers
-like the late Elbert Hubbard, who had no excuse for being
-anything but honest and independent, yet Mr. Sinclair on the
-whole would agree with me that the chief responsibility for
-the evils of journalism does not rest upon the journalist. He
-tries to place it squarely where it belongs on the owners of
-the press and the owners of the owners. But it is difficult to
-determine how the weight of guilt is distributed, for the press
-is a monster with more than two legs.</p>
-
-<p>Part of the responsibility rests upon the reader, if indeed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span>
-the reader is to blame for being a gullible fool and for buying
-shoddy goods. Mr. Lippmann says: “There is everywhere an
-increasingly angry disillusionment about the press, a growing
-sense of being baffled and misled.” And Mr. Sinclair says:
-“The people want the news; the people clamour for the news.”
-Both these statements may be true. But where do the learned
-doctors find the symptoms? A few of us who have some
-special interest in the press, in publicity, in political problems,
-are disillusioned and resentful. Probably everybody has said
-or heard somebody else say: “That’s only a newspaper story,”
-or “You cannot believe everything you read.” But such mild
-scepticism shows no promise of swelling to an angry demand on
-the part of that vague aggregate, the People, for better, more
-honest newspapers, to such an angry demand as you can actually
-hear in any house you enter for cheaper clothes and
-lower taxes.</p>
-
-<p>If we make a rough calculation of the number of papers sold
-and of the number of people in the main economic classes, it is
-evident that papers of large circulation must go by the million
-to the working-people. Well, is there any sign of growing
-wrath in the breasts of the honest toilers against the newspapers,
-against Mr. Hearst’s papers, which throw them sops
-of hypocritical sympathy, not to speak of papers which are
-openly unfair in handling labour news? Or consider the more
-prosperous classes. In the smoking-car of any suburban train
-bound for New York some morning after eight o’clock, look at
-the men about you, business men, the kind that work, or do
-something, in offices. They are reading the <cite>Times</cite> and the
-<cite>Tribune</cite>. There may be some growls about something in the
-day’s news, something that has happened on the stock-market,
-or a stupid throw to third base in yesterday’s game. But is
-there any murmur of discontent with the newspaper itself? I
-fail to find any evidence of widespread disgust with the newspaper
-as it is and a concomitant hunger for something better.
-The Reader, the Public is mute, if not inglorious, and
-accepts uncritically what the daily press provides. The reader
-has not much opportunity to choose the better from the worse.
-If he gives up one paper he must take another that is just as
-bad. He is between the devil and the deep sea, as when he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span>
-casts his ballot for Democrat or Republican. And if he votes
-Socialist he gets the admirable New York <cite>Call</cite>, which is less a
-newspaper than a vehicle of propaganda. When one paper is
-slightly more honest and intelligent than its rivals, the difference
-is so slight that only those especially interested in the
-problems of the press are aware of it. For example, in discussing
-these problems with newspaper men, with critical readers
-of the press, persons for any reason intelligently interested
-in the problems, I have never found one who did not have
-a good word to say for the New York <cite>Globe</cite>. It is so appreciably
-more decent than the other New York papers that I can
-almost forgive it for thrusting Dr. Frank Crane under my
-nose when I am looking at the amusing pictures of Mr. Fontaine
-Fox—the newspaper vaudeville has to supply stunts for
-all juvenile tastes. Yet the <cite>Globe</cite> does not find a clamorous
-multitude willing to reward it for its superiority to its neighbours,
-which I grant is too slight for duffers to discern. The
-American reader of newspapers, that is, almost everybody, is
-a duffer, so far as the newspaper is concerned, uncritical, docile,
-only meekly incredulous. It may be that “the people” get as
-good newspapers as they wish and deserve, just as they are said
-to get as good government as they wish and deserve. Certainly
-if the readers of newspapers seem to demand nothing
-better, the manufacturers of newspapers have no inducement to
-give them anything better. But this does not get us any
-nearer a solution of the problem or do more than indicate that
-some vaguely indeterminate part of the responsibility for the
-evils of the newspapers must rest on the people who buy them.</p>
-
-<p>From the buyer to the seller is the shortest step. The newspaper
-is a manufacturing concern producing goods to sell at a
-profit; it is also a department store, and it has some characteristics
-that suggest the variety show and the brothel. But
-the newspaper differs from all other commodities in that it does
-not live by what it receives from the consumer who buys it.
-Three cents multiplied a million times does not support a newspaper.
-The valuable part of a newspaper from the manufacturer’s
-point of view, and also to a great extent from the
-reader’s point of view, is the advertisements. The columns of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span>
-“reading matter,” so called, are little more than bait to attract
-enough readers to make the paper worth while as a vehicle
-for advertisements. It is of no importance to the management
-whether a given column contain news from Washington or
-Moscow, true or false, or a scandal or a funny story, as long
-as it leads some thousands of human eyes to look at it and so
-to look at adjacent columns in which are set forth the merits
-of a safety razor or an automobile tire or a fifty-dollar suit
-of clothes at thirty-nine dollars and a half. There has to be
-a good variety and a certain balance of interest in the columns
-of reading matter to secure the attention of all kinds of people.
-This accounts for two things, the great development in the
-newspaper of pure, or impure, entertainment, of more or less
-clever features, at the expense of space that might be devoted
-to news, and also the tendency to accentuate narrative interest
-above all other kinds of interest. A reporter is never sent out
-by his chief to get information, but always, in the lingo of the
-office, to get a “story.” This is sound psychology. Everybody
-likes a story, and there are only a few souls in the world
-who yearn at breakfast for information. To attack the newspaper
-for being sensational is to forget that all the great stories
-of the world, from the amatory exploits of Helen of Troy and
-Cleopatra to the scandalous adventures of Mrs. Black, the
-banker’s wife, are sensational and should be so treated. The
-newspaper manager is indifferent to every quality in his news
-columns except their power to attract the reader and so secure
-circulation and so please the advertiser. And the advertiser
-has as his primary interest only that of bringing to the attention
-of a certain number of people the virtues of his suspenders,
-shoes, and soothing syrup.</p>
-
-<p>But the advertiser has a secondary interest. The newspaper
-willy-nilly deals with ideas, such as they are. No idea inimical
-to the advertiser’s business or in general to the business system
-of which he is a dependent part must be allowed in the paper.
-Therefore all newspapers are controlled by the advertising department,
-that is, the counting-room. They are controlled
-negatively and positively. We are discussing general characteristics
-and have not space for detailed evidence. But one
-or two cases will suffice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span></p>
-
-<p>An example of the coercion of the newspaper by the advertiser
-was recently afforded by the Philadelphia press. The
-Gimbel Brothers, owners of a department store, were charged
-by United States Government officials with profiteering. The
-only Philadelphia paper that made anything of the story was
-the <cite>Press</cite>, which was owned by Mr. Wanamaker of the rival department
-store. The other papers ignored the story or put it in
-one edition and then withdrew it. If there is an elevator accident
-in a general office building, it is reported. If there is a
-similar accident in a department store, it is usually not reported.
-When the New York <cite>Times</cite> (April 25, 1921) prints
-a short account of the experience of four Wellesley college students
-who disguised their intellectual superiority and got jobs
-in department stores, the head-line tells us that they “Find
-They Can Live on Earnings,” though the matter under the
-head-line does not bear this out. Perhaps it does no harm to
-suppress, or fail to publish, news of accidents and to make
-out a good case for the living and working conditions of shop-girls.
-These are minor matters in the news of the world and
-their importance would appear only if they were accumulated
-in their tediously voluminous mass.</p>
-
-<p>The positive corruption of the newspaper by the advertiser
-goes deeper and proceeds from larger economic powers than
-individual merchants. There is all over the world a terrific
-economic contest between the employing classes and the wage-earning
-classes. The dramatic manifestation of this contest is
-the strike. Almost invariably the news of a strike is, if not
-falsified, so shaped as to be unfavourable to the workers. In
-the New York <cite>Nation</cite> of January 5, 1921, Mr. Charles G.
-Miller, formerly editor of the Cleveland <cite>Plain Dealer</cite>, exposes
-the lies of the Pittsburgh papers during the steel strike. In
-two weeks the Pittsburgh papers published more than thirty
-pages of paid advertisements denouncing the leadership of the
-strike and invoking “Americanism” against radicalism and
-syndicalism. The news and editorial attitude of the papers
-coincided with the advertisements and gave the impression that
-the strikers were disloyal, un-American, bolshevik. They were
-silent on the real questions at issue, hours, pay, working conditions.
-And not only the Pittsburgh press but the press of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
-the entire country was poisoned. For the Associated Press
-and other news services are not independent organizations
-feeding news to their clients but simply interrelated newspapers
-swapping each other’s lies. The Denver newspapers
-control all the news that is read in Boston about the Colorado
-coal mines. The Boston newspapers control all the news that
-is read in San Francisco about the New England textile mills.
-The head of a local bureau of the Associated Press is not a
-reporter; he is merely a more or less skilful compiler and
-extracter who sends to the nation, to the whole world, matter
-which is furnished him by the papers of his district. So that
-he can usually hold up his hand and swear to the honesty of
-his service; he is like an express agent who ships a case of
-what he thinks is canned corn, and it is not his fault if there
-is opium concealed in the case.</p>
-
-<p>The power of the advertiser to make the newspaper servile
-and right in its opinions is not confined to the local department
-store or the special industry operating through a district
-press. Nor is it confined to the negative punishment of withdrawing
-advertising of commodities like hosiery, chewing gum,
-and banking service from papers that offend their masters.
-There is another method of exerting this power, and that is
-to buy advertising space in which to set forth ideas calculated
-to influence public opinion. Here is a full page from a New
-York paper containing a cartoon and text, the main idea of
-which is that Labour and Capital should pull together. It is
-signed by “‘America First’ Publicity Association” and is
-Bulletin No. 115 in a series—“be sure to read them all.”
-This full-page bulletin, of which there have already been
-more than a hundred, appeared in many newspapers—I do
-not know how many; and a full page costs a good deal of
-money. What is the object of this patriotic association? The
-prevailing theme of the bulletins which I have seen is “Labour
-be good! Fight Bolshevism! Beware the Agitator!” Who is
-going to be influenced by these bulletins? Not the workingman.
-He knows what he wants, and if he is the dupe of agitators
-and false theories, these sermons can never rescue him.
-Not the capitalist. He knows what he wants, and gets it.
-Perhaps the little middle-class fellow may swallow such buncombe<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span>
-on his daily journey between his office and his home in
-the suburbs. But he is already an intellectually depraved servant
-of the employing classes, and it is not worth hundreds
-of thousands of dollars to complete and confirm his corruption.
-The primary object of the advertisement is to keep the newspaper
-“good,” to encourage its editorial departments, through
-the advertising department, not to fall below 99 and 44/100%
-pure Americanism or admit ideas inimical to the general interests
-of chambers of commerce, manufacturers’ associations,
-and other custodians of the commonweal. I suspect that
-some clever advertising man has stung the gentlemen who
-supply the money for this campaign of education, but what is
-a few million to them? The man who can best afford to laugh
-is the business manager of the newspaper when he looks at the
-check and meditates on the easy money of some of his advertising
-clients and the easy credulity of some of his reading
-clients.</p>
-
-<p>It may be argued that the newspaper, which is a business,
-ought to be controlled, directly and indirectly, by business interests;
-and certainly if we allow the commercial powers to
-manage our food supply, transportation, and housing, it is a
-relatively minor matter if the same powers dominate our press.
-In like manner if we tolerate dishonest governments, we are
-only dealing with an epiphenomenon when we consider the
-dishonest and inefficient treatment by the press of public affairs,
-national and international. All the news of politics, diplomacy,
-war, world-trade emanates from government officials
-or from those who are interested in turning to their own advantage
-the actions of officials. Business is behind government,
-and government is behind business; which comes first
-is unimportant like the problem of the chicken and the egg.
-It is a partnership of swindle, and though the details of the
-relation are infinitely complicated, the relation in itself is
-easy to understand and accounts quite simply for the fact that
-world news is the most viciously polluted of all the many
-kinds of news. The efforts of a merchant to keep up the good
-name of his department store, or of a group of manufacturers
-to break a strike are feeble and even reasonable, so far as
-they use the newspapers, compared to the audacious perversion<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span>
-of truth by the combination of arch criminals, government
-and international business.</p>
-
-<p>The star example in modern times is the current newspaper
-history of Russia. The New York <cite>Nation</cite> of March 6, 1920,
-published an article showing that in the columns of the New
-York Times Lenin had died once, been almost killed three
-times, and had fallen and fled innumerable times. The <cite>New
-Republic</cite> published August 4, 1920, a supplement by Lippmann
-and Merz summarizing the news which the <cite>Times</cite> printed
-about Russia during the three years preceding March 1920.
-The analysis shows an almost unbroken daily misrepresentation
-of the programme, purposes and strength of the Russian
-government and continuous false “optimism,” as the writers
-gently call it, about the military exploits of Russia’s enemies,
-the “white hopes,” Kolchak and Denekin. The writers expressly
-state that they did not select the <cite>Times</cite> because it is
-worse than other papers but, on the contrary, because it “is
-one of the really great newspapers of the world.” “Rich” or
-“powerful” would have been a better word than “great.”
-The sources of error in the Times were the Associated Press,
-the special correspondents of the Times, government officials
-and political factions hostile to the present Russian régime.
-Among the offenders was the United States Government or
-the journalistic fake-factory in or adjacent to the Department
-of State. At this writing the article in the <cite>New Republic</cite> has
-been out nearly a year, that in the <cite>Nation</cite> more than a year.
-It is fair to assume that they have been seen by the managers
-of the <cite>Times</cite> and other powerful journalists, that if there was
-any misstatement the weekly journals would have been forced
-to recant, which they have not done, and that if the Ochses
-of the newspaper world had any conscience they would have
-been at least more careful after such devastating exposures.
-But the game of “Lying about Lenin” goes merrily on.</p>
-
-<p>The American government and the American press have not
-been more mendacious in their treatment of Russia than the
-governments and the press of other nations, but they have
-been more persistently stupid and unteachable in the face of
-facts. The British government has been engaged in an agile
-zigzag retreat from its first position of no intercourse with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span>
-Russia, and when the London <cite>Labour Herald</cite> exposed the trick
-of Lloyd George which consisted of printing and sending out
-<em>from Russia</em> propaganda against the Soviet government, the
-prince of political liars was obliged to stop that fraud. On
-the other hand one of the first acts of our new administration
-was Mr. Hughes’s idiotic confirmation of the attitude held by
-the old administration, and he furnished the newspapers real
-news, since the Secretary’s opinions, however stupid, are real
-news, to add to their previous accumulation of ignorance and
-lies, and thereby encouraged them in their evil ways. If a
-government is composed of noodles and rogues, the press
-which reports the activities of the government and the opinions
-of its officials is only secondarily responsible for deceiving the
-public. The editors might be more critical in sifting the true
-from the false. But the newspaper has no motive for trying
-to correct the inherent vices of business and government; it
-does not originate those vices but merely concurs in them and
-reflects them. The newspaper is primarily responsible only
-for the stupidity and mendacity of its correspondents and
-editors. It is not an independent institution with its own ethic,
-with either will or full opportunity to serve the truth, but is
-only the symptom and expression of the vast corruption that
-lies behind it and of the dense popular ignorance that stands
-gaping before it.</p>
-
-<p>The <i xml:lang="cy" lang="cy">Dunciad</i> of the Press does not end in quite universal
-darkness. There is a little light over the horizon. A new
-organization called The Federated Press, which endeavours to
-“get the news in spite of the newspapers and the great news
-agencies,” announces that already two hundred editors all over
-the world are using its service. It is too soon to tell how successful
-this enterprise will be, but it is a ray of promise, because
-it is an association of working journalists and not a
-vague aspiration of reformers and uplifters. Until some such
-organization does become powerful and by practical labour
-make an impression on the daily paper, we shall have to depend
-for enlightenment on a few weekly and monthly periodicals
-of relatively small circulation. Most of the popular
-weeklies and monthlies are as bad in their way as the newspapers,
-but they aim chiefly at entertainment; their treatment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
-of the news in special articles and editorials is a subordinate
-matter, and their chief sin is not dishonesty but banality. The
-periodicals which do handle the news, always honestly, usually
-with intelligence, the <cite>Nation</cite>, the <cite>New Republic</cite>, the <cite>Freeman</cite>
-and one or two others, must have an influence greater than
-can be measured by their circulation; for though the giant
-press laughs at the cranky little Davids with their vicious
-radical ideas, and though it is too strong to be slain or even
-severely wounded, yet it cannot be quite insensible to the
-stones that fly from those valorous slings. It is, however,
-an indication of the low mental level of America that the combined
-circulation of these journals, which are, moreover,
-largely subscribed for by the same readers, is less than that of
-a newspaper in a second-rate city. Two of them are endowed
-or subsidized by liberal men of means and none of them is
-shiningly prosperous. An intelligent populace would buy them
-by the million. So we leave the responsibility where, after
-all, it belongs. The American press is an accurate gauge of
-the American mind.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">John Macy</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_53" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_LAW">THE LAW</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">“The</span> first thing we do, let’s kill all the lawyers.” This
-outcry of Jack Cade’s followers that the disappearance
-of the whole profession was the initial step in man’s progress
-toward a better world would be echoed in the United States
-by the revolutionists of to-day, and also by not a few solid
-business men who have nothing else in common with the mediæval
-agitator except perhaps the desire to see the fountains
-run wine and make it a felony to drink near-beer. Indeed
-almost every one takes his fling at the law. Doctors and ministers
-can be avoided if we dislike them, but the judge has a
-sure grip upon us all. He drags us before him against our
-will; no power in the land can overturn his decision, but defeated
-litigants, disappointed sociologists, and unsuccessful
-primary candidates all join in a prolonged yell, “Kill the umpire.”</p>
-
-<p>Where there is smoke, there is fire. Underneath all this
-agitation is a deep-seated suspicion and dissatisfaction aroused
-by the legal profession and the whole machinery of justice.
-It exists despite the fact observed by Bryce, that our system
-of written constitutions has created a strongly marked legal
-spirit in the people and accustomed them to look at all questions
-in a legal way—a characteristic exemplified when other
-peoples judged the Covenant of the League of Nations as an
-expression of broad policies and the aspirations of a hundred
-years, while we went at it word by word with a dissecting
-knife and a microscope as if it had been a millionaire’s will
-or an Income Tax Act. Moreover, although lawyers as a class
-are unpopular, they are elected to half the seats in the legislatures
-and in Congress. The profession which cannot boast
-a single English Prime Minister in the century between Perceval
-and Asquith, has trained every President who was not
-a general, except Harding. Perhaps this very fact that lawyers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
-receive public positions out of all proportion to their numbers
-partially accounts for the prejudice felt against them by men
-in other professions and occupations.</p>
-
-<p>Hostility to lawyers and case-law is no new phenomenon in
-this country. Puritans and Quakers arrived with unpleasant
-memories of the English bench and bar, who had harried them
-out of their homes. To them, law meant heresy trials,
-and the impression that these left on the minds of their victims
-has been set down forever by Bunyan in the prosecution of
-Faithful at Vanity Fair. The Colonists were no more anxious
-to transplant some Lord Hate-good, his counsellors, and his
-law books to our shores, than Eugene V. Debs would strive
-to set up injunctions and sedition statutes if he were founding
-a socialistic commonwealth in the South Seas. The popular
-attitude toward lawyers was re-inforced by the clergy who
-were naturally reluctant to have their great moral and intellectual
-influence disputed by men who would hire themselves
-out to argue either side of any question. The ministers who
-ruled Massachusetts and Connecticut by the Law of Moses,
-wanted no rivals to challenge their decisions upon the authority
-of Bracton and Coke. And everywhere, except perhaps
-on the Southern plantations, the complicated structure of
-feudal doctrines, which constituted such a large part of English
-law well into the 18th century, was as unsuited to Colonial
-ways and needs as a Gothic cathedral in the wilderness. Life
-was so pressing, time was so short, labour so scarce, that the
-only law which could receive acceptance must be so simple
-that the settlers could apply it themselves. Although Justice
-Story has spread wide the belief that our ancestors brought
-the Common Law to New England on the <i>Mayflower</i>, the
-truth is that only a few fragments got across. These were
-rapidly supplemented by rules based on pioneer conditions.
-Much the same phenomenon occurred as in the California of
-1849, where the miners ignored the water-law of the Atlantic
-seaboard which gave each person bordering on a stream some
-share of the water, and adopted instead the custom better
-suited to a new country of first come, first served. Almost
-the earliest task of the founders of a Colony was the regulation
-of the disputes which arise in a primitive civilization by a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span>
-brief legislative code concerning crimes, torts, and the simplest
-contracts, in many ways like the dooms of the Anglo-Saxon
-kings. Gaps in these codes were not filled from the Common
-Law, as would be the case to-day, but by the discretion of the
-magistrate, or in some Colonies, in the early days, from the
-Bible. Land laws and conveyances were simple,—the underlying
-English principle of primogeniture was abolished outright
-by several Colonial charters, and disputes of title were
-lessened by the admirable system of registering deeds. Such
-law did not require lawyers, and it is not surprising that even
-the magistrates were usually laymen. The chief justice of
-Rhode Island as late as 1818 was a blacksmith. Oftentimes
-a controversy was taken away from the court by the legislature
-and settled by a special statute. Thus, instead of the
-English and modern American judge-made law, the Colonists
-received for the most part executive and legislative justice, and
-lived under a protoplasmic popular law, with the Common Law
-only one of its many ingredients.</p>
-
-<p>The training of the few Colonists who did become lawyers
-may be judged from that of an early attorney general of Rhode
-Island:</p>
-
-<p>“When he made up his mind to study law, he went into the
-garden to exercise his talents in addressing the court and jury.
-He then selected five cabbages in one row for judges, and
-twelve in another row for jurors. After trying his hand there
-a while, he went boldly into court and took upon himself the
-duties of an advocate, and a little observation and experience
-there convinced him that the same cabbages were in the court
-house which he thought he had left in the garden,—five in one
-row and twelve in another.”</p>
-
-<p>The natural alienation of such attorneys from the intricacies
-of English law was increased by occasional conflicts between
-that system and Colonial statutes or conceptions of justice. An
-excellent Connecticut act for the disposal of a decedent’s land
-was declared void by the Privy Council in London as contrary
-to the laws of England, and the attempt of the New York
-governor and judges to enforce the obnoxious English law of
-libel in the prosecution of Peter Zenger in order to throttle
-the criticism of public officials by the press, would have succeeded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span>
-if the jury had not deliberately rejected the legal definitions
-given by the court.</p>
-
-<p>The Common Law became somewhat more popular when the
-principles of individual rights which had blocked Stuart oppression
-were used against George III. After the Revolution,
-however, it suffered with all things English. Many lawyers
-had been Loyalists. The commercial depression turned the
-bar into debt collectors. The great decisions of Lord Mansfield
-which laid the foundations of modern business law were
-rejected by Jefferson and many other Americans because of
-that judge’s reactionary policy towards the Colonies. Many
-States actually passed legislation forbidding the use of English
-cases as authorities in our courts. The enforcement of the
-Common Law of sedition and criminal libel by judges, many
-of whom had been educated in England, identified the Common
-Law with the suppression of freedom of speech. Nevertheless,
-the old simple Colonial rules were insufficient to decide
-the complex commercial questions which were constantly arising,
-especially in maritime transactions. Aid had to be obtained
-from some mature system of law.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment a rival to the Common Law presented itself
-in the Napoleonic code of 1804, attractive to the populace
-just because it was French, and to many of the bar because of
-its logical arrangement and because unlike English lawyers
-they were widely read in Roman and modern Continental law.
-For a time it was actually doubtful whether the legal assistance
-which American judges needed would be drawn from England
-or France. French writers were cited in the courts and Livingston
-drafted a code on the Napoleonic model for Louisiana.
-The English law had, however, one great advantage. It was
-written in our own language. Furthermore, a group of exceptionally
-able judges such as Joseph Story and James Kent, by
-their decisions and writings, virtually imported the great bulk
-of the Common Law into this country and reworked it to meet
-American conditions. Nevertheless, this law was something
-that came from outside and had not grown up altogether from
-the lives and thoughts of our own people, so that it has never
-meant to Americans what English law means to Englishmen,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span>
-for whom it is as much a product of their own land as parliamentary
-government or the plays of Shakespeare.</p>
-
-<p>Another reason for American hostility to law was found at
-the frontier. The pioneer, imbued with the conviction that he
-was entitled to the land which he had cleared, ploughed and
-sown, often thrown by crop failures into debt to the tradesmen
-in the town, resented law as something which was forced upon
-him by people who led easy lives, who took his land away
-for some technical defect of title, foreclosed mortgages, compelled
-him to pay for goods of high prices and low quality,
-suppressed hereditary feuds, and substituted a mass of book
-learning which he was too ignorant or too busy to read, for
-the simple principles of fair play which seemed sufficient to
-him. Habitual obedience to law was a spirit which could not
-develop in men who were largely squatters, and who, from
-the outset of our national history, disregarded the Congressional
-statutes which required that public lands must be surveyed
-before they were settled. Sometimes, as in this instance,
-the settler’s resistance to law was successful. More often they
-were overpowered by the strength of civilization and submitted
-to the law sullen and unconvinced.</p>
-
-<p>The old frontier is gone, a new frontier has arisen. The
-meeting place of unfriendly races has moved Eastward from
-the Missouri to the Merrimac. The pioneers of to-day came
-often from autocratic lands where law was something imposed
-on them from above, and they were slow to regard our law
-as different in kind. It was not a part of themselves. Moreover,
-they did not find in America the energetic police organization
-which had compelled their obedience in Europe. The
-men who framed our system of laws were taught by Puritanism
-that duties declared by those lawfully in authority
-should be voluntarily performed. A statute once on the books
-got much vitality from this spirit and from the social pressure
-of the homogeneous settled communities, whatever the difficulties
-of enforcement at the frontier. These forces behind law
-became weaker when the population was split into numerous
-and diverse races by the great tide of immigration. Obedience
-to law, never automatic among us, now became liable to cease<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span>
-altogether whenever a person thought the law unreasonable or
-felt fairly certain that he would not be found out.</p>
-
-<p>This belief that a law ceases to have obligation when it becomes
-inexpedient to obey it, extends far beyond the recently
-arrived elements in our population. For instance, a wealthy
-man with several American generations behind him, who was
-serving on the jury in an accident case, stood up on a chair
-as soon as the jury got into the consultation-room and urged
-them to disregard everything which the judge had instructed
-them about the inability of the plaintiff to recover if he, as
-well as the defendant, was negligent. “This doctrine of contributory
-negligence,” said this educated juryman, “is not the
-law of France or Germany or any country on the Continent of
-Europe. A number of eminent writers agree that it is a thoroughly
-bad law. Let’s have nothing to do with it.” Needless
-to say, the plaintiff recovered. This conception of a higher
-law than that on the books may owe something to the Abolitionists’
-belief that they were not bound by the laws protecting
-the inhuman institution of slavery. Many conscientious
-persons still hold that a man ought not to be punished for disobeying
-a law which he believes to be morally wrong. Fortunately,
-a corrective to this dangerous doctrine of the inner
-legal light is found in the words of a leading Abolitionist, Judge
-Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar, in charging the Grand Jury on
-riotous resistance to the fugitive slave law, although he himself
-regarded it as vicious legislation:</p>
-
-<p>“A man whose private conscience leads him to disobey a
-law recognized by the community must take the consequences
-of that disobedience. It is a matter solely between him and
-his Maker. He should take good care that he is not mistaken,
-that his private opinion does not result from passion or
-prejudice, but, if he believes it to be his duty to disobey, he
-must be prepared to abide by the result; and the laws as they
-are enacted and settled by the constituted authorities to be
-constitutional and valid, must be enforced, although it may be
-to his grievous harm. It will not do for the public authorities
-to recognize his private opinion as a justification of his
-acts.”</p>
-
-<p>Disrespect for law has been aggravated by the changing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
-function of the lawyer since the Civil War. In the forties and
-fifties, he stood out as a leader in his community, lifted by
-education above the mass of citizens, often before the public
-gaze in the court-room and chosen because of his forensic eloquence
-to deliver many of those set orations which Americans
-constantly demand, brought forward by the litigation of those
-days as the avenger of crime, the defender of those unjustly
-imprisoned, the liberator of the escaping slave, or upholding
-some great public right on behalf of his city or State—the
-construction of a toll-free bridge across the Charles, the maintenance
-of the charter of Dartmouth College. After 1870,
-this pre-eminence was challenged by the new captains of industry,
-and their appearance was accompanied by an alteration
-in the work of many an able lawyer, which soon obscured
-him to the popular imagination. The formation of large businesses
-required more and more the skill which he possessed.
-Rewards for drafting and consultation became greater than
-for litigation, which was growing tedious and costly, so that
-his clients avoided it whenever possible. Consequently, he
-changed from an advocate into a “client care-taker,” seldom
-visible to the people and often associated in their minds with
-the powerful and detested corporations which he represented.
-Much of the prejudice against “corporation lawyers” was unjust,
-and the business development of to-day would have been
-impossible without the skill in organization and reorganization
-of great enterprises which they displayed during the last half
-century. However, popular opinion of a class is inevitably
-based, not on all its members, but on a conspicuous few, and
-the kind of legal career described in Winston Churchill’s “Far
-Country” was common enough to furnish data for damaging
-generalizations. In any case, the decline in the public influence
-of the bar was inevitable, especially as certain businesses
-retained the exclusive legal services of a staff of men,
-so that it could be said: “Lawyers used to have clients; now,
-clients have lawyers.”</p>
-
-<p>Of course, during this period there were many lawyers who
-made a notable success by conducting cases against corporations.
-These accident lawyers were, however, no more popular
-than their opponents, even with the workingmen whom<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span>
-they represented. The small means of their clients made any
-remuneration from them improbable unless damages were recovered.
-Consequently, the lawyer agreed to take nothing if
-defeated, but to even matters up insisted on a large fraction
-of the amount awarded, usually one-third or even more, if he
-won. Therefore, he fought not merely for justice and his
-client, but for his own fee, and the temptation to win by
-every possible means was great. Business men were quick to
-label him unscrupulous, while workingmen resented it when
-a large slice of the money which the jury gave to them as a
-just measure for suffering a lifelong disability vanished into
-some lawyer’s pockets.</p>
-
-<p>No satisfactory substitute for the contingent fee was suggested,
-but the prejudice created by the system and by the dislike
-of corporation lawyers was too great to be dispelled by
-the many members of the bar whose practice lay in neither
-of these two fields. And indeed, the profession as a whole
-cannot free itself from blame for some very definite evils, soon
-to be discussed. Unfortunately, the long-standing antagonism
-between lawyers and laymen has distracted the thoughts of
-both sides from wrongs which ought to be and can be cured,
-and turned them to never-ending disputes on problems of relatively
-small importance. For instance, almost any layman
-will open a discussion of the function of the lawyer by condemning
-the profession because it defends criminals who are
-known to be guilty. The solution of this problem is not easy,
-but it is not worth a hundredth of the attention it receives, for
-it hardly ever arises. The criminal law is a small part of the
-whole law, and lawyers who have spent their whole lives in that
-field have declared that they were not certain of the guilt of
-a single client. A far more important problem is whether a
-lawyer should advocate the passage of legislation which he
-personally considers vicious. Indeed, the underlying question,
-to which lawyers and laymen ought to be devoting themselves,
-is this. How far can the State ascertain the proper
-course of action by limiting itself to hearing paid representatives
-of the persons directly interested, financially or otherwise;
-or should the State also call in and pay trained men to
-investigate the question independently? The solution of this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span>
-question will affect not only lawyers, but other professions as
-well. Medical experts, for instance, might cease to be hired
-by millionaires to prove them insane, or by the prosecuting
-attorney with the opposite purpose, but might be employed by
-the court to make an impartial inquiry into the mental condition
-of a prisoner. In short, it may be that we have carried
-the notion of litigation as a contest of wits between two sides
-so far that the interests of society have not been adequately
-safeguarded.</p>
-
-<p>If laymen have erred in concentrating on minor points,
-lawyers have been far too ready to deny laymen any right to
-discuss law at all. It is just as if school-teachers should
-maintain that parents and citizens in general have no concern
-in the problems of education. The time has come to close
-the gulf in American life between the legal profession and the
-people who are ruled by laws. Law is the surface of contact
-where the pressure of society bears upon the individual.
-Doubtless, he attributes to the law many of the features in
-this pressure to which he objects, whereas they actually result
-from the social structure itself. The man who feels wronged
-by a prosecution for bigamy, or for stealing bread when he is
-starving for lack of employment, cannot expect to change the
-law without also changing the views of the community on
-monogamous marriage and the organization of industry.
-These institutions of society show themselves in the law just
-as the veins in a block of marble show themselves at the
-surface, but it is as futile for him to blame the law for “capitalism,”
-private property, or our present semi-permanent marriages
-as to try to get rid of the veins by scraping the surface of
-the marble. On the other hand, there are aspects of law which
-do not correspond to any existing social requirements or demands,
-and the layman has good cause to offer his opinion.
-And it may be worth listening to. The onlooker often sees most
-of the game. Although the layman may lack technical knowledge,
-he can appreciate the relation of law to his own department
-of human activity—business, social service, health—in
-ways that are difficult for the lawyer who is absorbed in the
-pressing tasks of each day. Moreover, the lawyer’s habitual
-and necessary obligation to conform to existing laws naturally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span>
-inclines him to overlook their defects, which are obvious to
-those who can spend in detached criticism the same time which
-he requires for practical application. Modern medicine was
-created by Pasteur, who was not a doctor; modern English
-law by Bentham, who was a lawyer to the extent of arguing
-one case and who was edited by Mill, a philosopher and
-economist.</p>
-
-<p>Knowledge is no longer a matter of water-tight compartments.
-“All good work is one,” says Wells in “Joan and
-Peter.” Law touches psychology in its treatment of the defective
-and insane, medicine and surgery in industrial accidents
-and disease, political science in municipal corporations,
-economics in taxation, philosophy in its selection of the purposes
-it should strive to accomplish. And this is a meagre list.
-The greatest need of American law is the establishment of
-means for intelligent mutual understanding and effective co-operation,
-not merely between lawyers and experts in such other
-fields as those mentioned, but between lawyers and the mass of
-our population, who fill the jails, pay the taxes, drink city
-water, get hurt in factories, buy, sell, invest, build homes, and
-leave it all to their children when they die.</p>
-
-<p>For these men and women have a right to complain of our
-law. Its evils are not those commonly decried, lawyers to defend
-the guilty, reliance on precedents instead of common
-sense, bribed judges. The real defect is failure to keep up to
-date. Many existing legal rules have the same fault as New
-York surface-cars before the subway or Hoboken Ferries
-before the tubes. They were good in their day, but it has
-gone by and they cannot handle the traffic. The system
-formulated by Story and Kent worked well for the farms,
-small factories, and small banks of their time, but the great
-development of national resources and crowded cities presented
-new situations unsuited to the old legal rules, and kept
-men too busy for the constructive leisure necessary for thinking
-out a new system. The law became a hand-to-mouth
-affair, deciding each isolated problem as it arose, and often
-deciding it wrong. Yet lawyers were satisfied with law, just
-as business men with business. Then came the agitation of
-the last fifteen years, which has at least made us discontented<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span>
-about many things. The next task is to stop calling each other
-names, sit down together, think matters through to a finish,
-and work together to complete the process which is farther
-along than we realize, of making over the common law system
-of an agricultural population a century ago to meet the needs
-of the city-dwelling America of to-day.</p>
-
-<p>A first step toward co-operation would be more discussion
-of law in the press. Several years ago Charles E. Hughes in
-a public address said that one reason why courts and lawyers
-were so unpopular in this country was the unfamiliarity of the
-people with what they were doing. Outside of criminal prosecutions,
-divorces, and large constitutional cases, newspapers
-give very little attention to legal questions, and even these
-cases are presented fragmentarily with almost no attempt to
-present their historical background and the general principles
-at issue. There is nothing to compare with the resumé of
-trials and decisions which appears from day to day in the London
-<cite>Times</cite>, no popular exposition of legal problems such as
-Woods Hutchinson has done for medicine or numerous writers
-for the achievements of Einstein. Surely law can be made
-as intelligible and interesting to the ordinary educated reader
-as relativity. It enters so intimately into human relationships
-that some knowledge of it is very important, not as a guide in
-specific transactions as to which a lawyer ought to be consulted,
-but as part of the mental stock-in-trade of the well-informed
-citizen. Wider realization of the difficulties of the work of
-judges and lawyers would bring about a friendlier and more
-helpful popular attitude.</p>
-
-<p>The public might understand, for example, why law does
-not progress so conspicuously and rapidly as medicine or engineering.
-Part of the blame rests, no doubt, upon lawyers,
-who have been less active than other professions in discussing
-and applying new ideas, but the very nature of the subject is
-an obstacle to quick change. In law, progress requires group
-action; the individual can accomplish little. The physician
-who discovers a new antitoxin, the surgeon who invents a new
-method of operating for gastric ulcer, can always, if his reputation
-be established, find some patient upon whom to test his
-conception. Its excellence or its faults can be rapidly proved<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span>
-to his own mind and that of any skilled onlooker. And new
-ideas, if sound, mean a larger practice and money in his pocket.
-The lawyer gets no such rewards for improving the law, and
-has no such opportunities for experiment. If he is convinced
-by observation, wide reading, and long thinking, that arrest
-for debt should be abolished, or the property of a spendthrift
-protected by law from his creditors, or trial by jury abandoned
-except in criminal trials, he cannot try out these theories upon
-some client. He must sacrifice days from his regular work to
-persuade a whole legislature to test his idea upon thousands
-of citizens, and if the idea is a bad one, the experiment will
-be a widespread disaster. Consequently law reform always
-faces an instinctive and discouraging legislative opposition.
-Even after every State except two had adopted the Uniform
-Negotiable Instruments Law, the Georgia legislature refused
-to do so because the Act abolished days of grace, the old custom
-allowing a debtor three days beyond the time of payment
-named in his note. They said that when a man had promised
-to pay a debt on May 1, it was un-American not to let him
-wait till May 4. Again, a committee of very able New York
-lawyers recently drew a short Practice Act setting forth the
-main requirements for the conduct of a law-suit, and leaving
-the details to the judges, who may be supposed to know more
-about their own work than the legislature. Similar laws have
-long been in successful operation in England, Massachusetts,
-and Connecticut, whereas the existing New York Code of
-Civil Procedure with its thousands of sections has been a
-vexatious source of delay and disputes in the press of urban
-litigation. The new measure was an admirable and thorough
-piece of work, endorsed by the Bar Associations of New York
-City and the State. Yet it was killed by the age-long opposition
-of the country to the town. Upstate lawyers, less harassed
-by the old Code because of uncrowded rural dockets,
-objected to throwing over their knowledge of the existing system
-and spending time to learn a new and better one. The
-legislature hated to give more power to the courts. As a result,
-the new bill was scrapped, and nothing has been done
-after years of agitation except to renumber the sections of
-the old Code with a few improvements.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span></p>
-
-<p>Another factor in law reform is the existence of fifty legal
-systems in one nation. Even if the law is modernized in one
-State, the objectionable old rule will remain in the other forty-seven
-until their legislatures are persuaded by the same tedious
-process. On the other hand, this diversity has its merits.
-Some of the progressive Western States serve as experiment
-stations for testing new legal and governmental schemes. Still
-more important, the limitations on legal experimentation are
-somewhat offset by the opportunities for observation of the
-workings of different legal rules in neighbouring States. The
-possibilities of this comparative method for judging the best
-solution of a legal problem have not yet been fully utilized.
-For example, a dispute has long raged whether it is desirable
-to compel a doctor to disclose professional secrets on the witness-stand
-without the patient’s consent. About half the
-States require him to keep silent. The reasons given are,
-that patients will seek medical aid less freely if their confidences
-may be disclosed; doctors would lie to shield their
-patients; some doctors are hired by employers to treat workmen
-injured in accidents and will try to get evidence on behalf
-of the employers if they are allowed to testify. So far,
-the discussion has turned on the probability or improbability
-that these arguments represent the facts, and neither side has
-collected the facts. The discussion could be brought down to
-earth by an investigation in New York which has the privilege,
-and Massachusetts, where secrecy is not maintained. Are
-doctors less consulted in Massachusetts, do they perjure themselves,
-do they ingratiate themselves with workmen to defeat
-subsequent accident suits? Statistics, personal interviews
-with judges and physicians, and examination of the stenographic
-records of trials ought to give valuable assistance in determining
-which half of the States has the better rule.</p>
-
-<p>Since law reform requires highly organized group action,
-some individual should be charged with the responsibility of
-organization. At present, it is everybody’s business. Judges
-are hearing cases all day and writing opinions at night, and
-they have no legislative position as in England, where they can
-draft bills and present them in the House of Lords. Individual
-lawyers carry little weight. The Bar Associations have accomplished<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span>
-much, but the work of their members is done without
-pay in the intervals of practice, and they have no official
-standing. The Attorney General is necessarily a partisan, representing
-the State’s side in litigation, with neither the time
-nor the duty to improve the law in general. The United
-States and the larger States badly need a Minister of Justice.
-All complaints of legal inefficiency would come to him, and he
-would be constantly collecting statistics of the cases in the
-courts and their social consequences, observing procedure personally,
-or through a corps of expert assistants, conferring with
-the judges and the Bar Associations, drafting or examining
-measures affecting the administration of justice and giving
-his opinion about them to the legislature, and charged with
-the general duty of ascertaining whether every person can find
-a certain remedy from the laws for all injuries or wrongs, obtaining
-right and justice freely and without purchase, completely
-and without denial, promptly and without delay.</p>
-
-<p>Until we establish such an official, we can rely on three instruments
-of legal advance, each of which may be a point of co-operation
-between lawyers and laymen. Of the first, the Bar
-Associations, something has already been said. The second
-is the judiciary. Unfortunately, the tendency of the American
-antagonism to law to concentrate on personal topics has
-warped the prolonged discussion of this branch of our government
-during the last ten years, and, indeed, since 1789.
-Charges of corruption and incompetency against individual
-judges, and methods of getting a bad judge off the bench, have
-entirely obscured the problem of getting good judges on the
-bench. The power of judges to declare statutes unconstitutional
-and void makes them the controlling factor in our government,
-yet there is no country where less attention is paid
-to their selection and training. It is of no use to recall a poor
-judge by popular vote if the people are eager to put one of
-the same type in his place. Nothing need be added to the
-estimate in Bryce’s “Modern Democracies” of the unevenness
-of judicial personnel. The most obvious need, if the inferior
-judges are to be brought up to the level of the best men,
-is for higher salaries. But that alone is not enough to induce
-leaders of the bar to become judges. No salary could be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span>
-so high as the income of successful metropolitan lawyers.
-The time has come for greater willingness on their part
-to retire from a large practice in middle life and devote
-their talents to judicial work. And even this will be useless,
-unless selection is based on merit. Our system of an elective
-judiciary is probably too deeply rooted to be entirely abandoned,
-though it is clear that legal talent is not a quality, like
-executive ability, readily capable of being appraised by the
-electorate. On the other hand, it is not altogether certain that
-State governors would appoint judges without regard to partisan
-considerations. An interesting compromise plan has
-been suggested, that there should be a Chief Justice, elected
-by the people, who should be in effect the Minister of Justice
-already described. All the other judges would be appointed
-by him, for life or for long terms, while his responsibility for
-wise selections would be secured by a short term or even by
-the recall. A governor does so many tasks that his judicial
-appointments do not play a large part in the popular judgment
-of his record, but the Chief Justice would stand or fall on the
-merits of the administration of law under his management.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, we do not deal fairly by the judges chosen under
-existing systems. After they have been selected, they should
-have more opportunity to study the special duties of their position
-before beginning work, and more leisure amid trials and
-opinions for general legal reading and for observation of the
-complexities of modern life which are inevitably involved in
-their decisions, especially on constitutional questions. Most
-litigation grows out of urban and industrial conditions, with
-which State supreme court judges may easily get out of touch,
-if they remain continuously in the State House in a small
-upstate city like Springfield, Albany, or Sacramento, with little
-opportunity to visit the factories and tenements of Chicago,
-New York, and San Francisco. It may also be doubted
-whether our usual system which restricts some judges to trials
-and others to appellate work is wise; an occasional change
-from one to the other is both refreshing and instructive.
-Judges frequently complain of the monotony of their work,
-cooped up with a few associates of similar mental interests, so
-that the atmosphere may acquire the irritability of a boarding-house.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span>
-It is not generally understood how much judges are
-cut off from other men. Close intimacy with their former
-friends at the bar or with wealthy business men who may have
-cases before them, is sure to cause talk. Graham Wallas’s
-suggestion of an occasional transfer to active work of a semi-judicial
-character, like Judge Sankey’s chairmanship of the
-English Coal Commission, seems valuable. Our Interstate
-Commerce Commission would provide such an opportunity.
-Finally, the existing gulf between courts and law schools might
-be narrowed by summer conferences on growing-points in
-the law, where each side could give much out of its experience
-to the other.</p>
-
-<p>The remaining instrument of progress is the law schools.
-“Legal education,” says Bryce, “is probably nowhere so thorough
-as in the United States.” The chief reasons for this success
-are two, the professional law teacher, who has replaced
-the retired judge and the practising lawyer who lectured in
-his spare hours; and the case-system of instruction. This
-method is not, as is popularly believed, the memorization by
-the students of the facts of innumerable cases. It imparts
-legal principles, not on the say-so of a text-book or a professor,
-but by study and discussion of the actual sources of
-those principles, the decisions of the courts. The same method
-in the Continental Law would result in a class-room discussion
-of codes and commentators, which are there the sources.
-One of the most interesting signs of its success is its spread
-from law into other sciences such as medicine. Books based
-on the study of concrete situations are used in public schools
-for the study of geography and hygiene, and charitable societies
-work out the general needs of the community from the problems
-of individual families. This system has superseded in
-all the leading law schools the old methods of lecturing and
-reading treatises. Its most conspicuous service is, of course,
-vocational, the training of men whose advice a client can safely
-accept. Already some States have required a law-school degree
-as a condition of admission to the bar, and the old haphazard
-law-office apprenticeship will eventually disappear, although
-the question of how far a man who is earning his living should
-be allowed to study law in his spare hours at a night law school<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span>
-whose standards must usually be lower than a full-time school
-remains as a difficult problem in a democratic country. Efficiency
-of training conflicts with equality of opportunity. A
-second service of the leading law schools is the modernization
-of the law through the production of books. A great example
-of this is the “Treatise on Evidence,” by John H. Wigmore,
-dean of Northwestern Law School, which is every day
-influencing courts and renovating the most antiquated portion
-of the common law.</p>
-
-<p>Of late years, the need for fresh changes in method has become
-plain. Christopher Columbus Langdell, the inventor of
-the case-system, laid down two fundamental propositions:
-“First, that law is a science; second, that all the available
-materials of that science are contained in printed books.” Experience
-has proved that he was right in believing that attendance
-in a lawyer’s office or at the proceedings of courts was
-not essential to a legal education. But the scope of legal
-study must now extend beyond printed books, certainly beyond
-law books. Since law is not an isolated department of knowledge,
-but a system of rules for the regulation of human life,
-the truth of those rules must be tested by many facts outside
-the past proceedings of courts and legislatures. Not only
-law in books but law in action has to be considered, and after
-learning the principles evolved by a process of inclusion and
-exclusion in the decisions or by intermittent legislative action,
-the scholar must find how those principles actually work in
-the bank, the factory, the street, and the jail. The problem
-is still debated, whether this can better be done in the pre-legal
-college course or by the use of non-legal experts in the
-law schools, or whether the necessary material should be
-assimilated and presented by the law teachers themselves. Yet
-this widening of the content of legal study does not in the least
-impair the validity of Langdell’s method, the systematic investigation
-of the sources of law at first hand, whether those
-sources be found in the reports and statutes which he had in
-mind, or in the economic, social, and psychological facts which
-have demanded attention in recent years.</p>
-
-<p>Something must be said in closing of those portions of the
-law where change has been most necessary. Of these our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span>
-criminal law is easily the most disgraceful. Its complete inability
-to perform its task has been exhaustively demonstrated
-by the opening chapter of Raymond Fosdick’s “American
-Police Systems.” The lawyers and judges are only partly
-to blame, for their work forms only the middle of three stages
-in the suppression of crime. The initial stage of arrest and
-the final stage of punishment are in the hands of administrative
-officials, beyond the control of the bench and bar. Many
-criminals are never caught, and the loss of public confidence
-in the justice or effectiveness of prisons makes juries reluctant
-to convict. Yet the legal profession is sorely at fault for
-what takes place while the prisoner is in the dock. The whole
-problem calls for that co-operation between lawyers, other
-experts, and laymen, of which I have already spoken. Unless
-something is soon done, we may find crime ceasing to be
-a legal matter at all. Even now, many large department stores
-have so little belief in the criminal courts and prisons that
-they are trying embezzlers and shoplifters in tribunals of
-their own, and administering a private system of probation
-and restitution. The initial step is a reformulation of the purpose
-of punishment. Twenty-five years ago, Justice Holmes
-asked, “What have we better than a blind guess to show that
-the criminal law in its present form does more good than
-harm?”</p>
-
-<p>One serious reason for its breakdown has been the creation
-of innumerable minor offences, which are repeatedly committed
-and almost impossible to suppress. The police are diverted
-from murders and burglaries to gambling and sexual delinquencies,
-while the frequent winking at such breaches of law
-destroys the essential popular conviction that a law ought to
-be obeyed just because it is law. The Chief of Police of New
-Orleans told Raymond Fosdick, “If I should enforce the law
-against selling tobacco on Sunday, I would be run out of office
-in twenty-four hours. But I am in constant danger of being
-run out of office because I don’t enforce it.” So they were
-hanging green curtains, which served the double purpose of
-advertising the location of the stands and of protecting the
-virtue of the citizens from visions of evil.</p>
-
-<p>At the present time we have thrown a new strain on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
-criminal law by the enactment of nation-wide prohibition. The
-future will show whether the main effect of this measure will
-be an increase in disrespect and antagonism for law, or the
-ultimate removal of one of the chief causes of lawlessness
-and waste. Unfortunately, the perpetual discussion of home-brew
-receipts and hidden sources of supply has prevented a
-general realization that we are witnessing one of the most far-reaching
-legislative experiments of all time. What we ought
-to be talking about is the consequences of prohibition to health,
-poverty, crime, earning-power, and general happiness. It is
-possible, for instance, that total abstinence for the working
-classes coupled with apparently unlimited supplies of liquor
-for their employers may have the double consequence of increasing
-the resentful desire of the former to wrest the control
-of wealth from those who are monopolizing a time-honoured
-source of pleasure, and of weakening the ability of
-the heavy-drinking sons of our captains of industry to stand
-up in the struggle against the sober brains of the labour leaders
-of the future. Prohibition may thus bring about a striking
-shift of economic power.</p>
-
-<p>The delays, expense, and intricacies of legal procedure demand
-reform. The possession of a legal right is worthless to
-a poor man if he cannot afford to enforce it through the courts.
-The means of removing such obstacles have been set forth by
-Reginald H. Smith in “Justice and the Poor.” For instance,
-much has already been accomplished by Small Claims Courts,
-where relief is given without lawyers in a very simple manner.
-When a Cleveland landlady was sued by a boarder because she
-had detained his trunk, she told the judge that he had set fire
-to his mattress while smoking in bed and refused to pay her
-twenty-five dollars for the damage. The judge, instead of
-calling expert witnesses to prove the value of the mattress,
-telephoned the nearest department store, found he could buy
-another for eight dollars, and the parties agreed to settle on
-that basis. Again, family troubles are now scattered through
-numerous courts. A father deserts, and the mother goes to
-work. The neglected children get into the Juvenile Court.
-She asks for a separation in the Probate Court. A grocer sues
-her husband for food she has bought, before a jury. She<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span>
-prosecutes him before a criminal court for non-support, and
-finally secures a divorce in equity. One Court of Domestic
-Relations should handle all the difficulties of the family, which
-ought to be considered together. Much of the injustice to
-the poor has been lessened by legal aid societies, which have
-not only conducted litigation for individuals but have also
-fought test-cases up to the highest courts, and drafted statutes
-in order to protect large groups of victims of injustice. The
-injury done to the poor by antiquated legal machinery is receiving
-wide attention, but it is also a tax on large business
-transactions which is ultimately paid by the consumer. Reform
-is needed to secure justice to the rich.</p>
-
-<p>The substantive law which determines the scope of rights
-and duties has been more completely overhauled, and many
-great improvements have been accomplished. Relations between
-the public and the great corporations which furnish
-transportation and other essential services are no longer left
-to the arbitrary decisions of corporate officers or the slow
-process of isolated litigation. Public service commissions do
-not yet operate perfectly, but any one who doubts their desirability
-should read a contemporary Commission Report and
-then turn to the history of the Erie Railroad under Jim Fiske
-and Jay Gould as related in “The Book of Daniel Drew.”
-The old fellow-servant rule which threw the burden of an industrial
-accident upon the victim has been changed by workmen’s
-compensation acts which place the risk upon the employer.
-He pays for the injured workman as for a broken
-machine and shifts the expense to his customers as part of
-the costs of the business. The burden is distributed through
-society and litigation is rapid and inexpensive. Unfortunately,
-no such satisfactory solution has been reached in the law of
-labour organizations, but its chaotic condition only corresponds
-to the general American uncertainty on the proper treatment
-of such organizations. It is possible that just as the King,
-in the Middle Ages, insisted on dragging the Barons into his
-courts to fight out their boundary disputes there, instead of
-with swords and battleaxes on the highway, so society which
-is the victim of every great industrial dispute will force employers
-and workmen alike to settle their differences before a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span>
-tribunal while production goes on. The Australian Courts of
-Conciliation have lately been imitated in Kansas, an experiment
-which will be watched with close interest.</p>
-
-<p>Less importance must be attached, however, to the development
-of particular branches of the law than to the change
-in legal attitude. The difference between the old and the new
-is exemplified by two extracts from judicial decisions which
-were almost contemporaneous. Judge Werner, in holding the
-first New York Workmen’s Compensation Act unconstitutional,
-limited the scope of law as follows:</p>
-
-<p>“This quoted summary of the report of the commission to
-the legislature, which clearly and fairly epitomizes what is
-more fully set forth in the body of the report, is based upon
-a most voluminous array of statistical tables, extracts from
-the works of philosophical writers and the industrial laws of
-many countries, all of which are designed to show that our
-own system of dealing with industrial accidents is economically,
-morally, and legally unsound. Under our form of government,
-however, courts must regard all economical, philosophical
-and moral theories, attractive and desirable though
-they may be, as subordinate to the primary question whether
-they can be moulded into statutes without infringing upon
-the letter or spirit of our written constitutions.... With
-these considerations in mind we turn to the purely legal phases
-of the controversy.” (Ives <i>v.</i> South Buffalo Ry. Co., 201 N. Y.
-271, 287, 1911.)</p>
-
-<p>A different attitude was shown by the Supreme Court of the
-United States in its reception of the brief filed by Mr. Louis
-D. Brandeis on behalf of the constitutionality of an Oregon
-statute limiting woman’s work to ten hours a day. Besides
-decisions, he included the legislation of many States and of
-European countries. Then follow extracts from over ninety
-reports of committees, bureaus of statistics, commissioners of
-hygiene, inspectors of factories, both in this country and in
-Europe, to the effect that long hours of labour are dangerous
-for women, primarily because of their special physical organization.
-Following them are extracts from similar reports discussing
-the general benefits of shorter hours from the economic
-aspect of the question. Justice Brewer said:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span></p>
-
-<p>“The legislation and opinions referred to in the margin may
-not be, technically speaking, authorities, and in them is little
-or no discussion of the constitutional question presented to us
-for determination, yet they are significant of a widespread
-belief that woman’s physical structure, and the functions she
-performs in consequence thereof, justify special legislation restricting
-or qualifying the conditions under which she should be
-permitted to toil. Constitutional questions, it is true, are not
-settled by even a consensus of present public opinion, for it is
-a peculiar value of a written constitution that it places in unchanging
-form limitations upon legislative action, and thus
-gives a permanence and stability to popular government which
-otherwise would be lacking. At the same time, when a question
-of fact is debated and debatable, and the extent to which
-a special constitutional limitation goes is affected by the truth
-in respect to that fact, a widespread and long continued belief
-concerning it is worthy of consideration. We take judicial
-cognizance of all matters of general knowledge.” (Muller <i>v.</i>
-Oregon, 208 U. S. 412, 420, 1907.)</p>
-
-<p>The decision displays two qualities which are characteristic
-of the winning counsel since his elevation to the bench; it
-keeps its eye on the object instead of devoting itself to abstract
-conceptions, and it emphasizes the interest of society in new
-forms of protection against poverty, disease, and other evils.
-To these social interests, the property of the individual must
-often be partly sacrificed and in recent years we have seen the
-courts upholding the guarantee of bank deposits, State regulation
-of insurance rates, and suspension of the right of landlords
-to recover unreasonable rents or dispossess their tenants.
-All this would have been regarded as impossible fifty years
-ago.</p>
-
-<p>These extensions of governmental power over property have
-been accompanied by legislation severely restricting freedom
-of discussion of still more radical types of State control. It is
-argued that the right of free speech must face limitation like
-the right of the landlord. The true policy is exactly the opposite.
-Not only is it unjust for the State to carry out one form
-of confiscation while severely punishing the discussion of another
-form, but in an age of new social devices the widest liberty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
-for the expression of opinion is essential, so that the
-merits and demerits of any proposed plan may be thoroughly
-known and comparisons made between it and alternative
-schemes, no matter how radical these alternatives may be. A
-body of law that was determined to stand still might discourage
-thought with no serious damage; but law which is determined
-to move needs the utmost possible light so that it may be sure
-of moving forward.</p>
-
-<p>No one has expressed so well the new importance of social
-interests, and the value of freedom of speech; no one, indeed,
-has expressed so nobly the task and hopes of American Law,
-as the man of whom it is said that among the long list of
-American judges, he seems “the only one who has framed for
-himself a system of legal ideas and general truths of life, and
-composed his opinions in harmony with the system already
-framed.” (John H. Wigmore, “Justice Holmes and the Law
-of Torts,” 29 Harv. L. Rev. 601.) Yet no one has been more
-cautious than Justice Holmes in warning us not to expect too
-much from law.</p>
-
-<p>“The law, so far as it depends on learning, is indeed, as it
-has been called, the government of the living by the dead. It
-cannot be helped, it is as it should be, that the law is behind
-the times. As law embodies beliefs that have triumphed in
-the battle of ideas and then have translated themselves into
-action, while there is still doubt, while opposite convictions still
-keep a battle front against each other, the time for law has
-not come; the notion destined to prevail is not yet entitled to
-the field.” (“Collected Legal Papers,” 138, 294.)</p>
-
-<p>It is the work of the present generation of American lawyers
-to be sure that the right side wins in the many conflicts now
-waging. We cannot be certain that the law will make itself rational,
-while we remain as inactive as in the past, absorbed in
-our own routine, and occasionally pausing to say, “All’s right
-with the world”; for, to quote Holmes once more, “The mode
-in which the inevitable comes to pass is through effort.”</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Zechariah Chafee, Jr.</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_77" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="EDUCATION">EDUCATION</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">If</span> Henry Adams had lived in the 13th century he would have
-found the centre of a world of unity in the most powerful
-doctrine of the church, the cult of the Virgin Mary. Living
-in the 19th century he sums up his experience in a world of
-multiplicity as the attempt to realize for himself the saving
-faith of that world in what is called education. Adams was
-not the first to be struck with the similarity of the faiths of
-the mediæval and the modern world. This comparison is the
-subject of an article by Professor Barrett Wendell published
-in the <cite>North American Review</cite> for 1904 and entitled “The
-Great American Superstition”:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Undefined and indefinite as it is, the word education is
-just now a magic one; from the Atlantic to the Pacific, it is
-the most potent with which you can conjure money out of
-public chests or private pockets. Let social troubles declare
-themselves anywhere, lynchings, strikes, trusts, immigration,
-racial controversies, whatever you chance to hold most threatening,
-and we are gravely assured on every side that education
-is the only thing which can preserve our coming generations
-from destruction. What is more, as a people we listen
-credulously to these assurances. We are told, and we believe
-and evince magnificent faith in our belief, that our national
-salvation must depend on education.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Professor Wendell goes on trenchantly to compare this reigning
-modern faith with that in the mediæval church. He calls
-attention to the fact that whereas the dominant architectural
-monuments of the Old World are great cathedrals and religious
-houses, implying the faith that salvation could be assured
-by unstinted gifts to the church, in our modern times the most
-stately and impressive structures are our schools, colleges, and
-public libraries, many of them, like the cathedrals, erected<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
-by sinners of wealth in the pursuit of individual atonement
-and social salvation. “Ask any American what we shall do
-to be saved, and if he speak his mind he will probably bid
-us educate our fellow-men.” He might have extended his
-comparison to the personal hierarchy of the two institutions,
-for at the time of his article the President of Harvard spoke
-to the people of the United States with the voice of Innocent
-III, surrounded by his advisers among university presidents
-and superintendents gathered like Cardinal Archbishops,
-in the conclave of the National Education Association, of which
-the Committee of Ten was a sort of papal curia. Although
-the educational papacy has fallen into schism, the cities are
-still ruled by superintendents like bishops, the colleges by
-president and deans, like abbots and priors, and the whole
-structure rests on a vast population of teachers holding their
-precarious livings like the parish priests at the will of their
-superiors, tempered by public opinion. Indeed, Professor
-Wendell is struck by the probability that as European society
-was encumbered by the itinerant friars, so America will have
-“its mendicant orders of scholars—the male and female doctors
-of philosophy.” But it is his main theme which concerns
-us here, that “the present mood of our country concerning
-education is neither more nor less than a mood of blind,
-mediæval superstition.”</p>
-
-<p>The difference between faith as religion and as superstition
-may be hard to define, the terms having become somewhat interchangeable
-through controversy, but in general we should
-doubtless use the pragmatic test. A vital and saving faith
-which actually justifies itself by results is religion; a faith
-which is without constructive effect on character and society,
-and is merely fanciful, fantastic, or degrading we call superstition.
-The old education which America brought from
-England and inherited from the Renaissance was a reasonable
-faith. It consisted of mathematics, classics, and theology, and
-while it produced, except in rare instances, no mathematicians,
-classical scholars, or theologians, it trained minds for the
-learned professions of those days and it gave the possessors
-of it intellectual distinction, and admitted them to the society<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span>
-of cultivated men everywhere. Its authority was largely traditional,
-but it worked in the world of that day much as the
-thirty-three Masonic degrees do in the world of Masonry. It
-may properly be called a religion, and in its rigid, prescribed,
-dogmatic creed it may be compared to the mediæval theology.
-At any rate, it suffered the same fate and from the same cause.
-Its system was too narrow for the expanding knowledge and
-the multiplying phenomena of the advancing hour. It failed
-to take account of too many things. The authority of tradition,
-by which it maintained its position, was challenged and
-overthrown, and private judgment was set in its place.</p>
-
-<p>Private judgment in education is represented by the elective
-system; President Eliot was the Luther of this movement
-and Harvard College his Wittenberg. Exactly as after the
-Reformation, however, the attitudes of assertion and subservience
-in spiritual matters continued to manifest themselves
-where the pope had been deposed, in Geneva and Dort and
-Westminster, so in spite of the anarchy of the elective system
-the educational function continues to impose itself in its traditional
-robes of authority, and to be received with the reverence
-due to long custom. And in this way education in
-America from being a saving faith has become an illusion.
-The old education, its authority challenged, its sway limited,
-and nobody caring whether its followers can quote Latin or
-not, is in the position of the Church of Rome; the so-called
-new education, uncertain in regard to material and method,
-direction and destination, is like the anarchic Protestant sects.
-Neither possesses authority; the old system has lost it, and
-the new ones have never had it. They are alike in depending
-upon the blindness of the masses which is superstition.</p>
-
-<p>Although the generalization remains true that the mood of
-America toward education is a mood of superstition, there are
-certain forms of education operative in America to-day which
-approve themselves by performance and justify the reasonable
-faith in which they are held. The argument in favour of the
-elective system, by force of which it displaced the prescribed
-classical course, was that it was necessary to give opportunity
-for specialization. This opportunity it has given, and in certain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span>
-directions the results produced by American institutions
-are of high value. Our scientific education is the most advanced,
-and in the professions which depend upon it, engineering
-and medicine, our product doubtless “compares favourably”
-with that of Europe. These facts cannot be cited,
-however, as a valid reason for the American faith in education
-as a whole. It is recognized to-day that progress in
-natural science has far outrun that in politics, social life, culture—therein
-lies the tragedy of the world. A few men of
-science have a knowledge of the means by which the human
-race can be destroyed in a brief space—and no statesmen,
-philosophers, or apostles of culture have the power to persuade
-the human race not to permit it to be done.</p>
-
-<p>In another direction a great increase of specialization has
-taken place—in the preparation for business. Our colleges
-of business administration rival our scientific schools in the
-exactness of their aim, and the precision of their effort. Here
-again, however, it may be questioned whether their success
-is one to justify belief in the educational process as a whole.
-The result of such specialization upon the business organization
-of society can hardly be to arouse a critical, and hence
-truly constructive, attitude in regard to the whole economic
-problem; it is nearly certain to promote a disposition to take
-advantage of the manifest shortcomings of that organization
-for individual successful achievement. Whether society as a
-whole will profit by the efforts of such experts as our business
-colleges are turning out remains to be seen. Whether we are
-wise in strengthening the predatory elements which put a strain
-on the social organization, at a time when the whole structure
-is trembling, is open to question. Here again the faith of
-America in education as social salvation is not justified by individual
-results, however brilliant and fortunate.</p>
-
-<p>The value of the specialist to society is unquestionable,
-but he alone will not save it. Such salvation must come from
-the diffusion and validity of the educational process as a whole,
-from the men and women of active intelligence, broad view,
-wide sympathy, and resolute character who are fitted as a
-result of it to see life steadily and see it whole, reason soundly
-to firm conclusions in regard to it, and hold those decisions in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span>
-the face of death. The specialist indeed may be considered
-a necessary subtraction from the general social army, a person
-set apart for special duty, whose energies are concentrated and
-loyalties narrowed. We expect him to die, if need be, in maintaining
-that the world moves, but not for freedom of thought
-in the abstract. It is by the generally trained, all-round product
-of our education that the system must be judged. And
-what do we find?</p>
-
-<p>The general student, it appears, tends to be the product of
-as narrow a process as the specialist, but not as deep. As the
-demands of specialization become more exacting, its requirements
-reach farther and farther back into the field of general
-education, and more and more of the area is restricted to its
-uses. The general student in consequence becomes a specialist
-in what is left over. Moreover, he exercises his right of private
-judgment and free election along the path of least resistance.
-Laboratory science he abhors as belonging to a course
-of specialization which he has renounced. The classics and
-mathematics, to which a good share of our educational machinery
-is still by hereditary right devoted, he scorns as having
-no <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">raison d’être</i> except an outworn tradition. With the
-decline of the classics has gone the preliminary training for
-modern languages, which the general student usually finds
-too exacting and burdensome, and from the obligation of which
-colleges and secondary institutions also are now rapidly relieving
-him. We boasted in the late war that we had no quarrel
-with the German language, and yet by our behaviour we recognized
-that one of the fruits of victory was the annihilation of
-at least one foreign speech within our borders. The general
-student is thus confined, by right of private judgment of
-course, to his own language and literature, and such superficial
-studies in history and social science as he can accomplish
-with that instrument alone. His view is therefore narrow and
-insular. His penetration is slight. He is, in short, a specialist
-in the obvious.</p>
-
-<p>Not only does the general student tend to be as restricted
-in subject-matter as the specialist, but he lacks the training
-in investigation, reasoning, and concentration which the latter’s
-responsibility for independent research imposes. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span>
-definition of the aim of general education on which Professor
-Wendell rested his case for the old curriculum in the article
-quoted above, is “such training as shall enable a man to
-devote his faculties intently to matters which of themselves
-do not interest him.” Now clearly if the student persistently
-chooses only the subjects which interest him, and follows them
-only as far as his interest extends, he escapes all training
-in voluntary attention and concentration. In his natural disposition
-to avoid mental work he finds ready accomplices in
-his instructors and text-book writers. They realize that they
-are on trial, and that interest alone is the basis of the verdict.
-Accordingly they cheerfully assume the burden of preliminary
-digestion of material, leaving to the student the assimilation
-of so much as his queasy stomach can bear. One way in
-which the study of English literature or history can be made
-a matter of training in criticism and reasoning is to send the
-student to the sources, the original material, and hold him
-responsible for his conclusions. He may gain a wrong or inadequate
-view, but at any rate it is his own, and it affords him
-a solid basis for enlargement or correction. Instead of this
-the student is invited to a set of criticisms and summaries
-already made, and is usually discouraged if by chance he
-attempts a verification on his own account. The actual reading
-of Shakespeare, Bacon, Milton, Swift, Burke will give the
-student at least a certain training in concentration; but this
-is hard, slow, and dry work. It is much easier and more comprehensive,
-instead of reading one play of Shakespeare, to
-read <em>about</em> all the plays, including the life of the author, his
-dramatic art, and some speculations in regard to the Elizabethan
-stage. It was William James who pointed out the
-difference between <em>knowledge about</em> and <em>acquaintance with</em> an
-author. The extent to which we have substituted for the
-direct vision, with its stimulating appeal to individual reaction,
-the conventional summary and accepted criticism, the official
-formula and the stereotyped view, is the chief reason for the
-ready-made uniformity of our educated product.</p>
-
-<p>The pioneer democracy of America itself is responsible for
-a method of instruction typically American. The superstitious
-faith in education was the basis of a system whereby many<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span>
-busy, middle-aged persons whose early advantages had been
-limited, by means of attractive summaries, outlines, and handbooks,
-could acquaint themselves with the names of men,
-books, and events which form the Binet-Simon test of culture,
-and enable the initiate to hold up his head in circles where
-the best that has been thought or said in the world is habitually
-referred to. This method is carried out in hundreds of
-cultural camp-meetings every summer, by thousands of popular
-lectures, in countless programmes of study for women’s
-clubs. Unfortunately it is coming to be not only the typical
-but the only method of general education in America. Chautauqua
-has penetrated the college and the university. Better
-that our fathers had died, their intellectual thirst unsatisfied,
-than that they had left this legacy of mental soft drinks for
-their children.</p>
-
-<p>Thus far I have had the college chiefly in mind, but the
-same observations apply equally to the secondary school. The
-elective system has made its way thither, and indeed one of
-the chief difficulties of organizing a college curriculum for the
-general student which shall represent something in the way
-of finding things out, of reasoning from facts to conclusions,
-and of training in voluntary attention, is that of determining
-any common ground on the basis of previous attainment. Not
-only the elective system but the Chautauqua method has largely
-permeated our high schools. The teachers, often on annual
-appointment, more than the college instructors, with comparative
-security of tenure, are dependent on the favour of pupils,
-a favour to be maintained in competition with dances, movies,
-and <cite>The Saturday Evening Post</cite>, by interesting them. It is
-therefore a common thing for teachers to repeat in diluted form
-the courses which they took in college—and which in the
-original were at best no saturate solutions of the subject. The
-other day, on visiting a class in Shakespeare at a Y.M.C.A.
-school, I ventured to suggest to the teacher that the method
-used was rather advanced. “Ah, but my daughter at high
-school,” he said, “is having Professor Blank’s course in the
-mediæval drama.” Now such a course intended for graduate
-students investigating sources, influences, and variations among
-saints’ plays and mystery plays, could have no educational<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span>
-value in material or method for a high-school pupil, but it was,
-no doubt, as interesting as a Persian tale.</p>
-
-<p>Inasmuch as the colleges and the secondary schools are both
-uncertain as regards the meaning and aim of general education,
-it is not surprising to find the grade schools also at sea,
-their pupils the victims both of meaningless tradition and reckless
-experiment. The tradition of our grade schools, educational
-experts tell us, was brought by Horace Mann from Prussia.
-There the <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Volkschule</i> was designed for the children of
-the people, who should be trained with a view to remaining
-in the station in which they had been born. At least, it may
-be conceded, the German designers of the system had a purpose
-in mind, and knew the means to attain it; but both purpose
-and means are strangely at variance with American conditions
-and ideals. Other experts have pointed out the extraordinary
-retarding of the educational process after the first years, when
-the child learns by a natural objective method some of the most
-difficult processes of physical life, accomplishing extraordinary
-feats of understanding and control; and some of the most hopeful
-experiments in primary education look toward continuing
-this natural method for a longer time. At present the principle
-of regimentation seems to be the most important one in
-the grade school, and as the pace is necessarily that of the
-slowest, the pupils in general have a large amount of slack rope
-which it is the problem of principals and teachers to draw in
-and coil up. Altogether the grade school represents a degree
-of waste and misdirection which would in itself account for
-the tendencies toward mental caprice or stagnation which are
-evident in the pupils who proceed from it.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the parallel which Professor Wendell established between
-our educational system and the mediæval church would
-seem to have a certain foundation. In the colleges, as in the
-monasteries, we have a group of ascetic specialists, sustained
-in their labours by an apocalyptic vision of a world which they
-can set on fire, and in which no flesh can live; and a mass of
-idle, pleasure-loving youth of both sexes, except where some
-Abbot Samson arises, with strong-arm methods momentarily
-to reduce them to order and industry. In the high schools,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span>
-as in the cathedrals, we have great congregations inspired by
-the music, the lights, the incense, assisting at a ceremony of
-which the meaning is as little understood as the miracle of
-the mass. In the grade schools, as in the parish churches, we
-have the humble workers, like Chaucer’s poor parson of the
-town, trying with pathetic endeavour to meet the needs and
-satisfy the desires of their flocks, under conditions of an educational
-and political tyranny no less galling than was the
-ecclesiastical.</p>
-
-<p>But, we may well enquire, whence does this system draw its
-power to impose itself upon the masses?—for even superstition
-must have a sign which the blind can read, and a source of
-appeal to human nature. The answer bears out still further
-Professor Wendell’s parallel. The mediæval church drew its
-authority from God, and to impose that authority upon the
-masses it invented the method of propaganda. It claimed to
-be able to release men from the burden which oppressed them
-most heavily, their sins, and in conjunction with the secular
-power it enforced its claims against all gainsayers, treating the
-obstinate among them with a series of penalties, penance, excommunication,
-the stake. Education finds its authority in
-the human reason, and likewise imposes that authority by
-propaganda. It too claims the power of salvation from the
-evils which oppress men most sorely to-day—the social maladjustments,
-“lynchings, strikes, trusts, immigration, racial controversies”—and
-it is in alliance with the secular power to
-preserve its monopoly of social remedies from the competition
-of anything like direct action. Now it is clear that in the
-religion of Christ in its pure form the church had a basis for
-its claims to possess a power against sin, and a means of salvation.
-Similarly it may be maintained that human reason,
-allowed to act freely and disinterestedly, would be sufficient
-to cope with the evils of our time and bring about a social
-salvation. Indeed, it is curious to remark how nearly the
-intellectual conclusions of reason have come to coincide with
-the intuitive wisdom of Jesus. The church was faithless to its
-mission by alliance with temporal power, by substituting its
-own advancement for the will of God, by becoming an end in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span>
-itself. Education likewise is by way of being faithless to
-itself, by alliance with secular power, political and financial,
-by the substitution of its own institutional advancement for
-disinterested service of truth, by becoming likewise an end in
-itself.</p>
-
-<p>In one of the most remarkable pronouncements of the present
-commencement season, President Hopkins of Dartmouth
-College summarized the influences which make against what he
-calls Verihood. They are first, Insufficiency of mentality, or
-over-professionalization of point of view; second, Inertia of
-mentality or closed mindedness; and third, False emphasis of
-mentality or propaganda. The late war and its evil aftermath
-have put in high relief the extent of this third influence.
-President Hopkins speaks as one of the Cardinal Archbishops
-of Education, and I quote his words with the authority which
-his personality and position give them:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Now that the war is passed, the spirit of propaganda still
-remains in the reluctance with which is returned to an impatient
-people the ancient right of access to knowledge of the
-truth, the right of free assembly, and the right of freedom of
-speech. Meanwhile the hesitancy with which these are returned
-breeds in large groups vague suspicion and acrimonious
-distrust of that which is published as truth, and which actually
-is true, so that on all sides we hear the query whether
-we are being indulged with what is considered good for us,
-or with that which constitutes the facts. Thus we impair the
-validity of truth and open the door and give opportunity for
-authority which is not justly theirs to be ascribed to falsehood
-and deceit.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The war was a test which showed how feeble was the hold
-of American education upon the principle which alone can
-give it validity. Nowhere was the suppression of freedom of
-mind, of truth, so energetic, so vindictive as in the schools.
-Instances crowd upon the mind. I remember attending the
-trial of a teacher before a committee of the New York School
-Board, the point being whether his reasons for not entering
-with his class upon a discussion of the Soviet government concealed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span>
-a latent sympathy with that form of social organization.
-The pupils were ranged in two groups, Jews and Gentiles, and
-were summoned in turn to give their testimony—they had
-previously been educated in the important functions of modern
-American society, espionage, and mass action. Another occasion
-is commemorated by the New York <cite>Evening Post</cite>, the
-teacher being on trial for disloyalty and the chief count in his
-indictment that he desired an early peace; and his accuser, one
-Dr. John Tildsley, an Archdeacon or superintendent of the
-diocese of New York under Bishop Ettinger:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Are you interested in having this man discharged?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am,” said Dr. Tildsley.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know of any act that would condemn him as a
-teacher?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Dr. Tildsley, “he favoured an early peace.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you want an early, victorious peace?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why ask me a question like that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because I want to show you how unfair you have been to
-this teacher.”</p>
-
-<p>“But Mr. Mufson wanted an early peace without victory,”
-said Dr. Tildsley.</p>
-
-<p>“He didn’t say that, did he? He did not say an early
-peace without victory?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you don’t want an early peace, do you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“You want a prolongation of all this world misery?”</p>
-
-<p>“To a certain extent, yes,” said Dr. Tildsley.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Nor did the sabotage of truth stop with school boards and
-superintendents. A colleague of mine writing a chapter of a
-text-book in modern history made the statement that the British
-government entered the war because of an understanding
-with France, the invasion of Belgium being the pretext which
-appealed to popular enthusiasm—to which a great publishing
-house responded that this statement would arouse much indignation
-among the American people, and must therefore be
-suppressed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span></p>
-
-<p>We need not be surprised that since the war education has
-not shown a disinterested and impartial attitude toward the
-phenomena of human affairs, a reliance on the method of trial
-and error, of experiment and testimony, which it has evolved.
-Teachers who are openly, or even latently, in sympathy with a
-form of social organization other than the régime of private
-control of capital are banned from schools and colleges with
-candle, with book, and with bell. Text-books which do not
-agree with the convenient view of international relations are
-barred. Superintendents like Ettinger and Tildsley in New
-York are the devoted apologists for the system to which
-they owe their greatness. To its position among the vested
-interests of the world, to the prosperity of its higher clergy,
-education has sacrificed its loyalty to that which alone can
-give it authority.</p>
-
-<p>The prevention of freedom of thought and enquiry is of
-course necessary so long as the purpose of education is to
-produce belief rather than to stimulate thought. The belief
-which it is the function of education to propagate is that
-in the existing order. Hence we find the vast effort known
-as “Americanization,” which is for the most part a perfect
-example of American education at the present day. The spirit
-of “Americanization” is to consider the individual not with
-reference to his inward growth of mind and spirit, but solely
-with a view to his worldly success, and his relation to the
-existing order of society, to which it is considered that the
-individual will find his highest happiness and usefulness in
-contributing. This programme naturally enough finds a sponsor
-in the American Legion, but it is truly disconcerting to
-find the National Education Association entering into alliance
-with this super-legal body, appointing a standing committee to
-act in co-operation with the Legion throughout the year, accepting
-the offer of the Legion to give lectures in the schools,
-and endorsing the principle of the Lusk Law in New York,
-which imposes the test of an oath of allegiance to the Government
-as a requirement for a teacher’s certificate.</p>
-
-<p>We have now the chief reason why education remains the
-dominant superstition of our time; but one may still wonder
-how an institution which is apparently so uncertain of its purpose<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span>
-and methods can continue to exercise such influence on
-the minds and hearts of men. The answer is, of course, that
-education is not in the least doubtful of its purpose and methods.
-Though the humble and obscure teacher, like the Lollard
-parson, may puzzle his brains about the why and how and
-purpose of his being here, his superiors, the bishops, the papal
-curia, know the reason. Education is the propaganda department
-of the State, and the existing social system. Its resolute
-insistence upon the essential rightness of things as they
-are, coupled with its modest promise to reform them if necessary,
-is the basis of the touching confidence with which it is
-received. It further imposes itself upon the credulity of the
-people by the magnificence of its establishment. The academic
-splendour of the commencement season when the hierarchs
-bestow their favours, and honour each other and their
-patrons by higher degrees, is of enormous value in impressing
-the public. Especially to the uneducated does this majesty
-appeal. That an institution which holds so fair an outlook
-on society, which is on such easy and sympathetic terms with
-all that is important in the nation, which commands the avenues
-by which men go forward in the world, should be able to
-guarantee success in life to its worshippers is nothing at which
-to be surprised. Hence we find the poor of different grades
-making every sacrifice to send sons and daughters through
-high school, through college, in the same pathetic faith with
-which they once burned candles to win respite for the souls
-of their dead.</p>
-
-<p>There are reasons, however, for thinking that the superstition
-is passing. In the first place, nowhere do we find more
-scepticism in regard to the pretensions of education than among
-those who have been educated, and this number is rapidly
-increasing. In the second place, the alliance between education
-and a social system depending on private capital is too
-obvious, and the abrogation of the true functions of the former
-is too complete. The so-called Americanization campaign
-is so crude an attempt to put something over that even the unsophisticated
-foreigner whom it is intended to impress watches
-the pictures or reads the pamphlets which set forth the happy
-estate of the American workman, with his tongue in his cheek.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span>
-The social groups which feel aggrieved under the present order
-are marking their defection by seceding from the educational
-system and setting up labour universities of their own.
-So serious is this secession that New York has passed the Lusk
-Law, designed to bring the independent movement under State
-control. In the third place, the claim of education to be an
-open sesame to success in life is contradicted by the position
-of its most constant votaries, the teachers. The prestige which
-used to attach to the priests of learning and which placed them
-above the lure of riches has vanished; their economic station
-has declined until even college professors have fallen into the
-servantless class, which means the proletariat. Truly for such
-as they to declare that education means success in life is a
-dismal paradox.</p>
-
-<p>Another sign of approaching reformation in the educational
-system is to be found in the frankly corrupt practices which
-infest it. Here the parallel to the mediæval church is not
-exact, for in the latter it was the monasteries and religious
-houses that were the chief sources of offence, while the colleges
-and private institutions of higher learning which correspond
-to them are singularly free from anything worse than
-wasteful internal politics. It is the public educational system
-which by reason of its contact with political government partakes
-most palpably of the corruption that attends the democratic
-State. It is unnecessary to mention the forms which
-this corruption takes where a school board of trustees by
-political appointment is given the exploitation of the schools—the
-favouritism in appointments and promotions, the graft in
-text-books and equipment, the speculation in real estate and
-building contracts, the alienation of school property. There is
-scarcely a large city in the country in which pupils and teachers
-alike are not shamefully and scandalously defrauded by
-action of school trustees which can be characterized in the
-mildest terms as wilful mismanagement conducing to private
-profit.</p>
-
-<p>There are two things necessary to the reform of education.
-One is democratic control, that is, management of institutions
-of teaching by the teachers. It is to be noted that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span>
-this is the demand everywhere of labour which respects itself—control
-of the means of production and responsibility for
-the result. Surely the teachers should be one of the first
-groups of toilers to be so trusted. Under democratic control
-the spoliation of the schools by politicians, the sacrifice of
-education to propaganda, the tyranny of the hierarchy can
-be successfully resisted. Once the teachers are released from
-servile bondage to the public through the political masters who
-control appointments and promotions, they will deal with their
-problems with more authority, and be independent of the
-suffrage of the pupils. Through joint responsibility of the
-workers for the product they will arrive at that <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">esprit de corps</i>
-which consists in thinking in terms of the enterprise rather
-than of the job, and from which we may expect a true method
-of education. Already the movement toward democratic control
-of teaching is taking form in school systems and colleges.
-There are a hundred and fifty unions of teachers affiliated with
-the American Federation of Labour. But the true analogy is
-not between teachers and labour, but between education and
-other professions. To quote Dr. H. M. Kallen:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“To the discoverers and creators of Knowledge, and to its
-transmitters and distributors, to these and to no one else beside
-belongs the control of education. It is as absurd that any
-but teachers and investigators should govern the art of education
-as that any but medical practitioners and investigators
-should govern the art of medicine.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The other thing needful to restore education to health and
-usefulness is that it should surrender its hold upon the superstitious
-adoration of the public, by giving up its pretensions
-to individual or social salvation, by ceasing its flattery of
-nationalistic and capitalistic ambitions, and by laying aside
-its pomps and ceremonies which conduce mainly to sycophancy
-and cant. Education has shown in special lines that it can
-be thoroughly scientific, disinterested, devoted. It is its task
-to translate these virtues of the specialist into the general field.
-It is not the business of education to humbug the people in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span>
-the interest of what any person may think to be for their or
-for his advantage. It is its business to deal frankly and honestly
-with them, accepting in the most literal sense the responsibility
-and the promise contained in the text: “Ye shall know
-the truth, and the truth shall make you free.”</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Robert Morss Lovett</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_93" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="SCHOLARSHIP_AND_CRITICISM">SCHOLARSHIP AND CRITICISM</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">It</span> is natural for the musician to think any land barbarous
-if it has produced no great composers, the painter if it has
-produced no great painters, the critic or the scholar if it has
-produced no great scholars and critics, and so on for all the
-other arts and sciences. But it is idle to insist that every
-race should express itself in the same way, or to assume that
-the genius of a nation can be tested by its deficiencies in any
-single field of the higher life. Great critics are rare in every
-age and country; and even if they were not, what consolation
-is there for the clash and diversity of races and nations except
-the special and diverse gifts which each may furnish to the
-spiritual whole? England has achieved greatness without
-great music, Germany without great sculpture, ancient Rome
-without great science or philosophy, Judæa with little but
-poetry and religion; and it is not necessary to lay too much
-stress on our own lack of great scholars and great critics—yes,
-even on our lack of great poets and great painters. They
-may come to-day or to-morrow, or we may be destined never
-to have them. The idea that great national energy must inevitably
-flower in a great literature, and that our wide-flung
-power must certainly find expression in an immortal poem or
-in the “great American novel,” is merely another example of
-our mechanical optimism. The vision of great empires that
-have been both strong and silent, Assyria, Babylonia, Egypt,
-haunts all history; Virgil or Camoens only fitfully expresses
-the power that is summed up in Cæsar or Magellan.</p>
-
-<p>But without insisting on impossible aims or illusory standards
-of greatness, it is fair to ask some flow of spiritual activity,
-some general spirit of diffused culture,—in a word, the presence
-of a soul. For though we must eat (and common sense
-will cook better dinners than philosophy), though we must
-work (and the captain of industry can organize trade better
-than the poet), though we must play (and the athlete can win
-more games than the scholar), the civilization that has no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span>
-higher outlets for its intellect and imagination will show at
-least some marks of spiritual starvation. You may see the
-signs of its restless gnawing on the face of almost any American
-woman beyond the first flush of youth; you may see some
-shadow of its hopeless craving on the face of almost any mature
-American man.</p>
-
-<p>The same signs are to be seen in American scholarship and
-American criticism. If scholarship were what most people
-think it, the dull learning of pedants, and criticism merely the
-carping and bickering of fault-finders, the fact would hardly
-be worth recording. But since they are instruments which
-the mind of man uses for some of its keenest questionings,
-their absence or their weakness must indicate something at
-least in the national life and character which it is not unimportant
-to understand.</p>
-
-<h3>I</h3>
-
-<p>The tradition of scholarship, like so many other things, comes
-to us from what used to be called the Renaissance, the period
-(it may not be ironical to be reminded) in which the Americas
-were discovered and explored; and whatever savour of distinction
-inheres in the idea of “the gentleman and the scholar”
-was created then. Scholarship at first meant merely a
-knowledge of the classics, and though it has since widened its
-scope, even then the diversity of its problems was apparent, for
-the classical writers had tilled many fields of human knowledge,
-and the student of Homer and Virgil was really faced
-with a different problem from the student of Plato or Thucydides.
-Scholarship has never been a reality, a field that could
-be bounded and defined in the sense in which poetry, philosophy,
-and history can be. It is a point of view, an attitude,
-a method of approach, and, so far as its meaning and purpose
-can be captured, it may be said to be the discipline and illumination
-that come from the intellectual mastery of a definite
-problem involved in the growth of the human spirit.</p>
-
-<p>Scholarship, conceived in this sense, has no history (though
-dull and learned hodge-podges have served as such), for it is
-a spirit diffused over various fields of study; and in America<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span>
-this spirit has scarcely even come into existence. American
-Universities seem to have been created for the special purpose
-of ignoring or destroying it. The chief monuments of American
-scholarship have seldom if ever come from men who have
-been willing to live their whole lives in an academic atmosphere.
-The men whom we think of as our foremost literary scholars,
-Gildersleeve, Norton, and the rest, acquired their fame
-rather through their personalities than their scholarly achievements.
-The historians, Motley, Prescott, Bancroft, Parkman,
-Rhodes, Lea, Fiske, Mahan, were not professors; books like
-Taylor’s “Mediæval Mind,” Henry Adams’s “Mont Saint
-Michel and Chartres,” Thayer’s “Cavour,” Villard’s “John
-Brown,” and Beveridge’s “John Marshall,” even Ticknor’s
-“History of Spanish Literature,” were not written within University
-walls, though Ticknor’s sixteen years of teaching tamed
-the work of a brilliant man of the world until there is little
-left save the characteristic juiceless virtue of an intelligent ordering
-of laborious research. It would seem as if in the atmosphere
-of our Universities personality could not find fruitage
-in scholarly achievement worthy of it, and learning can only
-thrive when it gives no hostages to the enemy, personality.</p>
-
-<p>Of the typical products of this academic system, the lowest
-is perhaps the literary dissertation and the highest the historical
-manual or text-book. It may be because history is not
-my own special field of study that I seem to find its practitioners
-more vigorous intellectually than the literary scholars.
-Certainly our historians seem to have a special aptitude for
-compiling careful summaries of historical periods, and some of
-these have an ordered reasonableness and impersonal efficiency
-not unlike that of the financial accounting system of our large
-trusts or the budgets of our large universities. To me most of
-them seem feats of historical engineering rather than of historical
-scholarship; and if they represent a scholarly “advance”
-on older and less accurate work, written before Clio
-became a peon of the professors, it can only be said that history
-has not yet recovered from the advance. Nor am I as much
-impressed as the historians themselves by the more recent clash
-between the “old” school and the “new,” for both seem to me
-equally lacking in a truly philosophic conception of the meaning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span>
-of history. Yet there is among the younger breed a certain
-freshness of mind and an openness to new ideas, though less to
-the problems of human personality or to the emotional and
-spiritual values of man’s life. This deficiency is especially irritating
-in the field of biography. Not even an American opera
-(<i xml:lang="la" lang="la">corruptio optimi</i>) is as wooden as the biographies of our
-statesmen and national heroes; and if American lives written
-by Englishmen have been received with enthusiasm, it was less
-because of any inherent excellence than because they at least
-conceived of Hamilton or Lincoln as a man and not as an historical
-document or a political platitude.</p>
-
-<p>But literary scholarship is in far worse plight in our Universities.
-No great work of classical learning has ever been
-achieved by an American scholar. It may be unfair to suggest
-comparison with men like Gilbert Murray, Croiset, or Wilamowitz;
-but how can we be persuaded by the professors or even
-by a dean that all culture will die if we forget Greek and
-Latin, until they satisfy us by their own work that they themselves
-are alive? Asia beckons to us with the hand of Fate,
-but Oriental scholarship is a desert through which a few
-nomadic professors wander aimlessly. As to the literatures in
-the modern European tongues, Dante scholarship has perhaps
-the oldest and most respectable tradition, but on examination
-dwindles into its proper proportions: an essay by Lowell and
-translations by Longfellow and Norton pointed the way; a
-Dante Society has nursed it; and its modern fruits, with one
-or two honourable exceptions, are a few unilluminating articles
-and text-books. Ticknor’s pioneer work in the Spanish field
-has had no successors, though Spanish America is at our
-doors; the generous subsidies of rich men have resulted as
-usual in buildings but not in scholarship. Of the general level
-of our French and German studies I prefer to say nothing;
-and silence is also wisest in the case of English. This field
-fairly teems with professors; Harvard has twice as many as
-Oxford and Cambridge combined, and the University of Chicago
-almost as many as the whole of England. Whether this
-plethora of professors has justified itself, either by distinguished
-works of scholarship or by helping young America to
-love literature and to write good English, I shall not decide, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span>
-leave entirely to their own conscience. This at least may be
-said, that the mole is not allowed to burrow in his hole without
-disturbance; for in this atmosphere, as a protest and counterfoil,
-or as a token of submission to the idols of the market-place,
-there has arisen a very characteristic academic product,—the
-professor who writes popular articles, sometimes clever,
-sometimes precious, sometimes genteel and refined, sometimes
-merely commonplace, but almost always devoid of real knowledge
-or stimulating thought. Even the sober pedant is a more
-humane creature than the professorial smart-Aleck.</p>
-
-<p>Whence arises this inhibition of mediocrity, this fear of personality
-and intellect, this deep antinomy of pedant and dilettante?
-The “fear-of-giving-themselves-away disease” which
-affected the professors of the Colleges of Unreason in “Erewhon”
-is mildly endemic in every University in the world, and
-to a certain degree in every profession; but nowhere else does it
-give the tone to the intellectual life of a whole people. If I
-were a sociologist, confident that the proper search would unearth
-an external cause for every spiritual defect, I might
-point to any one of a dozen or more damning facts as the origin
-and source of all our trouble,—to the materialism of a national
-life directed solely toward practical ends, to the levelling and
-standardizing influences of democracy, to Anglo-Saxon “Colonialism,”
-to the influence of German erudition, or to the
-inadequate economic rewards of the academic life. I should
-probably make much of that favourite theme of critical fantasy,
-the habits derived from the “age of the pioneers,” a period in
-which life, with its mere physical discomforts and its mere
-demands on physical energy and endurance, was really so easy
-and simple that Americans attempt to reproduce it on all their
-holidays.</p>
-
-<p>But in so far as they have any reality, all these are merely
-symptoms of the same disease of the soul. The modern sanatorium
-may be likened to the mediæval monastery without its
-spiritual faith; the American University to a University without
-its inner illumination. It is an intellectual refuge without the
-integration of a central soul,—crassly material because it has
-no inner standards to redeem it from the idols of the market-place,
-or timid and anæmic because it lacks that quixotic fire<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span>
-which inheres in every act of faith. It is at one and the same
-time our greatest practical achievement and our greatest
-spiritual failure. To call it a compound of sanatorium and
-machine-shop may seem grossly unfair to an institution which
-has more than its share of earnest and high-minded men; but
-though the phrase may not describe the reality, it does indicate
-the danger. When we find that in such a place education does
-not educate, we cry for help to the only gods we know, the
-restless gods of Administration and Organization; but scholarship
-cannot be organized or administered into existence, even
-by Americans.</p>
-
-<p>What can we say (though it seem to evade the question)
-save that America has no scholarship because as yet it has a
-body but no soul? The scholar goes through all the proper
-motions,—collects facts, organizes research, delivers lectures,
-writes articles and sometimes books,—but under this outer
-seeming there is no inner reality. Under all the great works
-of culture there broods the quivering soul of tradition, a burden
-sometimes disturbing and heavy to bear, but more often
-helping the soul to soar on wings not of its own making. We
-think hungrily that the freshness of outlook of a young people
-should be more than compensation; but the freshness is not
-there. Bad habits long persisted in, or new vices painfully
-acquired, may pass for traditions among some spokesmen of
-“Americanism,” but will not breathe the breath of life into
-a national culture. All is shell, mask, and a deep inner emptiness.
-We have scholars without scholarship, as there are
-churches without religion.</p>
-
-<p>Until there comes a change of heart or a new faith or a deep
-inner searching, scholarship must continue to live this thwarted
-and frustrated life. Only a profound realization of its high
-purpose and special function, and the pride that comes from
-this realization, can give the scholar his true place in an
-American world. For this special function is none other than
-to act as the devoted servant of thought and imagination and
-to champion their claims as the twin pillars that support all
-the spiritual activities of human life,—art, philosophy, religion,
-science; and these it must champion against all the materialists
-under whatever name they disguise their purpose. What<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span>
-matter whether they be scientists who decry “dialectics,” or
-sociologists who sneer at “mere belles-lettres,” or practical
-men who have no use for the “higher life”? Whether
-they be called bourgeois or radical, conservative or intellectual,—all
-who would reduce life to a problem of practical activity
-and physical satisfaction, all who would reduce intellect and
-imagination to mere instruments of practical usefulness, all
-who worship dead idols instead of living gods, all who grasp at
-every flitting will-o’-the-wisp of theory or sensation,—all these
-alike scholarship must forever recognize as its enemies, and its
-chief tempters.</p>
-
-<h3>II</h3>
-
-<p>Scholarship, so conceived, is the basis of criticism. When a
-few years ago I published a volume which bore the subtitle of
-“Essays on the Unity of Genius and Taste,” the pedants and
-the professors were in the ascendant, and it seemed necessary
-to emphasize the side of criticism which was then in danger,
-the side that is closest to the art of the creator. But the professors
-have been temporarily routed by the dilettanti, the
-amateurs, and the journalists, who treat a work of the imagination
-as if they were describing fireworks or a bull-fight (to
-use a phrase of Zola’s about Gautier); and so it is necessary
-now to insist on the discipline and illumination of scholarship,—in
-other Words, to write an “Essay on the Divergence of
-Criticism and Creation.”</p>
-
-<p>American criticism, like that of England, but to an even
-greater extent, suffers from a want of philosophic insight
-and precision. It has neither inherited nor created a tradition
-of æsthetic thought. For it every critical problem is a separate
-problem, a problem in a philosophic vacuum, and so open
-for discussion to any astute mind with a taste for letters.
-Realism, classicism, romanticism, imagism, impressionism, expressionism,
-and other terms or movements as they spring up,
-seem ultimate realities instead of matters of very subordinate
-concern to any philosophy of art,—mere practical programmes
-which bear somewhat the same relation to æsthetic truth that
-the platform of the Republican Party bears to Aristotle’s “Politics”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span>
-or Marx’s “Capital.” As a result, critics are constantly
-carrying on a guerilla warfare of their own in favour of some
-vague literary shibboleth or sociological abstraction, and discovering
-anew the virtues or vices of individuality, modernity,
-Puritanism, the romantic spirit or the spirit of the Middle
-West, the traditions of the pioneer, and so on ad infinitum.
-This holds true of every school of American criticism, “conservative”
-or “radical”; for all of them a disconnected body
-of literary theories takes the place of a real philosophy of art.
-“Find an idea and then write about it” sums up the American
-conception of criticism. Now, while the critic must approach
-a work of literature without preconceived notion of what that
-individual work should attempt, he cannot criticize it without
-some understanding of what all literature attempts. The critic
-without an æsthetic is a mariner without chart, compass, or
-knowledge of navigation; for the question is not where the
-ship should go or what cargo it should carry, but whether it is
-going to arrive at any port at all without sinking.</p>
-
-<p>Criticism is essentially an expression of taste, or that faculty
-of imaginative sympathy by which the reader or spectator is
-able to re-live the vision created by the artist. This is the soil
-without which it cannot flourish; but it attains its end and
-becomes criticism in the highest sense only when taste is guided
-by knowledge and thought. Of these three elements, implicit
-in all real criticism, the professors have made light of taste,
-and have made thought itself subservient to knowledge, while
-the dilettanti have considered it possible to dispense with both
-knowledge and thought. But even dilettante criticism is preferable
-to the dogmatic and intellectualist criticism of the professors,
-on the same grounds that Sainte-Beuve is superior to
-Brunetière, or Hazlitt to Francis Jeffrey; for the dilettante at
-least meets the mind of the artist on the plane of imagination
-and taste, while the intellectualist or moralist is precluded by
-his temperament and his theories from ever understanding the
-primal thrill and purpose of the creative act.</p>
-
-<p>Back of any philosophy of art there must be a philosophy
-of life, and all æsthetic formulæ seem empty unless there is
-richness of content behind them. The critic, like the poet or
-the philosopher, has the whole world to range in, and the farther<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span>
-he ranges in it, the better his work will be. Yet this does
-not mean that criticism should focus its attention on morals,
-history, life, instead of on the forms into which the artist transforms
-them. Art has something else to give us; and to seek
-morals, or economic theories, or the national spirit in it is to
-seek morals, economic theories, the national spirit, but not
-art. Indeed, the United States is the only civilized country
-where morals are still in controversy so far as creative literature
-is concerned; France, Germany, and Italy liberated themselves
-from this faded obsession long ago; even in England
-critics of authority hesitate to judge a work of art by moral
-standards. Yet this is precisely what divides the two chief
-schools of American criticism, the moralists and the anti-moralists,
-though even among the latter masquerade some whose
-only quarrel with the moralists is the nature of the moral standards
-employed.</p>
-
-<p>Disregarding the Coleridgean tradition, which seems to have
-come to an end with Mr. Woodberry, and the influence of the
-“new psychology,” which has not yet taken a definite form, the
-main forces that have influenced the present clashes in the
-American attitude toward literature seem to be three. There
-is first of all the conception of literature as a moral influence,
-a conception which goes back to the Græco-Roman rhetoricians
-and moralists, and after pervading English thought from
-Sidney to Matthew Arnold, finds its last stronghold to-day
-among the American descendants of the Puritans. There is,
-secondly, the Shavian conception of literature as the most effective
-vehicle for a new <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Weltanschauung</i>, to be judged by the
-novelty and freshness of its ideas, a conception particularly
-attractive to the school of young reformers, radicals, and intellectuals
-whose interest in the creative imagination is secondary,
-and whose training in æsthetic thought has been negligible;
-this is merely an obverse of the Puritan moralism, and
-is tainted by the same fundamental misconception of the meaning
-of the creative imagination. And there is finally the conception
-of literature as an external thing, a complex of rhythms,
-charm, beauty without inner content, or mere theatrical effectiveness,
-which goes back through the English ’nineties to the
-French ’seventies, when the idea of the independence of art<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span>
-from moral and intellectual standards was distorted into the
-merely mechanical theory of “art for art’s sake”; the French
-have a special talent for narrowing æsthetic truths into hard-and-fast
-formulæ, devoid of their original nucleus of philosophic
-reality, but all the more effective on this account for universal
-conquest as practical programmes.</p>
-
-<p>The apparent paradox which none of these critics face is
-that the <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Weltanschauung</i> of the creative artist, his moral convictions,
-his views on intellectual, economic, and other subjects,
-furnish the content of his work and are at the same time the
-chief obstacles to his artistic achievement. Out of morals or
-philosophy he has to make, not morals or philosophy, but
-poetry; for morals and philosophy are only a part, and a small
-part, of the whole reality which his imagination has to encompass.
-The man who is overwhelmed with moral theories
-and convictions would naturally find it easiest to become a
-moralist, and moralists are prosaic, not poetic. A man who
-has strong economic convictions would find it easiest to become
-an economist or economic reformer, and economics too
-is the prose of life, not the poetry. A man with a strong philosophic
-bias would find it easiest to become a pure thinker,
-and the poet’s visionary world topples when laid open to the
-cold scrutiny of logic. A poet is a human being, and therefore
-likely to have convictions, prejudices, preconceptions, like
-other men; but the deeper his interest in them is, the easier
-it is for him to become a moralist, economist, philosopher, or
-what not, and the harder for him to transcend them and to become
-a poet. But if the genius of the poet (and by poet I
-mean any writer of imaginative literature) is strong enough,
-it will transcend them, pass over them by the power of the
-imagination, which leaves them behind without knowing it.
-It has been well said that morals are one reality, a poem is another
-reality, and the illusion consists in thinking them one
-and the same. The poet’s conscience as a man may be satisfied
-by the illusion, but woe to him if it is not an illusion, for
-that is what we tell him when we say, “He is a moralist, not
-a poet.” Such a man has really expressed his moral convictions,
-instead of leaping over and beyond them into that world
-of the imagination where moral ideas must be interpreted from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span>
-the standpoint of poetry, or the artistic needs of the characters
-portrayed, and not by the logical or reality value of morals.</p>
-
-<p>This “leaping over” is the test of all art; it is inherent in
-the very nature of the creative imagination. It explains, for
-example, how Milton the moralist started out to make Satan
-a demon and how Milton the poet ended by making him a hero.
-It explains the blindness of the American critic who recently
-objected to the “loose thinking” of a poem of Carl Sandburg
-in which steel is conceived of as made of smoke and blood, and
-who propounded this question to the Walrus and the Carpenter:
-“How can smoke, the lighter refuse of steel, be one of its
-constituents, and how can the smoke which drifts away from
-the chimney and the blood which flows in the steelmaker’s veins
-be correlates in their relation to steel?” Where shall we match
-this precious gem? Over two centuries ago, Othello’s cry after
-the death of Desdemona,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent8">“O heavy hour,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Methinks it should now be a huge eclipse</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of sun and moon!”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">provoked another intellectualist critic to enquire whether “the
-sun and moon can both together be so hugely eclipsed in any
-one heavy hour whatsoever;” but Rymer has been called “the
-worst critic that ever lived” for applying tests like these to the
-poetry of Shakespeare. Over a century ago a certain Abbé
-Morellet, unmoved by the music of Chateaubriand’s description
-of the <span class="locked">moon,—</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“She pours forth in the woods this great secret of melancholy
-which she loves to recount to the old oaks and the ancient shores
-of the <span class="locked">sea,”—</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">asked his readers: “How can the melancholy of night be called
-a secret; and if the moon recounts it, how is it still a secret;
-and how does she manage to recount it to the old oaks and the
-ancient shores of the sea rather than to the deep valleys, the
-mountains, and the rivers?”</p>
-
-<p>These are simply exaggerations of the inevitable consequence
-of carrying over the mood of actual life into the world of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span>
-imagination. “Sense, sense, nothing but sense!” cried a great
-Austrian poet, “as if poetry in contrast with prose were not
-always a kind of divine nonsense. Every poetic image bears
-within itself its own certain demonstration that logic is not the
-arbitress of art.” And Alfieri spoke for every poet in the world
-when he said of himself, “Reasoning and judging are for me
-only pure and generous forms of feeling.” The trained
-economist, philosopher, or moralist, examining the ideas of a
-poet, is always likely to say: “These are not clearly thought
-out or logical ideas; they are just a poet’s fancy or inspiration;”
-and that is the final praise of the poet. If the expert
-finds a closely reasoned treatise we may be sure that we shall
-find no poetry. It is a vision of reality, and not reality, imagination
-and not thought or morals, that the artist gives us; and
-his spiritual world, with all that it means for the soaring life
-of man, fades and disappears when we bring to it no other test
-than the test of reality.</p>
-
-<p>These are some of the elementary reasons why those who
-demand of the poet a definite code of morals or manners—“American
-ideals,” or “Puritanism,” or on the other side,
-“radical ideas”—seem to me to show their incompetence as
-critics. How can we expect illumination from those who share
-the “typical American business man’s” inherent inability to
-live in the world of fantasy which the poets have created, without
-the business man’s ability to face the external facts of life
-and mould them to his will? These men are schoolmasters,
-pedants, moralists, policemen, but neither critics nor true lovers
-of the spiritual food that art provides. To the creative writers
-of America I should give a wholly different message from theirs.
-I should say to them: “Express what is in you, all that serene
-or turbulent vision of multitudinous life which is yours by right
-of imagination, trusting in your own power to achieve discipline
-and mastery, and leave the discussion of ‘American ideals’
-to statesmen, historians, and philosophers, with the certainty
-that if you truly express the vision that is in you, the statesmen,
-historians, and philosophers of the future will point to
-your work as a fine expression of the ‘American ideals’ you
-have helped to create.”</p>
-
-<p>But it is no part of the critic’s duty to lay down laws for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span>
-the guidance of the creator, though he may have insight enough
-to foresee some of the directions which literature is likely to
-take. He may even point out new material for the imagination
-of poets to feed on,—the beautiful folklore of our native
-Indians, the unplumbed depths of the Negro’s soul, the poetry
-and wisdom of Asia (which it may be our chief destiny to interpret
-for the nations of Europe), the myth and story of the
-hundred races that are to make up the new America, and all
-the undiscovered coigns and crannies of our national life. I
-shall not say that these services are extraneous and unimportant,
-like furnishing the fountain-pen with which a great poem
-is written; but incursions into the geography of the imagination
-are incidental to the critic’s main duty of interpreting
-literature and making its meaning and purpose clear to all who
-wish to love and understand it.</p>
-
-<p>The first need of American criticism to-day is education in
-æsthetic thinking. It needs above all the cleansing and stimulating
-power of an intellectual bath. Only the drenching discipline
-that comes from intellectual mastery of the problems of
-æsthetic thought can train us for the duty of interpreting the
-American literature of the future. The anarchy of impressionism
-is a natural reaction against the mechanical theories
-and jejune text-books of the professors, but it is a temporary
-haven and not a home. The haphazard empiricism of English
-criticism and the faded moralism of our own will serve us no
-more. We must desert these muddy waters, and seek purer
-and deeper streams. In a country where philosophers urge men
-to cease thinking, it may be the task of the critic to revivify
-and reorganize thought. Only in this way can we gain what
-America lacks, the brain-illumined soul.</p>
-
-<p>The second need of American criticism can be summed up
-in the word scholarship—that discipline of knowledge which
-will give us at one and the same time a wider international outlook
-and a deeper national insight. One will spring from the
-other, for the timid Colonial spirit finds no place in the heart
-of the citizen of the world; and respect for native talent, born
-of a surer knowledge, will prevent us alike from overrating its
-merits and from holding it too cheap. Half-knowledge is either
-too timid or too cocksure; and only out of this spiritual<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span>
-discipline can come a true independence of judgment and
-taste.</p>
-
-<p>For taste is after all both the point of departure and the
-goal; and the third and greatest need of American criticism
-is a deeper sensibility, a more complete submission to the
-imaginative will of the artist, before attempting to rise above
-it into the realm of judgment. If there is anything that American
-life can be said to give least of all, it is training in taste.
-There is a deadness of artistic feeling, which is sometimes replaced
-or disguised by a fervour of sociological obsession, but
-this is no substitute for the faculty of imaginative sympathy
-which is at the heart of all criticism. When the social historian
-is born, the critic dies; for taste, or æsthetic enjoyment, is the
-only gateway to the critic’s judgment, and over it is a flaming
-signpost, “Critic, abandon all hope when this gate is shut.”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“To ravish Beauty with dividing powers</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Is to let exquisite essences escape.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">Only out of the fusion of these three elements of taste, intellect,
-and knowledge can American criticism gain what in one of its
-manifestations is called “personality” and in another “style.”
-Only in this way can it win in the battle against the benumbing
-chaos and the benumbing monotony of American art and life.</p>
-
-<p>We are all cocksure but bewildered children in a world we
-cannot understand. We are all parvenus—parvenus on a new
-continent, on the fringes of which some have lived a little
-longer than others, but the whole of which has been encompassed
-by none of us for more than two or three generations;
-parvenus in a new world of steam and electricity, wireless and
-aeroplane, machinery and industry, which none of us has yet
-been able to subdue to a mould that satisfies our deepest cravings;
-parvenus in our culture, which still seems like a borrowed
-garment instead of flesh of our flesh and bone of our bone.
-What is the good of all the instruments that our hands have
-moulded if we have neither the will nor the imagination to
-wield them for the uses of the soul? Not in this fashion shall
-we justify our old dream of an America that is the hope of the
-world. Here are hundreds of colleges and universities; why<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span>
-not fill these empty barracks with scholars and thinkers? Here
-are a hundred races; why not say to them: “America can give
-you generous opportunity and the most superb instruments that
-the undisciplined energy of practical life has ever created, but
-in the spiritual fields of art, poetry, religion, culture, it has little
-or nothing to give you; let us all work together, learning and
-creating these high things side by side”? Here are more hearts
-empty and unfulfilled and more restless minds than the world
-has ever before gathered together; why not lead them out of
-their corrals, and find a fitting pasture for their brains and
-souls?</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">J. E. Spingarn</span>
-</p>
-
-<h3><i>GLOSSARY</i></h3>
-
-<p>The English language, extraordinarily rich and expressive in
-everything that concerns the practical or the imaginative life, suffers
-from the poverty and lack of precision of English æsthetic thought.
-It may therefore be useful to indicate briefly the special sense in
-which certain terms are used in this essay.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“<i>Spectator</i>: I should say that you have advanced a subtlety that is
-little more than a play on words.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Friend</i>: And I maintain that when we are speaking of the operations
-of the soul, no words can be delicate and subtle enough.”—<span class="smcap">Goethe.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot hang">
-
-<p><i>Art</i>—Any creation of the imagination, whether in the form of
-imaginative literature or of painting, sculpture, music, etc.</p>
-
-<p><i>Artist</i>—The creator of a work of art in any of its forms; not used
-in this essay in the narrower sense of painter or sculptor.</p>
-
-<p><i>Taste</i>—The faculty of imaginative sympathy by which the reader
-or spectator is able to re-live the vision of the artist, and therefore
-the essential pre-requisite to all criticism.</p>
-
-<p><i>Criticism</i>—Any expression of taste guided by knowledge and
-thought. (The critic’s training in knowledge is scholarship, and
-his special field of thought æsthetics.)</p>
-
-<p><i>Æsthetics</i>—An ordered and reasoned conception of the meaning
-and purpose of art, intended for the guidance of the critic and
-not of the artist.</p>
-
-<p><i>A Literary Theory</i>—An isolated “idea” or theory in regard to
-imaginative literature, without reference to any ordered and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span>
-reasoned conception of its meaning and purpose.</p>
-
-<p><i>Impressionist Criticism</i>—Any expression of taste without adequate
-guidance of knowledge or thought.</p>
-
-<p><i>Intellectualist (or dogmatic) criticism</i>—Criticism based on the conception
-that art is a product of thought rather than of imagination,
-and that the creative fantasy of the artist can be limited
-and judged by the critic’s pre-conceived theories; or in the more
-ornate words of Francis Thompson, criticism that is “for ever
-shearing the wild tresses of poetry between rusty rules.”</p>
-
-<p><i>The Intellectuals</i>—All who lay undue stress on the place of intellect
-in life, and assume that the turbulent flux of reality can be tied
-up in neat parcels of intellectual formulæ.</p>
-
-<p><i>Poetry</i>—All literature in which reality has been transfigured by the
-imagination, including poetry in its narrower sense, the novel,
-the drama, etc.; used instead of “imaginative literature,” not
-merely for the sake of brevity, but as implying a special emphasis
-on creative power.</p>
-
-<p><i>Poet</i>—A writer of imaginative literature in any of its forms; not
-used in this essay in the narrower sense of a writer of verse.</p>
-
-<p><i>Learning</i>—The accumulation of certain forms of knowledge as a
-basis for scholarship, but no more the main purpose of scholarship
-than his preparatory training is the sole object of the
-athlete or soldier.</p>
-
-<p><i>Scholarship</i>—The discipline and illumination that come from the
-intellectual mastery of a definite problem in the spiritual (as
-opposed to the practical) life of man.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pedant</i>—Any one who thinks that learning is the whole of scholarship.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="right">
-J. E. S.
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_109" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="SCHOOL_AND_COLLEGE_LIFE">SCHOOL AND COLLEGE LIFE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Should</span> we ever entertain an intelligent explorer from
-Mars, we should of course importune him, in season and
-out, for his impressions of America. And if he were candid
-as well as intelligent, he might ultimately be interviewed somewhat
-as follows:</p>
-
-<p>“At first I thought the most striking fact about you was
-your passion for education. While I have been enjoying your
-so thorough hospitality I have met a minority of Americans
-who express themselves less complacently than the rest about
-your material blessings; I have talked with a few dissidents
-from your political theory; and I have even heard complaints
-that it is possible to carry moral enthusiasm too far. But I
-have yet to meet that American who is sceptical about education
-as such, though on the other hand I have found few of
-your citizens quite content with the working of every part of
-your educational establishment. And this very discontent
-was what clinched my first impression that schooling is the
-most vital of your passionate interests.</p>
-
-<p>“Yet as I have travelled from one to another of your cities,
-a second fact about you has struck me so forcibly as to contest
-the supremacy of the first. You Americans more and more
-seem to me to be essentially alike. Your cities are only less
-identical than the trains that ply between them. Nearly any
-congregation could worship just as comfortably in nearly any
-other church. The casts of almost any two plays, the staffs
-of almost any two newspapers, even the faculties of almost any
-two colleges could exchange ‘vehicles’ with about the same
-results that would attend their exchanging clothes.</p>
-
-<p>“And in nothing are you so alike as in your universal desire
-to be alike—to be inconspicuous, to put on straw hats on the
-same day, to change your clothes in Texas in accordance with
-the seasons in New York, to read the books everybody else is
-reading, to adopt the opinions a weekly digests for you from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span>
-the almost uniform opinions of the whole of the daily press,
-in war and peace to be incontestably and entirely American.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, I should scarcely make bold to be so frank about
-these observations if some of my new friends had not reassured
-me with the information that they are not novel, that a distinguished
-Englishman has put them into what you have considered
-the most representative and have made the most popular
-book about your commonwealth, that in fact you rather
-enjoy having outsiders recognize the success of your efforts in
-uniformity. There is, of course, no reason why you should not
-be as similar to each other as you choose, and you must not
-interpret my surprise to mean that I am shocked by anything
-except the contradiction I find between this essential similarity
-and what I have called your passion for education.</p>
-
-<p>“On Mars it has for a long time been our idea that the
-function of the school is to put our youth in touch with what all
-sorts of Martians have thought and are thinking, have felt and
-are feeling. I say ‘put in touch’ rather than ‘teach,’ because
-it is not so much our notion to pack their minds and hearts as
-to proffer samples of our various cultures and supply keys to
-the storehouses—not unlike your libraries, museums, and laboratories—that
-contain our records. We prefer to think of
-schooling as a kind of thoroughfare between our past and our
-present, an avenue to the recovery and appreciation of as many
-as possible of those innumerable differences between Martian
-and Martian, those conflicting speculations and cogitations,
-myths and hypotheses regarding our planet and ourselves that
-have gone into the warp and woof of our mental history.
-Thus we have hoped not only to preserve and add to the body
-of Martian knowledge, but also to understand better and utilize
-more variously our present minds. So it seems to us perfectly
-natural, and has rather pleased than distressed us, that our
-students should emerge from their studies with a multitude
-of differing sympathies, beliefs, tastes, and ambitions. We
-have thought that such an education enriched the lives of all
-of us, lives that ignorance could not fail to constrict and subject
-to hum-drum monotony.</p>
-
-<p>“So when I return to Mars and report that I found Earth’s
-most favourable continent inhabited by its most literate great<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span>
-people, a people that has carried the use of print and other
-means of communication to a point we Martians have never
-dared dream about; that this people has at once the most
-widely diffused enthusiasm for education and the most comprehensive
-school equipment on Earth; and finally that this people
-is at the same time the most uniform in its life—well, I fear
-I shall not be believed.”</p>
-
-<p>On subsequent visits the Martian might, as a wise man does
-who is confronted by a logical impasse, re-examine the terms
-of his paradox.</p>
-
-<p>As regards our uniformity, fresh evidence could only endorse
-his first impressions. The vestigial remnants of what regional
-cultures we have had are rapidly being effaced by our unthinking
-standardization in every department of life. The
-railroad, the telephone and telegraph, the newspaper, the Ford,
-the movies, advertising—all have scarcely standardized themselves
-before they have set about standardizing everything
-within their reach. Not even our provinces of the picturesque
-are immune, the places and things we like to think of as “different”
-(word that betrays our standard sameness!) and glamorous
-of our romantic golden age. In the Old South, Birmingham
-loves to call herself the Pittsburgh of the South; our railroads
-have all but hounded the packets from the Mississippi;
-it is notorious that our apostles to the Indians, whether political,
-religious, or pedagogic, wage relentless war on the very
-customs and traditions we cherish in legend; the beautiful Missions
-that a kindlier evangelism bequeathed to them are repeated
-and cheapened in every suburb and village of the land,
-under every harsher sky; those once spontaneous fêtes of the
-plains, the “Stampede” and the “Round-Up,” have been made
-so spurious that the natives abandon them for a moth-eaten
-Wild West Show made in the East; and in only a year or two
-even New Orleans’ Mardi Gras will be indistinguishable from
-its counterfeits in St. Louis and elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>As with these adventitious and perhaps not very important
-regional differentiations, so with the one fundamental demarcation
-our people have all along recognized as conditioning the
-give-and-take of American life. The line between the East
-and the West, advancing from the Alleghanies to the Rockies<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span>
-and then part of the way back, has never stayed long enough
-in one zone to be precisely drawn, but it has always been
-sharply felt. Since Colonial times the East has meant many
-things—wealth, stability, contacts with Europe, refinement, industry,
-centralized finance—and the West has meant many
-things—hardship and adventure, El Dorado, outlawry, self-reliance,
-agriculture, vast enterprise; but they have never been
-so close to meaning the same things as to-day. To-morrow
-they will merge. Even now the geographical line between
-them may be drawn anywhere in a belt two thousand miles
-wide, in which it will be fixed according to the nativity of the
-critic rather than by any pronounced social stigmata. East or
-West, there is a greater gulf between the intelligent and the
-unintelligent of the same parish than divides the intelligent
-of different parishes. East or West, Americans think pretty
-much the same thoughts, feel about the same emotions, and
-express themselves in the American tongue—that is, in slang.
-If the slang, the accent, the manner differ noticeably, as they
-still do, there are not wanting signs that another generation will
-obliterate these differences too. Publishing, to be sure, tends
-to concentrate in the East, though without impoverishing the
-West, since all notable circulations have to be national to survive.
-The very fact that the country’s publishing can be done
-from New York, Philadelphia, and Boston demonstrates our
-national unanimity of opinion and expression.</p>
-
-<p>Before it overleapt the geographical walls, this national
-unanimity had wiped out every class distinction but one, which
-it has steadily tended to entrench—the money line. Families
-may continue to hold their place only on the condition that
-they keep their money or get more; and a moderate fortune,
-no matter how quickly come by, has only to make a few correct
-strokes, avoid a few obvious bunkers, and it will found a family
-by inadvertence. The process is so simple that clerks
-practise it during their vacations at the shore.</p>
-
-<p>Besides money, there is one other qualification—personal
-charm. Its chief function, perhaps, is to disguise the essentially
-monetary character of American social life. At any
-rate, Americans are almost as uniformly charming as they are
-uniformly acquisitive. For the most part it is a negative<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span>
-charm, a careful skirting of certain national taboos: it eschews
-frank egoism, unfavourable criticism, intellectual subtlety,
-unique expressions of temperament, humour that is no respecter
-of persons, anything that might disturb the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">status quo</i>
-of reciprocal kindliness and complacent optimism. The unpopular
-American is unpopular not because he is a duffer or
-a bore, but because he is “conceited,” a “knocker,” a “highbrow,”
-a “nut,” a “grouch,” or something of that ilk. We
-do not choose, as the Martian suggested, to be as similar
-as possible; we choose <em>not</em> to be dissimilar. If our convictions
-about America and what is American sprang from real knowledge
-of ourselves and of our capacities, we should relish egoists,
-disinterested critics, intellectuals, artists, and irreverent
-humourists, instead of suppressing them when we cannot
-mould them. That we do not relish them, that we protect
-ourselves from them, is evidence that we fear them. What
-reason should we have to fear them save a secret distrust of
-our asseverated convictions? Our unanimity, then, would seem
-to the Martian to be an artificial substitute for some natural
-background we lack but should like to have; and a most dangerous
-wish-fulfilment it is, for it masks our ignorance of what
-we are and what we may reasonably become. Far from being
-self-knowledge, Americanism would seem to him to be a
-hallucination, an article of faith supported only by our determination
-to believe it, and to coerce others into believing it.
-The secret of our uniformity would be a stubborn ignorance.</p>
-
-<p>At which point our critic would have to re-examine his
-earlier impressions about our “passion for education,” and
-strive to understand the uses to which we actually put our
-educational establishment, to appraise its function in our life.</p>
-
-<p>Beginning with the kindergarten, it provides us a few hours’
-relief from our responsibility toward our youngsters. Curiously,
-the Americans most given to this evasion are the Americans
-most inveterately sentimental about the “kiddies” and
-most loath to employ the nursery system, holding it somehow
-an undemocratic invasion of the child’s rights. Then somewhere
-in the primary grades we begin to feel that we are purchasing
-relief from the burden of fundamental instruction.
-Ourselves mentally lazy, abstracted, and genuinely bewildered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">114</span>
-by the flow of questions from only one mouth, we blithely refer
-that awakening curiosity to a harassed young woman, probably
-less well informed than we are, who has to answer, or silence,
-the questions of from a score to three score mouths. So begins
-that long throttling of curiosity which later on will baffle
-the college instructor, who will sometimes write a clever magazine
-essay about the complacent ignorance of his pupils.</p>
-
-<p>A few years, and our expectation has shifted to the main
-chance. We begin worrying over grade reports and knotting
-our brows over problems in arithmetic by way of assisting our
-offspring to the practical advantages of education. For the
-child, we now demand of his teachers solid and lasting preparation
-in the things whose monetary value our office or domestic
-payroll keeps sharply before us—figures, penmanship,
-spelling, home economics. For us, the vicarious glory of his
-“brightness.” But we want this brightness to count, to be in
-the direct avenue to his career; so we reinforce the environment
-that gently discourages him from the primrose paths of knowledge.
-Nothing “practical” is too good for the boy at this moment—tool
-chests, bicycles, wireless, what not. Thank God,
-we can give him a better start than we had. As for arts and
-letters, well, we guess what was good enough for his dad is good
-enough for him. Meanwhile we are rather pleased than not at
-the athletics and the other activities in which the grammar
-school apes the high school that apes the college.</p>
-
-<p>The long spiral of repetitive schooling in study and sport
-has now commenced its climb: year by year reviews and adds
-its fresh increment to last year’s subject-matter in the classroom
-and on the field. Is it so strange that when the boy meets his
-college professors he is cock-sure of knowing to a hair the limits
-of what is normal and important in life, beyond which lie the
-abnormal interests of the grinds? That mediocre <em>C</em> is a gentleman’s
-mark? Not his to question the system that, in season
-and out, has borne down on passing instead of on training, and
-that ends somewhere, soon or late, with a diploma and, amid
-family plaudits, graduation from family control.</p>
-
-<p>The high schools are expected to fit ninety-five per cent. of
-their charges for life and five per cent. for college. If our boy
-and girl are of the ninety and five, we demand very early specialization<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">115</span>
-toward their precious careers, wax enthusiastic over
-the school’s model mercantile and banking establishment, expand
-to know our children are being dosed with a course in
-“Civics,” generously admire the history note-books in which
-they have spread much tinted ink over a little stereotyped
-information, and in what we fool ourselves into believing
-are the margins to all these matters proudly watch them capture
-a class numeral or a school letter, grumblingly pay for
-real estate signs that have gone up in flame to celebrate some
-epochal victory, and bear with their antics during hazings and
-initiations. It’s a democratic country, and if the poor man’s
-son cannot go to college, why the college must come to him.
-Nor are we without a certain undemocratic satisfaction in the
-thought that he has stolen a four years’ march into business
-over the rich man’s son, who spends his college hours, we
-assure ourselves, acquiring habits that will leave him weak in
-the hour of competition.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the straddling masters are cramming the other
-five with all the dates and rules and verbs and prose passages
-which long and bitter experience has demonstrated to be likeliest
-on entrance examinations. From the classrooms, as term
-follows term with its endless iteration of short advances and
-long reviews, there rises the bruit of rivalry: masters decorously
-put forward the claims of their own colleges; pupils rejoice
-when their future alma mater notches another athletic victory
-to the well-remembered tally; the weak of heart are urging
-upon their bewildered parents the superior merits of the
-“back-door” route to some exacting university—by certificate
-to a small college and transfer at the end of the first year.</p>
-
-<p>There are high schools in whose cases all this is understatement;
-and of course there are innumerable others, especially
-in these days when the most rigorous colleges have lost
-a little of their faith in entrance examinations, where it is
-absurd overstatement. Nevertheless your son, if he goes to
-a representative Eastern college from a representative high
-school, goes as a man steals second in the seventh. And his
-subsequent instructors marvel at the airy nonchalance with
-which he ignores “the finer things of life”!</p>
-
-<p>The private secondary schools, save those that are frankly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">116</span>
-designed to relieve parents of recalcitrant boys when the public
-schools will have no more of them, are pretty much without
-the ninety-five per cent. of non-college men. Frequently they
-have their charges for longer periods. So they are free to
-specialize in cramming with more singleness of mind and at
-the same time to soften the process as their endowments and
-atmospheres permit. But at bottom the demand you make of
-the “prep school” is the same demand your bookkeeper puts
-on his son’s high school: you want your boy launched into college
-with the minimum of trouble for yourself and the maximum
-of practical advantage for him; your bookkeeper wants his boy
-launched into business with a minimum of frippery and a
-maximum of marketable skill. One boy is experted into college,
-the other is experted into business. You are both among
-those passionate believers in education who impressed the Martian
-on his first visit.</p>
-
-<p>Some educator has announced that the college course should
-not only provide preparation for life but should itself be a satisfactory
-portion of life. What college student so dull as not
-to know that? For the most part, he trusts the faculty to
-provide the preparation—sometimes it would seem that he
-dares it to—but he takes jolly good care that the four years
-shall give him life more abundantly. He has looked forward
-to them with an impatience not even the indignity of entrance
-examinations could balk; he will live them to the top of his
-bent; and he will look back on them tenderly, even sentimentally,
-as the purplest patch of his days. So the American undergraduate
-is representative of the American temper at its
-best. He is the flower of our youth at its moment of perfect
-bloom, its ideals not yet corrupted, its aspirations unwithered.
-As he thinks and feels, all America would think and feel if it
-dared and could.</p>
-
-<p>At this point, therefore, the Martian’s inquiry into what we
-expect from our educational establishment would have to shift
-its point of view from the older to the younger generation.
-The Martian would be much in demand at our colleges, both
-as a sure-fire lecturer and as a shining target for degrees certain
-to attract wide publicity to the donors. Let us imagine him
-setting aside a page in his notebook for a scheme of undergraduate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span>
-emphases, grouped and amended as his triumphant
-progress permitted him to check up on his observations.</p>
-
-<p>Athletics would of course head the list. Regarded as play—that
-is, as they affect the spectator—college sports proffer a
-series of thrilling Roman holidays extending from the first week
-or so of term-time to the final base-ball game and crew race
-of Commencement week the next June, and for some colleges
-there may be transatlantic sequels in midsummer or later. It
-is by no means all play for the spectator, whose loyalty to his
-institution makes it his duty to watch the teams practise, follow
-the histories of the gladiators who are at once his representatives
-and his entertainers, and drill himself in songs and
-yells at noisy mass meetings; to bet on his college according
-to his purse and without any niggardly regard for his sober
-judgment as to the event; then to deck himself in the colours,
-march to the field, and watch the fray from the cheering section,
-where his attention will be perpetually interrupted by the
-orders and the abuse of a file of insatiable marionettes who
-are there to dictate when he may and when he may not give
-throat to his enthusiasm; and finally, if Providence please, to
-be one of the snake-dancing celebrants of victory. If he have
-the right physique or talent for one of the sports, he will find
-himself conscripted by public opinion to enter upon the long
-and arduous regimen that turns out the annual handful of
-athletic heroes—to slave on freshman squads, class teams,
-scrub and third and second teams, and finally perhaps, if he
-has been faithful, to play a dull minute or two of a big game
-that is already decided and so receive his coveted letter and
-side-line privilege as a charity. Or at the dizziest pinnacle of
-success, a “star,” to endure the unremitting discipline of summer
-practice, incessant training, eating with his fellow-stars
-at the training table, in season and out to be the butt of instruction
-and exhortation from all the experts of the entourage.
-As they affect the participant, then, college sports are to be
-regarded as work that differs from the work of professional
-sportsmen chiefly by being unremunerated.</p>
-
-<p>The student’s next most vivid concern is the organization of
-the social life in the academic commonwealth of which he is a
-citizen. Every American college has, or fancies it has, its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span>
-own tone, its ideal type of man; and good citizenship prescribes
-conformity to the spirit of the place and observance of
-the letter of its unwritten code. For the type is defined by a
-body of obligations and taboos transmitted from generation to
-generation, sometimes through the mouthpiece of the faculty,
-sometimes by way of the college “Bible” (to use the slang
-name for those handy manuals of what to do and what to avoid
-which the college Y.M.C.A. issues for the guidance of newcomers),
-but most often by a rough process of trial and error
-which very speedily convinces the freshman that the Fence is
-for seniors only, or that it is impracticable to smoke his pipe
-in the Yard, or that it is much healthier to take the air in a
-class cap than bareheaded. The cherished “traditions” of a
-college are for the most part a composite of just such privileges
-and prohibitions as these, clustering round the notion of the
-type and symbolizing it; and, curiously, the younger the institution,
-the more insistent it is likely to be about the sanctity
-of its traditions—a college feels the need of a type in much
-the same degree that a factory needs a trademark.</p>
-
-<p>Conformity thus becomes an article in loyalty. Sometimes
-the mere conformity is the desiderate virtue, as used (at least)
-to be the case in Yale. Sometimes the type will go in for
-individualism, as at Harvard a decade ago, where the thing to
-conform to was non-conformity. One tradition is probably
-universal: is there anywhere in America a college which does
-not boast that it is more “democratic” than others? Democracy
-undergoes some engaging redefinition in support of these
-conflicting claims, but at bottom it refers to an absence of
-snobs, arrogant critics, incomprehensible intellectuals, bouncing
-wits, uncomfortable pessimists—in short, the discouragement
-of just such individual tastes and energies as the Martian
-found discouraged in our social life at large. The money line
-remains. Theoretically, the poor may compete in athletics
-and in other student enterprises and reap the same social rewards
-as the rich: practically, they may compete and go socially
-unrewarded, precisely as in the outside world. It is
-natural and seemly that this should be the case, for the poor
-cannot afford the avenues of association which are the breath
-of society to the rich. There have been football heroes whom<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span>
-the well-to-do have put in the way of acquiring wealth after
-they left college, but this is patronage, not democracy. There
-are also colleges proud to be known as poor men’s colleges, and
-for that very reason devoid of the democracy they boast. Not
-long ago the president of Valparaiso had to resign, and it developed
-that among the counts against him were the deadly
-facts that he had attended the annual alumni dinner in dress
-clothes and had countenanced “dances, athletics, fraternities,
-and such.” No, all that we really mean by democracy in college
-is the equal opportunity to invest one’s inoffensive charm
-and perfectly good money in a transient society, to be neighbourly
-across geographical and family lines, to cultivate the
-local twist of the universal ideal—to be a “regular fellow.”
-Which is very much what we mean by democracy outside.
-Whatever the precise type of man a college exalts, its characteristic
-virtues are those that reflect a uniform people—hearty
-acceptance of unexamined ideals, loyal conformity to
-traditional standards and taboos, unassuming modesty in
-“playing the game,” and a wholesome optimism withal.</p>
-
-<p>But as for genuine democracy, the unrestricted interplay of
-free spirits against a common background, what college can
-boast that its social organization approaches even the measure
-of equality enjoyed by its disinterested scholars? There was
-a modicum of it in the free elective system that obtained in Dr.
-Eliot’s Harvard. There was an indifference to seniority that
-sorely puzzled the graduates of other colleges. Alas, freshman
-dormitories descended upon it, treacherously carrying the
-banners of “democracy”; and a “group system” of courses
-began to externalize intellectual interests to which the elective
-system, abused as it was, had offered every opportunity for
-spontaneity. It may be that the Amherst of Dr. Meiklejohn’s
-experiments, or the Smith that President Neilson envisages, will
-recapture opportunities now fled from Cambridge. These
-cases, after all, are exceptional. For the typical American
-college, private or public, marshals its students in two caste
-systems so universal and so familiar that it never occurs to us
-to scrutinize the one and we are liable to criticize the other
-only when its excesses betray its decadence.</p>
-
-<p>The former, the divisioning and tagging of every recruit with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span>
-the year of his graduation, looks to be an innocent convenience
-until you have surveyed its regimental effect. Freshmen are
-green; so we clap ridiculous caps on them, dub them “Frosh”
-or “Fish,” haze them, confine them to a York Street of their
-kind or impound them in freshman dormitories, where we bid
-them save themselves, the which they do in their sophomore
-year at the expense of the next crop of recruits. It is not so
-much the occasional brutality of hazing parties and “rushes”
-that should arrest us here, nor yet such infrequent accidents as
-the probably insane despair of that Harvard freshman whose
-phobia for eggs drove him to suicide to escape the inflexible
-diet of his class commons, as it is the remorseless mob invasion
-of personality and privacy which either leaves the impressionable
-boy a victim of his ingrowing sensibility or else converts
-him into a martinet who in his turn will cripple others.
-In the case of the Cornell freshman who was ducked for stubbornly
-refusing to wear the class cap and was saved from
-more duckings by an acting president who advised him—“in
-all friendliness,” said the newspapers!—to submit or to withdraw
-from college for a year, it is not necessary to applaud
-what may have been pig-headedness in the victim, or to flay
-what may have been wisdom in the executive, in order to admire
-the single professor who stood ready to resign in order to
-rebuke his college for her bigotry. What was really significant
-here, however, and what is everywhere characteristic of this
-sort of benevolent assimilation, was the tone of the university
-daily’s editorial apologia:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Complete liberty of action has never been recognized by any but
-avowed anarchists; granted the validity of the law, there can be no
-charge of intolerance in the enforcement of it.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The legal “validity” of an arbitrary tradition! No “intolerance”
-in its enforcement by Judge Lynch! The editor of
-the <cite>Cornell Sun</cite> went on to say that the existence of the “law”
-in question is “no secret from the prospective Cornellian,” implying,
-no doubt, that to offer oneself for matriculation at Cornell
-is <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">ipso facto</i> to accept the whole body of Ithacan tradition
-and taboos, along with their interpretation and enforcement<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span>
-according to the momentary caprice of the majority, as a <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">contrat
-social</i>. Small wonder he called the refractory freshman
-a “red.” The young editor’s reasoning should recommend his
-early appointment to a place in the greater <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The caste system of academic seniority, like all caste systems,
-is worst at its base. Such customs as the sequestering
-of the upper classes in their private quads or ovals, the jealous
-protection of senior privileges, and the calendrical elaboration
-of the alumni programme serve to import a picturesque
-if rather forced variety into our drab monotony. That men
-should choose to organize themselves to protect some more or
-less irrelevant distinction is of no special importance to outsiders
-so long as they do not use their organization to dragoon
-minorities or to bully individuals. Yet, speak out against
-the exploitation, and you will be accused of attacking the fellowship.
-Criticize the shackling of freshmen, and there will
-not be wanting college editors to call you a fanatic who cannot
-bear the jolly sight of cap and gown.</p>
-
-<p>The other system of caste, to which we give sharp attention
-when it goes badly wrong, is of course the club hierarchy.
-Wherever there are clubs their social capital will necessarily
-fluctuate with the quality of the members they take in. The
-reformers who deplore the institution of “rushing” have of
-course exaggerated its evils, but the evils are there. In young
-colleges, and wherever clubs are insecure, the candidates are
-liable to be spoiled for any club purposes before their destination
-is settled; wherever the candidates must do the courting,
-either brazenly or subtly, they tend to debauch the club. The
-dilemma holds, in one form or another, all the way from the
-opposed “literary” societies of the back-woods college to the
-most powerful chapters of the national fraternities; and it is
-particularly acute where the clubhouse is also the student’s
-residence. Any remedy thus far advanced by the reformers
-is worse than the disease.</p>
-
-<p>In many of the older colleges the equilibrium has been
-stabilized by a device similar to the gentlemen’s agreement in
-industry. The important clubs have gradually adjusted themselves
-into a series through which the clubman passes, or into
-which he penetrates as far as his personality and money will<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span>
-carry him. So the initial competition for untried material is
-done away with or greatly simplified; one or two large freshman
-or sophomore clubs take in all the likely candidates; the
-junior clubs do most of their choosing from among this number;
-and the senior clubs in turn draw on the junior. Meanwhile
-the member turnover is perhaps trebled, and initiations
-and other gay functions multiply.</p>
-
-<p>It is to be remembered, however, that not all the brethren
-shift onward and upward year by year. Many have to content
-themselves with clubs already won, and those who pass
-on are a narrowing band, whose depleted ranks are by no
-means restored in the eleventh hour recruiting of “elections
-at large,” deathbed gestures of democracy after a career of
-ballotting to exclude candidates who had not taken all the
-earlier degrees. Thus increasing distinction is purchased
-through the tried and true method of decreasing numbers. To
-be sure, the same end could be served if all would remain in
-one club and periodically drop groups of the least likely members.
-Initiations might be reversed, and punches be given to
-celebrate the lightening of the ship: it would be no more fantastic
-than a good part of the existing ceremonial. But—it
-would be undemocratic! And, too, the celebrations might be
-fatally hilarious. The present pre-initiation discipline is one
-that tests for regularity and bestows the accolade on the inconspicuous,
-so that the initiates turn out pretty much of a piece
-and the entertainment they provide is safely conventional. But
-reverse the process, assemble in one squad all the hands suspected
-of being exceptional—all the queer fish and odd sticks—and
-there’s no predicting what capers they might cut as they
-walked the plank.</p>
-
-<p>The real evil of the club caste is its taste for predictability,
-its standardization of contacts, its faintly cynical sophistication
-where life might be a riot of adventures and experiments
-and self-discoveries—in one word, its respectability. Not that
-it does not provide much good fellowship and a great deal of
-fun (including the varieties that have distressed its moral
-critics). But that everything it provides is so definitely provided
-<em>for</em>, so institutionalized, and so protected from the enrichment
-different types and conditions of men could bring<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span>
-to it that it is exclusive in a more sinister sense than the one
-intended by the critics of its alleged snobbery.</p>
-
-<p>Normally the club system is by no means so snobbish as
-it is thought to be; it dislikes, and is apt to punish with the
-black ball, the currying of social favour and the parade of
-special privilege. For youth is youth, and in the last analysis
-the enemy of caste. It is the glory of college life that the
-most unexpected friendships will overleap the fences run by
-class and club regimentation. It is its pity that the fences,
-which yield so easily to irregular friendships once they have
-discovered themselves, should nevertheless be stout enough to
-herd their victims past so many unrecognized opportunities
-for spontaneous association. The graduate who looks back
-fondly on his halcyon days is very likely passing over the
-Senior Picnic and his row of shingles to recall haze-hung October
-afternoons of tobacco and lazy reminiscence on the window-seat
-of somebody who got nowhere in class or club, or is
-wistful for the midnight arguments he had with that grind who
-lived in his entry freshman year—nights alive with darting
-speculation and warm with generous combat. Of these clandestine
-sweets he will say nothing; he is a regular fellow; but
-he affords one of the proofs that the well-worn social channels
-are not deep enough to carry off all the wine of free fellowship.
-And that even the moderate caste of college, securely established
-as it seems, must defend itself from youth (even from
-its own youth!) is demonstrated by two phenomena not to be
-explained satisfactorily on any other hypothesis. What is all
-the solemn mummery, the preposterous ritual, the pompous
-processions to and from temples of nightmare architecture, the
-whole sacrosanct edifice of the secret fraternities, if it be not
-an embroidery wherewith to disguise from present and future
-devotees the naked matter-of-factness of the cult? And, on the
-other hand, what are the too early maturity, the atmosphere
-of politely blasé languor, the ubiquitous paraphernalia for
-comfort and casual hospitality that characterize the non-secret
-and citified clubs of the “indifferent” college but so many
-disarming confessions of the predictability of everything—the
-predictability, and the necessity for quiet acceptance? Under
-all the encouraging variations and exceptions runs the regimental<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
-command of our unanimity: if you are to belong, you
-must conform; you must accept the limits of the conventional
-world for the bounds of your reality; and then, according to
-the caprice of your <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">genius loci</i>, you will play the game as if
-everything, even the minutiæ of the ritual your club has inherited
-from freer spirits, were of tremendous moment, or you
-will play it no less thoroughly but with the air of one who
-knows that nothing is of any moment at all. The clubs, that
-have so often been criticized for their un-American treason
-to democracy, are only too loyally American.</p>
-
-<p>The third emphasis would be corollary to these two—the
-political management of athletic and class and club affairs.
-The politics are those of personal popularity, the management
-is that of administration rather than legislation, the spirit is
-the American flair for petty regulation. Where issues are in
-question the tone is almost certain to be propagandist, conservatives
-and radicals dividing a field littered with hard names.
-College life has accumulated an abundance of machinery for
-the expression of the managing instinct, and most of it works.
-Nowadays the lines of representation finally knot in a Student
-Council, which is at once the Cabinet, the Senate, and the
-Supreme Court of the undergraduate commonwealth. The
-routine of its work is heavily sumptuary, and such matters as
-the sizes and colours and seasons for hatband insignia, the
-length of time students may take off to attend a distant game,
-the marshalling of parades, are decided with taste and tact.
-Then, abruptly, it is a tribunal for major cases, just if severe:
-a class at Yale fails to observe the honour rule, and upon
-the Council’s recommendation twenty-one students are expelled
-or suspended; it was the Student Council at Valparaiso that
-secured the president’s withdrawal; and at Cornell it was the
-Student Council that came to the rescue of tradition when a
-freshman refused to wear the freshman cap. Invariably, one
-concludes, its edicts and verdicts will support righteousness, as
-its constituents understand righteousness.</p>
-
-<p>The constituents themselves are ordinarily on the side of
-light, as they see the light. Not so long ago the faculty of
-a small New England college decided to dispense with compulsory
-chapel: the students voted it back. Moral crusades<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span>
-spring up like mushrooms and command the allegiance of all
-but the recalcitrant “rough-necks,” whom student opinion is
-sometimes tempted to feel are beating their way through an
-education for which they make no equivalent return in public
-spirit. A typical campaign of the sort was recently put in
-motion by the student daily at Brown: the editors discovered
-that “the modern age of girls and young men is intensely
-immoral”; they penned sensational editorials that evoked
-column-long echoes in the metropolitan press; they raised a
-crusade against such abominations as petting parties, the toddle
-(“Rome,” they wrote, “toddled before it fell”), and “parties
-continued until after breakfast time”; almost immediately
-they won a victory—the Mothers’ Club of Providence resolved
-that dances for children must end by eleven o’clock....</p>
-
-<p>And now the undergraduate will emphasize study. But a
-sharp line must be drawn between study that looks forward
-merely to the A.B. degree as the end of schooling and the
-beginning of business, and study that is a part of professional
-training, that looks forward to some professional degree at
-Commencement or to matriculation in a graduate school. Both
-come under the head of preparation for life; but in the former
-case the degree itself is the preparation, whereas in the latter
-case it is recognized that one must master and retain at least
-a working modicum of the subject-matter of the professional
-courses and of the liberal courses preliminary to them.</p>
-
-<p>The arts man, then, recognizes only the same necessity he
-has faced all the way up the school ladder—to pass. If he
-have entrance conditions, they are mortgages that must be paid
-off, perhaps in the Summer School; he must keep off probation
-to protect his athletic or political or other activity status; beyond
-this, he must garner enough courses and half-courses,
-semester hours or points, to purchase the indispensable sheepskin.
-Further effort is supererogatory so far as concerns study
-<i xml:lang="la" lang="la">per se</i>: prizes and distinctions fall in the category of “student
-activities,” hobbies, and belong of right to the “sharks”;
-scholarships, which in America are for the poor only, have to
-do with still another matter—earning one’s way through—and
-are mostly reserved for the “paid marks men,” professional
-studiers, grinds.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span></p>
-
-<p>Upon his programme of courses the student will often expend
-as much mental energy as would carry him through an ordinary
-examination: he will pore over the catalogue, be zealous to
-avoid nine o’clocks and afternoon hours liable to conflict with
-games, make an elaborate survey of the comparative competence
-of instructors, both as graders and as entertainers and
-even (quaintly enough) as experts in their fields, and enquire
-diligently after snap courses. Enrolled in a course, he will
-speedily estimate the minimum effort that will produce a safe
-pass, unless the subject happens to be one that commends itself
-to his interest independently of academic necessity. In that
-case he will exceed not only the moderate stint calculated to
-earn a <em>C</em>, but sometimes even the instructor’s extravagant requirements.
-There is, in fact, scarcely a student but has at
-least one pet course in which he will “eat up” all the required
-reading and more, take gratuitous notes, ask endless questions,
-and perhaps make private sallies into research. The fact that
-he holds most of this labour to be self-indulgence will not temper
-his indignation if he fails to “pull” an <em>A</em> or <em>B</em>, though it
-is a question whether, when the grade has sealed the course,
-he will be much the wiser for it than for the others.</p>
-
-<p>On the evils of the course system there is probably no new
-thing to be said. Such devices as the “group system” at Harvard
-interfere with liberty of election without appreciably correcting
-the graduate’s ignorance of the courses he has passed
-and cashed in for his degree. Recognizing this fact, certain
-faculties have latterly inaugurated general examinations in the
-whole subject-matter studied under one department, as notably
-in History, Government, and Economics; but thus far the general
-examination affects professional preparation, as notably for
-the Law School, much more than it affects the straight arts
-career, where it provides just one more obstacle to “pass.”</p>
-
-<p>This business of passing is a seasonal nuisance. The early
-weeks of term-time are an Arcady of fetching lectures, more or
-less interesting assigned reading, and abundant “cuts.” Across
-the smiling sky float minatory wisps of cloud—exercises,
-quizzes, tests. Then up from the horizon blow the “hour
-exams,” first breath of the academic weather that later on will
-rock the earth with “mid-years” and “finals.” But to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span>
-forewarned is, for the prudent student, to get armed, and
-Heaven knows he is amply warned by instructor, registrar, and
-dean. So he hies himself to the armourer, the tutor, one of the
-brotherhood of experts who saw him through the entrance examinations;
-he provides himself with bought or leased notebooks
-and summaries; he crams through a few febrile nights
-of cloistral deprivations and flagellations; and the sun shines
-again on his harvest of gentlemen’s <em>C</em>’s, the proud though superfluous
-<em>A</em> or <em>B</em>, and maybe a <em>D</em> that bespeaks better armour
-against the next onset. Or, of course, he may have slipped
-into “probation,” limbo that outrageously handicaps his athletic
-or political ambitions. Only if he have been a hapless
-probationer before the examinations is there any real risk of
-his having to join the exceedingly small company of living
-sacrifices whom a suddenly austere college now “rusticates.”
-(For in America suspensions and expulsions are the penalties
-rather of irregular conduct than of mental incompetence or
-sloth.) In four years, after he has weathered a score of these
-storms and concocted a few theses, the president hands him
-a diploma to frame, he sells his other furniture, puts mothballs
-in his cap and gown, and plunges into business to overtake
-his non-college competitors.</p>
-
-<p>Student opinion recognizes that the man enrolled in professional
-courses or headed for a graduate school faces more
-stringent necessities. He may devote himself to his more specific
-training without the imputation of being a “grind,” and
-if he pursues honours it will be in the line of business rather
-than of indoor sport. He will be charier of cuts, more painstaking
-as regards his notes and reading, and the professional
-manner will settle on him early. In every college commons you
-can find a table where the talk is largely shop—hypothetical
-cases, laboratory experiments, new inventions, devices for circumventing
-the income tax. All this, however, is really a quantitative
-difference, not a qualitative. Of disinterested intellectual
-activity he is if anything more innocent than his fellow
-in the arts school.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the four great necessities of average student life—in
-order of acknowledged importance: athletics, social life,
-politics, study. Deans and other official but theoretical folk<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span>
-will tell our Martian that the business of college is study and
-that all the undergraduate’s other functions are marginal matters;
-but their own conduct will already have betrayed them
-to him, for he will not have missed the fact that most of their
-labour is devoted to making study as dignified and popular as
-the students have made sports and clubs and elections. These
-four majors hold their places at the head of the list of student
-emphases because no representative undergraduate quite escapes
-any of them; the next ones may be stressed more variously,
-according rather to the student’s capricious private inclinations
-than to his simpler group reactions.</p>
-
-<p>Now, for instance, he is free to “go in for” some of the
-innumerable “student activities,” avocations as opposed to the
-preceding vocations. There are the minor sports which are not
-so established in popularity that they may conscript players—lacrosse,
-association football, trap shooting, swimming, and so
-on. There are the other intercollegiate competitions—chess
-and debating and what not. The musical clubs, the dramatic
-clubs, the magazines, and many semi-professional and semi-social
-organizations offer in their degree more or less opportunity
-to visit rival institutions. Then, too, there is in the
-larger colleges a club for almost every religious cult, from
-Catholic to Theosophist, whose devotees may crave a closer
-warmth of communion than they realize in the chapel, which
-is ordinarily non-sectarian; a club apiece for some of the great
-fraternal orders; a similar club for each of the political parties,
-to say nothing of a branch of the Intercollegiate Socialist
-Society, with another organization forming to supply the colleges
-with associated Liberal Clubs. Moreover, all the important
-preparatory schools, private and public, are certain to be
-represented by clubs of their alumni, some of which maintain
-scholarships but all of which do yeoman service scouting for
-athletes. Frequently there is a Cosmopolitan Club for foreign
-students and travelled Americans. And, finally, there are
-clubs to represent the various provinces of knowledge—the
-classics, philosophy, mathematics, the various sciences, and so
-on indefinitely. Then, in colleges in or near cities, there are
-well-organized opportunities for students who care to make a
-hobby of the Uplift and go in for social service. While, for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span>
-amateur and professional sharks and grinds, there is the honour
-roll of prizes, scholarships, fellowships, distinctions, and other
-academic honours. Verily a paradise for the joiner. Day by
-day, the calendar of meetings and events printed in the university
-paper resembles nothing so much as the bulletin board
-of a metropolitan hotel which caters to conventions.</p>
-
-<p>If at first glance all this welter of endeavour looks to be anything
-but evidence of uniformity, at second will appear its significant
-principle. Every part of it is cemented together by a
-universal institutionalizing of impulses and values. There is
-scarcely a college activity which can serve for a hobby but
-has its shingle and ribbon and certificated niche in the undergraduate
-régime.</p>
-
-<p>Even the undergraduate’s extra-collegiate social life, which
-would probably stand next on the Martian’s list, is thoroughly
-regimented. Speaking broadly, it is incorrect to call on girls
-at the nearest girls’ college; and, speaking still more broadly,
-there is usually one correct college whereat it is socially incumbent
-to pay devoirs. In coeducational institutions the sex
-line is an exacting but astonishingly innocent consumer of time
-and energy, of which the greater part is invested in the sheer
-maintenance of convention. Along both these social avenues
-the student practises a mimicry of what seems to him to be the
-forms regnant in secular society and, intent on the forms, tends
-to miss by a little what neighbourly ease really exists there, so
-that he out-conventionalizes the conventional world. The non-college
-American youth, of both sexes, would scarcely tolerate
-the amount of formalism, chaperonage, and constraint that
-our college youth voluntarily assumes.</p>
-
-<p>The word “fussing” is the perfect tag for the visiting, the
-taking to games and dances, the cherishing at house-parties,
-and the incessant letter-writing that are the approved communications
-across the sex line. You make a fuss over a girl,
-and there it ends; or you make a fuss over a girl and get
-engaged, and there it ends; or—and this is frequent only in the
-large Western universities where well-nigh all the personable
-youths of the State’s society are in college together—you make
-a fuss over a girl, you get engaged, and in due time you get
-married. So far as fussing is concerned, sex is far more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span>
-decorous among collegians than among their non-collegiate fellows
-of the same ages and social levels. There is a place, of
-course, where it is indecorous enough; but that place is next
-on the Martian’s list.</p>
-
-<p>Which now shifts its weakening emphasis to recreation.
-You will have thought that most of the foregoing attached to
-recreation and that all play and no work is the undergraduate
-rule. You will have erred. Above this point almost everything
-on the list is recognized by the student to be in some sort
-an obligation, a serious concern, a plough on which he finds his
-hand gently laid by custom but which he cannot decently relinquish
-till he has gained the end of the furrow.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Nobody could be busier than the normal undergraduate. His
-team, his paper, his club, show, or other activity, sometimes several
-at once, occupy every spare moment which he can persuade the
-office to let him take from the more formal part of college instruction.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The quotation is not from a baccalaureate sermon: it is from
-the Harvard class oration of 1921.</p>
-
-<p>The prime relaxation is talk, infinite talk—within its local
-range, full of tang, flicking with deft satire the rumps of
-pompous asses, burlesquing the comic (that is, the abnormal)
-in campus situations, making of gossip a staccato criticism—and
-beyond that range, a rather desultory patter about professional
-sport, shows, shallow books, the froth of fashion, all
-treated lightly but taken with what a gravity! For the other
-relaxations there are, according to taste, the theatre of girls
-and music, the novel, bath-robed sessions at poker and bridge,
-late afternoon tennis or golf or handball (very nearly the only
-sports left to play for their own sake), and the bouts with
-Bacchus and Venus which, though they attract fewer college
-men than non-college men, are everywhere the moral holidays
-that insure our over-driven Puritanism against collapse.</p>
-
-<p>A favourite subject for college debates and Freshman
-themes argues the case for and against going to college. You
-could listen to scores of such debates, read thousands of such
-themes, without once meeting a clear brief for education as a
-satisfaction of human curiosity. Everywhere below the level<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</span>
-of disinterested scholarship, education is regarded as access to
-that body of common and practical information without which
-one’s hands and tongue will be tied in the company of one’s
-natural peers. “Institutions of learning,” as the National Security
-League lately advised the Vice-President of the United
-States, “are established primarily for the dissemination of
-knowledge, which is acquaintance with fact and not with
-theory.” Consequently the universal expectation of the educational
-establishment has little to do with any wakening of
-appropriate if differing personalities, and has everything to
-do with a standard patina, varying only in its lustre, its brighter
-or duller reflection of the established scene.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, the essential Adam does break through and
-quiz the scene. Though it come lowest in his scale of emphasis,
-the typical underclassman knows the qualms and hungers
-of curiosity, experiments a little with forbidden fruit, at some
-time fraternizes with a man of richer if disreputable experience,
-perhaps strikes up a wistful friendship with a sympathetic instructor.
-Then the world of normal duties and rewards and
-certainties closes round him, and security in it becomes his
-first concern. Sometime he intends really to read, to think
-long thoughts again, to go to the bottom of things. Meanwhile
-he falls into the easy habit of applying such words as “radical”
-or “highbrow” to those infrequent hardier spirits who
-continue restless and unappeased. Later in life you will catch
-him explaining that radicalism is a perfectly natural manifestation
-of adolescence and the soundest foundation for mature
-conservatism. Wise churchmen still talk that way about religious
-doubt, and bide their time, and later refer to the “death
-of doubt”—which has really been buried alive. The Martian
-would conclude that the function of terrestrial education is to
-bury curiosity alive.</p>
-
-<p>But could he now feel that this educational establishment,
-this going machine of assimilation, is responsible for our
-uniformity? Will not American school and college life now
-seem too perfect a reflection of American adult life to be its
-parent? Everything in that scale of college values, from
-the vicarious excitements of football to what Santayana
-has called the “deprivations of disbelief” has its exact analogue<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">132</span>
-in our life at large; and neither any college tradition nor
-yet the “genteel tradition” is of so much significance as the
-will to tradition that both reveal. The Martian will long since
-have suspected himself guilty of a very human error, that of
-getting the cart before the horse.</p>
-
-<p>For we have made our schools in our own image. They
-are not our prisons, but our homes. Every now and again
-we discipline a rash instructor who carries too far his private
-taste for developing originality; we pass acts that require
-teachers to sink their own differences in our unanimity; and
-our fatuous faith in the public school system as the “cradle of
-liberty” rests on the political control we exercise over it. Far
-from being the dupes of education, we ourselves dupe the educated;
-and that college men do not rebel is due to the fact
-that inside a world our uniformity dominates as easily as it
-dominates the school, the regimen works, college men really
-do get ahead, and the “queer” really are frustrate.</p>
-
-<p>Then, what is the origin of our “desperate need to agree”?
-There is a possible answer in our history, if only we can be
-persuaded to give our history a little attention. When we became
-a nation we were not a folk. We were, in fact, so far
-from being alike that there were only our common grievances
-and a few propositions on which we could be got together at
-all, and the propositions were more like stubborn articles of
-faith than like tested observations: “We hold these truths to
-be self-evident, that all men are created equal ... certain
-inalienable Rights ... Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness
-... the consent of the governed ... are, and of
-Right ought to be, Free and Independent States.” That is not
-the tone of men who are partakers in a common tradition and
-who share reasonable and familiar convictions. Thus under
-the spur of our first national necessity we gave the first evidence
-of our capacity to substitute an arbitrary and not too
-exacting lowest common denominator to which men can subscribe,
-for the natural and rigorous highest common multiple
-that expresses their genuine community of interest. The device
-succeeded because we succeeded, but it was the propositions
-that got the credit. The device has continued to succeed
-ever since for the same reason that tradition succeeds in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">133</span>
-the modern college—nobody who has had any reason to challenge
-the propositions has been able to get at us.</p>
-
-<p>Our proper job was to create a people, to get acquainted
-with each other and develop a common background. But the
-almost miraculous success of our lowest common denominator
-stood in the way of our working out any highest common multiple.
-Instead of developing a common background, we went
-on assimilating subscribers to the Declaration, our arbitrary
-tradition, “Americanism.” We have been so increasingly beset
-by aliens who had to be assimilated that their Americanization
-has prevented our own.</p>
-
-<p>We now believe our national job was the Conquest of the
-West, as if scattering people over a continent were any substitute
-for creating a People. But we have never been seriously
-challenged. If our good luck should hold, the second
-or third generation after us will believe our job was the subjugation
-of a hemisphere, including the assimilation of genuine
-peoples who have done us less harm even than the Indians
-did. But, whatever our practice, we shall never admit that
-our theory has altered. Still lacking any common background,
-we shall still enclose ourselves against the void in the painted
-scene of our tradition.</p>
-
-<p>But our luck may not hold. We may be challenged yet.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Clarence Britten</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_135" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">135</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_INTELLECTUAL_LIFE">THE INTELLECTUAL LIFE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">When</span> Professor Einstein roused the ire of the women’s
-clubs by stating that “women dominate the entire life
-of America,” and that “there are cities with a million population,
-but cities suffering from terrible poverty—the poverty
-of intellectual things,” he was but repeating a criticism of our
-life now old enough to be almost a <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">cliché</i>. Hardly any intelligent
-foreigner has failed to observe and comment upon the
-extraordinary feminization of American social life, and oftenest
-he has coupled this observation with a few biting remarks
-concerning the intellectual anæmia or torpor that seems to
-accompany it. Naturally this attitude is resented, and the
-indiscreet visitor is told that he has been rendered astigmatic
-by too limited observation. He is further informed that he
-should travel in our country more extensively, see more people,
-and live among us longer. The inference is that this
-chastening process will in due time acquaint him with a beauty
-and a thrilling intellectual vitality coyly hidden from the superficial
-impressionist.</p>
-
-<p>Now the thesis of this paper is that the spontaneous judgment
-of the perceptive foreigner is to a remarkable degree correct.
-But it is a judgment which has to be modified in certain
-respects rather sharply. Moreover, even long residence
-in the United States is not likely to give a visitor as vivid a
-sense of the historical background that has so largely contributed
-to the present situation as is aroused in the native
-American, who in his own family hears the folklore of the two
-generations preceding him and to whom the pioneer tradition
-is a reality more imaginatively plausible than, say, the emanations
-of glory from English fields or the aura of ancient pomp
-enwrapping an Italian castle. The foreigner is too likely to
-forget that in a young country, precisely because it is young,
-traditions have a social sanction unknown in an older country
-where memory of the past goes so far back as to become<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">136</span>
-shadowy and unreal. It is a paradox of history that from
-ancient cultures usually come those who “were born too soon,”
-whereas from young and groping civilizations spring the panoplied
-defenders of conventions. It is usually when a tradition
-is fresh that it is respected most; it is only when it has been
-followed for years sufficient to make it meaningless that it can
-create its repudiators. America is a very young country—and
-in no respect younger than that of all Western nations it has
-the oldest form of established government; our naïve respect
-for the fathers is surest proof that we are still in the cultural
-awkward age. We have not sufficiently grown up but that
-we must still cling to our father and mother. In a word, we
-still <em>think</em> in pioneer terms, whatever the material and economic
-facts of a day that has already outgrown their applicability.</p>
-
-<p>And it is the pioneer point of view, once thoroughly understood,
-which will most satisfactorily explain the peculiar development
-of the intellectual life in the United States. For
-the life of the mind is no fine flower of impoverishment, and
-if the beginnings of human reflection were the wayward reveries
-of seamen in the long watches of the night or of a shepherd
-lying on his back idly watching the summer clouds float
-past, as surely have the considered intellectual achievements of
-modern men been due to the commercial and industrial organization
-which, whether or not conducive to the general happiness,
-has at least made leisure possible for the few. But in
-the pioneer community leisure cannot exist, even for the few;
-the struggle is too merciless, the stake—life itself, possibly—too
-high. The pioneer must almost of necessity hate the
-thinker, even when he does not despise thought in itself, because
-the thinker is a liability to a community that can afford
-only assets; he is non-productive in himself and a dangerously
-subversive example to others. Of course, the pioneer will
-tolerate the minister, exactly as primitive tribes tolerated medicine
-men—and largely for the same reasons. The minister,
-if he cannot bring rain or ward off pestilence as the medicine
-man at least pretended he could, can soften the hardness of
-the human lot and can show the road to a future kingdom
-that will amply compensate for the drudgery of the present<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">137</span>
-world. He has, in brief, considerable utilitarian value. The
-thinker <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">per se</i>, however, has none; not only that, he is a reproach
-and a challenge to the man who must labour by the
-sweat of his brow—it is as if he said, “For what end, all this
-turmoil and effort, merely to live? But do you know if life
-is worth while on such terms?” Questions like these the
-pioneer must cast far from him, and for the very good reason
-that if they were tolerated, new communities might never become
-settled. Scepticism is an expensive luxury possible only
-to men in cities living off the fruit of others’ toil. Certainly
-America, up to the end of the reconstruction period following
-the Civil War, had little practical opportunity and less native
-impulse for the cultivation of this tolerant attitude towards
-ultimate values, an atmosphere which is a talisman that a true
-intellectual life is flourishing.</p>
-
-<p>Consider the terrible hardness of the pioneer’s physical life.
-I can think of no better description of it than in one of Sherwood
-Anderson’s stories, “Godliness,” in his book, “Winesburg,
-Ohio.” He is writing of the Bentley brothers just before
-the Civil War: “They clung to old traditions and worked
-like driven animals. They lived as practically all of the
-farming people of the time lived. In the spring and through
-most of the winter the highways leading into the town of
-Winesburg were a sea of mud. The four young men of the
-family worked hard all day in the fields, they ate heavily of
-coarse, greasy food, and at night slept like tired beasts on beds
-of straw. Into their lives came little that was not coarse and
-brutal, and outwardly they were themselves coarse and brutal.”
-Naturally, this intense concentration upon work is not the
-whole of the picture; there was gaiety and often there was
-romance in the early days of pioneering, it ran like a coloured
-thread through all the story of our <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Drang nach Westen</i>. But
-on the whole the period from our confederation into a Union
-until the expanding industrial era following the Civil War—roughly
-the century from 1783 to 1883—was a period in which
-the cardinal command was, “Be active, be bold, and above all,
-work.” In that century we subdued and populated a continent.
-There was no time for the distractions of art or the
-amenities of literature.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">138</span></p>
-
-<p>To be sure, a short-range perspective seems to belie this last
-generalization. The colonial times and the first part of the
-19th century witnessed a valid and momentous literary and
-intellectual efflorescence, and it was then we contributed many
-names to the biography of greatness. Yet it was a culture
-centred almost wholly in New England and wholly East of
-the Alleghanies; it had its vitality because it was not self-conscious,
-it was frankly derivative from England and Europe,
-it made no pretensions to being intrinsically American. The
-great current of our national life went irresistibly along,
-ploughing, and tilling, and cutting down the trees and brush,
-making roads and bridges as it filled the valleys and the plains.
-That was the real America, a mighty river of life, compared
-with which, for instance, Emerson and the Transcendentalists
-seemed a mere backwater—not a stagnant or brackish one to
-be sure, often a pool of quietude in which the stars, like Emerson’s
-sentences, might be reflected. But the real America
-was still in the heart of the pioneer. And in one sense, it
-still is to-day.</p>
-
-<p>The “real America,” I say, because I mean the America of
-mind and attitude, the inner truth, not the outer actuality.
-That outer actuality has made the fact of the pioneer almost
-grotesque. The frontier is closed; the nation is the most
-prosperous among the harassed ones of the earth; there is no
-need for the old perpetual preoccupation with material existence.
-In spite of trade depressions and wars and their aftermaths,
-we have conquered that problem. But we have not
-conquered ourselves. We must still go on in the old terms, as
-if the purpose of making money in order to make more money
-were as important as the purpose of raising bread in order
-to support life. The facts have changed, but we have not
-changed, only deflected our interests. Where the pioneer
-cleared a wilderness, the modern financier subdues a forest of
-competitors. He puts the same amount of energy and essentially
-the same quality of thought into his task to-day, although
-the practical consequences can hardly be described as identical.</p>
-
-<p>And what have been those practical consequences? As the
-industrial revolution expanded, coincidently with the filling up
-of the country, the surplus began to grow. That surplus was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">139</span>
-expended not towards the enrichment of our life—if one omit
-the perfunctory bequests for education—but towards the most
-obvious of unnecessary luxuries, the grandiose maintenance
-of our women. The daughters of pioneer mothers found
-themselves without a real job, often, indeed, the chief instrument
-for advertising their husbands’ incomes. For years the
-Victorian conception of women as ornaments dominated what
-we were pleased to call our “better elements”—those years,
-to put it brutally, which coincided with that early prosperity
-that made the conception possible. If the leisure of the landed
-gentry class of colonial times had been other than a direct
-importation, if there had ever been a genuine <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">salon</i> in our
-cultural history, or if our early moneyed aristocracy had ever
-felt itself really secure from the constant challenge of immigrant
-newcomers, this surplus might have gone towards the
-deepening and widening of what we could have felt to be an
-indigenous tradition. Or if, indeed, the Cavalier traditions
-of the South (the only offshoot of the Renaissance in America)
-had not been drained of all vitality by the Civil War and its
-economic and intellectual consequences, this surplus might
-have enhanced the more gracious aspects of those traditions.
-None of these possibilities existed; and when prosperity smiled
-on us we were embarrassed. We were parvenus—even to this
-day the comic series, “Bringing Up Father,” has a native
-tang. We know exactly how Mr. Jiggs feels when Mrs. Jiggs
-drags him away to a concert and makes him dress for a stiff,
-formal dinner, when all his heart desires is to smoke his pipe
-and play poker with Dinty and the boys. Indeed, this series,
-which appears regularly in all the newspapers controlled by
-Mr. Hearst, will repay the social historian all the attention he
-gives it. It symbolises better than most of us appreciate the
-normal relationship of American men and women to cultural
-and intellectual values. Its very grotesqueness and vulgarity
-are revealing.</p>
-
-<p>In no country as in the United States have the tragic consequences
-of the lack of any common concept of the good life
-been so strikingly exemplified, and in no country has the break
-with those common concepts been so sharp. After all, when
-other colonies have been founded, when other peoples have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">140</span>
-roved from the homeland and settled in distant parts, they have
-carried with them more than mere scraps of tradition. Oftenest
-they have carried the most precious human asset of all, a
-heritage of common feeling, which enabled them to cling to
-the substance of the old forms even while they adapted them
-to the new conditions of life. But with us the repudiation of
-the old heritages was complete; we deliberately sought a new
-way of life, for in the circumstances under which we came into
-national being, breaking with the past was synonymous with
-casting off oppression. The hopefulness, the eagerness, the
-enthusiasm of that conscious attempt to adjudge all things
-afresh found its classic expression in the eloquent if vague.
-Declaration of Independence, not even the abstract phraseology
-of which could hide the revolutionary fervour beneath.
-Yet a few short years and that early high mood of adventure
-had almost evaporated, and men were distracted from the
-former vision by the prospect of limitless economic expansion,
-both for the individual and the nation as a whole. The Declaration
-symbolized only a short interlude in the pioneer spirit
-which brought us here and then led us forth to conquer the
-riches nature, with her fine contempt of human values, so
-generously spread before us. The end of the revolutionary
-mood came as soon as the signing of the Constitution by the
-States, that admirable working compromise in government
-which made no attempt to underscore democracy, as we understand
-it to-day, but rather to hold it in proper check and
-balance. Free, then, of any common heritage or tradition
-which might question his values, free, also, of the troublesome
-idealism of the older revolutionary mood, the ordinary man
-could go forth into the wilderness with singleness of purpose.
-He could be, as he still is to-day, the pioneer <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">toujours</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Now when his success in his half-chosen rôle made it unnecessary
-for him to play it, it was precisely the lack of a
-common concept of the good life which made it impossible for
-him to be anything else. It is not that Americans make money
-because they love to do so, but because there is nothing else
-to do; oddly enough, it is not even that the possessive instincts
-are especially strong with us (I think the French, for instance,
-are naturally more avaricious than we), but that we have no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">141</span>
-notion of a definite type of life for which a small income is
-enough, and no notion of any type of life from which work has
-been consciously eliminated. Never in any national sense
-having had leisure, as individuals we do not know what to do
-with it when good fortune gives it to us. Unlike a real game,
-we must go on playing <em>our</em> game even after we have won.</p>
-
-<p>But if the successful pioneer did not know what to do with
-his own leisure, he had naïve faith in the capacity of his
-women to know what to do with theirs. With the chivalric
-sentimentality that often accompanies the prosperity of the
-primitive, the pioneer determined that his good luck should
-bestow upon his wife and sisters and mother and aunts a gift,
-the possession of which slightly embarrassed himself. He
-gave them leisure exactly as the typical business man of to-day
-gives them a blank check signed with his name. It
-disposed of them, kept them out of his world, and salved his
-conscience—like a check to charity. Unluckily for him, his
-mother, his wife, his sisters, and his aunts were of his own
-blood and breeding; they were the daughters of pioneers like
-himself, and the daughters of mothers who had contributed
-share and share alike to those foundations which had made
-his success possible. Although a few developed latent qualities
-of parasitism, the majority were strangely discontented
-(strangely, that is, from his point of view) with the job of
-mere Victorian ornament. What more natural under the circumstances
-than that the unimportant things of life—art,
-music, religion, literature, the intellectual life—should be
-handed over to them to keep them busy and contented, while
-he confined himself to the real man’s job of making money
-and getting on in the world? Was it not a happy and sensible
-adaptation of function?</p>
-
-<p>Happy or not, it was exactly what took place. To an extent
-almost incomprehensible to the peoples of older cultures, the
-things of the mind and the spirit have been given over, in
-America, into the almost exclusive custody of women. This
-has been true certainly of art, certainly of music, certainly of
-education. The spinster school-marm has settled in the
-impressionable, adolescent minds of boys the conviction that
-the cultural interests are largely an affair of the other sex;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span>
-the intellectual life can have no connection with native gaiety,
-with sexual curiosity, with play, with creative dreaming, or
-with adventure. These more genuine impulses, he is made to
-feel, are not merely distinguishable from the intellectual life,
-but actually at war with it. In my own day at Harvard the
-Westerners in my class looked with considerable suspicion
-upon those who specialized in literature, the classics, or philosophy—a
-man’s education should be science, economics, engineering.
-Only “sissies,” I was informed, took courses in
-poetry out in that virile West. And to this day for a boy to
-be taught to play the piano, for example, is regarded as
-“queer,” whereas for a girl to be so taught is entirely in the
-nature of things. That is, natural aptitude has nothing to
-do with it; some interests are proper for women, others for
-men. Of course there are exceptions enough to make even
-the boldest hesitate at generalizations, yet assuredly the contempt,
-as measured in the only terms we thoroughly understand,
-money, with which male teachers, male professors (secretly),
-male ministers, and male artists are universally held
-should convince the most prejudiced that, speaking broadly,
-this generalization is in substance correct.</p>
-
-<p>In fact, when we try to survey the currents of our entire
-national life, to assess these vagrant winds of doctrine free
-from the ingenuousness that our own academic experience or
-training may give us, the more shall we perceive that the
-dichotomy between the cultural and intellectual life of men
-and women in this country has been carried farther than anywhere
-else in the world. We need only recall the older
-women’s clubs of the comic papers—in truth, the actual
-women’s clubs of to-day as revealed by small-town newspaper
-reports of their meetings—the now deliquescent Browning
-Clubs, the Chautauquas, the church festivals, the rural normal
-schools for teachers, the women’s magazines, the countless
-national organizations for improving, elevating, uplifting this,
-that, or the other. One shudders slightly and turns to the
-impeccable style, the slightly tired and sensuous irony of
-Anatole France (not yet censored, if we read him in French)
-for relief. Or if we are so fortunate as to be “regular”
-Americans instead of unhappy intellectuals educated beyond<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span>
-our environment, we go gratefully back to our work at the
-office. Beside the stilted artificiality of this world of higher
-ethical values the business world, where men haggle, cheat, and
-steal with whole-hearted devotion is at least real. And it is
-this world, the world of making money, in which alone the
-American man can feel thoroughly at home. If the French
-romanticists of the 18th century invented the phrase <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">la femme
-mécomprise</i>, a modern Gallic visitor would be tempted to observe
-that in this 20th century the United States was the
-land of <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">l’homme mécompris</i>.</p>
-
-<p>These, then, are the cruder historical forces that have led
-directly to the present remarkable situation, a situation, of
-course, which I attempt to depict only in its larger outlines.
-For the surface of the contemporary social structure shows us
-suffrage, the new insights into the world of industry which the
-war gave so many women for the first time, the widening of
-professional opportunity, co-education, and, in the life which
-perhaps those of us who have contributed to this volume know
-best, a genuine intellectual camaraderie. Nevertheless, I believe
-the underlying thesis cannot be successfully challenged.
-Where men and women in America to-day share their intellectual
-life on terms of equality and perfect understanding,
-closer examination reveals that the phenomenon is not
-a sharing but a capitulation. The men have been feminized.</p>
-
-<p>Thus far through this essay I have by implication rather
-than direct statement contrasted genuine interest in intellectual
-things with the kind of intellectual life led by women. Let me
-say now that no intention is less mine than to contribute to
-the old controversy concerning the respective intellectual capacities
-of the two sexes. If I use the adjective “masculine”
-to denote a more valid type of intellectual impulse than is expressed
-by the adjective “feminine,” it is not to belittle the
-quality of the second impulse; it is a matter of definition.
-Further, the relative degree of “masculine” and “feminine”
-traits possessed by an individual are almost as much the result
-of acquired training as of native inheritance. The young, independent
-college girl of to-day is in fact more likely to possess
-“masculine” intellectual habits than is the average<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span>
-Y.M.C.A. director. I use the adjectives to express broad,
-general characteristics as they are commonly understood.</p>
-
-<p>For a direct examination of the intellectual life of women—which,
-I repeat, is practically the intellectual life of the
-nation—in the United States shows the necessity of terms being
-defined more sharply. Interest in intellectual things is
-first, last, and all the time <em>disinterested</em>; it is the love of truth,
-if not exclusively for its own sake, at least without fear of
-consequences, in fact with precious little thought about consequences.
-This does not mean that such exercise of the
-native disposition to think, such slaking of the natural metaphysical
-curiosity in all of us, is not a process enwrapped—as
-truly as the disposition to make love or to get angry—with
-an emotional aura of its own, a passion as distinctive as any
-other. It merely means that the occasions which stimulate this
-innate intellectual disposition are of a different sort than those
-which stimulate our other dispositions. An imaginative picture
-of one’s enlarged social self will arouse our instincts of
-ambition or a desire to found a family, whereas curiosity or
-wonder about the mystery of life, the meaning of death, the
-ultimate nature of God (objects of desire as truly as other
-objects) will arouse our intellectual disposition. These occasions,
-objects, hypotheses are of necessity without moral significance.
-The values inherent in them are the values of satisfied
-contemplation and not of practical result. Their immediate
-utility—although their ultimate, by the paradox that is
-constantly making mere common sense inadequate, may be
-very great—is only subjective. In this sense, they seem wayward
-and masculine; and, cardinal sin of all, useless.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the meaning of the “feminine” approach to the
-intellectual life may be made somewhat clearer by this preliminary
-definition. The basic assumption of such an approach
-is that ideas are measured for their value by terms
-outside the ideas themselves, or, as Mrs. Mary Austin recently
-said in a magazine article, by “her [woman’s] deep
-sense of social applicability as the test of value.” Fundamentally,
-in a word, the intellectual life is an instrument of moral
-reform; the real test of ideas lies in their utilitarian success.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span>
-Hence it is hardly surprising that the intellectual life, as I
-have defined it, of women in America turns out on examination
-not to be an intellectual life at all, but sociological activity.
-The best of modern women thinkers in the United States—and
-there are many—are oftenest technical experts, keen to
-apply knowledge and skill to the formulation of a technique
-for the better solution of problems <em>the answers to which are
-already assumed</em>. The question of fundamental ends is seldom
-if ever raised: for example, the desirability of the modern
-family, the desirability of children glowing with health, the
-desirability of monogamy are not challenged. They are assumed
-as ends desirable in themselves, and what women usually
-understand by the intellectual life is the application of
-modern scientific methods to a sort of enlarged and subtler
-course in domestic science.</p>
-
-<p>This attitude of contempt for mere intellectual values has
-of course been strengthened by the native pioneer suspicion
-of all thought that does not issue immediately in successful
-action. The remarkable growth of pragmatism, and its sturdy
-offspring instrumentalism, where ideas become but the lowly
-handmaidens of “getting on,” has been possible to the extent
-to which we see it to-day precisely because the intellectual
-atmosphere has been surcharged with this feminized utilitarianism.
-We are deeply uncomfortable before introspection,
-contemplation, or scrupulous adherence to logical sequence.
-Women do not hesitate to call these activities cold, impersonal,
-indirect—I believe they have a phrase for them, “the poobah
-tradition of learning.” With us the concept of the intellect
-as a soulless machine operating in a rather clammy void has
-acquired the force of folklore because we have so much wished
-to strip it of warmth and colour. We have wanted to discredit
-it in itself; we have respected it only for what it could
-do. If its operations lead to better sanitation, better milk
-for babies, and larger bridges over which, in Matthew Arnold’s
-phrase, we might cross more rapidly from one dismal, illiberal
-city to another dismal, illiberal city, then those operations have
-been justified. That the life of the mind might have an emotional
-drive, a sting or vibrancy of its own, constituting as
-valuable a contribution to human happiness as, say, the satisfied<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span>
-marital felicity of the bacteria-less suburbanite in his
-concrete villa has been incomprehensible. Every science must
-be an <em>applied</em> science, the intellect must be <em>applied</em> intellect
-before we thoroughly understand it. We have created an
-environment in which the intellectual impulses must become
-fundamentally social in quality and mood, whereas the truth
-of the matter is that these impulses, like the religious impulse,
-in their pristine spontaneity are basically individualistic and
-capricious rather than disciplined.</p>
-
-<p>But such individualism in thought, unless mellowed by contact
-with institutions that assume and cherish it and thus can,
-without patronizing, correct its wildnesses, inevitably turns
-into eccentricity. And such, unfortunately, has too often been
-the history of American intellectuals. The institutional structure
-that might sustain them and keep them on the main
-track of the humanistic tradition has been too fragile and
-too slight. The university and college life, the educational
-institutions, even the discipline of scholarship, as other essays
-in this volume show us, have been of very little assistance.
-Even the church has provoked recalcitrance rather than any
-real reorientation of religious viewpoint, and our atheists—recall
-Ingersoll—have ordinarily been quite conventional in
-their intellectual outlook. With educated Englishmen, for example,
-whatever their religious, economic, or political views,
-there has been a certain common tradition or point of departure
-and understanding, i.e., the classics. Mr. Balfour can
-speak the same language as Mr. Bertrand Russell, even when
-he is a member of a government that puts Mr. Russell in gaol
-for his political opposition to the late war. But it really is a
-strain on the imagination to picture Mr. Denby quoting Hume
-to refute Mr. Weeks, or Vice-President Coolidge engaging in
-an epistemological controversy with Postmaster-General Hays.
-There is no intellectual background common to President
-Harding and Convict Debs or to any one person and possibly
-as many as a hundred others—there are only common social
-or geographical backgrounds, in which the absence of a real
-community of interests is pathetically emphasized by grotesque
-emphasis upon fraternal solidarity, as when Mr. Harding discovered
-that he and his chauffeur belonged to the same lodge,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span>
-regarding this purely fortuitous fact as a symbol of the healing
-power of the Fathers and of American Democracy!</p>
-
-<p>In such an atmosphere of shadowy spiritual relationships,
-where the thinness of contact of mind with mind is childishly
-disguised under the banner of good fellowship, it might be
-expected that the intellectual life must be led not only with
-that degree of individualistic isolation which is naturally necessary
-for its existence, but likewise in a hostile and unintelligent
-environment of almost enforced “difference” from the
-general social type. Such an atmosphere will become as infested
-with cranks, fanatics, mushroom religious enthusiasts,
-moral prigs with new schemes of perfectability, inventors of
-perpetual motion, illiterate novelists, and oratorical cretins, as
-a swamp with mosquitoes. They seem to breed almost overnight;
-we have no standard to which the wise and the foolish
-may equally repair, no criterion by which spontaneously to
-appraise them and thus, by robbing them of the breath of
-their life, recognition, reduce their numbers. On the contrary,
-we welcome them all with a kind of Jamesian gusto, as if
-every fool, like every citizen, must have his right to vote. It
-is a kind of intellectual enfranchisement that produces the
-same sort of leadership which, in the political field of complete
-suffrage, we suffer under from Washington and our various
-State capitals. Our intellectual life, when we judge it
-objectively on the side of vigour and diversity, too often seems
-like a democracy of mountebanks.</p>
-
-<p>Yet when we turn from the more naïve and popular experiments
-for finding expression for the baulked disposition to
-think, the more sophisticated <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">jeunesse dorée</i> of our cultural
-life are equally crippled and sterile. They suffer not so much
-from being thought and being “queer”—in fact, inwardly
-deeply uncomfortable at not being successful business men,
-they are scrupulously conventional in manner and appearance—but
-from what Professor Santayana has called, with his
-usual felicity, “the genteel tradition.” It is a blight that
-falls on the just and the unjust; like George Bernard Shaw,
-they are tolerant before the caprices of the mind, and intolerant
-before the caprices of the body. They acquire their
-disability from the essentially American (and essentially feminine)<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span>
-timorousness before life itself; they seem to want to
-confine, as do all good husbands and providers, adventure to
-mental adventure and tragedy to an error in ratiocination.
-They will discant generously about liberty of opinion—although,
-strictly speaking, <em>opinion</em> is always free; all that is
-restricted is the right to put it into words—yet seem singularly
-silent concerning liberty of action. If this were a mere
-temperamental defect, it would of course have no importance.
-But it cuts much deeper. Thought, like mist, arises from
-the earth, and to it must eventually return, if it is not to be
-dissipated into the ether. The genteel tradition, which has
-stolen from the intellectual life its own proper possessions,
-gaiety and laughter, has left it sour and <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">déraciné</i>. It has lost
-its earthy roots, its sensuous fulness, its bodily <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">mise-en-scène</i>.
-One has the feeling, when one talks to our correct intellectuals,
-that they are somehow brittle and might be cracked with a pun,
-a low story, or an animal grotesquerie as an eggshell might be
-cracked. Yet whatever else thought may be in itself, surely
-we know that it has a biological history and an animal setting;
-it can reach its own proper dignity and effectiveness
-only when it functions in some kind of rational relationship
-with the more clamorous instincts of the body. The adjustment
-must be one of harmony and welcome; real thinkers do
-not make this ascetic divorce between the passions and the
-intellect, the emotions and the reason, which is the central
-characteristic of the genteel tradition. Thought is nourished
-by the soil it feeds on, and in America to-day that soil is
-choked with the feckless weeds of correctness. Our sanitary
-perfection, our material organization of goods, our muffling of
-emotion, our deprecation of curiosity, our fear of idle adventure,
-our horror of disease and death, our denial of suffering—what
-kind of soil of life is that?</p>
-
-<p>Surely not an over-gracious or thrilling one; small wonder
-that our intellectual plants wither in this carefully aseptic
-sunlight.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, though I was tempted to give the sub-title “A
-Study in Sterility” to this essay, I do not believe that our
-soil is wholly sterile. Beneath the surface barrenness stirs
-a germinal energy that may yet push its way through the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span>
-weeds and the tin-cans of those who are afraid of life. If
-the genteel tradition did not succumb to the broad challenge
-of Whitman, his invitations have not been wholly rejected by
-the second generation following him. The most hopeful thing
-of intellectual promise in America to-day is the contempt of
-the younger people for their elders; they are restless, uneasy,
-disaffected. It is not a disciplined contempt; it is not yet
-kindled by any real love of intellectual values—how could it
-be? Yet it is a genuine and moving attempt to create a way
-of life free from the bondage of an authority that has lost all
-meaning, even to those who wield it. Some it drives in futile
-and pathetic expatriotism from the country; others it makes
-headstrong and reckless; many it forces underground, where,
-much as in Russia before the revolution of 1905, the <em>intelligentsia</em>
-meet their own kind and share the difficulties of their
-common struggle against an environment that is out to destroy
-them. But whatever its crudeness and headiness, it is a yeast
-composed always of those who <em>will not</em> conform. The more
-the pressure of standardization is applied to them the sharper
-and keener—if often the wilder—becomes their rebellion
-against it. Just now these non-conformists constitute a spiritual
-fellowship which is disorganized and with few points of
-contact. It may be ground out of existence, for history is
-merciless and every humanistic interlude resembles a perilous
-equipoise of barbaric forces. Only arrogance and self-complacency
-give warrant for assuming that we may not be
-facing a new kind of dark age. On the other hand, if the
-more amiable and civilized of the generation now growing up
-can somehow consolidate their scattered powers, what may
-they not accomplish? For we have a vitality and nervous
-alertness which, properly channelled and directed, might cut
-through the rocks of stupidity with the precision and spaciousness
-with which our mechanical inventions have seized on our
-natural resources and turned them into material goods. Our
-cup of life is full to the brim.</p>
-
-<p>I like to think that this cup will not all be poured upon
-the sandy deltas of industrialism ... we have so much to
-spare! Climb to the top of the Palisades and watch the great
-city in the deepening dusk as light after light, and rows of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span>
-lights after rows, topped by towers of radiance at the end
-of the island, shine through the shadows across the river.
-Think, then, of the miles of rolling plains, fertile and dotted
-with cities, stretching behind one to that other ocean which
-washes a civilization that was old before we were born and
-yet to-day gratefully accepts our pitiful doles to keep it from
-starvation, of the millions of human aspirations and hopes
-and youthful eagernesses contained in the great sprawling, uneasy
-entity we call our country—must all the hidden beauty
-and magic and laughter we know is ours be quenched because
-we lack the courage to make it proud and defiant? Or walk
-down the Avenue some late October morning when the sun
-sparkles in a clear and electric air such as can be found nowhere
-else in the world. The flashing beauty of form, the
-rising step of confident animalism, the quick smile of fertile
-minds—must all these things, too, be reduced to a drab uniformity
-because we lack the courage to proclaim their sheer
-physical loveliness? Has not the magic of America been hidden
-under a fog of ugliness by those who never really loved
-it, who never knew our natural gaiety and high spirits and
-eagerness for knowledge? They have the upper hand now—but
-who would dare to prophesy that they can keep it?</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps this is only a day-dream, but surely one can hope
-that the America of our natural affections rather than the present
-one of enforced dull standardization may some day snap
-the shackles of those who to-day keep it a spiritual prison.
-And as surely will it be the rebellious and disaffected who accomplish
-the miracle, if it is ever accomplished. Because at
-bottom their revolt, unlike the aggressions of the standardizers,
-is founded not on hate of what they cannot understand, but
-on love of what they wish all to share.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Harold E. Stearns</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_151" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="SCIENCE">SCIENCE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> scientific work of our countrymen has probably
-evoked less scepticism on the part of foreign judges than
-their achievements in other departments of cultural activity.
-There is one obvious reason for this difference. When our
-letters, our art, our music are criticized with disdainfully faint
-commendation, it is because they have failed to attain the
-higher reaches of creative effort. Supreme accomplishment in
-art certainly presupposes a graduated series of lesser strivings,
-yet from what might be called the consumer’s angle, mediocrity
-is worthless and incapable of giving inspiration to genius. But
-in science it is otherwise. Here every bit of sound work—however
-commonplace—counts as a contribution to the stock
-of knowledge; and, what is more, on labours of this lesser order
-the superior mind is frequently dependent for its own
-syntheses. A combination of intelligence, technical efficiency,
-and application may not by itself suffice to read the riddles
-of the universe; but, to change the metaphor, it may well provide
-the foundation for the epoch-makers’ structure. So while
-it is derogatory to American literature to be considered a mere
-reflection of English letters, it is no reflection on American
-scientists that they have gone to Europe to acquire that craftsmanship
-which is an indispensable prerequisite to fruitful
-research. And when we find Alexander von Humboldt praising
-in conversation with Silliman the geographical results of Maury
-and Frémont, there is no reason to suspect him of perfunctory
-politeness to a transatlantic visitor; the veteran scholar might
-well rejoice in the ever widening application of methods he
-had himself aided in perfecting.</p>
-
-<p>Thus even seventy years ago and more the United States had
-by honest, painstaking labour made worthwhile additions to
-human knowledge and these contributions have naturally multiplied
-a hundredfold with the lapse of years. Yet it would be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span>
-quite misleading to make it appear as if the total represented
-merely a vast accumulation of uninspired routine jobs. Some
-years ago, to be sure, an American writer rather sensationally
-voiced his discontent with the paucity of celebrated <em>savants</em>
-among our countrymen. But he forgot that in science fame
-is a very inadequate index of merit. The precise contribution
-made by one man’s individual ability is one of the most tantalizingly
-difficult things to determine—so much so that scholars
-are still debating in what measure Galileo’s predecessors
-paved the way for his discoveries in dynamics. For a layman,
-then, to appraise the relative significance of this or that intellectual
-worthy on the basis of current gossip is rather absurd.
-Certainly the lack of a popular reputation is a poor reason
-for denying greatness to a contemporary or even near-contemporary
-scientific thinker. Two remarkable instances at once
-come to mind of Americans who have won the highest distinction
-abroad yet remain unknown by name to many of their
-most cultivated compatriots. Who has ever heard of Willard
-Gibbs? Yet he was the recipient of the Copley medal, British
-learning’s highest honour, and his phase rule is said to mark an
-epoch in the progress of physical chemistry. Again, prior to
-the Nobel prize award, who outside academic bowers had ever
-heard of the crucial experiment by which a Chicago physicist
-showed, to quote Poincaré, “that the physical procedures are
-powerless to put in evidence absolute motion”? Michelson’s
-name is linked with all the recent speculations on relativity,
-and he shares with Einstein the fate of finding himself famous
-one fine morning through the force of purely external circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>In even the briefest and most random enumeration of towering
-native sons it is impossible to ignore the name of William
-James. Here for once the suffrage of town and gown, of domestic
-and alien judges, is unanimous. Naturally James can
-never mean quite the same to the European world that he
-means to us, because in the United States he is far more than a
-great psychologist, philosopher, or literary man. Owing to our
-peculiar spiritual history, he occupies in our milieu an altogether
-unique position. His is the solitary example of an
-American pre-eminent in a branch of science who at the same<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span>
-time succeeded in deeply affecting the cultural life of a whole
-generation. Further, he is probably the only one of our genuinely
-original men to be thoroughly saturated with the essense
-of old world civilization. On the other side of the Atlantic,
-of course, neither of these characteristics would confer
-a patent of distinction. Foreign judgment of James’s psychological
-achievement was consequently not coloured by external
-considerations, and it is all the more remarkable that
-the “Principles of Psychology” was so widely and by
-such competent critics acclaimed as a synthesis of the first
-order.</p>
-
-<p>Without attempting to exhaust the roster of great names, I
-must mention Simon Newcomb and his fellow-astronomer,
-George W. Hill, both Copley medallists. Newcomb, in particular,
-stood out as the foremost representative of his science
-in this country, honoured here and abroad alike for his abstruse
-original researches into the motion of the moon and
-the planetary system and for his effective popularization.
-Henry Augustus Rowland, the physicist, was another of our
-outstanding men—one, incidentally, whose measure was taken
-in Europe long before his greatness dawned upon his colleagues
-at home. He is celebrated, among other things, for
-perfecting an instrument of precision and for a new and more
-accurate determination of the mechanical equivalent of heat.
-Among geologists Grove Karl Gilbert, famous for his exploration
-of Lake Bonneville—the major forerunner of Great Salt
-Lake—and his investigations of mountain structure, stands
-forth as one of our pre-eminent savants. Even those who, like
-the present writer, enjoyed merely casual contact with that
-grand old man could not fail to gain the impression that now
-they knew what a great scientist looked like in the flesh and to
-feel that such a one would be a fit member of any intellectual
-galaxy anywhere.</p>
-
-<p>If from single individuals we turn to consider currents of
-scientific thought, the United States again stands the trial with
-flying colours. It can hardly be denied that in a number
-of branches our countrymen are marching in the vanguard.
-“Experimental biology,” said a German zoologist some time
-before the War, “is pre-eminently an American science.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</span>
-Certainly one need merely glance at German or British manuals
-to learn how deeply interpretations of basic evolutionary
-phenomena have been affected by the work of Professor T.
-H. Morgan and his followers. In psychology it is true that no
-one wears the mantle of William James, but there is effective
-advancement along a number of distinct lines. Thorndike’s
-tests marked an era in the annals of animal psychology, supplanting
-with a saner technique the slovenly work of earlier
-investigators. Experimental investigation of mental phenomena
-generally, of individual variability and behaviour in particular,
-flourishes in a number of academic centres. In anthropology
-the writings of Lewis H. Morgan have proved a
-tremendous stimulus to sociological speculation the world over
-and still retain their hold on many European thinkers. They
-were not, in my opinion, the product of a great intellect and
-the scheme of evolution traced by Morgan is doomed to abandonment.
-Yet his theories have suggested a vast amount of
-thought and to his lasting credit it must be said that he opened
-up an entirely new and fruitful field of recondite research
-through his painstaking accumulation and discussion of primitive
-kinship terminologies.</p>
-
-<p>More recently the anthropological school headed by Professor
-Boas has led to a transvaluation of theoretical values in
-the study of cultural development, supplanting with a sounder
-historical insight the cruder evolutionary speculation of the
-past. Above all, its founder has succeeded in perfecting the
-methodology of every division of the vast subject, and remains
-probably the only anthropologist in the world who has both
-directly and indirectly furthered ethnological, linguistic, somatological
-and archæological investigation. Finally, the active
-part played by pathologists like Dr. Simon Flexner in the experimental
-study of disease is too well known to require more
-than brief mention.</p>
-
-<p>Either in its individual or collective results, American research
-is thus very far from being a negligible factor in the
-scientific life of the world. Nevertheless, the medal has a reverse
-side, and he would be a bold optimist who should sincerely
-voice complete contentment either with the status of
-science in the cultural polity of the nation or with the work<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</span>
-achieved by the average American investigator. Let us, then,
-try to face the less flattering facts in the case.</p>
-
-<p>The fundamental difficulty can be briefly summarized by
-applying the sociologist’s concept of maladjustment. American
-science, notwithstanding its notable achievements, is not an organic
-product of our soil; it is an epiphenomenon, a hothouse
-growth. It is still the prerogative of a caste, not a treasure in
-which the nation glories. We have at best only a nascent class
-of cultivated laymen who relish scientific books requiring concentrated
-thought or supplying large bodies of fact. This is
-shown most clearly by the rarity of articles of this type even
-in our serious magazines. Our physicians, lawyers, clergymen
-and journalists—in short, our educated classes—do not
-encourage the publication of reading-matter which is issued in
-Europe as a profitable business venture. It is hard to conceive
-of a book like Mach’s “Analyse der Empfindungen”
-running through eight editions in the United States. Conversely,
-it is not strange that hardly any of our first-rate men
-find it an alluring task to seek an understanding with a larger
-audience. Newcomb and James are of course remarkable exceptions,
-but they <em>are</em> exceptions. Here again the contrast
-with European conditions is glaring. Not to mention the
-classic popularizers of the past, England, e.g., can boast even
-to-day of such men as Pearson, Soddy, Joly, Hinks—all of
-them competent or even distinguished in their professional
-work yet at the same time skilful interpreters of their field to
-a wider public. But for a healthy cultural life a rapport of
-this sort between creator and appreciator is an indispensable
-prerequisite, and it is not a whit less important in science than
-in music or poetry.</p>
-
-<p>The estrangement of science from its social environment has
-produced anomalies almost inconceivable in the riper civilizations
-of the Old World. Either the scientist loses contact with
-his surroundings or in the struggle for survival he adapts himself
-by a surrender of his individuality, that is, by more or less
-disingenuously parading as a lowbrow and representing himself
-as a dispenser of worldly goods. It is quite true that, historically,
-empirical knowledge linked with practical needs is
-earlier than rational science; it is also true that applied and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">156</span>
-pure science can be and have been mutual benefactors. This
-lesson is an important one and in a country with a scholastic
-tradition like Germany it was one that men like Mach and Ostwald
-did well to emphasize. But in an age and country where
-philosophers pique themselves on ignoring philosophical problems
-and psychologists have become experts in advertising technique,
-the emphasis ought surely to be in quite the opposite
-direction, and that, even if one inclines in general to a utilitarian
-point of view. For nothing is more certain than that a
-penny-wise Gradgrind policy is a pound-foolish one. A friend
-teaching in one of our engineering colleges tells me that owing
-to the “practical” training received there the graduates are
-indeed able to apply formulæ by rote but flounder helplessly
-when confronted by a new situation, which drives them to seek
-counsel with the despised and underpaid “theoretical” professor.
-The plea for pure science offered by Rowland in 1883
-is not yet altogether antiquated in 1921: “To have the applications
-of a science, the science itself must exist ... we have
-taken the science of the Old World, and applied it to all our
-uses, accepting it like the rain of heaven, without asking whence
-it came, or even acknowledging the debt of gratitude we owe
-to the great and unselfish workers who have given it to us....
-To a civilized nation of the present day, the applications of
-science are a necessity, and our country has hitherto succeeded
-in this line, only for the reason that there are certain countries
-in the world where pure science has been and is cultivated, and
-where the study of nature is considered a noble pursuit.”</p>
-
-<p>The Bœotian disdain for research as a desirable pursuit is
-naturally reflected in the mediocre encouragement doled out
-to investigators, who are obliged to do their work by hook or
-by crook and to raise funds by the undignified cajolery of
-wealthy patrons and a disingenuous <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">argumentum ad hominem</i>.
-Heaven forbid that money be appropriated to attack a problem
-which, in the opinion of the best experts, calls for solution;
-effort must rather be diverted to please an ignorant benefactor
-bent on establishing a pet theory or fired with the zeal to
-astound the world by a sensational discovery.</p>
-
-<p>Another aspect of scientific life in the United States that
-reflects the general cultural conditions is the stress placed on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span>
-organization and administration as opposed to individual effort.
-It is quite true that for the prosecution of elaborate investigations
-careful allotment of individual tasks contributory
-to the general end is important and sometimes even indispensable.
-But some of the greatest work in the history of science
-has been achieved without regard for the principles of business
-efficiency; and whatever advantage may accrue in the future
-from administrative devices is negligible in comparison with
-the creative thought of scientific men. These, and only these,
-can lend value to the machinery of organization, which independently
-of them must remain a soulless instrument. The
-overweighting of efficiency schemes as compared to creative
-personalities is only a symptom of a general maladjustment.
-Intimately related with this feature is that cynical flouting of
-intellectual values that appears in the customary attitude of
-trustees and university presidents towards those who shed
-lustre on our academic life. The professional pre-eminence
-of a scientist may be admitted by the administrative officials
-but it is regarded as irrelevant since the standard of values accepted
-by them is only remotely, if at all, connected with originality
-or learning.</p>
-
-<p>There are, of course, scientists to whom deference is paid
-even by trustees, nay, by the wives of trustees; but it will be
-usually found that they are men of independent means or social
-prestige. It is, in other words, their wealth and position, not
-their creative work, that raises them above their fellows. One
-of the most lamentable results of this contempt for higher
-values is the failure to provide for ample leisure that might be
-devoted to research. The majority of our scientists, like those
-abroad, gain a livelihood by teaching, but few foreign observers
-fail to be shocked by the way the energies of their
-American colleagues are frittered away on administrative
-routine and elementary instruction till neither time nor strength
-remains for the advancement of knowledge. But even this does
-not tell the whole story, for we must remember that the
-younger scientists are as a rule miserably underpaid and are
-obliged to eke out a living by popular writing or lecturing, so
-that research becomes a sheer impossibility. If Ostwald and
-Cattell are right in associating the highest productivity with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span>
-the earlier years of maturity, the tragic effects of such conditions
-as I have just described are manifest.</p>
-
-<p>In justice, however, mention must be made of a number of
-institutions permitting scientific work without imposing any
-obligation to teach or onerous administrative duties. The U.
-S. Geological Survey, the Carnegie Institution, the Rockefeller
-Institute may serve as examples. We must likewise remember
-that different individuals react quite differently to the necessity
-for teaching. Some of the most noted investigators—Rowland,
-for instance—find a moderate amount of lecturing positively
-stimulating. In a utopian republic of learning such individual
-variations would be carefully considered in the allotment
-of tasks. The association of the Lick Observatory with
-the University of California seems to approximate to ideal conditions,
-inasmuch as its highly trained astronomers are relieved
-of all academic duties but enjoy the privilege of lecturing to
-the students when the spirit moves them.</p>
-
-<p>To return to the main question, the maladjustment between
-the specific scientific phase of our civilization and the general
-cultural life produces certain effects even more serious than
-those due to penury, administrative tyranny, and popular indifference,
-for they are less potent and do not so readily evoke
-defence-mechanisms on the victims’ part. There is, first of
-all, a curtailment of potential scientific achievement through
-the general deficiencies of the cultural environment.</p>
-
-<p>Much has been said by both propagandists and detractors
-of German scholarship about the effects of intensive specialization.
-But an important feature commonly ignored in this connection
-is that in the country of its origin specialization is a
-concomitant and successor of a liberal education. Whatever
-strictures may be levelled at the traditional form of this preparatory
-training—and I have seen it criticized as severely by
-German writers as by any—the fact remains that the German
-university student has a broad cultural background such as his
-American counterpart too frequently lacks; and what is true
-of Germany holds with minor qualifications for other European
-countries.</p>
-
-<p>A trivial example will serve to illustrate the possible advantages
-of a cultural foundation for very specialized research.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span>
-Music is notoriously one of the salient features of German
-culture, not merely because Germany has produced great composers
-but because of the wide appreciation and quite general
-study of music. Artistically the knowledge of the piano or
-violin acquired by the average child in the typical German
-home may count for naught, yet in at least two branches of
-inquiry it may assume importance. The psychological aspect
-of acoustics is likely to attract and to be fruitfully cultivated
-by those conversant with musical technique, and they alone
-will be capable of grappling with the comparative problems
-presented by the study of primitive music—problems that
-would never occur to the average Anglo-Saxon field ethnologist,
-yet to which the German would apply his knowledge as spontaneously
-as he applies the multiplication table to a practical
-matter of everyday purchase.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, all the phenomena of the universe are
-interrelated and, accordingly, the most important advances may
-be expected from a revelation of the less patent connections.
-For this purpose a diversity of interests with corresponding
-variety of information may be not only a favourable condition
-but a prerequisite. Helmholtz may have made an indifferent
-physician; but because he combined a medical practitioner’s
-knowledge with that of a physicist he was enabled to devise the
-ophthalmoscope. So it may be that not one out of ten thousand
-men who might apply themselves to higher mathematics
-would ever be able to advance mathematical theory, but it is
-certainly true that the manipulatory skill acquired would stand
-them in good stead not only in the exact sciences but in biology,
-psychology, and anthropometry, in all of which the theory of
-probability can be effectively applied to the phenomenon of
-variability.</p>
-
-<p>I do not mean to assert that the average European student
-is an Admirable Crichton utilizing with multidexterity the most
-diverse methods of research and groups of fact. But I am
-convinced that many European workers produce more valuable
-work than equally able Americans for the sole reason that
-the European’s social heritage provides him with agencies
-ready-made for detecting correlations that must inevitably
-elude a vision narrower because deprived of the same artificial<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span>
-aid. The remedy lies in enriching the cultural atmosphere and
-in insisting on a broad educational training over and above
-that devoted to the specialist’s craftsmanship.</p>
-
-<p>Important, however, as variety of information and interests
-doubtless are, one factor must take precedence in the scientist’s
-equipment—the spirit in which he approaches his scientific
-work as a whole. In this respect the point that would probably
-strike most European or, at all events, Continental scientists
-is the rarity in America of philosophical inquiries into
-the foundations of one’s scientific position. The contrast with
-German culture is of course sharp, and in many Teutonic
-works the national bent for epistemological discussion is undoubtedly
-carried to a point where it ceases to be palatable to
-those not to the manner born. Yet this tendency has a salutary
-effect in stimulating that contempt for mere authority
-which is indispensable for scientific progress. What our average
-American student should acquire above all is a stout faith
-in the virtues of <em>reasoned nonconformism</em>, and in this phrase
-adjective and noun are equally significant. On one hand, we
-must condemn the blind deference with which too many of
-our investigators accept the judgments of acknowledged greatness.
-What can be more ridiculous, e.g., than to make dogmas
-of the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">obiter dicta</i> of a man like William James, the chief
-lesson of whose life is a resentment of academic traditionalism?
-Or, what shall we think of a celebrated biologist who decides
-the problem of Lamarckianism by a careful weighing not of
-arguments but of authorities? No one can approve of the
-grim ferocity, reminiscent of the literary feuds of Alexander
-Pope, with which German savants sometimes debate problems
-of theoretic interest. Yet even such billingsgate as Dührring
-levelled at Helmholtz is preferable to obsequious discipleship.
-It testifies, at all events, to the glorious belief that in the
-republic of learning fame and position count for naught, that
-the most illustrious scientist shall not be free from the criticism
-of the meanest <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Privatdozent</i>, But the nonconformism should
-be rational. It is infantile to cling to leading-strings but it is
-no less childish to thrust out one’s tongue at doctrines that
-happen to disagree with those of one’s own clique. Indeed,
-frequently both forms of puerility are combined: it is easy to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span>
-sneer with James at Wundt or to assault the selectionists under
-cover of De Vries’s mutationism. A mature thinker will forego
-the short and easy but misleading road. Following Fechner,
-he will be cautious in his belief but equally cautious in his disbelief.</p>
-
-<p>It is only such spiritual freedom that makes the insistence
-on academic freedom a matter worth fighting for. After all,
-what is the use of a man’s teaching what he pleases, if he quite
-sincerely retails the current folk-lore? In one of the most remarkable
-chapters of the “Mechanik” Ernst Mach points out
-that the detriment to natural philosophy due to the political
-power of the Church is easily exaggerated. Science was retarded
-primarily not because scientists were driven by outward
-compulsion to spread such and such views but because they uncritically
-swallowed the cud of folk-belief. <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Voilà l’ennemi!</i>
-In the insidious influence of group opinions, whether countenanced
-by Church, State or a scientific hierarchy, lies the basic
-peril. The philosophic habit of unremitting criticism of one’s
-basic assumptions is naturally repugnant to a young and naïve
-culture, and it cannot be expected to spring up spontaneously
-and flower luxuriantly in science while other departments of
-life fail to yield it nurture. Every phase of our civilization
-must be saturated with that spirit of positive scepticism which
-Goethe and Huxley taught before science can reap a full harvest
-in her own field. But her votaries, looking back upon
-the history of science, may well be emboldened to lead in the
-battle, and if the pioneers in the movement should fail they
-may well console themselves with Milton’s hero: “... and
-that strife was not inglorious, though the event was dire!”</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Robert H. Lowie</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_163" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="PHILOSOPHY">PHILOSOPHY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Philosophy</span> is at once a product of civilization and a
-stimulus to its development. It is the solvent in which
-the inarticulate and conflicting aspirations of a people become
-clarified and from which they derive directing force. Since,
-however, philosophers are likely to clothe their thoughts in
-highly technical language, there is need of a class of middle-men-interpreters
-through whom philosophy penetrates the
-masses. By American tradition, the philosophers have been
-professors; the interpreters, clergymen. Professors are likely
-to be deflected by the ideas embodied in the institutions with
-which they associate themselves. The American college, in its
-foundations, was designated a protector of orthodoxy and still
-echoes what Santayana has so aptly called the “genteel tradition,”
-the tradition that the teacher must defend the faith.
-Some of the most liberal New England colleges even now demand
-attendance at daily chapel and Sunday church. Less
-than a quarter of a century ago, one could still find, among
-major non-sectarian institutions, the clergyman-president, himself
-a teacher, crowning the curriculum with a senior requirement,
-Christian Evidences, in support of the Faith.</p>
-
-<p>The nineteenth century organized a vigorous war against this
-genteel tradition. Not only were the attacks of rationalism
-on dogma reinforced by the ever-mounting tide of scientific
-discovery within our institutions of learning, but also the news
-of these scientific discoveries began to stir the imagination of
-the public, and to carry the conflict of science and theology
-beyond the control of the church-college. The greatest leaven
-was Darwin’s “Origin of Species,” of which two American
-editions were announced as early as 1860, one year after its
-publication in England. The dogma of science came publicly
-to confront the dogma of theology. Howsoever conservative
-the college, it had to yield to the new intellectual temper and
-the capitulation was facilitated by the army of young professors<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">164</span>
-whom cheapened transportation and the rumour of
-great achievements led to the universities of Germany.</p>
-
-<p>From the point of view of popular interest, the immediate
-effects of these pilgrimages were not wholly advantageous to
-philosophy. In losing something of their American provincialism,
-these pilgrims also lost their hold on American interests.
-The problems that they brought back were rooted in a
-foreign soil and tradition. To students they appeared artificial
-and barren displays of technical skill. Thus an academic
-philosophy of professordom arose, the more lonely through the
-loss of the ecclesiastical mediators of the earlier tradition.
-But here and there American vitality showed through its foreign
-clothes and gradually an assimilation took place, the more
-easily, perhaps, since German idealism naturally sustains the
-genteel tradition and thrives amid the modes of thought that
-Emerson had developed independently and for which his literary
-gifts had obtained a following.</p>
-
-<p>Wherever New England has constituted the skeletal muscles
-of philosophic culture, its temper has remained unchanged.
-Calvinism was brought to America because it suited this temper,
-and the history of idealism in America is the history of
-its preservation by adaptation to a changing environment of
-ideas. Its marks are a sense of the presence of the Divine in
-experience and a no less strong sense of inevitable evil. Jonathan
-Edwards writes, “When we behold the light and brightness
-of the sun, the golden edges of an evening cloud, or the
-beauteous bow, we behold the adumbrations of His glory and
-goodness; and in the blue sky, of his mildness and gentleness.
-There are also many things wherein we may behold His awful
-majesty: in the sun in his strength, in comets, in thunder,
-with the lowering thunder-clouds, in ragged rocks and the
-brows of mountains.” Emerson’s version is: “Nature is always
-consistent, though she feigns to contravene her own
-laws.... She arms and equips an animal to find it place
-and living in the earth, and at the same time she arms and
-equips another animal to destroy it. Space exists to divide
-creatures; but by clothing the sides of a bird with a few
-feathers she gives him a petty omnipresence.... Nature is
-the incarnation of a thought, and turns to a thought again, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span>
-ice becomes water and gas. Every moment instructs and
-every object; for wisdom is infused into every form.” And
-Royce’s: “When they told us in childhood that we could not
-see God just <em>because</em> he was everywhere, just because his
-omnipresence gave us no chance to discern him and to fix our
-eyes upon him, they told us a deep truth in allegorical fashion....
-The Self is so little a thing merely guessed at as the
-unknown source of experience, that already, in the very least
-of daily experiences, you unconsciously know him as something
-present.”</p>
-
-<p>In its darker aspect this temper gives us Edwards’s “Sinners
-in the Hands of an Angry God,” whose choices we may
-not fathom. But Emerson is not far behind: “Great men,
-great nations, have not been boasters and buffoons, but perceivers
-of the terror of life, and have manned themselves to
-face it.... At Lisbon, an earthquake killed men like flies.
-At Naples, three years ago, ten thousand persons were crushed
-in a few minutes. Etc.... Providence has a wild, rough,
-incalculable road to its end, and it is of no use to try to whitewash
-its huge, mixed instrumentalities, or to dress up that terrific
-benefactor in the clean shirt and white neckcloth of a student
-of divinity.” For Royce, “the worst tragedy of the
-world is the tragedy of the brute chance to which everything
-spiritual seems to be subject amongst us—the tragedy of the
-diabolical irrationality of so many among the foes of whatever
-is significant.”</p>
-
-<p>Emersonian philosophy fails in two respects to satisfy the
-demands of the puritanical temperament upon contemporary
-thought. In building altars to the “Beautiful Necessity,”
-it neglects to assimilate the discoveries of science, and it detaches
-itself from the Christian tradition within which alone
-this spirit feels at home. Both of these defects are met by the
-greatest of American idealists, Professor Royce.</p>
-
-<p>In character and thought Royce is the great reconciler of
-contradictions. Irrational in his affections, and at his best
-in the society of children, he stands for the absolute authority
-of reason; filled with indignation at wrong and injustice, he
-explains the presence of evil as an essential condition for the
-good; keenly critical and not optimistic as to the concrete characters<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span>
-of men, he presents man as the image of God, a part of
-the self-representative system through which the Divine nature
-unfolds itself. Never was there a better illustration of
-Pascal’s dictum that we use our reasons to support what we
-already believe, not to attain conclusions. And never was
-there greater self-deception as to the presence of this
-process.</p>
-
-<p>What man not already convinced of an Absolute could find
-in error the proof of a deeper self that knows in unity all truth?
-Who else could accept the dilemma “<em>either</em> ... your real
-world yonder is through and through a world of ideas, an outer
-mind that you are more or less comprehending through your
-experience, <em>or else</em>, in so far as it is real and outer, it is unknowable,
-an inscrutable X, an absolute mystery”? Without
-the congeniality of belief, where is the thrill in assimilating
-self-consciousness as infinite to a greater Infinite, as the infinite
-systems of even numbers, or of odd numbers, or an infinity
-of other infinite series can be assimilated to the greater
-infinity of the whole number series as proper parts? Yet
-Royce has been able to clothe these doctrines with vast erudition
-and flashes of quaint humour, helped out by a prolix and
-somewhat desultory memory, and give them life.</p>
-
-<p>By virtue of the obscurantist logic inherent in this as in
-other transcendental idealisms, there is a genuine attachment
-to a certain aspect of Christianity. The identification of the
-Absolute with the Logos of John in his “Spirit of Modern
-Philosophy” and the frequent lapses into Scriptural language
-are not mere tricks to inspire abstractions with the breath of
-life. By such logic “selves” are never wholly distinct. If
-we make classifications, they are all <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">secundum quid</i>. Absolute
-ontological sundering is as mythical as the Snark. The
-individual is essentially a member of a community of selves
-that establishes duties for him under the demands of Loyalty.
-This is the basis of Royce’s ethics. But the fellowship in
-this community is also a participation in the “beloved community”
-within which sin, atonement, and the dogma of
-Pauline Christianity unfold themselves naturally in the guise
-of social psychology. In such treatment of the “Problem
-of Christianity” there is at most only a slight shifting of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span>
-emphasis from the somewhat too self-conscious individualism
-of his earliest philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>Royce used to tell a story on himself that illustrates a reaction
-of a part of the public to idealistic philosophy. At
-the close of a lecture before a certain woman’s organization,
-one of his auditors approached him with the words: “Oh, my
-dear Professor Royce, I <em>did</em> enjoy your lectures <em>so</em> much! Of
-course, I didn’t understand one word of it, but it was so evident
-<em>you</em> understood it all, that it made it <em>very</em> enjoyable!”
-The lady, though more frank in her confession, was probably
-not intellectually inferior to a considerable portion of the idealist’s
-public. James notes the fascination of hearing high things
-talked about, even if one cannot understand. But time is,
-alas, productive of comparative understanding, and it may be
-with Royce, as with Emerson before him, that growth of understanding
-contributes to narrowing the circle of his readers.
-The imported mysteries of Eucken and Bergson offer newer
-thrills, and a fuller sense of keeping up to date.</p>
-
-<p>If Royce’s philosophy of religion has not the success that
-might have been anticipated among those seeking a freer religion,
-it is probably, as Professor Hocking suggests, because
-“idealism does not do the work of religious truth.” Royce
-has no interest in churches or sects. Christ is for him little
-more than a shadow. Prayer and worship find no place in
-his discussion. The mantle of the genteel tradition must then
-fall on other shoulders, probably those of Hocking himself.
-His “Meaning of God in Human Experience” is an effort to
-unite realism, mysticism, and idealism to establish Christianity
-as “organically rooted in passion, fact, and institutional life.”
-Where idealism has destroyed the fear of Hell, this new interpretation
-“restores the sense of infinite hazard, a wrath to
-come, a heavenly city to be gained or lost in the process of time
-and by the use of our freedom”!</p>
-
-<p>In this philosophy, we ask, what has religion done for humanity
-and how has it operated? Its effects appear in “the
-basis of such certainties as we have, our self-respect, our belief
-in human worth, our faith in the soul’s stability through all
-catastrophes of physical nature, and in the integrity of history.”
-But if we accept this “mass of actual deed, once and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span>
-for all accomplished under the assurance of historic religion”
-and through the medium of religious dogma and practice, does
-this guarantee the future importance of religion? Much has
-been accomplished under the conception that the earth was
-flat, but the conception is nevertheless not valid.</p>
-
-<p>It is too soon to estimate the depth of impression that this
-philosophy will make on American culture. Professor Hocking
-warns us against hastening to judge that the world is
-becoming irreligious. He believes that the current distaste
-for the language of orthodoxy may spring from the opposite
-reason, that man is becoming potentially more religious. If
-so, this fact may conspire with the American tradition of the
-church-college to verify Professor Cohen’s assertion that “the
-idealistic tradition still is and perhaps will long continue to be
-the prevailing basis of philosophic instruction in America.”
-But there are signs that point to an opposite conclusion and
-the means of emancipation are at hand both in a change of
-popular spirit and within philosophy itself.</p>
-
-<p>The economic and social conditions that scattered the more
-adventurous of the New Englanders through the developing
-West, and the tides of immigration of the 19th century, have
-weakened the hold of the Calvinistic spirit. These events, and
-scientific education, are producing a generation that can look
-upon the beauties of nature, be moved to enjoyment, admiration,
-and wonder by them without, on that account, feeling
-themselves in the presence of a supernatural Divine principle.
-Success in mastering nature has overcome the feeling of helplessness
-in the presence of misfortune. It breeds optimists of
-intelligence. To a cataclysm such as the San Francisco earthquake,
-it replies with organized relief and reconstruction in
-reinforced concrete. If pestilence appears, it seeks the germ,
-an antitoxin, and sanitary measures. There are no longer
-altars built to the Beautiful Necessity.</p>
-
-<p>Within philosophy, the most radical expression of this attitude
-appears in the New Realism, and in the instrumentalism of
-Dewey. In 1910, six of the younger American philosophers
-issued in the <cite>Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific
-Method</cite> “The Programme and First Platform of Six
-Realists,” followed shortly by a co-operative volume of studies<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span>
-to elaborate the doctrine. Their deepest bond of union is a
-distaste for the romantic spirit and obscurantist logic of Absolute
-Idealism. Hence their dominant idea is to cut at the
-very foundations of this system, the theory of relations in general,
-and the relation of idea and object in particular. Young
-America is not fond of the subtleties of history, hence these
-realists take their stand upon the “unimpeachable truth of
-the accredited results of science” at a time when, by the irony
-of history, science herself has begun to doubt.</p>
-
-<p>To thwart idealism, psychology must be rewritten. While
-consciousness exists there is always the chance that our world
-of facts may fade into subjective presentations. Seizing a
-fruitful suggestion of James’, they introduce us to a world of
-objects that exists quite independently of being known. The
-relations of these objects are external to them and independent
-of their character. Sometimes, however, there arise relations
-between our organisms and other objects that can best be
-described by asserting that these objects have entered into
-our consciousness. How then can we fall into error? Only
-as nature makes mistakes, by reacting in a way that brings
-conflict with unnoted conditions. Perhaps the greatest contribution
-of Realism as yet to American thought is the contribution
-of some of its apostles to its implicit psychology,
-already independently established as behaviourism, the most
-vital movement in contemporary psychology.</p>
-
-<p>The highly technical form of the Six Realists’ co-operative
-volume has kept their doctrine from any great reading public.
-But in its critical echoes, the busy American finds a sympathetic
-note in the assertion of the independent reality of the
-objects with which he works and the world in which he has
-to make his way. His also is practical faith in science, and
-he is glad to escape an inevitable type of religion and moral
-theory to be swallowed along with philosophy. Until the New
-Realists, however, develop further implications of their theory,
-or at least present congenial religious, moral, and social attitudes,
-their philosophy has only the negative significance of
-release. If it is going to take a deep hold on life, it must
-also be creative, not replacing dogma by dogma, but elaborating
-some new world vision. As yet it has told us little<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span>
-more than that truth, goodness, and beauty are independent
-realities, eternal subsistencies that await our discovery.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Perry has outlined a realistic morality. For him
-a right action is any that conduces to goodness and whatever
-fulfils an interest is good. But a good action is not necessarily
-moral. Morality requires the fulfilment of the greatest possible
-number of interests, under the given circumstances; the
-highest good, if attainable, would be an action fulfilling all possible
-interests. This doctrine, though intelligible, is hard to
-apply in specific instances. In it realism dissolves into pragmatism,
-and its significance can best be seen in connection with
-that philosophy, where it has received fuller development and
-concrete applications.</p>
-
-<p>Pragmatism obtained its initial impulse through a mind in
-temper between the sturdy common sense of the New Realists
-and the emotionalistic romanticism of the Idealists, or rather
-comprehending both within itself. This mind is that of William
-James, the last heir of the line of pure New England culture,
-made cosmopolitan by travel and intellectual contacts.
-Of Swedenborgian family, skilled alike in science and art,
-James lived the mystical thrills of the unknown but could handle
-them with the shrewdness of a Yankee trader. With
-young America, his gaze is directed toward the future, and
-with it, he is impatient of dogma and restraint. He is free
-from conventions of thought and action with the freedom of
-those who have lived them all in their ancestry and dare to face
-realities without fear of social or intellectual <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">faux pas</i>. With
-such new-found freedom goes a vast craving for experience.
-For him, the deepest realities are the personal experiences of
-individual men.</p>
-
-<p>James’ greatest contribution is his “Psychology.” In it he
-places himself in the stream of human experience, ruthlessly
-cutting the gordian knots of psychological dogma and conventions.
-The mind that he reports is the mind each of us sees
-in himself. It is not so much a science of psychology as the
-materials for such a science, a science in its descriptive stage,
-constantly interrupted by shrewd homilies wherein habit appears
-as the fly-wheel of society, or our many selves enlarge
-the scope of sympathetic living. Nor is it congenial to this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span>
-adventurer in experience that his explorations should constrain
-human nature within a scientist’s map. Not only must the
-stream of consciousness flow between the boundaries of our
-concepts, but also in the human will there is a point, be it
-ever so small, where a “we,” too real ever to be comprehended
-by science or philosophy, can dip down into the stream of
-consciousness and delay some fleeting idea, be it only for the
-twinkling of an eye, and thereby change the whole course and
-significance of our overt action. Freedom must not unequivocally
-surrender to scientific determinism, or chance to necessity.</p>
-
-<p>James is a Parsifal to whom the Grail is never quite revealed.
-His pragmatism and radical empiricism are but methods
-of exploration and no adventure is too puny or mean for
-the quest. We must make our ideas clear and test them by the
-revelation they produce. Thoughts that make no difference
-to us in living are not real thoughts, but imaginings. The way
-is always open and perhaps there is a guiding truth, a working
-value, in the operations of even the deranged mind. We
-must entertain the ecstatic visions of saints, the alleged communications
-of spiritualists, mystical contacts with sources of
-some higher power, and even the thought-systems of cranks,
-that nothing be lost or untried. Not that we need share such
-beliefs, but they are genuine experiences and who can foretell
-where in experiences some fruitful vision may arise!</p>
-
-<p>As a psychologist, James knew that the significance of a
-belief lies not so much in its content as in its power to direct
-the energies it releases. His catholic interests are not equivalent
-to uncritical credulity. Santayana, the wisest of his critics,
-is right in his assertion that James never lost his agnosticism:
-“He did not really believe; he merely believed in the right
-of believing that you might be right if you believed.” As for
-Pascal, the wager on immortality might be worth the making
-for if one won there was the blessedness of Heaven, and if one
-lost—at least there should have been a sustaining optimism
-through the trials of this life. Communion with the infinite
-might open new sources of power. If so, the power was there.
-If not, no harm had been done by the trial. Yet there is no
-evidence in James’ philosophy that he himself drew inspiration
-from any of such sources.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span></p>
-
-<p>If James has drawn to himself the greatest reading public
-of all American philosophers, it is because in him each man
-can find the sanction for himself. Without dogmatism or
-pedantry, James is the voice of all individual human experiences.
-In him, each man can find a sympathetic auditor, and
-words vivid with the language of the street, encouraging his
-endeavours or at least pointing out the significance of his experiences
-for the great business of living. Sometimes James
-listens to human confessions with a suppressed cry of pain and
-recalls wistfully “A Certain Blindness in Human Beings,” or
-asks “Is Life Worth Living?” Once with indignation at “the
-delicate intellectualities and subtleties and scrupulosities” of
-philosophy he confronts “the host of guileless thoroughfed
-thinkers” with the radical realities of Morrison I. Swift, only
-to partially retract a few pages later with the admission, for
-him grudgingly given, that the Absolute may afford its believers
-a certain comfort and is “in so far forth” true. We live
-after all in an open universe, the lid is off and time relentlessly
-operates for the production of novelties. No empiricist can
-give a decision until the evidence is all in, and in the nature
-of the case this can never happen.</p>
-
-<p>Such openness of interest forefends the possibility of James’
-founding a school of philosophy. It also renders all his
-younger contemporaries in some measure his disciples. Popularly
-he is the refuge of the mystics and heterodox, the spiritualists
-and the cranks who seek the sanction of academic
-scholarship and certified dignity. There are more things in
-the philosophies of these who call him master than are dreamed
-of in his philosophy. In academic philosophy there is a dual
-descent of the James tradition. As a principle of negative
-criticism, it may be turned into its opposite, as with Hocking,
-who enunciates the extreme form of the pragmatic principle,
-If a theory is not interesting, it is false—and utilizes it for
-his realistic, mystic, idealistic absolutism. The philosophy of
-Henri Bergson, that has been widely read in this country,
-reinforces this mystical spiritual side, but American mysticism
-has popularly tended to degenerate into the occultisms of
-second-rate credulous minds.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span></p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, for those in whom the conflict of science
-and religion is settling itself on the side of science, the principle
-of pragmatism lends itself to the interpretation originally intended
-by Charles Peirce, the author of the term, as an experimentalism,
-a search for verifiable hypotheses after the
-manner of the sciences. But this side of the doctrine is the
-one that has been developed by John Dewey.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Dewey is without question the leading American
-philosopher, both from the thoroughness of his analyses and
-the vigour of his appeal to the American public. In discarding
-the Hegelian Idealism in which he was trained, he is thoroughly
-aligned with the New America. In him science has wholly
-won, and although of New England, Vermont, ancestry, there
-remains not a trace of the New Englander’s romantic spiritual
-longings for contact with a vast unknown. His dogmatic
-faiths, and no man is without such faiths, relate to evolution,
-democracy, and the all-decisive authority of experience.</p>
-
-<p>For Dewey, as for the Realists, psychology is the study of
-human behaviour. For him mind is the instrument by which
-we overcome obstacles and thinking takes place only when
-action is checked. Hence in the conventional sense there are
-no abstractions. Our concepts are instruments by which we
-take hold of reality. If we need instruments to manufacture
-instruments, or to facilitate their use, these instruments are
-also concepts. We may call them abstract, but they are not
-thereby removed from the realm of experienced fact. Since,
-therefore, our real interest is not in things as they are in themselves,
-but in what we can do with them, our judgments are
-judgments of value, and value is determined by practice. Such
-judgments imply an incomplete physical situation and look
-toward its completion. But the will to believe is gone. There
-is no shadow of James’ faith in the practicality of emotional
-satisfactions, or in his voluntaristic psychology. Our “sensations
-are not the elements out of which perceptions are
-composed, constituted, or constructed; they are the finest,
-most carefully discriminated objects of perception.” Early
-critics, particularly among the realists, have accused Dewey
-of subjectivism, but except in the sense that an individual<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span>
-must be recognized as one term in the reaction to a situation,
-and the realists themselves do this, there is no ground for the
-charge.</p>
-
-<p>Such a philosophy as Dewey’s is nothing if it is not put to
-work. And here is his greatest hold on American life. Like
-most Americans, he has no sympathy for the lazy, and even
-the over-reflective may suffer from the contamination of sloth;
-the true American wants to see results, and here is a philosophy
-in which results are the supreme end. Reform is, for America,
-a sort of sport and this philosophy involves nothing but
-reform. Metaphysical subtleties and visions leave the busy
-man cold; here they are taboo.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Dewey puts his philosophy to work in the fields
-of ethics and education. Perhaps his ethics is the least satisfactory,
-howsoever promising its beginnings. Moral codes
-become the expression of group-approval. But they easily
-pass into tradition, get out of touch with fact, are superannuated.
-The highest virtue is intelligence and with intelligence
-one can recognize the uniqueness of every moral situation
-and develop from it its own criteria of judgment. Progress
-in morals consists in raising the general level of intelligence
-and extending the group whose approvals are significant from
-a social class to the nation, a notion of highest appeal to
-Democracy, with its faith in the individual man. But with
-Dewey the limit of group expansion is humanity, and this may
-verge on dangerous (unfortunately) radicalism. Dewey’s
-weapon against conventional ethics is two-edged. For the
-intelligent man perhaps there is no better actual moral standard
-than that springing from intelligent specific judgments,
-but for the uneducated, it is only too easy to identify intelligence
-with sentimental opinion and to let practice degenerate
-into legislative repression.</p>
-
-<p>After all, judgments of practice do face incomplete situations
-and the problem is not only to complete but also to determine
-the manner in which the completion shall be brought
-about. What men transform is not merely the world, but
-themselves, and the ethics is incomplete without some further
-consideration of such questions as what are human natures,
-and what do we want them to become. But perhaps such<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span>
-questions are too dangerously near metaphysics to have appealed
-to Dewey’s powers of analysis. At any rate, the general
-effectiveness of his ethics is weakened by his neglect of
-attention to principles in some sense at least ultimate.</p>
-
-<p>In education Dewey’s philosophy has its most complete
-vitality, for here he is dealing with concrete needs and the
-means of satisfying them. The problem of education is to
-integrate knowledge and life. He finds no joy in information
-for information’s sake. Curiosity may be the gift of the
-child, but it must be utilized to equip the man to hold his own
-in a world of industrialism and democracy. Yet Dewey’s sympathies
-are with spontaneity. He is a Rousseau with a new
-methodology. Connected with the Laboratory School at Chicago
-from 1896 to 1903, he has since followed with sympathetic
-interest all radical experimentation from the methods of
-Madame Montessori to those of the Gary Schools. The vast
-erudition amassed in this field, and his careful and unprejudiced
-study of children, has made him competent above all men to
-speak critically of methods and results.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to education, he has given a fuller consideration
-of the ends to be attained than in the case of ethics. The end
-is seen as continued growth, springing from the existing conditions,
-freeing activity, and flexible in its adaptation to circumstances.
-The educational result is social efficiency and
-culture. This efficiency does not, however, imply accepting
-existing economic conditions as final, and its cultural aspect,
-good citizenship, includes with the more specific positive virtues,
-those characteristics that make a man a good companion.
-Culture is a complete ripening of the personality. “What
-is termed spiritual culture has usually been futile, with something
-rotten about it, just because it has been conceived as a
-thing which a man might have internally—and therefore exclusively.”
-The antithesis between sacrificing oneself for
-others, or others for oneself, is an unreal figment of the imagination,
-a tragic product of certain spiritual and religious
-thinking.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Dewey well understands the dangers that lurk
-behind such terms as <em>social efficiency</em> and <em>good citizenship</em>.
-To him sympathy is much more than a mere feeling: it is, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span>
-he says it should be, “a cultivated imagination for what men
-have in common and a rebellion at whatever unnecessarily
-divides them.” But his very gift of clear vision, his penetration
-of the shams of dogma, economic and social, leads him to treat
-these things with scant respect. In consequence his fellow-philosophers,
-the educators over whom his influence is profound,
-and the public suspect him of radicalism. Only too
-often, to avoid suspicion of themselves, they turn his doctrine
-to the very uses that he condemns: industrial efficiency for
-them becomes identical with business expedience; the school, a
-trade school; culture, a detached æstheticism to be condemned;
-and democracy, the privilege of thinking and acting like everybody
-else.</p>
-
-<p>The greatest weakness of Dewey’s philosophy, and it is
-serious, for Dewey as no other American philosopher grasps
-principles through which American civilization might be transformed
-for the better—lies in its lack of a metaphysics. Not,
-of course, a transcendentalism or a religious mysticism, but
-above all an interpretation of human nature. Emotionality
-represents a phase of the behaviour process too real to deny,
-yet it has no place in Dewey’s philosophy of man. Human
-longings and aspirations are facts as real as the materials of
-industry. Most men remain religious. Must they rest with
-quack mystics or unintelligent dogmatists? What is religion
-giving them that they crave? Is it a form of art, an attitude
-toward the ideal, or some interpretation of the forces of nature
-that they seek to grasp? Professor Dewey is himself a
-lover of art, but what place has art in his philosophy? If
-it is an instrument of education, what end does it serve, and
-how is it to be utilized? The pragmatic ethics gives no guarantee
-that the moral criteria developed by specific situations
-will always be the same even for two men equally intelligent.
-Perhaps, in spite of the paradox, there may be several best
-solutions. If so, this fact has some significance rooted in
-man’s nature and his relations to the world that philosophy
-should disclose. Such supplementation need not change the
-character of the results, but it might forefend them from misinterpretation
-and abuse.</p>
-
-<p>With all its incompleteness, Dewey’s philosophy is undeniably<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span>
-that of the America of to-day. What shall we say of the
-future? No nation in the world has more abused its philosophies
-than ours. The inspirational elements of our idealisms
-have become the panderings of sentimentalists. The vitalizing
-forces of our pragmatisms threaten to congeal into the dogmata
-of cash-success. The war has intensified our national self-satisfaction.
-We tend to condemn all vision as radical, hence
-unsound, hence evil, hence to be put down. Philosophy thrives
-in the atmosphere of the Bacchæ:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“What else is Wisdom? What of man’s endeavour</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Or God’s high grace, so lovely and so great?</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">To stand from fear set free, to breathe and wait;</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">To hold a hand uplifted over Hate;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And shall not loveliness be loved for ever?”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">But what have we now of this atmosphere?</p>
-
-<p>At Christmas-time, the American Philosophical Association
-devoted three sessions to the discussion of the Rôle of the
-Philosopher in Modern Life. From report, opinion was divided
-between those who would have him a social reformer,
-to the exclusion of contemplative background, and those with
-a greater sense of playing safe, who would have him turn to
-history, of any sort, or contemplation quite detached from
-social consequences. Let us hope these opinions are not to
-be taken seriously. Our social reformers are not all like
-Dewey, whose neglect of basic reflection is probably not as
-great as the omission of such reflections from his published
-works would indicate. Nor is an academic chair generally
-suited to the specific contacts with life from which successful
-reforms must be shaped. On the other hand, abstract contemplation
-with the pedagogic reinforcements advocated, will confirm
-the popular American sentiment against reflection, if it is
-true, as Dewey asserts, that education must be an outgrowth
-of existing conditions. Fortunately genius, if such there be
-amongst us, will not submit to the opinions of the American
-Philosophic Association. If philosophy can find freedom, perhaps
-America can yet find philosophy.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Harold Chapman Brown</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_179" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_LITERARY_LIFE">THE LITERARY LIFE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">Among</span> all the figures which, in Mrs. Wharton’s “The Age
-of Innocence,” make up the pallid little social foreground,
-the still more pallid middle distance, of the New York of forty
-years ago, there is none more pallid than the figure of Ned
-Winsett, the “man of letters untimely born in a world that
-had no need of letters.” Winsett, we are told, “had published
-one volume of brief and exquisite literary appreciations,” of
-which one hundred and twenty copies had been sold, and had
-then abandoned his calling and taken an obscure post on a
-women’s weekly. “On the subject of <em>Hearth-fires</em> (as the
-paper was called) he was inexhaustibly entertaining,” says Mrs.
-Wharton; “but beneath his fun lurked the sterile bitterness of
-the still young man who has tried and given up.” Sterile bitterness,
-a bright futility, a beginning without a future: that
-is the story of Ned Winsett.</p>
-
-<p>One feels, as one turns Mrs. Wharton’s pages, how symbolic
-this is of the literary life in America. I shall say nothing
-of the other arts, though the vital conditions of all the arts
-have surely much in common; I shall say nothing of America
-before the Civil War, for the America that New England dominated
-was a different nation from ours. But what immediately
-strikes one, as one surveys the history of our literature during
-the last half century, is the singular impotence of its creative
-spirit. That we have and have always had an abundance of
-talent is, I think, no less evident: what I mean is that so little
-of this talent succeeds in effectuating itself. Of how many
-of our modern writers can it be said that their work reveals
-a continuous growth, or indeed any growth, that they hold their
-ground tenaciously and preserve their sap from one decade to
-another? Where, to speak relatively, the characteristic evolution
-of the European writer is one of an ever-increasing differentiation,
-a progress toward the creation, the possession of a
-world absolutely his own (the world of Shaw, the world of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">180</span>
-Hardy, the world of Hamsun, of Gorky, of Anatole France),
-the American writer, having struck out with his new note,
-becomes—how often!—progressively less and less himself.
-The blighted career, the arrested career, the diverted career
-are, with us, the rule. The chronic state of our literature is
-that of a youthful promise which is never redeemed.</p>
-
-<p>The great writer, the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">grand écrivain</i>, has at the best of times
-appeared but once or twice in America: that is another matter.
-I am speaking, as I say, of the last half century, and I
-am speaking of the rank and file. There are those who will
-deny this characterization of our literature, pointing to what
-they consider the robust and wholesome corpus of our “normal”
-fiction. But this fiction, in its way, precisely corroborates
-my point. What is the quality of the spirit behind it?
-How much does it contain of that creative element the character
-of which consists in dominating life instead of being
-dominated by it? Have these novelists of ours any world of
-their own as distinguished from the world they observe and
-reflect, the world they share with their neighbours? Is it a
-personal vision that informs them, or a mob-vision? The
-Danish writer, Johannes V. Jensen, has described their work
-as “journalism under exceptionally fortunate conditions.”
-Journalism, on the whole, it assuredly is, and the chief of these
-fortunate conditions (fortunate for journalism!) has been the
-general failure of the writers in question to establish and develop
-themselves as individuals; as they have rendered unto
-Cæsar what was intended for God, is it any wonder that Cæsar
-has waxed so fat? “The unfortunate thing,” writes Mr. Montrose
-J. Moses, “is that the American drama”—but the observation
-is equally true of this fiction of ours—“has had many
-brilliant promises which have finally thinned out and never
-materialized.” And again: “The American dramatist has
-always taken his logic second-hand; he has always allowed his
-theatrical sense to be a slave to managerial circumstance.” The
-two statements are complementary, and they apply, as I say, to
-the whole of this “normal” literature of ours. Managerial
-circumstance? Let us call it local patriotism, the spirit of the
-times, the hunger of the public for this, that, or the other:
-to some one of these demands, these promptings from without,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span>
-the “normal” American writer always allows himself to become
-a slave. It is the fact, indeed, of his being a slave to
-some demand from without that makes him “normal”—and
-something else than an artist.</p>
-
-<p>The flourishing exterior of the main body of our contemporary
-literature, in short, represents anything but the integrity
-of an inner well-being. But even aside from this, one can
-count on one’s two hands the American writers who are able
-to carry on the development and unfolding of their individualities,
-year in, year out, as every competent man of affairs
-carries on his business. What fate overtakes the rest? Shall
-I begin to run over some of those names, familiar to us all,
-names that have signified so much promise and are lost in what
-Gautier calls “the limbo where moan (in the company of
-babes) still-born vocations, abortive attempts, larvæ of ideas
-that have won neither wings nor shapes”? Shall I mention
-the writers—but they are countless!—who have lapsed into
-silence, or have involved themselves in barren eccentricities,
-or have been turned into machines? The poets who, at the
-very outset of their careers, find themselves extinguished like
-so many candles? The novelists who have been unable to
-grow up, and remain withered boys of seventeen? The critics
-who find themselves overtaken in mid-career by a hardening
-of the spiritual arteries? Our writers all but universally lack
-the power of growth, the endurance that enables one to continue
-to produce personal work after the freshness of youth
-has gone. Weeds and wild flowers! Weeds without beauty
-or fragrance, and wild flowers that cannot survive the heat of
-the day.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the aspect of our contemporary literature; beside
-that of almost any European country, it is indeed one long list
-of spiritual casualties. For it is not that the talent is wanting,
-but that somehow this talent fails to fulfil itself.</p>
-
-<p>This being so, how much one would like to assume, with
-certain of our critics, that the American writer is a sort of
-Samson bound with the brass fetters of the Philistines and
-requiring only to have those fetters cast off in order to be able
-to conquer the world! That, as I understand it, is the position
-of Mr. Dreiser, who recently remarked of certain of our novelists:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span>
-“They succeeded in writing but one book before the
-iron hand of convention took hold of them.” There is this
-to be said for the argument, that if the American writer as a
-type shows less resistance than the European writer it is plainly
-because he has been insufficiently equipped, stimulated, nourished
-by the society into which he has been born. In this sense
-the American environment is answerable for the literature it
-has produced. But what is significant is that the American
-writer <em>does</em> show less resistance; as literature is nothing but the
-expression of power, of the creative will, of “free will,” in
-short, is it not more accurate to say, not that the “iron hand
-of convention” takes hold of our writers, but that our writers
-yield to the “iron hand of convention”? Samson had lost his
-virility before the Philistines bound him; it was because he
-had lost his virility that the Philistines were able to bind him.
-The American writer who “goes wrong” is in a similar case.
-“I have read,” says Mr. Dreiser, of Jack London, “several
-short stories which proved what he could do. But he did not
-feel that he cared for want and public indifference. Hence his
-many excellent romances.” <em>He did not feel that he cared for
-want and public indifference.</em> Even Mr. Dreiser, as we observe,
-determinist that he is, admits a margin of free will,
-for he represents Jack London as having made a choice. What
-concerns us now, however, is not a theoretical but a practical
-question, the fact, namely, that the American writer as a rule
-is actuated not by faith but by fear, that he cannot meet the
-obstacles of “want and public indifference” as the European
-writer meets them, that he is, indeed, and as if by nature, a
-journeyman and a hireling.</p>
-
-<p>As we see, then, the creative will in this country is a very
-weak and sickly plant. Of the innumerable talents that are
-always emerging about us there are few that come to any sort
-of fruition: the rest wither early; they are transformed into
-those neuroses that flourish on our soil as orchids flourish in
-the green jungle. The sense of this failure is written all over
-our literature. Do we not know what depths of disappointment
-underlay the cynicism of Mark Twain and Henry Adams
-and Ambrose Bierce? Have we failed to recognize, in the
-surly contempt with which the author of “The Story of a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span>
-Country Town” habitually speaks of writers and writing, the
-unconscious cry of sour grapes of a man whose creative life
-was arrested in youth? Are we unaware of the bitterness with
-which, in certain letters of his later years, Jack London
-regretted the miscarriage of his gift? There is no denying
-that for half a century the American writer as a type has gone
-down in defeat.</p>
-
-<p>Now why is this so? Why does the American writer, relatively
-speaking, show less resistance than the European writer?
-Plainly, as I have just said, because he has been insufficiently
-equipped, stimulated, nourished by the society into which he
-has been born. If our creative spirits are unable to grow
-and mature, it is a sign that there is something wanting in the
-soil from which they spring and in the conditions that surround
-them. Is it not, for that matter, a sign of some more general
-failure in our life?</p>
-
-<p>“At the present moment,” wrote Mr. Chesterton in one of
-his early essays (“The Fallacy of the Young Nation”),
-struck by the curious anæmia of those few artists of ours who
-have succeeded in developing themselves, usually by escaping
-from the American environment; “at the present moment the
-matter which America has very seriously to consider is not
-how near it is to its birth and beginning, but how near it
-may be to its end.... The English colonies have produced
-no great artists, and that fact may prove that they are still
-full of silent possibilities and reserve force. But America
-has produced great artists and that fact most certainly means
-that she is full of a fine futility and the end of all things.
-Whatever the American men of genius are, they are not young
-gods making a young world. Is the art of Whistler a brave,
-barbaric art, happy and headlong? Does Mr. Henry James
-infect us with the spirit of a school-boy? No, the colonies
-have not spoken, and they are safe. Their silence may be
-the silence of the unborn. But out of America has come a
-sweet and startling cry, as unmistakable as the cry of a dying
-man.” That there is truth behind this, that the soil of our
-society is at least arid and impoverished, is indicated by the
-testimony of our own poets; one has only to consider what
-George Cabot Lodge wrote in 1904, in one of his letters: “We<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span>
-are a dying race, as every race must be of which the men are,
-as men and not accumulators, third-rate”; one has only to
-consider the writings of Messrs. Frost, Robinson, and Masters,
-in whose presentation of our life, in the West as well as in
-the East, the individual as a spiritual unit invariably suffers
-defeat. Fifty years ago J. A. Froude, on a visit to this country,
-wrote to one of his friends: “From what I see of the
-Eastern states I do not anticipate any very great things as
-likely to come out of the Americans.... They are generous
-with their money, have much tenderness and quiet good humour;
-but the Anglo-Saxon power is running to seed and I
-don’t think will revive.” When we consider the general colourlessness
-and insipidity of our latter-day life (faithfully
-reflected in the novels of Howells and his successors), the
-absence from it of profound passions and intense convictions,
-of any representative individuals who can be compared in spiritual
-force with Emerson, Thoreau, and so many of their contemporaries,
-its uniformity and its uniform tepidity, then the
-familiar saying, “Our age has been an age of management,
-not of ideas or of men,” assumes indeed a very sinister import.
-I go back to the poet Lodge’s letters. “Was there ever,” he
-writes, “such an anomaly as the American man? In practical
-affairs his cynicism, energy, and capacity are simply stupefying,
-and in every other respect he is a sentimental idiot possessing
-neither the interest, the capacity, nor the desire for
-even the most elementary processes of independent thought....
-His wife finds him so sexually inapt that she refuses to
-bear him children and so drivelling in every way except as a
-money-getter that she compels him to expend his energies solely
-in that direction while she leads a discontented, sterile, stunted
-life....” Is this to be denied? And does it not in part
-explain that extraordinary lovelessness of the American scene
-which has bred the note of a universal resentment in so much
-of our contemporary fiction? As well expect figs from thistles
-as any considerable number of men from such a soil who are
-robust enough to prefer spiritual to material victories and who
-are capable of achieving them.</p>
-
-<p>It is unnecessary to go back to Taine in order to realize
-that here we have a matrix as unpropitious as possible for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span>
-literature and art. If our writers wither early, if they are too
-generally pliant, passive, acquiescent, anæmic, how much is
-this not due to the heritage of pioneering, with its burden
-of isolation, nervous strain, excessive work and all the racial
-habits that these have engendered?</p>
-
-<p>Certainly, for example, if there is anything that counts in
-the formation of the creative spirit it is that long infancy to
-which John Fiske, rightly or wrongly, attributed the emergence
-of man from the lower species. In the childhood of almost
-every great writer one finds this protracted incubation, this
-slow stretch of years in which the unresisting organism opens
-itself to the influences of life. It was so with Hawthorne, it
-was so with Whitman in the pastoral America of a century
-ago: they were able to mature, these brooding spirits, because
-they had given themselves for so long to life before they
-began to react upon it. That is the old-world childhood still,
-in a measure; how different it is from the modern American
-childhood may be seen if one compares, for example, the first
-book (“Boyhood”) of “Pelle the Conqueror” with any of
-those innumerable tales in which our novelists show us that
-in order to succeed in life one cannot be up and doing too
-soon. The whole temper of our society, if one is to judge
-from these documents, is to hustle the American out of his
-childhood, teaching him at no age at all how to repel life and
-get the best of it and build up the defences behind which he is
-going to fight for his place in the sun. Who can deny that
-this racial habit succeeds in its unconscious aim, which is to
-produce sharp-witted men of business? But could anything
-be deadlier to the poet, the artist, the writer?</p>
-
-<p>Everything in such an environment, it goes without saying,
-tends to repress the creative and to stimulate the competitive
-impulses. A certain Irish poet has observed that all he ever
-learned of poetry he got from talking with peasants along the
-road. Whitman might have said almost as much, even of
-New York, the New York of seventy years ago. But what
-nourishment do they offer the receptive spirit to-day, the
-harassed, inhibited mob of our fellow-countrymen, eaten up
-with the “itch of ill-advised activity,” what encouragement to
-become anything but an automaton like themselves? And<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span>
-what direction, in such a society, does the instinct of emulation
-receive, that powerful instinct of adolescence? A certain
-visitor of Whitman’s has described him as living in a house
-“as cheerless as an ash-barrel,” a house indeed “like that in
-which a very destitute mechanic” might have lived. Is it not
-symbolic, that picture, of the esteem in which our democracy
-holds the poet? If to-day the man of many dollars is no
-longer the hero of the editorial page and the baccalaureate
-address, still, or rather more than ever, it is the “aggressive”
-type that overshadows every corner of our civilization; the
-intellectual man who has gone his own way and refused to
-flatter the majority was never less the hero or even the subject
-of intelligent interest; at best ignored, at worst (and usually)
-pointed out as a crank, he is only a “warning” to youth,
-which is exceedingly susceptible in these matters. But how
-can one begin to enumerate the elements in our society that
-contribute to form a selection constantly working against the
-survival of the creative type? By cutting off the sources that
-nourish it, by lending prestige to the acquisitive and destroying
-the glamour of the creative career, everything in America
-conspires to divert the spirit from its natural course, seizing
-upon the instincts of youth and turning them into a single
-narrow channel.</p>
-
-<p>Here, of course, I touch upon the main fact of American
-history. That traditional drag, if one may so express it, in
-the direction of the practical, which has been the law of our
-civilization, would alone explain why our literature and art
-have never been more than half-hearted. To abandon the
-unpopular and unremunerative career of painting for the useful
-and lucrative career of invention must have seemed natural
-and inevitable to Robert Fulton and Samuel Morse. So strong
-is this racial compulsion, so feeble is the hold which Americans
-have upon ultimate values, that one can scarcely find to-day a
-scientist or a scholar who, for the sake of science or scholarship,
-will refuse an opportunity to become the money-gathering president
-of some insignificant university. Thus our intellectual
-life has always been ancillary to the life of business and organization:
-have we forgotten that the good Washington Irving
-himself, the father of American letters, thought it by no means<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span>
-beneath his dignity to serve as a sort of glorified press-agent
-for John Jacob Astor?</p>
-
-<p>It is certainly true that none of these unfavourable factors
-of American life could have had such a baleful effect upon our
-literature if there had been others to counteract them. An
-aristocratic tradition, if we had ever had it, would have kept
-open among us the right of way of the free individual, would
-have preserved the claims of mere living. “It is curious to observe,”
-writes Nietzsche in one of his letters, “how any one
-who soon leaves the traditional highway in order to travel on
-his own proper path always has more or less the sense of being
-an exile, a condemned criminal, a fugitive from mankind.”
-If that is true in the old world, where society is so much more
-complex and offers the individual so much more latitude, how
-few could ever have had the strength in a society like ours,
-which has always placed such an enormous premium on conformity,
-to become and to remain themselves? Is it fanciful
-indeed to see in the famous “remorse” of Poe the traces left
-by this dereliction of the tribal law upon the unconscious mind
-of an artist of unique force and courage? Similarly, a tradition
-of voluntary poverty would have provided us with an escape
-from the importunities of bourgeois custom. But aside
-from the fact that even so simple a principle as this depends
-largely for its life on precedent (Whitman and the painter
-Ryder are almost alone among latter-day Americans in having
-discovered it for themselves), aside from the fact that to secede
-from the bourgeois system is, in America, to subject oneself to
-peculiar penalties (did it ever occur to Mark Twain that he
-<em>could</em> be honourably poor?)—aside from all this, poverty in
-the new world is by no means the same thing as poverty in the
-old: one has only to think of Charles Lamb and all the riches
-that London freely gave him, all the public resources he had
-at his disposal, to appreciate the difference. With us poverty
-means in the end an almost inevitable intellectual starvation.
-Consider such a plaint as Sidney Lanier’s: “I could never describe
-to you” (he writes to Bayard Taylor) “what a mere
-drought and famine my life has been, as regards that multitude
-of matters which I fancy one absorbs when one is in an
-atmosphere of art, or when one is in conversational relationship<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span>
-with men of letters, with travellers, with persons who have
-either seen, or written, or done large things. Perhaps you
-know that, with us of the younger generation in the South
-since the war, pretty much the whole of life has been merely
-not dying.” That is what poverty means in America, poverty
-and isolation, for Lanier, whose talent, as we can see to-day,
-was hopelessly crippled by it, was mistaken if he supposed
-that there was anything peculiar to the South in that plight of
-his: it has been the plight of the sensitive man everywhere in
-America and at all times. Add to poverty the want of a society
-devoted to intellectual things and we have such a fate as
-Herman Melville’s in New York. “What he lacked,” wrote
-Mr. Frank Jewett Mather the other day, explaining the singular
-evaporation of Melville’s talent, “was possibly only health
-and nerve, but perhaps even more, companionship of a friendly,
-critical, understanding sort. In London, where he must have
-been hounded out of his corner, I can imagine Melville carrying
-the reflective vein to literary completion.” Truly Samuel
-Butler was right when he jotted down the following observation
-in his note-book: “America will have her geniuses, as
-every other country has, in fact she has already had one in
-Walt Whitman, but I do not think America is a good place in
-which to be a genius. A genius can never expect to have a
-good time anywhere, if he is a genuine article, but America is
-about the last place in which life will be endurable at all for
-an inspired writer of any kind.”</p>
-
-<p>To such circumstances as these, I say, the weakness of our
-literary life is due. If we had lacked nothing else indeed, the
-lack of great leaders, of a strong and self-respecting literary
-guild, even of an enlightened publishing system would have
-sufficed to account for much of it. To consider the last point
-first: in the philosophy of American publishing, popularity has
-been regarded not only as a practical advantage but as a virtue
-as well. Thanks to the peculiar character of our democracy,
-our publishers have been able to persuade themselves
-that a book which fails to appeal to the ordinary citizen cannot
-be good on other grounds. Thus, if we had had to depend
-on the established system, the present revival in our letters,
-tentative as it is, would have been still more sadly handicapped.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span>
-The history of Mr. Dreiser’s “Sister Carrie” is
-enough to suggest what may well have been the fate of many
-an incipient author less persistent than he. It is certain, in
-any case, that many another, at a critical moment, has drifted
-away from literature because of the lack in our publishing
-world of those opportunities for a semi-creative hack-work
-which have provided countless European writers with a foothold
-and even a guideway. The Grub Street of London and
-Paris is a purgatory, but as long as it exists, with its humble
-instrumentalities, translating, editing, reviewing, one can at
-least survive until one has either lost or found oneself: it
-scarcely needs to be pointed out that the American magazine,
-with its mechanical exactions, which levy such a terrible toll
-upon one’s individuality, is anything but an advantageous substitute.
-Till one has found oneself, the less one is subjected to
-such powerful, such essentially depolarizing influences, the better;
-the most mediocre institutions, if they enable one at the
-same time to maintain one’s contact with literature and to keep
-body and soul together, are as life is to death beside them. How
-many English writers owe their ultimate salvation to such
-trivial agencies as <cite>T. P.’s Weekly</cite>? In America, where
-nothing of the kind has existed until lately, or nothing adequate
-to the number of those who might have benefitted by it,
-the literary aspirant is lost unless his powers mature at once.</p>
-
-<p>But the lack of great leaders, of a strong and self-respecting
-literary guild (the one results from the other)—is not this
-our chief misfortune? In the best of circumstances, and considering
-all the devils that beset the creative spirit, a strong
-impulse is scarcely enough to carry one through: one must
-feel not only that one is doing what one wishes to do but that
-what one is doing <em>matters</em>. If dozens of American writers
-have fallen by the wayside because they have met with insuperable
-obstacles, dozens of others have fallen, with all their
-gifts, because they have lost interest in their work, because
-they have ceased to “see the necessity” of it. This is just
-the point where the presence of a leader, of a local tradition,
-a school, a guild makes all the difference. “With the masters
-I converse,” writes Gauguin in his journal. “Their example
-fortifies me. When I am tempted to falter I blush before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span>
-them.” If that could have been true of Gauguin, the “Wolf,”
-who walked by himself as few have walked, what shall we say
-of other men whose artistic integrity, whose faith in themselves,
-is exposed every day to the corroding influences of a
-third-rate civilization? It would be all very well if literature
-were merely a mode of “having a good time;” I am speaking
-of those, the real artists, who, with Nietzsche, make a distinction
-(illusory perhaps) between “happiness” and “work,”
-and I say that these men have always fed on the thought of
-greatness and on the propinquity of greatness. It was not
-for nothing that Turgeniev bore in his memory, as a talisman,
-the image of Pushkin; that Gorky, having seen Tolstoy once,
-sitting among the boulders on the seashore, felt everything
-in him blending in one happy thought, “I am not an
-orphan on the earth, so long as this man lives on it.” The
-presence of such men immeasurably raises the morale of the
-literary life: that is what Chekhov meant when he said, “I
-am afraid of Tolstoy’s death,” and is it not true that the whole
-contemporary literature of England has drawn virtue from
-Thomas Hardy? The sense that one is <em>working in a great line</em>:
-this, more than anything else perhaps, renews one’s confidence
-in the “quaint mania of passing one’s life wearing oneself out
-over words,” as Flaubert called it, in the still greater folly of
-pursuing one’s ego when everything in life combines to punish
-one for doing so. The successful pursuit of the ego is what
-makes literature; this requires not only a certain inner intensity
-but a certain courage, and it is doubtful whether, in any
-nation, any considerable number of men can summon up that
-courage and maintain it unless they have <em>seen the thing done</em>.
-The very notion that such a life is either possible or desirable,
-the notion that such a life exists even, can hardly occur to the
-rank and file: some individual has to start the ball rolling,
-some individual of extraordinary force and audacity, and where
-is that individual to be found in our modern American literature?
-Whitman is the unique instance, for Henry James, with
-all his admirable conscience, was at once an exile and a man
-of singularly low vitality; and Whitman was not only essentially
-of an earlier generation, he was an invalid who folded
-his hands in mid-career.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span></p>
-
-<p>Of those others what can we say, those others whose gifts
-have fitted them to be our leaders? Mr. Howells once observed
-of the American drama of the last few decades that
-“mainly it has been gay as our prevalent mood is, mainly it
-has been honest, as our habit is, in cases where we believe we
-can afford it.” In this gently ironical pleasantry one seems to
-discern the true spirit of modern American letters. But it was
-Howells himself who, in order to arrive at the doctrine that
-“the more smiling aspects of life are the more American,” deliberately,
-as he has told us, and professed realist that he was,
-averted his eyes from the darker side of life. And Mark Twain
-suppressed his real beliefs about man and the universe. And
-Henry Adams refused to sponsor in public the novels that revealed
-what he considered to be the truth about American society.
-Thus spake Zarathustra: “There is no harsher misfortune
-in all the fate of man than when the mighty ones of
-earth are not also the most excellent.” At its very headwaters,
-as we see, this modern literature of ours has failed to flow
-clear: the creative impulse in these men, richly endowed as
-they were, was checked and compromised by too many other
-impulses, social and commercial. If one is to blame anything
-for this it is the immense insecurity of our life, which is due
-to its chaotic nature; for one is not entitled to expect greatness
-even of those who have the greatest gifts, and of these
-men Henry Adams was alone secure; of Howells and Mark
-Twain, Westerners as they were, it may be said that they were
-obliged to compromise, consciously or unconsciously, in order
-to gain a foothold in the only corner of the country where men
-could exist as writers at all. But if these men were unable
-to establish their independence (one has only to recall the notorious
-Gorky dinner in order to perceive the full ignominy of
-their position), what must one expect to find in the rank and
-file? Great men form a sort of wind shield behind which the
-rest of their profession are able to build up their own defences;
-they establish a right of way for the others; they command a
-respect for their profession, they arouse in the public a concern
-for it, an interest in it, from which the others benefit. As
-things are, the literary guild in America is not respected, nor
-does it respect itself. In “My Literary Passions” Howells,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span>
-after saying that his early reading gave him no standing among
-other boys, observes: “I have since found that literature gives
-one no more certain station in the world of men’s activities,
-either idle or useful. We literary folk try to believe that it
-does, but that is all nonsense. At every period of life among
-boys or men we are accepted when they are at leisure and
-want to be amused, and at best we are tolerated rather than
-accepted.” Pathetic? Pusillanimous? Abject? Pathetic, I
-suppose. Imagine Maxim Gorky or Knut Hamsun or Bernard
-Shaw “trying to believe” that literature gives him a certain
-station in the world of men’s activities, conceiving for a moment
-that any activity could exceed his in dignity! Howells,
-we observe, conscientious craftsman as he was, instinctively
-shared, in regard to the significance of his vocation, the feeling
-of our pragmatic philosophers, who have been obliged to
-justify the intellectual life by showing how useful it is—not to
-mention Mr. R. W. Chambers, who has remarked that writers
-“are not held in excessive esteem by really busy people, the
-general idea being—which is usually true—that literature is a
-godsend to those unfitted for real work.” After this one can
-easily understand why our novelists take such pains to be mistaken
-for business men and succeed so admirably in their effort.
-One can easily understand why Jack London preferred
-the glory of his model ranch and his hygienic pigsties to the
-approval of his artistic conscience.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the conditions, or at least a few of them, that
-have prevented our literature from getting its head above
-water. If America is littered with extinct talents, the halt, the
-maimed and the blind, it is for reasons with which we are all
-too familiar; and we to whom the creative life is nothing less
-than the principle of human movement, and its welfare the true
-sign of human health, look upon this wreckage of everything
-that is most precious to society and ask ourselves what our
-fathers meant when they extolled the progress of our civilization.
-But let us look facts in the face. Mr. Sinclair Lewis
-asserts that we are in the midst of a revival and that we are
-too humble in supposing that our contemporary literature is
-inferior to that of England. That we are in the midst of a
-revival I have no doubt, but it is the sustained career that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span>
-makes a literature; without the evidence of this we can hope
-much but we can affirm nothing. What we can see is that,
-with all its hope, the morale of the literary profession in this
-country is just what its antecedents have made it. I am reminded
-of the observation of a friend who has reason to know,
-that the Catholic Church in America, great as it is in numbers
-and organization, still depends on the old world for its models,
-its task-masters and its inspiration; for the American priest,
-as a rule, does not feel the vocation as the European feels it.
-I am reminded of the American labour movement which, prosperous
-as it is in comparison with the labour movements of
-Europe, is unparalleled for the feebleness of its representatives.
-I am reminded of certain brief experiences in the American
-university world which have led me to believe that the professors
-who radiate a genuine light and warmth are far more
-likely to be Russians, Germans, Englishmen, Irishmen, Dutchmen,
-Swedes and Finns than the children of ’76. That old
-hostility of the pioneers to the special career still operates to
-prevent in the American mind the powerful, concentrated pursuit
-of any non-utilitarian way of life: meanwhile everything
-else in our society tends to check the growth of the spirit and
-to shatter the confidence of the individual in himself. Considered
-with reference to its higher manifestations, life itself has
-been thus far, in modern America, a failure. Of this the
-failure of our literature is merely emblematic.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mencken, who shares this belief, urges that the only
-hope of a change for the better lies in the development of a
-native aristocracy that will stand between the writer and the
-public, supporting him, appreciating him, forming as it were
-a <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">cordon sanitaire</i> between the individual and the mob. That
-no change can come without the development of an aristocracy
-of some sort, some nucleus of the more gifted, energetic and
-determined, one can hardly doubt. But how can one expect
-the emergence of an aristocracy outside of the creative class,
-and devoted to its welfare, unless and until the creative class
-itself reveals the sort of pride that can alone attract its ministrations?
-“The notion that a people can run itself and its
-affairs anonymously is now well known to be the silliest of absurdities.”
-Thus William James, in defence of the aristocratic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span>
-principle; and what he says is as applicable to literature as to
-every other department of social life. But he continues:
-“Mankind does nothing save through initiatives on the part
-of inventors, great and small, and imitation by the rest of us—these
-are the sole factors alive in human progress. Individuals
-of genius show the way, and set the patterns, which common
-people then adopt and follow.” In other words, as I understand
-it, and so far as literature is concerned, the burden of
-proof lies on the writer himself—which brings one back to a
-truism: it is not for the public or any aristocratic minority
-within the public to understand the writer, it is for the writer
-to create the taste by which he is understood. Is it not by
-this indeed (in a measure, at least) that we recognize the
-creator?</p>
-
-<p>Certainly if our contemporary literature is not respected, if
-it has not been able to rally to its support the sensitive public
-that already exists in this country, it is partly because this
-literature has not respected itself. That there has been every
-reason for it makes no difference; that it has begun to respect
-itself again makes no difference either, for when a people has
-lost confidence in its literature, and has had grounds for losing
-confidence in it, one cannot be surprised if it insists a little cynically
-upon being “shown.” The public supported Mark
-Twain and Howells and the men of their generation, it admired
-them for what was admirable in them, but it was aware,
-if only unconsciously, that there was a difference between them
-and the men of the generation before them; and in consequence
-of this the whole stock of American literature fell. But those
-who insist in our day that America prefers European writers
-to its own, because America is still a colony of Europe, cannot
-ignore the significant fact that at a time when America was
-still more truly colonial than it is now American writers had
-all the prestige in this country that European writers have at
-present; and it is not entirely because at that time the country
-was more homogeneous. Poe and Thoreau found little support
-in the generation of which I speak, as Whitman found
-little support in the generation that followed it. On the other
-hand, there were no European writers (and it was an age of
-great writers in Europe) who were held in higher esteem in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span>
-this country than Hawthorne, Emerson, Motley, and one or
-two others almost equally distinguished, as well from a European
-as from an American point of view; there were few, if
-any, European writers, in fact, who were esteemed in this
-country as highly as they. How can one explain it? How can
-one explain why, at a time when America, in every other department
-of life, was more distinctly colonial than it is now,
-American literature commanded the full respect of Americans,
-while to-day, when the colonial tradition is vanishing all about
-us, it so little commands their respect that they go after any
-strange god from England? The problem is not a simple one,
-but among the many explanations of it one can hardly deny
-that there were in that period a number of writers of unusual
-power, who made the most (who were able to make the most)
-of their power, who followed their artistic conscience (who
-were able to follow it) and who by this fact built up a public
-confidence in themselves and in the literature they represented.
-Does it matter at all whether to-day we enjoy these writers or
-not? They were men of spiritual force, three or four of them:
-that is the important point. If the emerging writers of our
-epoch find themselves handicapped by the scepticism of the
-public, which has ceased to believe that any good thing can
-come out of Nazareth, let them remember not only that they
-are themselves for the most part in the formative stage, but
-that they have to live down the recent past of their profession.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, what constitutes a literature is the spiritual force
-of the individuals who compose it. If our literature is ever to
-be regenerated, therefore, it can only be through the development
-of a sense of “free will” (and of the responsibility that
-this entails) on the part of our writers themselves. To be, to
-feel oneself, a “victim” is in itself not to be an artist, for it
-is the nature of the artist to live, not in the world of which he
-is an effect, but in the world of which he is the cause, the world
-of his own creation. For this reason, the pessimistic determinism
-of the present age is, from the point of view of literature,
-of a piece with the optimistic determinism of the age that
-is passing. What this pessimistic determinism reveals, however,
-is a <em>consciousness of the situation</em>: to that extent it represents
-a gain, and one may even say that to be conscious of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">196</span>
-the situation is half the battle. If we owed nothing else to Mr.
-Dreiser, for instance, we should owe him enough for the tragic
-sense of the waste and futility of American life, as we know
-it, which his books communicate. It remains true that in so
-far as we resent this life it is a sign of our own weakness, of
-the harm not only that our civilization has done us but that
-we have permitted it to do us, of our own imperfectly realized
-freedom; for to the creative spirit in its free state the external
-world is merely an impersonal point of departure. Thus it is
-certain that as long as the American writer shares what James
-Bryce calls the “mass fatalism” of the American people, our
-literature will remain the sterile, supine, and inferior phenomenon
-which, on the whole, it is.</p>
-
-<p>“What we want,” wrote Henry Adams in 1862 to his brother
-Charles, “is a <em>school</em>. We want a national set of young men
-like ourselves or better, to start new influences not only in politics,
-but in literature, in law, in society, and throughout the
-whole social organism of the country—a national school of our
-own generation. And that is what America has no power to
-create.... It’s all random, insulated work, for special and
-temporary and personal purposes. And we have no means,
-power or hope of combined action for any unselfish end.”
-<em>That is what America has no power to create.</em> But can it be
-said that any nation has ever created a school? Here we have
-the perfect illustration of that mass fatalism of which I have
-spoken, and Henry Adams himself, in his passivity, is the type
-of it. Secure as he was, uniquely secure, why did he refuse
-to accept the responsibility of those novels in which he expressed
-the contempt of a powerful and cultivated mind for
-the meanness, the baseness, the vulgarity of the guiding element
-in American society? In the darkest and most chaotic
-hours of our spiritual history the individual has possessed a
-measure of free will only to renounce it: if Henry Adams had
-merely signed his work and accepted the consequences of it, he
-might by that very fact have become the founder, the centre,
-of the school that he desired. But it is true that in that generation
-the impulses of youth were, with an extraordinary
-unanimity, focused upon a single end, the exploitation of the
-continent; the material opportunities that American life offered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span>
-were too great and too all-engrossing, and it is unlikely that
-any considerable minority could have been rallied for any non-utilitarian
-cause. Sixty years later this school remains, and
-quite particularly as regards our literature, the one thing necessary;
-the reforestation of our spiritual territory depends on
-it. And in more than one sense the times are favourable. The
-closing of the frontier seems to promise for this country an intenser
-life than it has known before; a large element of the
-younger generation, estranged from the present order, exists
-in a state of ferment that renders it highly susceptible to new
-ideas; the country literally swarms with half-artists, as one
-may call them, men and women, that is to say, who have ceased
-to conform to the law of the tribe but who have not accepted
-the discipline of their own individual spirits. “What I chiefly
-desire for you,” wrote Ibsen to Brandes at the outset of his
-career, “is a genuine, full-blooded egoism, which shall force
-you for a time to regard what concerns you yourself as the
-only thing of any consequence, and everything else as non-existent....
-There is no way in which you can benefit society
-more than by coining the metal you have in yourself.”
-The second half of this rather blunt counsel of perfection is
-implied in the first, and it connotes a world of things merely
-to name which would be to throw into relief the essential infantility
-of the American writer as we know the type. By
-what prodigies of alert self-adaptation, of discriminating self-scrutiny,
-of conscious effort does the creative will come into
-its own! As for us, weak as too many of us are, ignorant, isolated,
-all too easily satisfied, and scarcely as yet immune from
-the solicitations of the mob, we still have this advantage, that
-an age of reaction is an age that stirs the few into a consciousness
-of themselves.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Van Wyck Brooks</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_199" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="MUSIC">MUSIC</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">We</span> spend more money upon music than does any other
-nation on earth; some of our orchestras, notably those
-of Boston, Chicago, and Philadelphia, are worthy to rank
-among the world’s best; in the Metropolitan Opera House we
-give performances of grand opera that for consistent excellence
-of playing, singing, and <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">mise-en-scène</i> are surpassed probably
-nowhere. Yet there has never been a successful opera
-by an American offered at that opera house, and the number
-of viable American orchestral works is small enough to be
-counted almost upon one’s fingers. We squander millions
-every year upon an art that we cannot produce.</p>
-
-<p>There are apologists for the American composer who will
-say that we do produce it, but that it is strangled at birth.
-According to their stock argument, there are numberless greatly
-gifted native composers whose works never get a hearing, (a)
-because Americans are prejudiced against American music and
-in favour of foreign music, and (b) because the foreigners
-who largely control the musical situation in this country jealously
-refuse to allow American works to be performed. This
-would be impressive if it were consistent or true. As far as
-concerns the Jealous Foreigner myth—he does not dominate
-the musical situation—I have never noticed that the average
-European in this country is deficient either in self-interest or
-tact. He is generally anxious, if only for diplomatic reasons,
-to find American music that is worth singing or playing. Even
-when he fails to find any that is worth performing, he often
-performs some that isn’t, in order to satisfy local pride. Moreover,
-Americans are no more prejudiced against American musicians
-than they are against other kinds. As a matter of fact,
-if intensive boosting campaigns produced creative artists, the
-American composer during the past decade should have expanded
-like a hot-house strawberry. We have had prize contests
-of all kinds, offering substantial sums for everything from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span>
-grand operas to string quartettes, we have had societies formed
-to publish his chamber-music scores; publishers have rushed to
-print his smaller works; we have had concerts of American
-compositions; we have had all-American festivals. Meanwhile
-the American composer has, with a few lonely exceptions, obstinately
-refused to produce anything above the level of what
-it would be flattering to call mediocrity.</p>
-
-<p>No. If he is not heard oftener in concert halls and upon recital
-platforms, it is because he is not good enough. There is,
-in the music of even the second-rate Continental composers, a
-surety of touch, a quality of evident confidence in their material
-and ease in its handling that is rarely present in the work
-of Americans. Most American symphonic and chamber music
-lacks structure and clarity. The workmanship is faulty, the
-utterance stammers and halts. Listening to an average American
-symphonic poem, you get the impression that the composer
-was so amazed and delighted at being able to write a
-symphonic poem at all that the fact that it might be a dull
-one seemed of minor importance to him. When he isn’t
-being almost entirely formless he is generally safely conventional,
-preferring to stick to what a statesman would call the
-Ways of the Fathers rather than risk some structural innovation
-what might or might not be effective. Tschaikovsky’s
-variation of the traditional sequence of movements in the
-<cite>Pathétique</cite> symphony, for example—ending with the slow
-movement instead of the march—would scandalize and terrify
-the average American.</p>
-
-<p>This feebleness and uncertainty in the handling of material
-makes American music sound more sterile and commonplace
-than it really is. The American composer never seems certain
-just what, if anything, he wants to say. His themes, his fundamental
-ideas, are often of real significance, but he has no
-control over that very essence of the language of music, mood.
-He lacks taste. The fact that an American composition may
-begin in a genuinely impressive mood is no guarantee at all that
-inside of twenty-four bars it may not fall into the most appalling
-banalities. We start with lyric beauty and finish in
-stickiness. The curse of bathos is upon us. We lack staying
-power. Just as so many American dramatists can write two<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span>
-good acts of a three-act play, so many American novelists can
-write superb opening chapters, so do American composers devise
-eloquent opening themes. But we all fail when it comes
-to development. The train is laid, the match is applied, and
-the spectators crowd back in delighted terror amid tremendous
-hissings and sputterings. But when the awaited detonation
-comes, it is too often only a pop.</p>
-
-<p>Such failure to make adequate use of his ideas is partially
-attributable to the American musician’s pathetically inadequate
-technical equipment. Generally speaking, he doesn’t know
-his business. He has been unable, or hasn’t bothered, to learn
-his trade. Imagine if you can a successful dramatist who can
-neither read nor write, but has to dictate his plays, or a painter
-who can only draw the outlines of his pictures, hiring some one
-else to lay in the colours, and you have something analogous to
-many an American “composer” whose music is taken seriously
-by Americans, and who cannot write out a playable piano part,
-arrange a song for choral performance, or transcribe a hymn
-tune for a string quartette. Such elementary work he has to
-have done for him, whenever it is necessary, by some hack.
-This, to say nothing of the more advanced branches of musical
-science, like counterpoint, fugue, orchestration. Though it is
-risky to generalize, it is probably safe to say that among Americans
-who write music, the man who can construct a respectable
-fugue or canon or score a piece for full orchestra is decidedly
-the exception. In Europe, of course, any man who did not
-have these technical resources at his fingertips would have to
-be a Moussorgsky to be taken seriously as a composer at all.</p>
-
-<p>It is not entirely the American’s fault that he is so ill-equipped.
-Much of his comparative musical illiteracy, true,
-is the result of his own laziness and his traditional American
-contempt for theory and passion for results. On the other
-hand, the young American who honestly desires a good theoretical
-training in music must either undertake the expensive
-adventure of journeying to one of the few cities that contain
-a first-class conservatory, or the equally expensive one of going
-to Europe. If he can do neither, he must to a great extent
-educate himself. Some kinds of training it is nearly impossible
-for him to obtain here at any price. Orchestration, for instance,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span>
-a tremendously complex and difficult science, can be
-mastered only by the time-honoured trial and error method,
-i.e., by writing out scores and hearing them played. How is
-our young American to manage this? Granted that there is
-a symphony orchestra near him, how can he get his scores
-played? The conductor cannot be blamed for refusing. He
-is hired to play the works of masters, not to try out the apprentice
-efforts of unskilled aspirants. What we need so badly
-here are not more first-class orchestras, but more second-rate
-ones, small-town orchestras that could afford to give the tyro
-a chance.</p>
-
-<p>Because of their lack of technical skill many composers in
-this country never venture into the broader fields of composition
-at all. As a class, we write short piano and violin pieces,
-or songs. We write them because we do earnestly desire to
-write something and because they do not demand the technical
-resourcefulness and sustained inspiration that we lack. Parenthetically,
-I don’t for a moment mean to imply that clumsy
-workmanship and sterility are unknown in Europe, that we are
-all mediocrities and they are all <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Uebermenschen</i>. As a matter
-of fact, we have to-day probably much more creative musical
-talent, if less brains, than Europe; but, talent for talent, the
-European is infinitely better trained. This, at least in part,
-because he respects theory and has a desire for technical proficiency
-that we almost totally lack. Then too, the European
-has some cultural background. There is a curious lack of inter-communication
-among the arts in this country. The painter
-seems to feel that literature has nothing direct to give him, the
-writer, that music and painting are not in his line, and the musician—decidedly
-the worst of the three in this respect—that
-his own art has no connection with anything.</p>
-
-<p>The American composer’s most complete failure is intellectual.
-The fact that he writes music seldom warrants the assumption
-that he has the artist’s point of view at all. He is
-likely to be a much less interesting person than one’s iceman.
-Ten to one, he never visits a picture gallery or a sculpture exhibition,
-his taste in the theatre is probably that of the tired
-business man, and what little reading he does is likely to be
-confined to trade papers, <cite>Snappy Stories</cite>, and best-sellers. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span>
-takes no interest in politics, economics, or sociology, either national
-or international (how could they possibly concern him?),
-and probably cannot discuss even music with pleasure or profit
-to anybody.</p>
-
-<p>The natural inference that might be drawn from this diatribe—that
-the composing of music in this country is confined exclusively
-to the idiot classes—is not strictly true. Plenty of
-American musicians are intelligent and cultured men as well;
-but that is not America’s fault. She is just as cordial to the
-stupid ones. And the widespread impotence and technical
-sloppiness of American music is the inevitable result of the
-American attitude toward music and to the anomalous position
-the art occupies in this country.</p>
-
-<p>Let me be platitudinous in the interest of clarity and point
-out what we so often forget: that our nation, unlike most of
-the others, is not a race as well. We have common wellsprings
-of thought, but—and this is significant and ominous—none of
-feeling. Sheer environment may teach people to think alike
-within a generation; but it takes centuries of common emotional
-experiences to make them feel alike. Any average American,
-even of the National-Security-League-one-hundred-per-centum
-variety, may have in his veins the blood of English,
-French, Italian, and Russian ancestors, and there is no saying
-that his emotional nature is going to find many heart-beats in
-common with some equally average neighbour, whose ancestry
-may be, say, Irish, Danish, and Hungarian. What national
-spirit we have has been determined, first, by the fact that the
-ancestors of every one of us, whether they came here twenty
-years ago or two hundred, were pioneers. Every one of them
-left a civilization whose cultural background had been established
-for centuries, to come to a land where the problem of
-mere existence was of prime importance. Again, many of them
-were religious fanatics. In the life of the pioneer there was
-little room for art of any sort, and least for music. What he
-demanded of music, when he had time to spare for it, was that
-above all things it distract him from the fatigue and worry of
-everyday life, either by amusing him or by furnishing a sentimental
-reminder of old ways. To the Puritan, music, both for
-its own sake and as entertainment, was anathema. As sensuous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span>
-beauty it was popish, and as entertainment it was worldly
-pleasure, and therefore wicked. To be tolerated at all, it must
-be practical, i.e., perform some moral service by being a hymn
-tune. And what the American pioneer and the American Puritan
-asked a few generations back, the average American asks
-to-day whenever he is confronted with any work of art: Does
-it point a moral? If not, will it help me to kill time without
-boring me?</p>
-
-<p>Instruction, release, or amusement: that, in general, is all
-we want of art. The American’s favourite picture is one that
-tells a story, or shows the features of some famous person, or
-the topography of some historic spot. Fantastic pictures he
-likes, because they show him people and places far removed
-from his own rather tedious environment, but they must be a
-gaudy, literal, solid sort of fantasy—Maxfield Parrish rather
-than Aubrey Beardsley. If he can’t have these, he wants
-pretty girls or comics. Purely decorative or frankly meaningless
-pictures—Hokusai and Whistler (except, of course, the
-portraits of Carlyle and his mother)—do not exist for him.
-Sculpture—which he does not understand—is probably his favourite
-art-form, for it is tangible, three-dimensionable, stable.
-He doesn’t mind poetry, for it, too, gives him release. He likes
-novels, especially “glad” ones or mystery stories. He even
-tolerates realism if, as in “Main Street,” it gives him release
-by showing him a set of consistently contemptible and uncultured
-characters to whom even he must feel superior. His
-architecture he likes either ornate to imbecility or utilitarian
-to hideousness.</p>
-
-<p>In other words, the typical American goes to an art-work
-either frankly to have his senses tickled or for the sake of a
-definite thing that it says or a series of extraneous images or
-thoughts that it evokes—never for the <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Ding an sich</i>. Of pure
-æsthetic emotion he exhibits very little. To him, beauty is
-emphatically not its own excuse for being. He does not want
-it for its own sake, and distrusts and fears it when it appears
-before him unclothed in moral lessons or associated ideas. In
-such a civilization music can occupy but a very unimportant
-place. For music is, morally or intellectually, the most meaningless
-of arts: it teaches no lesson, it offers no definite escape<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span>
-from life to the literal-minded, and aside from the primitive
-and obvious associations of patriotic airs and “mother” songs,
-it evokes no associated images or ideas. To love music you
-must be willing to enjoy beauty pretty largely for its own sake,
-without asking it to mean anything definite in words or pictures.
-This the American hates to do. Since he cannot be edified,
-he refuses to be stirred. There is nothing left for him,
-therefore, in music, except such enjoyment as he can get out
-of a pretty tune or an infectious rhythm.</p>
-
-<p>And that, despite our admirable symphony orchestras and
-our two superb permanent opera companies (all run at a loss,
-by the way), is about all that music means to the average
-American—amusement. He simply does not see how an art
-that doesn’t teach him anything, that is a shameless assault
-upon his emotions (he makes no distinction between emotions
-and senses), can possibly play any significant part in his life.
-So, as a nation, he does what he generally does in other matters
-of art, delegates its serious cultivation to women.</p>
-
-<p>Women constitute ninety per cent. of those who support
-music in this country. It is women who attend song and instrumental
-recitals; it is women who force reluctant husbands
-and fathers to subscribe for opera seats and symphony concerts;
-the National Federation of Musical Clubs, which works
-throughout the country to foster the appreciation of music, is
-composed entirely of women; at least two-thirds of the choral
-organizations in the United States contain women’s voices only.
-It is no disparagement of their activities to say that such a
-state of affairs is unhealthy. This well-nigh complete feminization
-of music is bad for it. After all, art, to be alive, must
-like any other living thing be the result of collaboration.
-Women have undertaken to be the moral guardians of the race,
-and no one can deny that they guard, upon the whole, as well
-as men could; but their guardianship is a bit too zealous at
-times, and their predominance in our musical life aggravates
-our already exaggerated tendency to demand that art be edifying.
-One of the conditions of the opera contest conducted
-by the National Federation in 1914 was that the libretto must
-contain nothing immoral or suggestive (I paraphrase). Now
-music is, after all, an adult occupation, and it might be assumed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">206</span>
-that a composer competent to write an opera score might have
-taste and intelligence enough not to be vulgar—for, surely, vulgarity
-was all they wanted to guard against. If the clause
-were to be interpreted literally, it would bar the librettos of
-<cite xml:lang="de" lang="de">Tristan</cite>, <cite xml:lang="de" lang="de">Walküre</cite>, <cite>Carmen</cite>, <cite xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Pelléas et Mélisande</cite>, and <cite xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">L’Amore
-dei Tre Re</cite>—a supposition quite too unthinkable. The feminine
-influence helps to increase the insularity of our musicians.
-Women are more chauvinistic in art matters—if possible—than
-men, and among the women’s clubs that are trying to encourage
-the American composer there is a tendency to insist rather
-that he be American than that he be a composer. Since it is
-women who support our recitals and concerts it is they who
-must assume responsibility for our excessive cult of the performer.
-This land is certainly the happy hunting-ground of the
-virtuoso, be he singer, player, or conductor. What he chooses to
-sing, play, or conduct is comparatively unimportant to us. Our
-audiences seem to gather not so much to listen as to look; or if
-they do listen, it is to the voice or the instrument rather than
-to the music. The announcement, “Farrar in <em>Carmen</em>” will
-pack the Metropolitan to the doors; but if the bill be changed,
-and <em>Zaza</em> be substituted at the last moment, who cares?
-Indeed the ticket agencies, knowing what people really attend
-opera for, frankly advertise “tickets for Farrar to-night.”
-Rachmaninoff is a great pianist, and Rachmaninoff playing an
-all-Chopin programme could fill Carnegie Hall at any time.
-But Rachmaninoff playing a programme of Czerny’s “Exercises
-for the Beginner” could fill it just as well. Announce an
-all-Chopin programme without naming the pianist, and see how
-much of an audience you draw. The people who go to hear
-Galli-Curci sing the shadow-song from <cite>Dinora</cite> do not go to hear
-music at all. They go as they would go to see Bird Millman
-walk a slack wire; they go to hear a woman prove that, given
-a phenomenal development of the vocal cords, she can, after
-years of practice, perform scales and trills <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">in altissimo</i> very
-nearly as well as the union flute-player who furnishes her obligato.
-All this is to a certain extent true elsewhere, of course.
-It is natural that if one person can sing or play better than
-another, audiences should prefer to hear him rather than another.
-But this worship of the performance rather than the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span>
-thing performed, this blind adoration of skill for its own sake,
-is cultivated in America to a degree that is quite unparalleled.</p>
-
-<p>Many American cities and large towns hold annual musical
-festivals, lasting from two days to a week or more, and these
-are often mentioned as evidence of the existence of a genuine
-musical culture among us. Are they? What happens at them?
-For one thing, the local choral society performs a cantata or
-oratorio. This is more than likely to be either <cite>The Messiah</cite> or
-<cite>Elijah</cite>, works which through long association have taken on
-less the character of musical compositions than of devotional
-exercises. Edification again. Soloists are engaged, as expensive
-and famous as the local budget allows, and these give recitals
-during the remaining sessions of the festival. The
-audiences come largely to see these marvels rather than to
-hear music, for after the annual spree of culture is over they
-return home contentedly enough to another year void of any
-music whatever. Hearing a little music is better than hearing
-none, but the test of genuine culture is whether or not it is an
-integral part of life rather than a vacation from it. By this
-test the annual festival would seem to exert about as much permanent
-cultural influence as a clambake.</p>
-
-<p>The total unconsciousness on the part of his fellow-countrymen
-that art is related to life, a sense of futility and unreality,
-is what makes the lot of the musician in America a hard one,
-and is responsible for his failure as an artist. If people get
-the kind of government they deserve, they most certainly get
-the kind of art they demand; and if, comparatively speaking,
-there is no American composer, it is because America doesn’t
-want him, doesn’t see where he fits in.</p>
-
-<p>Suppose most American music is trivial and superficial?
-How many Americans would know the difference if it were
-profound? The composer here lives in an atmosphere that is,
-at the worst, good-natured contempt. Contempt, mind you,
-not for himself—that wouldn’t matter—but for his very art.
-In the minds of many of his compatriots it ranks only as an
-entertainment and a diversion, slightly above embroidery and
-unthinkably below baseball. At best, what he gets is unintelligent
-admiration, not as an artist, but as a freak. Blind Tom,
-the negro pianist, is still a remembered and admired figure in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span>
-American musical history; and Blind Tom was an idiot. To
-an American, the process of musical composition is a mysterious
-and incomprehensible trick—like sword-swallowing or
-levitation—and as such he admires it; but he does not respect
-it. He cannot understand how any normal he-man can spend
-his life thinking up tunes and putting them down on paper.
-Tunes are pleasant things, of course, especially when they
-make your feet go or take you back to the days when you went
-straw-riding; but as for taking them seriously, and calling it
-work—man’s work—to think them up ... any one who
-thinks that can be dismissed as a crank.</p>
-
-<p>If the crank could make money, it might be different.
-The respect accorded to artists in our country is pretty sharply
-graded in accordance with their earning power. Novelists and
-playwrights come first, since literature and the stage are known
-to furnish a “good living.” Sculptors have a certain standing,
-on account of the rumoured prices paid for statues and public
-memorials, though scenario writers are beginning to rank
-higher. Painters are eyed with a certain suspicion, though
-there is always the comfortable belief that the painter probably
-pursues a prosperous career of advertising art on the side.
-But poets and composers are decidedly men not to be taken
-seriously. This system of evaluation is not quite as crass as
-it sounds. America has so long been the land of opportunity,
-we have so long gloried in her supremacy as the place to make
-a living, that we have an instinctive conviction that if a man
-is really doing a good job he must inevitably make money at
-it. Only, poetry and music have the bad luck to be arts wherein
-a man may be both great and successful and still be unable
-to look the landlord in the eye. Since such trades are so
-unprofitable, we argue, those who pursue them are presumably
-incompetent. The one class of composer whom the American
-does take seriously is the writer of musical comedy and popular
-songs, not only because he can make money, but because
-he provides honest, understandable entertainment for man and
-beast. That, perhaps, is why our light music is the best of its
-kind in the world.</p>
-
-<p>The self-styled music-lover in this country too often brings
-little more genuine comprehension to music. He is likely to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span>
-a highbrow (defined as a person educated beyond his intelligence),
-with all the mental obtuseness and snobbishness of his
-class. He divides music into “popular”—meaning light—and
-“classical”—meaning pretentious. Now there is good
-music and bad, and the composer’s pretensions have little to do
-with the case. Compare, for example, the first-act finale of
-Victor Herbert’s <cite xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Mlle. Modiste</cite> with such vulgar rubbish as
-<cite xml:lang="it" lang="it">Donna è mobile</cite>. Yet because the latter is sung by tenors,
-at the Metropolitan, the highbrow solemnly catalogues it as
-“classical,” abolishing the work of Herbert, Berlin, and Kern,
-three greatly gifted men, with the adjective “popular.” In
-general, he is the faithful guardian of the Puritan tradition,
-always sniffing the air for a definite “message” or moral, seeking
-sermons in tones, books in running arpeggios. It never
-occurs to him that just as words are the language of intellect,
-so is music the language of emotion, that its whole excuse for
-existence is its perfection in saying what lies just beyond and
-above words, and that if you can reduce a composer’s message
-to words, you automatically render it meaningless.</p>
-
-<p>Music criticism in America is amazingly good in the cities.
-The system under which the critics must work, however,
-whereby they are supposed to “cover” everything (in New
-York this theoretically entails making some sort of critical
-comment upon every one of three or four hundred events in a
-single season) is so impossible that much of their work is inevitably
-scamped and perfunctory. Elsewhere throughout the
-country criticism is handed over to reporters, who generally
-avoid trouble by approving of everything. There is a tendency
-toward the double standard—holding the stranger strictly to
-account, especially the foreigner, and being “nice” to the
-native—that produces demoralizing results.</p>
-
-<p>Of real musical journalism we have none. There is <cite>The
-Musical Quarterly</cite>, good of its kind, but rather ponderous and
-making no pretence to timeliness. The monthlies are chiefly
-for the teacher. The weeklies are in general frankly “shop”
-organs, devoted to the activities of the performer and filled
-with his advertisements, portraits, and press notices. There
-is no medium for the exchange of contemporary thought, for
-the discussion of topics having a non-professional cultural interest.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span>
-Music publishing here is an industry, conducted like
-any other industry. The Continental type of publisher, who
-is a scholar and a musician, and a gentleman who is conscious
-of a duty to music as well as to the stockholders, is almost
-unknown here. To our publishers music is a commodity, to
-be bought cheap and sold dear, and most of them will publish
-anything that looks profitable, regardless of its quality. Their
-typographical standards are higher than those anywhere in the
-world, except Germany.</p>
-
-<p>So the American composer in America works more or less in
-a vacuum. He is out of things, and he knows it. If he attempts
-to say something, through his art, that will be intelligible
-to his countrymen, he is baffled by the realization that
-his countrymen don’t understand his language. This particular
-difficulty, this sense of inarticulateness, probably weighed
-less heavily upon the last two generations of American composers;
-for they were, most of them, virtually German composers.
-In their time a thorough technical education in music
-was so nearly unobtainable here that it was simpler to go
-abroad for it. So, from Paine to MacDowell, they went to
-Germany. There they learned their trade, and at least learned
-it thoroughly; but they learned to write, not only music, but
-German music. To them, German music was music. Their
-songs were <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Lieder</i>; their symphonies and overtures were little
-sinister sons of Beethoven, Raff, and Brahms. So completely
-Teutonized did our musical speech become that we still find
-it hard to believe that French music, Spanish music, Russian
-music is anything but an imperfect translation from the German.
-A few went to Paris and learned to write with a French
-accent. MacDowell was, and remains, our best: a first-rank
-composer, who died before his work was done. His earlier
-music was all written, performed, and published in Germany,
-and it is as <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">echt Deutsch</i> as that of Raff, his master. Not until
-he approached middle life did he evolve a musical idiom that
-was wholly of MacDowell, the American. Most of the rest
-came back to spend their days fashioning good, honest, square-toed
-<i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Kapellmeistermusik</i> that had about as much genuine relation
-to their America as the Declaration of Independence has
-to ours. They might feel this lack of contact, but at least<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span>
-they had the consolation of knowing that there were people
-in the world to whom what they said was at least intelligible.</p>
-
-<p>The American of the present generation has no such consolation.
-He has probably not been trained abroad. He wants to
-write music, and being human, he wants it understood. But
-the minute he tries to express himself he betrays the fact that
-he does not know what he wants to express. Any significant
-work of art is inevitably based on the artist’s relation and reaction
-to life. But the American composer’s relation to the
-common life is unreal. His activities strike his fellows as unimportant
-and slightly irrational. He can’t lay his finger upon
-the great, throbbing, common pulse of America because for
-him there is none. So he tries this, that, and the other, hoping
-by luck to stumble upon the thing he wants to say. He tries
-desperately to be American. Knowing that the great national
-schools of music in other countries are based upon folksong, he
-tries to find the American folksong, so as to base his music
-upon that. He utilizes Negro tunes, and when they fail to
-strike the common chord he devises themes based upon Indian
-melodies. What he fails to see is that the folksongs of Europe
-express the common <em>racial</em> emotions of a nation, not its geographical
-accidents. When a Frenchman hears <em>Malbrouck</em> he
-is moved by what moved generations of long-dead Frenchmen;
-when a Russian hears <em>Dubinushka</em> he is stirred by what has
-stirred Russians for centuries. But even if some melody did
-stir the pulse of Geronimo, the mere fact that he was a former
-resident of my country is no proof that it is going to stir
-mine. If you insist that Negro music is the proper basis for
-an American school of composition, try telling a Southerner
-that when he hears <cite>Swing Low, Sweet Chariot</cite>, he is hearkening
-to the voices of his ancestors!</p>
-
-<p>A curious symptom of this feeling of disinheritance is the
-tendency of so many Americans to write what might be called
-the music of escape, music that far from attempting to affirm
-the composer’s relation to his day and age is a deliberate attempt
-to liberate himself by evoking alien and exotic moods
-and atmosphere. The publishers’ catalogues are full of Arab
-meditations, Persian dances, Hindu serenades, and countless
-similar attempts to get “anywhere out of the world.” The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span>
-best work of Charles Griffes, whose untimely death last year
-robbed us of a true creative talent, was his symphonic poem,
-“The Pleasure Dome of Kubla Khan,” and his settings of
-Chinese and Japanese lyrics in Oriental rhythms and timbres.
-Not that the mere choice of subject is important; it is the actual
-mood and idiom of so much of this music that is significant
-evidence of the impulse to give up and forget America,
-to create a dream-world wherein one can find refuge from the
-land of chewing gum and victrolas.</p>
-
-<p>These same victrolas, by the way, with their cousin, the
-player-piano, which so outrage the sensibilities of many a musician
-of the elder day, are a very real force in helping to
-civilize this country musically. The American is by no means
-as unmusical as he thinks he is. His indifference to art is only
-the result of his purely industrial civilization, and his tendency
-to mix morals with æsthetics is a habit of thought engendered
-by his ancestry. The Puritan tradition makes him fearful
-and suspicious of any sort of sensuous or emotional response,
-but it has not rendered him incapable of it. Catch him off his
-guard, get him away from the fear of being bored, and he is
-far from insensitive to music. He buys victrola records because
-he is a hero-worshipper, because he wants to hear the
-expensive Caruso and Kreisler and McCormack; but inevitably
-he is bound to take some notice of what they play and sing,
-and to recognize it when he hears it again. In spite of himself
-he begins to acquire a rudimentary sort of musical background.
-He begins by buying jazz rolls for his player-piano,
-and is likely in the long run, if only out of curiosity, to progress
-from “blues” to Chopin, via Moszkovski and Grainger.</p>
-
-<p>But the greatest present-day force for good, musically, in this
-country, is the large motion-picture house. Music has always
-been a necessary accompaniment to motion pictures, in order
-to compensate for the uncanny silence in which these photographic
-wraiths unfold their dramas. Starting with a modest
-ensemble of piano and glass crash, the motion-picture orchestra
-has gradually increased in size and quality, the pipe organ has
-been introduced to augment and alternate it, so that the larger
-houses to-day can boast a musical equipment that is amazingly
-good. A few years ago S. L. Rothafel devised a glorified type<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span>
-of entertainment that was a sort of combination picture-show
-and “pop” concert. He built a theatre, the Rialto, especially
-to house it, containing a stage that was little more than a picture
-frame, a large pipe organ, and an orchestra platform large
-enough to hold seventy or eighty players. He recruited a permanent
-orchestra large enough to play symphonic works, and
-put Hugo Riesenfeld, an excellent violinist and conductor, who
-had been trained under Arthur Nikisch, in charge of the performances.
-These, besides the usual film presentations, comprised
-vocal and instrumental solos and detached numbers by
-the orchestra. All the music played at these entertainments
-was good—in what is known in this country as “classical.”
-Riesenfeld devised a running accompaniment to the films, assembled
-from the best orchestral music obtainable—a sort of
-synthetic symphonic poem that fitted the mood and action of
-the film presented, and was, of course, much too good for it.</p>
-
-<p>This new entertainment form was instantly successful, and
-is rapidly becoming the standard offering at all the larger picture
-houses. It is a significant step in our musical life, for it is
-the first entirely successful attempt in this country to adapt
-art to popular wants. At last the average man is going of
-his own accord into a public hall and hearing music—real music—and
-discovering that he likes it. The picture house allows
-him to pretend that he is going solely to see the films, and
-needn’t listen unless he wants to. He finds that “classical”
-music is not nearly so boresome as many of its admirers.
-Freed from the highbrow’s condescension, unconscious of uplift,
-he listens and responds to music like the prelude to <cite xml:lang="de" lang="de">Tristan</cite>,
-the <cite xml:lang="de" lang="de">Walkürenritt</cite>, the <cite>New World</cite> symphony, Tschaikovsky’s
-<cite>Fourth</cite>, and the <cite>Eroica</cite>. Theodore Thomas rendered no
-more valuable service to music in America than have Samuel
-Rothafel and Hugo Riesenfeld.</p>
-
-<p>We are still far from utopia, however. In one of his essays
-upon communal art Henry Caro-Delvaille speaks of “the true
-Mediterranean <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">esprit</i>, the viable art philosophy of the French
-race, which is essentially plastic, accepting and delineating life,
-free alike from dogmatism and mysticism.” Try to frame a
-sentence like that about America. Try to make any generalization
-about the American spirit without using “liberty,” “free<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span>
-institutions,” “resourcefulness,” “opportunity,” or other politico-economic
-terms, if you would know what confronts the
-American artist, above all the American musician, when he
-attempts to become articulate to his countrymen. We simply
-have no common æsthetic emotions. No wonder our music
-flounders and stammers, and trails off into incoherence!</p>
-
-<p>Wagner wrote <cite xml:lang="de" lang="de">Die Meistersinger</cite> in a deliberate effort to
-express the German artistic creed; Verdi wrote consciously as
-an Italian; Glinka founded an entire school of composers whose
-sole aim was to express Russia. Such a task is beyond the
-American. The others were spokesmen for a race: he has
-no race to speak for, and the moment he pretends that he has,
-and tries to speak for it, he becomes conscious and futile. To
-speak of American music, in any ethnic sense, is naïve; you
-might as well speak of Baptist music. No. The American
-must accept his lot. There is but one audience he can write
-for, and that is himself. John Smith, American composer,
-dare not say: “I write to express America.” He can only
-say: “I write to express John Smith. I accept my life because,
-after all, it is mine, and I interpret my life because it
-is the only life I know.” And because John Smith is an
-American, and because somewhere, remote and inarticulate,
-there must be an American soul, then perhaps, if he does
-honest work and is true to himself, he may succeed in saying
-something that is of America, and of nowhere else, and that
-other Americans will hear and understand.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Deems Taylor</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_215" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="POETRY">POETRY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">There</span> are many fashions, among contemporary critics,
-of regarding American poetry, each of them perhaps of
-equal helpfulness, since each is one facet of an imaginable
-whole. There is the view of Mr. John Middleton Murry,
-an English critic, that it depends perhaps a shade too much
-on narrative or dramatic interest, on bizarrerie (if I may very
-freely elaborate his notion) or, in general, on a kind of sensationalism,
-a use of superficially intriguing elements which are
-not specifically the right—or at all events the best—elements
-of poetry. There is the view of Mr. Louis Untermeyer, one of
-the ablest of our own critics and also one of the most versatile
-of our parodists and poets, that our contemporary poetry is
-good in measure as it comes in the direct line from Whitman:
-good, that is to say, when it is the voice of the poet who accepts,
-accepts joyously and largely, even loosely, this new
-world environment, these new customs, social and industrial,
-above all, it may be, the new sense of freedom which he might,
-if pressed, trace back to Karl Marx on one hand and Sigmund
-Freud on the other. There is again the view of Miss Amy
-Lowell that our poetry is good, or tends to be, precisely in
-proportion as it represents an outgrowing, by the poet, of his
-acute awareness of a social or ethical “here and now,” and the
-attainment of a relatively pure pre-occupation with beauty—the
-sense of freedom here exercising itself principally, if not
-altogether, with regard to literary tradition, especially the English:
-once more, I dilate the view to make it the more broadly
-representative. And there is, finally, the view of the conservative,
-by no means silent even in this era, that what is good
-in contemporary American poetry is what is for the moment
-least conspicuous—the traditional, seen as it appears inevitably
-in America to be seen, as something graceful, sentimental,
-rightly ethical, gently idealistic.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">216</span></p>
-
-<p>What will be fairly obvious is that if we follow a little way
-any particular one of these critics, we shall find him attempting
-to urge our poetry in a particular direction, a direction
-which he prefers to any other direction, and analysing its
-origins in such a way, if he analyses at all, as to make plausible
-its (postulated) growth in that direction. This is the natural,
-even perhaps the best thing, for a participant critic to do—it
-contributes, certainly, an interest and an energy. But if in
-some freak of disinterestedness, we wish if for only a moment
-to see American poetry with no concern save that of inordinate
-and intelligent curiosity, then it is to all of these views that
-we must turn, rather than to any one, and to the obverse of
-each, as well as to the face. For if one thing is apparent to-day
-in a study of American letters, it is that we must heroically
-resist any temptation to simplify, to look in only one direction
-for origins or in only one direction for growth. Despite our
-national motto, American civilization is not so much one in
-many as many in one. We have not, as England has and as
-France has, a single literary heart; our literary capitals and
-countries are many, each with its own vigorous people, its own
-self-interest, its own virtues and provincialisms. We may attribute
-this to the mere matter of our size, and the consequent
-geographical sequestration of this or that group—that is
-no doubt a factor, but of equal importance is the fact that
-in a new country, of rapid and chaotic material growth,
-we must inevitably have, according to the locality, marked
-variations in the rapidity of growth of the vague thing we call
-civilization. Chicago is younger than Boston, older than San
-Francisco. And what applies to the large unit applies also
-to the small—if the country in general has not yet reached
-anything remotely like a cultural homogeneity (as far, that is,
-as we ever in viewing a great nation expect such a thing) neither
-has any section of it, nor any city of it. It is no longer possible,
-if indeed it ever was, to regard a section like New England,
-for example, as a definite environmental factor, say “y,”
-and to conclude, as some critics are so fond of doing, that any
-poet who matures there will inevitably be representable as
-“yp.” This is among the commonest and falsest of false
-simplifications. Our critics, frantically determined to find an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span>
-American poetry that is autochthonous, will see rocky pastures,
-mountains and birches in the poetry of a New Englander,
-or skyscrapers in the poetry of a New Yorker, or stockyards
-in the poetry of a Chicagoan, as easily as a conjurer takes
-a rabbit from a hat.</p>
-
-<p>What refuge we have from a critical basis so naïve is in
-assuming from the outset, toward contemporary American
-poetry, an attitude guardedly pluralistic—we begin by observing
-merely that American poetry is certainly, at the moment,
-if quantitative production and public interest are any measure,
-extraordinarily healthy and vigorous. We are accustomed to
-hearing it called a renaissance. The term is admissible if we
-carefully exclude, in using it, any implication of a revival of
-classicism. What we mean by it is simply that the moment is
-one of quite remarkable energy, productiveness, range, colour,
-and anarchy. What we do not mean by it is that we can trace
-with accuracy where this outburst comes from. The origins of
-the thing are obscure. It was audible in 1914—Mr. Edwin
-Arlington Robinson and Mr. Ezra Pound were audible before
-that; it burst into full chorus in 1915; and ever since there
-has been, with an occasional dying fall, a lusty corybantic
-cacophony. Just where this amazing procession started nobody
-clearly knows. Mr. Untermeyer would have us believe that
-Walt Whitman was, as it were, the organizer of it, Miss Monroe
-tries to persuade us that it was <cite>Poetry: a Magazine of
-Verse</cite>, But the facts, I think, wave aside either postulate.
-If one thing is remarkable it is that in this spate of poetry the
-influence of Walt Whitman—an influence, one would suppose,
-as toxic for the young as Swinburne—is so inconsiderable: if
-another is even more remarkable, it is that in all this chorus
-one so seldom hears a voice of which any previous American
-voice was the clear prototype. We have had, of course, our
-voices—of the sort, I mean, rich enough in character to make
-imitation an easy and tempting thing. Longfellow, Lowell,
-Bryant, Sill, Lanier are not in this regard considerable,—but
-what of Poe, whose influence we have seen in French poetry
-on Baudelaire, and in contemporary English poetry on Mr.
-Walter de la Mare? No trace of him is discoverable, unless
-perhaps we find the ghostliest of his shadows now and then<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span>
-across the work of Mr. John Gould Fletcher, or Mr. Maxwell
-Bodenheim, or Mr. Wallace Stevens, a shadow cast, in all
-these cases, amid much else, from a technical and colouristic
-standpoint, which would have filled Poe with alarm. And
-there is another American poet, perhaps as great as Poe, perhaps
-greater (as he in turn is perhaps greater than Whitman—as
-poet, though not as personality)—Emily Dickinson. Of
-that quietist and mystic, who walked with tranquillity midway
-between Blake and Emerson, making of her wilful imperfections
-a kind of perfectionism, why do we hear so little?
-Do we catch now and again the fleetingest glimpse of her in
-the early work of Mr. Robert Frost? If so, it is certainly
-nowhere else. Yet it would be hard to prove that she has no
-right to a place with Poe and Whitman, or indeed among the
-best poets in the language.</p>
-
-<p>But nowhere in America can we find, for contemporary
-poetry, any clear precursive signal. Little as it may comfort
-our fuglemen of the autochthonous, we must, I think, look to
-Europe for its origins. This is not, as some imagine, a disgrace—it
-would be a melancholy thing, of course, if we merely
-imitated the European, without alteration. But Browning
-would hardly recognize himself, even if he cared to, in the
-“Domesday Book” of Mr. Edgar Lee Masters, Mallarmé and
-Rimbaud would find Mr. Fletcher a mirror with an odd trick
-of distortion, Laforgue would have to look twice at Mr. T. S.
-Eliot’s “Prufrock” (for all its Hamletism), M. Paul Fort
-would scarcely feel at home in Miss Amy Lowell’s “Can
-Grande’s Castle,” Mr. Thomas Hardy and the ghost of Tennyson
-would not quarrel much for the possession of Mr. Robinson’s
-work, nor Mr. Chesterton and the author of “The
-Ingoldsby Legends” for the lively sonorities of Mr. Vachel
-Lindsay. In such cases we have not so much “influence” as
-fertilization. It is something of Mr. Masters that “The Ring
-and the Book” reveals to Mr. Masters: something of Miss
-Lowell to which M. Paul Fort offers her the key. Was it a
-calamity for Baudelaire that he lived only by a transfusion of
-blood from an American? Is Becquer the less Becquer or
-Spanish for having fed upon the “Buch der Lieder”?...
-Culture is bartered, nowadays, at open frontiers, and if to-day<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">219</span>
-a new theme, chord, or colour-scheme is French, German, or
-American, to-morrow it is international.</p>
-
-<p>If we differ in this respect from any other country it is only
-that we are freer to exploit, really exhaust, the new, because
-we hold, less than any other, to any classical traditions: for
-traditions our poets seldom look back further than the 19th
-century. We have the courage, often indistinguishable from
-folly, of our lack of convictions. Thus it comes about that as
-America is the melting-pot for races, so she is in a fair way
-to become a melting-pot for cultures: we have the energy, the
-curiosity, the intelligence, above all the lack of affiliations with
-the past, which admirably adapt us to a task—so precisely
-demanding complete self-surrender—of æsthetic experiment.
-Ignorance has some compensations—I mean, of course, a partial
-ignorance. If Mr. Lindsay had been brought up exclusively
-on Aristotle, Plato, Æschylus, and Euripides, and had
-been taken out of the shadow of the church by Voltaire and
-Darwin, perhaps he would not have been so “free” to experiment
-with the “higher vaudeville.” It will be observed that
-this is an odd kind of “freedom,” for it amounts in some ways
-to little more than the “freedom” of the prison. For if too
-severe a training in the classics unfits one somewhat for bold
-experiment, too little of it is as likely, on the other hand, to
-leave one with an æsthetic perceptiveness, a sensibility, in
-short, relatively rudimentary.</p>
-
-<p>This, then, is something of the cultural <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">mise en scène</i> for our
-contemporary poetry. We have repeated waves of European
-suggestion breaking Westward over our continent, foaming
-rather more in Chicago than in New York; and we have our
-lusty young company of swimmers, confident that they are
-strong enough to ride these waves farther than any one in
-Europe rode them and with a more native grace. What is
-most conspicuously American in most of these swimmers is
-the fact that they rely not so much on skill and long training
-as on sheer energy, vitality, and confidence. They rely, indeed,
-in most cases, on a kind of exuberance or superabundance.
-Do we not feel this in the work of Mr. Edgar Lee
-Masters—does he not try, in these many full books of his,
-where the good is so inextricably enmeshed with the bad, simply<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">220</span>
-to beat us down as under a cataract? “Domesday Book”
-is, rather, an avalanche. He never knows what to exclude,
-where to stop. Miss Lowell, Mr. Fletcher, Mr. Carl Sandburg,
-and Mr. Lindsay are not far behind him, either—they
-are all copious. I do not mean to imply that this is a bad
-thing, at the moment—at the moment I am not sure that this
-sheer exuberance is not, for us, the very <em>best</em> thing. Energy
-is the first requisite of a “renaissance,” and supplies its material,
-or, in another light, its richness of colour. Not the beginning,
-but the end, of a renaissance is in refinement; and
-I think we are certainly within bounds in postulating that the
-last five years have given us at the least a superb beginning,
-and enough more than that, perhaps, to make one wonder
-whether we have not already cast Poe and Whitman, Sidney
-Lanier, and Emily Dickinson, our strange little quartette, into
-a shadow.</p>
-
-<p>All that our wonder can hope for is at best a very speculative
-answer. If parallels were not so dangerous, we might
-look with encouragement at that spangled rhetorical torrent
-which we call Elizabethan literature. Ben Jonson did not consider
-Shakespeare much of an artist, nor did Milton, and classicists
-ever since have followed them in that opinion. If one
-can be the greatest of poets and yet not much of an artist, we
-may here keep clear of the quarrel: what we get at is the fact
-that Shakespeare and the other Elizabethans participated in a
-literary movement which, like ours, began in energy, violence,
-and extravagance, was at its best excessively rhetorical and
-given to unpruned copiousness, and perished as it refined.
-Will a future generation see us in a somewhat similar light—will
-it like us for our vitality, for the reckless adventurousness
-of our literature, our extravagances, and forgive us, if it does
-not precisely enjoy as something with a foreign flavour, our
-artistic innocence? That is conceivable, certainly. Yet the
-view <em>is</em> speculative and we dare not take it too seriously. For
-if we have kept hopefully and intelligently abreast of the
-contemporary we have kept, none the less, our own very sufficient
-aloofness, our own tactilism and awareness, in the light
-of which we are bound to have our own scepticisms and self-distrust.
-I do not mean that we would perhaps prefer something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">221</span>
-more classical or severe than “Spoon River Anthology”
-or “The Congo” or the colour symphonies of Mr. Fletcher,
-merely on the ground that it is the intrinsically classical and
-severe which we most desire. What we seem to see in contemporary
-American poetry is a transition from the more to
-the less exuberant, from the less to the more severe; and what
-we most <em>desire</em> to see is the attainment of <em>that point</em>, in this
-transition, which will give us our parallel to the Shakespearean,
-if we may hope for anything even approximately so high; a
-point of equipoise.</p>
-
-<p>This hope gives us a convenient vantage from which to
-survey the situation, if we also keep in mind our perception of
-American cultural heterogeneity and the rashness of any attempt
-to generalize about it. The most exact but least diverting
-method would be the merely enumerative, the mere roll-call
-which would put before us Mr. Edwin Arlington Robinson
-and Mr. Ezra Pound as the two of our poets whose public
-literary activities extend farthest back, and after them the
-group who made themselves known in the interval between
-1914 and 1920: Mr. Robert Frost, Mr. Fletcher, Mr. Masters,
-Mr. Sandburg, Miss Lowell, Mr. Lindsay, Mr. Alfred Kreymborg,
-Mr. Maxwell Bodenheim, Mr. Wallace Stevens, “H. D.,”
-Mr. T. S. Eliot, and Miss Sara Teasdale. These poets, with
-few exceptions, have little enough in common—nothing, perhaps,
-save the fact that they were all a good deal actuated at
-the outset by a disgust with the dead level of sentimentality
-and prettiness and moralism to which American poetry had
-fallen between 1890 and 1910. From that point they diverge
-like so many radii. One cannot say, as Miss Lowell has tried
-to persuade us, that they have all followed one radius, and
-that the differences between them are occasioned by the fact
-that some have gone farther than others. We may, for convenience,
-classify them, if we do not attach too much importance
-to the bounds of our classes. We may say that Mr.
-Robinson, Mr. Frost, and Mr. Masters bring back to our
-poetry a strong sense of reality; that Mr. Fletcher, Mr. Pound,
-Miss Lowell, “H. D.,” and Mr. Bodenheim bring to it a sharpened
-consciousness of colour; that Mr. Eliot, Mr. Kreymborg,
-and Mr. Stevens bring to it a refinement of psychological<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">222</span>
-subtlety; Mr. Sandburg, a grim sense of social responsibility;
-Mr. Lindsay, a rhythmic abandon mixed with evangelism; Miss
-Teasdale, a grace. The range here indicated is extraordinary.
-The existence side by side in one generation and in one country
-of such poets as Mr. Masters and Mr. Fletcher, or Mr.
-Eliot and Miss Lowell, is anomalous. Clearly we are past
-that time when a nation will have at a given moment a single
-direct literary current. There is as yet no sign that to any
-one of these groups will fall anything like undivided sway.
-Mr. Frost’s “North of Boston” and Mr. Fletcher’s “Irradiations”
-came out in the same year; “Spoon River Anthology”
-and the first “Imagist Anthology”; Mr. Robinson’s “Lancelot”
-and Mr. Bodenheim’s “Advice.” And what gulfs even
-between members of any one of our arbitrary “classes”! Mr.
-Frost’s actualism is seldom far from the dramatic or lyric,
-that of Mr. Masters seldom far from the physiological. Mr.
-Masters is bitter-minded, tediously explanatory, and his passionate
-enquiries fall upon life like so many heavy blows;
-his delvings appear morbid as well as searching. Mr. Frost
-is gentle, whether in irony, humour, or sense of pain: if it is
-the pathos of decay which most moves him, he sees it, none
-the less, at dewfall and moonrise, in a dark tree, a birdsong.
-The inflections of the human voice, as he hears them, are as
-tender as in the hearing of Mr. Masters they are harsh. And
-can Mr. Robinson be thought a commensal of either? His
-again is a prolonged enquiry into the why of human behaviour,
-but how bared of colour, how muffled with reserves and dimmed
-with reticence! Here, indeed, is a step toward romanticism.
-For Mr. Robinson, though a realist in the sense that his preoccupation
-is with motive, turns down the light in the presence
-of his protagonist that in the gloom he may take on the air
-of something larger and more mysterious than the garishly
-actual. Gleams convey the dimensions—hints suggest a depth.
-We are not always too precisely aware of what is going on in
-this twilight of uncertainties, but Mr. Robinson seems to whisper
-that the implications are tremendous. Not least, moreover,
-of these implications are the moral—the mirror that Mr.
-Robinson holds up to nature gives us back the true, no doubt,
-but increasingly in his later work (as in “Merlin” and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span>
-“Lancelot,” particularly the latter) with a slight trick of refraction
-that makes of the true the exemplary.</p>
-
-<p>We cross a chasm, from these sombre psycho-realists, to the
-colourists. To these, one finds, what is human in behaviour or
-motive is of importance only in so far as it affords colour or
-offers possibilities of pattern. Mr. Fletcher is the most brilliant
-of this group, and the most “uncontrolled”: his colourism,
-at its best, is a pure, an astonishingly absolute thing. The
-“human” element he wisely leaves alone—it baffles and escapes
-him. One is aware that this kaleidoscopic whirl of colour
-is “wrung out” of Mr. Fletcher, that it conveys what is for
-him an intense personal drama, but this does not make his
-work “human.” The note of “personal drama” is more complete
-in the poetry of “H. D.,” but this too is, in the last analysis,
-a nearly pure colourism, as static and fragmentary, however,
-as Mr. Fletcher’s is dynamic. Mr. Bodenheim is more
-detached, cooler, has a more conscious eye for correspondences
-between colour and mood: perhaps we should call him a symbolist.
-Even here, however, the “human,” the whim of tenderness,
-the psychological gleam, are swerved so that they may fall
-into a fantastic design. Miss Lowell, finally, more conscious,
-deliberate and energetic than any of these, brilliantly versatile,
-utterly detached, while she “sees” more of the objective world
-(and has farther-ranging interests), sees it more completely
-than any of them simply as raw colour or incipient pattern.
-If the literary pulse is here often feverishly high, the empathic
-and sympathetic temperature is as often absolute zero.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pound shares with Miss Lowell this immersion in the
-“literary”—he is intensely aware of the literary past, rifles it
-for odds and ends of colour, atmosphere, and attitude, is perpetually
-adding bright new bits, from such sources, to his
-Joseph’s coat: but if a traditionalist in this, a curio-hunter,
-he is an experimentalist in prosody; he has come far from the
-sentimental literary affectedness of his early work and at his
-best has written lyrics of a singular beauty and transparent
-clarity. The psychological factor has from time to time intrigued
-him, moreover, and we see him as a kind of link between
-the colourists and such poets as Mr. T. S. Eliot, Mr.
-Alfred Kreymborg, and Mr. Wallace Stevens. These poets<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span>
-are alike in achieving, by a kind of alchemy, the lyric in terms
-of the analytic: introspection is made to shine, to the subtly
-seen is given a delicate air of false simplicity. Mr. Stevens
-is closest to the colourists. His drift has been away from the
-analytic and towards the mere capture of a “tone.” Mr.
-Kreymborg is a melodist and a mathematician. He takes a
-pleasure in making of his poems and plays charming diagrams
-of the emotions. Mr. Eliot has more of an eye for the sharp
-dramatic gesture, more of an ear for the trenchant dramatic
-phrase—he looks now at Laforgue, now at John Webster. His
-technical skill is remarkable, his perception of effect is precise,
-his range narrow, perhaps increasingly narrow.</p>
-
-<p>Even so rapid and superficial a survey cannot but impress
-us with the essential anarchy of this poetic community. Lawlessness
-has seemed at times to be the prevailing note; no
-poetic principle has remained unchallenged, and we have only
-to look in the less prosperous suburbs and corners of this city
-to see to what lengths the bolder rebels, whether of the
-“Others” group or elsewhere, have gone. Ugliness and shapelessness
-have had their adherents among those whom æsthetic
-fatigue had rendered momentarily insensitive to the well-shaped;
-the fragmentary has had its adherents among those
-whom cynicism had rendered incapable of any service, too
-prolonged, to one idea. But the fetichists of the ugly and the
-fragmentary have exerted, none the less, a wholesome and
-fructifying influence. Whatever we feel about the ephemerality
-of the specifically ugly or fragmentary, we cannot escape
-a feeling that these, almost as importantly as the new realism
-or the new colourism, have enlarged what we might term the
-general “poetic consciousness” of the time. If there was a
-moment when the vogue of the disordered seemed to threaten,
-or predict, a widespread and rapid poetic decadence, that moment
-is safely past. The tendency is now in the other direction,
-and not the least interesting sign is the fact that many
-of the former apostles of the disordered are to-day experimenting
-with the things they yesterday despised—rhyme, metre,
-and the architecture of theme.</p>
-
-<p>We have our affections, in all this, for the fragmentary and
-ugly as for the abrupt small hideousness—oddly akin to virility—of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span>
-gargoyles. We have our affections, too, for the rawest
-of our very raw realisms—for the maddest of our colourisms,
-the most idiosyncratic subtleties of our first introspectionists.
-Do we hesitate a little to ask something more of any of the
-poets whom we thus designate? What we fear is that in
-attempting to give us our something more, they will give us
-something less. What we want more of, what we see our
-contemporary poets as for the most part sadly deficient in, is
-“art.” What we are afraid they will lose, if we urge them in
-this direction, is their young sharp brilliance. Urge them,
-however, we must. What our poets need most to learn is
-that poetry is not merely a matter of outpouring, of confession.
-It must be serious: it must be, if simple in appearance, none the
-less highly wrought: it must be packed. It must be beautifully
-elaborate rather than elaborately beautiful. It must be
-detached from dogma—we must keep it away from the all too
-prevalent lecture platform.</p>
-
-<p>What we should like to see, in short, is a fusion, of the extraordinary
-range of poetic virtues with which our contemporary
-poets confront us, into one poetic consciousness. Do we
-cavil too much in assuming that no one of our poets offers us
-quite enough? Should we rather take comfort in the hope
-that many of their individual “personalities” are vivid enough
-to offset their onesidedness, and in that way to have a considerable
-guarantee of survival? We have mentioned that possibility
-before, and certainly it cannot be flatly dismissed. But
-I think it cannot be contested that many of these poets already
-feel, themselves, a sharper responsibility, a need for a greater
-comprehensiveness, for a finer and richer tactile equipment,
-a steadier view of what it is that constitutes beauty of form.
-They are immeasurably distant from any dry, cold perfectionism,
-however; and if we cheer them in taking the path that
-leads thither, it is in the hope of seeing them reach the halfway
-house rather than the summit. For to go all the way is to
-arrive exhausted; to go half way is to arrive with vigour....
-That, however, is to interpose our own view and to lose our
-detachment. We return to a reiteration of our conclusion that
-American poetry is at the moment extraordinarily healthy. Its
-virtues are the virtues of all good poetry, and they are sufficient<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">226</span>
-to persuade us that the future of English poetry lies as
-much in America as in England. Its faults are the faults of
-a culture that is immature. But again, we reiterate that we
-have here many cultures, and if some are immature, some
-are not. Let those who are too prone to diagnose us culturally
-from “Spoon River Anthology” or “Smoke and Steel” keep
-in mind also Mr. Robinson’s “Merlin” and Mr. Frost’s
-“North of Boston”; Mr. Fletcher’s “Goblins and Pagodas”
-and Miss Lowell’s “Can Grande’s Castle.”</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Conrad Aiken</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_227" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">227</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ART">ART</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> problem of American Art is unlike that of any other
-country of the present or the past. We have not here
-the racial and historical foundation on which, until now, every
-art has been built and so our striving (it is far too soon to speak
-of success or failure) must be judged from another standpoint
-than the one to be taken in viewing an art that originates with
-its people or is directly transmitted from an older race. Egypt
-and ancient Mexico furnish examples of the first case, Italy
-and France of the second. When the latter countries were
-colonized by the Greeks, Phœnicians and others, they received
-a culture which could take on fresh vigour when grasped by
-a new race.</p>
-
-<p>We did not start as a new race, but as Europeans possessing
-the same intellectual heritage as the men who stayed in the
-parent countries. Our problem was not one of receiving the
-ancient tradition from an invading or colonizing people who
-brought with them an art already formed. Ourselves the invaders
-and colonizers, our problem was to keep alive the ideas
-that we had had in Europe, or to take over those of our new
-home, or to evolve an art of our own.</p>
-
-<p>To begin with the second possibility, the question of our
-relation to the ideas of the Indians may obviously be disposed
-of very briefly. The tribes encountered by the early settlers
-were in a state of savagery, and this fact, together with the
-constant warfare between the two races, is a sufficient explanation
-why we find no influence from the red men. Even where
-the Europeans encountered culture of a very high order, as in
-Mexico and Peru, the remoteness of the native ideas from those
-of the invading race prevented for centuries a just appreciation
-of the earliest and unquestionably the greatest art produced
-in the Western Hemisphere. It is only in quite recent
-years that we have realized its merit, and it is unlikely that
-even our present-day interest in the exotic arts will bring about<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">228</span>
-any important influence from the Indians, although in regions
-such as our Southwest and the parts of Mexico where “Americanizing”
-has not yet killed their art-instinct, they are still
-producing beautiful work.</p>
-
-<p>We have, of course, retained European ideals, but they have
-been conditioned by circumstances and we have not kept pace
-with Europe or even followed the course of the great art-movements
-until they were almost or quite superseded abroad.
-Our distance from the centres of ancient and modern culture
-on one hand, and the needs of building up the new continent on
-the other, combined to make our people lose interest in art,
-which, indeed, had never found a propitious soil among our
-British forebears. The case of literature is different. The
-love of it is an abiding one with the Anglo-Saxon race, and as
-Shakespeare and the Bible could be read in the frontier cabin
-almost as well as in London or Dublin, there was not the loss
-of knowledge of literature, the break in the production of it
-that we find in the case of the plastic arts.</p>
-
-<p>It is easy to exaggerate on this score, however, forgetting that
-the art-instinct accumulated in a race for centuries is not to
-be lost by a period of neglect. When he goes to the museum,
-the American recognizes the same masters as does the European,
-but the smaller opportunity here to know the classic past
-has the double effect of keeping art-lovers in America in a far
-more reduced minority and at the same time of weakening the
-authority of tradition.</p>
-
-<p>Not to speak of 17th or 18th century conditions, nor even of
-those of the 19th century, one need only consider the America
-of to-day to realize how little opportunity our people has to
-know art. In all but a few cities, Americans can learn only
-from reproductions and books, though even these are an immeasurably
-safer guide than the bad original works which are
-usually the first to arrive. When one thinks of the European
-countryside and the numberless small towns of all the old countries
-where there is no museum, one may be tempted to ask
-whether art conditions are so very different there. But they
-are different. There will be an old church, or some houses
-of a good period, or some objects in the houses, or—on the
-walls of the inn—some old prints handing on the tradition<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">229</span>
-of the great religious pictures (such things were made quite
-commonly until recent times and have not entirely ceased to be
-produced); a tradition of construction and of colour makes the
-modern houses fit in quite acceptably with those of the past.
-The centuries have built up a sense of fitness and beauty in
-the making and wearing of costume; there will be some form
-of folk-singing or other collective action of an artistic character,
-and thus the exceptional individual, born with a strong
-instinct toward art, has surroundings and a foundation that are
-lacking here. A striking proof of the difference between the
-two continents is the effect of the war on art-interest: whereas
-in America public attention has been turned away from art to
-a most marked degree, Europe is producing and buying art
-with a fervour that can only be explained by the desire to get
-back to essentials after the years in which people were deprived
-of them.</p>
-
-<p>Another phenomenon to be noted at this point is the dominance
-of women in American art-matters. It is unknown in
-any other country. The vast majority of American men are
-engrossed in the drive of work, their leisure goes to sport and
-to the forms of entertainment that call for the smallest amount
-of mental effort. The women, with their quicker sensibility
-and their recognition of art as one of the things that mark the
-higher orders of life, take over the furnishing of the home and
-through this and the study that their greater leisure permits
-them, exert a strong influence on the purchase of art-works
-for private collections and even museums. The production
-of the American painter and sculptor is also much affected as
-a consequence, and in the direction of conventionality. I do
-not claim that the level of art in America would be greatly
-improved at present if it were the men instead of the women
-who took the lead; perhaps, in view of the state of appreciation
-in our people, it would be lowered; but I maintain that
-the fact that art is so much in the hands of women and the
-suspicion among men that it carries with it some implication
-of effeminacy are among the indications of American immaturity
-in art-appreciation. We cannot expect an art really
-representative of America until there is a foundation of regard
-for his work that the artist can build on. In the old civilizations<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">230</span>
-the artist was meeting an active demand on the part
-of his people; in America, he has to seek desperately for a
-living. Albrecht Dürer summed up the difference between the
-two states of civilization when he wrote from Venice to a friend
-in the young Germany of his day: “Oh, how I shall freeze for
-this sun when I get home; here I am a gentleman, at home a
-parasite.”</p>
-
-<p>It will seem to many that even such famous words should
-not be repeated in a country where art is so often mentioned
-in the papers, where museums are springing up in large numbers,
-where unheard-of prices are paid for the work of famous
-men, and where even those who take no interest in art will
-accord it a sort of halo. But the very fact that it is relegated
-to the class of Sunday things instead of entering into everyday
-life shows that our colonial period—in the cultural sense
-of the word—is not yet passed. This should not be looked on
-as discouraging; it is natural that the formation of character
-and ideas should require time and I shall endeavour to show
-that the development is really a rapid and healthy one. The
-mistake Americans are most prone to, that of imagining the
-country to have reached a mature character and a valid expression,
-shows their eagerness to advance, and explains their
-readiness to tear down or to build up.</p>
-
-<p>In the presence of such a spirit, one must see the mistakes
-of conservatism or of ignorance in due perspective. However
-trying to those who suffer from them at the time, they cannot
-fatally warp the growth that is going on. For years we retained
-a tariff that obstructed the coming into the country of
-works of art. That is a thing of the past, and as one of the
-reasons used to defend it was that it protected American artists
-against the foreigner, so, with the abolition of the tariff, there
-has been more of a tendency to judge works of art for their
-own qualities, without question of their nationality and without
-the puerile idea of nurturing the American product by
-keeping out work from abroad. How far this mistake had
-gone may be judged from the fact that in a certain city of our
-Far West a group of painters made a protest against the attention
-given by a newspaper to an exhibition sent out from New
-York, raising no question of the quality of the work, but merely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">231</span>
-demanding that local men be spoken of when art was discussed
-in the paper—which promptly acquiesced, and removed the
-critic from his position. The case may seem an extreme one,
-yet it illustrates the attitude of many of our collectors and even
-our museum authorities who, in the name of Americanism,
-are “helping to fame many, the sight of whose painting is a
-miseducation,” to use a phrase that Mr. Berenson has applied
-to another matter.</p>
-
-<p>There is no question to-day but that America must evolve
-along the lines of contemporary thought throughout the civilized
-world. There will be a local tang to our art. Certain
-enthusiasms and characteristics, as we develop them, may give
-emphasis to special phases of our production, but there is no
-longer the possibility of an isolated, autochthonic growth, such
-as seemed to be forecast up to about the time of the Revolution.
-The 18th century in America with its beautiful architecture,
-its fine craftsmen, and its painting, is only less far from
-the America of to-day than is the art of the Indians. We still
-put up buildings and make furniture in what is called the
-Colonial style, but so do we follow the even more remote
-Mission style of architecture in our Western States, and attempt
-to use Indian designs in decoration. The usual fate of
-attempted continuings of a bygone style overtakes all these
-efforts. Our materials are different, our needs are different,
-our time is different. A glance at two houses, as one speeds
-by in an automobile, tells us which is the real Colonial architecture,
-which the imitation. At the Jumel Mansion in New
-York it is easy to see which are the old parts, which the
-restorations, although enough time has passed since the latter
-were made to weather them to the tone of the original
-places.</p>
-
-<p>In painting, the change that occurred after we became a
-republic is even more unmistakable. The English School underwent
-considerable modification when its representatives here
-began to work for themselves. Where Reynolds, Gainsborough,
-and Lawrence were consulting the old masters with such
-studious solicitude, Sir Joshua especially pursuing his enquiry
-into the processes of Titian, men like Copley and Blackburn
-were thrown back on such technical resources as they could<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span>
-find here and had to depend for progress on tightening their
-hold on character. Copley has the true note of the primitive
-in the intensity with which he studies his people, and must be
-reckoned with portraitists of almost the highest order.</p>
-
-<p>What a change in the next generation! The more independent
-we are politically the more we come out of the isolation
-that gave us quiet and freedom to build up the admirable
-style of pre-Revolutionary days. And then there was so much
-to be done in getting our new institutions to work and our new
-land under cultivation, there was so much money to be made
-and so much to import from Europe. It is significant that the
-best painter of the period is John Vanderlyn, who had been
-sent to Paris to study under Ingres. Fine artist that Vanderlyn
-was, and informed by a greater tradition than Copley
-knew, he never reached the impressiveness of the latter.</p>
-
-<p>I shall not attempt to describe at any length the various
-steps by which we rose from the artistic poverty which was
-ours in the earlier decades of the 19th century. My purpose
-is not to write even a short history of American art, but to
-enquire into its character and accomplishment. The test of
-these is evidently not what each period or school meant to the
-American artists before or after it, but how it compares with
-the rest of the world’s art at its time. The thought occurs to
-one forcibly on hearing of the wildly exaggerated esteem—whether
-measured by words or by money—in which the more
-celebrated of American artists are held; one asks oneself how
-the given work would be considered in Europe by competent
-men. Few indeed are the reputations that will stand the test;
-and we do not need to go abroad to apply it, for the galleries
-of our large cities supply ample opportunity for the comparison.</p>
-
-<p>Beginning with the landscape artists who are the earliest of
-the modern Americans to be looked on as our possible contribution
-to art, one’s most impersonal observation is that in
-point of time, they, like their successors in this country, follow
-the Europeans of the school to which they belong by something
-like a generation. Now, art-ideas moved very rapidly in
-the 19th century, and—however mechanical an indication it
-may appear at first sight—it is almost a sure condemnation of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">233</span>
-a European painter to find him in one period trying to work
-with the formula of the generation before him. In America
-this test does not apply so well, for we must allow for the
-effect of distance and compare the American with his immediate
-contemporaries abroad only in proportion to the advance
-of time—which is to say in proportion to the convenience of
-travel to Europe and the possibility of seeing contemporary
-work here.</p>
-
-<p>Thus when we consider that Inness, Wyant, and Martin
-were born about a generation after the Barbizon men and very
-nearly at the time of the French Impressionists, we shall not
-say that it was to the latter school that the Americans should
-have belonged. Whereas the European followers of Corot
-and Rousseau were merely <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">retardataires</i> who had not the intellectual
-power to seize on the ideas of their own day, the Americans
-could feel a little of the joy of discoverers through having
-themselves worked out some of the ideas of naturalism in their
-evolution from the earlier landscape painting in this country.
-And so if they add nothing to what the Frenchmen had done
-already—with an incomparably greater tradition to uphold
-them—our trio of nature-lovers expressed genuine sentiment,
-and Homer Martin pushed on to a quality of painting that
-often places him within hailing distance of the classic line
-which, in France, kept out of the swamps of sentimentality
-that engulfed the followers of Wyant and Inness here.</p>
-
-<p>The cases of Winslow Homer and Albert P. Ryder have an
-interest aside from the actual works of the two painters. They
-are doubtless the strongest Americans of their time—and the
-ones who owe the least to Europe. It must be men of such
-a breed who will make real American art when we are ready
-to produce it. In any case their work must rank among our
-permanently valuable achievements: Homer’s for the renewal
-of the sturdy self-reliance that we noted in Copley, Ryder’s for
-the really noble design he so often obtained and for the grand
-and moving fidelity to a vision.</p>
-
-<p>If their independence is so valuable a factor in both men’s
-work, there is also to be noted the heavy price that each paid
-for having been reared in a provincial school. With a boldness
-of character that recalls Courbet, Winslow Homer fails<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">234</span>
-utterly to hold a place in art analogous to that of the French
-realist, because all the power and ability that went into his
-work were unequal to compensating for his lack of the knowledge
-of form, of structure, of optical effect that Ingres and
-Delacroix, among others, furnished ready to the hand of
-Courbet. Thus Homer’s painting goes on throughout his lifetime
-quite innocent of any real concern with the central problems
-of European picture-making and owes most of its strength
-to the second-rate quality of illustration. One hesitates to say
-that Ryder would have gone farther had he been born in
-France, yet the fact of his labouring for ten or fifteen years on
-many a small canvas, the very limited number of his works
-which has resulted from the difficulty he had in saying the
-thing that was in him, are marks of a bad training. His range
-is not a wide one, but the deep beauty he infused into his pictures
-is one of our chief reasons for confidence in the art-instinct
-that lies dormant in our people.</p>
-
-<p>None of the men in the next group we must consider, the
-artists who enter fully into European painting, have the foundation
-of talent that Ryder had. Whistler is, of course, the
-painter to whom most Americans pin their faith in searching
-among their compatriots for an essential figure in 19th-century
-art. But take the first opportunity to see him with the great
-Frenchmen of his time: beside Degas his drawing is of a sickly
-weakness but slightly relieved by his sense of rhythm in line
-and form; beside Manet his colour and painting seem even
-more etiolated, and to save one’s feeling for him from utter
-demolition one hastens to the usual American refuge of the
-sentiment and—in the etchings—to the Yankee excellence of
-the craftsmanship. The nocturnes really do have a felicity in
-their rendering of the poetry of the night that would make us
-regret their loss, and when the unhappy Whistlerian school
-has been forgotten (an artist must take <em>some</em> responsibility for
-his followers) we shall have more satisfaction in the butterfly
-that Whistler knew himself to be, since he adopted it as his
-signature. It is merit of no such slightness that we love in
-Ryder, and yet when we reach Chase and Sargent we find even
-less of basic talent, for which their immersion in the current
-of European painting could have furnished a finely tempered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</span>
-instrument of expression. Both men show the natural bent
-for painting that is often a valuable asset and often—as in
-their case—a source of danger. They do not enrich our annals
-by any great works, but they do the country an immense service
-when they cause its students and collectors to take one of
-the final steps in the direction of the live tradition of Europe.
-They never appreciated what was greatest among their contemporaries,
-and failing to have this grasp of the creative impulse
-and of the new principles that were at work in Paris,
-they offered clever manipulations of the material as a substitute.
-Feeling the insufficience of this, Sargent has tried the
-grave style of the early Italians in his decorations at the Public
-Library in Boston. But his Biblical personages get him no
-nearer to the essentials of art than the society people of whom
-he has done so many likenesses. In Boston, it is Chavannes
-who shows which is the great tradition of the period and how
-it accords with the classic past. Sargent is perhaps most
-American in his unreadiness to perceive the immense things
-that Europe, modern and ancient, had to offer him.</p>
-
-<p>Even so, with Chase and Sargent we find ourselves far
-nearer the period when American artists shall partake in art-ideas
-during their moment of full fertility. Our Impressionists
-are only a decade or two behind the Frenchman, and while one
-must not slip into a too easy trick of rating talent by the time
-of its appearance, one cannot fail to be struck by the fact that
-John H. Twachtman and J. Alden Weir approached the quality
-of their French preceptors with far greater closeness than
-that with which the Inness-Wyant group followed the Barbizon
-men. Much as there is of charm and sound pictorial
-knowledge in Twachtman’s work and Weir’s, one feels that
-they are not yet deep enough in the great tradition to go
-on to an art of their own creation, and we have to content
-ourselves with giving them a place among the Impressionists of
-secondary rank.</p>
-
-<p>An interesting case among the Americans who made the serious
-study of European art that began soon after the middle
-of the 19th century, is that of John La Farge. We know the
-history of his seeking, his copying, his associations, speculations,
-and travels. All his life he is the man from the new<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">236</span>
-country asking the dead and the living representatives of the
-classic tradition for help. How little we see of the man himself
-in the mosaic of charming things that make up his art.
-Winslow Homer exists as a personality, ill-educated and crude,
-but affirmative and arresting. La Farge disappears in the
-smoke of the incense that he burns before the various shrines
-to which his eclecticism led him.</p>
-
-<p>If not to be admired as a great artist, he was a man of great
-gifts and a genuine appreciator of the masters. Therefore, he
-is not to be confused for a moment with the ignoble <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">pasticheurs</i>
-who achieve office and honours in the anæmic institutions with
-which we imitate the academies and salons of Europe. These
-are among the youthful errors I mentioned on an earlier page—depressing
-enough when one sees the acres of “decorative”
-abominations which fill our state-houses, courts, and libraries,
-but in reality of no great importance as a detriment to our
-culture. Like the soldiers’ monuments, the dead architecture,
-the tasteless manufactured articles of common use, they sink
-so far below any level of art that the public is scarcely affected
-by them. Only the persons trained in schools to admire the
-painting of a Mr. E. H. Blashfield or the sculpture of a Mr.
-Daniel C. French ever try to think of them as beautiful; the
-rest of the public takes them on faith as something that goes
-with the building, like the “frescoed” cupids to be found in
-the halls of apartment houses or the tin cupolas and minarets
-on the roof. The popular magazine-illustrators, poor as they
-are, have more power to mislead than our quasi-official nonentities.</p>
-
-<p>Between the pseudo-classic decorators and the frankly “lowbrow”
-artists of the commercial publications, the posters, and
-the advertisements, there is the large class of men whose work
-is seen at the annual exhibitions, the dealers’ galleries, and the
-American sections of the museums. They partake of the vice
-of each of the other two classes: the easily learned formula for
-their product being a more or less thorough schooling in some
-style derived from the past, plus an optimistic or “red-blooded”
-or else gently melancholy attitude toward the subject.
-Velasquez has been the main victim of their caricature
-in the later years, but a little Chinese, Florentine, Impressionist,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">237</span>
-or even Cubist style will often be added to give a look of
-“modernity” to the work. As long as there is a recognizable
-proficiency in drawing and painting (it is of course only for the
-cheaper trade that the picture has to be guaranteed as done by
-hand), the erudite patron or museum trustee is assured of the
-seriousness of the artist’s intentions, while to make the thing
-take with the general buyer, the most important matter is
-judgment as to the type of American girl, the virile male, or
-the romantic or homely landscape that our public likes to live
-with.</p>
-
-<p>The only excuse for mentioning such things in an essay on
-American art is that they help to define it by contrast—for
-these pictures are neither art nor American. The disease of
-which they are an outward sign infects Europe almost as much
-as it does our own country, and there is hardly a distinguishing
-mark to tell whether the Salon picture was done in Madrid,
-Berlin, or Indianapolis. A sentence from an eminent American
-critic, Russell Sturgis, gives the key to the situation. He
-said, “The power of abstract design is lost to the modern
-world,—we must paint pictures or carve expressional groups
-when we wish to adorn.” In the half generation that has
-passed since these words were spoken, the French have proven
-by several arts based entirely on abstract design that the power
-for it was not lost to the world and that men still know the
-difference between expression by form and colour and expression
-by concrete ideas.</p>
-
-<p>Throughout this survey I have taken painting as the index
-to the art-instinct of America, and as we glance again at even
-our best painters we see that it is on concrete ideas that they
-have built: on character in portraiture with Copley, on romantic
-vision with Ryder, on observation of appearances with
-Homer. Precisely the reason for Whistler’s great success
-among his countrymen was the promise of release he afforded
-by his reaching out for the design and colour of the Orient,
-with which one associates also his spoken words, offering us
-“harmonies” and “symphonies” in place of the art built on
-intellectual elements that we had had before. The fact that
-Whistler himself was not strong enough in his grasp of tradition,
-or of a nature to achieve an important result along the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">238</span>
-lines he pointed to, does not change the issue. We had begun
-to be aware of the repression of instinct that was marking
-American life. We had recognized that the satisfaction of the
-senses, quite as much as intellectual pleasure, is to be demanded
-of art. Puritan morality and Quaker drabness had
-turned us away from any such conception, and when they took
-notice of art at all, it was for its educational value, either to
-inculcate religious or patriotic ideas, or for its connection with
-the classic past.</p>
-
-<p>Add to this the utilitarian needs of a country that had to
-build rapidly, caring for cheapness more than for permanence
-(so little of the building, in fact, was intended to be permanent),
-and one has an explanation of the absence of architectural
-quality in the American houses of the last hundred years.
-The characteristic of building in the time is seen in the lifeless
-blocks of “brownstone fronts,” in the apartments that have so
-little of the home about them that in the restlessness of his
-search for a place to live satisfactorily, the American of the
-cities has earned the name of the “van-dweller,”—one sees the
-thing again in the abject monotony of farm-houses and country
-residences. Their spirit, or lack of it, is continued in furniture
-and decoration. One understands why Europe has been
-the magic word for countless thousands of Americans. Perhaps
-it was the palaces and museums that they set out to see
-and that they told about on their return, but more impressive
-to them—because more satisfying to their hunger for a beauty
-near to their daily lives—was the sight of an Italian village
-built with love for hillsides and with understanding of the forms
-of the hill and of the type of construction that would suit it.
-Or was it the cheeriness of the solid Dutch houses whose clear
-reds and blacks look out so robustly through the green of the
-trees that border the canals? The bright-coloured clothing
-of the peasants became delightful to the traveller, even if
-he still gave it a pitying smile when he saw it again on the
-immigrant here; and the humble foreigner, anxious to fit in to
-his new surroundings, hastened to tone down the vivacity of his
-native costume to the colourlessness of the American farmer’s
-or workman’s garb. In place of the gay pink or green stucco
-of his cottage at home, the immigrant got more or less of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">239</span>
-sanitary plumbing, higher wages, and other material benefits,
-to recompense him for the life he had left behind.</p>
-
-<p>The life! That was the magic that Europe held for our
-visitors. They might return to the big enterprises, the big
-problems here, and feel that America was home because they
-had a share in its growth, but their nostalgia for the old countries
-continued to grow in the measure that they came to appreciate
-the wisdom with which life was ordered there—as
-they realized how the stable institutions, the old religions, festivals,
-traditions, all the things that flower into art, had resisted
-the terrific change that the industrial revolution had brought
-into the 19th century. Behind all questions of the coming of
-objects of art into this country or the appearance of new artists
-or new schools here, lies this most pivotal matter of the elements
-of art in American life. They need not be, they cannot
-be the same as those in European life, but it is futile to think
-of having an art here if we deny ourselves the ideas and feelings
-of which art has been made—the joy and awe of life
-that the Greek responded to in his marbles, the Italian in his
-frescoes, the Spaniard, the Fleming, the Dutchman, and the
-Frenchman in his canvases. Copying the externals of their
-work without again living their lives can result only in academism—bad
-sculpture and bad pictures.</p>
-
-<p>It was not as a protest against bad art, local or foreign,
-that the International Exhibition of 1913 was organized, and
-it is very solidly to the credit of our public that it did not regard
-the event in that negative fashion—but as a positive thing,
-a revelation of the later schools of European painting of which
-it had been kept in ignorance by the will of the academies here
-and abroad. The “Armory Show,” as it was called, drew
-forth a storm of ridicule, but it also attracted such hundreds of
-thousands of visitors as no current exhibition had ever gathered
-in this country before. The first contact of our public
-with the arts that have succeeded Impressionism—with the
-painting of Cézanne, Redon, Gauguin, van Gogh, Matisse, the
-Cubists, and others—was made at this epoch-marking show.
-With the jeers that it received there were not a few hosannas,
-and even the vast majority of visitors—doubtful as to the exact
-value of the various exhibits, knew that qualities existed in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">240</span>
-the new schools that had never been seen here and that were
-needed. Some three hundred works went from the walls of
-the Armory to form a vanguard for the far more important
-purchases of modern art that have since been building up our
-collections; so that at the moment of this writing an exhibition
-can be opened at the Metropolitan Museum which, while representing
-a mere fraction of the wealth of such pictures in
-American possession, gives a superb idea of the great schools
-of the later 19th century and the 20th century in France. It
-is worthy of note that in its response to the great show of 1913
-and to the smaller ones that followed, America was only giving,
-in a stronger form, the measure of a power of appreciation it
-had shown before. Earlier examples of this are to be found
-in the great collections of Barbizon and Impressionist pictures
-here. A thing that should weigh against many a discouraging
-feature of our art-conditions is the fact that an American
-museum was the first in the world, and the only one during
-the lifetime of Manet, to hang works by that master.</p>
-
-<p>Returning now to our own painting, one man in this country
-resisted with complete success the test of an exhibition with
-the greatest of recent painters from abroad. It was Mr.
-Maurice B. Prendergast, who for thirty years had been joyously
-labouring at an art which showed its derivation from
-the best French painting of his day, its admirable acceptances
-of the teaching of Cézanne (scarcely a name even in Europe
-when Mr. Prendergast first studied him), and its humorous
-and affectionate appreciation of the American scenes that the
-artist had known from his youth. In original and logical
-design, in brilliant colour that yet had the mellowness of a
-splendid wine, he expresses the modern faith in the world we
-see and makes it lovable. At last we welcome an art in accord
-with the finest of the ancient-modern tradition, as European
-critics have since declared; yet it remains American in provenance
-and in the air of unconscious honesty that has always
-been a characteristic of the good work of this country.</p>
-
-<p>The latest wave of influence to come over American art
-has almost been the most far-reaching and invigorating. To
-go further than this assertion, at least in the matter of individuals,
-would be to forego the support of too large a part<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">241</span>
-of that body of opinion that I know to be behind my statements
-throughout this essay. Art-matters must, in the final
-analysis, be stated dogmatically, but I am unwilling to speak
-of the schools now developing save in a general way, especially
-as the most interesting men in them have still to reach a definitive
-point in their evolution. They are abreast or nearly
-abreast of the ideas of Europe, and there is an admirable vigour
-in the work that some individuals are producing with those
-ideas. But the changes brought about by the International
-are still too recent for us to expect the most important results
-from them for a number of years. The general condition here
-has probably never been as good before.</p>
-
-<p>I have, till now, spoken only of the more traditional aspects
-of art—the kind one finds in museums—and that last word
-calls for at least a mention of the great wealth of art-objects
-that are heaping up in our public collections, and in the private
-galleries which so often come to the aid of the museums.</p>
-
-<p>There is, however, another phase of our subject that demands
-comment, if only as a point of departure for the study
-that will one day be given to the American art that is not yet
-recognized by its public or its makers as one of our main expressions.
-The steel bridges, the steel buildings, the newly
-designed machines, and utensils of all kinds we are bringing
-forth show an adaptation to function that is recognized as one
-of the great elements of art. Perhaps the process has not yet
-gone far enough for us to look on these things as fully developed
-works of art, perhaps we shall still need some influence
-from Europe to make us see the possibilities we have here, or
-again, it may be in America that the impetus to creation along
-such lines will be the stronger. At all events we may feel sure
-that the study of the classics, ancient and modern, which is
-spreading throughout the country has, in some men, reached
-a point of saturation which permits the going on to new discovery,
-and we may be confident of the ability of our artists to
-make good use of their advantage.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Walter Pach</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_243" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">243</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_THEATRE">THE THEATRE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Of</span> the perceptible gradual improvement in the American
-popular taste so far as the arts are concerned, the theatre
-as we currently engage it offers, comparatively, the least evidence.
-The best-selling E. Phillips Oppenheims, Robert W.
-Chamberses, and Eleanor H. Porters of yesterday have given
-considerable ground to Wharton and Bennett, to Hergesheimer
-and Wells. The audiences in support of Stokowski, the Flonzaley
-Quartette, the Philharmonic, the great piano and violin
-virtuosos, and the recognized singers, are yearly augmented.
-Fine painting and fine sculpture find an increasing sober appreciation.
-The circulation of <cite>Munsey’s Magazine</cite> falls, and
-that of the <cite>Atlantic Monthly</cite> rises. But the best play of an
-American theatrical season, say a “Beyond the Horizon,” has
-still to struggle for full breath, while across the street the receipts
-of some “Ladies’ Night,” “Gold Diggers,” or “Bat,”
-running on without end, mount to the half-million mark.</p>
-
-<p>If one speaks of the New York theatre as the American
-theatre, one speaks with an exaggerated degree of critical charity,
-for the New York theatre—so far as there is any taste in
-the American theatre—is the native theatre at its fullest flower.
-Persons insufficiently acquainted with the theatre have a fondness
-for controverting this, but the bookkeeping departments
-offer concrete testimony that, if good drama is supported at
-all, it is supported in the metropolitan theatre, not in the
-so-called “road” theatre. The New York theatre supports
-an American playwright like Booth Tarkington when he does
-his best in “Clarence,” where the road theatre supports him
-only when he does his worst, as in “Mister Antonio.” The
-New York theatre, these same financial records prove, supports
-Shaw, O’Neill, Galsworthy, Bahr, and others of their
-kind, at least in sufficient degree to permit them to pay their
-way, where the theatre of Philadelphia, Boston, Cleveland,
-Chicago, St. Louis, Baltimore, and Pittsburgh spells failure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">244</span>
-for them. Save it be played by an actor or actress of great
-popular favour, a first-rate piece of dramatic writing has to-day
-hardly a chance for success outside of New York. These other
-cities of America, though they are gradually reading better
-books and patronizing better music and finer musicians, are
-almost drama-deaf. “There is, in New York,” the experienced
-Mr. William A. Brady has said to me, “an audience of at least
-fifteen thousand for any really good play. That isn’t a large
-audience; it won’t turn the play into a profitable theatrical
-venture; but it is a damned sight larger audience than you’ll
-be able to find in any other American city.” Let the native
-sons of the cities thus cruelly maligned, before they emit their
-habitual bellows of protest, consider, once they fared forth
-from New York, the fate of nine-tenths of the first-rate plays
-produced in the American theatre without the hocus-pocus of
-fancy box-office “stars” during the last ten years.</p>
-
-<p>The theatrical taste of America at the present time, outside
-of the metropolis, is demonstrated by the box-office returns
-to be one that venerates the wall-motto <em>opera</em> of Mr. William
-Hodge and the spectacular imbecilities of Mr. Richard Walton
-Tully above the finest work of the best of its native dramatists
-like O’Neill, and above the finest work of the best of the modern
-Europeans. In the metropolis, an O’Neill’s “Beyond the
-Horizon,” a Galsworthy’s “Justice,” a Shaw’s “Androcles,”
-at least can live; sometimes, indeed, live and prosper. But
-for one respectable piece of dramatic writing that succeeds outside
-of New York, there are twenty that fail miserably. The
-theatrical culture of the American countryside is in the main
-of a piece with that of the French countryside, and to the nature
-of the latter the statistics of the French provincial theatres
-offer a brilliant and dismaying attestation. Save a good play
-first obtain the endorsement of New York, it is to-day impossible
-to get a paying audience for it in any American city of size
-after the first curiosity-provoking performance. These audiences
-buy, not good drama, but notoriety. Were all communication
-with the city of New York suddenly to be cut off for
-six months, the only theatrical ventures that could earn their
-way outside would be the Ziegfeld “Follies,” the Winter Garden
-shows, “Ben Hur,” and the hack dramatizations of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">245</span>
-trashier best-sellers like “Pollyanna” and “Daddy Longlegs.”
-This is not postured for sensational effect. It is literally true.
-So true, in fact, that there is to-day not a single producer in
-the American theatre who can afford to, or who will, risk the
-loss of a mere four weeks’ preliminary “road” trial of a first-class
-play. If he cannot get a New York theatre for his production,
-he places it in the storehouse temporarily until he
-can obtain a metropolitan booking rather than hazard the financial
-loss that, nine times in ten, is certain to come to him.</p>
-
-<p>More and more, the better producing managers—men like
-Hopkins, William Harris, Jr., Ames, <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">et al.</i>—are coming to open
-their plays in New York “cold,” that is, without the former
-experimental performances in thitherward cities. And more
-and more, they are coming to realize to their sorrow that, unless
-New York supports these plays of the better sort, they can
-look for no support elsewhere. Chicago, boasting of its hospitality
-to sound artistic endeavour, spent thirty-five hundred
-dollars on a drama by Eugene O’Neill in the same week that it
-spent forty-five thousand dollars on Al Jolson’s Winter Garden
-show. Boston, one of the first cities to rush frantically
-forward with proofs of its old New England culture, has turned
-into a prompt and disastrous failure every first-rate play presented
-in its theatres without a widely advertised star actor
-during the last five years, and at the same time has made a
-fortune for the astute Mr. A. H. Woods, who, gauging its culture
-accurately, has sent it “Up in Mabel’s Room,” “Getting
-Gertie’s Garter,” and similar spicy boudoir and hay-mow
-farces, together with Miss Theda Bara in “The Blue Flame.”
-(It is no secret among the theatrical managers that the only
-way to bring the culture of Boston to the box-office window is
-through a campaign of raw advertising: the rawer the better.
-Thus the Boston Sunday newspaper advertisements of “Up in
-Mabel’s Room” were made to display a girl lying on a bed,
-with the suggestive catch-lines, “10,000 Visitors Weekly” and
-“Such a Funny Feeling.” Thus, the advertisements of another
-exhibit presented a rear view of a nude female with the
-title of the show, “Oh, Mommer,” printed across the ample
-buttocks. Thus, the advertisements of a Winter Garden music
-show, alluding to the runway used in these exhibitions, christened<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">246</span>
-it “The Bridge of Thighs.”) No play presented in
-Philadelphia since “The Girl with the Whooping Cough”
-(subsequently suppressed by the New York police authorities
-on the ground of indecency) has been patronized to the extent
-where it has been found necessary to call out the police reserves
-to maintain order, as was the case when the play in point
-was produced. Washington is a cultural wilderness; I have
-personally attended the premières of ten highly meritorious
-dramas in the national capital in the last six years and can
-report accurately on the quality of the receptions accorded to
-them. Washington would seem still to be what it was some
-fifteen years or so ago when, upon the initial revelation of
-Barrie’s “Peter Pan,” it essayed to boo it into permanent discard.
-Baltimore, Detroit (save during the height of the war
-prosperity when the poor bohicks, wops, and Greeks in the
-automobile works found themselves suddenly able to buy theatre
-seats regularly), Cleveland, St. Louis, San Francisco—the
-story is the same. Honourable drama spells ruin; legs,
-lewdness and sentimentality spell riches.</p>
-
-<p>In comparison with the taste of the great American cultural
-prairie whereon these cities are situated, the city of New
-York, as I have written, looms up an æsthetic Athens. In
-New York, too, there is prosperity for bare knees, bed humours,
-and “Peg o’ My Heart” bathos, but not alone for
-these. Side by side with the audiences that crowd into the
-leg shows, the couch farces, and the uplift sermons are audiences
-of considerable bulk that make profitable the production
-of such more estimable things as Shaw’s “Heartbreak House,”
-O’Neill’s “Emperor Jones,” the plays of St. John Ervine and
-Dunsany, of Tolstoy and Hauptmann, of Bahr and Benavente
-and Guitry. True enough, in order to get to the theatres in
-which certain of these plays are revealed, one is compelled to
-travel in a taxicab several miles from Broadway—and at times
-has to sit with the chauffeur in order to pilot him to far streets
-and alleyways that are not within his sophisticated ken—but,
-once one gets to the theatres, one finds them full, and
-their audiences enthusiastic and responsive. The culture of
-the American theatre—in so far as it exists—may be said, in
-fact, to be an alleyway culture. Almost without exception in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">247</span>
-the last dozen years and more have the best dramatists of
-Europe and of our own country been driven up alleyways and
-side-streets for their first American hearing. Up these dark
-alleys and in these remote malls alone have they been able to
-find a sufficient intelligence for their wares. Hervieu, Shaw,
-Echegaray, Strindberg, Björnson, Dunsany, Masefield, Ervine,
-Bergström, Chekhov, Andreyev, Benavente, O’Neill—these
-and many others of eminence owe their New York introduction
-to the side-street American who, in the majority of cases,
-is found upon analysis to be of fifty per cent. foreign blood.
-And what thus holds true of New York holds equally true in
-most of the other cities. In most of such cities, that is, as have
-arrived at a degree of theatrical polish sufficient to boast a little
-playhouse up an ulterior mews.</p>
-
-<p>The more general American theatrical taste, reflected perhaps
-most fairly in such things as the idiotic endorsements of
-the Drama League and the various “white lists” of the different
-religious organizations, is—for all the undeniable fact
-that it seems gradually to be improving—still in the playing-blocks
-and tin choo-choo-car stage. Satire, unless it be of the
-most obvious sort and approach easily assimilable burlesque,
-spells failure for a producer. A point of view that does not
-effect a compromise with sentimentality spells failure for a
-dramatist. Sex, save it be presented in terms of a seltzer-siphon,
-“Abendstern,” or the <cite>Police Gazette</cite>, spells failure for
-both. The leaders in the propagation of this low taste are not
-the American managers and producers, as is commonly maintained,
-but the American playwrights. During the seventeen
-years of my active critical interest in the theatre, I have not
-encountered a single honest piece of dramatic writing from an
-American hand that could not get a hearing—and an intelligent
-hearing—from one or another of these regularly abused managers
-and producers. And during these years I have, by virtue
-of my joint professional duties as critic and co-editor of a sympathetic
-literary periodical, read perhaps nine-tenths of the
-dramatic manuscripts which aspiring young America has confected.
-This young America, loud in its inveighing against the
-managers and producers, has in the space of time indicated
-produced very, very little that was worth producing, and that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">248</span>
-little has promptly found a market. A bad workman is always
-indignant. But I know of no good American play that
-either has not already been produced, or has not been bought
-for future production. Any good play by an American will
-find its producer readily enough. The first manager who read
-“Beyond the Horizon” bought it immediately he laid the
-manuscript down, and this, recall, was its professionally unknown
-author’s first three-act play. The American theatre
-has altered in this department; the last fifteen years have
-wrought a tonic change.</p>
-
-<p>No, the fault is not with the managers and producers, but
-with the playwrights. The latter, where they are not mere
-parrots, are cowards. Young and old, new and experienced,
-talented and talentless alike, they are in the mass so many
-<cite>Saturday Evening Post</cite> souls, alone dreaming of and intent
-upon achieving a sufficient financial gain to transmute the Ford
-into a Rolls-Royce and the Hudson Bay seal collar into Russian
-sable. A baby cannot be nourished and developed physically
-upon water; a theatrical public, for all its potential willingness,
-cannot be developed aesthetically upon a diet of snide
-writing. In the American theatre of the present time there
-are not more than two, or at most three, playwrights out
-of all the hundreds, who retain in their hearts a determined
-and uncorrupted purpose. Take away young O’Neill, and
-give a bit of ground to Miss Rita Wellman (whose accomplishment
-is still too vague for fixed appraisal), and there is next
-to nothing left. Flashes of talent, yes, but only flashes.
-Craven’s “Too Many Cooks” and “The First Year” are
-observant, highly skilful depictions of the American scene, but
-they are dramatic literature only in the degree that “Main
-Street” and “This Side of Paradise” are literature. With
-the extraordinary “Papa,” Miss Zoë Akins gave up and surrendered—at
-least temporarily—to the box-office skull and
-cross-bones. Until Tarkington proves that “Clarence” was
-not a happy accident in the long and unbroken line of “Up
-from Nowhere,” “Mister Antonio,” “The Country Cousin,”
-“The Alan from Home,” “Cameo Kirby,” “Your Humble
-Servant,” “Springtime,” “Getting a Polish,” “The Gibson
-Upright,” and “Poldekin,” we shall have to hold up our decision<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">249</span>
-on him. George Ade, the great promise of authentic
-American drama, is no more; he pulled in his oars, alas, in
-mid-stream. Joseph Medill Patterson, an honest dramatist,
-fell through the bridge while not yet half way across. The
-rest? Well, the rest are the Augustus Thomases, left-overs
-from the last generation, proficient technicians with empty
-heads, or youngsters still dramatically wet behind the ears.
-The rest of the rest? Ticket salesmen.</p>
-
-<p>In no civilized country in the world to-day is there among
-playwrights so little fervour for sound drama as in the United
-States. In England, they at least try, in a measure, to write
-well; in Germany, to experiment bravely in new forms; in
-France, to philosophize either seriously or lightly upon life
-as they find it; in Russia, to treat soberly of problems physical
-and spiritual; in Spain, to depict the Spanish heart and
-conscience and atmosphere; in Ireland, to reflect the life and
-thoughts, the humour and tragedy and encompassing aspirations,
-of a people. And in the United States—what? In the
-United States, with hardly more than two exceptions, there is
-at the moment not a playwright who isn’t thinking of “success”
-above honest work. Good and bad craftsmen alike,
-they all think the same. Gold, silver, copper. And the result
-is an endless procession of revamped crook plays, detective
-plays, Cinderella plays, boudoir plays, bucolic plays: fodder
-for doodles. The cowardice before the golden snake’s eye
-spreads to the highest as well as to the lowest. Integrity is
-thrown overboard as the ship is steered unswervingly into the
-Golden Gate. The unquestionable talent of an Avery Hopwood—a
-George M. Cohan—a George Bronson-Howard—is
-deliberately self-corrupted.</p>
-
-<p>The American professional theatre is to-day at once the richest
-theatre in the world, and the poorest. Financially, it
-reaches to the stars; culturally, with exception so small as to
-be negligible, it reaches to the drains. For both of these
-reaches, the American newspaper stands largely responsible.
-The American newspaper, in general, regards the theatre with
-contempt. My early years, upon leaving the university, were
-spent on the staff of one of them—the leading daily journal
-of America, it was in those days—and I shall never forget its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">250</span>
-attitude toward the theatre: cheap, hollow, debased. If a
-play was produced by a manager who advertised extensively
-in the paper, it was praised out of all reason. If a play was
-produced by a manager who happened to be <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">persona non grata</i>
-in the office, it was dismissed with a brief reportorial notice.
-If a play was produced by a new and enterprising manager
-on the night of another production in a theatre patronized by
-fashionable audiences—the Empire, say—the former play,
-however worthy an effort it might be, was let down with a stick
-or two that there might be room to print the names of the
-fashionables who were in the Empire seats. The surface of
-things has changed somewhat since then, but the situation at
-bottom is much the same. A talented young reviewer writes
-honestly of a tawdry play in the <cite>Evening Sun</cite>; the producer
-of the play, an office favourite, complains; and the young reviewer
-is promptly discharged. A moving picture producer
-takes half-page advertisements of his forthcoming <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">opus</i> in the
-New York newspapers, and the screen exhibit, a piece of trash,
-is hailed as a master work. Let a new drama by Gerhart
-Hauptmann be presented in the Park Theatre to-night and
-let Mr. John Barrymore also appear at eight-thirty in a play
-by some obscure hack at the Empire, and there will not be a
-single newspaper in the whole of New York City that will not
-review the latter flashy affair at the expense of the former.</p>
-
-<p>It is not that the newspapers, in New York as elsewhere, are
-dishonest—few of them are actually dishonest; it is that they
-are suburban, shoddy, cheap. With only four exceptions that
-I can think of, the American newspaper, wherever you find it,
-treats the theatre as if it were of very much less importance
-than baseball and of but a shade more importance than a rape
-in Perth Amboy, New Jersey. Two columns are given freely
-to the latest development in bootlegging in Harlem, and a begrudged
-half-column to a play by John Galsworthy. A society
-woman is accused by her husband of having been guilty of
-adultery with a half-breed Indian, and the allotment is four
-columns. On the same day, a Shakespearean production is
-mounted by the most artistic producer in the American theatre,
-and the allotment of space is two-thirds of a column. The
-reply of the newspapers is, “Well, we give the public what it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">251</span>
-wants! And it is more greatly interested in scandal than in
-Shakespeare.” Have not then the theatrical managers the
-right to reply in the same terms? And when they do, some of
-them, disgustedly reply in the same terms, what is the hypocritical
-appraisal of their offerings that the selfsame newspapers
-vouchsafe to them? If the New York <cite>Times</cite> devotes three
-columns to a dirty divorce case, I fail to see how it can with
-justice or reason permit its theatrical reviewer indignantly to
-denounce Mr. A. H. Woods in the same issue for devoting
-three hours to a dirty farce.</p>
-
-<p>The American drama, like the American audience, lacks repose.
-This is ever logically true of a new civilization. Time
-must mellow the mind and heart before drama may achieve
-depth and richness; time must mellow the mind and heart before
-an audience may achieve the mood of calm deliberation.
-Youth is a rare and precious attribute, but youth, for all its
-fine courage and derring-do, is inclined to be superficial. Its
-emotions and its reactions are respectively of and to the primary
-colours; the pastels it is impatient of. The American
-theatre, drama, and audience are the theatre, drama, and audience
-of the metaphysical and emotional primary colours: substantial,
-vivid, but all too obvious and glaring. I speak, of
-course, generally. For there are a few notable exceptions to
-the rule, and these exceptions portend in the American theatre
-the first signs of the coming dawn. A producer like Arthur
-Hopkins, perhaps the first American man of the theatre gifted
-with a genuine passion for fine and beautiful things and the
-talent with which to do—or at least try to do—them; a dramatist
-like young O’Neill, permitting no compromise or equivoke
-in the upward sweep of his dynamic imagination; an actor
-like Arnold Daly and an actress like Margaret Anglin to
-whom failure in the service of honest drama means absolutely
-nothing—these are they who inspire our faith in the future.
-Nor do they stand alone. Hume and Moeller, Jones, Peters,
-Simonson and Bel-Geddes, Glaspell, Wellman and Pottle—such
-youngsters, too, are dreaming their dreams, some of them,
-true enough, still silly dreams, but yet dreams. And the
-dreaming spreads, spreads....</p>
-
-<p>But in its slow and brave ascent, the American theatre is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">252</span>
-still heavily retarded by the insular forces that, as in no other
-theatre save the English, operate in the Republic. The fight
-against outworn convention is a brave and bitter fight, but
-victory still rests mainly on the banners of the Philistines.
-The drama that dismisses sentimentality for truth, that seeks
-to face squarely the tragedy and comedy of love and life,
-that declines to pigeon-hole itself, and that hazards to view
-the American scene with cosmopolitan eyes, is confronted at
-every turn by the native Puritanism (as often shammed as
-inborn), and by the native parochialism and hypocrisy. The
-production that derides all stereotype—all the ridiculous and
-mossy rubber-stamps—is in turn derided. The actor or
-actress who essays to filter a rôle through the mind of a human
-being instead of through the mind of a rouged marionette is
-made mock of. Here, the playgoing public finds its leaders
-in three-fourths of the newspaper reviewing chairs, chairs influenced,
-directly or indirectly, by an intrinsic inexperience
-and ignorance, or by an extrinsic suggestion of “policy.”</p>
-
-<p>The American theatre and drama have long suffered from
-being slaves to the national hypocrisy. Only on rare occasions
-have they been successful in casting off the shackles, and then
-but momentarily. The pull against them is stubborn, strong.
-Cracking the black snake across their backs are a hundred
-padrones: newspapers trembling at the thought of offending
-their advertisers, religious orders poking their noses into what
-should not concern them, corrupt moral uplift organizations
-and lecherous anti-vice societies itching for the gauds of publicity,
-meddling college professors augmenting their humble
-wage by writing twenty-dollar articles on subjects they know
-nothing about for the Sunday supplements, ex-real estate reporters
-and divorcée interviewers become “dramatic critics,”
-notoriety seeking clergymen, snide producers trying to protect
-their snide enterprises from the dangers of the invasion of
-truth and beauty. Let a group of drama-loving and theatre-loving
-young men, resourceful, skilful, and successful, come
-upon the scene, as the Washington Square Players came, let
-them bring flashes of authentic dramatic art into their native
-theatre, and against them is promptly hurled the jealous irony
-of the Old Guard that is dead, but never surrenders. Let<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">253</span>
-a young playwright like Zoë Akins write an admirable fantastic
-comedy (“Papa”), and against her are brought all the
-weapons of the morals-in-art mountebanks. Let a producer
-like Hopkins break away from the mantel-leaning histrionism
-and palm-pot investiture, and against him is brought up the
-curt dismissal of freakishness.</p>
-
-<p>The native theatre, for all the fact that it is on the way,
-is not yet ready for such things as demand a degree of civilization
-for receptive and remunerative appreciation. The “Pegs
-o’ My Heart” and “Pollyannas,” the “Turn to the Rights”
-and “Lightnin’s” still make millions, while the bulk of finer
-things languish and perish. I speak, remember, not of the
-theatre of one city, but of the theatre of the land. This theatre,
-considering it in so far as possible as a unit, is still not
-much above the Midway Plaisance, the honk-a-tonk, the Sunday
-School charade. That one, or maybe two, foreign national
-theatres may not be much better is no apology. Such foreign
-theatres—the French, say—are less national theatres than one-city
-theatres, for Paris is France. But the American theatre
-spreads from coast to coast. What it spreads, I have herein
-tried to suggest.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">George Jean Nathan</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_255" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">255</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ECONOMIC_OPINION">ECONOMIC OPINION</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">IF</span> there were conscious restriction upon the expression of
-opinion in America, this essay would possess the pompous
-certainty of an official document. Instead of threading its
-hazardous way through a mass of confused thought, it would
-record in formal terms acceptable utterance. In fact, the very
-restrictions upon thought and speech, with the aid of scissors
-and a license to speech, could easily be turned into a statement
-of the reputable theory of the welfare of the community.</p>
-
-<p>Unluckily, however, American life has not been arranged to
-make matters easy for the interpreter of economic opinion.
-Every American is conscious of a right to his own opinion
-about “why all of us taken together are as well off as we are”
-and “why some of us are better off and others of us worse off
-than the average of us.” Whether this privilege comes from
-the Bill of Rights, the constitution of the United States, or his
-Simian ancestry, he could not say; but he is fully assured that
-it is “inalienable” and “indefeasible.” No restriction of
-birth, breeding, position, or wealth limits his right to an
-opinion or persuades him to esteem his more fortunate neighbour’s
-more highly than his own. Nor do intellectual limitations
-check the flow of words and of ideas. No one is examined
-upon the growth of industrialism, the institutions which
-make up the economic order, or the nature of an industrial
-problem before he is allowed to speak. In fact, the idea that
-a knowledge of the facts about the subject under discussion, or
-of the principles to be applied to it, is essential to the right
-to an opinion is a strange notion little understood here. Even
-if occasionally some potentate attempts a mild restriction upon
-the spoken or the written word, it checks only those who talk
-directly and therefore clumsily. Its principal effect is through
-provocation to add mightily to the volume of opinion.</p>
-
-<p>The result is a conglomerate mass of opinion that sprawls
-through the known realm of economics and into regions uncharted.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">256</span>
-The mighty men of finance spin a theory of national
-welfare in terms of foreign concessions no more glibly than
-the knights of the road in solemn convention solve with words
-the riddle of unemployment. The newly enfranchised women
-compete with the members of the Dynamite Club in proposals for
-setting the industrial cosmos in order. Economic opinion bobs
-up in the financial journals, “the labour press,” the periodicals
-of the “learned” societies, and in all the “Christian” advocates.
-It shows itself boldly in political speeches, in directors’
-reports, in public hearings, and in propagandist sheets. It
-lurks craftily in editorials, moving pictures, drawing-room lectures,
-poems, cartoons, and hymns. It ranges from the
-sonorous apologies for the existing order voiced by the Aaron
-Baal Professor of Christian Homiletics in the Midas Theological
-Seminary to the staccato denunciation of what is by the
-Sons of Martha Professor of Proletarian Tactics in the Karl
-Marx College for Workers.</p>
-
-<p>A mere semblance of order is given to this heterogeneous mass
-of opinion by the conditions which make it. A common system
-of legal, business, and social usages is to be found the country
-over. This has left its impress too firmly in the assumptions
-which underlie thought to allow this material to be separate
-bits from so many mental universes. The prevailing
-scheme of economic life is so definitely established as to force
-its imprint upon the opinion that moves about it. Acceptable
-opinion is created in its likeness, and unacceptable opinion becomes
-acceptable opinion when the negatives are skilfully extracted.
-Protestants are concerned rather with eliminating the
-“evils” of “capitalism” than with eradicating it root and
-branch. Protestantism is rather a variant of orthodox doctrine
-than an independent system of thought. Radical opinion that
-is likely to pass the decent bounds of negation is kept small
-in volume by a press which allows it little upon which to feed.
-Accordingly, varied doctrines wear the semblance of unity.</p>
-
-<p>Such elements, however, do not free this adventure into
-speculation from its perils. They merely make the hazards
-mortal. In the paragraphs below the economic opinion in
-America is recklessly resolved into four main classes. These
-are the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">laissez-faire</i> opinion of the mid-19th century, the conventional<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">257</span>
-“case for capitalism,” the protestant demand for
-“control,” and the academic insistence upon conscious “direction”
-of industrial change. Radical opinion gets a competent
-judgment elsewhere in this volume. Even in this bold outline
-the opinions of small minorities are lost to sight, and views and
-doctrines, seemingly alien to the authors who know their subtle
-differences, are often blurred into a single picture. To avoid
-the charge that the lion and the lamb have been pictured as
-one, no names have been called. Here as elsewhere particulars
-will rise up to curse their generalizations, and the whole will
-be found to be entirely too scanty to be disbursed into its parts.
-But the chance must be taken, and, after all, truth does not
-reside in copy-book mottoes.</p>
-
-<h3>I</h3>
-
-<p>The current types of economic opinion in this country all
-have a common origin. The men who express them are but
-a scant generation or two removed from the country or the
-small town. The opinions are so many variants of a stream
-of thought which goes back to a mid-19th century America
-of small towns and open country. This primitive economic
-opinion was formed out of the dust of the ground in the likeness
-of an exploitative America. The conditions which shaped
-it might be set forth in two lines of a school history thus: First,
-abundant natural resources; second, a scanty population; and
-third, the principle of letting the individual alone.</p>
-
-<p>It was a chance at an economic opportunity which made
-America of the 19th century the “land of promise.” The raw
-materials of personal wealth were here in soil, stream, and mine.
-The equipment necessary to the crude exploitative farming of
-the time was easy to possess. Since there was an abundance,
-the resources essential to a chance at a living were to be had
-for the asking. One with enterprise enough to “go it alone”
-lived upon what he himself and his wealth in wife and children
-produced. He did not have to drive a shrewd bargain
-for the sale of his labour nor purchase the wherewithal to be
-fed and clothed in a market. There was no confusing scheme
-of prices to break the connection between effort and reward;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">258</span>
-opportunity and responsibility went hand in hand; success
-or failure was of one’s own fashioning. Where nature does
-most, man claims all; and in rural America men were quite
-disposed to claim personal credit for nature’s accomplishments.
-Since ample resources smothered even mediocre effort in plenty,
-the voice of chronic failure which blamed circumstance, fate,
-or “the system” was unheard. A freedom to have and to
-hold economic resources plentiful enough to supply all was
-the condition of material prosperity.</p>
-
-<p>Even when the lure of natural resources drew men from
-agriculture to industrial exploitation conditions did not change
-materially. The population of the new towns for a while kept
-at least one foot upon the soil. When at last the city possessed
-its people, aliens came out of Southeastern Europe to do the
-“dirty work,” and the native born passed up into administrative,
-clerical, or professional positions. The alternative of
-farm employment and the rapid expansion of industry fixed
-a rough minimum beneath which wages could not fall. The
-expanding machine technique with large scale production by
-quantity methods turned out an abundance of goods evidenced
-alike in lower prices and in higher standards of living. The
-“captains of industry” were regarded by the community as
-the creators of the jobs which they dispensed and as the efficient
-cause of the prosperity of the neighbourhood. The
-trickle of immigration that swelled to a “stream” and rose
-to a “tide” is an eloquent testimonial of the time paid by the
-peasantry of Europe to the success of the American system of
-letting the individual alone in his business.</p>
-
-<p>These conditions brought forth the lay economic theory
-acceptable to the national community. Its precepts came from
-experience, rather than from books; by intuition, rather than
-by reason. The welfare of the individual and the wealth of
-the nation were alike due to free institutions. In business
-and industry the individual was to be free to do as he pleased
-unless specifically forbidden by the State. The State was
-powerless to interfere with the individual unless granted specific
-“constitutional” authority to do so. Each knew what
-he wanted and was able to take care of himself. The interests
-of all were an aggregate of the interests of individuals. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">259</span>
-prevailing scheme of institutions was accepted as a part of
-the immutable world of nature. Private property, if defended
-at all, was good because it gave the individual security and
-enabled him to enjoy the fruits of his own labour. The right
-of contract, exercised in a market characterized by “higgling,”
-gave one an occasional adventure beyond the horizon
-of a household economy. If perchance the individual stumbled
-into a bad bargain occasionally, so much the better. The
-mistake was a useful exercise in the development of the cardinal
-virtue of self-reliance. When the coming of industrialism
-made contract the basis of all industrial relations, the older
-justification was still used. Competition, with which it was
-always associated, was regarded as the prime agency in the
-organization of industry. It forced the elements of production
-into order and exercised a moral restraint over them. Under
-its régime men were rewarded in accordance with their deserts.
-In general, it was true beyond peradventure that “opportunity”
-knocked once “at every gate”; that there was “plenty
-of room at the top”; that each built the ladder by which he
-rose; and that even the humblest was “master of his
-fate.”</p>
-
-<p>Out of such raw materials there was fashioned a body of
-professional economic theory. In a sense it was an imported
-product; for its earlier statement was that of English “classical”
-economics. But in reality it was the return of an earlier
-export, for accepted theory had been made from crude individualistic
-notions which England had got from America. In
-addition, at the hands of American economists it received a
-far more elaborate and articulate statement than had been
-given it overseas. These theorists used subtle analysis, ponderous
-logic, and circumlocution; but their decorous processes
-brought them to much the same conclusions that practical men
-gained from their limited experiences. Its strength and its
-acceptability were wholly due to the precision and verbiage
-with which it reduced to formal terms the common-sense economics
-of the day.</p>
-
-<p>In its terms the economic order is made up of individuals.
-Each of these is actuated by the motive of self-interest. Each
-has for disposal personal services, goods, or property rights.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">260</span>
-Each must live upon goods and services purchased from others.
-Each must compete with his fellows in the sale of his wares
-and the purchase of his articles of livelihood. Because of the
-competition of sellers the wages of labour, the profits of capital,
-and the prices of goods cannot be forced to untoward
-heights. Because of the competition of buyers they cannot be
-driven too low. The equilibrium of this double competitive
-process assures to each a return which represents the just value
-of the service, the property right, or the good. Prices, by moving
-up and down in response to changing conditions, stimulate
-and retard consumption and production. Their very movement
-constantly reallocates resources to the production of a
-variety of goods and services in just the proportion which the
-consumers demand. In this theory the institutions which
-comprise the framework of the economic order are taken for
-granted. It has no place for an interference by the State with
-“private business.” It regards monopoly as a thing to be
-abjured, whether appearing as a capitalistic combine or as a
-union of workingmen. In the Eden of free enterprise the community’s
-resources yield all they have and competition rewards
-justly all the faithful who by serving themselves serve
-society. It is small wonder that sermons were preached upon
-“The Relation of Political Economy to Natural Theology.”</p>
-
-<h3>II</h3>
-
-<p>The conditions which made the economic opinion of the
-America of small towns and open country are gone. With
-their passing the older theories have been reshaped to new
-purposes. There are no longer free economic opportunities
-for all comers. Natural resources have been appropriated, and
-the natural differences between men have been enhanced by
-the artificial ones of ownership and inheritance. Wealth and
-control have alike been stripped from the many and concentrated
-in the few. The prevailing unit in business is the corporation.
-Establishments have been gathered into industries,
-and these have been articulated into a mighty industrial system,
-with its established rights, its customary ways of doing
-things, and its compulsions upon those who serve it. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">261</span>
-older personal relation of “master” and “servant” abides
-only in indices of the records of the law courts. The contract
-of employment is now between a “soulless” but “legal entity”
-and a mere creature of flesh and blood. The more human individual,
-the survival of a less mechanical age, no longer lives
-upon the fruit of his individual toil. His welfare is pent in
-between his wages and the prices which he must pay for his
-necessities. Beyond this immediate bargain lies a mysterious
-economic system filled with unknown causes which threaten
-his income and even his employment. Those who possess have
-come into succession to those who ventured. In short, free
-enterprise has given way to an established system.</p>
-
-<p>These events have left their mark upon economic opinion.
-It is altogether fitting that those who fell heir to the wealth
-piled up by free enterprise should gain its outer defences of
-theory and dialectic. So the older economics, with its logic
-and its blessing, has come as a legacy to those who have. Its
-newer statement, because of its well-known objective, may be
-called “the case for capitalism.” In its revision the adventurous
-militarism bent upon exploitation has given way to a
-pacifistic defence of security, possession, and things as they
-are.</p>
-
-<p>In outward form few changes were necessary to convert the
-older theory of <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">laissez-faire</i> into a presentable case for capitalism.
-A more rigid and absolute statement of the classical
-doctrine was almost enough. In its terms the economic order
-is independent of other social arrangements. It is an automatic,
-self-regulating mechanism. Over it there rules an immutable
-and natural “law of supply and demand.” This
-maintains just prices, prevents exploitation, adjusts production
-and consumption to each other, secures the maximum of goods
-and services from the resources at hand, and disburses incomes
-in accordance with the merits of men and the verity of things.
-So just and impartial is the operation of this law that interference
-by the State amounts to meddlesome muddling. It
-cannot override natural law; therefore it should not.</p>
-
-<p>It differs most from the older economics in the more explicit
-statement of the function of institutions. The growing inequality
-of income, of control, and of opportunity have presented<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">262</span>
-facts that have to be faced. But even here, instead
-of contriving new defences, the advocates of capitalism have
-refurbished the older ones. The thing that is finds its justification
-in that which was. Property rights are to be preserved
-intact, because private property is essential to personal opportunity;
-just as if the propertyless did not exist and each was
-to win his living from his own acres or his own shop. The
-right of contract is not to be abridged, because the interests of
-both parties are advanced by a bargain between equals; just
-as if the corporate employer and the individual employé were
-alike in their freedom, their capacity to wait, and their power
-to shape the terms of the bargain. Prices are to be self-determined
-in open market, because competition will best
-reconcile the conflicting interests of buyers and sellers; just
-as if there was no semblance of monopoly among producers,
-no open price agreements, and no informal understandings.
-Individual initiative is not to be abridged, because it creates
-the wealth of the nation; just as if routine had no value for
-efficiency and the masses of men still had discretion in economic
-matters. The arrangements which make up the economic
-order find their validity in the symbolic language of
-ritual rather than in a prosaic recital of current fact.</p>
-
-<p>This defence crosses the frontier which separates the economic
-from the political order only to appropriate the prestige
-of democracy. Its real concern is the preservation of the
-prevailing system wherein business controls industry for purposes
-of profit. Its formal solicitation is lest “the form of
-government” be changed. This concern finds expression in
-veneration for the work of the “fathers” (rather young men,
-by the way), not of machine technology and business enterprise,
-but of “representative government” and of “constitutional
-authority.” Its creed becomes propaganda, not for the
-defence of business, the security of corporations, or the preservation
-of managerial immunities, but for the defence of the
-nation, the security of America, and the preservation of “constitutional”
-rights. The newer economic arrangements are
-masked behind political rights and given the values of the political
-institutions which antedate them by many decades. In
-short, the staunchest defenders of the prevailing economic system<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">263</span>
-believe that “their economic preferences are shared by
-the constitution of the United States.”</p>
-
-<p>If we may borrow a term from its advocates, this body of
-opinion must be pronounced “theoretical.” In their speech
-a “theory” is a generalization which goes much further than
-its particulars warrant. In that sense their conclusions are not
-“practical.” The essential question with which this body of
-opinion is concerned is whether the scheme of institutions
-which focus upon profit-making make the members of the
-community, severally and collectively, as well off as they
-ought to be. It seems offhand that a realistic defence of the
-prevailing order might be convincingly formulated. At any
-rate, “the case for capitalism” is good enough to get into the
-records. Instead, its advocates have confused their own pecuniary
-success with the well-being of the community and have
-argued that because profits have been made the system is good.
-Like the classical economists they vindicate the system by
-assumption.</p>
-
-<h3>III</h3>
-
-<p>In the wake of the new industrialism there has come an
-economic opinion of protest. It is being gradually formulated
-by professional men, by farmers, by trade unionists, and by the
-younger business men who have escaped being “self-made.”
-Its hesitating and confused statement is due to the disturbed
-conditions out of which it comes. The varied interests of its
-many authors prevents unity of words or of principles. Its
-origin in the contact of minds steeped in the older individualism
-with the arresting facts of the newer economic order explains
-its current inarticulate expression. It can be set forth briefly
-only by subordinating the reality of variety to the tendencies
-which are clearly inherent within it.</p>
-
-<p>The objective of this newer opinion is a modification of the
-prevailing order, rather than its overthrow. It is quite conscious
-of defects in its arrangements and knows that its fruits
-are not all good. It has never considered the question of the
-efficiency or inefficiency of the system as a whole. The older
-individualistic notions are strong enough to give an intuitive
-belief that the theory of the control of industry by business for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">264</span>
-profit is essentially sound. But it would eliminate the bad,
-patch up the indifferent, and retain the good. It would set up
-in the government an external authority which through regulation
-and repression would make business interests serve the
-community. Its faith is in private enterprise compelled by the
-State to promote “public welfare.” Its detail can best be
-suggested by typical illustrations.</p>
-
-<p>There is, first of all, the attitude of the protestants towards
-freedom of contract. They accept the prevailing theory that
-the relations of buyer and seller, employer and employé, owner
-and agent, can safely be left to the free choice of all concerned.
-But they point out that in practice the principle does not give
-its assumed results. For, whereas the theory assumes the parties
-to be equal in their power to determine the terms of the
-contract, it is a matter of common knowledge that employers
-and labourers occupy unequal bargaining positions. They
-would leave relations to be determined by free bargaining; but,
-as a preliminary, they would attempt to establish equality of
-bargaining power. To that end they would have the contract
-made by “collective bargaining” between employers and employés
-“through representatives” chosen by each. Moreover,
-they would use the State to better the position of the
-weaker party. Thus legislation has been passed depriving
-employers of their right of requiring employés, as a condition
-of employment, not to remain members of labour unions. Although
-the courts have found such legislation to be “an arbitrary
-interference with the liberty of contract which no government
-can justify in a free land,” its advocates will insist
-that their aim has been only “to establish that equality in position
-between the parties in which liberty of contract begins.”</p>
-
-<p>There is, in the next place, a growing opinion among the
-protestants that the State is “a moral agent” and should
-determine the rules under which business is to be carried on.
-They point out that in business there are bad as well as good
-conditions, that business men engage in proper as well as in
-improper practices, and that some activities harm while others
-help the community. In many instances the employer finds
-it to his advantage to establish conditions which the interests
-of the workers and of the consumers require. In others, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">265</span>
-elevation of standards waits upon the pleasure of the most
-inconsiderate employer. The prohibition of child labour, the
-shortening of the working day, and the payment of a minimum
-wage may be advantageous alike to labourers and to the community;
-yet these innovations involve an increase in cost and
-cannot be made against the competition of the producer who
-will not establish them. In such cases it is the duty of the
-State to establish minimum conditions which must be met by
-all employers. The imposition of such standards in no way
-affects the system under which business is carried on; for
-the competition of rival sellers can be just as acute and just
-as considerate of the public, if all of them are forced to pay
-their employés a living wage, as if they are all free to force
-wages down to starvation. Upon this theory the State has established
-uniform weights and measures, prohibited the use
-of deleterious chemicals, stopped the sale of impure food, provided
-compensation for the human wear and tear of industry,
-and established minimum standards of safety, health, and
-service.</p>
-
-<p>There is, finally, a growing opinion that in some industries
-the profit-making motive must be superseded by some other.
-In the railway industry it has been repeatedly shown that the
-pecuniary interest of the management fails to coincide with
-that of either the owners or of the shippers. Long ago the
-determination of charges for service was put beyond the discretion
-of the officials. Of late there has been an increasing
-tendency to make accounts, services, expenditures, valuations,
-and other matters meet standards of public service. When
-this has been effected, as it will be, the officials of the roads
-will become mere subordinates responsible to a public authority.
-Then profit-making as a guide to administration will
-have given way to an official judgment of results in terms of
-established standards. Then it will be discovered that public
-control formally rejected has been achieved by indirection.
-But many times ere this American opinion has come by devious
-paths to goals which its individualism has not allowed it to
-regard as quite desirable.</p>
-
-<p>For the moment the medley of opinion here roughly characterized
-as a demand for control is dominant. Its proponents<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">266</span>
-are almost as naïve as the advocates of capitalism in a belief
-in the essential goodness of a mythical system of “free enterprise.”
-They differ from them in placing greater emphasis
-upon voluntary associations and in demanding that the State
-from without compel business to serve the common good.
-As yet they have formulated no consistent theory of economics
-and no articulate programme for achieving their ends. Without
-a clear understanding of the development of industry and
-of the structure of the economic order, they are content to face
-specific problems when they meet them. They are far from
-ready to surrender an inherited belief in an individualistic
-theory of the common good.</p>
-
-<h3>IV</h3>
-
-<p>The changes of the last four decades, which make up “The
-Industrial Revolution in America,” have left their mark upon
-the economics of the schools. If there was a time when the
-thought of the professed economists was a thing apart from
-the common sense of the age, it ended with the coming of industrialism.
-Differ as it may in phrase, in method, and in
-statement, the economics in solid and dull treatises reflects, as
-it has always reflected, the opinions of the laity. If there
-were agreement among the sorts of men who gather at ball
-games and in smoking cars, the books on economics would all
-read alike. But when the plumber differs from the banker
-and the scrub woman refuses to take her ideas from the coupon
-clipper, it is futile to expect mere economists to agree. To
-some, the classical doctrine still serves as a sabbatical refuge
-from modern problems. Others, who “specialize” in trusts,
-tariffs, and labour are too busy being “scientific” to formulate
-general opinions. Still others insist upon creating a new
-economics concerned with the problem of directing industrial
-development to appointed ends. Each of these schools has a
-membership large enough to allow dissension within the ranks.</p>
-
-<p>The revolt against the classical economics began when it
-encountered modern fact. Beyond the pale of doctrine taught
-by certified theorists appeared studies upon corporations, international
-trade, railway rates, craft unionism, and other matters<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">267</span>
-of the newer fact. For a time those who studied these
-subjects were content to describe in superficial terms the results
-of their observations. But as facts accumulated they provoked
-generalizations at variance with the accepted principles
-of the older competitive theory. At the same time the
-rise of a newer history concerned with development rather
-than chronology, a new ethics that recognized the existence
-of a social order, and a new psychology that taught that the
-content of men’s behaviour is poured in by the environment,
-together made the foundations of the older economics very
-insecure.</p>
-
-<p>For a time this protest found expression only in critical
-work. The picture of an economic order as a self-regulating
-mechanism, peopled with folk who could not but serve the
-community in serving themselves became very unreal. The
-complexity of industrialism made it hard to believe that the
-individual had knowledge enough to choose best for himself.
-The suspicion that frequently thought follows action made it
-hard to continue to believe in man’s complete rationality. The
-idea that incomes are different because opportunities are different
-led to a questioning of the justice of the ratings of men
-in the market. The unequal division of income made impossible
-pecuniary calculations in which each man counted for
-one and only for one. With these assumptions of 19th-century
-economics passed “the economic man,” “the Crusoe economy,”
-and the last of the divine theories, that of “enlightened
-self-interest.” It was no longer possible to build a defence of
-the existing order upon “the hedonistic conception of man”
-as “a lightning calculator of pleasures and pains, who oscillates
-like a homogeneous globule of desire of happiness under the
-impulse of stimuli that shift him about the area, but leave
-him inert.”</p>
-
-<p>The most immediate effect of this criticism was a change
-in method. The older process of juggling economic laws out
-of assumptions about human nature, human motives, and the
-beneficence of competition lost prestige. It was evident that
-if the system was to be appraised the facts must be had. Accordingly
-a veritable multitude of facts, good, bad, and mostly
-indifferent were treasured up. This process of garnering information<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">268</span>
-soon made it evident that the facts about the relationship
-of industry to the welfare of the community were too
-varied and too numerous to be separately catalogued. Since
-only totals could be used, economics came to rely upon facts
-presented in the quantitative language of statistics.</p>
-
-<p>But since facts are not possessed of the virtue of self-determination,
-they did not yield an opinion which was very
-relevant or very truthful. Their use was for the moment
-nothing more than a substitution of the superstition of facts
-for that of logic. The facts were of value, because when properly
-interpreted they gave the story of what the economic
-system had done. But without the aid of standards it was
-impossible to determine whether it had worked well or ill,
-whether it had much or little to give in return for the solicitous
-concern about it. It was evident that modern industrialism
-was developing without conscious guidance. As long as no
-goal was fixed it was impossible to tell whether industrial development
-was proceeding in the right direction. As long as we
-were unmindful of the kind of society we wished ours to be,
-we could not appraise its accomplishments. Without standards
-all that could be said was that the system had worked as
-well as it had worked and that we were as well off as we were
-well off. The problem, therefore, became one of judging the
-system on the basis of the facts by means of standards.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the newer economics has been of service in stating the
-problem with which opinion must be concerned. The “prevailing”
-economic order is one of many schemes of arrangements
-for making industry serve the purposes of the community.
-The system has been slowly evolved out of the institutions
-of the past, is constantly being affected by circumstances,
-and for the future is capable of conscious modification.
-How well it has served its purpose cannot be attested by
-an abstract argument proceeding from assumptions about human
-nature and the cosmos. A judgment upon its relative
-goodness or badness requires an appraisal of the facts in terms
-of standards. These standards must be obtained from our
-notions of the kind of society we want this to be. These notions
-must proceed from a scientific study of the properties
-of things and the needs of human beings. That judgment will<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">269</span>
-be one not of goodness or badness, but of the relative merits of
-a very human scheme of arrangements compared with its
-alternatives.</p>
-
-<p>The economists are reluctant to pass a judgment upon the
-prevailing order. The relevant facts are too scanty and the
-standards too inexact to warrant an appraisal of the virtues
-and the vices of “capitalism.” They distrust the eulogies of
-apologists because they do not square with the known facts.
-They are not convinced by the reformers, because they fear
-that they know as little about their own schemes as they do
-about current arrangements. They insist that a general judgment
-must be a progressive affair. The system will change
-through gradual modification; the larger problem will be solved
-by attention to an endless succession of minor problems. Each
-of these must be met with the facts and with an ideal of what
-our society should be. They have too little faith in the rationality
-of the collect to believe that problems can be faced in
-battalions or that a new order can emerge as a work of creation.
-They have little fear for “the future of the nation,” if
-only problems can be intelligently handled as they emerge.
-Their attitude towards the present system is one, neither of
-acceptance nor of rejection, but of doubt and of honest inquiry.
-Their faith is neither in the existing order nor in a
-hand-me-down substitute, but in a conscious direction of the
-process of change.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>This tedious narrative has failed entirely in its purpose, if
-it has not revealed the strength and the weakness of economic
-opinion in America. Its merits stand out boldly in the preceding
-paragraphs; its defects are too striking to be concealed.
-The reader has already been informed; but the writer must
-inform himself. The essay, therefore, will close with an explicit
-statement of some three of the more obvious characteristics.</p>
-
-<p>First, its most striking characteristic is its volume. In
-quantity it contains enough verbal and intellectual ammunition
-to justify or to wreck a dozen contradictory economic
-orders. If, in an orderly way, opinion became judgment and
-judgment ripened into the society of to-morrow, it would stand<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">270</span>
-condemned. For little of it has a practical consequence and
-our ways of expression are very wasteful. But it also affords
-a harmless outlet for the dangerous emotions aroused by the
-wear and tear of everyday work in a humdrum universe. And,
-if it is true that we are, all of us, Simians by lineage, this is by
-far the most important function it serves.</p>
-
-<p>Second, it is grounded none too well in information and
-principles. The ordinary mortal is busied with his own
-affairs. He lacks the time, the patience, and the equipment
-necessary to get at the facts about the material welfare of the
-nation. In the most casual way he makes up his mind, using
-for the purpose a few superficial facts, a number of prejudices,
-and a bit of experience. He has little idea of where we are
-in the course of social development, of the forces which have
-brought us here, or of where we ought to be going. Since the
-opinions of groups and of the nation are aggregates of individual
-opinion, the ideas of those who have an intellectual right
-to speak are not a large part of the compound.</p>
-
-<p>Third, despite its crudeness and variety, it possesses elements
-of real value. Its very volume creates at least a statistical
-probability that some of it is of high quality. The waste
-of much of it gives the rest a real chance of expression in
-social policy. The common features of industrialism are giving
-to men something of a common experience out of which
-there will come a more or less common-sense appreciation of
-problems and of ideals. This will dictate the larger features
-of a future social policy. The particularized opinion which
-finds expression in the detailed formulation of programmes
-must be left to the experts. The great masses of men must
-learn that these problems are technical and must trust the
-judgment of those who know. Despite the record of halting
-development and of confused statement, the pages above indicate
-that the economic opinion in America is coming slowly
-to an appreciation of the factors upon which “the good life
-for all” really rests.</p>
-
-<p>But enough. Opinion by being economic does not cease to
-be opinion, and an essay about it is only more opinion.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Walton H. Hamilton</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_271" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">271</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="RADICALISM">RADICALISM</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> first obstacle to an assessment of radicalism in America
-is the difficulty of discovering precisely what American
-radicalism is. According to his enemies, a radical is a person
-whose opinions need not be considered and whose rights need
-not be respected. As a people we do not wish to understand
-him, or to deal with what he represents, but only to get him
-out of sight. We deport him and imprison him. If he writes
-a book, we keep it out of the schools and libraries. If he publishes
-a paper, we debar it from the mails. If he makes a
-speech, we drive him out of the hall and shoo him away from
-the street-corner. If by hook or crook he multiplies himself
-to considerable numbers, we expel his representatives from
-legislative chambers, break up his parades, and disperse his
-strikes with well-armed soldiery.</p>
-
-<p>These being the associations which cluster about the word,
-it has naturally become less a definition than a weapon. Statisticians
-in the Federal Trade Commission publish certain figures
-dealing with the business of the packing-houses—a Senator
-loudly calls these devoted civil servants “radicals,” and they
-are allowed to resign. A labour leader, following the precedent
-of federal law established for over a half a century,
-espouses the eight-hour day, but because he has the bad taste
-to do so in connection with the steel industry, he becomes a
-“radical,” and is soundly berated in the press. If one were
-to ask the typical American Legion member how he would
-describe a radical—aside from the fact that a radical is a
-person to be suppressed—he would probably answer that a
-radical is (a) a pro-German, (b) a Russian or other foreigner,
-(c) a person who sends bombs through the mail, (d)
-a believer in free love, (e) a writer of free verse, (f) a painter
-of cubist pictures, (g) a member of the I.W.W., (h) a Socialist,
-(i) a Bolshevist, (j) a believer in labour unions and
-an opponent of the open shop, and (k) any one who would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">272</span>
-be looked upon with disapproval by a committee consisting of
-Judge Gary, Archibald Stevenson, and Brander Matthews.</p>
-
-<p>There is scarcely more light to be had from the radicals
-themselves. Any one who feels a natural distaste for the
-censorious crowd of suppressors is likely to class himself with
-the free spirits whom they oppose. To call oneself a radical
-is in such circumstances a necessary accompaniment of self-respect.
-The content of the radicalism is of minor importance.
-There is an adventurous tendency to espouse anything
-that is forbidden, and so to include among one’s affirmations
-the most contradictory systems—such as Nietzscheanism and
-Communism, Christianity of the mystical sort and rebellion.
-And when these rebels really begin to think, the confusion is
-increased. Each pours his whole ardour into some exclusive
-creed, which makes him scorn other earnest souls who happen
-to disagree about abstruse technical points. Among economic
-radicals, terms like “counter-revolutionary” and “bourgeois”
-are bandied about in a most unpleasant fashion. If, for instance,
-you happen to believe that Socialism may be brought
-about through the ballot rather than through the general strike,
-numbers of radicals will believe you more dangerous than the
-Czar himself; it is certain that when the time comes you will
-be found fighting on the wrong side of the barricade. Creeds
-have innumerable subdivisions, and on the exact acceptance
-of the creed depends your eternal salvation. Calvinists,
-Wesleyans, Lutherans, and the rest in their most exigent days
-could not rival the logical hair-splitting which has lately taken
-place among the sectarian economic dissenters, nor has any
-religious quarrel ever surpassed in bitterness the dogmatic
-dissidence with which the numerous schools of authoritarian
-rebellion rebel against authority.</p>
-
-<p>There is a brilliant magazine published in New York which
-takes pride in edging a little to the left of the leftmost radical,
-wherever for the moment that may be. Its editor is a poet,
-and he writes eloquently of the proletariat and the worker.
-Not long ago I was speaking of this editor to an actual leader
-of labour—a man who is a radical, and who also takes a daily
-part in the workers’ struggles. “Yes,” he said, “he certainly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">273</span>
-can write. He is one of the best writers living.” And he
-went on wistfully, “If the labour movement only had a writer
-like that!”</p>
-
-<p>There is another brilliant magazine published in New York
-which takes exquisite pains to inform the reader that it is
-radical. In precise columns of elegant type, Puritan in its
-scorn of passion or sensation, it weekly derides the sentimental
-liberal for ignorance of “fundamental economics.” Not long
-ago it made the startling discovery that Socialists favour taking
-natural resources out of private ownership. And its “fundamental
-economics,” whenever they appear in language simple
-enough for the common reader to understand, turn out to
-be nothing more dangerous than that respectable and ancient
-heresy, the single tax.</p>
-
-<p>Another method of definition is now in common use—a
-method which seems easy because of its mechanical simplicity.
-People are arranged in a row from left to right, according to
-their attitude toward the existing order. At the extreme right
-are the reactionaries, who want to restore the discarded. Next
-to them are the conservatives, who wish to keep most of what
-exists. At their elbow are the liberals, who are ready to examine
-new ideas, but who are not eager or dogmatic about
-change. And at the extreme left are the radicals, who want
-to change nearly everything for something totally new. Such
-an arrangement is a confusing misuse of words based on a misconception
-of social forces. Society is not a car on a track,
-along which it may move in either direction, or on which it may
-stand still. Society is a complex, with many of the characteristics
-of an organism. Its change is continuous, although
-by no means constant. It passes through long periods of
-quiescence, and comparatively brief periods of rapid mutation.
-It may collect itself into a close order, or again become dispersed
-into a nebula. There is much in its development that
-is cyclical; it has yet undiscovered rhythms, and many vagaries.
-The radical and the reactionary may be agreed on essentials;
-they may both wish sudden change and closer organization.
-The conservative may be liberal because he wishes to preserve
-an order in which liberal virtues may exist. Or a liberal may<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">274</span>
-be so cribbed and confined by an unpleasant constriction of
-social tissue that he becomes radical in his struggle for immediate
-release. The terms are not of the same class and should
-not be arranged in parallel columns.</p>
-
-<p>The dictionary definition is enlightening. “Radical—Going
-to the root or origin; touching or acting upon what is essential
-or fundamental; thorough.... <em>Radical reform</em>, a thorough
-reform.... Hence Radical Reformer equals Radical”
-(New English Dictionary). In this sense radicalism is an
-historic American tradition. The revolt of the Colonies
-against England and the formation of the Republic were, indeed,
-far from the complete break with the past which the
-schoolboy assumes them to have been, but what lives in the
-minds of the American people is, nevertheless, not the series
-of counterchecks which men like Hamilton and Madison wrote
-into the Constitution, but rather the daring affirmations of
-Jefferson which have a real kinship with the radical spirit of
-the French Revolution. Talk of “inalienable rights” such
-as life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness was genuine radical
-talk; it searched out the bases of human relationship, proclaimed
-them against authority, and sought to found on them a
-system of government.</p>
-
-<p>So strongly has this conception seized the imagination of
-Americans that it largely accounts for their almost instinctive
-hostility to new kinds of political change. The roots of politics
-have been uncovered, the change has in fact been made
-once for all—so they reason. To admit that any new fundamental
-alteration is necessary is to be disloyal to the historical
-liberation. Because the conservative American believes himself
-a complete democrat, because for him the “new order”
-was achieved in 1776, he is intolerant of modern radicals.
-Suggestions of new revolution touch him closely on his pride.
-In this sense Jefferson has been less a spur to future generations
-than an obstacle. If his fine frenzy about rights had
-been less eloquently expressed, if it had not obscured in a
-cloud of glory the true nature of the foundation of our government—a
-highly practical compromise which embodied a few
-moderate advances and many hesitancies—we should have a
-different temper about change to-day. We should not assume<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">275</span>
-that all desirable fundamental modification of social and political
-structure had been completed nearly a century and a
-half ago.</p>
-
-<p>The greatest historic expression of American radicalism has
-thus become the altar of the conservatives. To the unlettered
-man it may seem strange that a Supreme Court of elderly
-radicals will not allow Congress to forbid child-labour because
-of their loyalty to an 18th-century limitation of the federal
-government, presumably in the interest of freedom and humanity.
-To workmen voting for the eight-hour day the language
-of Jefferson did not seem hostile—they were struggling
-to pursue happiness in a way that he must have approved.
-And yet it is the sacred “right” of contract which deprived
-them, as voters, of the right to legislate for shorter hours.
-Workmen using their collective economic power to gain industrial
-freedom are met by a shower of injunctive denials, based
-chiefly on that same right of contract. In order to stay any
-further liberation of the human body and spirit, judges and
-officials and industrial barons have only to invoke the phrases
-of freedom thrown out against an ancient despotism. They
-have only to point out that freedom as defined abstractly over
-a hundred years ago forbids practical freedom to-day. Frozen
-radicalism of the past chills and destroys the new roots of
-American life.</p>
-
-<p>Some appreciation of this state of affairs underlies the prevailing
-tendency to believe that all new radicalism has a foreign
-origin. It is, indeed, part of the best nationalistic tradition
-to attribute subversive doctrines to foreigners. This is
-the habit in every country. But in the United States the habit
-is perhaps more deep-seated than elsewhere. Americans are
-by definition free and equal; if then any one talks or acts as
-if he were not free and equal, he must have been born somewhere
-else. The American Government, being not a faulty
-product of human growth, but a new creation sprung perfect
-out of the ineffable minds of the Fathers, is unassailable; if
-any one assails it, he cannot know it, and must be subjected
-to courses in English and Civics (Americanization) until he
-recognizes its perfection. Treason in this country is not simple
-treason to a ruler, to a class, or to a system as elsewhere; it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">276</span>
-is an act of sacrilege, by one uninitiated, upon a religious
-mystery.</p>
-
-<p>Of course there are and have been Americans whose radicalism
-is less crust and more meat. The spirit of Jefferson
-still lives, after all, to confute the interpretation put upon his
-words. And imported doctrine has actually had less to do with
-most of the radical movements in America than has American
-tradition itself. It is an easy step from the conception of political
-liberty to the conception of economic liberty, and the
-step has been made here as readily as in Europe. In a country
-which for so long offered extraordinary opportunities to the
-individual business man, it is only natural that economic liberty
-should have been conceived as a means of protecting his
-enterprise; and as a matter of fact our economic legislation for
-many years has been sprinkled with victories of the small
-business men and farmers over the interests which had already
-become large enough to seem to them oppressive. The regulation
-of the railroads, the succession of popular financial doctrines,
-and the anti-trust legislation, were all initiated by the
-interpretation of economic democracy naturally arising in the
-vigorous class of the small entrepreneurs. With the slow weakening
-of this class by its disintegration, on one hand into captains
-and lieutenants of the great principalities of industry,
-and on the other into permanently salaried or waged members
-of the rank and file, comes a corresponding tendency to change
-the prevailing conception of economic democracy. The radicalism
-of workmen in the United States has often been no
-less sweeping or assertive than the radicalism of workmen anywhere—witness
-the I.W.W. Even violence in the labour
-struggle has been practised chiefly by one hundred per cent.
-Americans—the steel workers in Homestead in 1892 and the
-West Virginia miners in Mingo County in 1921 were of old
-American stock. And the moment the predominating group
-in American thought and activity is composed of those who
-expect to live by their daily work rather than of those who
-expect to accumulate property, we are likely to see the rise of
-an economic radicalism more akin to that which exists in
-Europe, and one which, because of its sanction in our tradition,
-will be twice as militant and convinced.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">277</span></p>
-
-<p>For, after all, economic radicalism arises neither from a
-merely stupid desire for more material goods, nor from an intellectual
-adherence to a particular formula of industrial organization.
-It arises from a desire to be free, to achieve
-dignity and independence. Poverty is distressful not so much
-because of its physical hardships as because of its spiritual
-bondage. To be poor because one chooses to be poor is less
-annoying than to be moderately paid while the man who fixes
-one’s wages rides in a Rolls-Royce. The most modest aspects
-of the labour movement are attempts of the workmen to gain
-some voice in determining the conditions under which they
-must work—in other words, to extend democracy into industry.
-And when the workman wakes up to the fact that industrial
-policies are governed by a comparatively small class of
-owners, and that the visible result of those policies seems to
-be a large class of underemployed, undernourished, and under-housed
-families on one hand, and a small class of abundantly
-supplied families on the other, he feels that he is suffering an
-indignity. You may challenge him to prove that any other
-system would work better. You may argue that if all the
-wealth of the rich were distributed equally, he would receive
-but a trifle. Such reasoning will affect him little. If every
-one must be miserable, he at least wants to share and exercise
-whatever power exists to alter that misery. Kings have argued
-that the people could rule no better than they, but that has not
-prevented peoples from demanding representative government.
-The American tradition is sure to be as subversive a motive
-in industry as it has been in the State. The technical problem
-of how industry may be better organized, important as it
-is, is subordinate to this cry of the personality. Essentially,
-this sort of radicalism arises from the instinct of the workman
-to achieve an adult relationship to the industrial world.</p>
-
-<p>The impact of the war upon industry, and the reverberation
-of its social results abroad, for some time stimulated this
-latent feeling in American workmen. For the first time in
-decades the competition of the unemployed and the immigrant
-was virtually removed, and the wage-earner began to feel secure
-enough to assert his personality. He was necessary to
-the community in an immediate way. The policy of the government<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">278</span>
-was to recognize this fact, and to prevent an unduly
-rapid increase in wages and in the power of organized labour
-by compromising with it on certain simple issues like collective
-bargaining and the eight-hour day. But larger aspirations
-arose in the rank and file, and when the Russian Revolution
-sent a word of emancipation around the world, they were ready
-to listen. In spite of the crushing force of the whole ruling
-propaganda machinery, which had been so successful in arousing
-hatred against Germany, countless American workmen
-sensed the approach of a new order as a result of the success
-of the Bolsheviki. A secondary impulse of the same sort, felt
-even more strongly in some quarters, arose from the Nottingham
-programme of the British Labour Party. But affairs
-moved slowly, hope was deferred, and at length the new spirit
-lost much of its freshness and power. The very acrimoniousness
-and volume of the controversy over what had or had not
-been done in Russia wearied most people of the whole matter.
-The many expected revolutions in other countries, which missed
-fire so many times, caused disillusionment. The doctrinaire
-and even religious adherents of the Russian Communists began
-to make trouble for every radical organization in the country
-by their quarrels and divisions. At length, the war being
-over, the American labour movement itself began to display
-a weakness in the face of renewed attack on the part of its
-opponents, which showed how illusory had been many of its
-recent gains and how seriously its morale had been injured.</p>
-
-<p>Economic radicalism never looked—on the surface—weaker
-than it does in the United States to-day. On the strength of
-statements by Mr. Gompers and some other leaders of the
-trade unions, we are likely to assume that organized labour
-will have nothing to do with it. The professed radicals themselves
-have been weakened by dissensions and scattered by
-persecution. Yet a brief survey of the formal groups which
-now profess radical theories will indicate why the future of
-American radicalism should not be assessed on the evidence of
-their present low estate.</p>
-
-<p>The Socialist Party, even more than the Socialist Parties in
-other countries, was placed by the war in a difficult situation.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">279</span>
-With its roots not yet firmly in the soil, except in a few localities
-and among diverse national elements, it was faced with
-the necessity, in accordance with its principles and tradition,
-of denouncing the entrance of the United States into hostilities.
-But this decision could command no effective support from
-the workers organized on the economic field, who under a
-different leadership adopted a different attitude. Nor was the
-party strong enough among any other element of the population
-to make its decision respected. The only immediate
-result of the gesture was therefore to place this unarmed little
-force in the most exposed position possible, where it drew the
-fire of all those who were nervously afraid the people would
-not sanction the war. Socialism was not judged on the basis
-of its economic tenets, but was condemned as disloyal and
-pro-German; and the effect was to render the party even more
-sectarian and unrepresentative than ever before. It had
-adopted a position in which it could not expect recruits except
-from moral heroes, and no nation nourishes a large proportion
-of these. Such episodes make good legend, but they do not
-lead to prompt victories. Even those who later have come to
-believe that the Socialists were right about the war are likely
-to express their belief in some other form than joining the
-party.</p>
-
-<p>In this weakened condition, the Socialist Party after the war
-developed internal fissures. Many bitter words have been
-exchanged as to whether the “Left Wingers” were or were not
-a majority of the party, whether they were or were not more
-orthodox than those in control of the party machinery, and
-whether, if they were more orthodox, their orthodoxy was wise.
-At any rate, they broke away and formed two new parties of
-their own, a fact which is the chief point of interest to one
-who is more concerned with the larger issues of American
-radicalism than with the minutiæ of Socialist politics. The
-Communist Party and the Communist Labour Party, whatever
-may have been the legitimacy of their gestation in the
-bowels of Socialism, certainly found their reason for being
-chiefly in logic which originated in Moscow and Berlin rather
-than in the American situation. At once selected for persecution<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">280</span>
-by government officials, they burrowed underground,
-doubtless followed by a band of spies at least as numerous as
-they. From these subterranean regions have come rumours
-of a fourth party—the United Communist, which swallowed
-most of the Communist Labourites and some of the Communists.
-At last accounts the Communists and the United
-Communists were each attempting to prove the other counter-revolutionary
-by reference to the latest documents from international
-revolutionary headquarters.</p>
-
-<p>It is hazardous in the extreme for an outsider to speak of
-the differences in doctrine among these groups. It is probably
-fair to say, however, that the Communist parties are chiefly
-distinguished by their total lack of interest in anything save
-a complete revolution, because this is the only kind they believe
-possible. They reject as “compromises” partial gains
-of all sorts; piecemeal progress by evolutionary methods rather
-offends them than otherwise. Their eyes are turned always
-toward some future revolutionary situation; for this their organization
-and their theories are being prepared. This being
-the case, the validity of their position will be tested by the
-event. If, as the milder Socialists believe, economic changes
-may come gradually by process of growth and smaller shocks,
-the Communists are likely to remain a nearly functionless
-and tiny minority, even in the labour movement. If, as the
-Communists believe, the present order in the normal course of
-its development is destined to experience a sudden collapse
-similar to that which occurred in Russia near the end of the
-war, they will become the true prophets, and their mode of
-thought and action will presumably have fitted them to assume
-leadership.</p>
-
-<p>The Farmer-Labour Party is a recent growth far less doctrinaire
-than either the Socialist or the Communist groups.
-It has neither prophet nor Bible, but is based rather on the
-principle of gathering certain categories of people together for
-political action, trusting that as they become organized they
-will work out their own programme in relation to the situation,
-and that that programme will develop as time goes on. The
-categories to which it appeals are chiefly the industrial workers
-and the small farmers, who have in general common economic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">281</span>
-interests as opposed to the large owners of land and
-capital. It hopes that other elements in the population, realizing
-that their major interests are much the same as those
-of the unionists and the farmers, will join forces with them
-to produce a majority. As an illustration of the operation of
-such tactics, the Farmer-Labourites point to the success of the
-Independent Labour Party of Great Britain, first in aiding the
-foundation of the British Labour Party, and second in building
-up for that party an increasingly coherent radical programme.</p>
-
-<p>In all these cases, however, not much confidence is placed in
-the actual political machinery of elections. There is a widespread
-scepticism about the ability to accomplish industrial
-changes by the ballot, on account of experience with political
-corruption, broken election promises, adverse court decisions,
-and political buncombe in general. These parties are formed as
-much for the purpose of propagating ideas and creating centres
-of activity as for mobilizing votes. All radical parties lay
-great stress on the industrial power of the organized labour
-movement. This is not to say that they do not recognize the
-importance of the State in industrial matters. All agree that
-control of political machinery will in the long run be necessary,
-if only to prevent it from checking the advance of the people
-through the courts and police. But they also agree that control
-of the State is not held and cannot be attained by political
-machinery alone. The present influence of the proprietors
-of industry on politics is due, they see, chiefly to economic
-power, and the workers consequently must not neglect
-the development of their own economic organization. The
-Communists are completely hopeless of attaining results
-through the present election machinery; the Socialists and
-Farmer-Labourites believe it possible to secure a majority at
-the polls, which may then execute its will, if the workers are
-well enough organized for industrial action.</p>
-
-<p>Outwardly the most successful of the radical movements is
-the least doctrinaire of all. It is unnecessary to repeat the
-history and achievements of the Nonpartisan League—an attempt
-on the part of organized farmers to use the machinery
-of the State in order to gain economic independence from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">282</span>
-banking, milling, and packing interests. Other groups of
-farmers have aimed at a similar result through co-operation,
-with varying success.</p>
-
-<p>In the industrial labour movement proper there have been
-numerous radical minorities. The most uncompromising of
-these, as well as the most characteristically American, was the
-Industrial Workers of the World, who aspired to build up a
-consciously revolutionary body to rival the unions composing
-the American Federation of Labour. This decline is due not
-so much to suppression as to their previous failure to enlist the
-continued support of the industrial workers themselves. Like
-the Communists, the I.W.W. predicated their success on a revolutionary
-situation, and lacking that situation they could not
-build a labour movement on an abstract idea. Over long
-periods not enough people are moved by a philosophy of salvation
-to give staying power to such an organization in the
-daily struggle with the employers. Other similar attempts,
-such as the W.I.I.U., and the more recent One Big Union,
-have encountered similar difficulties. They grow rapidly in
-crises, but fail under the strain of continued performance.</p>
-
-<p>The failure of American radicals to build up a strong movement
-is in part due, of course, to the natural difficulties of the
-social and economic situation, but it is also due to the mental
-traits which usually accompany remoteness from reality. This
-is illustrated in the history of the I.W.W., if we accept William
-Z. Foster’s acute analysis. The regular trade-union movement,
-slowly evolving towards a goal but half consciously
-realized, overcoming practical obstacles painfully and clumsily,
-as such obstacles usually are overcome, was too halting for
-these impatient radicals. They withdrew, and set up rival,
-perfectionist unions, founded in uncompromising revolutionary
-ardour. These organizations were often unable to serve the
-rank and file in their practical difficulties, and consequently
-could not supplant the historic labour movement. But they
-did draw out of that movement many of its most sincere and
-ardent spirits, thus depriving it of the ferment which was
-necessary to its growth. The I.W.W., for their part, failing
-to secure any large grip on reality, regressed into quarrels
-about theory, suffered divisions of their social personality, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">283</span>
-at length—except in the far West—became little more than
-economic anchorites. As Foster says, “The I.W.W. were
-absolutely against results.”</p>
-
-<p>Too much of American radicalism has been diverted to
-the easy emotional satisfaction which is substituted for the
-arduous process of dealing with reality. We suffer a restriction
-of the personality, we cry out against the oppressor, we
-invent slogans and doctrines, we fill our minds with day dreams,
-with intricate mechanisms of some imaginary revolution. At
-the same time we withdraw from the actual next step. Here
-is the trade-union movement, built up painfully for over a century,
-a great army with many divisions which function every
-day in the industrial struggle. How many radicals know it
-in any detail? How many have paid the slightest attention to
-the technique of its organization, or have devoted any time to
-a working out of the smaller problems which must be worked
-out before it can achieve this or that victory? Here are our
-great industries, our complex systems of exchange. How many
-radicals really know the technique of even the smallest section
-of them? Radicals wish to reorganize the industrial system;
-would they know how to organize a factory?</p>
-
-<p>If radicalism arises from the instinct for economic maturity,
-then it can find its place in the world only by learning its function,
-only by expressing its emotion in terms of the actual with
-which it has to deal. A period of adolescence was to be expected,
-but to prolong the characteristics of that period is to
-invite futility. And as a matter of fact American radicalism
-now exhibits a tendency to establish more contacts with reality.
-Instead of withdrawing from established unions to start
-a new and spotless labour movement, radicals are beginning
-to visualize and to carry out the difficult but possible task of
-improving the organization of the existing unions, and of charging
-them with new energy and ideas. Unions which were
-founded by radicals—such as the Amalgamated Clothing Workers
-of America—are devoting their efforts not to talking of a
-future revolution, but to organizing the workers more firmly
-in the present, to establishing constitutional government in
-industry through which tangible advances may be made and
-safeguarded, and to improving the productivity of industry itself.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">284</span>
-Engineers, encouraged by labour organizations, and in
-some cases actually paid by them, are investigating the problem
-of economic waste, and are demonstrating by line upon
-line and precept upon precept how the chaos of competition,
-industrial autocracy, and a controlling profit motive are reflected
-in idle hours, low wages, high prices, and inferior products.
-The co-operative movement is slowly providing a new
-and more efficient machinery of distribution, while co-operative
-banks are building up a reserve of credit for those who wish
-to experiment with undertakings conducted for other purposes
-than the profit of the proprietor. Such functional use of the
-labour movement is more dangerous to the existing disorder
-than volumes of phrases or a whole battalion of “natural
-rights.”</p>
-
-<p>Extremists call such activities compromise. They are compromise
-in the sense that any hypothesis must be changed to
-fit the facts, but they involve no compromise with scientific
-truth. The alchemist compromised when he gave up the
-search for the philosopher’s stone and began to learn from the
-elements. He surrendered a sterile dogma for a fruitful science.
-In proportion as radicals learn how to put their emotions
-to work, in proportion as they devise ways to function
-in the world in which we live, will they make possible not only
-unity among themselves, but a rapprochement with other
-Americans. A man who believes there is no real possibility
-of change short of complete revolution can unite with a man
-who has no theory about the matter at all so long as they do
-not discuss abstract doctrine, but concentrate upon the problem
-of how to bring about a particular effect at a particular
-time. The most radical theories, if expressed in terms of concrete
-situations, will be accepted by those who are wary of
-generalities, or do not understand them. The theories will be
-tested in the fact. The operation of such a process may be
-blocked by those who dogmatically oppose all experiment, but
-in that case the forces of reason and of nature will be so clearly
-on the side of the radical that there can be no doubt about
-his ultimate fruitfulness.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">George Soule</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_285" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">285</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_SMALL_TOWN">THE SMALL TOWN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">America</span> is a nation of villagers, once remarked George
-Bernard Shaw in a moment of his most exclusive scorn
-for what he believed was our crude and naïve susceptibility to
-the modes and moods, to say nothing of the manners, of the
-professional patriots during that hectic period when Wilhelm
-was training to become the woodman of Amerongen. Now
-Shaw is the oracle of the Occident, and when he speaks there
-is no docile dog this side of Adelphi Terrace presumptuous
-enough to bark. At least there should not be; and in any
-event, neither history nor H. G. Wells records any spirited
-protest on America’s part to the Shavian accusation. It was
-allowed to stand invulnerable and irrefutable. Of course, in
-our hearts we know Shaw is right. We may for the moment
-be signifying <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">rus in urbe</i>, but between you and me and the
-chief copy-reader of the Marion (Ohio) <cite>Star</cite>, <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">in urbe</i> is a superfluous
-detail.</p>
-
-<p>Show me a native New Yorker and I will show you something
-as extinct as a bar-tender. There are no native New
-Yorkers. All New Yorkers come from small towns and farms.
-Ask Dad, ask the Sunday editor, ask the census-taker—they
-know. And what is true of New York is true of Boston and
-Chicago. The big men, the notable men of the big cities, hail
-from the small towns, the Springfields, the Jacksons, the Jamestowns,
-Georgetowns, Charlestowns—yes, and from the Elizabeths
-and Charlottes—of the nation.</p>
-
-<p>Under the circumstances any back-to-the-land movement in
-this country seems futile if not ridiculous. The land is still
-confident and capable of taking care of itself. It needs no aid
-from the city chaps and asks none. The Freudians are not
-deceived for a moment over the basis of a return-to-the-farm
-enterprise. They recognize it for what it is—a sentimental
-complex superinduced by the nervous hysteria of the city. But
-even the amazingly small proportion of the population that is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">286</span>
-not Freudian refuses to become influenced by the cry of the
-sentimentalists. Because it is keenly, though unpretentiously,
-aware of the genuinely rural state of its culture and civilization.</p>
-
-<p>The civilization of America is predominantly the civilization
-of the small town. The few libertarians and cosmopolites who
-continue to profess to see a broader culture developing along
-the Atlantic seaboard resent this fact, though they scarcely
-deny it. They are too intelligent, too widened in vision to
-deny it. They cannot watch the tremendous growth and
-power and influence of secret societies, of chambers of commerce,
-of boosters’ clubs, of the Ford car, of moving pictures,
-of talking-machines, of evangelists, of nerve tonics, of the <cite>Saturday
-Evening Post</cite>, of Browning societies, of circuses, of
-church socials, of parades and pageants of every kind and
-description, of family reunions, of pioneer picnics, of county
-fairs, of firemen’s conventions without secretly acknowledging
-it. And they know, if they have obtained a true perspective
-of America, that there is no section of this vast political unit
-that does not possess—and even frequently boast—these unmistakably
-provincial signs and symbols.</p>
-
-<p>I do not mean to imply that such aspects make America an
-unfit place in which to live. On the contrary, America’s very
-possession of them brings colour and rugged picturesqueness,
-if not a little pathos, to the individual with imagination sufficient
-to find them. Mr. Dreiser found them and shed a triumphant
-tear. “Dear, crude America” is to him a sweet and
-melancholy reality. It is a reality that has been expressed with
-a good deal of prophecy—and some profit—by the young novelists.
-Small-town realism with a vengeance, rather than a joy,
-has been the keynote of their remarkable success during the
-past year. However, they pulled the pendulum of cultural life
-too far in one direction. They failed, for the most part, of
-appreciating the similarity of human nature in city as in country,
-with the result that their triumph is ephemeral. Already
-the reaction has set in. There are now going on in the work-rooms
-of the novelists attempts to immortalize Riverside Drive,
-Fifth Avenue, Beacon Street, Michigan Boulevard, and Pennsylvania
-Avenue.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">287</span></p>
-
-<p>Unless they penetrate into the soul of these avenues, unless
-they perceive that these avenues are not spiritually different
-from Main Street, though they may be clothed in the
-habiliments of metropolitan taste and fancy, they will fail to
-symbolize correctly America. They will be writing merely for
-money and controversial space in the literary supplements.</p>
-
-<p>For the soul of these avenues is a soul with an <em>i</em> substituted
-for <em>u</em>. It is the soul of the land. It is a homely, wholesome
-provincialism, typifying human nature as it is found
-throughout the United States. We may herd in a large centre
-of population, assume the superficialities of cosmopolitan culture
-and genuinely believe ourselves devils of fellows. It takes
-all the force of a prohibition law to make us realize that we are
-more sinned against than sinning. Then are we confronted
-sharply by the fact that the herd is appallingly inefficient and
-inarticulate in a conflict with isolated individualism.</p>
-
-<p>The prohibition movement originated in farming communities
-and villages where the evils of alcohol are ridiculously insignificant.
-No self-respecting or neighbour-respecting villager
-could afford to be known as a drinking man. His business or
-his livelihood was at stake. Then why did he foster prohibition?
-Why did he seek to fasten it upon the city resident
-who, if he drank, did not lose apparently his own or his neighbour’s
-respect? Chiefly because of his very isolation. Because
-he was geographically deprived of the enjoyments which the
-city man shared. I can well imagine a farmer in the long
-sweating hours of harvest time or a small town storekeeper
-forced to currying favour with his friends and neighbours 365
-days in a year, resolutely declaring that what he cannot have
-the man in the city shall not have. The hatching of all kinds
-of prohibitory plots can be traced to just such apparent injustices
-of life. Dr. Freud would correctly explain it under the
-heading of inferiority-complex.</p>
-
-<p>City men have marvelled at the remarkable organization of
-the reformers. It is not so much organization, however, as it
-is a national feeling perceived and expressed simultaneously.
-Cities may conduct the most efficient propaganda against such
-a feeling, they may assemble their largest voting strength to
-assail it. All in vain. The country districts roll up the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">288</span>
-majorities and the cities are left unmistakably high and dry.</p>
-
-<p>So it is with most of the laws and movements of America.
-The rural sections have but to will them and they become
-in due time established facts. An idea merely has to take
-root in the mind of some socially oppressed individual. He
-talks it over with his friends at lodge meeting or during an
-informal hour at a board of trade meeting. He receives encouragement.
-He imparts the idea to his wife, who carries it
-to her literary club, where it is given further airing. It spreads
-to the volunteer firemen’s clubrooms, to the grange picnics
-and the church socials. It is discussed in the pulpits. Finally
-it reaches the ears of the village and county politicians who,
-impressed by its appeal to the moral force of the community,
-decide after hours in the back room of the post-office or the
-national bank to interest the congressman or assemblyman
-from their district in its merits as a possible law upon the
-statute books. The congressman and assemblyman, acutely
-aware of the side on which their bread is buttered, agree to do
-“everything within their power” to put the measure through.
-Having the assistance of other congressmen and assemblymen,
-most of whom are from rural districts, their tasks assuredly
-are not difficult.</p>
-
-<p>Before the appearance of the automobile and the movie
-upon the national horizon, the small town was chiefly characterized
-by a distinctly rural and often melancholy peacefulness.
-A gentle air of depression hung over it, destructive of the ambitious
-spirit of youth and yet, by very reason of its existence,
-influencing this spirit to seek adventure and livelihood in wider
-fields. Amusements were few and far between. It was the day
-of the quilting party, of the Sunday promenade in the cemetery,
-of buggy-riding, of the ice-cream festival and the spelling
-bee. The bucolic note was ever present.</p>
-
-<p>Such an environment, while joyous to the small boy, became
-hopelessly dull and lifeless to the youth of vitality and imagination.
-Restlessness with it tormented him day and night until
-it grew into an obsession. Especially did he dislike Sunday,
-its funereal quiet with stores closed and other possible avenues
-of excitement and adventure forbidden. He began to cherish
-dreams of a life strange and teeming in distant cities.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">289</span></p>
-
-<p>As he grew older and a measure of independence came to
-him he fled, provided there was no business established by a
-patient and hard-working ancestry which might lure him into
-remaining home. And even that did not always attract him.
-He was compelled to go by his very nature—a nature that desired
-a change from the pall of confining and circumscribed
-realism, the masks of respectability everywhere about him, the
-ridiculous display of caste, that saw a rainbow of fulfilled ideals
-over the hills, that demanded, in a word, romance.</p>
-
-<p>He, who did not feel this urge, departed because of lack of
-business opportunities. Occasionally he returned disillusioned
-and exhausted by the city and eager to re-establish himself in
-a line of work which promised spiritual contentment. But
-more often he stayed away, struggling with the crowd in the
-city, returning home only for short vacation periods for rest
-and reminiscence, to see his people and renew boyhood friendships.
-At such times he was likely to be impressed by the
-seeming prosperity of those boys he left behind, of the apparent
-enjoyment they found in the narrow environment. The
-thought may have occurred to him that the life of the small
-town had undergone a marked change, that it had adopted
-awkward, self-conscious urban airs.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly he realizes that the automobile and the movie
-and to some extent the topical magazine are mainly responsible
-for the contrast. The motor-car has given the small town
-man an ever-increasing contact with the city, with life at formerly
-inaccessible resorts, with the country at large. And the
-movie and the magazine have brought him news and pictures
-of the outside world. He has patronized them and grown
-wiser.</p>
-
-<p>The basis, the underlying motive, of all cultural life in the
-small town is social. The intellectual never enters. It may
-try to get in but the doors are usually barred. There is
-practically no demand for the so-called intellectual magazines.
-Therefore, they are seldom placed on sale. But few daily
-papers outside of a radius of fifty miles are read. Plays which
-have exclusive appeal to the imagination or the intellect are
-presented to rows of empty seats. On the other hand, dramas
-teeming with primitive emotions and the familiar devices of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">290</span>
-hokum attract large audiences, provided the producing managers
-care to abide by the present excessive transportation
-rates. There is but little interest manifested in great world
-movements, such as the economic upheaval in Eastern Europe.
-Normalcy is, indeed, the watchword so far as intellectual development
-is concerned.</p>
-
-<p>It is in the social atmosphere that the American village has
-its real <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">raison d’être</i>. Therein do we meet the characteristics
-that have stamped themselves indelibly upon American life.
-The thousand and one secret societies that flourish here have
-particularly fertile soil in the small towns. Count all the loyal
-legionaries of all the chapters of all the secret societies between
-the Atlantic and Pacific oceans and you have a job suited only
-to the most irrepressible statistician. And the most loyal live
-in the small towns and villages of the United States. The
-choice is not limited. There are societies enough to suit all
-kinds of personalities and purses.</p>
-
-<p>The Knights of Pythias, the Knights of the Maccabees, the
-Odd Fellows, the Elks, the Eagles, the Loyal Order of the
-Moose, the Modern Woodmen, the Masons with their elaborate
-subdivisions of Shriners and Knights Templar—all count
-their membership throughout the nation. And the women,
-jealous of their husbands’ loyalty to various and complex forms
-of hocus-pocus, have organized auxiliary societies which, while
-not maintaining the secrecy that veils the fraternal orders,
-nevertheless build up a pretentious mystery intriguing to the
-male mind.</p>
-
-<p>No town is a self-respecting town unless it can boast half
-a dozen of these societies. They are the fabric of which the
-basis of the social structure is built. They are the very essence
-of America. They dot the national landscape. Every city, as
-if to prove conclusively its provincial nature, displays one or
-more temples devoted to the rituals of fraternal organization.</p>
-
-<p>Recently the South has revived the order of the Ku Klux
-Klan which flourished after the Civil War as a means of improving
-upon the orderly course of the law in dealing with the
-Negro race. Here is the apotheosis of the secret society, with
-its magnificent concealment of identity in a unique form of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">291</span>
-dress, its pretensions to 100 per cent. Americanism, its blatant
-proclamations of perpetuating the great and glorious traditions
-of the republic. The Negro has already organized to offset
-this propaganda. He knew that unless he could show secret
-orders of imposing strength he had no right even to the questionable
-heritage of habitation here. He would be outside the
-spirit of the times. He owed it to America, to “dear, crude
-America,” to organize lodges and secret societies; and he has
-done so.</p>
-
-<p>Undoubtedly the secret society plays a large part in the
-greatness of America. It has made the American class-conscious.
-It has made him recognize his own importance, his
-own right to the national distinction of good-fellowship. It
-provides him temporary surcease from domestic and business
-details, though there are countless numbers of men who join
-these orders to make business details, so far as they affect
-them, more significant.</p>
-
-<p>The amazing prevalence of conventions in America is an
-outgrowth of the secret societies. Life to many 100 per cent.
-Americans is just one lodge convention after another. Held
-in a different city each year, a distinction that is industriously
-competed for, the convention has become a fixed fact in American
-cultural life. Here is the one occasion of the year when
-the serious diddle-daddle is laid aside, and refuge and freedom
-are sought in such amusements as the convention city can
-offer. The secret order convention has inspired the assembly
-of all kinds and descriptions of conventions—trade conventions,
-religious conventions, educational conventions—until
-there is no city in the land boasting a first-class hotel that does
-not at one time or another during the year house delegates with
-elaborate insignia and badges.</p>
-
-<p>Probably the first parade held in America was that of a
-class-conscious fraternal organization eager to display its high
-standard of membership as well as a unique resplendence in
-elaborate regalia. The parade has continued an integral part
-of American life ever since. There is something of the vigour,
-the gusto and crudeness of America in a parade. It has come
-to represent life here in all its curious phases.</p>
-
-<p>The parade had become an event of colourful significance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">292</span>
-when P. T. Barnum organized the “greatest show on earth.”
-He decided to glorify it—in his dictionary “to glorify” really
-meant “to commercialize”—and once and for all time associate
-it chiefly with the circus. He succeeded, mainly because
-the residents of the villages were receptive to the idea. They
-saw a bizarre relief from the monotony of existence. The
-farmers rolled down from the hills in their lumber-wagons
-and found an inarticulate joy, storekeepers closed shop and
-experienced a tumultuous freedom from the petty bickerings
-of trade, men and women renewed their youth, children were
-suddenly thrown into a very ecstasy of delight. Thus, the
-circus parade became part and parcel of American civilization.</p>
-
-<p>And the precious and unique spirit created by the circus
-parade has been carried on in innumerable representations.
-To-day America shelters parades of every conceivable enterprise.
-Firemen have a day in every small town of the land on
-which they joyously pull flower-laden hose-carts for the entertainment
-of their fellow-citizens. Bearing such labels as
-Alerts, Rescues and Champion Hook and Ladder No. 1, they
-march proudly down Main Street—and the world goes hang.
-The volunteer firemen’s organization is an institution peculiar
-to the American small town,—an institution, too, that is not
-without class-consciousness. The rough-and-ready, comparatively
-illiterate young men form one group. The clerks, men
-engaged in the professions and social favourites compose another.
-This class is usually endowed by the wealthiest resident
-of the town, and its gratitude is expressed usually by naming
-the organization for the local Crœsus.</p>
-
-<p>The Elks parade, the Knights of Pythias parade, veterans
-of various wars parade, the Shriners and Knights Templar
-parade, prohibitionists parade, anti-prohibitionists parade, politicians
-parade, women parade, babies parade—everybody
-parades in America. Indeed, America can be divided into
-two classes, those who parade and those who watch the parade.
-The parade is indelibly identified with the small town. It is
-also inalienably associated with the large city, composed, as it
-is, of small-town men.</p>
-
-<p>There has lately taken place in the villages throughout
-the country a new movement that has civic pride as its basis.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">293</span>
-It is the formation of boosters’ clubs. Everybody is boosting
-his home town, at least publicly, though in the privacy
-of the front porch he may be justly depressed by its narrowness
-of opportunity, its subservience to social snobbery, its
-intellectual aridity. “Come to Our Town. Free Sites Furnished
-for Factories,” read the signs along the railroad tracks.
-“Boost Our Town” shout banners stretched across Main
-Street.</p>
-
-<p>Is there not something vitally poignant in such a proud provincialism?
-Is not America endeavouring to lift itself up by
-its boot-straps, to make life more comfortable and interesting?
-The groping, though crude, is commendable. It is badly directed
-because there is no inspiration back of it, because its
-organizers are only remotely aware how to make life here more
-interesting. However, there is the effort and it is welcome.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps, when the towns—and for that matter the cities—realize
-that artistic sensitiveness is necessary to achieve comfort
-and interest we shall have boosters who are as enthusiastic
-on the front porch as in the board of trade meeting. When
-will our towns take artistic advantage of their river-fronts?
-The place for the most beautiful walk and drive and park presents
-usually unsightly piers, factories and sheds. Railroad
-tracks are often laid in the very heart of the town. For many
-years the leading hotels in practically all of our towns and
-cities were built in close proximity to the railroad station. In
-seeking to save a traveller time and convenience hotel proprietors
-subjected him to the bodily and mental discomforts
-that are related to the vicinity of a railroad station. Of late
-there is a marked tendency to erect hotels in quiet residential
-streets away from the noise and confusion of shops and railroad
-yards.</p>
-
-<p>The billboard menace, while diminishing, is still imposing.
-It is to the everlasting shame of the towns and cities that in
-an era of prohibitions no legislative effort has been made to
-stop the evil of desecrating our finest streets with advertising
-signs. Such commercial greed is inconceivable to the foreign
-visitor. It is one of his first impressions, though he charitably
-takes refuge in public in attributing it to the high tension of
-our existence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">294</span></p>
-
-<p>While the first symptoms of artistic appreciation are beginning
-to be faintly discerned upon the American horizon, the
-old and familiar phases of social life in the country are still
-being observed. The picnic of first settlers, the family reunion,
-the church supper, the sewing circle, the Browning society—all
-have national expression. The introduction of such modern
-industrial devices as the automobile has not affected them
-in the least. It can truly be asserted that the flivver has even
-added to their popularity. It has brought people of the country
-districts into closer contact than ever before. It has given
-a new prestige to the picnics and the reunions.</p>
-
-<p>What offers more rustic charm and simplicity than a family
-reunion? Practically every family in the farming districts
-that claims an ancestral residence in this country of more than
-fifty years holds one annually. It is attended by the great
-and the near-great from the cities, by the unaffected relatives
-back home. Babies jostle great-grandparents. Large and
-perspiring women bake for days the cakes and pies to be consumed.
-The men of the house are foolishly helping in making
-the rooms and the front lawn ready. At last the reunion is
-at hand—a sentimental debauch, a grand gorging. Everybody
-present feels the poignancy of age. But while the heart throbs
-the stomach is working overtime. The law of compensation is
-satisfied. “A good time was had by all” finds another expression
-in the weekly paper, and the reunion becomes a
-memory.</p>
-
-<p>At pioneer picnics one finds the family reunion on a larger
-scale. The whole township and county has for the time become
-related. It is the day of days, a sentimental tournament
-with handshaking as the most popular pastime. Organized
-in the rugged primitiveness of the early part of the 19th
-century by men who were first to settle in the vicinity, the
-pioneer picnic has been perpetuated, until to-day it is linked
-inalterably with America’s development. It has weathered
-the passing of the nation from an agricultural to a great industrial
-commonwealth. It has stood the gaff of time. And so
-it goes on for ever, a tradition of the small town and the farming
-community. While it has been divested almost entirely
-of its original purpose, it serves to bring the politicians in touch<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">295</span>
-with the “peepul.” Grandiloquent promises are made for a
-day from the rostrum by a battalion of “Honourables”—and
-forgotten both by the “Honourables” and the public intent
-upon dancing and walking aimlessly about the grounds. The
-politicians smile as they continue to preserve their heroic pose,
-and the “peepul,” satisfied that all is well with the world, turn
-to various gambling devices that operate under the hypocritical
-eye of the sheriff and to the strange dances that have crept
-up from the jungle, for it is a day filled with the eternal spirit
-of youth. There is ingenuous appeal in the fair samples of
-the yokelry present. There is a quiet force beneath the bovine
-expressions of the boys. The soul of America—an America
-glad to be alive—is being wonderfully and pathetically manifested.
-No shams, no superficialities, no self-conscious sophistication
-are met. Merely the sturdy quality of the true American
-civilization, picturesque and haunting in its primitiveness.</p>
-
-<p>The county fair belongs in the same classification as the first-settler
-picnic. It is the annual relaxation by farmers and
-merchants from the tedious tasks of seeing and talking to the
-same people day after day. It offers them a measure of
-equality with the people in the city with their excursion boats,
-their baseball games, their park sports. And they make the
-most of their opportunity. They come to see and to be seen,
-to risk a few dollars on a horse race, to admire the free exhibitions
-in front of the side-shows, to watch with wide eyes the
-acrobatic stunts before the grandstand; to hear the “Poet and
-the Peasant” overture by the band, proud and serious in a
-stand of its own.</p>
-
-<p>Three or four days given to such pleasures naturally bestow
-a fine sense of illusion upon the visitors. They begin to believe
-that life has been specially ordered for them. They see
-through a glass lightly. They care not a whiff about the
-crowded excitements of the city. They have something infinitely
-more enjoyable than a professional baseball game or an
-excursion ride down the river. They have days of endless
-variety, of new adventures, of new thoughts. They, too, know
-that America cannot go wrong so long as they continue to find
-illusion. And they are correct. They may not suspect that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">296</span>
-American culture is crude. They do know, however, that it
-is dear. They should worry.</p>
-
-<p>Against such a background have the flavour and essence
-of American life been compounded. Their influence has extended
-in all directions, in all walks of industry. They have
-left their impress upon the character of the country, upon the
-mob and the individual. Sentimental attachment to the old
-ties, to boyhood ideals and traditions remains potent though
-a little concealed by the mask, be it affected or real, of sophistication.
-It is the voice of a new land, of a vigorous and curious
-nationalism that is being exerted. There obviously cannot
-be among such a naturally healthy people a supercilious contempt
-for sentiment. We may laugh a little haughtily at the
-amazing susceptibility of folks to the extravagant eloquence
-of itinerant evangelists. We may look on an “old home
-week” with a touch of urban disdain. We may listen to the
-band concert on a Saturday night in the Court House Square
-with a studied indifference. We may assume an attractive
-weariness in watching the promenaders on Main Street visit
-one ice-cream emporium after another. But deep down in our
-hearts is a feeling of invincible pride in the charming homeliness,
-the youthful vitality, the fine simplicity, yes, and the
-sweeping pathos of these aspects of small-town civilization.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Louis Raymond Reid</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_297" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">297</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="HISTORY">HISTORY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry short">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“Nescire autem quid antea quam natus sis</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">acciderit id est semper puerum esse.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="attrib"><cite>Cicero.</cite></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry short">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“History is bunk.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="attrib"><cite>Henry Ford</cite></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> burghers of Holland, being (like the Chinese) inclined
-towards a certain conservatism of both manners and
-habits, continued the tradition of the “front parlour”—the
-so-called “good-room”—well into the 20th century.
-Every farmer had his “front parlour” filled with stuffy air,
-stuffy furniture, and an engraving of the Eiffel Tower facing
-the lithographic representation of a lady in mid-seas clinging
-desperately to a somewhat ramshackle granite cross.</p>
-
-<p>But the custom was not restricted to the bucolic districts.
-His late Majesty, William III (whose funeral was the most
-useful event of his long life), had been married to an estimable
-lady of Victorian proclivities, who loved a “tidy” and an
-“antimacassar” better than life itself. An aristocracy, recruited
-from the descendants of East India Directors and West
-India sugar planters, followed the Royal Example. They
-owned modest homes which the more imaginative Latin would
-have called “Palazzi.” Most of the ground floor was taken
-up by an immense “front parlour.” For the greater part of
-the year it was kept under lock and key while the family clustered
-around the oil lamp of the “back parlour” where they
-lived in the happy cacophony of young daughters practising
-Czerny and young sons trying to master the intricacies of
-“paideuo—paideueis—paideuei.”</p>
-
-<p>As for the “front parlour” (which will form the main part
-of my text), it was opened once or twice a twelve-month for
-high family functions. A week beforehand, the cleaning
-woman (who received six cents per hour in those blessed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">298</span>
-Neanderthal days) would arrive with many mops and many
-brooms. The covers would be removed from the antique furniture,
-the frames of the pictures would be duly scrubbed. The
-carpets were submitted to a process which resembled indoor
-ploughing and for fully half an hour each afternoon the windows
-were opened to the extent of three or four inches.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the day of the reception—the birthday party of
-the grandfather—the betrothal of the young daughter. All
-the relatives were there in their best silks and satins. The
-guests were there in ditto. There was light and there was
-music. There was enough food and drink to keep an entire
-Chinese province from starving. Yet the party was a failure.
-The old family portraits—excellent pieces by Rembrandt or
-Terborch—looked down upon grandchildren whom they did
-not know. The grandchildren, on the other hand, were quite
-uncomfortable in the presence of this past glory. Sometimes,
-when the guests had expressed a sincere admiration of these
-works of art, they hired a hungry Ph.D. to write a critical essay
-upon their collection for the benefit of the “Studio” or the
-“Connoisseur.” Then they ordered a hundred copies, which
-they sent to their friends that they might admire (and perhaps
-envy) the ancient lineage of their neighbours. Thereafter,
-darkness and denim covers and oblivion.</p>
-
-<p>The history of our great Republic suffers from a fate similar
-to that of these heirlooms. It lives in the “front parlour”
-of the national consciousness. It is brought out upon a few
-grand occasions when it merely adds to the general discomfort
-of the assisting multitude. For the rest of the time it lies
-forgotten in the half dark of those Washington cellars which
-for lack of National Archives serve as a receptacle for the
-written record of our past.</p>
-
-<p>Our popular estimate of history and the value of a general
-historical background was defined a few years ago by Henry
-Ford. Mr. Ford, having made a dozen flivvers go where none
-went before and having gained untold wealth out of the motor-car
-industry, had been appointed an ex-officio and highly esteemed
-member of our national Council of Wise Men. His
-opinion was eagerly asked upon such subjects as child-raising,
-irrigation, the future of the human race, and the plausibility<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">299</span>
-of the Einstein theory. During a now memorable trial the
-subject of history came up for discussion, and Mr. Ford (if
-we are to believe the newspaper accounts) delivered himself
-of the heartfelt sentiment that “history is bunk.” A grateful
-country sang Amen!</p>
-
-<p>When asked to elucidate this regrettable expression of dislike,
-the average citizen will fall back upon reminiscences of
-his early childhood and in terms both contrite and unflattering
-he will thereupon describe the hours of misery which he has
-spent reciting “dreary facts about useless kings,” winding up
-with a wholesale denunciation of American history as something
-dull beyond words.</p>
-
-<p>We cannot say much in favour of late Stuarts, Romanoffs,
-and Wasa’s, but we confess to a sincere affection for the history
-of these United States. It is true there are few women
-in it and no little children. This, to us, seems an advantage.
-“Famous women of history” usually meant “infamous trouble”
-for their much perturbed contemporaries. As for the
-ever-popular children motif, the little princes of the Tower
-would have given a great deal had they been allowed to whitewash
-part of Tom Sawyer’s famous fence, instead of waiting in
-silken splendour for Uncle Richard’s murder squad.</p>
-
-<p>No, the trouble is not with the history of this land of endless
-plains and a limitless sky. The difficulty lies with the
-reader. He is the victim of an unfortunate circumstance.
-The Muses did not reach these shores in the first-class cabin of
-the <i>Aquitania</i>. They were almost held up at Ellis Island and
-deported because they did not have the necessary fifty dollars.
-They were allowed to sneak in after they had given a solemn
-promise that they would try to become self-supporting and
-would turn their white hands to something useful.</p>
-
-<p>Clio, our revered mistress, has tried hard to live up to this
-vow. But she simply is not that sort of woman. An excellent
-counsellor, the most charming and trusted of friends, she has
-absolutely no gift for the practical sides of life. She was
-forced to open a little gift-shop where she sold flags and bunting
-and pictures of Pocahontas and Paul Revere. The venture
-was not a success. A few people took pity on her and tried
-to help. She was asked to recite poetry at patriotic gatherings<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">300</span>
-and do selections from the “Founding Fathers.” She did not
-like this, being a person of shy and unassuming character. And
-so she is back in the little shop. When last I saw her, she was
-trying to learn the Russian alphabet. That is always a dangerous
-sign.</p>
-
-<p>And now, lest we continue to jumble our metaphors, let us
-state the case with no more prejudice than is strictly necessary.</p>
-
-<p>The earliest settlers of this country brought their history
-with them. Little Snorri, son of Gudrid and Thorfinn Karlsefni,
-playing amidst the vines of his father’s Labradorian garden,
-undoubtedly listened to the selfsame sagas that were being
-told at the court of good King Olaf Tryggvason in distant
-Norway. The children of San Domingo shared the glories of
-the Cid with the boys and girls who visited the schools of
-Moukkadir’s ancient capital. And the long-suffering infants
-of the early New England villages merely finished an historical
-education that had begun at Scrooby and had been continued
-at No. 21 of the <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Kloksteeg</i> in Leyden.</p>
-
-<p>During the 17th century, the greater part of the Atlantic
-coast became English. The Dutch and the French, the Spanish
-and Swedish traditions disappeared. The history of the
-British Kingdom became the universal history of the territory
-situated between the thirtieth and the fiftieth degree of
-latitude. Even the American Revolution was a quarrel between
-two conflicting versions of certain identical principles
-of history. Lord North and George Washington had learned
-their lessons from the same text-book. His Lordship, of
-course, never cut the pages that told of Runymede, and George
-undoubtedly covered the printed sheets which told of the fate
-of rebels with strange geometrical figures. But the historical
-inheritance of the men who fought on the left bank of the Fish
-Kill and those who surrendered on the right shore was a common
-one, and Burgoyne and Gates might have spent a profitable
-evening sharing a bottle of rum and complimenting each
-other upon the glorious deeds of their respective but identical
-ancestors.</p>
-
-<p>But during the ’twenties and ’thirties of the 19th century, the
-men of the “old régime”—the founder and fighters of the
-young Republic—descended into the grave and they took their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">301</span>
-traditions, their hopes, and their beliefs with them. The curtain
-rose upon a new time and upon a new people. The acquisition
-of the Northwestern Territory in 1787 and the purchase
-of Napoleon’s American real-estate in the year 1803 had
-changed a little commonwealth of struggling Colonies into a
-vast empire of endless plains and unlimited forests. It was
-necessary to populate this new land. The history of the
-Coast came to an end. The history of the Frontier began.
-English traditions rarely crossed the Alleghanies. The long
-struggle for representative government took on a new aspect in
-a land where no king had ever set foot and where man was
-sovereign by the good right of his own energy.</p>
-
-<p>It is true that the first fifty years of the last century witnessed
-the arrival upon these shores of millions of men and
-women from Europe who had enjoyed a grammar school education
-in the land of their birth. But dukes do not emigrate.
-Those sturdy fellows who risked the terrors and horrors of the
-Atlantic in the leaky tubs of the early forties came to the
-country of their future that they might forget the nightmare
-of the past. That nightmare included the biography of Might
-which was then the main feature of the European text-book.
-They threw it overboard as soon as they were well outside of
-the mouth of the Elbe or the Mersey. Settled upon the farms
-of Michigan and Wisconsin, they sometimes taught their children
-the songs of the old Fatherland but its history never.
-After two generations, this migration—the greatest of all
-“treks” since the 4th century—came to an end. Roads had
-been made, canals had been dug, railroads had been constructed,
-forests had been turned into pastures, the Indian was
-gone, the buffalo was gone, free land was gone, cities had been
-built, and the scene had been made ready for the final
-apotheosis of all human accomplishment—civilization.</p>
-
-<p>The schoolmaster has ever followed in the wake of the full
-dinner-pail. He now made his appearance and began to teach.
-Considering the circumstances he did remarkably well. But
-he too worked under a disadvantage. He was obliged to go
-to New England for his learning and for his text-books. And
-the historian of the Boston school, while industrious and patient,
-was not entirely a fair witness. The recollection of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">302</span>
-British red-coats drilling on the Common was still fresh in
-the minds of many good citizens. The wickedness of George
-III was more than a myth to those good men and women whose
-own fathers had watched Major Pitcairn as he marched forth
-to arrest Adams and Hancock. They sincerely hated their
-former rulers, while they could not deny their love for the old
-mother country. Hence there arose a conflict of grave consequence.
-With one hand the New England chronicler twisted
-the tail of the British lion. With the other he fed the creature
-little bits of sugar.</p>
-
-<p>Again the scene changed. The little red school-house had
-marched across the plains. It had followed the pioneer through
-the passes of the Rocky Mountains. It had reached the shores
-of the Pacific Ocean. The time of hacking and building and
-frying with lard came to a definite end. The little red school-house
-gave way for the academy of learning. College and University
-arose wherever a thousand people happened to be together.
-History became a part of the curriculum. The schoolmaster,
-jack of all learned trades and master of many practical
-pursuits, became extinct. The professional historian made
-his appearance. And thereby hangs a sad tale which takes us
-to the barren banks of the Spree.</p>
-
-<p>Ever since the Thirty Years War, Germany had been the
-battlefield of Europe. The ambitions of the Napoleon who
-was four feet tall and smooth shaven and the prospective ambitions
-of the Napoleon who was five feet tall and who waxed
-his moustachios, had given and were actually giving that country
-very little rest. The intelligentsia of the defunct Holy Roman
-Empire saw but a single road which could lead to salvation.
-The old German State must be re-established and the
-kings of Prussia must become heirs to the traditions of Charlemagne.
-To prove this point it was necessary that the obedient
-subjects of half a hundred little potentates be filled with certain
-definite historical notions about the glorious past of Heinrich
-the Fat and Konrad the Lean. The patient historical
-camels of the Teutonic universities were driven into the heart
-of <i xml:lang="pt" lang="pt">Historia Deserta</i> and brought back those stupendous bricks
-of learning out of which the rulers of the land could build their
-monuments to the glorious memory of the Ancestors.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">303</span></p>
-
-<p>Whatever their faults and however misguided the ambition
-of these faithful beasts of burden, they knew how to work.
-The whole world looked on with admiration. Here, at last,
-in this country of scientific precision, history had been elevated
-to the rank of a “<i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Wissenschaft</i>.” Carrying high their banners,
-“For God, for Country, <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">und wie es eigentlich dagewesen</i>,” all
-good historians went upon a crusade to save the Holy Land of
-the Past from the Ignorance of the Present.</p>
-
-<p>That was in the blessed days when a first-class passage to
-Hamburg and Bremen cost forty-six dollars and seventy-five
-cents. Henry Adams and John Lothrop Motley were among
-the first of the pilgrims. They drank a good deal of beer, listened
-to many excellent concerts, and assisted, “privatissime
-and gratis,” at the colloquia docta of many highly learned <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Geheimräte</i>,
-and departed before they had suffered serious damage.
-Others did not fare as well. Three—four—five years they
-spent in the company of the Carolingians and the Hohenstaufens.
-After they had soaked themselves sufficiently in Ploetz
-and Bernheim to survive the <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Examen Rigorosum</i> of the <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Hochgelehrte
-Facultät</i>, they returned to their native shore to spread
-the gospel of true <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Wissenschaftlichkeit</i>.</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing typically American in this. It happened
-to the students of every country of the globe.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, in making this point, we feel that we expose ourselves
-to the accusation of a slight exaggeration. “How now,”
-the industrious reader exclaims, “would you advocate a return
-to the uncritical days of the Middle Ages?” To which we
-answer, “By no means.” But history, like cooking or fiddling,
-is primarily an art. It embellishes life. It broadens our tolerance.
-It makes us patient of bores and fools. It is without
-the slightest utilitarian value. A handbook of chemistry or
-higher mathematics has a right to be dull. A history, never.
-And the professional product of the Teutonic school resembled
-those later-day divines who tried to console the dying by a
-recital of the Hebrew verb <em>abhar</em>.</p>
-
-<p>This system of preaching the gospel of the past filled the
-pulpits but it emptied the pews. The congregation went elsewhere
-for its historical enlightenment. Those who were seriously
-interested turned to the works of a few laymen (hardware<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">304</span>
-manufacturers, diplomats, coal-dealers, engineers) who
-devoted their leisure hours to the writing of history, or imported
-the necessary intellectual pabulum from abroad. Others
-took to the movies and since those temples of democratic delight
-do not open before the hour of noon, they spent the early
-morning perusing the endless volumes of reminiscences, memoirs,
-intimate biographies, and recollections which flood the
-land with the energy of an intellectual <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">cloaca maxima</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But all this, let us state it once more, did not matter very
-much. When all is peace and happiness—when the hospitals
-are empty of patients—when the weather is fine and people are
-dying at the usual rate—it matters little whether the world at
-large takes a deep interest in the work of the Board of Health.
-The public knows that somewhere, somehow, someway, there
-exists a Board of Health composed of highly trained medical
-experts. They also appreciate from past experiences that these
-watchful gentlemen “know their job” and that no ordinary
-microbe can hope to move from Warsaw to Chicago without
-prompt interference on the part of the delousing squad. But
-when an epidemic threatens the safety of the community, then
-the public hastens to the nearest telephone booth—calls up the
-Health Commissioners and follows their instructions with implicit
-faith. It demands that these public servants shall spend
-the days of undisturbed health to prepare for the hour of sickness
-when there is no time for meditation and experiment.</p>
-
-<p>The public at large had a right to expect a similar service
-from its historians. But unfortunately, when the crisis came,
-the scientific historical machine collapsed completely.</p>
-
-<p>In Germany, the home country of the system of <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">historische
-Wissenschaftlichkeit</i>, the historian became the barker outside
-the Hohenzollern main tent, shouting himself hoarse for the
-benefit of half-hearted fellow citizens and hostile neutrals, extolling
-the ancestral Teutonic virtues until the whole world
-turned away in disgust. In France, they arrange those things
-better. Even the most unhealthy mess of nationalistic scraps
-can be turned into a palatable dish by a competent cook of
-the Parisian school. In England, the historian turned propagandist,
-and for three years, the surprised citizens of Copenhagen,
-Bern, and Madrid found their mail boxes cluttered with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">305</span>
-mysterious bundles of state documents duly stamped, beautifully
-illustrated, and presented (as the enclosed card showed)
-with the compliments of Professor So-and-so of Such-and-such
-College, Oxford, England. In Russia, a far-seeing government
-had taken its measures many years before. Those historians
-who had refused to be used as <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">cheval de bataille</i> for the glory
-of the house of Romanoff, were either botanising along the
-banks of the Lena or had long since found a refuge in the universities
-of Sofia and Geneva. I do not know what happened
-in Japan, but I have a suspicion that it was the same thing,
-the entire world over.</p>
-
-<p>The historian turned apologist. He was as useful as a doctor
-who would show a partiality to the native streptococcus on
-the grounds of loyalty to the land of his birth.</p>
-
-<p>What happened on this side of the ocean after the first three
-years of “peace without victory” had given place to “force
-to the uttermost” is too well known to demand repetition.
-Long before the first American destroyer reached Plymouth,
-the staunch old vessel of history had been <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">spurlos versenkt</i> in
-the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">mare clausum</i> of the Western hemisphere. Text-books were
-recalled, rehashed, and revamped to suit the needs of the hour.
-Long and most deservedly forgotten treatises were called back
-to life and with the help of publishers’ blurbs and reviews by
-members of the self-appointed guardians of national righteousness
-they were sent forth to preach the gospel of domestic virtue.
-Strange encyclopædias of current information were concocted
-by volunteers from eager faculties. The public mind
-was a blank. For a hundred years the little children had
-learned to dislike history and grown-ups had revaluated this
-indifference into actual hate. This situation had been created
-to maintain on high the principles of scientific historical investigation.
-Let popular interest perish as long as the Truth
-stand firm. But in the hour of need, the guardians of the
-Truth turned gendarmes, the doors of Clio’s temple were
-closed, and the public was invited to watch the continuation of
-the performance in the next moving-picture house. At Versailles
-the curtain went down upon the ghastly performance.</p>
-
-<p>After the first outbreak of applause the enthusiasm waned.
-Who had been responsible for this terrible tragedy? The supposed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">306</span>
-authors were branded as enemies of mankind. Nations
-tottered and ancient Empires crumbled to dust and were hastily
-carried to the nearest historical scrapheap. The ambitious
-monarch, who for thirty years had masqueraded as a second
-Charlemagne, made his exit amidst properties borrowed from
-the late King Louis Philippe. The gay young leader of the
-Death Head Hussars developed into the amateur bicycle-repairer
-of the island of Wieringen. International reputations
-retailed at a price which could only be expressed in Soviet
-rubles and Polish marks and no takers. The saviour of the
-world became the invalid of the White House. But not a
-word was said about those inconspicuous authors of very conspicuous
-historical works who had been the henchmen of the
-<cite xml:lang="de" lang="de">Oberste</cite> and <cite xml:lang="de" lang="de">Unterste Kriegsherren</cite>. They went back to the
-archives to prepare the necessary post-mortem statements.
-These are now being published at a price which fortunately
-keeps them well out of reach of the former soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>In certain dramas and comedies of an older day it was customary
-to interrupt the action while the Chorus of moralising
-Villagers reviewed what had gone before and drew the necessary
-conclusions. It is time for the “goat-singers” to make
-their appearance.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you, O Author,” so they speak, “quite fair when
-you pronounce these bitter words? Are we not all human—too
-human? Is it reasonable to demand of our historians that
-they shall possess such qualities of detached judgment as have
-not been seen on this earth since the last of the Mighty Gods
-departed from High Olympus? Has a historian no heart? Do
-you expect him to stand by and discuss the virtues of vague
-political questions, when all the world is doing its bit—while
-his children are risking their lives for the safety of the common
-land?”</p>
-
-<p>And when we are approached in this way, we find it difficult
-to answer “no.” For we too are an animated compound of
-prejudice and unreasonable preferences and even more unreasoning
-dislikes, and we do not like to assume the rôle of
-both judge and jury.</p>
-
-<p>The evidence, however, gives us no chance to decide otherwise.
-What was done in the heat of battle—what was done<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">307</span>
-under the stress of great and sincere emotions—what was
-written in the agony of a thousand fears—all that will be forgotten
-within a few years. But enough will remain to convince
-our grandchildren that the historian was among those most
-guilty of creating that “state of mind” without which modern
-warfare would be an impossibility.</p>
-
-<p>Here the music of the flutes grows silent. The Chorus steps
-back and the main action of our little play continues. The
-time is “the present” and the problem is “the future.” The
-children who are now in the second grade will be called upon
-to bear the burden of a very long period of reconstruction.
-America, their home, has been compared to an exceedingly
-powerful and influential woman who is not very popular but
-who must not be offended on account of her eminent social
-position. The folk who live along our international Main
-Street are not very well disposed towards a neighbour who holds
-all the mortgages and lives in the only house that has managed
-to survive the recent catastrophe. It will not be an easy thing
-to maintain the peace in the neurasthenic community of the
-great post-war period. It has been suggested that the Ten
-Commandments, when rightly applied, may help us through
-the coming difficulties. We beg to suggest that a thorough
-knowledge of the past will prove to be quite as useful as the
-Decalogue. We do not make this statement hastily. Furthermore,
-we qualify it by the observation that both History and
-the Decalogue will be only two of a great many other remedies
-that will have to be applied if the world is to be set free
-from its present nightmare of poison gas and high-velocity
-shells. But we insist that History be included. And we do
-so upon the statement of a learned and famous colleague who
-passed through a most disastrous war and yet managed to keep
-a cool head. We mean Thucydides. In his foreword to the
-History of the Peloponnesian War he wrote: “The absence of
-romance in my history will, I fear, detract somewhat from
-its interest; but if it be judged by those inquirers who desire
-an exact knowledge of the past as an aid to the interpretation
-of the future, which in the course of human things, must resemble,
-if it does not reflect it, I shall be content.”</p>
-
-<p>When we measure out achievements in the light of this ancient<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">308</span>
-Greek ideal, we have accomplished very little indeed. An
-enormous amount of work has been done and much of it is
-excellent. The great wilderness of the past has been explored
-with diligent care and the material lies, carefully classified, in
-those literary museums which we call libraries. But the public
-refuses to go in. No one has ever been able to convince
-the man in the street that time employed upon historical reading
-is not merely time wasted. He carries with him certain
-hazy notions about a few names, Cæsar and Joan of Arc (since
-the war) and Magna Charta and George Washington and Abraham
-Lincoln. He remembers that Paul Revere took a ride,
-but whither and for what purpose he neither knows nor cares
-to investigate. The historical tie which binds him to the past
-and which alone can make him understand his own position in
-relation to the future, is non-existent. Upon special occasions
-the multitude is given the benefit of a grand historical pyrotechnic
-display, paid for by the local Chamber of Commerce, and
-a few disjointed facts flash by amidst the fine roar of rockets
-and the blaring of a brass band. But this sort of historical
-evangelising has as little value as the slapstick vespers which
-delight the congregation of Billy Sunday’s circus tent.</p>
-
-<p>We live in an age of patent medicines. The short-cut to
-success is the modern <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">pons asinorum</i> which leads to happiness.
-And remedies which are “guaranteed to cure” are advertised
-down the highways and byways of our economic and social
-world. But no such cure exists for the sad neglect of an historical
-background. History can never be detached from life. It
-will continue to reflect the current tendencies of our modern
-world until that happy day when we shall discontinue the
-pursuit of a non-essential greatness and devote our energies
-towards the acquisition of those qualities of the spirit without
-which human existence (at its best) resembles the proverbial
-dog-kennel.</p>
-
-<p>For the coming of that day we must be as patient as Nature.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Hendrik Willem Van Loon</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_309" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">309</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="SEX">SEX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“The sin I impute to each frustrate ghost</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Is the unlit lamp and the ungirt loin.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">In</span> one of the popular plays of last season, a melodrama
-toned up with snatches of satire and farce, the wife was
-portrayed as a beaten dog heeling her master after he has
-crushed her down across the table the better to rowel off her
-nose. Not until the would-be mutilator was finally disposed
-of by an untrammelled Mexican did the woman feel free to go
-to her lover, and even then she took little or no satisfaction in
-the venture. As for the lover, he had to be robbed of his pistol
-by the husband and shot at, and then—the husband out of the
-way—threatened by the bandit with the loss of the woman, before
-he felt free to take her. The two New Englanders were
-made happy in spite of themselves—and in accordance with
-the traditions or conventions of the audience.</p>
-
-<p>To leave a husband for a lover is in theory un-American,
-unless the husband gives a legal ground for divorce and the
-divorce is secured. In several States cruelty is a legal ground,
-and so the conjugal fidelity of the stage-heroine was perhaps
-overdrawn. But the feeling that she was presumed to share
-with the audience—that the initiative towards freedom in love
-should not come from her—is a characteristic trait of American
-morality. If your husband is unrestrainedly a brute or a
-villain, you may leave him, in fact it behooves you to leave
-him, but if he is merely a bore, or perhaps a man you like well
-enough as a friend, but only as a friend, you must stay on
-with him in an intimacy where boredom readily becomes aversion
-and mere friendliness, disgust. The fact that you do not
-love a person is no reason at all, in American opinion, for not
-living as if you did.</p>
-
-<p>This opinion or attitude is explicit in American divorce law.
-In none of the States is divorce granted either by mutual consent
-or at the desire, the overt desire, of either person. In<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">310</span>
-fact collusion, as mutual consent is called, is accounted a
-reason against granting divorce, and desire for divorce on the
-part of one remains ineffectual until the other has been forced
-into entertaining it. He or she must be given due ground.
-Disinclination to intimacy is not of itself due ground. You
-must express disinclination in a way so disagreeable that he
-or she will want to get rid of you. The law sets a premium
-on being hateful, declares indeed that in this case it is an indispensable
-condition to not being miserable.</p>
-
-<p>The grotesqueness, from either a social or psychological
-point of view, would be too obvious to emphasize, if the implications
-of this attitude towards divorce were not so significant
-of American attitudes at large towards sex—attitudes of repression
-or deception. Of deception or camouflage towards
-divorce there is one other conspicuous point I should like to
-note. “Strictness of divorce” is commonly argued to be protection
-of marriage for the sake of children, since brittle marriage
-is destructive of the family life. It is safe to say that
-from no contemporary discussion of divorce will this argument
-be omitted; and it is equally safe to say that the rejoinder
-that divorce laws should therefore discriminate between parents
-and non-parents will, by the opponents of divorce, pass unheeded.
-That this distinction should be so persistently ignored
-is accountable only, it seems to me, on the ground of
-emotional self-deception. What else but a covert emotional
-attitude could make tenable the irrationality, and what else is
-that attitude but that joy in mating is of negligible value,
-that sex emotion, if not a necessary evil, is at any rate a
-negligible good, deserving merely of what surplus of attention
-may be available from the real business of life? Indifference
-towards sex emotion is masked by concern for offspring.</p>
-
-<p>In France, we may note, this confusion between parenthood
-and mating does not exist. The parental relation in both law
-and custom is highly regulated, much more regulated than
-among English-speaking peoples, but it is unlikely that it would
-be argued in France that mating and parenthood were inseparable
-concepts. Unlikely, because the French attitude towards
-sex differs so radically from the Anglo-Saxon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">311</span></p>
-
-<p>To the French, as to many of the Continental peoples of
-Europe, sexual interest is normally to be kept stimulated,
-neither covered over nor suppressed. And in this case stimulation
-is seen to depend largely upon the factor of interrelation.
-Sex-facts are to be related to other facts of life, not
-rigidly or <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">a priori</i>, as in the American view that mating is inseparable
-from parenthood, but fluently and realistically, as
-life itself moves and finds expression. And sex-facts in European
-opinion are to be interrelated in a philosophy of sex.
-Failure to make these interrelations, together with the attitude
-of suppression, seem to me to be the outstanding aspects of
-the characteristically American attitude towards sex.</p>
-
-<p>There is no need in this post-Freudian day of dwelling upon
-the effects of suppression of sex instinct or impulse. Suppression
-leads, we are told, either to sublimation, in which case it
-is diversion, rather than suppression, or it leads to perversion
-or disease. Unfortunately sex-pathology in the United States
-has been given little or no study, statistically. We have no
-statistical data of health or disease in relation to the expression
-or suppression of sex instinct, and no data on the extent or
-the effects of homosexuality or of the direction of the sex impulses
-towards self. Opinion therefore becomes merely a matter
-of personal observation and conclusion, observation of individuals
-or small groups. My own conclusion or guess in regard
-to perversion in this country is that part of the commonly
-observed spirit of isolation or antagonism between the sexes,
-and part of the spirit of competition between individuals, are
-associated with homosexual or masturbatory tendencies which
-get expressed in varying degrees according to varying circumstances.
-More particularly the lack of warmth in personal
-intercourse which makes alike for American bad manners and,
-in the more intellectual circles, for cheerlessness and aridity is
-due, I think, to failure of one kind or another in sex relations.
-I mean cultural failure, not merely individual failure.</p>
-
-<p>May not some such theory of sex failure account also for
-that herd sense which is so familiar a part of Americanism,
-and which is not incompatible with the type of self-seeking
-or pseudo-individualism of which American individualism appears
-to be an expression? It is a tenable hypothesis that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">312</span>
-sexually isolated individuals become dependent upon the group
-for stimulus, whether of emotion or will, whereas persons in
-normal sex relations, although they may contribute to the group
-or co-operate with it, remain comparatively independent of it,
-finding stimulus in sex and its sublimations.</p>
-
-<p>If this theory is valid, we may expect to find a comparatively
-large number of sex failures in those circles which are
-characterized by what Everett Dean Martin has recently
-called crowd behaviour, reform circles intolerant of other
-mindedness and obsessed by belief in the paramountcy of their
-own dogma.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza" xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">
- <div class="verse indentq">“<i>Leur printemps sans jeunesse exige des folies,</i></div>
- <div class="verse indent0"><i>Leur sang brûlant leur dicte des propos amers,</i></div>
- <div class="verse indent0"><i>L’émeute est un remède à la mélancolie,</i></div>
- <div class="verse indent0"><i>Et nous aurions la paix si leurs yeux étaient clairs,</i></div>
- <div class="verse indent0"><i>Ou leur femme jolie.</i>”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">Were a set of tests for sex failure or sex fulfilment applied to
-the more outstanding propagandists of this country, likewise,
-of course, for comparative purposes, to an adequate number
-of non-propagandists, the results might be of considerable
-significance. I recommend the undertaking to the National
-Research Council in co-operation with some organization for
-social hygiene.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile in what measure propagandism of various sorts
-may be a perversion of sex or a sublimation remains speculative;
-and in applying theory one should be thoroughly aware
-that from the day of Sappho and before to the day of Elizabeth
-Blackwell and after, even to the Russian Revolution, sex
-failure of one kind or another, the kind considered at the time
-most despicable, has commonly been imputed to persons or
-groups disapproved of on other grounds or reprobated. Some
-sublimation of sex in the United States there must be, of course,
-not only, in propaganda movements, but in other expressions
-of American culture, in American art and letters and science,
-in philanthropy, in politics, finance, and business. By and
-large, however, in all these cultural expressions does one see
-any conspicuous measure of sex sublimation? Is not the concern
-practical rather than devotional, a matter of getting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">313</span>
-rather than giving, of self-advancement or family support
-rather than of interest in ideas and their forms or in the values
-of taste or of faith?</p>
-
-<p>Interest in impersonal subjects in general is not an American
-trait. Personal concrete terms are the terms commonly
-used. Americans, as we say, are not given to abstract thought
-or philosophy. They are interested in facts as facts, not as
-related to other facts. How expect of Americans, therefore,
-that kind of curiosity about sex which leads to a philosophy of
-sex? Sex curiosity in American life does not lead past curiosity
-about isolated facts, and that means that it leads not to philosophy
-but to gossip and pruriency. Not long ago I was talking
-with a woman about a common acquaintance to whom I referred
-as singularly free through sophistication and circumstance
-to please any man she liked. “What do you mean?
-Have you heard any scandal about her?” snapped out my
-companion, not at all interested in the general reflection, but
-avid of information about illicit affairs.</p>
-
-<p>Facts which are not held together through theory call for
-labels. People who do not think in terms of relations are
-likely to be insistent upon names. Labels or names for sex
-disposition or acts are, as a matter of fact, very definite in the
-American vernacular. “Engaged,” “attentive,” “devoted,”
-“a married man,” “a man of family,” “a grass widow,” “a
-<em>good</em> woman,” “a <em>bad</em> woman”—there is no end to such tags.
-Again, intimacy between a man and a woman is referred definitely
-to the act of consummation, a sex relation is strictly
-classified according to whether or not it is physically consummated.
-In this attitude towards sex boundaries or captions
-may lie the explanation, incidentally, of what is a constant
-puzzle to the European visitor—the freedom of social intercourse
-allowed to the youth of opposite sexes. Since consummation
-only constitutes sexual intimacy in American opinion,
-and since consummation, it is assumed, is utterly out of the
-question, why raise barriers between boys and girls? The
-assumption that consummation is out of the question is, by and
-large, correct, which is still another puzzle. To this some clue
-may be found, I think, in our concluding discussion.</p>
-
-<p>Fondness for captions and for the sort of classification that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">314</span>
-is so likely to paralyze perception of the finer distinctions
-and to arrest thought, are natural enough in a child, learning
-language and so pressed upon by the multiplicity of phenomena
-that in self-protection he must make rough classifications
-and remain unaware of much. The old who are dying to life
-are also exclusive, and they, too, cling to formulas. Is American
-culture in the matter of sex childish and immature, as
-Americans imply when they refer to their “young country,” or
-is the culture representative of the aged; are Americans born
-old, as now and again a European critic asserts?</p>
-
-<p>Such terms of age are figurative, of course, unless we take
-them in a historical sense, meaning either that a new culture
-was developed in this country—or rather that there were fresh
-developments of an old culture—or that an old culture was
-introduced and maintained without significant change. This
-is not the place to discuss the cultural aspects of Colonial
-America, but it is important to bear in mind in any discussion
-of merely contemporaneous sex attitudes in this country the
-contributions of European, and more particularly, English
-morality. Without recalling the traditions of early Christianity
-or of English Puritanism, those attitudes of ignoring or
-suppressing the satisfactions of the impulses of sex to which we
-have referred were indeed incomprehensible and bewildering—mere
-psychological interpretation seems inadequate. But
-viewed as consequences of the sense of sin in connection with
-sex, which was a legacy from Paul and his successors in English
-Puritanism, interpretation is less difficult, and the American attitude
-toward sex becomes comparatively intelligible—the attitude
-seen in divorce and in the melodramas, and in the standardizing
-of sex relations, in accordance with that most significant
-of Pauline dogmas that marriage is the lesser of two evils,
-that it is better to marry than to burn. Without the key of
-Paul and of the obscenities of the early Christian Fathers how
-explain the recent legislation in Virginia making it a crime
-to pay attention to a married man or woman, or such a sermon
-as was recently preached somewhere in the Middle West
-urging a crusade against the practice of taking another man’s
-wife in to dinner or dancing round dances? “At a dinner of
-friends let every man take his own wife on his arm and walk<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">315</span>
-in to their seats side by side at the dinner table to the inspiring
-music of ‘Onward Christian Soldiers,’” urged the minister.
-As to dancing, whenever a man is seen to put his arm around
-a woman who is not his wife, the band should cease playing.
-I do not quote the words of the latter injunction, as they are
-rather too indecent.</p>
-
-<p>Turning from the historical back to the psychological point
-of view—in one of those circles of cause and effect that are
-composed now of cultural inheritance or tradition, now of psychological
-trend or disposition—the American case of sex,
-whether a case of adolescence or of senescence, may be said to
-present symptoms of arrested development. Together with
-the non-realism of childish or senile formula, there is here the
-kind of emotionalism which checks emotional vitality and
-which is fed upon the sense of crisis; we may call it crisis-emotion.
-Life at large, the sex life in particular, is presented
-as a series of crises preceded and followed by a static condition,
-and in these conventional times of crisis only, the times
-when the labels are being attached, are the emotions aroused.
-In the intervals, in the stretches between betrothal, marriage,
-birth, christening, or divorce, there is little or no sense of
-change—none of the emotions that correspond to changing relations
-and are expressions of personal adjustment. The emotions
-of crisis are statutory, pre-determined, conventionalized;
-neither for oneself nor for others do they make any demands
-upon imagination, or insight, or spiritual concern.</p>
-
-<p>Here in this psychology of crisis is the clue—before mentioned—to
-an understanding of the freedom allowed our youth,
-of “bundling,” as the Colonials termed it, or, in current phrase,
-“petting.” In general, “keeping company” is accounted
-one kind of a relationship, marriage, another—one characterized
-by courtship without consummation, the other by consummation
-without courtship. Between the two kinds of relationship
-there is no transition, it is assumed, except by convention
-or ritual. So inrooted is this social attitude that the
-young cannot escape adopting it, at least the very young to
-whom, at any rate, uncritical conservatism seems to be natural.
-Indeed the taboo on unritualized consummation partakes
-enough of the absolutism of the taboo, shall we say, on incest,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">316</span>
-to preclude any risk of individual youthful experimentation
-or venture across the boundary lines set by the Elders.</p>
-
-<p>Given these boundary lines, given a psychology of crisis, all
-too readily the sex relations, in marriage or out, become stale,
-flat, colourless, or of the nature of debauch, which is only another
-aspect of crisis-psychology. Sex relations perforce become
-limited to two conventions, marriage and prostitution.
-Prostitute or wife, the conjugal or the disorderly house, these
-are the alternatives. In formulaic crisis-psychology there may
-be no other station of emotional experiment or range of emotional
-expression.</p>
-
-<p>That a man should “sow his wild oats” before marriage,
-and after marriage “settle down,” is becoming throughout the
-country a somewhat archaic formula, at least in so far as wild
-oats means exposure to venereal disease; but there has been
-no change, so far as I am aware, in the attitude towards the
-second part of the formula on settling down—in conjugal segregation.
-The married are as obtrusively married as ever, and
-their attitude towards persons of the opposite sex as dull and
-forbidding. Few “happily married” women but refer incessantly
-in their conversation to their husband’s opinion or stand;
-and what devoted husband will fail to mention his wife in one
-way or another as a notice of his immunity against the appeal
-of sex in any degree by any other woman? Shortly after the
-war, a certain American woman of my acquaintance who was
-travelling in France found herself without money and in danger
-of being put off her train before reaching Paris and her
-banker’s. She found a fellow-countryman and told him her
-predicament. He was quite willing to pay her fare; she was
-an American and a woman, but she was informed firmly and
-repeatedly that her knight was a married man, and besides, he
-was travelling with his business partner. Soon after I heard
-this anecdote I happened to repeat it to a Chicago lawyer who
-promptly joined in the laugh over the American man’s timidity.
-“Still, a married man travelling can’t be too prudent,” he finished
-off.</p>
-
-<p>Circumspection towards women, in travel or elsewhere, or,
-better still, indifference towards women, is the standardized
-attitude of American husbands. In marriage, too, a relationship<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">317</span>
-of status rather than of attention to the fluctuations of
-personality, indifference to psychical experience, is a not uncommon
-marital trait. American men in general, as Europeans
-have noted, are peculiarly indifferent to the psychology of
-women. They are also peculiarly sentimental about women,
-a trait quite consistent with indifference or ignorance, but one
-which, in view of American prostitution and the persistent
-exclusion of many women from equal opportunities for education
-and for life, gives an ugly look of hypocrisy to the trumpeters
-of American chivalry.</p>
-
-<p>And yet subject the American concept of chivalry to a little
-scrutiny and the taunt, at least of hypocrisy, will miss the mark.
-For the concept is, both actually and historically, a part of the
-already noted classification of women as more or less sequestered,
-on the one hand, and unsequestered or loose on the other,
-as inexperienced and over-experienced or, more accurately, partially
-over-experienced. In this classification the claims of
-both classes of women are settled by men on an economic basis,
-with a few sentimentalities about womanhood, pure or impure,
-thrown in for good measure. The personality of the woman
-a man feels that he is supporting, whether as wife or prostitute,
-may, theoretically, be disregarded and, along with her personality,
-her capacity for sexual response. Whether as a creature
-of sin or as an object of chivalry, a woman becomes a depersonalized,
-and, sexually, an unresponsive being.</p>
-
-<p>People sometimes forget this when they discuss the relations
-between men and women in this country, and especially the
-sexlessness or coldness of American women. They forget it in
-arguing against the feminizing of education, the theatre, literature,
-etc., meaning, not that women run the schools or are
-market for the arts, but that immature, sexless women are in
-these ways too much to the fore. In part at least it is thanks
-to chivalry or to her “good and considerate husband” that
-the American woman, the non-wage earner at least, does not
-grow up, and that it is possible for so many women to marry
-without having any but the social consequences of marriage in
-mind. One surmises that there are numbers, very large numbers,
-of American women, married as well as unmarried, who
-have felt either no stirring of sex at all or at most only the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">318</span>
-generalized sex stir of pre-adolescence. What proportion of
-women marry “for a home” or to escape from a home, or a
-job, and what proportion marry for love? After marriage,
-with the advent of children, what of these proportions?</p>
-
-<p>Marriage for a home or for the sake of children, chivalry,
-“consideration” for the wife, all these attitudes are matters
-of status, not of personality, and to personality, not to status,
-love must look, since love is an art, not a formula. It often
-seems that in American culture, whether in marriage or out,
-little or no place is open to this patient, ardent, and discerning
-art, and that lovers are invariably put to flight. Even if they
-make good their escape, their adventure is without social significance,
-since it is perforce surreptitious. Only when adventurers
-and artists in love are tolerated enough to be able to come
-out from under cover, and to be at least allowed to live, if only
-as variants from the commonplace, may they contribute of their
-spirit or art to the general culture.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Elsie Clews Parsons</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_319" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">319</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_FAMILY">THE FAMILY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> American family is the scapegoat of the nations.
-Foreign critics visit us and report that children are forward
-and incorrigible, that wives are pampered and extravagant,
-and that husbands are henpecked and cultureless. Nor
-is this the worst. It only skims the surface by comparison
-with the strictures of home-grown criticism. Our domestic
-arbiters of every school have a deeper fault to find: they see
-the family as a crumbling institution, a swiftly falling bulwark.
-Catholic pulpits call upon St. Joseph to save the ruins and
-Puritan moralists invoke Will Carlton, believing in common
-with most of our public guardians that only saints and sentimentalism
-can help in such a crisis. Meanwhile the American
-family shows the usual tenacity of form, beneath much superficial
-change, uniting in various disguises the most ancient and
-the newest modes of living. In American family life, if anywhere,
-the Neolithic meets the modern and one needs to be
-very rash or very wise to undertake the nice job of finding
-out which is which. But one at least refuses to defeat one’s
-normal curiosity by joining in the game of blind-man’s buff,
-by means of which public opinion about the family secures a
-maximum of activity along with a minimum of knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>A little science would be of great help. But popular opinion
-does not encourage scientific probing of the family. In this
-field, not honesty but evasion is held to be the best policy.
-Rather than venture where taboo is so rife and the material so
-sensitive, American science would much rather promote domestic
-dyes and seedless oranges. It is true that we have the Federal
-Census with its valuable though restrained statistics. But
-even the census has always taken less interest in family status
-and family composition, within the population, than in the
-classification of property and occupation and the fascinating
-game of “watching Tulsa grow.” In no country is the collection
-of vital statistics so neglected and sporadic and the total<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">320</span>
-yield of grab-bag facts so unamenable to correlation. Through
-the persistent effort of the Children’s Bureau, this situation
-has been considerably improved during the past ten years; so
-that now there exist the so-called “registration areas” where
-births, marriages, and deaths are actually recorded. For the
-country as a whole, these vital facts still go unregistered. The
-prevailing sketchiness in the matter of vital statistics is in distinct
-contrast to the energy and thoroughness with which
-American political machinery manages to keep track of the
-individual who has passed the age of twenty-one.</p>
-
-<p>One of the tendencies, statistically verified, of the native
-family is its reduction in size. In the first place the circumference
-of the family circle has grown definitely smaller
-through the loss of those adventitious members, the maiden
-aunt and the faithful servant. The average number of adult
-females in the typical household is nowadays just one. The
-odd women are out in the world on their own; they no longer
-live “under the roofs” of their brothers-in-law. Miss Lulu
-Bett is almost an anachronism in 1920. The faithful servant
-has been replaced by the faithless one, who never by any
-chance remains long enough to become a familial appendage,
-or else she has not been replaced at all. Even “Grandma”
-has begun to manifest symptoms of preferring to be on her
-own. Thus the glory of the patriarchal household has visibly
-departed, leaving only the biological minimum in its stead.</p>
-
-<p>In the dwindling of this ultimate group lies the crux of the
-matter. The American grows less and less prolific, and panicky
-theorists can already foresee a possible day when the last 100
-per cent. American Adam and the last 100 per cent. American
-Eve will take their departure from our immigrationized stage.
-It is providentially arranged—the maxim tells us—that the
-trees shall not grow and grow until they pierce the heavens;
-but is there any power on the job of preventing the progressive
-decline of the original Anglo-Saxon stock even to the point of
-final extinction? This is a poignant doubt in a country where
-the Anglo-Saxon strain enjoys a prestige out of all proportion
-to its population quota. The strain may derive what comfort
-it can from the reflection that the exit of the Indian was probably
-not due to birth control.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">321</span></p>
-
-<p>Still, birth control is not new. If it did not originate with
-the Indians, it did at least with the Puritans. As the census
-books and genealogy books show, every succeeding American
-generation has manifested a tendency to reduce the birth-rate.
-The new aspects of the situation are the acceleration of the
-tendency and the propaganda for family limitation by artificial
-methods. In the birth registration area, which includes twenty-three
-States, the number of births for the year 1919 compared
-with those for 1918 showed a slump of seven per cent. Also
-the current assumption that children are more numerous on
-farms, where they are an economic asset, than they are in
-cities, where they became an economic handicap, has recently
-received a startling correction through a survey made by the
-Department of Agriculture. Among the surprises of the study,
-says the report, was the small number of children in farm
-homes:—“Child life is at a premium in rural districts.” The
-farm is not the national child reserve it has been supposed to
-be. As far as the salaried class is concerned, it has stood
-out as the national pace-setter in family limitation. The editorial
-writer of the New York <cite>Times</cite>, who may be trusted for
-a fairly accurate statement of the standards of this group,
-justifies its conduct thus: “Unless the brain-worker is willing
-to disclass his children, to subject them to humiliation, he
-must be willing to feed, clothe, and educate them during many
-years. In such circumstances, to refuse parenthood is only
-human.” It therefore remains for the manual worker, who
-cannot obtain from his Church the same absolution that the
-suburban resident can obtain from his <cite>Times</cite>, to produce the
-bulk of the population. This, as a whole, is not yet stationary;
-the recent census estimates an annual excess of births over
-deaths throughout the United States amounting to about one
-per cent. What will the next decade do with it?</p>
-
-<p>A peculiar feature of the American propaganda for birth
-control is its specific advocacy of artificial methods. The defenders
-of this cause have been compelled, it appears, to define
-a position which would be self-evident in any society not
-incorrigibly Puritan. People who regard celibacy as a state
-of grace and celibacy within marriage as a supreme moral victory
-are still growing, it would seem, on every bush. This<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">322</span>
-unwholesome belief must have its effect upon the birth control
-methods of the married population. It is a matter of speculation
-how many marriages succumb to its influence, especially
-after the birth of a second or third child; but there is reason
-to believe that the ascetic method is by no means uncommon.
-You cannot hold up an ideal before people steadily for forty
-years without expecting some of them to try to follow it. This
-kind of rigorous negativism passes for morality in America and
-finds its strongest devotees among the middle-aged and the
-heads of families. Such people are greatly shocked at the wild
-conduct of the young who are certainly out of bounds since the
-war; but the most striking feature of the current wave of so-called
-immorality is the exposure of the bankruptcy of ideals
-among the older generation. There are thirty million families
-in the United States; presumably there are at least sixty million
-adults who have experimented with the sexual relationship
-with the sanction of society. But experience has taught them
-nothing if one may judge by the patented and soulless concepts
-which still pass for sexual morality among people who are
-surely old enough to have learned about life from living it.</p>
-
-<p>The population policies of the government are confined to
-the supply through immigration. A few years ago, an American
-president enunciated population policies of his own and
-conducted an energetic though solitary campaign against “race
-suicide.” But no faction rallied to his standard, no organization
-rose up to speed his message. His bugle-call was politely
-disregarded as the personal idiosyncrasy of a popular president
-who happened to be the proud father of six children.
-Mr. Roosevelt was evidently out of tune with his own generation,
-as, no doubt, Mr. Washington was with his, for exactly
-the opposite reason. But the more retiring nature of our first
-president saved him from the egoistic error of regarding his
-own familial situation as the only proper and desirable example.
-The complete failure of Mr. Roosevelt’s crusade is significant.
-There are clerical influences in America which actively fight
-race suicide, but with these obscurantist allies the doughty
-son of a Dutch Reform family had too little else in common.
-Among the men of his own class he stirred not an echo. Is it
-because the American husband is too uxorious or too indifferent?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">323</span>
-I have heard a married man say, “It is too much to
-expert of any woman;” and still another one explain, “The
-Missis said it was my turn next and so we stopped with one.”
-Or is there any explanation in the fact that the American
-father tends more and more to spend his life in a salaried job
-and has little land or business to bequeath? Whatever the
-reason, the Business Man is in accord with the Club Woman
-on the subject of birth control, in practice if not in theory.</p>
-
-<p>So far as relative distribution of income is concerned, the
-families of the United States fare much as those in the industrial
-countries of Europe. In 1910, the same relative inequality
-of wealth and income existed in feudal Prussia and democratic
-America. The richest fifth of the families in each
-country claimed about half the income while the poorest two-thirds
-of the families were thankful for about one-third. The
-same law of economic relativity falls alike on the just American
-and the unjust Prussian. But the American family, it
-appears, is in every case two or three times better off than the
-corresponding family in Prussia. You must multiply Herr
-Stinnes by two to get a Judge Gary and the wealth of a Silesian
-child labourer is only half that of a Georgia mill-child. This
-economic advantage of our American rich and poor alike is
-measured chiefly in dollars and marks and not in actual standards
-of living. It is apparently difficult to get real standards
-of living out into the open; otherwise the superior fortune of
-American families of every estate might be less evident. Some
-of us who may have visited middle-class Prussian people only
-half as well off as ourselves probably did not commiserate the
-poor things as they deserved. My hostess, I recall, had eight
-hundred dollars a year on which she maintained an apartment
-of two rooms, bath, and kitchen; kept a part-time maid;
-bought two new suits’ a year; drove out in a hired carriage on
-Sunday; and contributed generously to a society which stirred
-up women to call themselves Frau instead of Fräulein. Any
-“single woman” in an American city of equal size who could
-have managed as much in those days on fifteen hundred a year
-would certainly have deserved a thumping thrift-prize....
-And then there were all those poor little children in a Black
-Forest village, who had to put up with rye bread six days in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">324</span>
-the week and white bread only on Sundays. Transported to
-America, they might have had package crackers every day and
-ice-cream sandwiches on Sunday. One wonders whether the
-larger income of the American family is not largely spent on
-things of doubtful value and pinchbeck quality.</p>
-
-<p>According to theory, the income of the family normally belongs
-to the man of the house. According to theory, he has
-earned it or derived it from some lawful business enterprise.
-“The head of the family ordinarily divides income between
-himself and his various dependents in the proportion that he
-deems best,” says Mr. Willford King. The American husband
-has a peculiarly unblemished reputation as a provider—and
-probably deserves it. Certainly few husbands in the world
-are so thoughtful of their widows; they invest extensively in
-life insurance but rarely in annuities against a period of retirement.
-Trust Companies remind them through advertisements
-every day to make their wills, and cemetery corporations nag
-them incessantly to buy their graves. “Statistics show that
-women outlive men!” says the promoter of America’s Burial
-Park. “They show that the man who puts off the selection of
-a burial place leaves the task to the widow in her grief. For
-the man it is easy now—for the woman an ordeal then.” The
-chivalry of the business man leads him to contrive all sorts
-of financial mechanisms for his widow’s convenience and protection.
-His will, like his insurance policy, is in her favour.
-Unlike the European husband, he hates to leave the man’s
-world of business and to spend his declining years in the society
-of his wife. After he is dead, she is welcome to his all,
-but so long as he lives he keeps business between them.</p>
-
-<p>Though in life and death a generous provider, he is not a
-systematic one. Financial arrangements between husband
-and wife are extremely casual. As the dowry hardly exists,
-so a regular cash allowance is very rare. He loves to hold the
-purse-strings and let her run the bills. This tendency is known
-in the outside business world, and the American wife, therefore,
-enjoys a command of credit which would amaze any
-solvent foreign housekeeper. She has accounts on every hand.
-She orders food by telephone or through the grocer’s boy
-and “charges it.” The department store expects her to have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">325</span>
-a charge account, and gives her better service if she does. For
-instance, the self-supporting woman who is, for obvious reasons,
-more inclined to pay as she goes, finds herself discriminated
-against in the matter of returning or exchanging goods. In
-numerous ways, the charge account has the inside track. This
-would not seem strange if credit were limited to the richest
-fraction. But that is not the case; almost every housewife in
-the country has credit, from the Newport ladies to the miners’
-wives who “trade at the company store.” The only difference
-is that, in the case of these two extremes—Newport and the
-company store—longer credit than ususal seems to be the rule.
-In the meantime, the preaching of thrift to the American
-housewife goes on incessantly by apostles from a business
-world which is largely organized on the assumption that she
-does not possess it and which would be highly disconcerted if
-she actually developed it. American business loves the housewife
-for the same reason that it loves China—that is, for her
-economic backwardness.</p>
-
-<p>The record of the American husband as a provider is not
-uniform for all classes. In Congress it is now and then asserted
-with appropriate oratory that there are no classes in
-America. This is more or less true from the point of view of
-a Cabin Creek vote-getter, who lives in a factitious political
-world, where economic realities fail to penetrate; to him
-middle-class and working-class are much the same since they
-have equal rights not to “scratch the ticket.” But the economist
-finds it convenient, as has been said, to classify the totality
-of American families in definite income-groups corresponding
-to the Prussian classes. As one descends the income scale
-one finds that the American husband no longer fulfils his
-reputation for being sole provider for his family. According
-to Edgar Sydenstricker, “less than half of the wage-earners’
-families in the United States, whose heads are at work, have
-been found to be supported by the earnings of the husband or
-father.” The earnings of the mother and the children are a
-necessary supplement to bring the family income up to the
-subsistence level. Half the workingmen, who have dutifully
-“founded” families, cannot support them. According to the
-latest figures published, it costs $2,334 a year to keep a family<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">326</span>
-of five in New York. Have the young Lochinvars of the tenements
-never heard of those appalling figures? Very likely they
-have a premonition, if not an actual picture of the digits. In
-any case they have their mothers to warn them. “Henry’s
-brought it on himself,” said the janitress. “He had a right
-not to get married. He had his mother to take care of him.”
-If he had only chosen bachelorhood, he might have lived at
-home in comfort and peace on his twenty-five a week. But
-having chosen, or been chosen by, Mrs. Henry instead, it is
-now up to the latter to go out office-cleaning or operating,
-which she very extensively does. It is estimated that since
-the war fully one-third of all American women in industry are
-married.</p>
-
-<p>Going back up the scale to the middle-class wife, we find
-new influences at work upon her situation. Custom has relaxed
-its condemnation of the economically independent wife,
-and perhaps it is just as well that it has done so. For this is
-the class which has suffered the greatest comparative loss of
-fortune, during the last fifteen years. “If all estimates cited
-are correct,” writes Mr. Willford King, “it indicates that, since
-1896, there has occurred a marked concentration of income in
-the hands of the very rich; that the poor have relatively lost
-but little; but that the middle class has been the principal sufferer.”
-It is, then, through the sacrifices of our middle-class
-families that our very richest families have been able to improve
-their standard of living. The poor, of course, have had
-no margin on which to practise such benevolence, but the generous
-middle-class has given till it hurts. The deficit had to
-be relieved, the only possible way being through the economic
-utilization of the women. At first daughters became self-supporting,
-while wives still tarried in the odour of domestic sanctity;
-then wives came to be sporadically self-supporting. The
-war, like peace still bearing hardest on the middle-class, enhanced
-all this. Nine months after the armistice, fifty per
-cent. more women were employed in industry than there were
-in the year before the war.</p>
-
-<p>In America, we have no surplus women. The countries of
-western Europe are each encumbered with a million or two,
-and their existence is regarded as the source of acute social<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">327</span>
-problems. What shall be done with them is a matter of earnest
-consideration and anxious statecraft. America has been spared
-all this. She has also no surplus men—or none that anybody
-has ever heard of. It is true that the population in 1910 consisted
-of ninety-one millions, of whom forty-seven millions
-were men and forty-four were women. There were three million
-more men than women, but for some reason they were
-not surplus or “odd” men and they have never been a “problem.”
-The population figures for 1920,—one hundred and
-five millions,—have not yet been divided by sexes, but the
-chances are that there is still a man for every woman in the
-country, and two men apiece for a great number of them.
-However, no one seems to fear polyandry for America as
-polygamy is now feared in Europe.</p>
-
-<p>The situation is exceptional in New England where the typical
-European condition is duplicated. Beyond the Berkshire
-Hills, all the surplus women of America are concentrated. In
-the United States as a whole there are a hundred and five men
-for each one hundred women, but in New England the balance
-shifts suddenly to the other side. Within the present century,
-a gradual increase has taken place in the masculine contingent
-owing to immigration. But the chances of marriage have not
-correspondingly improved, for matches are rarely made between
-New England spinsters and Armenian weavers or Neapolitan
-bootblacks.</p>
-
-<p>In America only the very rich and the very poor marry
-early. Factory girls and heiresses are, as a rule, the youngest
-brides. It is generally assumed that twenty-four for women
-and twenty-nine for men are the usual ages for marriage the
-country over. Custom varies enormously, of course, in so
-polyglot a population. Now and then an Italian daughter acquires
-a husband before the compulsory education law is
-through with her. In such cases, however, there is apparently
-a gentleman’s agreement between the truant officer and the
-lady’s husband which solves the dilemma. At the opposite extreme
-from these little working-class Juliets are the mature
-brides of Boston. As the result of a survey covering the last
-ten years, the registrar of marriage licenses discovered that
-the women married between twenty-seven and thirty-three and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">328</span>
-the men between thirty and forty. Boston’s average marriage
-age for both sexes is over thirty. This does not represent an
-inordinate advance upon the practice of the primitive Bostonians.
-According to certain American genealogists, the
-Puritans of the 17th century were in no great haste to wed—the
-average age of the bride being twenty-one and of the
-bridegroom twenty-five. The marriage age in the oldest American
-city has moved up about ten years in a couple of centuries.
-The change is usually ascribed to increasing economic
-obstacles, and nobody questions its desirability. Provided that
-celibacy is all that it seems to be, the public stands ready to
-admire every further postponement of the marriage age as
-evidence of an ever-growing self-control and the triumphant
-march of civilization.</p>
-
-<p>In the majority of marriages, the American wife outlives
-her husband. This is partly because he is several years older
-than she and partly because she tends to be longer-lived than
-he. Americans of the second and third generation are characterized
-by great longevity,—the American woman of American
-descent being the longest-lived human being on earth.
-Consequently the survivors of marriage are more likely to be
-widows than widowers. In the census of 1910, there were
-about two million and a half widows of forty-five or over as
-compared with about one million widowers of corresponding
-age. Nor do they sit by the fire and knit as once upon a
-time; they too must “hustle.” Among the working women
-of the country are a million and a quarter who are more than
-forty-five and who are probably to a very large extent—though
-the census provides no data on the subject—economically
-independent widows. As was said before, “Grandma”
-too is on her own nowadays.</p>
-
-<p>The widow enjoys great honour in American public life, although
-it usually turns out to be rather a spurious and
-sentimental homage. Political orators easily grow tearful
-over her misfortunes. For generations after the Civil War,
-the Republican Party throve on a pension-system which gathered
-in the youngest widow of the oldest veteran, and Tammany
-has always understood how to profit from its ostentatious
-alms-giving to widows and orphans. From my earliest childhood,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">329</span>
-I can recollect how the town-beautifiers, who wanted to
-take down the crazy board fences, were utterly routed by the
-aldermen who said the widow’s cow must range and people
-must therefore keep up their fences. Similarly, the Southern
-States have never been able to put through adequate child
-labour laws because the widow’s child had to be allowed to
-earn in order to support his mother. All this sentimentalism
-proved to be in time an excellent springboard for a genuine
-economic reform—the widow’s pension systems of the several
-states which would be more accurately described as children’s
-pensions. The legislatures were in no position to resist an appeal
-on behalf of the poor widow and so nicely narcotized were
-they by their traditional tender-heartedness that they failed
-to perceive the socialistic basis of this new kind of widow’s
-pensions. Consequently America has achieved the curious
-honour of leading in a socialistic innovation which European
-States are now only just beginning to copy. Maternity insurance,
-on the other hand, has made no headway in America
-although adopted years and even decades ago in European
-countries. With us the obstacle seems to be prudishness
-rather than capitalism—it makes a legislator blush to hear
-childbirth spoken of in public while it only makes him cry to
-hear of widowhood.</p>
-
-<p>One aspect of widowhood is seldom touched upon and that
-is its prevention. Aged widows, on the whole, in spite of their
-soap-boxing and their wage-earning, are a very lonely race.
-Why must they bring it on themselves by marrying men whose
-expectation of life is so much less than theirs? And yet so
-anxious are the marrying people to observe this conventional
-disparity of age, that if the bride happens to be but by three
-months the senior of the bridegroom, they conceal it henceforth
-as a sort of family disgrace. Even if this convention
-should prove to be immutable, is there nothing to be done
-about the lesser longevity of the American male? There is a
-life extension institute with an ex-president at the head but, as
-far as I am aware, it has never enlisted the support of the
-millions reported by the census as widows, who surely, if anybody,
-should realize the importance of such a movement. It is
-commonly assumed that the earlier demise of husbands is due<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">330</span>
-to the hazardous life they lead in business and in industry; but
-domestic life is not without its hazards, and child-bearing is
-an especially dangerous trade in the United States, which has
-the highest maternal death-rate of seventeen civilized countries.
-If American husbands were less philosophical about
-the hardships of child-bed—the judgment of Eve and all that
-sort of thing—and American wives were less philosophical
-about burying their husbands—the Lord hath given and the
-Lord hath taken away and so on—it might result in greater
-health and happiness for all concerned.</p>
-
-<p>But the main trouble with American marriage, as all the
-world knows, is that divorce so often separates the twain before
-death has any chance to discriminate between them. The
-growing prevalence of divorce is statistically set forth in a
-series of census investigations. In 1890, there was one divorce
-to every sixteen marriages; in 1900, there was one to
-every twelve marriages; and in 1916, there was one to every
-nine marriages. The number of marriages in proportion to
-the population has also increased during the same period,
-though not at a rate equal to that of divorce. But divorce,
-being so much younger than marriage, has had more room to
-grow from its first humble scared beginnings of fifty years ago.
-Queen Victoria’s frown had a very discouraging effect on divorce
-in America; and Mrs. Humphry Ward, studying the
-question among us in the early 20th century, lent her personal
-influence towards the arrest of the American evil. We also
-have raised up on this side of the water our own apostles against
-divorce, among whom Mr. Horace Greeley perhaps occupies
-the first and most distinguished place. But in spite of all
-heroic crusades, divorce has continued to grow. One even suspects
-that the marked increase in the marriage rate is partly—perhaps
-largely—due to the remarriage of the divorced. At
-any rate, they constitute new and eligible material for marriage
-which formerly was lacking.</p>
-
-<p>The true cause of the increase of divorce in America is not
-easy to come by. Commissions and investigations have worried
-the question to no profitable end, and have triumphantly
-come out by the same door by which they went in. That seems
-to be the test of a successful divorce inquiry; and no wonder,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">331</span>
-for the real quest means a conflict with hypocrisy and prejudice,
-fear and taboo, which only the intrepid spirit of a John
-Milton or a Susan B. Anthony is able to sustain. The people
-who want divorces and who can pay for them seem to be able
-to get them nowadays, and since it is the truth only that suffers
-the situation has grown more tolerable.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, there are popular impressions and assumptions
-which do not tally with the known facts. It is assumed
-that divorce is frequent in America because it is easy, and
-that the logical way to reduce it would be to make it difficult.
-Certain States of the West have lenient divorce laws but other
-States have stringent laws, while South Carolina abolished divorce
-entirely in 1878. On the whole, our laws are not so
-lenient as those of Scandinavia, whose divorce rate is still far
-behind that of the United States. Neither is divorce cheap in
-America; it is enormously expensive. Therefore for the poor
-it is practically inaccessible. The Domestic Relations Courts do
-not grant divorce and the Legal Aid Societies will not touch it.
-The wage-earning class, like the inhabitants of South Carolina,
-just have to learn to get along without it. Then there is another
-belief, hardly justified by the facts, that most divorced
-wives get alimony. Among all the divorces granted in 1916,
-alimony was not even asked for by 73 per cent. of the wives
-and it was received altogether by less than 20 per cent. of them.
-The statistics do not tell us whether the actual recipients of
-alimony were the mothers of young children or whether they
-were able-bodied ladies without offspring. The average American
-divorce court could not be trusted to see any difference
-between them.</p>
-
-<p>The war has naturally multiplied the actions for divorce in
-every country. It was not for nothing that the British government
-called the stipends paid to soldiers’ wives “separation
-allowances.” The war-time conditions had a tendency to
-unmake marriages as well as to make them. The momentary
-spread of divorce has revived again the idea of a uniform divorce
-law embodied in an amendment to the Federal Constitution.
-As no reasonable law can possibly be hoped for, the
-present state of confusion is infinitely to be preferred as affording
-at least some choice of resources to the individual who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">332</span>
-is seeking relief. If there were any tendency to take divorce
-cases out of the hands of the lawyers, as has been done with
-industrial accidents, and to put it into domestic relations courts
-where it belongs; if there were the least possibility of curbing
-the vested interest of the newspapers in divorce news; if there
-were any dawning appreciation of the absurdity of penalizing
-as connivance the most unanswerable reason for divorce, that
-is, mutual consent; if there were any likelihood that the lying
-and spying upon which divorce action must usually depend for
-its success would be viewed as the grossest immorality in the
-whole situation; if there were any hope whatever that a statesman
-might rise up in Congress and, like Johan Castberg of
-Norway, defend a legal measure which would help ordinary
-men and women to speak the truth in their personal relationships—if
-there were any prospect that any of these influences
-would have any weight in the deliberations of Congress, one
-might regard the possibilities of Federal action with a gleam
-of hope. But since nothing of the kind can be expected, the
-best that can happen in regard to divorce in the near future
-is for Congress to leave it alone. There is a strong tradition
-in the historical suffrage movement of America which favours
-liberal divorce laws and which makes it improbable that a
-reactionary measure could gain sufficient support from the
-feminine electorate. Since the majority of those who seek
-divorce in this country are women, it seems to put them logically
-on the side of dissoluble marriage.</p>
-
-<p>Though home is a sacred word in America, it is a portable
-affair. Migration is a national habit, handed down and still
-retained from the days when each generation went out to break
-new ground. The disasters of the Civil War sent Southern
-families and New England families scurrying to the far West.
-The development of the railway and express systems produced
-as a by-product a type of family life that was necessarily
-nomadic. The men of the railway “Brotherhoods” have
-always been marrying men, and their families acquired the art
-of living on wheels, as it were. Rich farmers of the Middle
-West retire to spend their old age in a California cottage surrounded
-by an orange grove—and the young farmers move to
-the city. The American family travels on any and every excuse.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">333</span>
-The neurotic pursuit of health has built up large communities
-in Colorado, Arizona, and other points West. Whole
-families “picked up,” as the saying goes, and set out for the
-miraculous climate that was to save one of its members from
-the dreaded tuberculosis—and then later had to move again
-because somebody’s heart couldn’t stand the “altitude.” The
-extreme examples of this nomadic habit are found among the
-families of the very poor and the very rich, who have regular
-seasonal migrations. The oyster canners and strawberry-pickers
-have a mobility which is only equalled by that of the
-Palm Beachers. And finally there is the curious practice of
-New England which keeps boarders in the summer-time in
-order that it may be boarded by Florida in the winter-time.</p>
-
-<p>By contrast with all this geographical instability, the stable
-sway of convention and custom stands out impressively. With
-each change of environment, family tradition became more
-sacred. Unitarians who moved to Kansas were more zealous
-in the faith than ever, and F.F.V.’s who settled in Texas were
-fiercely and undyingly loyal to the memory of Pocahontas.
-Families that were always losing their background, tried to
-fixate in some form the ancestral prestige which threatened
-always to evaporate. Organizations composed of the Sons
-and Daughters of the Revolution, of the descendants of the
-Pilgrims, of Civil War Veterans, of the Scions of the Confederacy,
-and so on, sprang up and flourished on the abundant soil
-of family pride. All of which means that pioneering brought
-no spiritual independence or intellectual rebirth, and that new
-conditions were anxiously reformulated under the sanction of
-the old. Above all, sanction was important. That incredible
-institution, the “society column” of the local newspaper, took
-up the responsibility where the Past laid it down. Stereotyped
-values of yesterday gave way to stereotyped values of to-day.
-This was the commercial opportunity of a multitude of home
-journals and women’s magazines which undertook—by means
-of stories, pictures, and advertisements—to regiment the last
-detail of home life. But the perforated patterns, the foods
-“shot from guns,” and all the rest of the labour-saving ingenuities
-which came pouring into the home and which were supposed
-to mean emancipation for mothers and their families,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">334</span>
-brought little of the real spirit of freedom in their wake. Our
-materialistic civilization finds it hard to understand that liberty
-is not achieved through time-saving devices but only
-through the love of it.</p>
-
-<p>But the notorious spoiling of the American child—some one
-says—is not that a proper cradle of liberty for the personality?
-A spoilt child may be a nuisance, but if he is on the way towards
-becoming a self-reliant, self-expressive adult, the
-“American way” of bringing up children may have its peculiar
-advantages. But a spoilt child is really a babyish child,
-and by that token he is on the way towards becoming a childish
-adult. Neither is his case disposed of simply by adjudging
-him a nuisance; the consequence of his spoiling carry much
-further than that. They are seen, for instance, in malnutrition
-of the children of the American rich—a fact which has
-but recently been discovered and which came as a great surprise
-to the experts. “In Chicago,” one of them tells us, “it
-was found that a group of foreign children near the stockyards
-were only 17 per cent. underweight, while in the all-American
-group near the University of Chicago they were 57 per cent.
-below normal.” The same condition of things was found in a
-select and expensive boarding school in the neighbourhood of
-Boston. A pathetic commentary—is it not?—on a country
-which leads the world in food-packing and food-profits, that
-it should contain so many parents who, with all the resources
-of the earth at their command, do not know how to feed their
-own children. Surely, the famous American spoiling has
-something to do with this. Whether it may not also be behind
-the vast amount of mental disturbance in the population may
-well be considered. The asylums are suddenly over-crowded.
-The National Committee for Mental Hygiene suggests for our
-consolation that this may be because the asylums are so much
-more humane than they used to be and the families of the
-sufferers are more willing than formerly to consign them to
-institutions.</p>
-
-<p>It is the fashion to attribute all these mental tragedies to
-the strain of business life and industry, and more recently to
-war-shock. But if we are to accept the results of the latest
-psychological research, the family must receive the lion’s share<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">335</span>
-of blame. The groundwork for fatal ruptures in the adult personality
-is laid in childhood and in the home which produced
-the victim. For many years the discussion of American nerves
-has hinged on the hectic haste of business and industrial life,
-on the noise and bustle and lack of repose in the national
-atmosphere. But we have neglected to accuse the family to its
-face of failing to protect the child against the cataclysms of
-the future while it had the chance.</p>
-
-<p>The tremendous influence of the family on the individuals,
-old and young, composing it is not merely a pious belief. We
-are, alas, what our families make us. This is not a pleasant
-thought to many individuals who have learned through bitter
-experience to look on family relationships as a form of soul
-imprisonment. Yet it seems to be an incontestable fact that
-personality is first formed—or deformed—in the family constellation.
-The home really does the job for which the school,
-the press, the church, and the State later get the credit. It is
-a smoothly articulated course from the cradle onward, however,
-in which the subjugated parent produces a subjugated child,
-not so much by the rod of discipline—which figures very
-little in American family life—but by the more powerful and
-pervasive force of habit and attitude. Parents allow themselves
-to be a medium for transmitting the incessant pressure
-of standards which allow no room for impulse and initiative;
-they become the willing instrument of a public mania for
-standardization which tries to make every human soul into the
-image of a folded pattern. The babe is moulded in his cradle
-into the man who will drop a sentimental tear, wear a white
-carnation, and send a telegram on Mother’s Day—that travesty
-of a family festival which shames affection and puts spontaneous
-feeling to the blush.</p>
-
-<p>As the family itself grows smaller, this pressure of mechanistic
-and conventional standards encroaches more closely upon
-the child. A sizeable group of brothers and sisters create for
-themselves a savage world which is their best protection against
-the civilization that awaits them. But with one or two children,
-or a widely scattered series, this natural protection is
-lost. The youngster is prematurely assimilated to the adult
-world of parents who are nowadays, owing to later marriage, not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">336</span>
-even quite so young as formerly they were. It is a peculiarity
-of parents, especially of mothers, that they never entertain a
-modest doubt as to whether they might be the best of all possible
-company for their children. And obviously the tired business
-man cannot properly substitute in the evenings for a roistering,
-shouting brother who never came into the world at
-all; nor can all the concentrated care of the most devoted
-mother take the place of the companionship and discipline
-which children get from other children. These considerations
-deserve more attention than they usually receive in connection
-with the falling birth-rate. The figures mean that the environment
-of the young child is being altered in a fundamental respect.
-Parents of small families need to take effective steps
-to counteract the loss. Practical things, like nursery schools,
-would be a help. But, chiefly, if parents will insist on being
-companions of their children, they need themselves to understand
-and practise the art of common joy and happiness.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Katharine Anthony</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_337" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">337</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_ALIEN">THE ALIEN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> immigrant alien has been discussed by the Anglo-Saxon
-as though he were an Anglo-Saxon “problem.” He
-has been discussed by labour as though he were a labour
-“problem”; by interpreters of American institutions as though
-man existed for institutions and for institutions which the class
-interpreting them found advantageous to its class. Occasionally
-the alien has been discussed from the point of view of the
-alien and but rarely from the point of view of democracy. The
-“problem” of the alien is largely a problem of setting our own
-house in order. It is the “problem” of Americanizing America.
-The outstanding fact of three centuries of immigration
-is that the immigrant alien ceases to be an alien when economic
-conditions are such as properly to assimilate him.</p>
-
-<p>There is something rather humorous about the way America
-discusses “the alien.” For we are all aliens. And what is
-less to our liking we are almost all descended from the peasant
-classes of Europe. We are here because our forebears were
-poor. They did not rule over there. They were oppressed;
-they were often owned. And with but few exceptions they
-came because of their poverty. For the rich rarely emigrate.
-And in the 17th and 18th centuries there was probably a
-smaller percentage of immigrants who could pass the literacy
-test than there are to-day. Moreover, in the early days only
-suffering could drive the poor of Europe from their poverty.
-For the conditions of travel were hazardous. The death toll
-from disease was very high. It required more fortitude to
-cross the Atlantic and pass by the ring of settlers out onto the
-unbroken frontier than it does to pass Ellis Island and the
-exploiters round about it to-day.</p>
-
-<p>The immigration question has arisen because America, too,
-has created a master class, a class which owns and employs and
-rules. And the alien in America is faced by a class opinion,
-born of the change which has come over America rather than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">338</span>
-any change in the alien himself. America has changed. The
-alien remains much the same. And the most significant phase
-of the immigration problem is the way we treat the alien and
-the hypocrisy of our discussion of the subject.</p>
-
-<p>Sociologists have given us a classification of the immigrant
-alien. They speak of the “old immigration” and the “new
-immigration.” The former is the immigration of the 17th and
-18th and the first three-quarters of the 19th centuries. It was
-English, Scotch, Irish, German, Scandinavian with a sprinkling
-of French, Swiss, and other nationalities. From the beginning,
-the preponderance was British. During the 18th century
-there was a heavy Scotch inflow and during the first half
-of the 19th a heavy Irish and German immigration. The Irish
-came because of the famine of 1848, the Scotch in large part
-because of the enclosure acts and the driving of the people from
-the land to make way for deer preserves and grazing lands for
-the British aristocracy. Most of the British immigration was
-the result of oppressive land laws of one kind or another. The
-population of Ireland was reduced from eight million to slightly
-over four million in three-quarters of a century. The British
-immigrant of the 17th century, like the recent Russian immigration,
-was driven from home by economic oppression. Only
-a handful came to escape religious oppression or to secure
-political liberty. The cause of immigration has remained the
-same from the beginning until now.</p>
-
-<p>The “old immigration” was from the North of Europe.
-It was of Germanic stock. It was predominantly Protestant.
-But the most important fact of all and the fact most usually
-ignored is an economic fact. The early immigrant found a
-broad continent awaiting him, peopled only by Indians. He
-became a free man. He took up a homestead. He ceased to
-belong to any one else. He built for himself. He paid no
-rent, he took no orders, he kept what he produced, and was
-inspired by hope and ambition to develop his powers. It was
-economic, not political, freedom that distinguishes the “old
-immigration” from the “new.”</p>
-
-<p>The “new immigration” is from Southern and Central Europe.
-It is Latin and Slavic. It is largely Catholic. It, too,
-is poor. It, too, is driven out by oppression, mostly economic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">339</span>
-and for the most part landed. Almost every wave of immigration
-has been in some way related to changes for the worse
-in the landed systems of Europe. Wherever the poverty has
-been the most distressing, there the impulse to move has been
-the strongest. It has been the poverty of Europe that has
-determined our immigration from the 17th century until now.</p>
-
-<p>The ethnic difference is secondary. So is the religious.
-The fundamental fact that distinguishes the “old immigration”
-from the “new” is economic. The “new immigration”
-works for the “old.” It found the free land all taken up.
-The public domain had passed into the hand of the Pacific
-railroads, into great manorial estates. Land thieves had repeated
-the acts of the British Parliament of the 18th century.
-The Westward movement of peoples that had been going on
-from the beginning of time came to an end when the pioneer
-of the 80’s and 90’s found only the bad lands left for settlement.
-That ended an era. It closed the land to settlement
-and sent the immigrant to the city. The peasant of Europe
-has become the miner and the mill worker. He left one kind
-of serfdom to take up another. It is this that distinguishes
-the “old immigrant” from the “new.” It is this that distinguishes
-the old America from the America of to-day. And the
-problem of immigration, like the problem of America, is the
-re-establishment of economic democracy. The protective tariff
-bred exotic industry. The employer wanted cheap labour.
-The mine owners and mill owners combined with the steamship
-companies to stimulate immigration. They sent agents
-abroad. They brought in gangs from Southern and Central
-Europe. They herded them in mining camps, in mill towns,
-in the tenements. The closing of the public domain and the
-rise of monopoly industry marks the turning point in immigration.
-It marks the beginning of the immigration “problem.”
-It is partly ethnic, but largely economic.</p>
-
-<p>The “new immigration” from Southern and Central Europe
-began to increase in volume about 1890. It came from Southern
-rather than Northern Italy, from Poland, Hungary, Bohemia,
-Russia, the Balkans, and the Levant. There was a
-sprinkling of Spanish and Portuguese immigrants. In 1914
-South and Central European immigration amounted to 683,000,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">340</span>
-while the North European immigration was but 220,000. Of
-the former 296,000 came from Italy, 123,000 from Poland,
-45,000 from Russia, and 45,000 from Hungary. These figures
-do not include Jewish immigrants, who numbered 138,000. Of
-the North European immigrants 105,000 came from the British
-Isles, 80,000 came from Germany, and 36,000 from the
-Scandinavian countries.</p>
-
-<p>Of the 14,000,000 persons of foreign birth now in the
-country, a very large percentage is of South and Central European
-stock.</p>
-
-<p>We are accustomed to think of the old immigration and the
-new immigration in terms of races and religions. And much
-of the present-day hostility to immigration comes from the
-inexplicable prejudice which has recently sprung up against
-persons of differing races and religions. It is assumed that the
-new immigration is poor and ignorant because it is ethnically
-unfitted for anything different and that it prefers the tenement
-and the mining camp to American standards of living and culture.
-But the newly arrived immigrant goes to the mines and
-the crowded city not from choice but from necessity. He lives
-in colonies with his fellows largely because the employing
-class prefers that he be segregated and has no interest in his
-physical comfort or welfare. The alien has been a commodity,
-not a human being; he has been far cheaper than a machine
-because he provided his own capital cost and makes provision
-for his own depreciation and decay. He has been bought in
-the slums of Europe for his passage money and he can be left
-to starve when bad times or industrial power throws him on
-his own resources. The important difference between the “old
-immigration” and the “new immigration” is not ethnic. It
-is not religious. It is economic. The “old immigration” has
-become the owning and employing class, while the “new immigration”
-is the servile and dependent class. This is the real,
-the important difference between the “old immigration” and
-the “new.” The former owns the resources of America. The
-economic division coincides roughly with the race division.</p>
-
-<p>When economic privilege becomes ascendant fear is born. It
-is born of a subconscious realization on the part of the privileged
-classes that their privileges rest on an unjust if not an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">341</span>
-unstable foundation. Fear is the parent of hate, and back of
-other explanations of the present demand for exclusion of the
-alien is fear. It is fear that gave birth to the persecution
-and ruthless official and semi-official activity first against all
-aliens under the White Slave Act and similar laws, next against
-the Germans, and later against the “reds.” An economic psychology
-born of injustice explains our present attitude toward
-the alien just as a different economic psychology explained our
-attitude during the first two and a half centuries of our life
-when it was the consuming desire of statesmen, real-estate speculators,
-and exploiters to people the continent and develop our
-industries and resources as rapidly as possible.</p>
-
-<p>The “immigration problem,” so called, has always been and
-always will be an economic problem. There are many people
-who feel that there is an inherent superiority in the Anglo-Saxon
-race; that it has a better mind, greater virtue, and a
-better reason for existence and expansion than any other race.
-They insist there are eugenic reasons for excluding immigration
-from South and Central Europe; they would preserve
-America for people of Anglo-Saxon stock. As an immigration
-official I presided over Ellis Island for five years. During this
-time probably a million immigrants arrived at the port of New
-York. They were for the most part poor. They had that in
-common with the early immigrant. They had other qualities
-in common. They were ambitious and filled with hope. They
-were for the most part kindly and moved by the same human
-and domestic virtues as other peoples. And it is to me an
-open question whether the “new immigration,” if given a virgin
-continent, and the hope and stimulus which springs from
-such opportunity, would not develop the same qualities of mind
-and of character that we assume to be the more or less exclusive
-characteristics of the Anglo-Saxon race. There is also
-reason for believing that the warmer temperament, the emotional
-qualities, and the love of the arts that characterize the
-South and Central European would produce a race blend,
-under proper economic conditions, that would result in a better
-race than one of pure Northern extraction. For it is to be
-remembered that it was not political liberty, religious liberty,
-or personal liberty that changed the early immigrant of Northern<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">342</span>
-Europe into the American of to-day. His qualities were
-born of economic conditions, of a free continent, of land to be
-had for the asking, of equal opportunity with his fellows to
-make his life what he would have it to be. The old immigrant
-recognized no master but himself. He was the equal of his
-neighbours in every respect. He knew no inferiority complex
-born of a servile relationship. It was this rather than our
-constitutions and laws that made the American of the first
-three centuries what he was. It was this alchemy that changed
-the serf of Northern Europe into the self-reliant freeman of
-America.</p>
-
-<p>The immigration problem was born when this early economic
-opportunity came to an end. When the free land was
-all gone, the immigrant had to work for somebody else. He
-went to the mines and the city tenement not from the choice
-but from necessity. He took the first job that offered. When
-established he sent for his brother, his neighbour, or his friend.
-He, too, went to the mining camp or the slum. Colonies appeared.
-The alien became segregated. He lived by himself.
-And he developed the qualities that would be developed by
-any race under similar conditions. He, too, feared. He was
-known as a Dago, Wop, Hunkie. To him government meant
-a policeman, a health officer, and an immigration inspector—all
-agencies to be feared. He slowly learned to unionize. He
-came to understand group action. He found in his craft organization
-the only protection against the employers, and in
-the political boss the only protection against agencies that interfered
-with his personal and domestic life. The immigrant
-soon learned that our immigration laws were shaped by economic
-motives. He learned that he was in danger of being
-deported if he did not work. The menace which hangs over
-the immigrant during his early years is the phrase “likely to
-become a public charge.” And this alleged reason for deportation
-covers a multitude of other excuses which can be used
-as it is used—as a drag-net accusation. So the immigrant
-feels and justly feels that what we want of him is to work, to
-work for some one else, and to accept what is offered and be
-content. For within the last few years the doctrine has become
-accepted by him and by the nation as well that the alien<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">343</span>
-must not complain, he must not be an agitator, he must not
-protest against the established industrial order or the place
-which he occupies within it. This has heightened his fear complex.
-It has tended to establish his inferiority relationship.</p>
-
-<p>Our legislative attitude toward the alien has mirrored the
-economic conditions of the country. Up to about the middle
-of the last century we had no restrictive laws of any kind.
-America was free to all comers. We wanted population.
-Western States pleaded for settlers. They drew them from the
-East as they drew them from Europe. We were hospitable
-to the oppressed. We opened our arms to revolutionary leaders.
-We had no fears. Experience had shown that the poorest
-of Europe, even the classified criminals of Europe, would
-quickly Americanize themselves under the stimulus of new
-opportunity in a virgin land where all men were potentially
-equal. For generations there was fear that the American continent
-could never be fully peopled.</p>
-
-<p>But the free lands were all gone about 1890. The Western
-drift of peoples, which had been in movement since the earliest
-times, came to an end. Population closed in on the Pacific.
-Cities grew with unprecedented rapidity. Factories needed
-men. Employers looked to Europe. They sent agents abroad
-who employed them in gangs. Often they were used to displace
-American-born workers. They were used to break up
-labour organizations. The aliens were mixed to prevent them
-organizing. Wages were temporarily at least forced down.
-For some years our immigration policy was shaped by the
-big industrials who combined with the steamship companies to
-induce immigration.</p>
-
-<p>Organized labour began to protest. It, too, was moved by
-economic motives. It secured the passage of the contract
-labour law, which prevents the landing of any worker for whom
-employment has been provided in advance by an employer.
-Organized labour began to demand restrictive legislation to
-protect its standard of living. But the country was not ready
-for restrictive legislation. Congress instead adopted a selective
-policy. We excluded paupers, the insane and diseased,
-criminals, immoral persons, and those who were likely to become
-a public charge. Later we extended the selective idea to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">344</span>
-persons who did not believe in organized government, to
-anarchists, and to persons of revolutionary beliefs. We now
-exclude and deport for opinions as well as for physical and
-mental conditions. The percentage of rejections under these
-selective laws was not great. Of the 1,200,000 aliens who
-came to the country in 1914 only one and one-third per cent.
-were denied admission by the immigration authorities.</p>
-
-<p>The war stimulated the anti-alien feeling. It provided an
-opportunity for crusades. The press aided the hue and cry.
-In 1915 there was a nation-wide round-up of immoral cases.
-Thousands of prostitutes, of procurers, and of persons guilty
-of some personal irregularity were arrested all over the country.
-Many of them were deported. The demand for restrictive
-legislation was supported by many different groups. It
-had the backing of organized labour, of the Southern States,
-of many protestant organization and churches. It was strongly
-supported in the West.</p>
-
-<p>The “literacy test,” which went into effect in 1917, requiring
-of the alien an ability to read some language selected by him,
-was the first restrictive measure enacted. Its purpose was to
-check the South and Central European inflow. For in these
-countries illiteracy is very high. It rises as high as sixty
-and seventy per cent. in the Central European states. With
-the test of literacy applied it was felt that the old immigration
-from Northern Europe would reassert itself. Our industrial
-needs would be supplied from Great Britain, from Germany
-and from the Scandinavian countries. The same motive underlies
-the recently enacted law which arbitrarily fixes the
-number who may come in any one year from any one country
-to three per cent. of the aliens already here from that country.
-This will still further shift the immigration to the Northern
-countries, and if continued as the permanent policy of the Government
-will insure a predominant Anglo-Saxon-Germanic-Scandinavian
-stock as the racial stock of America.</p>
-
-<p>Despite all of the Congressional concern over the alien and
-the recent nation-wide movement for his Americanization, there
-has never been any official concern for the alien, for his protection
-from exploitation and abuse, or any attempt to work
-out a policy of real Americanization. Not that the task is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">345</span>
-impossible. Not that it is even experimental. Australia,
-Brazil, and Canada have more or less well-developed agencies
-for aiding the alien on landing, for protecting him until he is
-able to protect himself, and for adjusting him as speedily as
-possible to new conditions of life. In all of these countries
-the aim of the government is to give the immigrant a stake
-in the land, to bring about his permanent residence in the
-country, and, if possible, to induce him to become a farmer
-rather than an industrial worker. This has not been done by
-agencies of distribution alone, but by conscious selection in the
-country from which the immigrant comes, by grants of land
-to those who are ready to take up land holdings, and by the
-extension of credit from state agencies to enable the settlers
-to stock and equip their farms. The policy of Brazil has
-been so successful that many colonies of Northern Italians
-have been induced to settle there who have become prosperous
-and contented farmers. In other words, these countries have
-consciously aimed to work out a continuing policy similar to
-that which prevailed in this country up to about 1890 when
-the immigrant drifted naturally to the land as a means of securing
-the freedom from the exploiting class that had driven
-him from Europe.</p>
-
-<p>It is not to be inferred that our policy of hands off the alien
-after his landing has worked only evil. Viewed in the perspective
-of two centuries, it has worked amazingly well. The
-rapidity with which practically all immigrants rise in the world
-in spite of the obstacles of poverty, illiteracy, and unfamiliarity
-with our language is little short of a miracle. This is true of
-the older generation as it is of the younger. It is most true
-in the cities, least true in the mining camps and smaller industrial
-centres about the steel mills and slaughter houses where
-the tyranny of the employing class is most pronounced. For
-the newcomer speedily acquires the wants of those with whom
-he associates. He becomes dissatisfied with his shack. He
-demands more and better food and clothes. He almost always
-wants his children to have a schooling and to rise in the scale,
-which to him means getting out of the hod-carrying, day-labour,
-or even artisan class. And the next generation does rise. It
-rises only less rapidly than did the early immigrant. It increases<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">346</span>
-its wants and demands. It finds the trades union a
-weapon with which it can combat the employer who seeks to
-bring about a confusion of tongues, a confusion of religion,
-and a confusion of races as a means of maintaining the open
-shop. As an evidence of this, the Amalgamated Clothing
-Workers of America is almost exclusively Jewish, Italian, and
-Latin in its membership. It is the most intelligent, the most
-social-minded, and the most highly developed labour organization
-in the country. The coal miners are largely men of foreign
-birth. They, too, have adopted an advanced social programme.
-The alien has found the trades union the most efficient
-if not the only agency through which he can Americanize
-himself. And in Americanizing himself he is merely doing
-what the aliens of earlier centuries who preceded him have
-done—he is seeking for economic freedom from a master class.</p>
-
-<p>America is a marvellous demonstration of the economic
-foundations of all life. It is a demonstration of what happens
-to men when economic opportunities call forth their resourcefulness
-and latent ability on one hand and when the
-State, on the other, keeps its hands off them in their personal
-relationships. For the alien quickly adopts a higher standard
-of culture as he rises in the industrial scale, while his morals,
-whatever they may have been, quickly take on the colour of
-his new environment, whatever that may be. And if all of
-the elements which should enter into a consideration of the
-subject were included, I am of the opinion it would be found
-that the morals, the prevalence of vice and crime among the
-alien population is substantially that of the economic class in
-which he is found rather than the race from which he springs.
-In other words, the alleged prevalence of crime among the alien
-population is traceable to poverty and bad conditions of living
-rather than to ethnic causes, and in so far as it exists it tends
-disappear as the conditions which breed it pass away.</p>
-
-<p>Despite the fact that our hands-off policy of the past has
-worked amazingly well, the time has come when it must be
-changed. Not because of any change in the character of the
-alien, but because of the change which has taken place in our
-own internal life. Economic conditions make it impossible for
-the alien, as it does for the native born, to become a farmer.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">347</span>
-Exploiting agencies are making it difficult and often impossible
-for the farmer to make a living. Land speculation has shot
-up the price of farm land to prohibitive figures. The railroads
-and middle men and banking agencies are putting the American
-farmer into a semi-servile status. He is unable to market his
-crop after it is produced or he markets it at a figure that ultimately
-reduces him to bankruptcy. The immigration problem
-remains an economic problem. It has become an American
-problem. The policy we should adopt for Americanizing the
-alien is a policy we should adopt for our own people as well, for
-when economic opportunity came to an end for our own people,
-it created not only an immigration problem, but a domestic
-problem. The solution of one is the solution of the other.</p>
-
-<p>The alien will Americanize himself if he is given the opportunity
-to do so. The bird of passage will cease to migrate
-when he possesses a stake in the land of his adoption. The
-best cure for Bolshevism is not deportation but a home, a farm,
-a governmental policy of land settlement. A constructive immigration
-policy and Americanization policy is one that will:</p>
-
-<p>1. Direct the alien as well as the native born to opportunities
-of employment and especially to agencies that will enable
-them to become home owners and farm owners;</p>
-
-<p>2. Provide government grants, as is done in Australia, Denmark,
-and some of the South American countries, to which the
-would-be farmer or home owner can go for financial assistance.
-In Denmark and Australia any man who shows aptitude and
-desire for farming and who is able to satisfy a local commission
-of his abilities, can secure a small farm in a farm colony, fully
-equipped for planting. The grant includes a house and barn,
-some cattle and machinery, and sufficient capital to carry the
-settler over the first season. The applicant must provide a
-certain portion of the initial outlay himself. He is aided by
-experts from the colony, he is advised as to what to plant and
-how to care for his cattle. His produce is marketed co-operatively,
-while much of the machinery is owned either by
-the community or by co-operative agencies identified with the
-community. The land is purchased in large tracts by the
-State in advance of settlement to prevent speculation, while
-settlers are required to develop their holdings. They may<span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">348</span>
-not purchase for speculative purposes. The State of Denmark
-has planted thousands of home-owning farmers in this way and
-has all but ended farm tenancy in a generation’s time. The
-farm tenant and farm labourer have become owners. A similar
-policy has been developed in Australia, where millions of
-dollars have been advanced by the State to settlers. In both
-of these countries the land settlement colonies have been a
-great success. There have been few failures and no losses to
-the State.</p>
-
-<p>3. The savings of the alien should be used for the benefit
-of the alien. Hundreds of millions of dollars leave this country
-annually in the form of remittances. Much of it goes abroad
-because of fear of American banks. Many millions more are
-in hiding for the same reason. The deposits in the Postal
-Savings banks are largely the deposits of the immigrant. They
-are turned over to the National banks and find their way into
-commercial activities. If these funds were mobilized in co-operative
-banks, as is done all over Europe, or if the Government
-would dedicate them to a revolving fund for aiding
-persons to build homes, to buy farms, and to aid the alien with
-credit, which he now has no means of securing; he would be
-lured from the city to the land, he would become a home and
-farm owner rather than an industrial worker, and would rapidly
-develop those qualities of mind and character that are associated
-in our minds with the early Anglo-Saxon settler but
-which are rather the qualities which spring up of themselves
-when the economic conditions encourage them.</p>
-
-<p>4. Our deportation laws are a disgrace to any country.
-They are an adaptation of the fugitive slave laws. The offending
-alien is subject to lynch law sanctioned by the State. He
-is arrested on complaint by an inspector. He is then tried by
-the man who arrests him. His friends and relatives are excluded
-from the trial. The judge who made the arrest is often
-the interpreter and the clerk who transcribes the testimony.
-He also is his jailer. He can and does hold the alien incommunicado.
-Often the alien scarcely knows why he has been
-arrested. Often he does not understand the testimony. The
-local findings have to be approved at Washington by the Department
-of Labour. But the approval is by a clerk who, like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">349</span>
-the inspector, often wants to make a record. The opportunity
-for collusion with police, with crusaders, with employers, with
-Chambers of Commerce, and with organization bent on “ridding
-the country of disturbers” is manifest. Often men are
-arrested, tried, convicted, and possibly placed on ships for their
-home countries before their families are aware of what has
-happened to them.</p>
-
-<p>The alien is denied every protection of our constitution.
-The Bill of Rights does not apply to him. He has no presentment
-before a Grand Jury, there is no jury trial, he rarely has
-counsel, and he is often held incommunicado by the official
-who has taken him into custody and who wants to justify his
-arrest. The only recourse the alien has is the writ of habeas
-corpus. But this is of practically no avail. For the courts
-have held that if there is a scintilla of evidence on which the
-inspector could act the court will not review the finding. And
-a scintilla is any evidence at all. When to this is added the
-fact that the charge “likely to become a public charge” has
-come to cover almost any condition that might arise, and as
-this charge is usually added to the others as a recourse on which
-the inspector may fall back, the chance of relief in the court
-is practically nil. Under the laws as they now exist the alien
-is a man without a country. He has no protection from the
-constitution and little protection under the laws. The alien
-knows this. He feels that he is defenceless. American liberty
-to him means the liberty of a policeman, a health or school
-official, an immigration inspector, and agents of the department
-of justice to invade his home, to seize his papers, to arrest
-without warrant, to hold incommunicado, and to deport on a
-charge that is often as foreign to the facts as anything could be.</p>
-
-<p>It is this more than anything else that has embittered the
-alien towards America during the last few years. It is this
-that makes him feel that he is not wanted here. It is this that
-is sending hundreds of thousands back to Europe, many of them
-among the best of the aliens and many of them worthy in
-every way of our confidence and welcome.</p>
-
-<p>A proper immigration policy should be a national policy.
-Not something for the alien alone but for our own people.
-For the immigration problem is merely another form of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">350</span>
-domestic problem. When we are ready to settle the one we
-will settle the other. A cross section of one branch of our
-political State is a cross section of another. The alien of
-to-day is not very different from the alien of yesterday. He
-has the same instincts and desires as did those who came in
-the <i>Mayflower</i>. Only those who came in the <i>Mayflower</i> made
-their own laws and their own fortunes. Those who come to-day
-have their laws made for them by the class that employs
-them and they make their own fortunes only as those aliens
-who came first permit them to do so.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Frederic C. Howe</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_351" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">351</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="RACIAL_MINORITIES">RACIAL MINORITIES</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“... not to laugh at the actions of men, nor yet to deplore or
-detest them, but simply to understand them.”—<cite>Spinoza.</cite></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">In</span> America, the race-problem is not only without answer;
-thus far it is even without formulation. In the face of ordinary
-economic, political, and religious difficulties, people habitually
-formulate creeds which give a kind of rhyme and reason
-to their actions; but where inter-racial relations are concerned,
-the leaders go pussy-footing all around the fundamental question,
-while the emotions of the masses translate themselves
-into action, and action back again into emotion, with less consideration
-of means and ends than one expects of the maddest
-bomb-thrower. Everybody has some notion of the millennial
-aims of the Communist Party, the National Association of
-Manufacturers, the W.C.T.U., the Holy Rollers; but what
-are the Southerners getting at, when they educate the Negro,
-and refuse him the ballot; what ultimate result does the North
-expect from the granting of the franchise and the denial of
-social equality? Do both the North and the South hope to
-maintain a permanent racial division of the country’s population?
-If so, are the Indians, the Jews and the Asiatics to be
-classed with the Negroes, as unassimilable minorities? How
-is the conduct of the American majority suited to this aim,
-if it is an aim? How can permanent division be maintained,
-except by permanent prejudice? What do the racial liberators,
-ameliorators, uplifters, and general optimists think about it;
-or do they think about it at all?</p>
-
-<p>From the moment of initial contact between the mass of
-the American population and the country’s most important
-racial minorities—the Indian, the Jew, the Oriental, and the
-Negro—the self-congratulatory feelings of the majority have
-always found a partial or complete counterpart everywhere
-except among the slaves and the children of the slaves. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">352</span>
-long delay in the inception of All-Africanism in America, and
-the groping uncertainty which still characterizes its manifestations,
-are due in large part to the cultural youthfulness of
-the American Negro. Biologically, the black race was matured
-in Africa; culturally it had made considerable advances
-there, before the days of the slave-trade. The process of enslavement
-could not strip away the physical characteristics
-of the race, but in all that has to do with cultural life and
-social inheritance, the Negro was re-born naked in the new
-world.</p>
-
-<p>When one compares the condition of the Negro with that
-of the other three racial minorities at the moment of contact
-with the miscellaneous white population, the Indian seems
-closer to the Jew and the Oriental than to the slave. In a
-general way, the condition of the Indian tribes resembled that
-of the Negroes in Africa, but the Indians were left in possession
-of most of the elements of savage culture and were
-never entirely deprived of the means of maintaining themselves
-in this stage of development. Needless to say, the Jews
-and the Orientals were in still better case than the
-Indians, for their imported cultural equipment was far more
-elaborate and substantial, and their economic position much
-better.</p>
-
-<p>The four racial minorities thus varied widely in the degree
-of their self-sufficiency, and likewise, inversely, in the degree
-of their need for absorption into the current of American life.
-Quite obviously the Negro was least independent and most in
-need of assimilation. However, the necessity of the alien group
-has not been the only factor of importance in this matter of
-assimilation. Each of the minorities has been from the beginning
-subjected to the prejudice of the majority, and that group
-which first lost all life of its own through contact with the
-whites has been singled out for the maximum amount of
-persecution.</p>
-
-<p>The standard explanation or excuse for race-prejudice is
-the theory of the inequality of racial stocks. However, for
-all their eagerness to bolster up a foregone conclusion, the
-race-patriots have not been able to prove by any sort of evidence,
-historical, biological, or psychological, that racial differences<span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">353</span>
-are not simply indications of unlikeness, rather than
-of inherent superiority or inferiority. The anthropologists
-are pretty well agreed that physical differences divide mankind
-into three major groups, European (including the Jews),
-Mongoloid (including the American Indians), and Negroid;
-but science has set no definite limit to the respective potentialities
-of these groups. In other words, it has remained for race-prejudice
-to assume an unproved inferiority, and to devise
-all possible measures for making the life of the objectionable
-races exactly what it would be, in the absence of interference,
-if the assumed inferiority were real.</p>
-
-<p>To accept the term “race-prejudice” as accurately descriptive
-of the feelings to which it is usually applied, is to assume
-that these feelings originate in race-differences, if not in the
-inequality of races. This, however, is still to be proved.
-Race-differences are a factor of the situation wherever two
-races are in contact, but it is a matter of common knowledge
-that the members of two or more racial groups sometimes intermingle
-on terms of greatest friendliness. To attribute
-“race-prejudice” to race-difference, and to leave race-friendliness
-entirely unexplained, is to blind oneself deliberately to
-the existence of variable causes which alone can account for
-the variable results that appear in the presence of racial
-constants. Racial inequality of intelligence, if it actually
-exists, is simply one of a number of ever-present race-differences,
-and in all these differences taken together one can
-find no adequate explanation of the variable phenomenon commonly
-called “race-prejudice,” but so designated here only for
-the sake of convenience.</p>
-
-<p>Any serious attempt to get at the non-racial causes of “race-prejudice”
-in America would necessarily involve the comparison,
-point by point, of economic, social, political, and intellectual
-conditions in various localities in the United States
-with corresponding local conditions in other countries where
-the races here in conflict are more nearly at peace. In the
-present state of knowledge, the racial theory of race-prejudice
-is demonstrably inadequate, while the non-racial theory is an
-hypothesis which can neither be proved nor disproved. Such
-being the case, the haphazard speculations which follow are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">354</span>
-not offered as a proof of this hypothesis, or as an explanation
-of the existence of race-prejudice in America, but simply as a
-stimulus to inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>Beginning with these speculations, it may be said that the
-goods and opportunities of the material life, unlike those of the
-intellectual life, are frequently incapable of division without
-loss to the original possessor. On this account, competition
-is likely to be particularly keen and vindictive where material
-interests are given the foremost place. It is also perhaps
-safe to say that the long preoccupation of the American majority
-with the development of its material inheritance has
-brought to the majority a heavy heritage of materialism. One
-may hazard the statement that the prejudice of America’s native
-white majority against the Negroes, the Indians, the Jews and
-the Asiatics, is now and has always been in some sense attributable
-and proportional to the majority’s fear of some action
-on the part of the minority which might injure the material
-interests of the majority, while the only race-differences which
-have had any real importance are those superficial ones which
-serve to make the members of the minorities recognizable at
-sight. At any rate, an examination of some of the facts that
-come most easily to hand shows an interesting coincidence
-between the prejudice of the majority and the power of the
-minority.</p>
-
-<p>Before the Civil War, the structure of Southern society was
-bottomed on slavery, and the fear of any humanization of
-the Negro which would make him appear worthy of emancipation
-was strong enough to arouse any degree of prejudice,
-and any amount of repression. The prejudice of the Southern
-white populace as a whole reached its maximum intensity when
-emancipation threatened to place the blacks in permanent political
-and economic control of certain portions of the South.
-Even to-day, fear of the political power of the Negroes, and
-perhaps also the over-emphasized fear of black “outrages,”
-still acts upon the white population as a unifying force; but
-in spite of this fact, class-interests have become plainly visible.
-When Black Republicanism had once been driven to cover, the
-masters set about rebuilding their privileges upon the foundation
-of Negro labour which is still their chief support. Only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">355</span>
-a few Negroes have been able to compete directly for a share
-in these privileges, and accordingly most of the fears of the
-well-to-do people of the South are anticipatory rather than
-immediate.</p>
-
-<p>With the “poor whites,” the case is altogether different.
-Here there is no question of keeping the Negro in his place,
-for ever since the Emancipation the place of the Negro has
-been very much that of the poor white himself, at least in so
-far as economic status is concerned. In the view of the white
-labourer, the Negro rises too high the moment he becomes a
-competitor for a job, and every Negro is potentially just that.
-Accordingly, the prejudice of the poorer whites is bitter and
-indiscriminate, and is certainly not tending to decrease with
-the cityward drift of the Negro population.</p>
-
-<p>With the appearance of Negro workers in large numbers in
-Northern industrial centres, race-prejudice has begun to manifest
-itself strongly among the white workers. The Northern
-masters have, however, shown little tendency to reproduce
-the sentiments of their Southern peers, for in the North there
-is no fear of political dominance by the blacks, and a supply
-of cheap labour is as much appreciated as it is south of the
-Line.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of the fact that the proportion of Negroes in the
-total population of the United States has declined steadily from
-15.7 per cent. in 1850 to 9.9 per cent. in 1920, the attitude of
-both Northerners and Southerners is somewhat coloured by
-the fear that the blacks will eventually overrun the country.
-If prejudice had no other basis than this, there would perhaps
-be no great difficulty in effecting its cure. As a matter of
-course, immigration accounts in part for the increasing predominance
-of the white population; but this hardly disposes
-of the fact that throughout the South, during the years 1890–1910,
-the percentage of native whites of native parentage advanced
-in both urban and rural communities. Discussion of
-comparative birth-rates also gives rise to numerous alarums
-and excursions, but the figures scarcely justify the fears expressed.
-Statistics show that, in spite of the best efforts of
-the people who attempt to hold the black man down, and then
-fear him all the more because he breeds too generously, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">356</span>
-improvement in the material condition of the Negro is operating
-inevitably to check the process of multiplication.</p>
-
-<p>If the case of the Negro is complicated in the extreme, that
-of the Indian is comparatively simple. Here race-prejudice
-has always followed the frontier. As long as the Indian interfered
-with the exploitation of the country, the pioneers feared
-him, and disliked him cordially. Their feelings worked themselves
-out in all manner of personal cruelty, as well as in a
-process of wholesale expropriation, but as soon as the tribes
-had been cooped up on reservations, the white man’s dislike
-for the Indian began to cool off perceptibly. From the beginning,
-the Indian interfered with expansion, not as an economic
-competitor, but as a military enemy; when the dread
-of him as a fighter disappeared, there was no new fear to take
-its place. During the years 1910 to 1920 the Indian population
-actually decreased 8.6 per cent.</p>
-
-<p>If the Indian has neither shared the privileges nor paid the
-price of a generous participation in American life, the Jew
-has certainly done both. In every important field of activity,
-the members of this minority have proved themselves quite
-able to compete with the native majority, and accordingly
-the prejudice against them is not confined to any one social
-class, but is concentrated rather in those regions where the
-presence of Jews in considerable numbers predicates their
-competitive contact with individuals of all classes. Although
-as a member of one branch of the European racial family,
-the Jew is by no means so definitely distinguished by physical
-characteristics as are the members of the other minorities
-here under discussion, it is nevertheless true that when the
-Jew has been identified by his appearance, or has chosen to
-identify himself, the anti-Semite takes on most of the airs of
-superiority which characterize the manifestations of prejudice
-towards the other minorities. Nevertheless, the ordinary run
-of anti-Semitic talk contains frequent admissions of jealousy
-and fear, and it is safe to say that one must look chiefly to
-such emotions, as intensified by the rapid increase of the
-Jewish population from 1,500,000 in 1906 to 3,300,000 in
-1918, rather than to the heritage of European prejudice, for an
-explanation of the growth of anti-Semitism in America. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">357</span>
-inclusion of anti-Semitism with the other types of race-prejudice
-here under discussion follows naturally enough from
-the fact that the Jew is thought of as primarily a Jew, whatever
-the country of his origin may have been, while the Slav,
-for instance, is popularly regarded as a Russian, a Pole, a Serb—a
-<em>national</em> rather than a <em>racial</em> alien.</p>
-
-<p>Like the Jew, the Oriental has come into the United States
-as a “foreigner,” as well as a member of an alien race. The
-absence of this special disqualification has not particularly
-benefitted the Negro and the Indian, but its presence in the
-case of the Japanese has been of considerable service to the
-agitators. The prevalent dislike and fear of the new Japan
-as a world-power has naturally coloured the attitude of the
-American majority toward the Japanese settlers in this country;
-but this in itself hardly explains why the Californians,
-who were burning Chinamen out of house and home in the
-’seventies, are now centring their prejudice upon the Japanese
-agriculturist. The fact is that since the passage of the Exclusion
-Laws the Chinese population of the United States has
-fallen off more than 40 per cent., and the importance of
-Chinese competition has decreased accordingly, while on the
-other hand the number of Japanese increased 53.9 per cent.
-between 1910 and 1920, and the new competitors are showing
-themselves more than a match for the white farmers. With a
-frankness that neither Negrophobia nor anti-Semitism has
-made us familiar with, many of the Californians have rested
-their case against the Japanese on an economic foundation, and
-have confessed that they are unable to compete with the
-Japanese on even terms. As a matter of course, there is the
-usual flow of talk about the inferiority of the alien race, but
-the fear of competition, here so frankly admitted, would be
-enough in itself to account for this new outbreak of “race-prejudice.”</p>
-
-<p>When one considers thus the course that prejudice has taken
-in the case of the Negro, the Indian, the Jew, and the Oriental,
-it begins to appear that this sentiment may wax and wane and
-change about astonishingly in the presence of racial factors
-that remain always the same. Such being the case, one is
-led to wonder what the attitude of the native majority would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">358</span>
-be, if the minorities were recognizable simply as groups, but
-<em>not</em> as <em>racial</em> groups. In other words, what would be the
-result if the racial factor were reduced simply to recognizability?
-The question has a more than speculative interest.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>If the causes of race-prejudice lie quite beyond the reach
-of any simple explanation, the manifestation of this prejudice
-on the part of the American majority are perhaps capable of
-an analysis which will render the whole situation somewhat
-more comprehensible. By and large, and with all due allowance
-for exceptions, it may be said that, in its more familiar
-manifestations, race-prejudice takes a direction exactly opposite
-to that taken by prejudice against the ordinary immigrant
-of European stock; in the former case, a conscious effort is
-made to magnify the differences between the majority and the
-minority, while in the latter, a vast amount of energy is expended
-in the obliteration of these differences. Thus race-prejudice
-aspires to preserve and even to increase that degree
-of unlikeness which is its excuse for being, while alien-prejudice
-works itself out of a job, by “Americanizing” the immigrant
-and making him over into an unrecognizable member of the
-majority. On one hand, enforced diversity remains as a
-source of friction, while on the other, enforced uniformity is
-demanded as the price of peace.</p>
-
-<p>Although no purpose can be served by cataloguing here
-all the means employed in the South to keep the black man in
-his place, a few examples may be cited, in order to show the
-scope of these measures of repression. In the economic field,
-there is a pronounced tendency to restrict Negro workers to
-the humblest occupations, and in the agricultural areas the
-system of peonage or debt-slavery is widely employed for the
-purpose of attaching Negro families to the soil. Residence-districts
-are regularly segregated, Jim Crow regulations are
-everywhere in force, and inter-racial marriages are prohibited
-by law in all the States of the South. The administration of
-justice is in the hands of white judges and white juries, and
-the Negro’s chances in such company are notoriously small.
-In nearly one-fourth of the counties of the South, the population
-is half, or more than half black, but the denial of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">359</span>
-ballot excludes the Negroes from local, State, and national
-political activities. In religious organizations, segregation is
-the invariable rule. Theatres and even public libraries are
-regularly closed to the Negro, and in every State in the South
-segregation in schools is prescribed by law. Some idea of
-the significance of the latter provision may be drawn from
-O. G. Ferguson’s study of white and Negro schools in Virginia.
-In this comparatively progressive State, the general
-rating of the white schools is 40.8, as against 22.3 for the
-coloured schools, the latter figure being seven points lower
-than the lowest general rating for any State in the Union.</p>
-
-<p>Such are some of the legal, extra-legal, and illegal manifestations
-of that prejudice which finds its supreme expression in
-the activities of the lynching-mob and the Ku Klux Klan.
-There is still a considerable annual output of lynchings in this
-country (in 1920 the victims numbered sixty-five, of whom fifty
-were Negroes done to death in the South), but the casualty-list
-for the South and for the country as a whole has decreased
-steadily and markedly since 1889, and the proportion of Negro
-victims who were accused of rape or attacks on women has also
-decreased, from 31.8 per cent. in 1889–1893 to 19.8 per cent.
-in 1914–1918.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, the Ku Klux Klan has now re-commenced
-its ghost-walking activities under the command of an “Imperial
-Wizard” who claims that he has already enlisted 100,000
-followers in the fight to maintain the “God-ordained” pre-eminence
-of the Anglo-Saxon race in America. Other statements
-from the lips of the Wizard seem to indicate that his
-organization is not only anti-African, but anti-Semitic, anti-Catholic,
-and anti-Bolshevik as well. Indeed, the bearers of
-the fiery cross seem bent upon organizing an all-American hate
-society, and the expansion of the Klan in the North is already
-under way.</p>
-
-<p>However, the Klansmen might have succeeded in carrying
-the war into the enemy’s country even without adding new
-prejudices to their platform. There has always been some
-feeling against the Negro in the North, and the war-time migration
-of the blacks to Northern industrial centres certainly
-has not resulted in any diminution of existing prejudice. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">360</span>
-National Urban League estimates that the recent exodus from
-Dixie has produced a net increase of a quarter of a million in
-the coloured population of twelve cities above the Line. This
-movement has brought black and white workers into competition
-in many industries where Negroes have hitherto been
-entirely unknown, and frequently the relations between the
-two groups have been anything but friendly. Since about half
-the “internationals” affiliated with the American Federation
-of Labour still refuse to accept Negro members, the unions
-themselves are in no small part to blame for the use that employers
-have made of Negro workers as strike-breakers.</p>
-
-<p>In twelve Northern and Western States there are laws on the
-statute-books prohibiting marriage between whites and blacks.
-Jim Crow regulations are not in force north of Maryland, but
-in most of the cities there has been a continuous effort to maintain
-residential segregation, and the practice of discrimination
-in hotels and restaurants is the rule rather than the exception.
-Lynchings are infrequent, but the great riots of Washington
-and Chicago were not exactly indicative of good feeling between
-the races. One situation which revealed a remarkable
-similarity of temper between the North and the South was that
-which arose in the army during the war. It is notorious that
-Northerners in uniform fell in easily with the Southern spirit,
-and gave all possible assistance in an energetic Jim-Crowing of
-the Negroes of Michigan and the Negroes of Mississippi, from
-the first day of their service right through to the last.</p>
-
-<p>The treatment of the Negro in literature and on the stage
-also reveals an unconscious but all the more important
-unanimity of opinion. It is true the North has produced no
-Thomas Dixons, but it is also true that the gentle and unassuming
-Uncle Tom of Northern song and story is none other
-than the Uncle Remus whom the South loves so much. In
-Boston, as in Baton Rouge, the Negro who is best liked is the
-loyal, humble, and not too able mammie or uncle of the good
-old days before the war. If an exception be made in the case
-of Eugene O’Neill’s “Emperor Jones,” it may be said that
-American literature has not yet cast a strong, upstanding black
-man for any other rôle than that of beast and villain.</p>
-
-<p>And yet all these forms of discrimination and repression are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">361</span>
-not fully expressive of the attitude of the white population.
-The people of the South are fully sensible of the necessity
-of keeping the Negro in his place; still they do not keep
-him from attending school. Educational facilities, of a sort,
-are provided, however reluctantly, and in half the States of
-the South school attendance is even made compulsory by laws
-(which may or may not be enforced). The schooling is not
-of a kind that will fit the Negroes for the permanent and contented
-occupancy of a servile position. Generally speaking,
-the coloured children do not receive a vocational education that
-will keep them in their place, but an old-style three-R training
-that prepares for nothing but unrest. If unrest leads to
-urbanization, the half-hearted education of the Negro perhaps
-serves the interests of the new industrialists; but these industrial
-employers are so few in number that their influence cannot
-outweigh that of the planters who lose their peons, and the
-poor whites who find the Negro with one grain of knowledge
-a somewhat more dangerous competitor than the Negro with
-none. Hence there is every reason to believe that if the white
-South had rationalized this situation, the Negro would be as
-ruthlessly excluded from the school as he now is from the
-ballot-box. In fact, the education of the Negro seems quite
-inconsistent with race-prejudice as it is generally preached
-and practised in the South.</p>
-
-<p>In the North there is no discrimination in the schools, and
-black children and white are put through the same mill. In
-the industrial field, prejudice cannot effectually close to the
-Negroes all those openings which are created by general economic
-conditions, and in politics the Northern Negro also finds
-some outlet for his energies.</p>
-
-<p>While it would be quite impossible to show that the existence
-of these miscellaneous educational, industrial, and political
-opportunities is due to any general desire upon the part of the
-members of the white majority to minimize the differences between
-themselves and the Negroes, it is certainly true that this
-desire exists in a limited section of the white population. At
-the present time, white friends of the Negro are actively engaged
-in efforts to eliminate certain legal and illegal forms of
-discrimination and persecution, and are giving financial support<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">362</span>
-to much of the religious work and most of the private
-educational institutions among the blacks. The Inter-racial
-Committee of the War Work Council of the Y.M.C.A. has
-listed thirty-three social and economic agencies, and twenty-three
-religious agencies, in which members of both races are
-working co-operatively. It must be admitted, however, that
-many, if not most, of the white participants in work of this
-sort are affected by race-prejudice to the extent that they desire
-simply to ameliorate the lowly condition of the Negro, without
-altogether doing away with a certain wholesome degree of
-racial segregation. For the complete elimination of the flavour
-of condescension, one must usually seek out those extreme
-socialist and syndicalist agitators who preach political or non-political
-class-organization, as a substitute for the familiar
-national and racial groupings.</p>
-
-<p>In the case of the American Indian, the prejudice and self-interest
-of the white majority have placed the emphasis on
-geographic rather than social segregation. Here the demand
-of the whites has been for land rather than for labour, and
-by consequence servility has never been regarded as a prime
-virtue of Indian character.</p>
-
-<p>If the early white settlers had so desired, they of course
-could have enslaved a considerable portion of the Indian population,
-just as the Spaniards did, in regions farther to the
-southward. However, the Americans chose to drive the Indians
-inland, and to replace them in certain regions with
-African tribesmen who in their native state had been perhaps
-as war-like as the Indians themselves. Thus in the natural
-course of events the African warrior was lost in the slave, while
-the Indian chief continued to be the military opponent rather
-than the economic servant of exploitation, and eventually
-gained romantic interest by virtue of this fact. The nature
-of this operation of debasement on one hand, and ennoblement
-on the other, is plainly revealed in American literature.
-The latter phase of the work is carried forward to-day with
-great enthusiasm by the Camp Fire Girls and the Boy Scouts,
-whose devotion to the romantic ideal of Indian life is nowhere
-paralleled by a similar interest in African tribal lore.</p>
-
-<p>If the Indian has been glorified by remote admirers, he has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">363</span>
-also been cordially disliked by some of his nearest neighbours,
-and indeed the treatment he has received at the hands of the
-Government seems to reflect the latter attitude rather than
-the former. In theory, most of the Indian reservations are
-still regarded as subject principalities, and the Indians confined
-within their boundaries are almost entirely cut off from
-the economic, social, and political life of the neighbouring
-white communities. Many of the tribes still receive yearly
-governmental grants of food, clothing, arms, and ammunition,
-but these allowances only serve to maintain them in a condition
-of dependence, without providing any means of exit from
-it. In justice it should be said, however, that the Government
-has declared an intention to make the Indian self-supporting,
-and accordingly it restricts the grants, in principle,
-to the old and the destitute. Several States have shown their
-complete sympathy with the system of segregation by enacting
-laws prohibiting the inter-marriage of Indians and whites.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, the mental and moral Americanization of
-the red man has been undertaken by Protestant and Catholic
-missions, and more recently by Government schools. The
-agencies of the latter sort are especially systematic in their
-work of depriving the Indian of most of the qualities for which
-he has been glorified in romance, as well as those for which
-he has been disliked by his neighbours. Many a Western town
-enjoys several times each year the spectacle of Indian school-boys
-in blue uniforms and Indian school-girls in pigtails and
-pinafores, marching in military formation through its streets.
-As long as these marchers are destined for a return to the
-reservation, the townsmen can afford to look upon them with
-mild curiosity. The time for a new adjustment of inter-racial
-relations will not come until the procession turns towards the
-white man’s job on the farm and in the factory—if it ever
-does turn that way.</p>
-
-<p>Attention has already been called to the fact that the
-Jewish immigrant normally marches from the dock directly
-to the arena of economic competition. Accordingly his progress
-is not likely to be at any time the object of mere curiosity.
-On the other hand, the manifestations of prejudice against the
-Jew have been less aggressive and much less systematic than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">364</span>
-those repressive activities which affect the other minorities.
-Where anti-Semitism is present in America, it seems to express
-itself almost entirely in social discrimination, in the narrow
-sense. On the other hand, economic, political, and educational
-opportunities are opened to the Jews with a certain
-amount of reluctance. A major exception to this rule of discrimination
-must be made in the case of those socialists, syndicalists
-and trade-unionists who have diligently sought the
-support of the Jewish workers.</p>
-
-<p>The Chinaman has also some friends now among the people
-who once regarded him as the blackest of villains. Indeed,
-the Californian’s attitude toward the Orientals has in it an
-element of unconscious irony which somewhat illuminates the
-character of the race-problem. The average Easterner will
-perhaps be surprised to learn that in Western eyes the Chinaman
-is an inferior, of course, but nevertheless an honest man,
-noted for square dealing and the prompt payment of his debts,
-while the Jap is a tricky person whom one should never trust
-on any account.</p>
-
-<p>In California the baiting of the Japanese is now almost
-as much a part of political electioneering as is the abuse of
-the Negro in the South. The Native Sons of the Golden West
-and the American Legion have gone on record in determined
-opposition to any expansion of Japanese interests in California,
-while the Japanese Exclusion League is particularly
-active in trouble-making propaganda. Economic discrimination
-has taken statutory form in the Alien Land Laws of 1913
-and 1920; discriminatory legislation of the same general type
-has been proposed in Texas and Oregon; a bill providing for
-educational segregation has been presented for a second time
-at Sacramento; Congress has been urged to replace the “gentlemen’s
-agreement” with an absolute prohibition of Japanese
-immigration; and there is even a demand for a constitutional
-amendment which will deny citizenship to the American-born
-children of aliens who are themselves ineligible for naturalization.
-The method of legislation is perhaps preferable to the
-method of force and violence, but if the previous history of
-race-prejudice means anything, it means that force will be
-resorted to if legislation fails. At bottom, the spirit of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">365</span>
-California Land Laws is more than a little like that of a
-Georgia lynching; in the one case as in the other, the dominant
-race attempts to maintain its position, not by a man-to-man
-contest, with fair chances all around, but by depositing
-itself bodily and <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">en masse</i> on top of the subject people and
-crushing them.</p>
-
-<p>If in the realm of individual conduct this sort of behaviour
-works injury to the oppressor, as well as to the oppressed, it is
-not otherwise where masses of men are concerned. Stephen
-Graham, in his recent book, “The Soul of John Brown,” says
-that “in America to-day, and especially in the South, there is
-a hereditary taint left by slavery, and it is to be observed in
-the descendants of the masters as much as in the descendants
-of the slaves. It would be a mistake to think of this American
-problem as exclusively a Negro problem.” Indeed, it is true
-that in every case the race-problem is the problem of the
-majority as well as of the minority, for the former can no
-more escape the reaction of prejudice than the latter can escape
-its direct effects.</p>
-
-<p>To-day the white South is still under the influence of a system
-of life and thought that is far more enduring than the one
-institution which gave it most complete expression. The
-Emancipation abolished slavery, but it did not rid the master
-of the idea that it is his right to live by the labour of the
-slave. The black man is not yet relieved of the duty of supporting
-a certain proportion of the white population in leisure;
-nor does it appear that the leisured Southerner of to-day makes
-a better use of his time than his ancestors did before him.
-Indeed, an historian who judged the peoples chiefly by their
-contribution to science and the arts would still be obliged to
-condemn the white South, not for enslaving the Negro, but
-for dissipating in the practices of a barren gentility the leisure
-that Negro labour created, and still creates, so abundantly.
-It is notorious also that in the South the airs of gentility have
-been more widely broadcast among the white population than
-the leisure necessary for their practice, with the result that
-much honest work which could not be imposed upon the
-black man has been passed on to posterity, and still remains
-undone.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">366</span></p>
-
-<p>Any one who seeks to discover the cause of the mental
-lethargy that has converted the leisure of the South so largely
-into mere laziness must take some account of a factor that is
-always present where race-prejudice exists. The race which
-pretends to superiority may not always succeed in superimposing
-itself economically upon the inferior group; and yet the
-pride and self-satisfaction of the members of the “superior”
-race will pretty surely make for indolence and the deadening
-of the creative spirit. This will almost inevitably be true where
-the superiority of the one race is acknowledged by the other,
-and where no contest of wits is necessary for the maintenance
-of the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">status quo</i>. This is the condition that has always obtained,
-and still obtains in most of the old slave territory. In
-Dixie it is a career simply to go through life inside of a
-white skin. However ignorant and worthless the white man
-may be, it is still his privilege to proclaim on any street corner
-that he is in all respects a finer creature than any one of several
-million human beings whom he classes all together as
-“good-for-nothin’ niggers.” If the mere statement of this
-fact is not enough to bring warm applause from all the blacks
-in the neighbourhood, the white man is often more than willing
-to use fire and sword to demonstrate a superiority which
-he seldom stoops to prove in any other fashion. Naturally this
-feeling of God-given primacy tends to make its possessors indolent,
-immune to new ideas of every sort, and quite willing
-to apply “the short way with the nigger” to any one who
-threatens the established order of the universe.</p>
-
-<p>It would be foolish indeed to suppose that the general intolerance,
-bigotry, and backwardness which grow out of race-prejudice
-have affected the South alone. The North and the
-West have their prejudices too, their consciousness of a full-blooded
-American superiority that does not have to be proved,
-their lazy-mindedness, their righteous anger, their own short
-way with what is new and strange. No sane man will attribute
-the origin of all these evils to race-prejudice alone, but no
-honest man will deny that the practice of discrimination against
-the racial minorities has helped to infect the whole life and
-thought of the country with a cocky and stupefying provincialism.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">367</span></p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the most interesting phase of the whole racial situation
-in America is the attitude which the minorities themselves
-have maintained in the presence of a dominant prejudice which
-has constantly emphasized and magnified the differences between
-the minorities and majority, and has even maintained
-the spirit of condescension, and the principle of segregation
-in such assimilative activities as education and Christian mission
-work. One would naturally expect that such an attitude
-on the part of the majority would stimulate a counter race-prejudice
-in each of the minorities, which would render them
-also intent upon the maintenance of differentiation.</p>
-
-<p>Although such a counter prejudice has existed from the beginning
-among the Indians, the Jews, and the Asiatics, it is
-only now beginning to take form among the Negroes. The
-conditions of the contact between the black minority and the
-white majority have thus been substantially different from
-those which existed in the other cases, and the results of this
-contact seem to justify the statement that, so long as it remains
-<em>one-sided</em>, the strongest race-prejudice cannot prevent the cultural
-and even the biological assimilation of one race to another.
-In other words, prejudice defeats itself, in a measure,
-just so long as one of the parties accepts an inferior position;
-in fact, it becomes fully effective only when the despised group
-denies its own inferiority, and throws the reproach back upon
-those with whom it originated. Thus the new racial self-consciousness
-of a small section of the Negro population gives
-the prejudiced whites a full measure of the differentiation they
-desire, coupled with an absolute denial of the inferiority which
-is supposed to justify segregation.</p>
-
-<p>It has already been pointed out that the enslavement of
-the Negroes deprived them of practically everything to which
-racial pride might attach itself, and left them with no foundation
-of their own on which to build. Thus they could make
-no advances of any sort except in so far as they were permitted
-to assimilate the culture of the white man. In the natural
-course of events, the adoption of the English language came
-first, and then shortly the Negro was granted such a share
-in the white man’s heaven as he has never yet received of the
-white man’s earth. As the only available means of self-expression,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">368</span>
-religion took a tremendous hold upon the slaves,
-and from that day to this, the black South has wailed its heart
-out in appeals to the white man’s God for deliverance from the
-white man’s burden. The Negro “spirituals” are not the
-songs of African tribesmen, the chants of free warriors. Indeed,
-the white man may claim full credit for the sadness that
-darkens the Negro’s music, and put such words as these into
-the mouth of the Lord:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Go down, Moses,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Way down in Egyp’ lan’</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Tell ole Pharaoh</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Le’ ma people go!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Israel was in Egyp’ lan’</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Oppres’ so hard dey could not stan’,</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Le’ ma people go!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>When casual observers say that the black man is naturally
-more religious than the white, they lose sight of the fact that
-the number of church-members per thousand individuals in the
-Negro population is about the same as the average for the
-United States as a whole; and they forget also the more important
-fact that the Negro has never had all he wanted of
-anything except religion—and in segregated churches at that.
-It is more true of the black men than of Engel’s proletarians,
-that they have been put off for a very long time with checks
-on the bank of Heaven.</p>
-
-<p>Emancipation and the Fourteenth Amendment seemed to
-open the path to an earthly paradise; but this vision was soon
-eclipsed by a second Civil War that resulted in a substantial
-victory for the white South. Economic repression could not
-be made entirely effective, however, and in the fifty-three years
-from 1866 to 1919 the number of American Negro homeowners
-increased from 12,000 to 600,000 and the number of
-Negroes operating farms from 20,000 to 1,000,000. In 1910
-the Negro population still remained 72.6 per cent. rural, but
-the cityward movement of the blacks during the years 1890
-to 1910 was more rapid than that of the whites. Education has
-directly facilitated economic progress, and has resulted in an
-increase of literacy among the Negroes from ten per cent. in
-1866 to eighty per cent. in 1919. During the period 1900 to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">369</span>
-1910, the <em>rate</em> of increase of literacy among the blacks was
-much more rapid than that among the whites. Thus from the
-day he was cut off from his own inheritance, the American
-Negro has reached out eagerly for an alien substitute, until
-to-day, in practically everything that has to do with culture,
-he is not black but white—and artificially retarded.</p>
-
-<p>Since America has deprived the Negro of the opportunity to
-grow up as an African, and at the same time has denied him
-the right to grow up as a white man, it is not surprising that
-a few daring spirits among the Negroes have been driven at
-last to the conclusion that there is no hope for their race
-except in an exodus from the white man’s culture and the
-white man’s continent. The war did a great deal to prepare
-the way for this new movement; the Negroes of America heard
-much talk of democracy not meant for their ears; their list
-of wrongs was lengthened, but at the same time their economic
-power increased; and many of them learned for the first time
-what it meant to fight back. Some of them armed themselves,
-and began to talk of taking two lives for one when the lynching-mob
-came. Then trouble broke in Chicago and Washington—and
-the casualties were not all of one sort. Out of this welter
-of unrest and rebellion new voices arose, some of them calling
-upon the Negro workers to join forces with their white
-brothers; some fierce and vengeful, as bitterly denunciatory
-of socialism and syndicalism as of everything else that had
-felt the touch of the white man’s hand; some intoxicated,
-ecstatic with a new religion, preaching the glory of the black
-race and the hope of the black exodus.</p>
-
-<p>With much travail, there finally came forth, as an embodiment
-of the extreme of race-consciousness, an organization
-called the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African
-Communities League. This clan lays claim to a million
-members in the United States, the West Indies, South America
-and South Africa, and announces as its final object the establishment
-of a black empire in Africa. Connected with the
-U.N.I.A. are the Black Star Line, capitalized at $10,000,000,
-and the Negro Factories Corporation, capitalized at $2,000,000.
-Just what these astonishing figures mean in actual cash it is
-impossible to say, but this much is certain: the Black Star Line<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">370</span>
-already owns three of the many vessels which—say the
-prophets of the movement—will some day ply among the Negro
-lands of the world.</p>
-
-<p>To cap the climax, the U.N.I.A. held in New York City
-during the month of August, 1920, “the first International
-Negro Convention,” which drew up a Negro Declaration of
-Independence, adopted a national flag and a national anthem,
-and elected “a Provisional President of Africa, a leader for
-the American Negroes, and two leaders for the Negroes of
-the West Indies, Central and South America.”</p>
-
-<p>The best testimony of the nature of this new movement is
-to be found in an astonishing pamphlet called the “Universal
-Negro Catechism,” and issued “by authority of the High
-Executive Council of the Universal Negro Improvement Association.”
-In this catechism one discovers such items as the
-following, under the head of “Religious Knowledge”:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Q. Did God make any group or race of men superior to another?</p>
-
-<p>A. No; He created all races equal, and of one blood, to dwell on all
-the face of the earth.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Q. What is the colour of God?</p>
-
-<p>A. A spirit has neither colour, nor other natural parts, nor qualities.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Q. If ... you had to think or speak of the colour of God, how
-would you describe it?</p>
-
-<p>A. As black; since we are created in His image and likeness.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Q. What did Jesus Christ teach as the essential principle of true
-religion?</p>
-
-<p>A. The universal brotherhood of man growing out of the universal
-Fatherhood of God.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Q. Who is responsible for the colour of the Ethiopians?</p>
-
-<p>A. The Creator; and what He has done cannot be changed. Read
-Jeremiah 13:23.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Q. What prediction made in the 68th Psalm and the 31st Verse is
-now being fulfilled?</p>
-
-<p>A. “Princes shall come out of Egypt, Ethiopia shall soon stretch
-out her hands unto God.”</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Q. What does this verse prove?</p>
-
-<p>A. That Negroes will set up their own government in Africa with
-rulers of their own race.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Q. Will Negroes ever be given equal opportunity and treatment in
-countries ruled by white men?</p>
-
-<p>A. No; they will enjoy the full rights of manhood and liberty only
-when they establish their own nation and government in Africa.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">371</span></p>
-
-<p>Perhaps enough has already been said to make it clear that
-there exists in America no distinctive black culture which could
-spontaneously give rise to such a movement as this. Culturally
-the black man is American; biologically he is African.
-It is solely and entirely the prejudice of the American majority
-that has forced this group of Negroes to attempt to reconstruct
-a cultural and sentimental connection that was destroyed
-long ago. The task which faces the leaders of the new movement
-is one of almost insurmountable difficulty, for in spite
-of every sort of persecution, the general life and thought of
-America are still far more easily accessible to the Negro than
-is anything distinctively his own.</p>
-
-<p>The cultural shipwreck of the Negro on the American shore
-has thus placed him more completely at the mercy of the
-majority than the other minorities have ever been. In the
-case of the Indians, the Jews, and the Orientals, the race-name
-has not stood simply for an incomplete Americanism, but for
-a positive cultural quality which has persisted in the face of
-all misfortune. These races were provisioned, so to speak, for
-a long siege, while the Negro had no choice but to eat out of
-the white man’s hand, or starve.</p>
-
-<p>The reservation-system has reduced many of the Indian
-tribes to a state of economic dependence, but it has also helped
-to preserve their cultural autonomy. In most cases the isolated
-communities on the reservations are distinctly Indian
-communities. The non-material inheritance of the past has
-come down to the present generation in a fairly complete form,
-with the result that the Indian of to-day may usually take his
-choice between Indian culture and white. Under these conditions
-the labours of missionaries and educators have not been
-phenomenally successful, as is witnessed by the fact that the
-number of Protestant Christians per thousand Indians is still
-only about one-seventh as large as that for the Negroes, while
-the percentage of illiterates is much larger among the Indians.
-However, school attendance is increasing at a more rapid rate
-than among the whites, and the prospect is that the Government
-schools will eventually deprive the country of all that is
-attractive in Indian life.</p>
-
-<p>Toward the close of the 19th century, the Indian’s resentment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">372</span>
-of the white man’s overbearing actions found expression
-in a religious movement which originated in Nevada and spread
-eastward till it numbered among its adherents nearly all the
-natives between the Rocky Mountains and the Missouri River.
-This messianic faith bore the name of a ceremonial connected
-with it, the Ghost Dance, and was based upon a divine revelation
-which promised the complete restoration of the Indian’s
-inheritance. Such doctrines have, of course, been preached in
-many forms and in many lands, but it is no great compliment
-to the amiability of American civilization that the gospel of
-deliverance has found so many followers among the Negroes,
-the Indians, and the Jews who dwell within the borders of the
-country.</p>
-
-<p>It does not seem likely that the Zionist version of this gospel
-will produce any general exodus of the last-named minority
-from this country, for in spite of prejudice, the Jews have been
-able to make a large place for themselves in the United States.
-Since the movements of the Jews have not been systematically
-restricted, as those of the Negroes and the Indians have
-been, the great concentration of the Jewish population in the
-cities of the East would seem to be due in large measure to the
-choice of the Jews themselves. At the present time they dominate
-the clothing industry, the management of the theatre, and
-the production of motion-pictures. Approximately one-tenth
-of the trade-unionists in the United States are Jews, and the
-adherence of a considerable number of Jews to the doctrines
-of socialism and syndicalism has unquestionably been one of
-the causes of prejudice against the race.</p>
-
-<p>In matters that pertain more directly to the intellectual life,
-the Jews have exhibited every degree of eagerness for, and
-opposition to, assimilation. There are among them many
-schools for the teaching of the Hebrew language, and some
-other schools—private and expensive ones—in which only non-Jewish,
-“all-American” teachers are employed. Of the
-seventy-eight Jewish periodicals published in the United States,
-forty-eight are printed in English. In every Jewish centre,
-Yiddish theatres have been established for the amusement of
-the people; but Jewish managers, producers, actors, and playwrights
-have also had a large part in the general dramatic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">373</span>
-activities of the country. Finally, in the matter of religion,
-the response of the Jews to Christian missionary work has
-been very slight indeed, while, on the other hand, the number
-of synagogue-members per thousand Jews is only about one-fourth
-the general average of religious affiliation for the United
-States as a whole. When one considers the fact that in some
-fields the Jews have thus made advances in spite of opposition,
-while in others they have refused opportunities offered to them,
-it seems at least probable that the incompleteness of their
-cultural assimilation is due as much to their own racial pride
-as to the prejudice of the majority.</p>
-
-<p>Similarly in the case of the Orientals, the pride and self-sufficiency
-of the minority has helped to preserve for it a measure
-of cultural autonomy. In the absence of such a disposition
-on the part of the Chinese, it would be difficult to account for
-the fact that their native costume has not disappeared during
-the thirty-nine years since the stoppage of immigration. San
-Francisco’s Chinatown still remains very markedly Chinese
-in dress largely because the Chinese themselves have chosen
-to keep it so. The Japanese have taken much more kindly to
-the conventional American costume, but one is hardly justified
-in inferring from this that they are more desirous for general
-assimilation. Indeed, one would expect the opposite to be
-the case, for most of the Japanese in America had felt the
-impress of the nationalistic revival in Japan before their departure
-from that country. In a measure this accounts for the
-fact that Japanese settlers have established a number of Buddhist
-temples and Japanese-language schools in the United
-States. However, figures furnished by the “Joint Committee
-on Foreign Language Publications,” which represents a number
-of Evangelical denominations, seem to indicate that the
-Japanese in the United States are much more easily Christianized
-than the Chinese, and are even less attached to Buddhism
-than are the Jews to their native faith. In the nature of
-things, the domestic practice of Shinto-worship among the
-Japanese is incapable of statistical treatment.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the combination of all the internal and external forces
-that affect the racial minorities in America has produced a
-partial, but by no means a complete, remodelling of minority-life<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">374</span>
-in accordance with standards set by the majority. Prejudice
-and counter-prejudice have not prevented this change,
-and there is no accounting for the condition of the American
-minorities to-day without due attention to the positive factor
-of cultural assimilation, as well as to the negative factor of
-prejudice.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Since it has already been implied that a greater or less assimilation
-by the minorities of the culture of the majority is
-inevitable, it is apparent that the relation of this assimilative
-change to the biological fusion of the groups is a matter of
-ultimate and absolute importance. Wherever friction exists
-between racial groups, the mere mention of biological fusion is
-likely to stir up so much fire and smoke that all facts are
-completely lost to sight; and yet it is quite obvious that the
-forces of attraction and repulsion which play upon the several
-races in America have produced biological as well as cultural
-results.</p>
-
-<p>The mulatto population of the United States is the physical
-embodiment of a one-sided race-prejudice. By law, by custom,
-even by the visitation of sudden and violent death, the
-master-class of the South expresses a disapproval of relations
-between white women and coloured men, which does not apply
-in any forcible way to similar relations between white men
-and coloured women. The white male is in fact the go-between
-for the races. The Negroes have not the power,
-and sometimes not even the will, to protect themselves against
-his advances, and the result is that illegitimate mulatto children
-in great numbers are born of Negro mothers and left to
-share the lot of the coloured race.</p>
-
-<p>If the infusion of white blood were stopped entirely, the
-proportion of mulattoes in the Negro race would nevertheless
-go on increasing, since the children of a mulatto are usually
-mulattoes, whether the other parent be mulatto or black.
-There is, however, no reason for supposing that under such
-conditions the proportion of mulattoes to blacks would increase
-<em>more</em> rapidly in one geographic area than in another. The
-fact is that during the period 1890 to 1910 the number of
-mulattoes per 1,000 blacks <em>decreased</em> in the North from 390<span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">375</span>
-to 363, and <em>increased</em> in the South from 159 to 252; the inference
-as to white parenthood is obvious. During the same
-period the black population of the entire United States increased
-22.7 per cent., while the mulatto population increased
-81.1 per cent. The mulatto group is thus growing far more
-rapidly than either the black or the white, and the male white
-population of the South is largely responsible for the present
-expansion of this class, as well as for its historical origin.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the South couples a maximum of repression with a
-maximum of racial intermixture; indeed, the one is naturally
-and intimately associated with the other. The white population
-as a whole employs all manner of devices to keep the
-Negro in the social and economic status most favourable to
-sexual promiscuity, and aggressive white males take full advantage
-of the situation thus created.</p>
-
-<p>While it is not generally admitted in the South that the progressive
-whitening of the black race is a natural result of the
-maintenance of a system of slavery and subjection, the converse
-of this proposition is stated and defended with all possible
-ardour. That is to say, it is argued that any general improvement
-in the condition of the Negro will increase the likelihood
-of racial intermixture on a higher level, through inter-marriage.
-The Southerners who put forth this argument know very well
-that inter-marriage is not likely to take place in the presence
-of strong race-prejudice, and they know, too, that the Negro
-who most arouses their animosity is the “improved” Negro
-who will not keep his place. They are unwilling to admit
-that this increase in prejudice is due largely, if not wholly,
-to the greater competitive strength of the improved Negro;
-and likewise they prefer to disregard the fact that such a Negro
-resents white prejudice keenly, and tends to exhibit on his own
-part a counter prejudice which in itself acts as an additional
-obstacle to inter-marriage.</p>
-
-<p>In the absence of such factors as Negro self-consciousness
-and inter-racial competition, it would be difficult to account for
-the extreme rarity of marriages between blacks and whites in
-the Northern States. No comprehensive study of this subject
-has been made, but an investigation conducted by Julius
-Drachsler has shown that of all the marriages contracted by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">376</span>
-Negroes in New York City during the years 1908 to 1912, only
-0.93 per cent. were mixed. The same investigation revealed
-the fact that Negro men contracted mixed marriages about four
-times as frequently as Negro women.</p>
-
-<p>Marriages between whites and Indians have not been so
-vigorously condemned by the American majority as those
-between whites and Negroes, and the presumption is that the
-former have been much more frequent. However, it appears
-that no systematic investigation of Indian mixed marriages
-has been made, and certainly no census previous to that of
-1910 gives any data of value on the subject of mixed blood
-among the Indians. The enumeration of 1910 showed that
-56.5 per cent. of the Indians were full-blooded, 35.2 per cent.
-were of mixed blood, and 8.4 per cent. were unclassified. Although
-it is impossible to fix the responsibility as definitely
-here as in the case of the Negro, it is obvious that an infusion
-of white blood half again as great as that among the Negroes
-cannot be accounted for in any large part by racial inter-marriages.
-Without question, it is chiefly due to the same
-sort of promiscuity that has been so common in the South, and
-the present and potential checks upon the process of infusion
-are similar to those already discussed.</p>
-
-<p>In the case of the Jews and the Asiatics, it seems that the
-only figures available are those gathered by Drachsler. He
-found that only 1.17 per cent. of the marriages contracted
-by Jews in New York City during the years 1908 to 1912 were
-classifiable as “mixed,” while the corresponding percentages
-for the Chinese and the Japanese were 55.56 and 72.41
-respectively. The largeness of the figures in the case of Orientals
-is accounted for in part by the fact that there are comparatively
-few women of Mongolian race in New York City.
-Besides this, it must be remembered that, whatever the degree
-of their cultural assimilation, the Chinese and Japanese residents
-of the metropolis are not sufficiently numerous to form
-important competitive groups, while the Jews constitute one-quarter
-of the entire population of the city. Does any one
-doubt that the situation in regard to mixed marriages would be
-partially reversed in San Francisco?</p>
-
-<p>When due allowance is made for special conditions,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">377</span>
-Drachsler’s figures do not seem to run contrary to the general
-proposition that an improvement in the economic and social
-condition of one of the minorities, and a partial or complete
-adoption by the minority of the culture of the majority, does
-not necessarily prepare the way for racial fusion, but seems to
-produce exactly the opposite effect by increasing the competitive
-power of the minority, the majority’s fear of its rivals, and
-the prejudice of each against the other.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of all that prejudice can do to prevent it, the economic,
-social, and intellectual condition of the minorities is
-becoming increasingly like that of the majority; and yet it is
-not to be expected that as long as the minorities remain physically
-recognizable this change will result in the elimination of
-prejudice, nor is it likely that the cultural assimilation which
-checks the process of racial intermixture through promiscuous
-intercourse will result automatically in intermixture on a higher
-level, and the consequent disappearance of the recognizability
-of the minorities. Prejudice does not altogether prevent cultural
-assimilation; cultural assimilation increases competitive
-strength without eliminating recognizability; competitive
-strength <em>plus</em> recognizability produces more prejudice; and so
-on ... and so on.... Thus it seems probable that race-prejudice
-will persist in America as long as the general economic,
-social, political, and intellectual system which has nurtured
-it endures. No direct attack upon the race-problem, as
-such, can alter this system in any essential way.</p>
-
-<p>Is this conception sound, or not? It stands very high upon
-a slim scaffolding of facts, put together in pure contrariness
-after it had been stated that no adequate foundation for such
-a structure could be found anywhere. But, after all, it is no
-great matter what happens to the notion that race-prejudice
-can be remedied only incidentally. If the conditions which
-surround race-prejudice are only studied comparatively, this
-notion and others like it will get all the attention they deserve.</p>
-
-<h3><i>RACE PROBLEMS</i></h3>
-
-<p>(The answers are merely by way of suggestion, but the questions
-may prove to be worthy of serious attention.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">378</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Q. Has the inherent inferiority of any human race been established
-by historical, biological or psychological evidence?</p>
-
-<p>A. No.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Q. Does the theory of the inequality of human races offer a satisfactory
-explanation of the existence of race-prejudice?</p>
-
-<p>A. No.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Q. Do physical characteristics make the members of the several
-races recognizable?</p>
-
-<p>A. Yes.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Q. Is race-prejudice inherent and inevitable, in the sense that it
-always exists where two recognizably different races are in contact?</p>
-
-<p>A. No.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Q. How does it happen that in the presence of <em>racial</em> factors which
-remain constant, race-prejudice exists in some localities, and is absent
-in others?</p>
-
-<p>A. No satisfactory explanation of these local variations in inter-racial
-feeling has yet been given; however, the existence of the variations
-themselves would seem to indicate that the primary causes of race-prejudice
-are <em>not racial</em> but <em>regional</em>.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Q. What study will lead most directly to an understanding of race-prejudice—that
-of universal racial differences, or that of regional environmental
-differences which are associated with the existence and non-existence
-of racial prejudice?</p>
-
-<p>A. The latter.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Q. Does the systematic study of regional environmental differences in
-the United States, in their relation to race-prejudice, yield any results
-of importance?</p>
-
-<p>A. No such systematic study has ever been made; a casual glance
-seems to reveal an interesting coincidence between race-prejudice and the
-fear of competition.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Q. Is competition more likely to produce race-prejudice in the
-United States than elsewhere?</p>
-
-<p>A. Because of the general preoccupation of the American people with
-material affairs, <em>economic</em> competition is likely to produce unusually
-sharp antagonisms.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Q. Does the coincidence between race-prejudice and the fear of competition
-offer a complete explanation of the existence and strength of
-race-prejudice in the United States?</p>
-
-<p>A. No; no such claim has been advanced.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Q. Is the assimilation by the minorities of the culture of the majority
-taking place continuously, in spite of the prejudice of the majority and
-the counter-prejudice of three of the minorities?</p>
-
-<p>A. Yes.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Q. Does this cultural assimilation make for better inter-racial feeling?</p>
-
-<p>A. Probably not, because as long as physical race-differences remain,
-cultural assimilation increases the strength of the minority as a <em>recognizable</em>
-competitive group, and hence it also increases the keenness of the
-rivalry between the minorities and the majority.</p>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">379</span>
-<p>Q. How can the recognizability of the minorities be eliminated?</p>
-
-<p>A. By blood-fusion with the majority.</p>
-
-<p>Q. How can blood-fusion come about if cultural assimilation increases
-rivalry and prejudice?</p>
-
-<p>A.  ............................... .</p>
-
-<p>Q. Is it then true that, as things stand, the future of inter-racial
-relations in the United States depends upon the ratio between cultural
-assimilation, which seems inevitable, and biological assimilation, which
-seems unlikely?</p>
-
-<p>A. It so appears.</p>
-
-<p>Q. Does the race-problem in the United States then seem practically
-insoluble as a separate problem?</p>
-
-<p>A. It does.</p>
-
-<p>Q. Has the race-problem ever been solved anywhere by direct attack
-upon it as a <em>race</em> problem?</p>
-
-<p>A. Probably not.</p>
-
-<p>Q. Does not this conclusion involve a return to the assumption that
-race-prejudice is inevitable wherever race-differences exist; and has this
-not been emphatically denied?</p>
-
-<p>A. On the contrary, the implication is that race-prejudice is inevitable
-where <em>race-prejudice</em> exists. The conclusion in regard to the United
-States is based on the single assumption that the <em>non-racial</em> conditions
-under which race-prejudice has arisen will remain practically unchanged.</p>
-
-<p>Q. Is it then conceivable that a complete alteration of non-racial
-conditions—as, for instance, an economic revolution which would change
-the whole meaning of the word “competition”—might entirely revise the
-terms of the problem?</p>
-
-<p>A. It is barely conceivable—but this paper is not an accepted channel
-for divine revelation.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">380</span></p>
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Geroid Tanquary Robinson</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_381" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">381</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ADVERTISING">ADVERTISING</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Do</span> I understand you to say that you do not believe in advertising?
-Indeed! Soon you will be telling me that you
-do not believe in God. Though, to be sure, in so doing you
-would be committing less of a crime against the tenets of modern
-American civilization than in doubting the existence of a
-power so great that overnight it can raise up in our midst gods,
-kings, and other potentates, creating a world which for splendour
-and opulence far surpasses our own poor mortal sphere—a
-world in which every prospect pleases and only the reluctant
-spender is vile.</p>
-
-<p>True, we can only catch a fleeting glimpse of its many marvels.
-True, we have scarcely time to admire a millionth part
-of the joys and magnificence of one before a new and greatly
-improved universe floats across the horizon, and, from every
-corner news-stand, smilingly bids us enter its portals. True,
-I repeat, our inability to grasp or appreciate the full wonder
-of these constantly arriving creations, yet even the narrow
-limitations of our savage and untutored minds can hardly
-prevent us from acclaiming a miracle we fail to understand.</p>
-
-<p>If it were only given me to live the life led by any one of
-the fortunate creatures that dwell in these advertising worlds,
-I should gladly renounce my home, my wife, and my evil ways
-and become the super-snob of a mock creation. All day long
-should I stand smartly clad in a perfectly fitting union-suit just
-for the sport of keeping my obsequious butler waiting painfully
-for me with my lounging-gown over his exhausted arm. On
-other days I should be found sitting in mute adoration before
-a bulging bowl of breakfast food, and, if any one should chance
-to be listening at the keyhole, they might even catch me in the
-act of repeating reverently and with an avid smile on my lips,
-“I can never stir from the table until I have completely
-crammed myself with Red-Blooded American Shucks,” adding
-in a mysterious whisper, “To be had at all good grocers.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">382</span></p>
-
-<p>There would be other days of course, days when I should
-ride in a motor of unrivalled power with companions of unrivalled
-beauty, across canyons of unrivalled depth and mountains
-of unrivalled height. Then would follow still other days,
-the most perfect days of all, days when the snow-sheathed earth
-cracks in the clutches of an appalling winter and only the lower
-classes stir abroad. This would be the time that I should
-select for removing the lounging gown from my butler’s arm
-and bask in the glowing warmth of my perfect heater, with my
-chair placed in such a position as to enable me to observe the
-miserable plight of my neighbours across the way as they strive
-pitifully to keep life in their bodies over the dying embers of
-an anæmic fire. The sight of the sobbing baby and haggard
-mother would only serve to intensify my satisfaction in having
-been so fortunate and far-sighted as to have possessed myself of
-a Kill Kold Liquid Heat Projector—That Keeps the Family
-Snug.</p>
-
-<p>What days I should spend! Take the literary days, for
-instance. Could anything be more edifying than to dip discriminatingly
-into a six-inch bookshelf with the absolute assurance
-that a few minutes spent thus each day in dipping would,
-in due course of time, give me complete mastery of all the best
-literature of the world—and incidentally gain for me a substantial
-raise at the office? Nor could any of the literature
-of the past ages equal my hidden library of books containing
-Vital Secrets. In this room there would linger a never-failing
-thrill. Here I should retreat to learn the secret of success,
-the secret of salesmanship, the secret of vigour, the secret of
-bull-dozing one’s boss, the secret of spell-binding, the secret of
-personality and social charm, all bearing a material value measured
-in dollars and cents. In time I should so seethe with
-secrets that, unable to bear them any longer, I should break
-down before my friends and give the whole game away.</p>
-
-<p>But why should I lacerate my heart in the contemplation of
-happiness I shall never experience? Why should I dwell upon
-the pipe-filling days, or the days when I should send for samples?
-Why torture my mind with those exquisitely tailored
-days when, with a tennis racket in one hand and a varsity crew
-captain on my shoulder, I should parade across the good old<span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">383</span>
-campus in a suit bereft of wrinkles and a hat that destroyed
-the last shreds of restraint in all beholding women? No, I
-can go no further.</p>
-
-<p>For when I consider the remarkable characters that so
-charmingly infest my paradise never found, I cannot help asking
-myself, “How do they get that way?” How do the men’s
-legs grow so slim and long and their chins so smooth and
-square? Why have the women always such perfect limbs and
-such innocent but alluring smiles? Why are families always
-happy and children always good? What miracle has banished
-the petty irritations and deficiencies of life and smoothed out
-the problems of living? How and why—is there an answer?
-Can it all be laid at the door of advertising, or do we who
-read, the great, sweltering mass of us, insist upon such things
-and demand a world of artificial glamour and perfectly impossible
-people? The crime is committed by collusion, I am
-forced to conclude. Advertising, for the most part, makes
-its appeal to all that is superficial and snobbish in us, and we
-as a solid phalanx are only too glad to be appealed to in such
-a manner.</p>
-
-<p>In only the most unscholarly way can I lay my reflections
-before you, and the first one is this: advertising is America’s
-crudest and most ruthless sport, religion, or profession, or
-whatever you choose to call it. With an accurate stroke, but
-with a perverted intent, it coddles and toys with all that is base
-and gross in our physical and spiritual compositions. The
-comforts and happiness it holds out to the reader are for ever
-contrasted with the misery and misfortune of another. Thus,
-if I ride in a certain make of motor, I have the satisfaction
-of knowing that every one who rides in a motor of another
-make is of a lower caste than myself and will certainly eat dust
-for the rest of his life. There is a real joy in this knowledge.
-Again, if I wear a certain advertised brand of underwear, I
-have the pleasure of knowing that my fellow-men not so fortunately
-clad are undoubtedly foolish swine who will eventually
-die of sunstroke, after a life devoted entirely to sweating.
-Here, too, is a joy of rare order. If I brush my teeth with
-an advertised tooth paste, my satisfaction is enhanced by the
-knowledge that all other persons who fail to use this particular<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">384</span>
-paste will in a very short time lose all of their teeth. In this
-there is a savage, but authentic delight. Even if I select a
-certain classic from my cherished six-inch bookshelf, I shall
-have a buoyant feeling in knowing that all men, who, after the
-fatigue of the day, take comfort in the latest murder or ball-game,
-are of inferior intellect and will never succeed in the
-world of business.</p>
-
-<p>This is one of the most successful weapons used in advertising,
-and there is no denying that a great majority of people
-take pleasure in being struck by it. It is a pleasure drawn
-from the same source that feeds so many people’s sense of satisfaction
-when they attend a funeral, or call on a sick friend,
-or a friend in misfortune and disgrace. It was the same source
-of inner satisfaction which made it possible for many loyal
-citizens to bear not only with fortitude, but with bliss, the sorrows
-of the late war. It is the instinct of self-preservation,
-toned down to a spirit of complacent self-congratulation, and
-it responds most readily to the appeal of selfishness and snobbery.
-Advertising did not create this instinct, nor did it discover
-it, but advertising uses it for its own ends. Who is to
-blame, the reader or the advertiser, hardly enters in at this
-point. The solid fact to take into consideration is that day
-in and day out the susceptible public is being worked upon in
-an unhealthy and neurotic manner which cannot fail to effect
-harmful results.</p>
-
-<p>At this tragic moment I purpose briefly to digress to the
-people who create advertisements, before returning to a consideration
-of the effects of their creations.</p>
-
-<p>To begin with, let it never be forgotten that advertising is
-a red-blooded, two-fisted occupation, engaged in for the most
-part by upstanding Americans of the kiss-the-flag or knock-’em-down-and-drag-’em-out
-variety. Yet years of contact with
-the profession compel me for the sake of truth to temper this
-remark by adding that it also contains, or rather confines,
-within its mystic circle a group of reluctant and recalcitrant
-“creatures that once were men,” who, moving through a phantasmagoria
-of perverted idealism, flabby optimism, and unexamined
-motives, either deaden their conscience in the twilight
-of the “Ad. Men’s Club,” or else become so blindly embittered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">385</span>
-or debauched that their usefulness is lost to all constructive
-movements.</p>
-
-<p>Generally speaking, however, advertising is the graveyard
-of literary aspiration in which the spirits of the defeated aspirants,
-wielding a momentary power over a public that rejected
-their efforts, blackjack it into buying the most amazing
-assortment of purely useless and cheaply manufactured commodities
-that has ever marked the decline of culture and common
-sense. These men are either caught early after their
-flight from college, or else recruited from the newspaper world.
-Some—the most serious and determined—are products of correspondence
-schools. Others are merely robust spirits whose
-daily contact with their fellow-men does not give them sufficient
-opportunity to disgorge themselves of the abundance of
-misinformation that their imaginations manufacture in wholesale
-quantities. This advertising brotherhood is composed of
-a heterogeneous mass of humanity that is rapidly converted
-into a narrow-minded wedge of fanatics. And this wedge is
-continually boring into the pocketbook of the public and extracting
-therefrom a goodly quantity of gold and silver. Have
-you ever conversed with one of the more successful and important
-members of this vast body? If so have you been able
-to quit the conversation with an intelligent impression of its
-subject-matter? For example: do you happen to know what
-a visualizer is? If not, you would be completely at the mercy
-of a true advertising exponent. Returning to my Edisonian
-method of attack, do you happen to know by any chance what
-a rough-out man is, or what is the meaning of dealer mortality,
-quality appeal, class circulation, or institutional copy? Probably
-not, for there is at bottom very little meaning to them;
-nevertheless, they are terms that are sacred to a great number
-of advertising men, and which, if unknown, would render
-all intelligent communication with them quite impossible.</p>
-
-<p>If you should ever attend a session of these gentlemen in full
-cry—and may God spare you this—you would return from it
-with the impression that all was not well with the world. You
-would have heard speeches on the idealism of meat-packing,
-and other kindred subjects. The idealism would be transmitted
-to you through the medium of a hireling of some large<span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">386</span>
-packing organization, a live-wire, God-bless-you, hail-fellow
-type. Assuming that you had been there, you would have witnessed
-this large fellow with a virile exhalation of cigar-smoke,
-heave himself from his chair; you would have observed a good-natured
-smile play across his lips, and then you would have
-suddenly been taken aback by the tenderly earnest and masterfully
-restrained expression that transformed our buffoon into
-a suffering martyr, as, flinging out his arms, he tragically exclaimed,
-“Gentlemen, you little know the soul of the man who
-has given the Dreadnought Ham to the world!” From this
-moment on your sense of guilt would have increased by leaps
-and bounds until at last you would have broken down completely
-and agreed with everything the prophet said, as long
-as he refrained from depriving you of an opportunity to make
-it up to the god-like man who gave Dreadnought Hams to the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>The orator would go on to tell you about the happiness
-and sunlight that flood the slaughter-house in which Dreadnought
-Hams are made. You would hear about the lovely,
-whimsical old character, who, one day, when in the act of
-polishing off a pig, stood in a position of suspended animation
-with knife poised above the twitching ear of the unfortunate
-swine, and seizing the hand of the owner as he
-passed benevolently by, kissed it fervently and left on it a
-tear of gratitude. Perhaps you would not hear that in the
-ardour of loyal zeal this lovable old person practically cut the
-pig to ribbons, thus saving it from a nervous collapse, nor
-would you be permitted to hear a repetition of the imprecations
-the old man muttered after the departing back of the owner,
-for these things should not be heard,—in fact, they do not exist
-in the world of advertising. Nothing would be said about the
-red death of the pig, the control of the stock-raiser, the underpaying
-of the workers, the daughter who visits home when
-papa is out and the neighbours are not looking, the long years
-of service and the short shrift of age, the rottenness and hypocrisy
-of the whole business—no, nothing should be said
-about such things. But to make up for the omission, you
-would be told in honied words of the workers who lovingly
-kiss each ham as it is reverently carried from the plant to receive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">387</span>
-the patriarchal blessing of the owner before it is offered
-up as a sacrifice to a grateful but greedy public. The whole
-affair would suggest to you a sort of Passion Play in which
-there was neither Judas nor Pilot, but just a great, big happy
-family of ham producers.</p>
-
-<p>This speech, as I have said, would soon appear in the principal
-papers of the country. It would be published in installments,
-each one bearing its message of peace on earth, good-will
-to men, and the public—always preferring Pollyanna to
-Blue Beard—would be given an altogether false impression
-of Dreadnought Hams, and the conditions under which they
-were produced. But this particular speech would be only a
-small part of the idealism you would be permitted to absorb.
-There would also be a patriotic speech about Old Glory, which
-would somehow become entangled with the necessity for creating
-a wider demand for a certain brand of socks. There
-would perhaps be a speech on the sacredness of the home,
-linked cunningly with the ability of a certain type of talking-machine
-to keep the family in at nights and thus make the
-home even more sacred. There would be speeches without
-end, and idealism without stint, and at last every one would
-shake hands with every one else and the glorious occasion
-would come to an end only to be repeated with renewed vigour
-and replenished optimism on the following Friday.</p>
-
-<p>But the actual work of creating advertisements is seldom
-done in this rarefied and rose-tinted atmosphere; it is done in
-the more prosaic atmosphere of the advertising agency. (And
-let it be said at once that although, even in the case of agencies
-engaging in “Honest Advertising” campaigns, many such
-firms indulge in the unscrupulous competitive practice of splitting
-their regular commission with their clients in order to
-keep and secure accounts, there are still honest advertising
-agencies.)</p>
-
-<p>Now there are two important classes of workers in most
-agencies—the copy-writer and the solicitor—the man who
-writes the advertisements and the man who gets the business.
-This latter class contains the wolves of advertising, the restless
-stalkers through the forests of industry and the fields of trade.
-They are leather-lunged and full-throated; death alone can<span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">388</span>
-save their victims from hearing their stories out. Copywriters,
-on the other hand, are really not bad at heart; sometimes
-they even possess a small saving spark of humour, and
-frequently they attempt to read something other than <cite>Printer’s
-Ink</cite>. But the full-fledged solicitor is beyond all hope. Coming
-in close touch with the client who usually is an industrialist,
-capitalist, stand-patter, and high-tariff enthusiast, the solicitor
-gradually becomes a small edition of the man he serves, and
-reflects his ideas in an even more brutal and unenlightened
-manner. In their minds there is no room for change, unless it
-be change to a new kind of automobile they are advertising, for
-new furniture, unless it be the collapsible table of their latest
-client, for spring cleaning, unless thereby one is introduced to
-the virtues of Germ-Destroying Soap. Things must remain as
-they are and the leaders of commerce and industry must be
-protected at all costs. To them there are no under-paid workers,
-no social evil, no subsidized press, no restraint of free
-speech, no insanitary plants, no child-labour, no infant mortality
-due to an absence of maternity legislation, no good strikers,
-and no questionable public utility corporations. Everything is
-as it should be, and any one who attempts to effect a change is
-a socialist, and that ends it all.</p>
-
-<p>Advertising is very largely controlled by men of this
-type. Is it any wonder that it is of a reactionary and artificial
-nature, and that any irresponsible promoter with money
-to spend and an article to sell, will find a sympathetic and wily
-minister to execute his plans for him, regardless of their effect
-on the economic or social life of the nation?</p>
-
-<p>Turning, for the moment, from the people who create advertisements
-to advertising as an institution, what is there to be
-said for or against it? What is there to advance in justification
-of its existence, or in favour of its suppression? Not
-knowing on which side the devil’s advocate pleads his case, I
-shall take the liberty of representing both sides, presenting as
-impartially as possible the cases for the prosecution and defence
-and allowing the reader to bring in the verdict in accordance
-with the evidence.</p>
-
-<p>The first charge—that the low state of the press and the
-magazine world is due solely to advertising—is not, I believe,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">389</span>
-wholly fair. There is no use denying that advertising is responsible
-for the limitation of free utterance and the nonexistence
-of various independent and amusing publications.
-However, assuming that advertising were utterly banished from
-the face of the earth, would the murky atmosphere be cleared
-thereby? Would the press become free and unafraid, and
-would the ideal magazine at last draw breath in the full light
-of day? I think not. Years before advertising had attained
-the importance it now enjoys, public service corporations and
-other powerful vested interests had found other and equally
-effective methods of shaping the news and controlling editorial
-policies. The fact remains however, and it is a sufficiently
-black one, that advertising is responsible for much of
-the corruption of our papers and other publications, as well as
-for the absence of the type of periodicals that make for the
-culture of a people and the enjoyment of good literature.
-When a profiteering owner of a large department store can
-succeed in keeping the fact of his conviction from appearing
-in the news, while a number of smaller offenders are held up
-as horrid examples, it is not difficult to decide whether or not
-it pays to advertise. When any number of large but loosely
-conducted corporations upon which the people and the nation
-depend, can prevent from appearing in the press any information
-concerning their mismanagement, inefficiency, and extravagance,
-or any editorial advocating government control, one
-does not have to ponder deeply to determine the efficacy of
-advertising. When articles or stories dealing with the unholy
-conditions existing in certain industries, or touching on the risks
-of motoring, the dangers of eating canned goods, or the impossibility
-of receiving a dollar’s value for a dollar spent in a
-modern department store, are rejected by many publications,
-regardless of their merit, one does not have to turn to the back
-pages of the magazine in order to discover the names and products
-of the advertisers paying for the space. Indeed, one of
-the most regrettable features of advertising is that it makes
-so many things possible for editors who will be good, and so
-many things impossible for editors who are too honest and too
-independent to tolerate dictation.</p>
-
-<p>Another charge against advertising is that it promotes and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">390</span>
-encourages the production of a vast quantity of costly
-articles many of which duplicate themselves, and that this
-over-production of commodities, many of them of highly
-questionable value, is injurious to the country and economically
-unsound. This charge seems to be well founded
-in fact, and illustrated only too convincingly in the list
-of our daily purchases. Admitting that a certain amount of
-competition creates a stimulating and healthy reaction, it still
-seems hardly reasonable that a nation, to appear with a clean
-face each morning, should require the services of a dozen
-producers of safety razors, and several hundred producers of
-soap, and that the producers of razors and soap should spend
-millions of dollars each year in advertising in order to remind
-people to wash and shave. Nor does it seem to be a well-balanced
-system of production when such commodities as automobiles,
-sewing machines, face powders, toilet accessories, food
-products, wearing apparel, candy, paint, furniture, rugs, tonics,
-machinery, and so on <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">ad infinitum</i> can exist in such lavish
-abundance. With so many things of the same kind to choose
-from, there is scarcely any reason to wonder that the purchasing
-public becomes addle-brained and fickle. The over-production
-of both the essentials and non-essentials of life is indubitably
-stimulated by advertising, with the result that whenever
-business depression threatens the country, much unnecessary
-unemployment and hardship arises because of an over-burdened
-market and an industrial world crowded with moribund
-manufacturing plants. “Give me a strong enough motor and
-I will make that table fly,” an aviator once remarked. It could
-be said with equal truth, “Give me money enough to spend in
-advertising and I will make any product sell.” Flying tables,
-however, are not nearly so objectionable as a market glutted
-with useless and over-priced wares, and an army of labour dependent
-for its existence upon an artificially stimulated demand.</p>
-
-<p>The claim that advertising undermines the habits of thrift
-of a nation requires no defence. Products are made to be sold
-and it is the principal function of advertising to sell them regardless
-of their merits or the requirements of the people. Men
-and women purchase articles to-day that would have no place<span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">391</span>
-in any socially and economically safe civilization. As long as
-this condition continues, money will be drawn out of the savings
-accounts of the many and deposited in the commercial
-accounts of the few—a situation which hardly makes for happy
-and healthy families.</p>
-
-<p>It has been asserted by many that advertising is injurious to
-literary style. I am far from convinced that this charge is true.
-In my belief it has been neither an injurious nor helpful influence.
-If anything, it has forced a number of writers to say
-a great deal in a few words, which is not in itself an undesirable
-accomplishment. Nor do I believe that advertising has recruited
-to its ranks a number of writers or potential writers
-who might otherwise have given pearls of faith to the world.
-However, if it has attracted any first-calibre writers, they have
-only themselves to blame and there is still an opportunity for
-them to scale the heights of literary eminence.</p>
-
-<p>The worst has been said of advertising, I feel, when we agree
-that it has contributed to the corruption of the press, that it
-does help to endanger the economic safety of the nation, and
-that, to a great extent, it appeals to the public in a false and
-unhealthy manner. These charges certainly are sufficiently
-damaging. For the rest, let us admit that advertising is more
-or less like all other businesses, subject to the same criticisms
-and guilty of the same mistakes. Having admitted this, let us
-assume the rôle of the attorney for the defence and see what
-we can marshal in favour of our client.</p>
-
-<p>First of all, I submit the fact that advertising has kept many
-artists alive—not that I am thoroughly convinced that artists
-should be kept alive, any more than poets or any other un-American
-breed; but for all that I appeal to your humanitarian
-instincts when I offer this fact in support of advertising,
-and I trust you will remember it when considering the
-evidence.</p>
-
-<p>In the second place, advertising is largely responsible for
-the remarkable strides we have taken in the art of typography.
-If you will examine much of the literature produced by advertising,
-you will find there many excellent examples of what can
-be done with type. To-day no country in the world is producing
-more artistic and authentic specimens of typography than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">392</span>
-America, and this, I repeat, is largely due to the influence of
-advertising.</p>
-
-<p>We can also advance as an argument in favour of advertising
-that it has contributed materially to a greater use of the
-tooth-brush and a more diligent application of soap. Advertising
-has preached cleanliness, preached frantically, selfishly
-and for its own ends, no doubt, but nevertheless it has preached
-convincingly. It matters little what means are used to achieve
-the end of cleanliness as long as the end is achieved. This,
-advertising has helped to accomplish. The cleanliness of the
-body and the cleanliness of the home as desirable virtues are
-constantly being held up before the readers of papers and
-magazines. As has been said, there are altogether too many
-different makes of soap and other sanitary articles, but in this
-case permit us to modify the statement by adding that it is
-much better to have too many of such articles than too few.
-This third point in favour of advertising is no small point to
-consider. The profession cannot be wholly useless, if it has
-helped to make teeth white, faces clean, bodies healthy, homes
-fresh and sanitary, and people more concerned with their
-bodies and the way they treat them.</p>
-
-<p>The fourth point in favour of advertising is that through the
-medium of paid space in the papers and magazines certain
-deserving movements have been able to reach a larger public
-and thus recruit from it new and valuable members. This
-example illustrates the value of advertising when applied to
-worthy ends. In all fairness we are forced to conclude, that,
-after all, there is much in advertising that is not totally
-depraved.</p>
-
-<p>Now that we are about to rest the case, let us gaze once more
-through the magic portals of the advertising world and refresh
-our eyes with its beauty. On second glance we find there is
-something strangely pathetic and wistfully human about this
-World That Never Was. It is a world very much after our
-own creation, peopled and arranged after our own yearnings
-and desires. It is a world of well regulated bowels, cornless
-feet, and unblemished complexions, a world of perfectly fitting
-clothes, completely equipped kitchens, and always upright and
-smiling husbands. To this world of splendid country homes,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_393">393</span>
-humming motors, and agreeable companions, prisoners on our
-own poor weary world of reality may escape for a while to
-live a few short moments of unqualified comfort and happiness.
-Even if they do return from their flight with pockets empty
-and arms laden with a number of useless purchases, they have
-had at least some small reward for their folly. They have
-dwelt and sported with fascinating people in surroundings of
-unsurpassed beauty. True, it is not such a world as Rembrandt
-would have created, but he was a grim old realist, who,
-when he wanted to paint a picture of a person cutting the nails,
-selected for his model an old and unscrupulous woman, and
-cast around her such an atmosphere of reality that one can
-almost hear the snip of the scissors as it proceeds on its revolting
-business. How much better it would be done in the advertising
-world! Here we would be shown a young and beautiful
-girl sitting gracefully before her mirror and displaying just
-enough of her body to convince the beholder that she was
-neither crippled nor chicken-breasted, and all day long for ever
-and for ever she would sit thus smiling tenderly as she clipped
-the pink little moon-flecked nails from her pink little pointed
-fingers.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, I fear it is a world of our own creation. Only a few
-persons would stand long before Rembrandt’s crude example,
-while many would dwell with delight on the curves and allurements
-of the maid in the advertising world. Of course one
-might forget or never even discover what she was doing, and
-assuming that one did, one would hardly dwell upon such an
-unromantic occupation in connection with a creature so fair
-and refined as this ideal young woman; but for all that, one
-would at least have had the pleasure of contemplating her loveliness.</p>
-
-<p>So many of us are poor and ill-favoured in this world of
-ours, so many girls are not honestly able to purchase more than
-one frock or one hat a year, that the occasion of the purchase
-takes on an importance far beyond the appreciation of the
-average well-to-do person. It is fun, therefore, to dwell upon
-the lines and features of a perfectly gowned woman and to
-imagine that even though poor and ill-favoured, one might
-possibly resemble in a modified way, the splendid model, if one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_394">394</span>
-could only get an extra fifteen minutes off at lunch-time in
-order to attend the bargain sale. There are some of us who
-are so very poor that from a great distance we can enjoy without
-hope of participation the glory and triumph of others. The
-advertising world supplies us with just this sort of vicarious enjoyment,
-and, like all other kinds of fiction, enables us to play
-for a moment an altogether pleasing rôle in a world of high
-adventure.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore let us not be too uncharitable to the advertising
-world. While not forgetting its faults, let us also strive to remember
-its virtues. Some things we cannot forgive it, some
-things we would prefer to forget, but there are others which
-require less toleration and fortitude to accept when once they
-have been understood.</p>
-
-<p>As long as the printed word is utilized and goods are bought
-and sold, there will be a place and a reason for advertising—not
-advertising as we know it to-day, but of a saner and more
-useful nature. He would be a doughty champion of the limitation
-of free speech who would deny a man the right to tell
-the world that he is the manufacturer of monkey-wrenches,
-and that he has several thousands of these same wrenches on
-hand, all of which he is extremely anxious to sell.</p>
-
-<p>Advertising, although a precocious child, is but in its infancy.
-In spite of its rapid development and its robust constitution, it
-has not yet advanced beyond the savage and bragging age. It
-will appeal to our instincts of greed as quickly as to our instincts
-of home-building. It will make friends with the snob
-that is in us, as readily as it will avail itself of the companionship
-of our desire to be generous and well-liked. It will frighten
-and bulldoze us into all sorts of extravagant purchases with
-the same singleness of purpose that it will plead with our self-respect
-in urging us to live cleaner and better lives. It will use
-our pride and vanity for its own ends as coolly as it will use our
-good nature or community spirit. It will run through the whole
-gamut of human emotions, selecting therefrom those best suited
-to its immediate ends. Education alone will make the child
-behave—not the education of the child so much as the education
-of the reader.</p>
-
-<p>Advertising thrives to-day in the shadows created by big<span class="pagenum" id="Page_395">395</span>
-business, and, as a consequence, if it would retain its master’s
-favour it must justify his methods, and practise his evil ways.
-Here it must be added that there are some honest advertising
-agencies which refuse to accept the business of dishonest concerns.
-It must also be added that there are some magazines
-and newspapers which will refuse to accept unscrupulous advertisements.
-These advertisements must be notoriously unscrupulous,
-however, before they meet this fate. There are
-even such creatures as honest manufacturers, but unfortunately
-for the profession they too rarely advertise. As a whole, advertising
-is committed to the ways of business, and as the ways
-of business are seldom straight and narrow, advertising perforce
-must follow a dubious path. We shall let it rest at that.</p>
-
-<p>We have made no attempt in this article to take up the subject
-of out-door advertising. There is nothing to say about
-this branch of the profession save that it is bad beyond expression,
-and should be removed from sight with all possible haste.
-In revolting against the sign-board, direct action assumes the
-dignity of conservatism, and although I do not recommend an
-immediate assault on all sign-boards, I should be delighted if
-such an assault took place. Were I a judge sitting on the case
-of a man apprehended in the act of destroying one of these eyesores,
-I should give him the key to my private stock, and adjourn
-the court for a week.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">J. Thorne Smith</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_397" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_397">397</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BUSINESS">BUSINESS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Modern</span> business derives from three passions in this order,
-namely: The passion for things, the passion for
-personal grandeur and the passion for power. Things are multiplied
-in use and possession when people exchange with each
-other the products of specialized labour. Personal grandeur
-may be realized in wealth. Gratification of the third passion
-in this way is new. Only in recent times has business become
-a means to great power, a kind of substitute for kingship,
-wherein man may sate his love of conquest, practise private
-vengeance, and gain dominion over people.</p>
-
-<p>These passions are feeble on the Oriental side of the world,
-strong in parts of Europe, powerful in America. Hence the
-character of American business. It is unique, wherein it is so,
-not in principle but in degree of phenomena. For natural reasons
-the large objects of business are most attainable in this
-country. Yet this is not the essential difference. In the pursuit
-of them there is a characteristic American manner, as to
-which one may not unreasonably prefer a romantic explanation.
-No white man lives on this continent who has not himself
-or in his ancestry the will that makes desire overt and
-dynamic, the solitary strength to push his dream across seas.
-Islands had been peopled before by this kind of selection,
-notably England; never a continent. A reckless, egoistic, experimental
-spirit governs, betrays, and preserves us still.</p>
-
-<p>The elemental hunger for food, warmth, and refuge gives
-no direct motive to business. People may live and reproduce
-without business. Civilization of a sort may exist without its
-offices. The settler who disappears into the wilderness with a
-wife, a gun, a few tools, and some pairs of domestic beasts,
-may create him an idyllic habitation, amid orchards and fields,
-self-contained in rude plenty; but he is lost to business until
-he produces a money crop, that is, a surplus of the fruits of
-husbandry to exchange for fancy hardware, tea, window glass,
-muslin, china, and luxuries.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_398">398</span></p>
-
-<p>The American wilderness swallowed up hundreds of thousands
-of such hearth-bearers. Business was slow to touch
-them. What they had to sell was bulky. The cost of transportation
-was prohibitive. There were no highways, only
-rivers, for traffic to go upon. Food was cheap, because the
-earth in a simple way was bounteous; but the things for which
-food could be exchanged were dear. This would naturally be
-true in a new country, where craft industry must develop
-slowly. It was true also for another reason, which was that
-the Mother Country regarded the New World as a plantation
-to be exploited for the benefit of its own trade and manufactures.</p>
-
-<p>Great Britain’s claim to proprietary interest in America having
-been established against European rivals by the end of the
-17th century, her struggle with the colonists began. The English
-wanted (1) raw materials upon which to bestow their high
-craft labour, (2) an exclusive market for the output of their
-mills and factories, and (3) a monopoly of the carrying trade.
-The colonists wanted industrial freedom. As long as they
-held themselves to chimney-corner industries, making nails,
-shoes, hats, and coarse cloth for their own use, there was no
-quarrel. But when labour even in a small way began to devote
-itself exclusively to handicraft, so that domestic manufactures
-were offered for sale in competition with imported English
-goods, that was business—and the British Parliament
-voted measures to crush it. The weaving of cloth for sale was
-forbidden, lest the colonists become independent of English
-fabrics. So was the making of beaver hats; the English were
-hatters. It was forbidden to set up an iron rolling-mill in
-America, because the English required pig iron and wished to
-work it themselves. To all these acts of Parliament the colonists
-opposed subterfuge until they were strong enough to
-be defiant. That impatience of legal restraints which is one
-of the most obstinate traits of American business was then a
-patriotic virtue.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the New England trader had appeared—that
-adorable, hymning, unconscious pirate who bought molasses
-in the French West Indies, swapped it for rum at Salem, Mass.,
-traded the rum for Negroes on the African coast, exchanged the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_399">399</span>
-Negroes for tobacco in Virginia, and sold the tobacco for
-money in Europe, at a profit to be settled with God. This
-trade brought a great deal of money to the colonies; and they
-needed money almost more than anything else. Then the
-British laid a ban on trade with the French West Indies, put
-a tax upon coastwise traffic between the colonies; and decreed
-that American tobacco should be exported nowhere but to
-English ports, although—or because—tobacco prices were
-higher everywhere else in Europe. The natural consequence
-of this restrictive British legislation was to make American
-business utterly lawless. As much as a third of it was notoriously
-conducted in defiance of law. Smuggling both in domestic
-and foreign trade became a folk custom. John Hancock,
-the first signer of the Declaration of Independence, was
-a celebrated smuggler.</p>
-
-<p>During the War of Independence domestic craft industry
-was stimulated by necessity. But the means were crude and
-the products imperfect; and when, after peace, British merchants
-with an accumulation of goods on their hands began to
-offer them for sale in the United States at low prices, hoping
-to recover their new-world trade in competitive terms, the
-infant industries cried out for protection. They got it. One
-of the first acts of the American Congress was to erect a tariff
-against foreign-made goods in order that the country might
-become self-sufficing in manufactures. This was the beginning
-of our protectionist policy.</p>
-
-<p>Fewer than four million unbusiness-like people coming into
-free possession of that part of the North American continent
-which is named America was a fabulous business event. We
-cannot even now comprehend it. They had not the dimmest
-notion of what it was they were possessed of, nor what it
-meant economically. Geography ran out at the Mississippi.
-The tide of Westward immigration was just beginning to break
-over the crest of the Alleghany mountains.</p>
-
-<p>Over-seas trade grew rapidly, as there was always a surplus
-of food and raw materials to be exchanged abroad for things
-which American industry was unable to provide. Foreign
-commerce was an important source of group-wealth and public
-interest was much concerned with it. Besides, it was easier<span class="pagenum" id="Page_400">400</span>
-to trade across seas than inland. Philadelphia until about
-1835 was nearer London than Pittsburgh, not as the crow flies
-but as freight moves. Domestic business, arising from the
-internal exchange of goods, developed slowly, owing partly to
-the wretched state of transportation and partly to the self-contained
-nature of families and communities. The population
-was more than nine-tenths rural; rural habits survived
-even in the towns, where people kept cows and pigs, cured
-their own meats, preserved their own fruits and vegetables,
-and thought ready-made garments a shocking extravagance.
-Business under these conditions performed a subservient function.
-People’s relations with it were in large measure voluntary.
-Its uses were more luxurious than vital. There was not
-then, nor could any one at this time have imagined, that interdependence
-of individuals, groups, communities, and geographical
-sections which it is the blind aim of business increasingly
-to promote, so that at length the case is reversed and people
-are subservient to business.</p>
-
-<p>In Southern New Jersey you may see a farm, now prosperously
-devoted to berry and fruit crops, on which, still in
-good repair, are the cedar rail fences built by a farmer whose
-contacts with business were six or eight trips a year over a
-sand road to Trenton with surplus food to exchange for some
-new tools, tea, coffee, and store luxuries. That old sand road
-has become a cement pavement—a motor highway. Each
-morning a New York baking corporation’s motor stops at the
-farm-house and the driver hands in some fresh loaves. Presently
-a butcher’s motor stops with fresh meat, then another
-one with dry groceries, and yet another from a New York department
-store with parcels containing ready-made garments,
-stockings and shoes.</p>
-
-<p>Consider what these four motors symbolize.</p>
-
-<p>First is an automobile industry and a system for producing,
-refining and distributing oil which together are worth as much
-as the whole estimated wealth of America three generations
-ago.</p>
-
-<p>Back of the bakery wagon what a vista! An incorporated
-baking industry, mixing, kneading, roasting, and wrapping the
-loaf in paraffine paper without touch of human hands, all by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_401">401</span>
-automatic machinery. Beyond the Mississippi, in a country
-undiscovered until 1804, the wheat fields that are ploughed,
-sown, reaped by power-driven machinery. In Minnesota a
-milling industry in which the miller has become an impersonal
-flour trust. A railroad system that transports first the grain
-and then the flour over vast distances at rates so low that the
-cost of two or three thousand miles of transportation in the
-loaf of bread delivered to the New Jersey farm-house is inexpressible....
-Back of the butcher’s motor is a meat-packing
-industry concentrated at Chicago. It sends fresh meat a
-thousand miles in iced cars and sells it to a New Jersey farmer
-for a price at which he can better afford to buy it than to bother
-about producing it for himself.... Back of the grocer’s
-motor are the food products and canning industries. By means
-of machinery they shred, peel, hull, macerate, roll, cook, cool,
-and pack fruits, cereals, and vegetables in cartons and containers
-which are made, labelled, and sealed by other automatic
-machinery.... And back of the department store
-motor are the garment-making, shoe-making, textile, and knitting
-industries.</p>
-
-<p>If one link in all this ramified scheme of business breaks
-there is chaos. If the State of New Jersey were suddenly cut
-off from the offices of business for six months, a third of her
-population might perish; not that the State is unable potentially
-to sustain her own, but that the people have formed
-habits of dependence upon others, as others depend upon them,
-for the vital products of specialized labour.</p>
-
-<p>All this has happened in the life of one cedar rail fence.
-You say that is only fifty or sixty years. Nevertheless it is literally
-so. The system under which we live has been evolved
-since 1860. The transformation was sudden. Never in the
-world were the physical conditions of a nation’s life altered
-so fast by economic means. Yet it did not happen for many
-years. The work of unconscious preparation occupied three-quarters
-of a century.</p>
-
-<p>Man acts upon his environment with hands, tools, and imagination;
-and business requires above everything else the means
-of cheap and rapid transportation. In all the major particulars
-save one the founders were ill-equipped for their independent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_402">402</span>
-attack upon the American environment. At the beginning
-of the 19th century there were no roads, merely a few
-trails fit only for horseback travel. There were no canals yet.
-And the labour wherewith to perform heavy, monotonous tasks
-was dear and scarce and largely self-employed. Though the
-hands of the pioneer are restless they are not patiently industrious.
-There was need of machinery such as had already
-begun to revolutionize British industry, but the English jealously
-protected their mechanical knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>There is a tradition that the Americans were marvellously
-inventive with labour-saving devices. That is to be qualified.
-Their special genius lay rather in the adaptation and enthusiastic
-use of such devices. The introduction of them was not
-resisted as in the older countries by labour unwilling to change
-its habits and fearful of unemployment. This was an important
-advantage.</p>
-
-<p>The American textile industry was founded by British artisans
-who came to this country carrying contraband in their
-heads, that is, the plans of weaving, spinning, and knitting
-machines which the English guarded as carefully as military
-secrets.... The pre-eminence of this country in the manufacture
-and use of agricultural implements is set out in elementary
-school-books as proof of American inventiveness; yet the
-essential principles of the reaper were evolved in Great Britain
-forty years before the appearance of the historic McCormick
-reaper (1831) in this country, and threshing-machines were in
-general use in England while primitive methods of flailing,
-trampling, and dragging prevailed in America. As recently as
-1850 the scythe and cradle reaped the American harvest and
-there still existed the superstition that an iron plough poisoned
-the soil and stimulated weeds. Of all the tools invented
-or adopted the one which Americans were to make the most
-prodigious use of was the railroad; yet the first locomotive was
-brought from England in 1829, the embargo on machinery having
-by this time been lifted—and it failed because it was too
-heavy!</p>
-
-<p>Twenty years passed and still the possibilities of rail transportation
-were unperceived, which is perhaps somewhat explained
-by the fact that the one largest vested interest of that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_403">403</span>
-time existed in canals. On the map of 1850 the railroads resemble
-earthworms afraid to leave water and go inland. The
-notion of a railroad was that it supplemented water transportation,
-connecting lake, canal, and river routes, helping traffic
-over the high places.</p>
-
-<p>But in the next ten years—1850 to 1860—destiny surrendered.
-There was that rare coincidence of seed, weather, deep
-ploughing, and mysterious sanction which the miracle requires.
-The essential power of the American was suddenly liberated.
-There was the discovery of gold in California. There was the
-Crimean War, which created a high demand abroad for our
-commodities. The telegraph put its indignities upon time and
-space. The idea of a railroad as a tool of empire seized the
-imagination. Railroads were deliriously constructed. The
-map of 1860 shows a glistening steel web from the seaboard to
-the Mississippi.</p>
-
-<p>The gigantesque was enthroned as the national fetich. Votive
-offerings were mass, velocity, quantity. True cities began.
-The spirit of Chicago was born. Bigness and be-damnedness.
-In this decade the outlines of our economic development were
-cast for good.</p>
-
-<p>In the exclusive perspective of business the Civil War is an
-indistinct episode. It stimulated industry in the North, shattered
-it in the South. The net result in a purely economic
-sense is a matter of free opinion. The Morse telegraph code
-probably created more wealth than the war directly destroyed.
-Or the bitter sectional row over the route of the first transcontinental
-railroad which postponed that project for ten years
-possibly cost the country more than the struggle to preserve
-the Union. But that is all forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>After 1860 the momentum of growth, notwithstanding the
-war and two terrible panics, was cumulative. In the next fifty
-years, down to 1910, we built half as much railroad mileage
-as all the rest of the world. Population trebled. This fact
-stands alone in the data of vital statistics. Yet even more remarkable
-were the alterations of human activity. The number
-of city dwellers increased 3½ times faster than the population;
-the number of wage-earners, 2 times faster; clerks, salesmen,
-and typists, 6½ times faster; banks, 7 times faster;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_404">404</span>
-corporations, 6½ times faster; miners, 3 times faster; transportation-workers,
-20 times faster, and the number of independent
-farmers decreased. Wealth in this time increased
-from about $500 to more than $1,500 <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">per capita</i>.</p>
-
-<p>If America in its present state of being had been revealed
-to the imagination of any hard-headed economist in, say, 1850,
-as a mirage or dream, he would have said: “There is in all
-the world not enough labour and capital to do it.” He could
-not have guessed how the power of both would be multiplied.</p>
-
-<p>First there was the enormous simple addition to the labour
-supply in the form of immigration. Then the evolution of
-machinery and time-saving methods incredibly increased the
-productivity of labour per human unit. Thirdly, the application
-of power to agriculture and the opening of all that virgin
-country west of the Mississippi to bonanza-farming so greatly
-increased the production of food per unit of rural labour that
-at length it required only half the population to feed the whole.
-The other half was free. Business and industry absorbed
-it.</p>
-
-<p>Of what happened at the same time to capital, in which term
-we include also credit, there could have been no prescience
-at all. Even now when we think of building a railroad, a telephone
-system, or an automobile factory the thought is that
-it will take capital, as of course it will at first, but one should
-consider also how anything that increases the velocity with
-which goods are exchanged, or reduces the time in which a
-given amount of business may be transacted, adds to the functioning
-power of capital. To illustrate this: the merchant of
-1850 did business very largely with his own capital unaided.
-He was obliged to invest heavily in merchandise stocks. The
-turn-over was slow. His margin of profit necessarily had to
-be large. But with the development of transportation and
-means of communication—the railroad, telegraph, and telephone—and
-with the parallel growth of banking facilities, the
-conditions of doing business were fundamentally changed. All
-the time-factors were foreshortened.</p>
-
-<p>A merchant now has to lock up much less capital in merchandise,
-since his stocks are easily and swiftly replenished.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_405">405</span>
-The turn-over is much faster because people using suburban
-railways and street-cars go oftener to shop. And not only is
-it possible for these reasons to do a larger volume of business
-with a given amount of capital, but the merchant now borrows
-two-thirds, maybe three-quarters, of his capital at the bank
-in the form of credit. The same is true of the manufacturer.
-Formerly he locked up his capital, first in raw materials and
-then in finished products to be sold in season as the demand
-was; and there was great risk of loss in this way of matching
-supply to an estimated demand. Now he sells his goods before
-he makes them, borrows credit at the bank to buy his raw
-materials, even to pay his labour through the processes of
-manufacture, and when the customer pays on delivery of the
-goods with credit which he also has borrowed at the bank, the
-manufacturer settles with <em>his</em> bank and keeps the difference.
-An exporter was formerly one who bought commodities with
-his own money, loaded them on ship, sent them on chance to
-a foreign market, and waited for his capital to come back
-with a profit. Now he first sells the goods to a foreign customer
-by cable, then buys them on credit, loads them on ship,
-sells the bill of lading to a bank, uses the proceeds to pay for
-the goods, and counts his profit. All large business now is
-transacted in this way with phantom capital, called credit;
-money is employed to settle differences only.</p>
-
-<p>The effect of this revolution of methods upon the morals
-and manners of business was tremendous. It destroyed the
-aristocracy of business by throwing the field open to men
-without capital. Traders and brokers over-ran it. The man
-doing business on borrowed capital could out-trade one doing
-business on his own. The more he borrowed, the harder he
-could trade. Salesmanship became a specialized, conscienceless
-art. There was no rule but to take all the traffic would
-bear: let the buyer look out. Dishonesty in business became
-so gross that it had to be sublimated in the national sense of
-humour. There are many still living who remember what
-shopping was like even in the largest city stores when nobody
-dreamed of paying the price first asked and counter-higgling
-was a universal custom. Indeed, so ingrained it was that when
-A. T. Stewart in New York announced the experiment of treating<span class="pagenum" id="Page_406">406</span>
-all buyers alike on a one-price basis his ruin was predicted
-by the whole merchant community.</p>
-
-<p>As credit both increases competition and enables a larger
-business to be done on a small base of invested capital, the
-margin of profit in business tends to fall. Under conditions
-of intense rivalry among merchants and manufacturers operating
-more and more with phantom capital the margin of
-profit did fall until it was very thin indeed. This led to the
-abasement of goods by adulteration and tricks of manufacture,
-which became at length so great an evil that the government
-had to interfere with pure-food acts and laws forbidding
-wilful misrepresentation.</p>
-
-<p>There was a limit beyond which the cost of production could
-not be reduced by degradation of quality. It was impossible
-to control prices with competition so wild and spontaneous and
-with cheapness the touchword of success. Therefore the wages
-of business were low, and things apparently had come to an
-impasse. Yet out of this chaos arose what now we know as
-big business. The idea was simple—mass production of
-standardized foods. The small, fierce units of business began
-to be amalgamated. As society is integrated by steps—clan,
-tribe, nation, State—so big business passed through mergers,
-combines, and trusts toward the goal of monopoly.</p>
-
-<p>When a number of competing manufacturers unite to produce
-standard commodities in quantity, much duplication of
-effort is eliminated, time-saving methods are possible as not
-before, the cost of production is reduced. There are other
-advantages. They are stronger than they were separately, not
-only as buyers of labour, raw materials, and transportation,
-but as borrowers of capital. The individual or firm is the
-customer of a bank. The corporation makes a partnership
-with finance.</p>
-
-<p>Now a curious thing happens. The corporation with its
-mass production restores the quality of goods. It is responsible
-for its products and guarantees them by brands, labels and
-trade-marks. Sugar and oatmeal come out of the anonymous
-barrel behind the grocer’s counter and go into attractive cartons
-on his shelf, bearing the name of the producer. Gloves,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_407">407</span>
-shirts, stockings, cutlery, furniture, meat products, jams,
-watches, fabrics, everything in fact becomes standardized by
-name and price and is advertised by the producer directly to
-the public over the retailer’s head, so that the small retailer is
-no longer a merchant in the old sense but a grumbling commission-man.
-Big business has delivered itself from the impasse;
-it has recovered control of its profits; but now the retailer’s
-margin of profit tends to become fixed. What does the
-retailer do? He applies the same principle to the last act of
-selling. Enter the chain-store. Obviously a corporation owning
-a chain of several hundred stores and working, like the
-manufacturer, with borrowed capital, is stronger than any one
-retailer to bargain with the powerful producers, and as the
-chain-store tends to displace the little retailer a balance is
-restored between the business of production and the business
-of retailing. Mass production is met by mass selling. The
-consumer as the last subject may resort to legislation for his
-protection.</p>
-
-<p>Big business could not have evolved in this way without
-the aid of the railroads. Their dilemma was similar. Strife
-and competition had ruined their profits. To begin with, nobody
-knew what it cost to produce transportation. When a
-new line was opened it made rates according to circumstances.
-At points where it met water competition it charged very little,
-sometimes less than the cost of its fuel, and at points where
-there was no competition it charged all the traffic would stand.
-Then as competitive railroad-building excessively increased the
-high rates steadily fell. Once they got started people were
-obsessed to make railroads. They made them for speculative
-reasons, for feudal reasons, for political reasons, for any reason
-at all. Two men might quarrel in Wall Street, and one would
-build a thousand miles of railroad to spite the other—build it
-with the proceeds of shares sold to the public or hypothecated
-at the bank. Then there would be two roads to divide the
-business of one. Railroads under these conditions were unscientifically
-planned and over-built. The profit was rather
-in the building than in the working of them. There was scandal
-both ways. Quantities of fictitious capital were created<span class="pagenum" id="Page_408">408</span>
-and sold to the public. And when a railroad was built it became
-the plaything of its traffic manager, who conspired with
-other traffic managers to sell favours to shippers and to invent
-disastrous rate-wars in order to profit by the fall of shares
-on the stock market.</p>
-
-<p>Rates could not be raised or held up, owing to the irresponsible
-nature of the competition. Transportation is a commodity
-that cannot be adulterated. How was the profit to be
-restored in this field of business? Why, by the same method
-as in industry. That is, by mass production.</p>
-
-<p>Some one discovered that once you got a loaded train out
-of the terminal and rolling on the right-of-way it cost almost
-nothing to keep it moving. There was no money in hauling
-small lots of freight short distances at the highest rates that
-could be charged; but there was profit in moving large quantities
-of freight in full cars over long distances at very low
-rates. At this the railroad people went mad over the long,
-heavy haul. Here was industry seeking to concentrate itself
-in fewer places for purposes of mass production; and here were
-the railroads wanting masses of freight to move long distances.
-Their problems coincided.</p>
-
-<p>Result: mass production gravitates to those far-apart long-haul
-points to get the benefit of low rates, there is congestion
-of industrial population at those points, industry at intermediate
-points is penalized by higher freight rates, and the
-railroads henceforth equip themselves with mass tonnage primarily
-in view. You begin now to have steel towns, meat
-towns, flour towns, textile towns, garment towns, and so on.
-That interdependence of communities and geographical sections
-which makes business is in full development.</p>
-
-<p>However, the second state of the railroad is worse than the
-first. It is overwhelmed by the monster it has suckled. It is
-at the mercy of a few big shippers, masters of mass production,
-who bully it, extort lower and lower rates still, and at
-length secret rebates, under threat of transferring their tonnage
-to another railroad or in some cases of building their own
-railroad, which now they are powerful enough to do. The railroad
-yields; and whereas before only such industry as survived
-at intermediate points was penalized by higher freight rates,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_409">409</span>
-now all industry outside of big business is at a disadvantage,
-since big business is receiving secret benefits from the railroads.</p>
-
-<p>There was no philosophy in any of this, not even a high
-order of intelligence. The will of business is anarchistic; its
-religion is fatalism. If let alone, it will seek its profit by any
-means that serve and then view the consequences as acts of
-Providence.</p>
-
-<p>It has been noted that big business, going in for mass production,
-restored the honesty of goods. The motive was not
-ethical. It paid. The public’s good will toward a brand or a
-trade-mark was an asset that could be capitalized, sometimes
-for more than plant and equipment, and the shares
-representing such capitalization could be sold to the public on
-the Stock Exchange. But what was gained for morality in the
-honesty of goods was lost again in new forms of dishonesty.
-Standard Oil products were always cheap and honest; its oil
-was never watered. But the means by which the Standard Oil
-Company gained its dangerous trade eminence were dishonest,
-and the trust was dissolved for that reason by the United States
-Supreme Court. It happens to be only the most notable instance.
-There were and are still many others—combines and
-trusts whose products are honest but whose tradeways are
-either illegal or ethically repugnant.</p>
-
-<p>One cannot say that business is either honest or dishonest.
-It is both. Evidence of permanent gain in a kind of intrinsic
-commercial honesty is abundant. Wild-cat banking has disappeared.
-A simple book entry between merchants is as good
-as a promissory note. The integrity of merchandise now is a
-trade custom. Vulgar misrepresentations have ceased save in
-the slums of business. The practice of making open prices
-to all buyers alike, wholesale and retail, is universal. It is
-no longer possible to print railroad shares surreptitiously overnight
-and flood the Stock Exchange with them the next morning,
-as once happened in Erie. Nowhere is character more
-esteemed than in business.</p>
-
-<p>And yet, in spite of all this and parallel with it, runs a bitter
-feud between society and business. People are continually
-acting upon big business through the agencies of government
-to make it behave. What is the explanation?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_410">410</span></p>
-
-<p>Well, in the first place, the improvement in commercial honesty
-has been owing not so much to ethical enlightenment as
-to internal necessity. Big business must do its work on credit;
-there is no other way. Therefore credit is a sacred thing, to
-be preserved by all means. Men know that unless they are
-scrupulous in fulfilling their obligations toward it, the system
-will collapse. As the use of credit increases the code of business
-become more rigid. It must. One who breaks faith with
-the code is not merely dishonest, man to man; he is an enemy
-of credit.</p>
-
-<p>If a stock-market coterie of this day could print Erie shares
-without notice and sell them the public would suffer of course
-but Wall Street would suffer much more. Its own affairs
-would fall into hopeless disorder. That kind of thing cannot
-happen again. The code has been improved. You now may
-be sure that anything you buy on the Stock Exchange has been
-regularly issued and listed. No institution is more jealous of
-the integrity of its transactions—transactions as such. Purchases
-and sales involving millions are consummated with a nod
-of the head and simple dishonesty is unknown. Nevertheless,
-it is a notorious fact that the amount of money nowadays lost
-on the Stock Exchange by the unwary public is vastly greater
-than in Jay Gould’s time. There is, you see, an important difference
-between formal and moral honesty.</p>
-
-<p>Secondly, business morality is a term without meaning.
-There is no such thing. Business is neither moral nor immoral.
-It represents man’s acquisitive instinct acting outside
-of humanistic motives. Morals are personal and social. Business
-is impersonal and unsocial.</p>
-
-<p>So far we come clear. Only now, what shall be said of the
-man in business? He is not a race apart. He may be any of
-us. How then shall we account for the fact that those evils
-and tyrannies of big business with which the Congress, the
-Interstate Commerce Commission, the Department of Justice,
-the Federal Trade Board, and other agencies of the social will
-keep open war are not inhibited at the head by an innate social
-sense? Does the business man lose that sense? Or by
-reason of the material in which he works does he become an
-unsocial being? No. The answer is that the kind of business<span class="pagenum" id="Page_411">411</span>
-we now are talking about is not conducted by men. It is
-conducted by corporations.</p>
-
-<p>A thing of policy purely, with only legal responsibilities and
-no personality, free from hope of heaven or fear of hell, the
-corporation is both a perfect instrument for the impersonal
-ends of business and a cave of refuge for the conscience. Business
-by corporations is highly responsible in all that pertains
-to business. Business by corporations is in all ethical respects
-anonymous. A corporation does many things which no one of
-its directors would do as an individual. The head of a corporation
-says: “If it were my own business, I should handle this
-labour problem very differently. But it isn’t. I am a trustee,
-answerable to five thousand stockholders for the security of
-their dividends.” Each of the five thousand stockholders says:
-“It isn’t my business. I am merely one of a great number of
-stockholders. What can I do about it?”</p>
-
-<p>Nobody is personally responsible.</p>
-
-<p>More than two-thirds of our national wealth is owned by
-corporations. They control at some point every process of economic
-life. Their power is so great that many have wondered
-whether in time it might not overwhelm popular government.
-Yet in all this realm of power there is nowhere that sense of
-personal moral liability which is acknowledged between men
-and without which civilized human relationships would become
-utterly impossible. A corporation is like a State in this respect:
-it cannot, if it would, make moral decisions. The right to do
-that is not delegated by people to a State nor by stockholders
-to a corporation. Both therefore are limited to material decisions.</p>
-
-<p>It is probably owing as much to the power-thirsty, law-baiting
-temperament of the American in business as to the
-magnitude of the work to be done that the use of the corporation,
-like the use of labour-saving machinery, has been carried
-further here than in any other country. Railroads naturally
-were the first great corporations. The amount of capital required
-to build a railroad is beyond the resources of any small
-group of individuals; it must be gathered from a large number,
-who become shareholders. The original railroads were subsidized
-by the government with loans of money and enormous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_412">412</span>
-grants of land. Industrial and trading corporations came
-later. For a long time America was to all corporations a Garden
-of Eden. They were encouraged, not precisely that they
-were presumed to be innocent but because they were indispensable.
-Then they ate of the Tree of Political Power and
-the feud was on. When people began really to fear them
-their roots were already very deep and touched nearly everything
-that was solid. The sinister alliance between big business
-and high finance was accomplished.</p>
-
-<p>One of the absurdities of the case was and is that any State
-according to its own laws may grant corporation-charters
-which carry rights of eminent domain in all other states. The
-Standard Oil Company was once dissolved in Ohio. It took
-out a new charter in New Jersey, and went on as before, even
-in Ohio.</p>
-
-<p>Every attempt to reform their oppressive ways by law they
-have resisted under the constitution as an attack upon the
-rights of property. And there has always been much confusion
-as to what the law was. In one case it was construed by
-the United States Supreme Court to mean that bigness itself,
-the mere power of evil, was illegal whether it had been exercised
-or not; in another, that each instance must be treated
-on its merits by a rule of reason, and, in still another, that the
-potential power to restrain trade in a monopolistic manner
-was not in itself illegal provided it had never been used.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless the doubt as to which should control the other—the
-State the corporations or the corporations the State—has
-been resolved. Gradually the authority of the State has
-been asserted. The hand of the corporation in national politics
-is branded. The Federal Government’s control over the
-rates and practices of the railroads is complete; so likewise is
-the control of many of the several separate States over the
-rates and practices of public-utility corporations. Federal
-authority over the tradeways of the great industrial and trading
-corporations whose operations are either so large or so essential,
-to economic life as to become clothed with public interest
-is far advanced; and supervision of profits is beginning.</p>
-
-<p>Now what manner of profit and loss account may we write
-with American business?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_413">413</span></p>
-
-<p>Given to begin with an environment superb, it has made
-wealth available to an aggregate extent hitherto unimaginable
-in the world. But in doing this it has created a conscious, implacable
-proletariat in revolt against private profit.</p>
-
-<p>In production it has brought about a marvellous economy of
-human effort. At the same time it has created colossal forms
-of social waste. It wastes the spirit by depriving the individual
-of that sense of personal achievement, that feeling of
-participation in the final result, which is the whole joy of
-craftsmanship, so that the mind is bored and the heart is
-seared. It wastes all things prodigally in the effort to create
-new and extravagant wants, reserving its most dazzling rewards
-for him that can make two glittering baubles to sell
-where only one was sold before. It wastes the living machine
-in recurring periods of frightful and unnecessary idleness.</p>
-
-<p>For the distribution of goods it has perfected a web of exchange,
-so elaborate that the breaking of one strand is a disaster
-and yet so trustworthy that we take its conveniences
-every day for granted and never worry. But the adjustment
-of supply to demand is so rude and uncontrolled that we
-suffer periodic economic calamities, extreme trade depression,
-and social distress, because there has been an over-production
-of some things at a price-impasse between producer and consumer.</p>
-
-<p>In the field of finance and credit it has evolved a mechanism
-of the highest dynamic intensity known; yet the speculative
-abuse of credit is an unmitigated scandal, and nothing whatever
-has been done to eliminate or diminish those alternations
-of high and low prices, inflation and deflation, which produce
-panics and perilous political disorder. On the contrary, business
-continues fast in the antique superstition that such things
-happen in obedience to inexorable laws.</p>
-
-<p>In the Great War American business amazed the world, itself
-included. In 1914 the United States was a debtor nation,
-owing Europe 3 billions of dollars. By the end of 1920 we
-were the largest creditor nation on earth, other nations owing
-us 15 billions. This means simply that in six years this country
-produced in excess of its own needs and sent abroad commodities
-amounting to 18 billions of dollars. In 1921, to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_414">414</span>
-naïve astonishment of business, the foreign demand for American
-goods slumped because foreign countries had not the
-means to go on buying at any such rate. The result was an
-acute panic in prices here, trade prostration, unemployment,
-and sounds of despair. The case was stated by leaders of
-business and finance in these ominous terms: “America is
-over-equipped. It has the capacity to produce more of everything
-than it needs. Therefore unless we continuously sell our
-surplus abroad, unless the American government will lend foreign
-countries the credit with which to buy our excess production,
-prosperity is shattered. Factories will shut up, fields will
-lie fallow, labour will suffer for want of work. Moreover, we
-are threatened with a deluge of foreign goods, for presently
-the countries that owe us 18 billions of dollars will be trying
-to pay us with commodities. If we open our markets to their
-goods our own industries will be ruined. So we must have
-high tariffs to protect American producers from the competition
-of foreign merchandise.”</p>
-
-<p>Ruined by over-plenty!</p>
-
-<p>We are equipped to produce more of the goods that satisfy
-human wants than we can use, our command over the labour
-of foreign countries by reason of the debt they owe us is enormous,
-and <em>business desponds</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Attend. To keep our prosperity we must sell away our
-surplus, or if necessary give it away to foreign countries on
-credit, and then protect ourselves against their efforts to repay
-us! The simple absurdity of this proposition is self-evident.
-We mention it only for what it signifies. And it signifies that
-business is a blind, momentous sequence, with extravagant reflex
-powers of accommodation and extension and almost no faculty
-of original imagination.</p>
-
-<p>American business despairing at over-production and the
-American Indian shivering on top of the Pennsylvania coalfields—these
-are twin ironies.</p>
-
-<p>John Law’s Mississippi Bubble dream three centuries ago
-was a phantasy of escape from the boredom of toil. The
-bubble itself has been captured. That is the story of American
-business. But who has escaped, save always a few at the
-expense of many? There may be in fact no other way. Still,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_415">415</span>
-the phantasy will not lie. And nobody knows for sure what
-will happen when business is no longer a feudal-minded thing,
-with rights and institutions apart, seeking its own profit as the
-consummate end, and perceives itself in the light of a subordinate
-human function, justified by service.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Garet Garrett</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_417" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_417">417</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ENGINEERING">ENGINEERING</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">American</span> engineering made its beginning almost immediately
-after the end of the War for Independence.
-The pursuits of the colonists under British domination
-were mainly agricultural. Manufacturing was systematically
-thwarted in order that the Colonies might become a market
-for the finished goods of England. Objection to this form of
-sabotage subsequently developed into one of the main causes
-of the Revolutionary War. It was but natural, therefore, as
-soon as the artificial restrictions imposed upon Colonial enterprise
-were removed, for the new citizens of America to
-devise machinery, build roads and canals, and plan cities.</p>
-
-<p>The early engineers who carried on this work were seldom
-formally trained. They were little more than higher types of
-artisans. It was only after thirty-odd years of discussion and
-agitation that the first scientific schools were established in
-this country—two in number. And it was only after the enactment
-of the Morrill Act by Congress (1862) that formal
-engineering training as we know it to-day was put on a firm
-national basis. By 1870, 866 engineers had been graduated
-from American technical schools and colleges. The real advent
-of the typical American engineer, however, has only occurred
-since 1870. At present he is being supplied to the industries
-of the country at the rate of 5,000 a year.</p>
-
-<p>The coming of the formally trained technologist or scientist
-of industry lagged somewhat behind the development of the
-industrial revolution. This was particularly true in America.
-Originally all attention was centered on the training of
-so-called civil engineers, i.e., canal, bridge, road, dam and
-building designers and constructors. The rapid rise of the mechanical
-arts after the Civil War focused attention on the
-training of engineers expert in manufacturing. To-day the
-mechanical and electrical engineers are more numerous than
-any other group and have far outstripped the civil engineers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_418">418</span></p>
-
-<p>The original function of the engineer, especially in the first
-days of his systematic training, was to deal scientifically with
-purely mechanical problems. Thus the oft quoted definition
-of the British Institution of Civil Engineers that “Engineering
-is the art of directing the great sources of power in nature
-for the use and convenience of man” reveals quite clearly
-the legitimate field within which the engineer was supposed to
-operate. He was to harness the untamed energies of nature.
-That this conception was then sufficient, and that the careers
-of most engineers were shaped accordingly, is hardly to be disputed.
-Nor, judging from the achievement of American engineers
-in the last fifty years, can it be contended that their
-function was conceived in too narrow a light. Undoubtedly,
-the problems of mechanical production, power-creation and
-transmission, bridge and building construction, and railway
-and marine transportation, during this period were largely material
-ones, and the opportunities for their solution were especially
-good. To these the engineers directed their attention.
-Thanks to their training, technique, and accumulated experience,
-they became more and more successful in solving them.
-At the same time, their relative freedom of thought and action
-with reference to technological problems brought them into
-more or less coherent groups which, as time went on, began to
-conceive a larger function for the engineer—service to society
-as a whole rather than the solving of mere concrete, specific
-difficulties.</p>
-
-<p>For while the material problems of production are undoubtedly
-as important as ever, the present-day industrial system
-has begun to reveal new problems which the engineer in America
-has, to a limited extent, come to realize must be faced.
-These new problems are not material in the old sense of the
-word; they concern themselves with the control and administration
-of the units of our producing system. Their nature is
-psychological and economic.</p>
-
-<p>Certain groups in the American engineering profession have
-become quite conscious that these deeper problems are not being
-solved; at the same time they consider it a necessary duty
-to help in their solution, inasmuch as the engineer, they feel,
-is peculiarly fitted to see his way clearly through them. Thus<span class="pagenum" id="Page_419">419</span>
-is being split off from the main body of old-line engineers, a
-new wing not so much concerned with wringing power from
-nature as with adjusting power to legitimate social needs. As
-against the old engineer, concerned primarily with design and
-construction, there is to be recognized the new engineer, concerned
-mainly with industrial management.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, however, a strict evaluation of the engineer’s
-status with reference to the influence he may have on the solution
-of these social and economic problems causes serious
-doubts to arise regarding his ultimate possibilities in this field.
-Despite his great value and recognized indispensability as a
-technologist, expert in problems of materials and processes of
-manufacture, he can at best but serve in an advisory capacity
-on questions affecting the division of the national surplus or
-the control of industry. Nevertheless, it is of fundamental
-significance that the American engineering profession has of
-late considerably widened the scope of the British Institution
-of Civil Engineers’ definition of engineering, namely, to the
-effect that “Engineering is the science of controlling the forces
-and utilizing the materials of nature for the benefit of man <em>and
-the art of organizing and of directing human activities in connection
-therewith</em>.” The implications of this much broader
-definition, if widely accepted, will bring the American engineers
-sooner or later squarely before a fundamental issue.</p>
-
-<p>The ideal of service is profoundly inherent in the profession
-of engineering. But so, also, is the ideal of creative work.
-The achievements of engineering enterprise are easily visualized
-and understood, and from them the engineer is wont to derive
-a great deal of satisfaction. Recently, however, the exactions
-of the modern complex economic system, in which the engineer
-finds himself relatively unimportant compared with, say, the
-financier, have contrived to rob him of this satisfaction. And
-as his creative instincts have been thwarted, he has turned
-upon business enterprise itself a sharp and inquiring eye.
-From isolated criticisms of wastes and inefficiencies in industry,
-for instance, he has not found it a long or difficult step to
-the investigation of industry on a national basis for the purpose
-of exposing technical and managerial shortcomings.</p>
-
-<p>It appears, however, that the majority of American engineers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_420">420</span>
-to-day believe that their position as a class is such that
-they can effectively maintain an impartial position when differences
-which arise between large economic groups of society
-such as those of the merchant, the manufacturer, the labourer,
-the farmer, although these differences frequently lead to economic
-waste and loss. At all events, it is on this basis that
-attempts are being made to formulate a general policy for
-engineers as a class to pursue. It is very doubtful, however,
-whether a group such as the engineers, constituting the “indispensable
-general staff of industry,” can long take an impartial
-attitude towards two such conflicting forces as capital and
-labour so long as they (the engineers) adhere to the ideal of
-maximum service and efficiency. The pickets of the fence
-may eventually prove unduly sharp.</p>
-
-<p>A minority group which believes otherwise has already organized
-into an international federation of technicians affiliated
-with the standard organized labour movement of America.
-This group holds that the engineer is a wage-earner like all
-other industrial workers, and that his economic welfare in many
-instances is no better than that of ordinary wage-earners.
-In addition, this group maintains that in the last analysis it is
-flatly impossible for engineers to take an impartial attitude in
-the struggle between capital and labour. Hence they advocate
-the engineer affiliating with the organized labour movement
-like other wage earners and, in times of crisis, throwing his influence
-with the workers of industry.</p>
-
-<p>The organized labour movement of America has indicated
-in clear terms its estimate of the American engineer’s true
-value and opportunity. The American Federation of Labour
-in 1919 issued the following statement:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“To promote further the production of an adequate supply of the
-world’s needs for use and higher standards of life, we urge that there
-be established co-operation between the scientist of industry and the
-representatives of the organized workers.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This conviction has also been expressed in the following
-terms:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The trades-union movement of America understands fully the
-necessity for adequate production of the necessities of life. American<span class="pagenum" id="Page_421">421</span>
-labour understands, perhaps more fully than do American statesmen,
-the needs of the world in this hour, and it is exerting every
-effort to see that those needs are met with intelligence and with
-promptness. The question of increased productivity is not a question
-of putting upon the toilers a more severe strain; it is a question
-of vast fundamental changes in the management of industry; a question
-of the elimination of outworn policies; a question of the introduction
-of the very best in machinery and methods of management.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The fundamental significance of these attitudes of the engineers
-and the organized workers of the country will perhaps
-be better understood when it is realized how indispensable the
-engineers have become in the conduct of industrial affairs
-to-day. While virtually the product of the last fifty years,
-they have already fallen heir to one of the most strategic positions
-in society. To them are entrusted the real “trade secrets”
-of industry. Only they understand how far the intricate
-material processes of manufacture are interdependent, and how
-they can be kept in harmony. The engineers have the skill
-and the understanding which is absolutely necessary for industrial
-management. Without their guidance the present highly
-complicated system of production would quickly tumble into
-chaos.</p>
-
-<p>The ownership of industry has frequently been suggested
-as the key to the true emancipation of the great mass of workers
-of a nation. Leastwise many theoretical arguments on
-the process of workers’ liberation have been premised on the
-necessity of eventually liquidating the institution of private
-property. How futile such a programme is without recognizing
-the indispensable part which technical and managerial
-skill plays in any system of production has been emphasized
-again and again by individuals, notably in Russia and Italy,
-where the experiment of securing production without the
-assistance of adequate technical control has been tried. In
-fact, the whole question of property control is secondary when
-once the true value of engineering management is understood.
-In so far as the American workers see this, and make it possible
-for American engineers to co-operate with them in their
-struggle for liberation, will they make the task of the worker
-more easy and avoid the frequent recurrence of wasteful and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_422">422</span>
-often tragic conflict. The burden, however, is equally upon
-the shoulders of the engineer to meet labour half way in this
-enterprise.</p>
-
-<p>It is very much to be doubted if most American engineers
-really have a clear understanding of the position in which
-they find themselves, beyond a general conception of their
-apparent impartiality. The progressive economic concepts
-and activities which have been outlined, while advanced by
-representatives of national associations of engineers, are not
-necessarily the reflection of the great mass of American engineers
-to-day, over 200,000 strong. Nevertheless, it is fortunate
-that an otherwise conservative and socially timid body
-of individuals, such as the engineers frequently have been in
-the past, should now find itself represented by a few spokesmen
-at least who are able to promulgate clear statements on
-fundamental issues. The rank and file of engineers have a
-long road to travel before they will be in a position to command
-adequate consideration for their basic ideals and purposes
-as expressed in their new definition of engineering, and
-as proposed by some of their leaders.</p>
-
-<p>It is, indeed, seriously to be doubted if many engineers
-of America have really had the training to grasp the relation
-of their position to the economic developments of to-day.
-Conventional engineering education has been entirely too narrow
-in its purpose. It has succeeded in turning out good
-technical practitioners, not far-seeing economic statesmen. In
-recent years many engineering schools have placed emphasis
-on what has aptly been termed “The business features of engineering
-practice.” This, while conceivably a good thing from
-the standpoint of the limits within which engineering enterprise
-must ordinarily function to-day, is bound to over-emphasize
-the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">status quo</i>, and so confine the vision of the engineer.</p>
-
-<p>Engineers in this country have frequently taken a sort of
-pharisaic attitude on the desirability—offhand—of delegating
-the entire running of things human to technical experts. While
-such experts may usually have been quite successful in operating
-engineering enterprises, it hardly follows that this necessarily
-qualifies them for the wholesale conduct of the affairs of
-society.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_423">423</span></p>
-
-<p>Yet the demand on the part of certain engineers for a more
-fundamental participation in the conduct of the larger economic
-and political affairs of society should be construed as
-a healthy sign. It is an outgrowth of an intellectual unrest
-among the profession, precipitated by the thwarting of a genuine
-desire to build and serve. This unrest, in the absence of
-a constructive outlet combined with the past failure of engineering
-education to provide a real intellectual background,
-has resulted from time to time in some amusing phenomena.
-Thus not a few engineers have developed a sort of symbolism
-or mysticism, expressed in the terminology of their profession,
-with a view to building a new heaven and a new earth whose
-directing head they propose to be. From this they derive a
-peculiar satisfaction and perhaps temporary inspiration, and
-incidentally they often seem to confound laymen who do not
-understand the meaning of their terms. Instead of deriving
-comfort from symbolic speculations and futurist engineering
-diagrams, one would rather expect engineers to be realists,
-especially in the larger affairs of their profession. The seriousness
-with which the speculations concerning “space-binding”
-and “time-binding” have been taken is an example of how
-engineers with their present one-sided intellectual development
-may seize upon metaphysical cobwebs for spiritual solace in
-their predicament.</p>
-
-<p>Another aspect of the intellectual limitations of many American
-engineers is revealed by some of the controversies which
-engage the technical societies and the technical periodicals.
-A notable and recurring instance is the debate concerning the
-relative merits of steam and electrical operation of railways.
-The real question which underlies replacing a going system
-with one which is better but more costly in capital outlay is
-primarily economic in nature. Consequently such a change is
-contingent upon a revised distribution of the national surplus
-rather than on the comparative merits of detail parts. This
-fact seldom seems to get home to the engineers. They have
-been arguing for the last fifteen years the relative advantages
-of this or that detail, failing all the while to understand that
-the best, in the large, from an engineering standpoint, can
-be secured only when unrestricted, free enterprise has given<span class="pagenum" id="Page_424">424</span>
-way to some form of enterprise regulated principally in the
-interest of public service.</p>
-
-<p>The profession of engineering, especially in America, is still
-young enough not to have become ridden with tradition and
-convention. It has developed rapidly along essentially pragmatic
-though perhaps narrow lines. Certainly it is not bound
-and circumscribed by precedent and convention like the legal
-profession, or even the medical profession. Above all, it derives
-its inspiration from powerful physical realities, and this
-constitutes its bulwark.</p>
-
-<p>What the profession really lacks are two fundamentals, absolutely
-necessary for any group strategically located and
-desirous of leadership in society. These are: (1) an intellectual
-background based squarely upon a comprehensive study
-of the economic and political institutions of society, their history,
-growth, and function, together with a study of the larger
-aspects of human behaviour and rights; and, (2) the development
-of a facility for intelligent criticism, especially of engineering
-and economic enterprises. A wholesome intellectual
-background is necessary to interpret the new position and its
-prerogatives which the application of science has created for
-the engineer. A development of the critical faculty is desirable
-in order to enable him to detect the blandishments of
-cult, the temptations of formulas and systems expressed in
-indefinable abstractions, and the pitfalls of the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">status quo</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The responsibility for the American engineer’s function in
-society rests largely upon the schools which train him. Engineering
-education in America has done its task relatively well
-considered from the simple technical point of view. Of late,
-progressive engineering educators have stressed the necessity
-for paying more attention to the humanistic studies in the engineering
-curriculum. The beginning made in this respect is,
-however, entirely too meagre to warrant much hope that
-younger American engineers will soon acquire either that intellectual
-background or genuine critical faculty which will
-entitle them to a larger share of responsibility for the affairs
-of men.</p>
-
-<p>The most hopeful sign in this direction is rather the fusion
-of the engineers into a large federation of societies, with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_425">425</span>
-service to the community, State, and Nation as their motto;
-a growing tendency, collectively, at least, to investigate the
-conduct of national industrial enterprises; and, finally, an attempt
-at a rapprochement, in the interest of society, between
-labour and the engineers. Ere long these developments will
-reflect themselves in the schools of engineering, and then, it is
-reasonable to expect, will the process of developing a truly
-worthy class of industrial leaders in this country really make
-its beginning. In America to-day no such leadership exists.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">O. S. Beyer, Jr.</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_427" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_427">427</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="NERVES">NERVES</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Young</span> as America is, she is nevertheless old enough to
-have known the time when there were no such things
-as nerves. Our earliest settlers and colonists, our proverbially
-hardy pioneers apparently managed to get along with a very
-modest repertory of diseases. They died, if not from malnutrition
-or exposure or from Indians, then from some old-fashioned,
-heaven-sent seizure or sudden pain, not to mention
-from “old age,” long a favourite diagnosis of a pious and
-not too inquisitive school of medicine even where the patient’s
-age had to be entered by the coroner as of forty or thereabouts.
-As for the various forms of nervousness which belong
-to our age of indulgence and luxury, they were unknown to
-those sturdier times, and would undoubtedly have put their
-unhappy victims under the quick suspicion of having had forbidden
-converse with the Devil.</p>
-
-<p>If, nevertheless, we feel justified in assuming that this
-golden age of health and disease probably hid beneath its tinsel
-a good many of the nervous afflictions which had already
-made the Middle Ages so interesting, we must bear in mind
-that the pioneer neurotic of those days had at his command a
-number of disguises and evasions to which his fellow-sufferer
-of to-day can no longer have recourse. One of his favourite
-expedients for concealing his neurotic maladjustment was to
-take refuge in some form of religion or rather in some new
-variation of religious belief or practice, for it is, of course,
-not claimed here that religion itself can be exhaustively explained
-as a manifestation of nervous maladjustment. But the
-colonial period was an era when it was still good form, so
-to speak, for a neurosis to express itself in some religious
-peculiarity, and as this was a country without monasteries
-(which had proved to be such a haven for the neurotically
-afflicted during the Middle Ages), the neurotic was forced to
-exhibit his neo-religionism in the open. Often he blossomed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_428">428</span>
-forth in some new form of religious segregation, which allowed
-him to compensate for his social defect and often gave him
-positive advantages.</p>
-
-<p>The neurotic legacy which he thus bequeathed to the nation
-can still be seen all around us to-day in the extraordinary
-multiplicity of religious variations, not to say eccentricities,
-which dot the theological heavens in America. For the neurotic
-as a religion founder—or better, inventor—quickly gathered
-similarly inclined adherents, formed a sect, and moved a
-little further West, so that the country was rather plentifully
-sown with strange creeds. He was thus freed from the criticism
-which would have overtaken him in a more settled society
-and his neurotic disguise remained undetected to a degree
-no longer possible to-day. For if nowadays we still occasionally
-encounter a brand-new and crassly individual religion all
-registered and patented like any temperance elixir, we usually
-discover that its prophet is either a defective or even an illiterate
-person who has distorted some biblical text in favour of
-a bizarre interpretation, or else a psychopathic individual who
-already has highly systematized ideas of the delusioned type.
-This class of neurotic has tended to disappear by somewhat
-the same process through which the more flamboyant type of
-hysteric such as flourished in the Middle Ages has gradually
-succumbed to progressive exposure—an analogy to which I
-refer with some diffidence in the face of one of the supreme
-ironies of the 20th century, namely, the canonization of Joan
-of Arc. But that lapse into the darkness of mediævalism is
-probably to be explained as a by-product of the war mind.</p>
-
-<p>The other great loophole for the early American neurotic
-was purely geographical. He could always move on. In view
-of the tendency towards social avoidance so characteristic of
-the neurotic, this was of inestimable advantage. It is, of
-course, generally supposed that when the embryonic American
-trekked Westward it was either in response to some external
-pressure of political oppression or religious intolerance or to
-the glad, free call of wider horizons and more alluring opportunities,
-as was the case with the earliest colonists in their flight
-from Europe. In both cases, however, the assumption may be
-challenged as a sufficient explanation. For it is extremely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_429">429</span>
-probable that a good many of these pioneers were, like Mr.
-Cohan’s “Vagabond,” fugitives from their own thoughts quite
-as much as from the tyranny of others. They felt an urge
-within them that made a further abidance in their social environment
-intolerable. This geographical flight of the neurotic
-has always been the most natural and the most obvious,
-checked though it is to-day to a large extent by the disappearance
-of further virgin territory and the sophistication born
-of the knowledge wrought by a world-wide intercommunication
-which says that mankind is everywhere much the same, a truth
-which can again be translated into an internal realization that
-we cannot escape from ourselves.</p>
-
-<p>Certainly our pioneers have been too much romanticized.
-The neurotic legacy which they bequeathed to us can plainly
-be seen in many characteristics of our uncouth Westerners with
-their alternate coldness towards visitors and their undignified
-warmth towards the casual stranger who really cannot mean
-anything to them. There is something wrong about man as a
-social animal when he cannot live happily in a valley where
-he sees more than the distant smoke of his neighbour’s chimney.
-When at last the pressure of population forces him to
-live socially his suspicion and distrust are likely to turn him
-into a zealot and reformer and make possible the domination
-in American life of such a sub-cultural type as Bryan or the
-beatitudes of a State like Kansas. The favourite Western
-exhortation to be able to look a man in the eye and tell him
-to go to Hell is worthy of an anti-social community of ex-convicts,
-and the maxim about minding your own business can
-only be understood as a defence against the prevalent tendency
-of everybody to mind his neighbour’s business. Thus the self-isolating
-neurotic ends by revenging himself upon society by
-making it intolerable.</p>
-
-<p>But this is to anticipate. It must be said that until after
-the Civil War America remained singularly free from “nerves.”
-This is perhaps largely due to the fact, as I have tried to show,
-that they were not known as such. The only serious epidemic
-was the witchcraft hunting of the 17th century. It is certainly
-most charitable towards a religion which had so many other
-repellent features to characterize this as an hysterical epidemic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_430">430</span>
-and let it go at that, though it also freshly illustrates the time-worn
-truth that intolerance does not seem to make its victims
-any more tolerant in their turn. The passing of this epidemic
-also marked the last irruption of State intolerance towards religion,
-with the exception of later incidents in connection with
-the Mormon Church, though it has rarely been understood that
-especially in this country State tolerance of religion was compensated
-for by individual and social intolerance in matters
-that quite transcended the religious sphere. The vast importance
-of this phenomenon in relation to our modern nervous
-tension will be referred to again later on.</p>
-
-<p>The first typical manifestation of American nerves on an
-imposing scale began to develop in the sixties and seventies of
-the last century in the form of neurasthenia. Until then the
-typical American, despite his religious obsessions and his social
-deficiencies, had, to a large extent, remained externally minded,
-a fact which is sufficiently attested by his contempt for the
-arts and his glorification of his purely material achievements.
-He had been on the make, an absorbing process while it lasts,
-though rather dangerous in the long run because it never comes
-to an end. Neurasthenia developed rapidly as soon as it had
-been properly labelled, and claimed a notable number of victims
-among our captains of industry and high-pressure men:
-indeed, the number might easily lead to the perhaps rather
-unkindly conclusion that business dishonesty, even though successful,
-is likely to result in nervous breakdown in a generation
-piously reared on the unimpeachable maxims of a Benjamin
-Franklin or a Herbert Smiley. More fundamentally
-it was, of course, the logical penalty for cultivating the purely
-energetic side of man at the expense of his contemplative nature.
-The philosophy of hurry and hustle had begun to totter.</p>
-
-<p>The discoverer, expounder, and popularizer of neurasthenia
-was Doctor George M. Beard, under whose ægis neurasthenia
-came to be known as “the American disease.” Dr. Beard
-was a sound neurologist within the limits of his generation
-of medicine, but with a dangerous gift of imagination. His
-conception of neurasthenia was truly grandiose. According
-to him this fascinating disease was endemic in the United
-States and was the result of our peculiar social conditions. Its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_431">431</span>
-cause, he claimed, was “modern civilization, which has these
-five characteristics—steam power, the periodical press, the
-telegraph, the sciences, the mental activity of women.” Among
-the secondary and tertiary causes of neurasthenia or nervousness
-he threw in such things as climate, the dryness of our
-air and the extremes of heat and cold, civil and religious liberty,
-our institutions as a whole, inebriety, and the general
-indulgence of our appetites and passions. In a remarkable
-chapter he also assigned as one of the causes of our nervousness
-the remarkable beauty of American women, though he
-does not clearly state whether this made only the men nervous
-or the women as well. Such a diagnosis was to turn sociologist
-with a vengeance and Doctor Beard lived up to his implications
-by saying that the cure of neurasthenia would mean “to
-solve the problem of sociology itself.”</p>
-
-<p>The inevitable result of such a broad and confident diagnosis
-was to make of neurasthenia a kind of <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">omnium gatherum</i> of
-all the ills of mankind less obvious than a broken leg. To
-explain the affliction in terms of America rather than in terms
-of the patient and his symptoms had about the value of a foreigner’s
-book about America written on his home-bound
-steamer after a six-weeks’ sojourn in this country. In fact,
-the wildest diagnoses were made, and such perfectly well-defined
-medical entities as tabes, arteriosclerosis, parathyroidism,
-myasthenia, and incipient tumours of the brain were frequently
-given the neurasthenic label. Various theories of
-exhaustion and nervous strain were also advanced and the
-attempt was made to feed and strengthen the nervous system
-directly on the analogy of Professor Agassiz’s famous assumption
-that the phosphates in fish could be directly absorbed as
-material for brain-cells, a theory which did not account for
-the fact that comparatively few intellectual giants have sprung
-from fisher-folk. This naturally opened up a wide field for
-quackery and ushered in the era of “nerve tonics” which are
-still with us to-day. The craze for sanitariums also started at
-about this time, and with every doctor having a little sanitarium
-of his own the public was pretty well fleeced both by
-its “medicine men” and its men of medicine.</p>
-
-<p>Of course no treatment could possibly be successful in curing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_432">432</span>
-such a wide variety of diseases the very existence of many
-of which was hidden from the physician under the blanket
-term of neurasthenia; and in those cases where an actual neurasthenia
-was present the treatment as developed by Beard
-and his followers made only superficial progress. The S. Weir
-Mitchell formula, for instance, with its emphasis upon quiet,
-diet, and rest, remained, in the majority of cases, essentially
-a treatment of symptoms rather than of causes. The tired
-and over-wrought business man was given a pacifying vacation
-from his dubious labours and was then promptly sent back
-to them, like a dog to his vomit. The American woman, grown
-nervous from being insufficiently occupied, was initiated into
-a different form of doing nothing, whereat she felt much relieved
-for a time. Neurasthenia was soon moving in a vicious
-and ever-widening circle; the more it spread the more it had
-to include and thus became less and less digested medically;
-it played havoc especially among American women who exploited
-their “nervousness” much as their European sisters
-had exploited their “migraine” or their “vapours” in previous
-generations. By the nineties, however, neurasthenia had run
-its course as a fashionable affliction, other countries had succeeded
-in surviving without erecting a quarantine against it,
-and medical circles had begun to debate whether there was
-such a thing as neurasthenia at all.</p>
-
-<p>But, despite the breakdown of neurasthenia and the sins
-that were committed in its name, it would be a mistake to be
-merely amused at Doctor Beard for the pretentiousness of his
-concept or to criticize him too severely for being too much of
-a medical popularizer. His insight was, after all, of considerable
-value. For he realized, however imperfectly, that the
-neuroses as a class are cultural diseases and that they cannot
-be properly understood without taking into account the background
-of modern civilization. This is a rare virtue in American
-medicine where the specialist is constantly in danger of
-isolating himself, a tendency which is particularly harmful in
-the study of the mental sciences. Unfortunately Doctor Beard
-did not follow through. He seems to have become frightened
-at his own diagnosis. For no sooner had he drawn the worst
-possible picture of American civilization as a breeder of neurasthenia<span class="pagenum" id="Page_433">433</span>
-than he turned around and assured the public that
-things were not so bad after all. He accomplished this by
-enriching his sociology with a philosophy which is a prodigy
-in itself. This philosophy of his he called the “omnistic philosophy”
-and claimed for it the peculiar virtue of being able to
-include “optimism on the one hand and pessimism on the
-other and make the best of both,” which is undoubtedly as
-uplifting a piece of American metaphysics as one is likely to
-find on the whole Chautauqua circuit. In criticizing the slow
-advance of American medicine as a whole it is always well to
-remember the atmosphere of intellectual quackery in which
-our physicians no less than our early metaphysicians so confidently
-moved.</p>
-
-<p>By the end of the 19th century the study of functional nervous
-disorders in America was, as I have said, pretty well strewn
-with the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">disjecta membra</i> of neurasthenia which still breathed
-slightly under the stimulus of electro- and hydrotherapeutics
-and of the “health foods” industry. Meanwhile hypnotism
-also had come to do its turn upon the American medical stage,
-where it ran through a swift cycle of use and abuse. Neurology
-as a special department, like the rest of American medicine,
-had been greatly enriched by contact with continental
-medicine, and the works of Kraepelin had come into honour
-among the psychiatrists. Dr. Morton Prince had begun to
-publish some interesting studies of double personalities, and
-a number of tentative systems of psycho-therapy based on a
-rather mixed procedure had been set up only to be knocked
-down again as a beneficial exercise for the critical faculty.</p>
-
-<p>But now the stage was set for the appearance of the two
-modern theories of the neuroses as presented in Europe by
-Janet and Freud. In the rivalry that immediately ensued between
-these two opposing theories that of Janet was soon outdistanced.
-His fundamental conception of hysteria as a form
-of degeneration was in a way quite as repugnant to American
-optimism as the sexual interpretation of Freud was to American
-prudery. Janet had indeed been of invaluable help to
-the hysteric by taking him seriously, but his presentation of
-the subject was so narrow and his theory in the end proved
-so static that his views have made little headway. Janet was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_434">434</span>
-also under the disadvantage of working as an isolated figure
-in a prescribed field and did not come into any revolutionary
-relation to psychology as a whole or find those immensely suggestive
-analogies in the field of psychiatry, especially in dementia
-præcox and paranoia, which have given the work of Freud
-such a wide range. He had, besides, the defects common
-to so much of French medicine which is often so peculiarly
-insular and, so to speak, not made for export. His contribution
-more or less began and ended with the theory of the dissociation
-of the personality which is not characteristic of hysteria
-alone and could not successfully be grafted upon the old
-psychology to which Janet clung.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, Freud after an initial resistance rapidly
-became epidemic in America. As was the case in Europe, he
-enjoyed considerable vogue among the lay public while still
-violently opposed in medical circles. His visit to America,
-however, in 1909, on the occasion of the twentieth anniversary
-of Clark University, created a very favourable impression and
-brought him to the attention of such American psychologists as
-William James, Edwin B. Holt, Adolf Meyer, and others. His
-works appeared in this country in translations by Doctor A. A.
-Brill, and in a short while Freud was “taken up” with a
-vengeance.</p>
-
-<p>He has had both the advantages and the handicaps of a
-boom. His admirers have obscured or exaggerated him and
-his enemies have derided his popularity as proof of a reputation
-based upon sensationalism. In fact, Freud met with three
-fates: he was either wildly embraced, or rejected in toto with
-an appropriate academic lynching, or else he was accepted with
-“improvements.”</p>
-
-<p>He was fortified by previous experience against the second
-alternative and probably resigned to the third: it was the embrace
-that most nearly proved fatal to him. For America
-was to see the most extravagant development of the so-called
-“wild” psychoanalysis, a danger against which Freud himself
-had issued a warning. In 1916, for instance, an informal
-canvas revealed that approximately five hundred individuals
-were quite willing to psychoanalyze patients in the city of New
-York alone, whereas there were probably not more than six<span class="pagenum" id="Page_435">435</span>
-properly qualified medical practitioners in the whole State.
-Advertisements offered to teach the psychoanalytic technique
-by mail and instructors in chiropractic included it in their
-curriculum. This gross abuse was due to the general laxness
-of medical law in this country which still remains to be remedied.
-It was not only the amateurs that offended; doctors
-themselves were often at fault. For it cannot be too often
-emphasized that a psychoanalyst must have something more
-than the conceit of psychological subtlety common to most of
-us; he must be a trained neurologist and must have had considerable
-experience in psychiatry if he would escape the pitfalls
-of differential diagnosis—a case of hysteria can be dangerously
-like an incipient tumour of the brain and a compulsion-neurosis
-may simulate a paranoid condition. These abuses are, of
-course, no criticism of the intrinsic value of psychoanalysis.
-It has been the history of so many medical discoveries that
-they are recommended as a cure-all; we need but recall vaccination,
-or the present vitamine craze. On the other hand, it
-is regrettable that the direct attack upon Freud in this country
-has rarely risen above the level of denunciation. Quite recently,
-for instance, one of our socially eminent neurologists
-allowed himself to indulge in the teleological, or rather disguised
-theological, argument that if the unconscious is really
-so full of dreadful things as Freud says, they should be left
-there. And yet it is just serious and sympathetic criticism
-of which the science of psychoanalysis stands most in need.</p>
-
-<p>The attempts to assimilate Freud were of two kinds. The
-first of these, like Professor Holt’s book on “The Freudian
-Wish” or Doctor Edward J. Kempf’s “The Autonomic Functions
-and the Personality,” were sincere attempts of critical
-dignity to relate psychoanalysis to American behaviouristic psychology
-on the part of men who are not altogether professed
-Freudians. The second were more in the nature of somewhat
-pompous criticisms which attempted to reconcile and soften
-what seemed to be the more repellent features of the Freudian
-theories. There is a prevalent tendency among medical men
-in America to indulge in criticism without any due regard to
-the proportions between the magnitude of a subject and their
-familiarity with it, somewhat after the manner of the green<span class="pagenum" id="Page_436">436</span>
-theological student who is confident of his ability to subvert
-the theory of evolution in a casual thesis of his own. The
-scientist in many fields is constantly facing this debasement of
-standards, making science not too scientific or logic not too
-logical lest it should be misunderstood; it is certainly a commentary
-that the majority of Americans, for instance, look
-upon Edison as our greatest scientist. The tendency to
-sweeten and refine Freud has taken some peculiar forms, due,
-in great part, to Doctor Jung who, on having re-introduced
-the libido theory to American audiences with a number of
-philosophical and mystical trimmings of his own, felt that he
-had made Freud more palatable over here.</p>
-
-<p>Ironically enough, it would have been a very simple matter
-to “put over” Freud in this country with all the éclat of the
-Bergsonian craze which just preceded him. It was merely
-a question of the right kind of publicity, for the problem of
-how to handle sex in America has been solved long ago. The
-way to do it is to sentimentalize it. If Freud, instead of saying
-that the incestuous longing of the child for the parent of
-opposite sex is a natural impulse, though normally sublimated
-during the period of adolescence, had put the same idea into
-the phraseology of so many of our popular songs which reiterate
-the theme about mother being her boy’s first and last
-and truest love, he would have encountered no opposition.
-And if he had given his theory of the unconscious a slightly
-religious setting by emphasizing the fact that the unconscious
-has no sense of the passage of time and cannot conceive its
-own annihilation, he would have been hailed as the latest
-demonstrator of the immortality of the soul. A little personal
-press-agenting to the effect that he led a chaste life and was
-the father of a flourishing family would have completed the
-prescription. He would have gone over with a bang, though
-he probably would have been quite as amiably misunderstood
-as he is now viciously misunderstood.</p>
-
-<p>Freud, however, presented his case at its own value and,
-aside from informing an astonished American audience that
-Doctor Sanford Bell had preceded him in announcing the preadolescent
-sexuality of children, shouldered the responsibility
-for his theories. What he has said, carefully and repeatedly,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_437">437</span>
-is that ever since, for a long period in our development, the
-difficulties of satisfying the hunger impulse have been overcome
-in so far as civilized man has pretty well solved the problem
-of nutrition; it is the sex impulse to which the individual
-has the greatest difficulty in adjusting himself. This difficulty
-increases rather than decreases with the advance of culture
-and at certain stages leads to the group of diseases known
-as the neuroses. In a normal sexual life there is no neurosis.
-But our civilization has in many ways become so perverse that
-we find something akin to an official preference for a neurosis
-rather than a normal sexual life, in spite of the fact that the
-neurosis ultimately will destroy civilization. This is the
-vicious circle which Freud attacked. In doing so he had first
-to enlarge the concept of sexuality and show its complex relation
-to our whole culture. In studying civilization at its breaking
-point he naturally had to study what was breaking it up,
-namely, the individual’s maladjustment to his sexual impulses.
-But he has never attempted to sexualize the universe, as has
-been claimed, nor has he ever lost sight of the fact that while
-man as an egocentric being must put the self-regarding instincts
-first, man regarded as one of the processes of nature
-remains to be studied in terms of his reproductive instincts.
-Freud has been persistently oversexualized both by his admirers
-and his opponents, and the degree to which this has
-been done in America is at least some indication of how close
-he has come home to conditions here.</p>
-
-<p>Freudian research in this country has been limited almost
-entirely to cases. Our physicians who practise psychoanalysis
-have lacked either the leisure or the culture to apply their
-science to wider cultural questions to which the Freudian
-psychology applies, and among the lay scholars using the
-psychoanalytic technique there has been no outstanding figure
-like that of Otto Rank who has done such notable work in
-Vienna. But the study of specific cases of hysteria and
-neurosis as they occur in America already permit of some
-general conclusions as to the character of the national matrix
-from which they spring. One of the most striking features
-of our emotional life is the exaggerated mother-love so frequently
-displayed by Americans. The average American,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_438">438</span>
-whether drunk or sober, can grow maudlin about his mother’s
-perfections and his devotion to her in a way that must shock
-the European observer. Not that the European loves his
-mother less: it is simply that he is more reticent about expressing
-an emotion which he feels has a certain private sanctity;
-he would experience a decided constraint or αἰδώς in
-boasting about it, just as a woman of breeding would not
-parade her virtue. The American adult knows no such restraint;
-he will “tell the world” how much he loves his
-mother, will sing sentimental songs about her and cheerfully
-subscribe to the advice to “choose a girl like your mother
-if you want to be happily married,” and then grows violent
-when the incest-complex is mentioned. This excessive mother
-worship has reached almost cultic proportions. It is reflected
-in our fiction, in our motion-pictures, in the inferior position
-of the American husband, and in such purely matriarchal religions
-as Christian Science where a form of healing is practised
-which is not very far removed from a mother’s consolation
-to her boy when he has bruised his knees. All this points to
-a persistent sexual infantilism and an incomplete sublimation,
-which are such fertile breeders of hysteria. One is involuntarily
-reminded of Doctor Beard’s rather enigmatic statement
-that the extraordinary beauty of our women is one of the
-causes of nervousness in America. In so far as they offer a
-maximum of enticement with a minimum of conjugal satisfaction
-the charge is certainly justified. It is as if they did not
-even know their own business in terms of their sexual function
-of weaning their husbands from their mothers and thus
-completing the necessary exogamic process. We thus have the
-condition where the husband, in further seeking to overcome
-his incest-complex, becomes everything in his business and
-nothing in his home, with an ultimate neurotic breakdown or
-a belated plunge into promiscuity. The wife, on her part,
-either becomes hysterical or falls a victim to religious or reformatory
-charlatanism.</p>
-
-<p>The study of compulsion-neuroses and allied paranoid states
-which are so prevalent among us has given us further insights
-into the neurotic character of the American temperament.
-One of the most valuable of these is the recognition of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_439">439</span>
-compulsive nature of so much of our thinking. This has also
-been well observed by a foreign critic like Santayana who says
-of America, “Though it calls itself the land of freedom, it is
-really the land of compulsions, and one of the greatest compulsions
-is that we must think and feel alike.” This is a
-rather fatal indictment of our boasted individualism, which is,
-as a matter of fact, an individualism born of fear and distrust
-such as already marked our early pioneers. We are indeed
-ultra-conformists, and our fear of other-mindedness amounts
-almost to a phobia. But such an atmosphere constitutes a
-paradise for the compulsion-neurotic because he finds it easy
-to impose his compulsions upon the rest of society. The fact
-that compulsion-neurotics are constantly indulging in neo-religious
-formations through which they are enabled temporarily
-to accommodate their taboos and phobias in religious
-ceremonials, enables them to make use of the general religious
-sanctions of society in order to impose their compulsions upon
-their fellow-beings.</p>
-
-<p>Herein probably lies a better explanation of American intolerance
-than in the indictment of Puritanism which furnishes
-such a favourite invective for our iconoclasts. Puritanism
-has become a literary catchword and by no means covers
-the case. For it must be remembered that we are dealing with
-offshoots of deteriorated religions which spring from a very
-wide range of individuals. Religion, having been cut off from
-direct interference with the State, and having gradually lost
-its primitive anthropomorphism which really was one of its
-sources of strength, proceeded to project itself more and more
-outwardly upon social questions. As the personality of God
-grew dim the figure of the Devil also lost its vividness and
-the problem between good and evil could not longer be fought
-out entirely in the individual’s own bosom; he was no longer
-tempted by the figure of the Devil appearing to him in person.
-Christian religion in its prime saw very clearly that the soul
-must put its own salvation to the fore, and constantly used
-many apt similes, such as the beam in our own eye, to remind
-us that while our neighbour might also have his hands full in
-fighting the Devil, he probably was capable of taking care of
-himself. Our modern reformer has no use for any such simile;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_440">440</span>
-he would have to go out of business if he could not keep picking
-at the mote in his neighbour’s eye. He finds the equivalent
-of the Devil in our social vices, in alcohol, in tobacco, in tea
-and coffee, in practically all forms of amusements. He
-preaches a crusade which no longer has an ideal object, and
-enlists a vague religious emotion which is inaccessible to reason
-and mocks intellectual criticism. The device of using religious
-associations as carriers of propaganda has often been
-used for political purposes with consummate skill. Bryan’s
-famous Cross of Gold speech and Roosevelt’s Armageddon
-appeal are excellent examples of it.</p>
-
-<p>The question has often arisen why the fanatical reformer
-is so omnipotent in America. Why does he succeed so well
-in imposing his compulsions upon others? Why are we so
-defenceless against his blackmail? Why, in plain language,
-do we stand for him? Foreign observers have frequently
-commented upon the enormous docility of the American public.
-And it is all the more curious because ordinarily the average
-American prides himself upon his assertiveness and his
-quickness in detecting false pretensions. Yet it is a common
-occurrence to meet people with valid claims to hard-headedness
-who nevertheless submit to every form of compulsion. They
-do not believe in prohibition but vote for it, they smoke but
-think smoking ought to be stopped, they admit the fanatical
-nature of reform movements and yet continue their subscriptions.</p>
-
-<p>In giving what can at best be only a partial answer to this
-national enigma, we may briefly consider two types which profoundly
-contribute to our atmosphere of compulsion: our immigrant
-and our native aristocrat. The first, from the very
-nature of the case, becomes the victim of compulsion, while
-the second imposes the compulsion and then in turn, however
-unwillingly, succumbs to it himself. Our society, with its
-kaleidoscopic changes of fortune and its unchannelled social
-distinctions, presents a problem of adjustment with which even
-those who are at home in America find it difficult to cope.
-People on the make, people who are not sure of themselves
-on a new social ladder, are likely to conform: we find an astonishing
-amount of social imitation, in its milder and more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_441">441</span>
-ludicrous form, in all our pioneer communities. The immigrant
-faces the same problem to an intensified degree. He
-comes to us in an uprooted state of mind, with many of his
-emotional allegiances still lingering in his native country, and
-often with an entirely alien tradition. His mind is set to conform,
-to obey at first without much asking. He is like a
-traveller arriving in a strange town who follows the new traffic
-directions even though he does not understand their purpose.
-But even with the best of will he cannot entirely conform.
-He finds himself in a new world where what formerly seemed
-right to him is now considered wrong, his household gods have
-lost their power, his conscience is no longer an infallible guide.
-It is a sign of character in him to resist, to refuse to sink his
-individuality entirely, to struggle somewhat against the democratic
-degradation which threatens to engulf him too suddenly.
-But his struggle leads to a neurotic conflict which is often not
-resolved until the third generation. It is thus quite permissible
-to talk of an immigrant’s neurosis, which has considerable
-sociological importance even though it does not present an
-integral clinical picture. It leads either to the formation of
-large segments of undigested foreigners in American society
-who sullenly accept the forms we impose upon them while
-remaining comparatively inarticulate in our cultural and political
-life, or else it produces a type of whom our melting-pot
-romanticists are foolishly proud, the pseudo-American who
-has sunk from individualism to the level of the mob, where he
-conforms to excess in order to cover his antecedents and becomes
-intolerant in order that he may be tolerated.</p>
-
-<p>Ordinarily, the mob tyranny which has become such an
-alarming feature of our public life would be checked by the
-aristocratic element in society. It is part of the aristocratic
-function to foster cultural tolerance and to resist herd suggestion:
-the aristocratic or dominant type, in enjoying the most
-privileges, is normally least subject to compulsions and taboos.
-With us that is not the case. The Southerner, for instance,
-our most traditional aristocrat, finds himself paralyzed by the
-consciousness of a black shadow behind him who constantly
-threatens both his political and his sexual superiority. He
-moves in an atmosphere of taboos from which he himself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_442">442</span>
-cannot escape, for it is an established fact that interdiction
-in one line of thought has a crippling effect upon a man’s
-intellectual activity as a whole. Elsewhere our native aristocrat
-frequently finds himself in the position of a lonely outpost
-of a thin Anglo-Saxon tradition which he must defend against
-the constant onslaughts of alien civilizations, in the desperate
-attempt to uphold the fiction that spiritually, at least, we are
-still an English colony. He is in a state of tension where he
-himself cannot move with any of the freedom which he vaunts
-as one of the outstanding characteristics of the country of his
-fathers. In his hands his own latest hope, our war-born
-Americanization programme, which should really be an initiation
-into freedom, has quickly become little more than a forced
-observance of sterile rites with which to impress the alien.
-He already sees its failure, and, like a general who is afraid of
-his own army, he does not sleep very well.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Alfred B. Kuttner</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_443" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_443">443</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="MEDICINE">MEDICINE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">From</span> time immemorial the doctor has been the object of
-respect and awe by the generality of mankind. It is true
-that he has occasionally been made the butt of the satirical
-humour of such dramatists as Molière and Shaw, but the
-majority of people have regarded these jests as amiable buffooneries,
-and not as penetrating criticisms. In ancient days
-the veneration of the medico was based upon his supposed
-association with gods and devils, and upon the belief that he
-could cure disease by wheedling propitiation of <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">deus</i>, or by
-the exorcism of <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">diabolus</i>. In modern times he holds sway by
-his supposed possession of the secrets of science.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of his pretension to scientific attainment, many
-vestiges of his former priesthood remain, and this <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">mélange</i> of
-scientist and priest has produced curious contradictions and
-absurdities. But these absurdities must by an inexorable law
-remain concealed from all save a few, and the general failure
-to recognize them has led to a great increase in the importance
-and prosperity of the medical cult. In America, of all
-civilized nations, medical magnificence has reached its most
-formidable proportions. This exaggeration, characteristic of
-all social phenomena in the new world, makes the real importance
-of the doctor to society easy to inspect and to analyze.</p>
-
-<p>A friend not long ago asked me to explain the co-existence,
-in the same city, of the elaborate installation of the Harvard
-Medical School and the magnificent temple of the religion
-of Mrs. Eddy. “What is it in our culture,” said he, “that
-permits the symbol of such obvious quackery as that of Mrs.
-Eddy to flourish within a stone’s throw of such an embodiment
-of scientific enlightenment as the medical college?”</p>
-
-<p>I replied that the reason for this must be sought in the gullibility
-of our citizens, who are capable of entertaining most incompatible
-and contradictory credos. Thus, the average
-American can believe firmly and simultaneously in the therapeutic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_444">444</span>
-excellence of yeast, the salubrious cathartic effects of
-a famous mineral oil, the healing powers of chiropractors,
-and in the merits of the regimen of the Corrective Eating
-Society. His catholicity of belief permits him to consider
-such palpable frauds seriously, and at the same time to admire
-and respect authentic medical education and even the scientific
-study of disease. But the teachers, students, and alumni
-of medical colleges are drawn from our excessively credulous
-populace. So it is dangerous to consider the votaries of the
-profession of medicine as sceptical and open-minded <em>savants</em>,
-in contrast to the promulgators of the afore-mentioned imbecilities
-and to <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">Homo sapiens americanus</i>, who is the unconscious
-victim of such charlatanry. In reality the great majority
-of the medical profession is credulous and must always
-remain so, even in matters of health and disease.</p>
-
-<p>The tendency to consider physicians in general as men of
-science is fostered by the doctors themselves. Even the most
-eminent among them are guilty in this respect. Thus the
-Director of the Hospital of the Rockefeller Institute maintains
-that medicine must be considered not as an applied science
-but as an independent science (R. Cole, <cite>Science</cite>, N. S., Vol. LI,
-p. 329). And an eminent ex-President of the American Medical
-Association holds a similar view, at the same time preposterously
-asserting that “medicine has done more for the
-growth of science than any other profession, and that its best
-representatives have been among the leaders in the advancement
-of knowledge....” (V. C. Vaughan, <cite>Journal</cite>, A. M. A.,
-1914, Vol. LXII, p. 2003.)</p>
-
-<p>Such pronunciamentoes rest upon the almost universal confusion
-of the <em>art</em> of the practice of medicine with the <em>science</em>
-of the study of disease. Science, in its modern definition,
-is concerned with the quantitative relationship of the factors
-governing natural phenomena. No favourites are to be played
-among these factors. They are to be weighed and measured
-meticulously and coldly, without enthusiasm for one, or disdain
-and enmity toward another. Now, in the case of relationship
-of doctor to patient, it is clear that such emotions must
-enter. The physician must entertain enthusiasm for the defensive
-powers of his patient, John Smith, and at the same<span class="pagenum" id="Page_445">445</span>
-time hate virulently the pneumococcus that attacks him. This
-emotional state of the soldier of health prevents the employment
-of what is known in the language of the laboratory as
-the “control.” For example, a doctor wishes to test the
-efficacy of a serum against pneumonia. In America it is
-practically unknown for him to divide his cases of pneumonia
-into two groups of equal size, to administer his serum to group
-A and to leave group B untreated. He almost invariably has
-a <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">parti-pris</i> that the serum will work, and he reflects with horror
-that if he holds his remedy from group B, some members
-of this group will die, who might otherwise have been saved.
-So he injects his serum into all of his patients (A and B), and
-if the mortality in the entire group appears to him to be lower
-by statistics than that observed in previous series of cases,
-he concludes that the value of his nostrum is proved. This
-is an illustration of the fallacy of the notion that medicine is
-a science in the modern sense.</p>
-
-<p>Modern study of disease, conducted in the laboratory upon
-experimental animals, has furnished medical practitioners with
-a few therapeutic and prophylactic weapons. In the use of
-these the American medico has not lagged behind his European
-colleague. But the great majority of the malaises that
-plague us are not amenable to cure, and it is with these that
-the doctor has since the beginning of time played his most
-important rôle, i.e., that of a “professional sympathizer.” The
-encouraging conversation with the family of the sufferer; the
-mumbling of recondite Latin phrases; the reassuring hopeful
-hand on the patient’s shoulder; the grave use of complicated
-gimcracks; the prescription of ineffective but also innocuous
-drugs or of water tinted to pleasing hues; all these are of
-incalculable value to the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">ménage</i> stricken by disease. It is
-my lamentable duty to point out the danger of the decline of
-this essential rôle among the doctors of America. The general
-practitioner of the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">ancien régime</i> was sincere in his performance
-of his quasi-religious function. He was unsparing of
-his energies, stern in his devotion to duty, deeply altruistic
-in sentiment, and charmingly negligent in economic matters.</p>
-
-<p>But at the present time this adorable figure is disappearing
-from the land, to be replaced by another, more sinister type,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_446">446</span>
-actually less learned in the important folklore of the bedside,
-pseudo-scientific, given to rigidly defined office hours, and painfully
-exact in the extortion of his emolument. What are the
-factors that give rise to the appearance of this new figure on
-the American scene? The most important of these is to be
-found in the high development of the craft of surgery in the
-United States. Of all the dread afflictions that plague us, a
-few may be cured or ameliorated by the administration of
-remedies, and an equally small number improved or abolished
-by surgical interference. But in spite of the relatively few
-diseases to which surgery is beneficial, the number of surgeons
-that flourish in the land is enormous. The fundamental discoveries
-of Pasteur and their brilliant application by Lister
-were quickly seized upon in America. The names of Bull,
-Halstead, Murphy, the brothers Mayo, Cushing, and Finney
-are to be ranked with those of the best surgeons of any nation.
-In fact, we may be said to lead the world—to use an apt
-Americanism—in the production of surgeons, just as we do in
-that of automobiles, baby carriages, and antique furniture.</p>
-
-<p>The success of these protagonists in the higher carpentry
-at once attracted a horde of smaller fry, imitators, men of inferior
-ability. The rapid advances made by the leaders resulted
-in the development of a diversified and complicated technic,
-which the ordinary surgeon was able to master in sections
-but not <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">in toto</i>. From this, specialization in surgery has developed
-rapidly and naturally, so that now certain men devote
-their lives exclusively to the enthusiastic and indiscriminate
-removal of tonsils, others are death on gall bladders, some the
-foes of the vermiform appendix, and yet others practise exclusively
-the radical cure of phimosis. It is obvious that such
-narrow specialization, practised in isolation, would lead to
-most amusing results, which may best be left to the imagination.
-But these absurdities were finally apparent even to the
-surgeons themselves, with the resulting development of what
-is now known as “group medicine.”</p>
-
-<p>In brief, surgeons with special <em>penchants</em> for the removal of
-various organs, form partnerships, calling to their aid the internist
-for the diagnosis of their prospective victims. The
-internist gathers about him, in turn, a group of less important<span class="pagenum" id="Page_447">447</span>
-fry, known as radiographers, bacteriologists, pathologists, and
-serologists. Frequently a dentist is added to the coterie. The
-entire organization is welded into a business partnership of
-typically American efficiency. These groups are forming over
-the entire nation, are appearing even in the tank-towns of
-the hinterland. They occupy elegant suites in important
-office buildings, their members are generally considered the
-arbiters of the medical opinion of the community. Their more
-or less intelligent use of the paraphernalia of pathology, bacteriology,
-<i xml:lang="la" lang="la">et cetera</i>, gives them an enormous advantage over
-their more humble brother, the general practitioner. This
-last, indeed, is being rapidly routed in his battle with such
-associations of “best minds,” equipped with the armamentarium
-of modern science.</p>
-
-<p>The remuneration required by the “super-docs” of group
-medicine is naturally far in excess of that demanded by the
-general practitioner. It is right that this should be so, if not
-for the results obtained, then by reason of the elaborate organization
-and expensive equipment that the group system
-demands. This increase in reward has made the profession
-of medicine in America what it never was before, a paying
-proposition—again to use an apt Americanism. The result
-of this entry of crass materialism into a previously free-and-easy,
-altruistic, anything but business-like profession is, once
-more, better left to the imagination than described. The
-brigandage of many of these medical banditti is too painful
-even to think about. It will be apparent that relatively few
-of our citizens are able to pay for group medicine. So, it is
-interesting to observe that the best in medical treatment and
-advice is accessible only to the highest and lowest castes of
-our plutocracy. The rich receive this at the elegant offices
-and private hospitals of the groups, the miserably poor at the
-teaching hospitals of medical colleges.</p>
-
-<p>The service of the “super-doc” to such of our citizens as
-can afford him cannot at this time be properly estimated. It
-is true that he is progressive, that he leans heavily upon the
-subsidiary sciences of pathology, <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">et cetera</i>, that he publishes
-papers in medical periodicals, that he visits medical libraries,
-frequents medical congresses. It has just been insisted that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_448">448</span>
-the doctor has benefitted himself to a great extent economically
-by forming the group; it is for the future to divulge whether
-his ministrations have resulted in a perceptible reduction of
-human suffering or in a prolongation of human life. Certainly
-he has perpetrated some astounding hoaxes, the kind-hearted
-will say unwittingly. Probably the most interesting
-of these is to be observed in the focal infection mania just
-now subsiding.</p>
-
-<p>Focal infection came into prominence as the theory, so
-called, of a group of eminent physicians in Chicago. It is, in
-brief, the doctrine that many of our aches and pains whose
-direct etiology it is impossible to demonstrate are due to the
-presence in the body of foci of harmful microbes, at the roots
-of the teeth, in the tonsils, accessory sinuses, or the appendix.
-Discover the focus, remove it, and presto!—the ache disappears
-like the card up the sleeve of the expert American poker
-player. The advantages of this theory to the various specialists
-of a group will be obvious. To illustrate. Henry Doolittle
-is plagued by a persistent and annoying pain over his
-left shoulder-blade. He goes to the office of a group of
-“super-docs,” is referred to the diagnostician, who makes a
-careful record of his <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">status præsens</i>, then orders his satellites
-to perform the Wassermann reaction, make the luetin test, do
-differential blood counts, perform the determination of his
-blood urea, and carry out a thorough chemical study of his
-basal metabolism. If the results of these tests show no departure
-from the normal, or if they seriously contradict each
-other, the cause of the pain is probably focal infection. The
-patient is then subjected to examination by X-ray, his teeth
-are pulled by the dentist, his tonsils excised by the otolaryngolist,
-who also takes a swipe, in passing, at his accessory
-sinuses, and should these mutilations fail to relieve him, his
-appendix is removed by the abdominal surgeon. If relief
-still fails to occur, the theory is not given up, but the focus is
-presumed to exist elsewhere. If Mr. Doolittle’s patience is
-equal to the test, and if his purse is not by this time completely
-empty, additional operations are advised. These continue
-until all organs and appendages not actually necessary to
-mere existence have been removed. Henry then returns to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_449">449</span>
-his former mode of life, depleted and deformed, it is true, but
-occasionally minus his original pain. It is not the intention
-to deny that infected teeth and tonsils have no significance in
-pathology. But it is certain that their importance has been
-greatly exaggerated by many physicians. The question needs
-more investigation, with fewer preconceived ideas. The “science”
-underlying this astounding practice is admirably outlined
-in the book of Billings called “Focal Infection.” It
-is the most striking example of medical <em>Ga-Ga-ism</em> that has
-appeared in our country. It is, as its author himself admits,
-a triumph of the new idea of team-work and co-operative research
-in medicine. The factors giving rise to this lamentable
-<em>Ga-Ga</em> are the gullibility of patient and doctor, the emotional
-element entering into the interpretation of all of the phenomena
-observed by the physician, commercialism, and, finally, the
-self-limiting nature of most disease.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the Art of Healing as practised by the physicians
-of America. What of our activities in the second aim of
-medicine, that is, the prevention of disease? While superficial
-examination is enough to lay bare the many hollow pretensions
-of the practice of medicine, it would appear <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">a priori</i>
-that the work of disease prevention might at least approach
-the category of the applied sciences. This would seem to be
-so, since the greater part of this field must of necessity concern
-itself with infectious disease. Now the etiologic agents of the
-majority of infectious diseases are known. It is easy to see
-that the labour of their prevention rests upon an exact knowledge
-of the nature of the disease-producing microbes, the
-analysis of the delicate balance between the virulence of the
-microbic invader and the resistance of the human host, and,
-most important of all, upon the exact path by which the
-germ in question travels from one individual to another.</p>
-
-<p>In the early days of preventive medicine, following shortly
-upon the fundamental researches of Pasteur, several important
-contributions were made by Americans. These include
-the brilliant investigations of Theobald Smith on the etiology
-and mode of transmission of the Texas fever of cattle, and,
-later on, the differentiation of bovine and human tuberculosis.
-America had again reason to be proud when, in 1901, Reed,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_450">450</span>
-Carroll, Agramonte, and Lazear demonstrated that yellow
-fever was spread exclusively by the mosquito, <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">Ædes calopus</i>.
-These investigators showed a beautiful spirit of self-sacrifice
-and devotion to their science. The construction of the Panama
-Canal was made possible by the application of these
-researches by Gorgas. Again, the American Russell was the
-first to show that vaccination against typhoid and allied infections
-is feasible. In the New York Board of Health, Park,
-Krumwiede, and their associates have made careful and valuable
-studies on the prevention of diphtheria. These constitute
-the high lights of American achievement in preventive
-medicine. It must be admitted that the majority of these
-examples are to be placed in the category of the science of the
-study of disease, rather than in that of its application—preventive
-medicine.</p>
-
-<p>It is noticeable even by cursory survey of recent American
-work that such striking achievements have become distinctly
-fewer in recent years, despite an enormous increase in personnel,
-equipment, and money devoted to the prevention of
-disease. Along with this decrease in solid contributions there
-has been an augmentation of fatuous propaganda and windy
-theory. All of the judicious must view this tendency with
-alarm and sadness, since it seemed for a time that science was
-really about to remove the vestigia of witchcraft and high-priesthood
-from this branch of medicine at least.</p>
-
-<p>What is the cause of this retrogression? It must be laid
-at the door of <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">Religio Sanitatis</i>, the Crusade of Health. This
-is one of the most striking examples of the delusion of most
-Americans that they are the Heaven-appointed uplifters of
-the human race. Just as all Baptists, Presbyterians, and
-Methodists deprecate the heathen happiness of the benighted
-Oriental, so the International Health Board seeks to mitigate
-his contented squalour and to eradicate his fatalistically born
-disease. Just as Billy Sunday rages against John Barleycorn
-and the Dionysians who worship him, so the Great Hygienists
-seek to point out the multiform malaises arising from such
-worship. Just as the now extinct Wilson strove to show the
-world that it was horrid and wrong to fight, so the Public
-Health Service seeks to propagate the notion that chastity and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_451">451</span>
-adherence to marital vows are the sole alternatives to a universal
-syphilization.</p>
-
-<p>Thus we observe with horror the gradual replacement of
-those Nestors of preventive medicine who had the dispassionate
-view of science, and who applied its methods of cold
-analysis, by a group of dubious Messiahs who combine the
-zealous fanaticism of the missionary with the Jesuitical
-cynicism of the politician. For most of the organizations for
-the promotion of health are closely dependent upon state and
-municipal politics, and must become contaminated with the obscenity
-of political practice. Finally, it is apparent that the
-great privately endowed foundations are animated by the spirit
-of proselytism common to the majority of religions, but especially
-to Baptists. It will be objected that such charges are
-vague generalizations. It is necessary, therefore, to bring
-forward one or two specific instances in support of these
-contentions.</p>
-
-<p>The soldiers of the recent successful campaign for national
-prohibition were supported by battalions of noted hygienists
-who made excellent practice with a heavy artillery of so-called
-scientific evidence upon the confused ranks of brewers, distillers,
-and their customers, the American bibuli. What is
-the value of their “scientific evidence”? Two charges are
-made against the use of alcohol as a beverage. <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">Primo</i>, that
-its moderate or excessive use is the direct cause of various
-maladies. <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">Secondo</i>, that the children of alcoholic parents are
-often deformed, degenerates, or imbeciles, and that such lamentable
-stigmata are the direct results of the imbibitions of their
-parents.</p>
-
-<p>Now it is vain to argue that alcohol, taken in great excess,
-is not injurious. Mania a potu (Korsakow’s disease) is
-without doubt its direct result, at least in some instances. On
-the other hand, excessive indulgence in water is also not without
-its harmful effects, and I, for one, would predict evil
-days for our Great Commoner, should he so far lose control
-of himself as to imbibe a gallon of grape juice <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">per diem</i>.
-Many enthusiastic hygienists advance the opinion that alcohol
-is filling our insane asylums! This generalization is a gorgeous
-example of <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">post hoc propter hoc</i> reasoning, and is based<span class="pagenum" id="Page_452">452</span>
-upon the idiotic statistical research which forms so large a
-part of the activity of the minions of public health. The
-recent careful work of Clouston and others tends more and
-more to indicate that chronic alcoholics do not go crazy because
-they drink, but become alcoholics because they already
-were crazy, or had the inherited tendency toward insanity.
-This embarrassing fact is carefully suppressed by the medico-hygienic
-heavy artillerists of the prohibition army. What is
-more, diseases with definite pathologic pictures, such as cirrhosis
-of the liver, have by no means been definitely proved to be
-caused by alcohol. Indeed, the researches of Friedenwald,
-who endeavoured to produce such effects by direct experiment,
-have led to negative results.</p>
-
-<p>The second indictment, i.e., that alcoholism in parents
-causes degenerate offspring, rests upon still more dubious scientific
-foundations. The most important animal experimentation
-in this field is that of Stockard, who used guinea-pigs
-as his subjects, and of Pearl, who had recourse to chickens.
-Both of these researches are sound in scientific method. Unfortunately
-for hygienists, they lead to completely contradictory
-conclusions. Stockard and his collaborators found the
-offspring of alcoholic guinea-pigs to be fewer in number than
-those of his normal controls. What is more, the children of
-the alcoholics were frequently smaller, had a higher post-natal
-mortality, and were prone to suffer from epileptiform convulsions.
-These results brought forth <em>banzais</em> from the hygienists
-and were extensively quoted, though their application by analogy
-to the problems of human heredity is not to be made too
-hastily.</p>
-
-<p>Pearl, on the other hand, discovered that while the number
-of offspring from his inebriated chickens was distinctly fewer,
-yet these were unquestionably superior to normal chickens in
-eight of the twelve hereditary characters amenable to quantitative
-measurement. Now if one can generalize Stockard’s results
-to human beings, then it is equally permissible to do the
-same with Pearl’s. Of the two, the latter generalization would
-be preferable, and of greater benefit to the human race, were
-the analogy valid. For who will not whoop for “fewer children,
-but better ones”? Do the votaries of preventive medicine<span class="pagenum" id="Page_453">453</span>
-place the results of Pearl along side of those of Stockard?
-Indeed, who even mentions Pearl’s results at all? If satisfactory
-evidence is adduced that this has been done, I hereby
-promise to contribute one hundred dollars in cash toward the
-foundation of a home for inebriated prohibition agents. Again,
-while much is heard of the results of Bezzola in regard to the
-<i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Rauschkinder</i> resulting from the Swiss bacchanalia, the negative
-findings of Ireland in similar investigations of the seasonal
-debauches of Scotland are carefully avoided. Once more, Elderton
-and Karl Pearson have failed utterly to find increase
-in the stigmata of degeneracy among the children of alcoholic
-parents as compared with those of non-alcoholics. This research,
-published in a monograph of the Francis Galton Laboratory
-of London, is the one really careful one that has been
-made in the case of human beings. It was directed by Pearson,
-admittedly a master of biometrical science. Yet, turning
-to Rosenau’s “Preventive Medicine and Hygiene,” the bible of
-this branch, I find the Elderton-Pearson report relegated to a
-footnote in the edition of 1913, <em>and omitted completely from
-the 1920 edition</em>.</p>
-
-<p>A discussion of the fatuity to which American preventive
-medicine descends cannot be terminated without touching upon
-the current propaganda of the syphilophobes. For just as
-practitioners of medicine exploit human credulity, so the preventers
-of disease play upon the equally universal instinct of
-fear. There is no intention of minimizing the seriousness of
-syphilis. Along with cancer, pneumonia, and tuberculosis, it
-is one of the major afflictions of humanity. It causes thousands
-of deaths yearly; it leads to great misery. Paresis, one of the
-important psychoses, is definitely known to be one of its manifestations.
-It is obvious, therefore, that its eradication is one
-of the major tasks of social hygiene.</p>
-
-<p>But by what means? Let one of the most noted of our
-American syphilophobes give the answer! This gentleman, a
-professor of pathology in one of the most important medical
-schools of the Middle West, yearly lectures over the length
-and breadth of the land on the venereal peril. He begins his
-expostulation with reduction of his audiences to a state of terror
-by a lantern-slide display of the more loathsome manifestations<span class="pagenum" id="Page_454">454</span>
-of the disease. He does not state that modern treatment
-makes these more and more rare. He insists upon the
-utter impossibility of its cure, a fact by no means established.
-He advocates early marriage to a non-syphilitic maiden as the
-best means of prevention, and failing that, advises that chastity
-is both possible and salubrious. Then follows a master
-stroke of advice by innuendo—<em>the current belief that masturbation
-causes insanity is probably untrue</em>. Finally he denies
-the value of venereal prophylaxis, which was first experimentally
-demonstrated by Metchnikoff and Roux, and
-which the medical department of the Army and Navy know
-to be of almost perfect efficacy when applied early and
-thoroughly.</p>
-
-<p>Lack of space prevents the display of further examples of
-the new phenomenon of the entrance of religion and morals into
-medicine. It is not my intention for a moment to adopt a
-nihilistic attitude toward the achievement of preventive medicine.
-But it is necessary to point out that its contamination
-by moralism, Puritanism, proselytism, in brief, <em>by religion</em>,
-threatens to reduce it to absurdity, and to shake its authority
-in instances where its functions are of unmistakable value to
-our republic. At present the medical profession plays a minor
-rôle in the more important functions of this branch. These
-are performed in the first place by bacteriologists who need
-not be doctors at all, and in the second by sanitary engineers,
-whose splendid achievements in water supply and sewage disposal
-lead those of all other nations.</p>
-
-<p>It has been remarked above that one of the chief causes of
-the unscientific nature of medicine and the anti-scientific character
-of doctors lies in their innate credulity and inability to
-think independently. This contention is supported by the report
-on the intelligence of physicians recently published by the
-National Research Council. They are found by more or less
-trustworthy psychologic tests to be the lowest in intelligence
-of all of the professional men excepting only dentists and
-horse doctors. Dentists and horse doctors are ten per cent.
-less intelligent. But since the quantitative methods employed
-certainly carry an experimental error of ten per cent. or even
-higher, it is not certain that the members of the two more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_455">455</span>
-humble professions have not equal or even greater intellectual
-ability. It is significant that engineers head the list in intelligence.</p>
-
-<p>In fact, they are rated sixty per cent. higher than doctors.
-This wide disparity leads to a temptation to interesting psychological
-probings. Is not the lamentable lack of intelligence
-of the doctor due to lack of necessity for rigid intellectual
-discipline? Many conditions conspire to make him an intellectual
-cheat. Fortunately for us, most diseases are self-limiting.
-But it is natural for the physician to turn this dispensation
-of nature to his advantage and to intimate that <em>he</em> has
-cured John Smith, when actually nature has done the trick.
-On the contrary, should Smith die, the good doctor can assume
-a pious expression and suggest that, despite his own incredible
-skill and tremendous effort, it was God’s (or Nature’s)
-will that John should pass beyond. Now the engineer is open
-to no such temptation. He builds a bridge or erects a building,
-and disaster is sure to follow any mis-step in calculation
-or fault in construction. Should such a calamity occur, he is
-presently discredited and disappears from view. Thus he is
-held up to a high mark of intellectual rigour and discipline that
-is utterly unknown in the world the doctor inhabits.</p>
-
-<p>A survey of the present condition of American medical education
-offers little hope for a higher intellectual status of the
-medical profession or of any fundamental tendency to turn
-medicine as a whole from a <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">mélange</i> of religious ritual, more
-or less accurate folk-lore, and commercial cunning, toward the
-rarer heights of the applied sciences.</p>
-
-<p>Such a reform depends absolutely upon the recognition that
-the bodies of all the fauna of the earth (including <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">Homo
-sapiens</i>) are essentially physico-chemical mechanisms; that
-disease is a derangement of one sort or another of this mechanism;
-and that real progress in knowledge of disease can only
-come from quantitatively exact investigation of such derangements.</p>
-
-<p>Up to the present, the number of professors in any branch
-of medicine who are aware of this fact is pitifully few. The
-men, who, being aware of it, have the training in physics and
-chemistry to put their convictions into practice are less in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_456">456</span>
-number. So, it is vain to hope that medical students are being
-educated from this point of view.</p>
-
-<p>This casual glance at American medicine may be thought
-to be an unduly pessimistic one. It has not been my intention
-to be pessimistic or to be impertinently critical. Indeed,
-turning from the art of the practice of medicine, and the religion
-and folk-lore of sanitation, to the science of the study of
-disease, we have much of which to be proud. American biochemists
-of the type of Van Slyke and Folin are actually in the
-lead of their European brothers. Their precise quantitative
-methods furnish invaluable tools in the exact study of the ills
-that afflict us.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, the greatest figure of all, Jacques Loeb, working in
-an institution that declares its purpose to be the dubious one
-of <em>medical</em> research, has in the last three years published investigations
-which throw a flood of light upon the dark problems of
-the chemistry of proteins. His work is of most fundamental
-significance, will have far-reaching results, and is measurably
-in advance of that of any European in the same field. Loeb,
-like all men of the first rank, has no spirit of propaganda or
-proselytism. His exact quantitative experiments rob biology
-of much of its confused romantic glamour. The comprehension
-of his researches demands thorough knowledge of physical
-chemistry. However, it is encouraging to note that among
-a few younger investigators his point of view is being accepted
-with fervour and enthusiasm. But it is time to stop. We are
-straying from our subject which was, if I remember, American
-medicine.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Anonymous</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_457" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_457">457</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="SPORT_AND_PLAY">SPORT AND PLAY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Bartlett</span> does not tell us who pulled the one about all
-work and no play, but it probably was the man who said
-that the longest way round was the shortest way home. There
-is as much sense in one remark as in the other.</p>
-
-<p>Give me an even start with George M. Cohan, who lives in
-Great Neck, where I also live, without his suspecting it—give
-us an even start in the Pennsylvania Station and route me on
-a Long Island train through Flushing and Bayside while he
-travels via San Francisco and Yokohama, and I shall undertake
-to beat him home, even in a blizzard. So much for “the
-longest way round.” Now for the other. If it were your ambition
-to spend an evening with a dull boy, whom would you
-choose, H. G. Wells, whose output indicates that he doesn’t
-even take time off to sleep, or the man that closes his desk at
-two o’clock every afternoon and goes to the ball-game?</p>
-
-<p>You may argue that watching ball-games is not play. It is
-the American idea of play, which amounts to the same thing,
-and seventy-five per cent, of the three hundred thousand citizens
-who do it daily, in season, will tell you seriously that it
-is all the recreation they get; moreover, that deprived of it,
-their brain would crack under the strain of “business,” that,
-on account of it, they are able to do more work in the forenoon,
-and do it better, than would be possible in two or three
-full days of close sticking on the job. If you believe them,
-inveterate baseball fans can, in a single morning, dictate as
-many as four or five twenty-word letters to customers or salesmen,
-and finish as fresh as a daisy; whereas the non-fan, the
-grind, is logy and torpid by the time he reaches the second
-“In reply to same.”</p>
-
-<p>But if you won’t concede, in the face of the fans’ own statement,
-that it is recreation to look on at baseball or any other
-sport, then let me ask you to invite to your home some evening,
-not a mere spectator, but an active participant in any of
-our popular games—say a champion or near-champion golfer,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_458">458</span>
-or a first string pitcher on a big league baseball club. The
-golfer, let us say, sells insurance half the year and golfs the
-rest. The pitcher plays eight months of the year and loafs the
-other four. Bar conversation about their specialty, and you
-won’t find two duller boys than those outside the motion-picture
-studios.</p>
-
-<p>No, brothers, the bright minds of this or any other country
-are owned by the men who leave off work only to eat or go to
-bed. The doodles are the boys who divide their time fifty-fifty
-between work and play, or who play all the time and don’t
-even pretend to work. Proper exercise undoubtedly promotes
-good health, but the theory that good health and an active
-brain are inseparable can be shot full of holes by the mention
-of two names—Stanislaus Zbyzsk and Robert Louis Stevenson.</p>
-
-<p>It is silly, then, to propound that sport is of mental benefit.
-Its true, basic function is the cultivation of bodily vigour, with
-a view to longevity. And longevity, despite the fact that we
-profess belief in a post-mortem existence that makes this one
-look sick, is a thing we poignantly desire. Bonehead and wise
-guy, believer and sceptic—all of us want to postpone as long
-as possible the promised joy-ride to the Great Beyond. If to
-participate in sport helps us to do that, then there is good
-reason to participate in sport.</p>
-
-<p>Well, how many “grown-ups” (normal human beings of
-twenty-two and under need not be considered; they get all
-the exercise they require, and then some) in this country, a
-country that boasts champions in nearly every branch of athletics,
-derive from play the physical benefit there is in it?
-What percentage take an active part in what the sporting editors
-call “the five major sports”—baseball, football, boxing,
-horse racing, and golf? Let us take them one by one and figure
-it out, beginning with “the national pastime.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Baseball.</i> Twenty or twenty-one play. Three hundred to
-forty thousand look on. The latter are, for two hours, “out
-in the open air,” and this, when the air is not so open as to give
-them pneumonia and when they don’t catch something as bad
-or worse in the street-car or subway train that takes them
-and brings them back, is a physical benefit. Moreover, the
-habitual attendant at ball-games is not likely to die of brain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_459">459</span>
-fever. But otherwise, the only ones whose health is appreciably
-promoted are the twenty or twenty-one who play. And
-they are not doing it for their health.</p>
-
-<p><i>Football.</i> Thirty play. Thirty thousand look on. One or
-two of the thirty may be killed or suffer a broken bone, but
-the general health of the other twenty-nine or twenty-eight is
-improved by the exercise. As for the thirty thousand, all they
-get is the open air—usually a little too much of it—and, unless
-they are hardened to the present-day cheer-leader, a slight
-feeling of nausea.</p>
-
-<p><i>Boxing.</i> Eight to ten play. Five thousand to sixty thousand
-look on. Those of the participants who are masters of defence
-may profit physically by the training, though the rigorous
-methods sometimes employed to make an unnatural weight
-are certainly inimical to health. The ones not expert in defensive
-boxing, the ones who succeed in the game through their
-ability to “take punishment” (a trait that usually goes with
-a low mentality) die, as a rule, before reaching old age, as a
-result of the “gameness” that made them “successful.”
-There is a limit to the number of punches one can “take”
-and retain one’s health. The five or sixty thousand cannot
-boast that they even get the air. All but a few of the shows
-are given indoors, in an atmosphere as fresh and clean as that
-of the Gopher Prairie day-coach.</p>
-
-<p><i>Horse Racing.</i> Fifty horses and twenty-five jockeys play.
-Ten thousand people look on. I can’t speak for the horses, but
-if a jockey wants to remain a jockey, he must, as a rule, eat a
-great deal less than his little stomach craves, and I don’t know
-of any doctor who prescribes constant underfeeding as conducive
-to good health in a growing boy.</p>
-
-<p>Racing fans, of course, are out for financial, not physical,
-gain. They, like the jockeys, are likely to starve to death
-while still young.</p>
-
-<p><i>Golf.</i> Here is a pastime in which the players far outnumber
-the lookers-on. It is a game, if it is a game, that not only
-takes you out in the open air, but makes you walk, and walking,
-the doctors say, is all the exercise you need, if you walk
-five miles or more a day. Golf, then, is really beneficial, and
-it costs you about $25.00 a week the year round.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_460">460</span></p>
-
-<p>So much for our “five major sports.” We look on at four
-of them, and if we can support the family, and pay taxes and
-insurance, on $1250 a year less than we earn, we take part in
-the fifth.</p>
-
-<p>The minor sports, as the editor will tell you, are tennis,
-boating, polo, track athletics, trap-shooting, archery, hockey,
-soccer, and so on. Not to mention games like poker, bridge,
-bowling, billiards, and pool (now officially known as “pocket
-billiards” because the Ladies’ Guild thought “pool” must
-have something to do with betting), which we may dismiss as
-being of doubtful physical benefit, since they are all played
-indoors and in a fog of Camel smoke.</p>
-
-<p>Of the outdoor “minors,” tennis is unquestionably the most
-popular. And it is one whale of a game—if you can stand it.
-But what percentage of grown-ups play it? I have no statistics
-at hand, and must guess. The number of adult persons
-with whom I am acquainted, intimately or casually, is possibly
-two thousand. I can think of ten who play as many as five
-sets of tennis a year.</p>
-
-<p>How many of the two thousand play polo or have ever
-played polo? One. How many are trap-shooters? Two.
-How many have boats? Six or seven. How many run footraces
-or jump? None. How many are archers? None. How
-many play hockey, soccer, la crosse? None.</p>
-
-<p>If I felt like indulging in a game of cricket, which God forbid,
-whom should I call up and invite to join me?</p>
-
-<p>Now, how many of my two thousand acquaintances are occasional
-or habitual spectators at baseball games, football
-games, boxing matches, or horse races? All but three or four.
-The people I know (I do not include ball-players, boxers, and
-wrestlers, who make their living from sport) are average
-people; they are the people you know. And the overwhelming
-majority of them don’t play.</p>
-
-<p>Why not? If regular participation in a more or less interesting
-outdoor game is going to lengthen our lives, why don’t
-we participate? Is it because we haven’t time? It takes just
-as much time to look on, and we do that. Is it because we
-can’t afford it? We can play tennis for as little as it costs to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_461">461</span>
-go to the bail-game and infinitely less than it costs to go to
-the races.</p>
-
-<p>We don’t play because (1) we lack imagination, and because
-(2) we are a nation of hero-worshippers.</p>
-
-<p>When we were kids, the nurse and the minister taught us
-that, if we weren’t good, our next stop would be hell. But, to
-us, there was no chance of the train’s starting for seventy
-years. And we couldn’t visualize an infernal excursion that
-far off. It was too vague to be scary. We kept right on swiping
-the old man’s cigars and giggling in the choir. If they had
-said that misdemeanours such as those would spell death and
-eternal fire, not when we were old, but to-morrow, most of
-us would have respected father’s property rights and sat
-through the service with a sour pan. If the family doctor were
-to tell us now that unless we got outdoors and exercised every
-afternoon this week, we should die next Tuesday before lunch,
-you can bet we should get outdoors and exercise every afternoon
-this week. But when he tells us that, without healthful outdoor
-sport, we shall die in 1945 instead of 1949, why, it doesn’t
-mean anything. It’s a chimera, a myth, like the next war.</p>
-
-<p>But hero-worship is the national disease that does most to
-keep the grandstands full and the playgrounds empty. To
-hell with those four extra years of life, if they are going to cut
-in on our afternoon at the Polo Grounds, where, in blissful
-asininity, we may feast our eyes on the swarthy Champion of
-Swat, shouting now and then in an excess of anile idolatry,
-“Come on, you Babe. Come on, you Baby Doll!” And if
-an hour of tennis is going to make us late at the Garden, perhaps
-keep us out of our ringside seats, so close to Dempsey’s
-corner that (O bounteous God!) a drop of the divine perspiration
-may splash our undeserving snout—Hang up, liver!
-You’re on a busy wire!</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Ring W. Lardner</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_463" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_463">463</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="HUMOUR">HUMOUR</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">With</span> the aid of a competent bibliographer for about five
-days I believe I could supply the proof to any unreflecting
-person in need of it that there is no such thing as an
-American gift of humorous expression, that the sense of
-humour does not exist among our upper classes, especially our
-upper literary class, that in many respects almost every other
-civilized country in the world has more of it, that quiet New
-England humour is exceedingly loud and does not belong to
-New England, that British incomprehension of our jokes is as
-a rule commendable, the sense of humour generally beginning
-where our jokes leave off. And while you can prove anything
-about a race or about all races with the aid of a bibliographer
-for five days, as contemporary sociologists are now showing, I
-believe these things are true. Belief in American humour is
-a superstition that seldom outlasts youth in persons who have
-been exposed to American practice, and hardly ever if they
-know anything of the practice elsewhere. Of course I am not
-speaking of the sad formalism of the usual thing as we see it
-in newspapers and on movie screens or of the ritual of magazines
-wholly or in part sanctified to our solemn god of fun. I
-mean the best of it.</p>
-
-<p>In the books and passages collated by my bibliographer the
-American gift of humour would be distributed over areas of
-time so vast and among peoples so numerous, remote, or savage,
-that no American would have the heart to press his claim.
-The quaintness, dryness, ultra-solemnity with or without the
-wink, exaggeration, surprise, contrast, assumption of common
-misunderstanding, hyperbolical innocence, quiet chuckle, upsetting
-of dignity, <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">éclat</i> of spontaneity with appeals to the everlasting,
-dislocation of elegance or familiarity, imperturbability,
-and twinkle—whatever the qualities may be as enumerated by
-the bacteriologists who alone have ever written on the subject,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_464">464</span>
-the most American of them would be shown in my bibliographer’s
-report to be to a far greater degree un-American. Patriotic
-exultation in their ownership is like patriotic exultation
-in the possession of the parts of speech. Humour is no more
-altered by local reference than grammar is altered by being
-spoken through the nose. And if the bibliography is an ideal
-one it will not only present American humour at all times and
-places but will produce almost verbatim long passages of
-American humorous text dated at any time and place, and will
-show how by a few simple changes in local terms they may be
-made wholly verbatim and American. It will show that American
-humorous writing did in fact begin everywhere but only
-at certain periods was permitted to continue and that these
-periods were by no means the happiest in history. I have time
-to mention here only the laborious section that it will probably
-devote to Mark Twain in the Age of Pericles, though for
-the more active reader the one on Mr. Cobb, Mr. Butler, and
-others around the walls of Troy might be of greater contemporary
-interest.</p>
-
-<p>Mark Twain, according to the citations in this section, would
-seem actually to have begun all of his longer stories, including
-“Pudd’nhead Wilson,” and most of the shorter ones, essays,
-and other papers, at Athens or thereabouts during this period,
-but not to have finished a single one, not even the briefest of
-them. He started, gave a clear hint as to how the thing would
-naturally run, and then he stopped. The reason for this was
-that owing to the trained imagination of the people for whom
-he wrote, the beginning and the hint were sufficient, and from
-that point on they could amuse themselves along the line that
-Mark Twain indicated better than he would have amused
-them, had he continued. Mark Twain finally saw this and
-that is why he stopped, realizing that there was no need of his
-keeping the ball rolling when to their imaginative intelligence
-the ball would roll of itself. He did at first try to keep on,
-and being lively and observant and voluble even for a Greek
-he held large crowds on street-corners by the sheer repetition
-of a single gesture of the mind throughout long narratives of
-varied circumstance. In good society this was not tolerated
-even after supper, and there was never the slightest chance of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_465">465</span>
-publication. But the streets of Athens were full of the suppressed
-writings of Mark Twain.</p>
-
-<p>Every man of taste in Athens loved Mark Twain for the
-first push of his fancy but none could endure the unmitigated
-constancy of his pushing of it, and as Mark Twain went everywhere
-and was most persistent, the compression of his narrative
-flow within the limits of the good breeding of the period
-was an embarrassing problem to hosts, unwilling to be downright
-rude to him. Finally he was snubbed in public by his
-friends and a few of the more intimate explained to him afterwards
-the reason why.</p>
-
-<p>The gist of their explanation was evidently this: The hypothesis
-of the best society in town nowadays is that the prolongation
-of a single posture of the mind is intolerable, no
-matter how variegated the substance in which the mind reposes.
-That sort of thing belongs to an earlier day than ours,
-although, as you have found, it is still much relished in the
-streets. If all the slaves were writers; if readers bred like
-rabbits so that the pleasing of them assured great wealth; if
-the banausic element in our life should absorb all the rest of
-it and if, lost in the external labour process, with the mechanism
-of it running in our minds, we turned only a sleepy eye
-to pleasure; then we might need the single thought strung with
-adventures, passions, incidents and need only that—infinitudes
-of detail easily guessed but inexorably recounted; long lists of
-sentiments with human countenances doing this and that;
-physiological acts in millions of pages and unchanging phrase;
-volumes of imaginary events without a thought among them;
-invented public documents equalling the real; enormous anecdotes;
-and all in a strange reiterated gesture, caught from machines,
-disposing the mind to nod itself to sleep repeating the
-names of what it saw while awake. But the bedside writer for
-the men in bed is not desired at the present moment in our
-best society.</p>
-
-<p>All these things are now carried in ellipsis to the reader’s
-head, if the reader’s head desires them; they are implied in
-dots at ends of sentences. We guess long narratives merely
-from a comma; we do not write them out. In this space left
-free by us with deliberate aposiopesis, a literature of countless<span class="pagenum" id="Page_466">466</span>
-simplicities may some day arise. At present we do not feel the
-need of it. And in respect to humour the rule of the present
-day is this: never do for another what he can do for himself.
-A simple process of the fancy as in contrast, incongruity, exaggeration,
-impossibility, must be confined in public to one or
-two displays. Let us take the simplest of illustrations—a cow
-in the dining-room, for example—and proceed with it as simply
-as we can. If by a happy stroke of fancy a cow in the dining-room
-is made pleasing to the mind, never argue that the pleasure
-is doubled by the successive portrayal of two cows in two
-dining-rooms, assuming that the stroke of fancy remains the
-same. Realize rather that it diminishes, and that with the
-presentation of nine cows in nine dining-rooms it has changed
-to pain. Now if for cows in dining-rooms be substituted gods
-in tailor shops, tailors in the houses of gods, cobblers at
-king’s courts, Thebans before masterpieces, one class against
-another, one age against another, and so on through incalculable
-details, however bizarre, all in simple combination, all easily
-gathered, without a shift of thought or wider imagery, the fancy
-mechanistically placing the objects side by side, picked from
-the world as from a catalogue—even then the situation to our
-present thinking is not improved.</p>
-
-<p>“Distiktos,” said they, playfully turning the name of the
-humourist into the argot of the street, “we find you charming
-just at the turn of the tide, but when the flood comes in, <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">ne
-Dia!</i> you are certainly <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">de trop</i>. And in your own private interest,
-Distiktos, unless you really want to lead a life totally
-anexetastic and forlorn, how can you go on in that manner?”</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Frank Moore Colby</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_467">467</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="American_Civilization_from_the_Foreign_Point_of_View"><i>American Civilization from the Foreign Point of View</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-<table id="foreign">
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_469">I.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#toclink_469">ENGLISH</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_489">II.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#toclink_489">IRISH</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_508">III.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl"><a href="#toclink_508">ITALIAN</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_468">468</span></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_469" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_469">469</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="I_AS_AN_ENGLISHMAN_SEES_IT">I. AS AN ENGLISHMAN SEES IT</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap a"><span class="smcap1">A little</span> less than two years ago—on the 14 July, 1919,
-to be exact—it fell to my lot, as an officer attached to
-one of the many military missions in Paris, to “assist,” from
-a reserved seat in a balcony of the Hotel Astoria, at the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">défilé</i>,
-or triumphal entry of the Allied troops into Paris.</p>
-
-<p>The march <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">à Berlin</i> not having eventuated owing to the upset
-in schedule brought about by the entry of dispassionate
-allies at the eleventh hour, it was felt that the French must
-be offered something in exchange, and this took the happy
-form of a sort of community march along the route once desecrated
-by Prussian hoof-beats—a vast military <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">corbeille</i> of the
-allied contingents, with flags, drums, trumpets, and all the rest
-of the paraphernalia that had been kept in cold storage during
-four years of gas, shell, and barbed wire. Such a <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">défilé</i>, it was
-calculated, would be something more than a frugal gratification
-to the French army and people. It would offer to the
-world at large, through the medium of a now unmuzzled press,
-a striking object lesson in allied good feeling and similarity of
-aims.</p>
-
-<p>My purpose in referring to the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">défilé</i> is merely to record one
-unrehearsed incident in it but I would say in passing that the
-affair, “for an affair,” as the French say, was extraordinarily
-well stage-managed. A particularly happy thought was the
-marshalling of the allied contingents by alphabetical order.
-This not only obviated any international pique on what we
-all wanted to be France’s day, but left the lead of the procession
-where everybody, in the rapture of delivery, was well content
-it should remain. Handled with a little tact, the alphabet
-had once more justified itself as an impartial guide:</p>
-
-<p class="in0 in4">
-B is for Britain, Great.<br />
-A is for America, United States of.
-</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>For impressiveness I frankly and freely allot the palm to
-what it was the fashion then to term the American effort. Different<span class="pagenum" id="Page_470">470</span>
-contingents were impressive in different ways. The Republican
-Guard, jack-booted, with buckskin breeches, gleaming
-helmets, flowing <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">crinières</i>, and sabres <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">au clair</i>, lent just the right
-subtle touch of the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">épopée</i> of Austerlitz and Jena to make us
-feel 1871 had been an evil dream; the Highlanders, the voice
-of the hydra squalling and clanging from their immemorial
-pipes, stirred all sorts of atavistic impulses and memories.
-Nevertheless, had I been present that day in Paris as a newspaper
-man instead of as the humblest and most obscure of soldiers,
-neither one nor the other would have misled my journalistic
-instinct. I should have put the lead of my “story”
-where alphabetical skill had put the lead of the procession—in
-the American infantry.</p>
-
-<p>In front the generalissimo, martial and urbane, on a bright
-coated horse that pranced, curvetted, “passaged” from side to
-side under a practised hand. At his back the band, its monster
-uncurved horns of brass blaring out the Broadway air before
-which “over there” the walls of pacifism had toppled into dust
-in a day. Behind them, platoon by platoon, the clean shaved,
-physically perfect fighting youth of the great republic. All six
-feet high—there was not one, it was whispered, but had earned
-his place in the contingent by a rigorous physical selection:
-moving with the alignment of pistons in some deadly machine—they
-had been drilled, we were told, intensively for a month
-back. In spotless khaki, varnished trench helmets, spick and
-span, scarcely touched by the withering breath of war. Whenever
-the procession was checked, platoon after platoon moved
-on to the regulation distance and marked time. When it
-resumed, they opened out link by link with the same almost
-inhuman precision, and resumed their portentous progress.
-How others saw them you shall hear, but to me they were
-no mere thousand fighting men; rather the head of a vast
-battering ram, the simple threat of which, aimed at the over-taxed
-heart of the German Empire, had ended war. A French
-<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">planton</i> of the Astoria staff, who had edged his way into the
-ticketed group was at my back. “Les voilà qui les attendaient,”
-he almost whispered. “Look what was waiting for
-<em>them</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>The next balcony to mine had been reserved for the civil<span class="pagenum" id="Page_471">471</span>
-employés of British missions, and here was gathered a little
-knot of average English men and women—stenographers, typists,
-clerks, cogs of commercialism pressed into the mechanical
-work of post-war settlement. As the Americans moved on
-after one of the impressive checks of which I have just spoken,
-something caught my ears that made me turn my head quickly,
-even from a spectacle every lost moment of which I grudged.
-It was, of all sounds that come from the human heart, the
-lowest and the most ominous—the sound that makes the unwary
-walker through tropical long grass look swiftly round his
-feet and take a firmer grasp on the stick he has been wise
-enough to carry.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible—it is inconceivable—and it’s true. On this
-great day of international congratulation, one of the two
-branches of the Anglo-Saxon race was hissing the other.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>I spoke about the matter later to a friend and former
-chief, whom I liked but whose position and character were no
-guarantee of tact or good judgment. I said I thought it rather
-an ominous incident, but he refused to be “rattled.” With
-that British imperturbability which Americans have noted and
-filed on the card index of their impressions he dismissed the
-whole thing as of slight import.</p>
-
-<p>“Very natural, I dare say. Fine show all the same. Perhaps
-your friends on the other balcony thought they were
-slopping over in front.”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Slopping over...?’”</p>
-
-<p>“Well—going a little too far. Efficiency and all that. Bit
-out of step with the rest of the procession.”</p>
-
-<p>I have often wondered since whether this homely phrase, uttered
-by a simple soldier man, did not come nearer to the root
-of the divergence between British and American character
-than all the mystifying and laborious estimates which nine out
-of ten of our great or near-great writers seem to think is due
-at a certain period in their popularity.</p>
-
-<p>To achieve discord, you see, it is not necessary that two instruments
-should play different tunes. It is quite sufficient
-that the tempo of one should differ from the tempo of the other.
-All I want to indicate in the brief space which the scope of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_472">472</span>
-this work, leaves at my disposal are just a few of the conjunctures
-at which I think the beat of the national heart, here and
-across the Atlantic, is likely to find itself out of accord.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Englishmen do not emigrate to the United States in any
-large numbers, and it is many years since their arrival contributed
-anything but an insignificant racial element to the
-“melting pot.” They do not come partly because their own
-Colonies offer a superior attraction, and partly because British
-labour is now aware that the economic stress is fiercer in the
-larger country and the material rewards proportionately no
-greater. Those who still come, come as a rule prepared to take
-executive positions, or as specialists in their several lines.
-Their unwillingness to assume American citizenship is notorious,
-and I think significant; but it is only within quite recent
-years that it has been made any ground of accusation—and
-among the class with which their activities bring them into
-closest contact it is, or was until a year or two ago, tacitly and
-tactfully ignored. During a review of the “foreign element”
-in Boston to which I was assigned two years before the war, I
-found business men of British birth not only reluctant to yield
-“copy” but resentful of the publicity to which the enterprise
-of my journal was subjecting them.</p>
-
-<p>There are many reasons why eminent English writers and
-publicists are of little value in arriving at an estimate of “how
-Americans strike an Englishman.” While not asserting anything
-so crude as that commercial motives are felt as a restraining
-force when the temptation arises to pass adverse judgment
-on the things they see and hear, it is evident that the conditions
-under which they come—men of achievement in their
-own country accredited to men of achievement here—keep
-them isolated from much that is restless, unstable, but vitally
-significant in American life. None of them, so far as I know,
-have had the courage or the enterprise to come to America,
-unheralded and anonymous, and to pay with a few months
-of economic struggle for an estimate that might have real
-value.</p>
-
-<p>To this lack of real contact between the masses in America
-and Great Britain is due the intrinsic falsity of the language<span class="pagenum" id="Page_473">473</span>
-in which the racial bond is celebrated on the occasions when
-some political crisis calls for its reiteration. It is felt easier
-and safer to utter it in consecrated <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">clichés</i>—to refer to the
-specific gravity of blood and water, or the philological roots
-of the medium used by Milton and Arthur Brisbane. The
-banality, the insincerity, of the public utterances at the
-time that America’s entry into the European struggle first
-loomed as a possible solution of the agony on the Western
-Front was almost unbelievable. Any one who cares to turn
-up the files of the great dailies between September, 1916, and
-March, 1918, may find them for himself.</p>
-
-<p>To a mind not clouded by the will to believe, this constant
-invocation of common aims, this perpetual tug at the bond to
-ensure that it has not parted overnight, would be strong corroboration
-of a suspicion that the two vessels were drifting apart,
-borne on currents that flow in different directions. It is not
-upon the after-dinner banalities of wealthy and class-conscious
-“pilgrims” nor the sonorous platitudes of discredited laggards
-on the political scene, still less is it upon the sporting proclivities
-of titled hoydens and hawbucks to whom American
-sweat and dollars have arrived in a revivifying stream, that
-we shall have to rely should the cable really part and the two
-great vessels of State grope for one another on a dark and uncharted
-sea. It is upon the sheer and unassisted fact of how
-American and Englishman like or dislike one another.</p>
-
-<p>It is a truism almost too stale to restate that we are standing
-to-day on the threshold of great changes. What is not so
-well realized is that many of these changes have already taken
-place. The passing of gold in shipment after shipment from
-the Eastern to the Western side of the Atlantic and the feverish
-hunt for new and untapped sources of exploitation are only the
-outward signs of a profound European impoverishment in
-which Britain for the first time in her history has been called
-upon to bear her full share. The strikes and lock-outs that
-have followed the peace in such rapid succession might possibly
-be written off as inevitable <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">sequelæ</i> of a great war. The
-feeble response to the call for production as a means of salvation,
-the general change in the English temper faced with its
-heavy task are far more vital and significant matters. They<span class="pagenum" id="Page_474">474</span>
-seem to mark a shift in moral values—a change in the faith
-by which nations, each in the sphere that character and circumstance
-allot, wax and flourish.</p>
-
-<p>Confronted with inevitable competition by a nation more
-populous, more cohesive, and richer than itself, it seems to me
-that there are three courses which the older section of the
-English race may elect to follow. One is war, before the
-forces grow too disparate, and on the day that war is declared
-one phase of our civilization will end. It will really not matter
-much, to the world at large, who wins an Anglo-American
-world conflict. The second, which is being preached in and
-out of season by our politicians and publicists, who seldom,
-however, dare to speak their full thought, is a girding up of
-the national loins, a renewed consecration to the gospel of effort,
-a curtailment, if necessary—though this is up to now
-only vaguely hinted—of political liberties bestowed in easier
-and less strenuous days. The third course may easily be
-guessed. It is a persistence in proclivities, always latent as I
-believe in the English temperament, but which have only revealed
-themselves openly since the great war, a clearer questioning
-of values till now held as unimpeachable, a readier ear
-to the muttering and murmuring of the masses in Continental
-Europe, internationalism—revolution. No thoughtful man in
-England to-day denies the danger. Even references to that
-saving factor, the “common sense of the British workman,”
-no longer allays the spectre of a problem the issues of which
-have only to be stated to stand forth in all their hopeless irreconcilability.
-Years ago, long before the shadow fell on the
-world, in a moment of depression or inspiration, I wrote that
-cravings were stirring in the human heart on the very eve of
-the day when the call would be to sacrifice. That is the riddle,
-nakedly stated, to which workers and rulers alike are asked
-to find an answer to-day.</p>
-
-<p>In this choice that lies before the British worker a great
-deal may depend upon how American experiments and American
-achievements strike him. In England now there is no
-escaping from the big transatlantic sister. Politicians use her
-example as a justification; employers hold up her achievements
-as a reproach. A British premier dare not face the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_475">475</span>
-House of Commons on an “Irish night” unequipped with
-artful analogies culled from the history of the war of secession.
-The number of bricks per hour America’s bricklayers will lay
-or the tons of coal per week her stolid colliers will hew are
-the despair of the contractor face to face with the loafing and
-pleasure-loving native born. You will hear no more jokes
-to-day in high coalition places over her political machine replacing
-regularly and without the litter and disorder of a general
-election tweedledum Democrat by a tweedledee Republican.
-She is recognized—and this, I think, is the final value
-placed upon her by the entire ruling and possessing classes in
-my own country—as better equipped in her institutions, her
-character, and her population for the big economic struggle
-that is ahead of us.</p>
-
-<p>This is the secret of the unceasing court paid to Washington
-by all countries, but pre-eminently by Britain. It is not
-fear of her power, nor hunger for her money bags and harvests,
-nor desire to be “on the band-wagon,” as light-hearted
-cartoonists see it, that prompts the nervous susceptibility and
-the instantaneous response to anything that will offend those
-in high places on the banks of the Potomac. It is the sense,
-among all men with a strong interest in maintaining the present
-economic order, that the support in their own countries is
-crumbling under their hands, and that that fresh support,
-stronger and surer, is to be found in a new country with a
-simpler faith and a cleaner, or at any rate a shorter, record.
-To fight proletarianism with democracy is a method so obvious
-and safe that one only wonders its discovery had to wait upon
-to-day. Its salient characteristic is a newly aroused interest
-and enthusiasm in one country for the political forces that seem
-to make stability their watchword in the other. The coalition
-has become the hero of the New York <cite>Times</cite> and <cite>Tribune</cite>—the
-triumph of the Republican party was hailed almost as a
-national victory in the London <cite>Times</cite> and Birmingham <cite>Post</cite>.
-Intransigeance in foreign policies finds ready forgiveness in
-London; in return, a blind eye is turned to schemes of territorial
-aggrandisement at Washington.</p>
-
-<p>If a flaw is to be discerned in what at first sight seems a perfectly
-adjusted instrument for international comity, it is that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_476">476</span>
-this new Anglo-American understanding seems to be founded
-on class rather than on national sympathy. Even offhand
-some inherent inconsistency would seem to be sensed from the
-fact that the appeal of the great republic comes most home, in
-the parent country, to the class that is least attached to democratic
-forms and the most fearful of change. References to
-America arouse no enthusiasm at meetings of the labour element
-in England, and it is still felt unwise to expose the Union
-Jack to possible humiliation in parades on a large scale in New
-York or Chicago. A sympathy that flowers into rhetoric at
-commercial banquets or at meetings of the archæologically inclined
-may have its roots in the soundest political wisdom.
-But to infer from such demonstrations of class solidarity any
-national community of thought or aim is both unwarranted and
-unsafe. This much is evident, that should a class subversion,
-always possible in a country the political fluidity of which is
-great, leave the destinies of Great Britain in the hands of the
-class that is silent or hostile to-day when the name of America
-is mentioned, an entire re-statement of Anglo-American unity
-would become necessary, in terms palatable to the average
-Englishman.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>This average Englishman is a highly complicated being.
-Through the overlay which industrialism has imposed on him,
-he has preserved to quite an extraordinary extent the asperities,
-the generosities, the occasional eccentricities of the days
-when he was a free man in a free land. No melting process
-has ever subdued the sharp bright hues of his individuality
-into the universal, all-pervading drab that is the result
-of blending primary colours. No man who has employed
-him to useful purpose has ever succeeded in reducing his personality
-to the proportions of a number on a brass tag. The
-pirate and rover who looked upon Roman villadom and found
-it not good, the archer who brought the steel-clad hierarchy
-of France toppling from their blooded horses at Crécy and
-Agincourt, the churl who struck off the heads of lawyers in
-Westminster Palace yard survive in him.</p>
-
-<p>If I am stressing this kink in the British character it is because
-one of its results has been to make the Englishman of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_477">477</span>
-all men the least impressed by scale, and the one to whom appeals
-made on the size of an experiment or the vastness of a
-vision will evoke the least response, and especially because I
-think I perceive a tendency to approach him in the interests
-of Anglo-American unity precisely from the angle that will
-awake antagonism where co-operation is sought. The attachment
-of the Englishman to little things and to hidden things,
-which no one except Chesterton has had the insight to perceive,
-or at all events which Chesterton was the first to place in
-its full relation to his inconsistencies, explains his strangely
-detached attitude to that British Empire of which his country
-is the core. Its discovery as an entity calling for a special
-quality in thought and action dates no further back than that
-strange interlude in history, when the personality of Roosevelt
-and the vision of Kipling held the imagination of the world.</p>
-
-<p>This refusal to be impressed by greatness, whether his own
-or others’, has its disadvantages, but at least it has one saving
-element. It leaves an Englishman quite capable of perceiving
-that it is possible for a thing to be grandiose in scale and mean
-in quality. It leaves intact his frank and childlike confidence
-that the little things of the world confound the strong; his
-implicit conviction that David will always floor Goliath, and
-that Jack’s is the destined sword to smite off the giant’s head.
-The grotesqueness of the Kaiser’s upturned moustaches,
-the inadequacy of a mythical “William the Weed” to
-achieve results that would count, were his guiding lights
-to victory, the touchstones by which he tested in advance the
-vast machine that finally cracked and broke under its own
-weight. It was the “contemptible” little army of shopmen
-and colliers which seized his imagination and held his affection
-throughout, not the efficient mechanical naval machine
-that fought one great sea battle, which was a revelation of
-the risks inherent in its own monstrousness and complexity,
-and made its headquarters in Scapa Flow. I recall the comments
-heard at the time of Jutland in the artillery camp where
-fate had throwm me. They served to confirm a dawning conviction
-that the navy, while it still awes and impresses, lost
-its hold on the British heart the day wooden walls were exchanged
-for iron and steel. It is perhaps the “silent service”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_478">478</span>
-to-day because its appeal awakes so little response. It has
-been specialized and magnified out of the average Englishman’s
-power to love it.</p>
-
-<p>In America the contrary seems the case. The American
-heart appears to go out to bulk, to scale, and to efficiency. The
-American has neither the time nor the temperament to test
-and weigh. His affections, even his loyalties, seem to be at
-the mercy of aspects that impose and impress. I know no
-other country where the word “big” is used so constantly as
-a token of affection. Every community has its “Big Tims,”
-“Big Bills,” “Big Jacks,” great hearty fellows who gambol
-and spout on public occasions with the abandonment of a
-school of whales. Gargantuan “Babe Ruth,” mountainous
-Jack Dempsey are the idols of its sport-loving crowds.
-“Mammoth in character,” the qualification which on the lips
-of the late Mr. Morgan Richards stirred laughter throughout
-England, is to the American no inconsequential or slipshod
-phrase. He does perceive a character and justification in
-bigness. It was perhaps to this trait in his mental make-up
-that the puzzling shift of allegiance to the beginning
-of the great war was due. The scale and completeness of the
-German effort laid hold of his imagination to an extent that
-only those who spent the first few months of agonizing doubt
-in the West and the Middle West can appreciate. Something
-that was obscurely akin, something that transcended racial affinities
-and antipathies, awoke in him at the steady ordered
-flow of the field-grey legions Westward, so adequately pictured
-for him by Richard Harding Davis. He is quite merciless to
-defeat.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing conceived on such a scale can indulge complexities.
-Its ideals must be ample, rugged, and primitive, adequate
-to the vast task. Hence the velocity, the thoroughness,
-the apparent ruthlessness with which American enterprises are
-put through. It is the fashion among a certain school of
-thought to call America the country of inhibitions. But there
-is little inhibition to be perceived on that side of his temperament,
-which the American has chosen to cultivate, leaving all
-else to those who find perverse attraction in weed and ruin.
-His language—and he is amazingly vocal—is as simple and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_479">479</span>
-direct as his thought. The appeals and admonitions of his
-leaders reverberate from vast and resonant lungs. They are
-calculated rather to carry far than to penetrate deeply. They
-are statements and re-statements rather than arguments. If
-their verbiage often aims at and sometimes seems to attain
-the sublime, if the American leader is forever dedicating, consecrating,
-inspiring something, the altitude is like the elevation
-given a shell in order that it may travel further. The nimble
-presentation of antithesis of a Lloyd George, the dagger-play
-of sarcasm of an Asquith, are conspicuously absent from the
-speeches of American leaders. There is something arrogant
-and ominous, like the clenching of a fist before the arm is
-raised, in this sonorous presentation of a faith already securely
-rooted in the hearts of all its hearers.</p>
-
-<p>This primitiveness and single-mindedness of the American
-seem to intensify as his historical origins recede further and
-further into the past. It is idle to speculate on what might
-have happened had the development of his country remained
-normal and homogeneous, as, up to the Civil War, it admittedly
-did. It is an even less grateful task to look back on the
-literature of the Transcendental period and register all that
-American thought seems to have lost since in subtlety and essential
-catholicity. What is really important is to realize that
-not only the language but the essence of Occidental civilization
-has called for simplification, for sacrifice, year by year.
-It is hard to see what other choice has lain before the American,
-as wave after wave of immigration diluted his homogeneity,
-than to put his concepts into terms easily understood
-and quickly grasped, with the philological economy of the traveller’s
-pocket manual and the categorical precision of the drill
-book. If in the very nature of things, this evangel is oftener
-pointed with a threat than made palatable with the honey of
-reason and sympathy, the task and not the taskmaster is to
-blame. On no other country has ever been imposed similar
-drudgery on a similar scale. It is idle to talk about the spiritual
-contribution of the foreigner when his first duty is to cast
-that contribution into the discard. It is futile to appeal to his
-traditions where the barrier of language rears itself in a few
-years between parents who have never learnt the new<span class="pagenum" id="Page_480">480</span>
-tongue and children who are unable or ashamed to speak the
-old.</p>
-
-<p>But such a régime cannot endure for many years without a
-profound influence, not only on those to whom it is prescribed,
-but on those who administer it. The most heaven-born
-leader of men, put into a receiving depot to which monthly
-and fortnightly contingents of bemused recruits arrive, quickly
-deteriorates into something like a glorified and commissioned
-drill sergeant. The schoolmaster is notoriously a social failure
-in circles where intercourse must be held on the level to which
-the elevation of his <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">estrade</i> has dishabituated him. Exact
-values—visions, to use a word that misuse has made hateful—disappear
-under a multiplicity of minor tasks. It is one of the
-revenges taken by fate that those who must harass and drive
-become harassed and sterile in turn.</p>
-
-<p>No one yet, so far as I know, has sought to place this
-amazing simplification in its true relation to the aridity of
-American life, an aridity so marked that it creates a positive
-thirst for softer and milder civilizations, not only in the foreigner
-who has tasted of them, but at a certain moment in their
-life in almost every one of the native born whose work lies
-outside the realm of material production. It is not that in England,
-as in every community, entire classes do not exist who seek
-material success by the limitation of interests and the retrenchment
-of sympathies. But in so doing they sacrifice to a domestic,
-not a national God; they follow personal not racial proclivities.
-There is no conscious subscription to a national ideal
-in their abandonment of æsthetic impulses. Side by side with
-them live other men whose apparent contentment with insecure
-and unstable lives at once redresses their pride and curtails
-their influence. They are conscious of the existence
-around them of a whole alien world, the material returns from
-which are negligible but in which other men somehow manage
-to achieve a fullness of experience and maintain self-respect.
-This other world reacts not only on employer but on employed.
-For the worker it abates the fervour and stress of his
-task, lends meaning and justification to his demand for leisure
-in the face of economic demands that threaten or deny. No one
-in England has yet dared to erect into an evangel the obvious<span class="pagenum" id="Page_481">481</span>
-truth that poor men must work. No compulsion sets the
-mental attitude a man may choose when faced with his task.
-The speeder-up and the efficiency expert is hateful and alien.
-“A fair day’s wage for a fair day’s work” may seem a loose
-and questionable phrase, but its implications go very deep.
-It sets a boundary mark on the frontier between flesh and
-spirit by which encroachments are registered as they occur.</p>
-
-<p>In America no such frontier exists. Here the invasion
-seems to be complete. The spirit that would disentangle material
-from immaterial aims wanders baffled and perplexed
-through a maze of loftily conceived phrases and exhortations
-each one of which holds the promise of rescue from the drudgery
-of visionless life, yet each one of which leads back to an
-altar where production is enthroned as God. Manuals and
-primers, one had almost written psalters, pour out from the
-printing presses in which such words as “inspiration,” “dedication,”
-“consecration” urge American youth not to the renunciation
-of material aims but to their intensive pursuit.
-This naïve and simple creed is quite free of self-consciousness
-or hypocrisy. In its occasional abrupt transitions from the
-language of prayer to such conscience-searching questions as
-“Could you hold down a $100.00 a week job?” or “Would
-you hire yourself?” no lapse from the sublime to the ridiculous,
-far less to the squalid, is felt. It has the childlike gravity
-and reverence of all religions that are held in the heart.</p>
-
-<p>But its God is a jealous God. No faltering in his service,
-no divided allegiance is permitted. His rewards are concrete
-and his punishments can be overwhelming. For open rebellion,
-outlawry; for secret revolt, contempt and misunderstanding
-are his inevitable visitations. For this reason those who
-escape into heresy not unfrequently lose their integrity and are
-gibbeted or pilloried for the edification of the faithful. The
-man who will not serve because the service starves and stunts
-his soul is all too likely to find himself dependent for company
-upon the man who will not serve because his will is too
-weak or his habits too dissipated.</p>
-
-<p>That this service is a hard one, its most ardent advocates
-make no attempt to conceal. Its very stringency is made the
-text of appeals for ever and ever fresh efficiency, intensive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_482">482</span>
-training, specialization. “The pace they must travel is so
-swift,” one advocate of strenuousness warns his disciples,
-“competition has become so fierce that brains and vision are
-not enough. One must have the <em>punch</em> to put things through.”
-The impression grows that the American business man, new
-style, is a sombre gladiator, equipped for his struggle by rigorous
-physical and mental discipline. The impression is helped
-by a host of axioms, plain and pictured, that feature a sort of
-new cant of virility. “Red-blooded men,” “Two-fisted men,”
-“Men who do things,” “Get-there fellows,” are a few headliners
-in this gospel of push and shove.</p>
-
-<p>The service is made still more difficult by its uncertainty,
-since no gospel of efficiency can greatly change the proportion
-of rewards, though it can make the contest harder and the
-marking higher. Year in year out, while competition intensifies
-and resources are fenced off, insecurity of employment remains,
-an evil tradition from days when opportunity was really boundless
-and competition could be escaped by a move of a few score
-miles Westward. Continuity in one employment still remains
-the exception rather than the rule, and when death or retirement
-reveals an instance it is still thought worthy of space in
-local journals. “Can you use me?” remains the customary
-gambit for the seeker after employment. The contempt of a
-settled prospect, of routine work, the conception of business as
-something to work <em>up</em> rather than to work <em>at</em> is still latent in
-the imagination of atavistic and ambitious young America. Of
-late years this restlessness, even though in so worthy a cause
-as “getting on,” has been felt as a hindrance to full efficiency,
-and the happy idea has been conceived of applying the adventurous
-element of competition at home. Territorial or departmental
-spheres are allotted within or without the “concern”
-to each employé; the results attained by A, B, and C are then
-totalled, analyzed, charted, and posted in conspicuous places
-where all may see, admire, and take warning. In the majority
-of up-to-date houses “suggestions” for the expansion or improvement
-of the business are not only welcomed but expected,
-and the employé who does not produce them in reasonable bulk
-and quality is slated for the “discard.” When inventiveness
-tires, “shake-ups” on a scale unknown in England take place,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_483">483</span>
-and new aspirants eager to “make good” step into the shoes of
-the old. The business athletes strain and pant toward the
-goal. There is no rest for the young man “consecrated” to
-merchandising effort. Like the fly in the fable, he must struggle
-and swim until the milk around his legs is churned into the
-butter of executive position.</p>
-
-<p>The American press, hybrid, highly coloured, and often
-written by men of erratic genius who prefer the poor rewards
-of news writing to the commercial yoke, conveys but a partial
-idea of this absorption of an entire race in a single function.
-A far more vivid impression is to be gained from the “house
-organs,” and publicity pamphlets which pour from the press
-in an unceasing stream and the production of which within
-recent years has become a large and lucrative industry. Here
-articles and symposia on such themes as “Building Character
-into Salesmanship,” “Hidden Forces that bring Sales,” and
-“Capitalizing Individuality,” often adorned with half-tones of
-tense and joyless faces, recur on every page. No sanctuary
-is inviolable, no recess unexplored. The demand of the commercial
-God is for the soul, and he will be content with no less.</p>
-
-<p>This demand implies a revised conception of the relation
-between employé and employer. The old contract under
-which time and effort were hired for so many hours a day at a
-stated remuneration, leaving life, liberty, and the pursuit of
-happiness outside those hours a matter of personal predilection,
-is now abrogated, or at least sharply questioned. It is recognized,
-and with entire logic, that the measure of accomplishment
-within working hours will depend largely on the environment
-amid which hours of recreation are spent; and that
-though detection of inefficiency is a task of keen brains that
-seldom fail, this detection, in the nature of things, may not
-take place until damage has been done the commercial structure.
-This is the real inwardness of a whole new gospel of
-“Welfare” and “Uplift,” under whose dispensation employés
-are provided with simple and tested specifics for recreation,
-with the watchful and benevolent eye of department heads
-upon them, in which it is presumed and stated with entire candour
-that the physical, moral, and mental efficiency of the
-staffs and “salesforce” has become the concern of the organization<span class="pagenum" id="Page_484">484</span>
-that has allotted them a place in its economy. The
-organism works, plays, rests, moves on together.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing is more terrifying, as that master of terror, Edgar
-Allan Poe, perceived, than an organism that is at once mean
-and colossal. Properties of efficiency and adaptation to one
-definite end are bestowed in an eminent degree only on the
-lower orders of animal life. With rigid bodies, encasing organs
-that are designed for simple, metabolic purposes, armed
-with an elaborate mechanism of claws, hinges, borers, valves,
-and suckers the lepidoptera are living tools that fly or creep.
-Absorbed in one tireless function, with all distractions of love
-and war delegated to specialized subspecies, they neither love,
-hate, nor rebel. As the scale ascends, efficiency dwindles, until
-in the litter and loneliness of the den, lazy domesticity
-with dam and cubs, the joy of prey hunt and love hunt, between
-the belly pinch of hunger and the sleep of repletion, the
-lives of the big carnivora pass in a sheer joy of living for living’s
-sake until the gun of the hunter ends the day dream.</p>
-
-<p>It has been left for man—hapless and inventive—to realize
-a life that touches both ends of the scale, to feel at his heart
-the pull of hive-life and jungle-life in turn. Something of the
-ant and something of the tiger lurks in every normal human
-creature. If he has immense powers of assertion, his faculty
-for abdication seems to be as limitless. It is just this dual
-nature in man that makes prophecy as to what “will happen
-the world” so difficult and unsafe. But one prophecy may be
-ventured on and that is, that in proportion as acquiescence or
-revolt seize the imaginations of separated nations will those
-nations coalesce or drift apart into antagonism.</p>
-
-<p>If a life spent during the last twenty years between
-England and the United States is any title to judge, I
-should say that at the present moment the dominant note
-in America is acquiescence in, and in England revolt against
-the inordinate demands of commercialism. Here, to all appearances,
-the surrender for the moment is complete. There
-are revolts, but they are sporadic and misguided and their
-speedy suppression seems to stir no indignation and to
-awaken no thrill of common danger among the body of
-workers. Strikes confined to wage issues are treated more indulgently,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_485">485</span>
-but even they are generally strangled at their birth
-by injunctions, and a sour or hostile attitude of authority
-makes success difficult. In any display of opposition to established
-conditions, even when based on the most technical
-grounds, authority appears to sense a challenge to larger issues
-and to meet them half way with a display of force that
-to an Englishman appears strangely over-adequate. It is evident
-the ground is being tested. Interpretations of liberty that
-date from easier and roomier days are under revision, and
-where they are found at variance with a conception of society
-as a disciplined and productive force, they are being roughly
-retrenched. The prevailing character of the labour mass, at
-once heterogeneous and amorphous, makes it a safe and ductile
-medium for almost any social experiment. “If you don’t like
-it, go back,” is an argument to which no answer has been
-found. Native-born labour shares in the universal dis-esteem
-and takes refuge from it in aristocratic and doctrinaire federations
-whose ineffectiveness is apparent whenever a labour issue
-arises. For the rebel who, under these conditions, chooses
-to fight on, rougher methods are found. He may become <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">fera
-natura</i>. Tarring and feathering, ducking and rubbing with
-acid, and deportation from State to State may be his portion.
-Under any social condition conformity is the easiest
-course. When the prison cell and social pillory are its
-alternatives, to resist requires a degree of fanatical courage
-and interior moral resources possessed only by a handful of
-men in a generation.</p>
-
-<p>To this conception of a disciplined community harnessed to
-the purpose of production, thousands of the possessing and
-capitalistic classes look wistfully from the other side of the
-Atlantic. But there are many obstacles to its realization in
-England. The English proletarian is no uprooted orphan, paying
-with docile and silent work for the citizenship of his children
-and grandchildren. That great going concern, the British
-Empire, is his personal work, built on the bones and cemented
-with the blood of his forebears. His enfranchisement is as complete
-as his disinheritance, and the impoverishment of his country,
-evidenced in the stream of gold that pours Westward like
-arterial blood, has not reached to his spirit. Even the Great<span class="pagenum" id="Page_486">486</span>
-War, with its revelation to him of how ruthless and comprehensive
-the demands of the State on the individual can be,
-has only reinforced his sense of being a very deserving person
-and has added to the long debt which he is frankly out to
-collect. The promises, the appeals to national pride and tradition
-with which he had to be appeased while, for the first time
-in his history, the yoke of universal service was laid upon his
-neck, trip up the feet of his rulers to-day. It is difficult to
-tell him to go elsewhere, for he “belongs” in England. Even
-suggestions that he should emigrate wholesale to British colonies
-in order to relieve the congested labour market are received
-with mocking laughter in which a threat lurks. He is,
-I am sure, because I know him, looking on with a certain sardonic
-relish and enjoyment at the flurries, the perplexities of
-his rulers, their displays of force alternated with appeals to
-sweet reason, their brave words succeeded by abject denials
-and qualifications. He is waiting until the naked economic
-question, which he knows well underlies all the rhodomontade
-of national greatness and imperial heritage, shall be put to
-him. It will be a great and momentous day when the Englishman
-is given his choice. A choice it must be. The means
-to compulsion are not here.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>To America just now Europeans as a whole must seem a
-helpless race, bewildered actors in a vast and tragic blunder.
-To thousands of Red Cross workers, Knights of Columbus,
-and welfare auxiliaries in devastated districts, the spectacle of
-suffering and want must have come home to reinforce impressions
-already gained from sights witnessed at Ellis Island or
-Long Wharf. None the less, it is an historical misfortune that
-the first real contact between the people of the two continents
-should have come at a time when the older was bankrupt and
-had little to show save the rags and tatters of its civilization.
-The reverse of the tenderness to the stricken European abroad
-has been a hardening of the heart to the immigrant at home,
-and it is difficult for the American, schoolmaster and lawgiver
-to so many alien peoples in his own country, to divest himself
-of a didactic character in his foreign relations. To many
-countries he is “saying it with flour,” and those who accept the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_487">487</span>
-dole can do little else than swallow the sermon. Even to those
-countries who were his allies he does shine forth in a certain
-splendour of righteousness. His sacrifice was deliberate—which
-is, perhaps, its best excuse for being a little conscious.
-It was self-imposed, and fifty thousand of his dead,
-wrested from productive enterprises to lie in France, attest
-its sincerity. No Englishman, at any rate, believes in his
-heart that its material reward, great and inevitable as it is
-now seen to be, was the driving force at the time the sacrifice
-was accepted. There are a host of reasons, some creditable,
-others less so, that make Europe curb its restiveness under
-American homilies.</p>
-
-<p>With England the case is different. No one knows just
-how hard Britain has been hit, but she is managing to put a
-good face on her wounds. No relief organization from the
-big sister has landed its khaki-clad apostles of hygiene and
-its grey-cloaked sisters of mercy on English shores. The façade
-is intact, the old masters in possession. With a few shifts
-and changes in political labelling that are a matter of domestic
-concern, those who steered the big concern into the bankruptcy
-of war are still entrusted with its extrication. No great
-subversion stands as a witness of a change of national faith.
-The destinies, the foreign relations, the aspects that attract
-or antagonize remain in the hands of men who secured a fresh
-lease of power by a clever political trick. The skeleton at the
-feast of racial reunion is not Ireland, nor Mesopotamia, nor
-Yap, nor the control of the seas. It is the emergence into
-political power, sooner or later, but inevitably from the very
-nature of British political institutions, of the British proletariat.</p>
-
-<p>Frankly I do not see, when this moment arrives, who is
-going to put the gospel of American civilization into terms that
-will be, I shall not say acceptable, but even significant, to the
-emancipated British worker. Ruling classes in the older
-country who rely on a steadying force from across the Atlantic
-in possible political upheavals must have strange misgivings
-when they take account of their own stewardship. It will be
-an ungrateful task to preach the doctrine of salvation through
-work to a people that has tried it out so logically and completely
-that the century which has seen the commercial supremacy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_488">488</span>
-of their country has witnessed the progressive impoverishment
-and proletarization of its people. Homilies on
-discipline will sound strangely in the ears of those who, while
-America was enjoying her brief carnival of spacious and fruitful
-endeavour in a virgin land, went under an industrial yoke
-that has galled their necks and stunted their physical growth.
-Appeals to pride of race will have little meaning coming from
-a stock that has ceased through self-indulgence or economic
-upward pressure to resist ethnologically and whose characteristics
-are disappearing in the general amalgam.</p>
-
-<p>The salient fact that stands out from all history is that inordinateness
-of any sort has never failed to act upon the English
-character as a challenge. His successes, whatever his libellists
-may seek to believe, have seldom been against the small
-or weak. It has been his destiny, in one recurrent crisis after
-another, to find himself face to face with some claimant to
-world power, some “cock of the walk.” To use a homely
-phrase, it has always been “up to him.” And the vision of
-his adversary which has nerved his arm has always been an
-excess in some quality easily understandable by the average
-man. Bigotry is not the monopoly of the Spaniard, nor commercial
-greed of the Hollander, nor vanity of the Frenchman,
-nor pomposity of the German. It would be an easy task to
-convict the Englishman of some share in each vice. Nevertheless
-history in the main has justified his instinct for proportion,
-his dislike for “slopping over.” In something far beyond
-the accepted phrase, the English struggle has been a
-struggle for the “balance of power.”</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Henry L. Stuart</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_489" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_489">489</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="II_AS_AN_IRISHMAN_SEES_IT">II. AS AN IRISHMAN SEES IT</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> application of the term “shirt-sleeve” to American
-diplomacy is perhaps the most concise expression of the
-conception we have formed in Europe of life in the United
-States. We imagine that it is only necessary to cross the Atlantic
-Ocean to find a people young and vigorous in its emancipation
-from ancient forms and obsolete ceremonies. The average
-visitor returns, after a brief tour through the more urbane
-centres of European imitation, and tries to startle us with a
-narrative in which a few picturesque crudities are supposed to
-indicate the democratic ease of American civilization. His
-mind is filled with an incoherent jumble of skyscrapers, express
-elevators, ice water, chewing-gum, and elevated railroads,
-so that his inevitable contribution to the literature relating to
-America becomes the mere chronicle of a tourist’s experiences.
-Every deviation from European practice is emphasized, and in
-proportion to the writer’s consequent personal discomfort, he
-will conjure up a hideous picture of uncouthness, whose effect
-is to confirm us in our estimate of American progress ...
-or barbarism, as the case may be. If the critical stranger
-happens to be a well-known poet or dramatist, he will probably
-succeed in passing lightly over those minor inconveniences,
-which the generosity of wealthy admirers has prevented
-him from experiencing at first hand.</p>
-
-<p>The consequence is that there is no subject more hopelessly
-involved in a cloud of voluminous complaint and banal laudation
-than American life as seen by the foreigner. Neither the
-enthusiasts nor the fault-finders have contributed much of any
-assistance either to Europeans or to the Americans themselves.
-The former accept America at its own valuation, the latter
-complain of precisely those things upon which the average citizen
-prides himself. It is not easy to decide which class of
-critics has helped most effectively to perpetuate the legend of
-American freedom; the minor commentators who hold democracy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_490">490</span>
-to be the cause of every offence, or the higher critics, like
-Viscount Bryce, who, finding no American commonwealth, proceeded
-to invent one. The objectors are dismissed as witnesses
-to the incapacity of the servile European to appreciate
-true liberty and equality; the well-disposed are gratefully received
-as evangelists of a gospel to which Americans subscribe
-without excessive introspection. There is something touching
-in the gratitude felt towards the author of “The American
-Commonwealth.” Who would have believed that a foreigner,
-and a Britisher at that, could make a monument of such imposing
-brick with the straws of political oratory in the United
-States?</p>
-
-<p>On one point all observers have involuntarily agreed.
-Whether with approval or disapproval, they have depicted for
-us a society which presents such marked divergencies from
-our own manners and customs that there is not one of us but
-comes to America believing that his best or worst hopes will
-be confirmed. It is, therefore, somewhat disconcerting to
-confess that neither presentment has been realized. To have
-passed from Continental Europe to New York, via London,
-is to deprive oneself of that social and intellectual shock which
-is responsible for the uniformly profound impression which
-transatlantic conditions make upon the European mind. So
-many continentals enjoy in the United States their first direct
-contact with Anglo-Saxon institutions and modes of thought
-that the revelation cannot fail to stimulate them. Their writings
-frequently testify to a naïve ignorance of the prior existence
-in England of what excites their dismay or admiration in
-America. If it be asked why, then, have Englishmen similarly
-reacted to the same stimuli, if acquaintance with England
-blunts the fine edge of perception, the reply must be: the
-quality of their emotion is different. The impression made
-upon a mind formed by purely Latin traditions necessarily
-differs from that received by a mind previously subjected to
-Anglo-Saxon influences. Consequently, the student of American
-life who has neither the motive of what might be called
-family jealousy, in the Englishman, nor the mentality, wholly
-innocent of alien culture, of the Latin, would seem well
-equipped to view the subject from another angle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_491">491</span></p>
-
-<p>To the good European the most striking characteristic of
-the United States is a widespread intellectual anæmia. So far
-from exhibiting those traits of freedom and progress which
-harrow the souls of sensitive aristocrats in Europe, the American
-people alarm the outsider in search of stimulating ideas
-by their devotion to conventions and formulæ. As soon as one
-has learnt to discount those lesser manifestations of independence,
-whose perilous proximity to discourtesy gives them an
-exaggerated importance in the eyes of superficial critics, the
-conventionality of the American becomes increasingly evident.
-So many foreigners have been misled—mainly because of an
-apparent rudeness—by this show of equality, this ungraciousness
-in matters of service, that one hesitates at first to dismiss
-the unconventional American as a myth closely related
-to that of the “immoral Frenchman.” It is only when prolonged
-association has revealed the timid respectability beneath
-this veneer of informality that it becomes possible to understand
-the true position of America. From questioning individuals
-one proceeds to an examination of the public utterances
-of prominent men, and the transition from the press to literature
-is easily made. At length comes the discovery that mentally
-the United States is a generation or two behind Western
-Europe. The rude and vigorous young democracy, cited by
-its admirers in extenuation of æsthetic sins of omission and
-commission, suddenly stands forth attired in the garment of
-ideas which clothed early Victorian England.</p>
-
-<p>This condition is largely due to the absence of an educated
-class accustomed to leisure. To the American work for work’s
-sake has a dignity unknown in Europe, where it is rare to find
-anybody working for mere wages if he has any means of independent
-subsistence, however small. In America the contrary
-is the case, and people who could afford to cultivate their own
-personalities prefer to waste their energies upon some definite
-business. Almost all the best that has come out of Europe
-has been developed in that peculiar class which sacrificed
-money-making for the privilege of leisure and relative independence.
-The only corresponding class in the United States
-is that of the college professors, who are an omnipresent menace
-to the free interplay of ideas. Terrorized by economic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_492">492</span>
-fears and intellectual inhibitions, they have no independence.
-They are despised by the plain people because of their failure
-to make money; and to them are relegated all matters which
-are considered of slight moment, namely, learning and the arts.
-In these fields the pedants rule unchallenged, save when some
-irate railroad presidents discover in their teachings the heresy
-of radicalism. Æsthetics is a science as incomprehensible to
-them as beauty, and they prefer to substitute the more homely
-Christian ethics. Moral preoccupations are their sole test of
-excellence. The views of these gentlemen and their favourite
-pupils fill the bookshelves and the news-stands.</p>
-
-<p>The professorial guardians of Colonial precedents and traditions
-determine what the intellectual life of America shall be.
-Hence the cult of anæmia. Instead of writing out of themselves
-and their own lives, they aspire to nothing greater than
-to be classed as English. They are obsessed by the standards
-imposed from without, and their possible achievement is
-thwarted. While they are still shaking their heads over Poe,
-and trying to decide whether Whitman is respectable, a national
-literature is growing up without the guidance and help
-which it should expect from them. At the same time, as the
-official pundits have the ear of Europe, and particularly of
-England, American culture is known only as they reflect it.
-It is natural, therefore, that the European attitude should be
-as contemptuous as it so often is.</p>
-
-<p>When the reviews publish some ignorant and patronizing
-dissertation on the American novel or American poetry, by an
-English writer, they are pained by the evident lack of appreciation.
-The ladies and gentlemen whose works are respectfully
-discussed by the professors, and warmly recommended by
-the reviewers, do not seem to receive the consideration due to
-them for their unflinching adherence to the noblest standards
-of academic criticism. When these torch-bearers of the purest
-Colonial tradition are submitted to the judgment of their
-“big” cousins in England, there is a noticeable condescension
-in those foreigners. But why should they profess to admire
-as the brightest stars in the American firmament what are,
-after all, the phosphorescent gleams of literary ghosts? Is
-it any wonder that the majority of Britishers can continue in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_493">493</span>
-the comfortable belief that there is practically no American
-literature worthy of serious attention?</p>
-
-<p>The academic labours of American professors of literature
-are an easy and constant butt for English critics. Yet, they
-rarely think of questioning the presentation of literary America
-for which these gentlemen are so largely responsible. When
-have the Stuart Shermans and Paul Elmer Mores (and their
-diminutives) recognized the existence of a living American
-writer of genius, originality, or distinction? The only justification
-for their existences is their alleged capacity to estimate
-literary values. If they cannot do so, it is hardly surprising
-that their English patrons, who imagine that they are
-representative men, do not often penetrate the veil of Colonialism.
-Whatever their outward professions, the majority of
-Englishmen regard all other English-speaking countries as
-Colonies. Since they are stubborn enough when faced with
-undeniable proof of the contrary, as in Ireland, it is unlikely
-they will persuade themselves unaided that they are mistaken.
-When will American criticism have the courage to base the
-claims of contemporary literature on those works which are
-essentially and unmistakably American?</p>
-
-<p>The mandarins, of course, have stood for reaction in all
-countries, and there is no intention here to acquit the European
-of the species. So many of his worst outrages are matters
-of history that it would be futile to pretend that he is untrue
-to type. Nevertheless, his position in Europe is measurably
-more human than in this country, owing to the greater freedom
-of intellectual intercourse. In America the mandarin is firmly
-established on a pedestal which rests upon the vast unculture
-of an immense immigrant population, enjoying for the first
-time the benefits of sufficient food and heat. He is obviously
-secure in his conviction that those qualified to challenge him—except
-perhaps some isolated individual—are not likely to
-do so, being of the same convention as himself. He belongs
-to the most perfect trade-union, one which has a practical monopoly
-of its labour. His European colleagues, on the contrary,
-live in constant dread of traitors from their ranks, or
-worse still, the advance of an opposing force manned with
-brains of no inferior calibre. France, for example, can boast<span class="pagenum" id="Page_494">494</span>
-of a remarkable roll of names which never adorned the councils
-of pedantry, or not until they had imposed a new tradition.
-The two finest minds of modern French literature, Anatole
-France and Rémy de Gourmont, are illustrations of this
-fact. France has never allowed his academic honours to
-restrict the daring play of his ideas; Gourmont died in the
-admiration of all cultivated men, although his life was a prolonged
-protest against the orthodox, who never succeeded in
-taming him.</p>
-
-<p>What America requires is an unofficial <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">intelligentsia</i> as
-strong and as articulate as the political and literary pundits,
-whose purely negative attitude first exasperates, and finally
-sterilizes, every impulse towards originality. Only when a survey
-is made of the leading figures in the various departments
-of American life is it possible fully to realize the weight of
-inertia which presses upon the intellect of the country. While
-the spirit of enterprise and progress is stimulated and encouraged
-in all that relates to material advancement, the artistic
-and reasoning faculties are deadened. Scientific study, when
-directed to obviously practical ends, is the only form of mental
-effort which can count upon recognition and reward. It is not
-without its significance that the Johns Hopkins Medical School
-is the one learned institution in America whose fame is world-wide
-amongst those who appreciate original research, otherwise
-the names of few universities are mentioned outside academic
-circles. Even in the field of orthodox literary culture
-the mandarins have, in the main, failed to do anything positive.
-They have preferred to bury their talent in anæmic
-commentary. The reputed intellectuals are still living on a
-tradition bequeathed by the attenuated transcendentalism of
-the Bostonian era.</p>
-
-<p>That tradition was, after all, but a refinement of the notorious
-Puritanism of New England. Having lost whatever
-semblance of dignity the Emersons and Thoreaus conferred
-upon it, its subsequent manifestations have been a decadent
-reversion to aboriginal barbarism. This retrograde movement,
-so far as it affects social life, is noticeable in the ever-increasing
-number of crusades and taboos, the constant probing
-of moral and industrial conditions, unrelated to any well-considered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_495">495</span>
-desire for improvement, or intelligent conception
-of progress. The orgies of prohibition and suppression are
-unbelievable to the civilized European, who has no experience
-of a community in which everything from alcohol to Sunday
-tennis has attracted the attention of the “virtuosi of vice”—to
-quote the phrase of a discerning critic. Innumerable commissions,
-committees, and boards of enquiry supplement the
-muck-raking of yellow journalism, and encourage espionage in
-social reformers. But what has the country to show for this?
-Probably the greatest number of bungled, unsolved, and misunderstood
-problems of all industrial nations of the same
-rank.</p>
-
-<p>These debauches of virtue, however, are the direct outcome
-of the mental conditions fostered by those who are in a position
-to mould public opinion. The crowd which tolerates,
-or participates in, the Puritanical frenzy is merely reflecting
-the current political and social doctrine of the time. Occasionally
-the newspapers will hold a symposium, or the reviews
-will invite the aid of some foreign critic, to ascertain the reasons
-for the prevailing puerility of American fiction. Invariably
-it is urged, and rightly, that the novel is written by
-women for women. Where almost all articles of luxury are
-produced for female consumption, and the arts are deemed
-unessential to progress, the latter are naturally classed with
-uneconomic production destined to amuse the idle. They are
-left to the women, as the men explain, who have not yet understood
-the true dignity of leisure. They are abandoned,
-in other words, to the most unreal section of the community,
-to those centres of culture, the drama leagues and literary
-clubs, composed of male and female spinsters. Needless to
-say, any phrase or idea likely to have disturbed a mid-Victorian
-vicarage will be ruled out as unseemly.</p>
-
-<p>The malady of intellectual anæmia is not restricted to any
-one department of American life. In politics, as in art and
-literature, there is a dread of reality. The emasculation of
-thought in general is such as to render colourless the ideas
-commonly brought to the attention of the public. Perhaps the
-most palpable example of this penchant for platitude is the
-substantial literature of a pseudo-philosophic character which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_496">496</span>
-encumbers the book-stores, and is read by thousands of right-thinking
-citizens. Namby-pamby works, it is true, exist to
-some extent in all Protestant countries, but their number,
-prevalence, and cost in America are evidence of the demand
-they must meet. It is not for nothing that the books of
-thoughtful writers are crowded from shelves amply stocked
-with the meditations of an Orison Swett Marden, a Henry van
-Dyke, or a Hamilton Wright Mabie—to mention at random
-some typical authors.</p>
-
-<p>These moral soothsayers successfully compete with moving-picture
-actors, and novelists whose claim to distinction is their
-ability to write the best-seller of the season. If they addressed
-themselves only to the conventicles, the phenomenon would
-have less significance, but the conventicles have their own
-minor prophets. The conclusion, therefore, suggests itself,
-that these must be the leaders and moulders of American
-thought. The suspicion is confirmed when men of the same
-stamp, sometimes, indeed, the actual authors of this evangelical
-literature, are found holding the most important public
-offices. To have written a methodist-tract would appear to be
-an unfailing recommendation for promotion. It is rare to
-find the possessor of such a mentality relegated to the obscurity
-he deserves.</p>
-
-<p>A wish to forestall the accusation of exaggeration or inaccuracy
-imposes the painful obligation of citing specific instances
-of the tendency described. Who are the leading
-public men of this country, and what have they written? Besides
-the classic volumes of Thiers and Guizot must we set
-such amiable puerilities as “The New Freedom,” “On Being
-Human,” and “When a Man Comes to Himself.” Even the
-essays of Raymond Poincaré do not sound the depths indicated
-by the mere titles of these presidential works. But the author
-of “The State,” for all his antiquated theories of government,
-writes measurably above the level of that diplomatist whose
-copious bibliography includes numerous variations upon such
-themes as “The Gospel for a World of Sin,” “The First
-Christmas Tree,” and “The Blue Flower.” A search through
-the underworld of parish magazines in England, France, and
-Germany would probably reveal something to be classed with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_497">497</span>
-the works of Dr. Lyman Abbott, but the authors would not
-be entrusted with the editorship of a leading weekly review.
-As for the writings of his associate, the existence of his book
-on Shakespeare is a testimony to Anglo-Saxon indifference to
-the supreme genius of the race.</p>
-
-<p>It is hardly necessary to dwell upon the literary labours of
-William Jennings Bryan, ex-Secretary of State, except to wonder
-that they did not alone suffice to disqualify him for such
-an office. They belong to the same category as those volumes
-of popular American philosophy whose titles are: “Character
-the Grandest Thing in the World,” “Cheerfulness as a Life
-Power,” and “The Miracle of Right Thought.” If those
-quoted are to be laid to the charge of Mr. Orison Swett Marden,
-every department of American life contains prominent men
-who might say: There, but for the grace of God, speak I. The
-sanctimonious breath of the uplifter tarnishes the currency
-of ideas in almost every circle of society. Irrespective of
-party, Republicans, Democrats, and Socialists help to build up
-this monument of platitude which may one day mark the resting
-place of the American brain. Books, reviews, magazines,
-and newspapers are largely conceived in the evangelical spirit.
-The average contributor, when not a foreigner, suggests a
-Sunday-school superintendent who has (perhaps) missed his
-vocation. Where the subject excludes the pedantry of the
-professors, the tone is intensely moral, and the more it is so
-the surer one may be that the writer is a colonel, a rear-admiral,
-or a civil officer of the State or Federal government.
-Imagination refuses to conceive these functionaries as fulfilling
-their duties efficiently in any service, other than that of the
-Salvation Army or a revivalist campaign.</p>
-
-<p>The stage of culture which these phenomena presuppose cannot
-but be hostile to artistic development in such as escape
-contamination. It has already been postulated that the just
-claims of ethics and æsthetics are hopelessly confounded in
-America, to the evident detriment of art in all its branches.
-To the poor quality of the current political and social philosophy
-corresponds an equally mediocre body of literary
-criticism. A recent historian of American literature accords
-a high place amongst contemporary critics, to the author of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_498">498</span>
-“Shelburne Essays,” and other works. These volumes are
-dignified as “our nearest approach to those ‘Causeries du
-Lundi’ of an earlier age,” and may well be taken as representative.
-Typical of the cold inhumanity which a certain
-type of “cultured person” deems essential is the circumstance
-related, by Mr. Paul Elmer More himself, in explanation of
-the genesis of these essays. “In a secluded spot,” he writes,
-“in the peaceful valley of the Androscoggin I took upon myself
-to live two years as a hermit,” and “Shelburne Essays”
-was the fruit of his solitary mediations. The historian is
-mightily impressed by this evidence of superiority. “In another
-and far more unusual way he qualified himself for his
-high office of critic,” says Professor Pattee, “he immured himself
-for two years in solitude.”... “The period gave him
-time to read leisurely, thoughtfully, with no nervous subconsciousness
-that the product of that reading was to be marketable.”</p>
-
-<p>What a revelation of combined timidity and intellectual
-snobbishness there is in this attitude so fatuously endorsed
-by a writer for the schools! We can imagine what the effect
-of such a pose must be upon the minds of the students whom
-the professor would constrain to respect. Only a young prig
-could pretend to be favourably impressed by this pseudo-Thoreau
-in the literary backwoods. The impulse of most
-healthy young men would be to turn in contempt from an art
-so unnatural as this conception of criticism implies. How are
-they to know that the Taines, Sainte-Beuves, Brunetières, and
-Arnolds of the world are not produced by expedients so primitive
-as to suggest the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">mise en scène</i> of some latter-day Messiah,
-a Dowie, or a Mrs. Baker Eddy? The heralds of new theologies
-may find the paraphernalia of asceticism and aloofness a
-useful part of their stock in trade—neither is associated with
-the great criticism of literature. The <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">causeries</i> of Sainte-Beuve
-were not written in an ivory tower, yet they show no traces
-of that “nervous subconsciousness” which our professor finds
-inseparable from reading that is “marketable.”</p>
-
-<p>The suspicion of insincerity in this craving for the wilderness
-will be strengthened by reference to the first of Mr.
-More’s volumes. Whatever may have been the case of its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_499">499</span>
-successors, this work was certainly the product of his retirement.
-What, then, are the subjects of such a delicate nature
-that they could not be discussed within the sound of “the
-noisy jargon of the market-place”? Of the eleven essays,
-only four deal with writers whose proximity to the critic’s own
-age might justify a retreat, in order that they be judged impartially,
-and without reference to popular enthusiasm and the
-prevalent fashion of the moment. The seven most substantial
-studies in the book are devoted to flogging horses so dead that
-no fear of their kicking existed. “A Hermit’s Notes on Thoreau,”
-“The Solitude of Nathaniel Hawthorne,” “The Origins
-of Hawthorne and Poe,” “The Influence of Emerson,” “The
-Spirit of Carlyle”—these are a few of the startling topics
-which Mr. More could discuss only with fasting and prayer!
-Any European schoolmaster could have written these essays in
-the leisure moments of his Sunday afternoons or Easter vacation.</p>
-
-<p>No more remarkable profundity or originality will be found
-in the critic’s essays in contemporary literature. His strictures
-upon Lady Gregory’s versions of the Irish epic, and his comments
-upon the Celtic Renaissance in general are the commonplaces
-of all hostile English criticism. “The shimmering
-hues of decadence rather than the strong colours of life” is
-the phrase in which he attempts to estimate the poetry of the
-Literary Revival in Ireland. In fact, for all his isolation Mr.
-More was obsessed by the critical cant of the hour, as witness
-his readiness to apply the term “decadent” to all and sundry.
-The work of Arthur Symons is illuminated by this appellation,
-as is also that of W. B. Yeats. The jargon of the literary
-market-place, to vary Mr. More’s own <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">cliché</i>, is all that he
-seems to have found in that “peaceful valley of the Androscoggin.”
-Even poor Tolstoy is branded as “a decadent with
-the humanitarian superimposed,” an application of the word
-which renders its previous employment meaningless. As a
-crowning example of incomprehension may be cited Mr. More’s
-opinion that the English poet, Lionel Johnson, is “the one great
-... and genuinely significant poet of the present Gaelic movement.”
-In the circumstances, it is not surprising that he
-should pronounce Irishmen incapable of exploiting adequately<span class="pagenum" id="Page_500">500</span>
-the themes of Celtic literature. For this task he considers
-the Saxon genius more qualified.</p>
-
-<p>With these examples before us it is unnecessary to examine
-the remaining volumes of “Shelburne Essays.” Having
-started with a distorted conception of the critical office, the
-author naturally contributed nothing helpful to the literature
-of American criticism. His laborious platitudes do not help us
-to a better appreciation of the dead, his dogmatic hostility nullifies
-his judgments upon the living. Not once has he a word
-of discerning censure or encouragement for any rising talent.
-Like most of his colleagues, Mr. More prefers to exercise his
-faculties at the expense of reputations already established, save
-when he condescends to repeat the commonplaces of complaint
-against certain of the better known modern writers. He is
-so busy with Mrs. Gaskell, Charles Lamb, Milton, Plato, and
-Dickens that he can find time to mention only some fifteen
-Americans, not one of them living.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the critic whom Professor Pattee salutes as “consistent”
-and “courageous,” having “standards of criticism”
-which make him comparable to Sainte-Beuve. As editor of
-“the leading critical review of America,” we are assured that
-Mr. More had “a dominating clientèle and a leader’s authority.”
-Alas! There can be no doubt as to this, though it is
-very doubtful if the fact can be regarded as “one of the most
-promising signs for that new literary era which already is overdue.”
-That era will long continue overdue while criticism
-remains absorbed in the past, aloof from life and implacably
-hostile to every manifestation of originality. If the new literary
-generation were merely ignored its lot would be comparatively
-happy. But the mandarins come down periodically
-from their Olympic communings with George Eliot and Socrates,
-to fill the reviews with verbose denunciations of whatever
-is being written independently of their idols. The oracles
-having spoken, the newcomers are left with an additional
-obstacle in the way of their reaching the indifferent ear of the
-crowd. The crowd wallows in each season’s literary novelties,
-satisfied that whatever is well advertised is good. Rather than
-face the subjects endorsed by the frigid enthusiasm of Mr. Paul
-Elmer More or Stuart Sherman, Mr. W. C. Brownell and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_501">501</span>
-Professor Brander Matthews, it takes refuge in fields where
-the writ of pedantry does not run. Meanwhile, the task of
-welcoming new talent is left to amiable journalists, whose
-casual recommendations, usually without any background of
-critical experience, are accepted as the judgments of competent
-experts. The “colyumist” has to perform the true function
-of the critic.</p>
-
-<p>Although anæmia is the dominant characteristic of intellectual
-life in the United States, the reaction against that condition
-is none the less worthy of notice. When we remember
-that the fervour of righteousness is the very breath of current
-philosophy, we are also reminded that crudeness, sensationalism,
-and novelty are commonly held by Europeans to be the
-quintessence of America. It might be replied, in answer to
-this objection, that Hearst newspapers, and the vaudeville theology
-of Billy Sunday, are the only alternatives to the prim
-conventionality of authoritative journalism, and the sanctimoniousness
-of popular leaders. The man in the street obtains the
-illusion of strenuous cerebral activity when he contrasts the
-homely qualities of those prophets of democracy with the
-spinster-like propriety and beatific purity of prominent publicists
-and statesmen. He likes to hear his master’s voice,
-it is true, but he likes even more to hear his own, especially
-where his personal interests are at issue. The æsthetic <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">obiter
-dicta</i> of the professors, like the language of diplomacy, are
-concerned with questions sufficiently remote to make sonority
-an acceptable substitute for thought.</p>
-
-<p>In the realm of ideas, nevertheless, there is a more or less
-articulate expression of reaction, mainly concentrated in the
-larger cities of the East. There the professional supermen and
-their female counterparts have come together by tacit agreement,
-and have attempted to shake off the incubus of respectability.
-The extremists impress one as being overpowered by
-a sense of their own sinful identity. In a wild burst of hysterical
-revolt they are plunged into a debauch of ideas from
-which they are emerging in a very shaken and parlous condition.
-For the most part their adventures, mental and otherwise,
-have been in the domain of sex, with a resultant flooding
-of the “radical” market by varied tomes upon the subject.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_502">502</span>
-What the bookstores naïvely catalogue as the literature of
-advanced thought is a truly wonderful <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">salade russe</i>, in which
-Krafft-Ebbing and Forel compete with Freud and Eugene
-Debs. Karl Marx, and Signora Montessori, Professor Scott
-Nearing, and Havelock Ellis engage the same attention as the
-neo-Malthusian pamphleteers, and the young ladies whose novels
-tell of what Flaubert called “<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">les souillures du mariage et
-les platitudes de l’adultère</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>The natural morbidity of the Puritan mind is exasperated
-in advanced circles, whose interest is nothing if not catholic.
-Let Brieux discourse of venereal disease, or Strindberg expound
-his tragedies of prurience, their success is assured
-amongst those who would believe them geniuses, rather than
-risk the ignominy of agreement with the champions of orthodoxy.
-So long as our European pornographers are serious
-and inartistic, they need have no fear of America. Unbalanced
-by prolonged contemplation of the tedious virtues of
-New England, a generation has arisen whose great illusion
-is that the transvaluation of all values may be effected by
-promiscuity. Lest they should ever incur the suspicion of
-conservatism the emancipated have a permanent welcome for
-everything that is strange or new. The blush on the cheek of
-the vice-crusader is their criterion of excellence.</p>
-
-<p>By an irony of fate, however, they are condemned to the
-disheartening spectacle of their moral bogies being received
-into a society but one removed from the Olympians themselves.
-In recent years it has been the practice of the latter to accept
-certain reputations, when they have passed through the sieve
-of the literary clubs and drama leagues. In fact, candidates
-for academic immortality frequently serve on the board of
-these literary filtration plants. While the mandarins execute
-their ritual in the cult of Longfellow and Bryant, and excommunicate
-heretical moderns, their servitors are engaged upon
-an ingenious task. They discover the more innocuous subjects
-of “radical” enthusiasm, deprive them of whatever sting of
-originality their work possessed, and then submit the result
-discreetly to the official pundits. When these judges have
-satisfied themselves as to the sterility of the innovations, their
-imprimatur is granted, and another mediocrity is canonized.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_503">503</span>
-Ibsen is saluted because of his “message,” and “Anna
-Karenina” becomes a masterpiece, because Tolstoy was a
-Christian. While remarkable talents at home are ignored or
-vilified, the fifth-rate European is in the process of literary
-naturalization. Mr. Masefield receives the benediction of Paul
-Elmer More, who in the same breath tries to convince us that
-he is qualified to pronounce “The Spoon River Anthology” a
-bad joke.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing more clearly demonstrates the futility and disrepute
-of criticism in this country than the constant surrenders to
-the prestige of the foreigner. A cheap fashion in European
-literature has only to be thrust with sufficient publicity upon
-the women’s literary clubs, and parish meeting-houses, to ensnare
-the uneasy wearers of the academic crown. Give them
-time and they will be found praising a translated French poet
-for precisely those qualities which offend them in the protégés
-of Miss Harriet Monroe. The young Englishman, Rupert
-Brooke, might have contributed to “Poetry” for ten years
-without securing any more recognition than did the American,
-Robert Frost. But now both reputations, made in England,
-are widely accepted, and the inevitable professor is found to
-tread respectfully where Henry James rushed in. Compare
-the critical essays which James wrote during a period of thirty
-years with the stereotyped Bostonian theses of the men he
-left behind him. Yet nobody will accuse James of a disregard
-for tradition.</p>
-
-<p>The American word “standpatter” is curiously precise as
-a designation of the species. The conservative critic in
-Europe, Brunetière, for example, is never so purely negative as
-his counterpart on this side of the Atlantic. When Brunetière
-adversely criticized the Symbolist movement in French poetry
-he did so intelligently, not in that laboriously facetious fashion
-which is affected by the Stuart Shermans and W. H. Boyntons
-when they are moved to discuss <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">les jeunes</i>. Brunetière, in a
-word, was a man of education and culture, capable of defending
-rationally his own theories, without suggesting that the
-unfamiliar was necessarily bad. He condemned the excesses
-of the new school, not the school itself. If he had been in
-America, he would have denied the Symbolists even the right<span class="pagenum" id="Page_504">504</span>
-to exist. Edward Dowden might also be cited as a similar
-example, in English literature, of enlightened conservatism.
-Dowden was partly responsible for bringing Whitman to the
-favourable notice of the English public, and his work stands
-as a proof that respect for the classics does not involve hostility
-to the moderns. Just as he was able to write a masterpiece
-of Shakespearean criticism without retiring into hermitage,
-so he was qualified to appreciate original genius when
-it presented itself. He was not paralyzed, in short, by the
-weight of his literary traditions and conventions.</p>
-
-<p>A thousand and one reasons have been advanced to explain
-the absence of a genuine American literature, and all of them
-are probably true. The country is comparatively young, and
-its energies have been, are still, directed chiefly towards the
-exploitation of material resources and the conquest of natural
-difficulties. Racially the nation is in an embryonic stage, and
-until some homogeneity is attained the creation of a native
-tradition must be slow. Moreover, the conflict of diverse races
-implies, in a broad sense, the clash of two or more civilizations,
-one of which must impose its culture if any organized
-progress is to be made. The language of the Hyphenated
-States is English, but to what extent will the nation in being
-evolve in accordance with this linguistic impulse? Will it be
-Anglo-Saxon, Teutonic, Latin, or Slav? These are a few of
-the problems which have a direct bearing upon the intellectual
-development of the country. They must be solved before
-America can give her imprint to the arts. They cannot
-be solved by the assumption that the Anglo-Saxon hyphen is
-alone authentic. The permanent hypothesis of Colonialism
-must be abandoned, if “Americanization” is ever to be more
-than the silliest political cant. Puritanism must be confined
-to the conventicles, to its natural habitat. It must not be
-allowed to masquerade as art, philosophy, and statesmanship.
-The evangelical tyranny exists elsewhere, but only in America
-has it invaded every branch of the national life. In the more
-impatient and realistic generation which has emerged from the
-world war this monstrous extension of prohibitions is arousing
-a violent reaction. It is rare now to find a young American
-who does not cry out against American civilization.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_505">505</span></p>
-
-<p>To the disinterested European, this spectacle is an affecting
-illustration of what may be called the enchantment of distance.
-Evidently these disconsolate citizens imagine that there is a
-way of escape from the Presbyterian wilderness, an oasis in
-the desert of one hundred per cent. Americanism, where every
-prospect pleases and man is only relatively vile. One listens
-to the <em>intelligentsia</em>, rendered more than usually loquacious by
-generous potations of unconstitutional Scotch whiskey, cursing
-the subtle blow to the arts administered by the Volstead denial
-of the necessary ambrosia. Advanced thinkers revelling in
-the delights of a well-organized polygamy, have taken me aside
-to explain how the prophets of Methodism have laid waste
-this fair land. I have read desperate appeals to all young
-men of spirit to shake off the yoke of evangelistic philistinism
-by expatriation to more urbane centres of culture.</p>
-
-<p>These are brave words, coming as they do, for the most part,
-from those who are in no wise incommoded by the ukases of
-the gospel-tent tyrants, and who have taken appropriate measures
-to defeat the Eighteenth Amendment. Back of all their
-plaints is the superstition that Europe is free from the blight
-which makes America intolerable in their eyes. They do not
-know that the war has almost destroyed the Europe of a
-civilized man’s affections. Socially, politically, and intellectually
-that distracted continent is rapidly expiring in the arms
-of profiteers and class-conscious proletarians, who have decided
-between them to leave not a blade of culture upstanding. The
-leisured class, which was rarely the wealthiest, is being ground
-out of existence by the plutocracy and the proletariat. That
-was the class which made the old Europe possible, yet there
-are Americans who go on talking as if its extinction did not
-knock the bottom out of their utopia. Most of these disgruntled
-Americans are radicals, who strive to forward the
-designs of the plain people and their advocates.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, every European knows that if prohibition is making
-the headway it surely is, the chief reason must be sought in the
-growth of radicalism. From Bernard Shaw to Trotsky, our
-revolutionaries are “dry.” Their avowed ideal is a state of society
-in which the allurements of love are reduced to a eugenic
-operation, the mellowing influences of liquor are abolished,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_506">506</span>
-and compulsory labour on the Taylor efficiency plan of scientific
-management is substituted. In fine, by the benign workings
-of democratic progress Europe is moving steadily toward
-the state of affairs attributed here by disillusioned intellectuals
-to the sinister machinations of Wall Street and the evangelists.</p>
-
-<p>No doubt America was a purer and happier place in 1620
-than in 1920. No Sumner was needed to keep the eyes of the
-settlers from the dimpled knees of Ziegfeld’s beauties, and the
-platitudes of the Wilsonian epoch were the brightest flowers of
-wisdom in 1776. Alas! that it should be so, and in every
-country of our Western World. If the Magna Charta were
-to be offered for signature in London now, some nasty Bolshevik
-would be sure to prove that the document was drawn
-up in a private conclave of the international financiers. If
-Lincoln were to make his Gettysburg speech to-day the world
-would snicker irreverently, and a dreadfully superior person,
-with a Cambridge accent (like John Maynard Keynes, C.B.),
-would publish the “Economic Consequences of the Civil War,”
-full of sardonic gibes at the innocent evangelism of Springfield.
-As for the Declaration of Independence—well, during
-“the late unpleasantness” we saw what happened to such un-American
-sedition-mongers. In fine, things are not what they
-used to be; we pine for what is not, and so forth. Of this only
-we may be sure, that America corresponds neither more nor
-less than any other country to the dreams of its ancestors.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, to be more affirmative in this plea for America, it is
-probable that this country has followed more closely the intentions
-of its founders than the critics will admit. Unlike most
-European nations, the Americans have preserved, with an almost
-incomprehensible reverence, the constitution laid down
-to meet conditions entirely unlike those of the 20th century.
-Ancestor worship is the cardinal virtue of America and surpasses
-that of China and Japan, where revolutionary changes
-have been made in the whole social and political structure.
-America was created as a political democracy for the benefit
-of staunch individualists, and both these ends have been
-achieved to perfection. Everything against which the super-sensitive
-revolt has come about <i xml:lang="nl" lang="nl">planmaessig</i>, and existed in the
-germ from the day when the Pilgrim Fathers first brought the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_507">507</span>
-blessings of Anglo-Saxon civilization to the shores of Cape
-Cod.</p>
-
-<p>In the South alone were traces of a <i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Weltanschauung</i> which
-might have given an impulse in another direction, but the
-South went under, in obedience to the rules of democratic Darwinism.
-Once the dissatisfied American can bring himself to
-look the facts of his own history and of contemporary Europe
-in the face, he may be forced to relent. He will grant, at
-least, that it is useless to cherish the notion that the ills the
-American mind is heir to are spared to other peoples. He may
-even come to recognize the positive virtues of this country,
-where the stories in the <cite>Saturday Evening Post</cite> actually come
-true. Here a man can look his neighbour straight in the eye
-and subscribe—without a smile—to the romantic credo that
-all men are equal, in so far as it is possible by energy, hard
-work, and regular attendance at divine service, to reach the
-highest post in any career. Class barriers are almost unknown,
-and on all sides there is an endlessly generous desire to learn,
-to help, and to encourage. The traditional boy can still arrive
-from the slums of Europe and finish up in the editorial chair of
-a wealthy newspaper. If he ever fails to do so it can only be
-because he starts by reading the <cite>Liberator</cite>, and devotes to the
-deciphering of Thorstein Veblen’s hieroglyphics of socialism
-the time which should have been given to mastering the more
-profitable technique of Americanism.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Ernest Boyd</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_508" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_508">508</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="III_AS_AN_ITALIAN_SEES_IT">III. AS AN ITALIAN SEES IT</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">In</span> a typical form of primitive society, where institutions and
-ideals, collective representations and individual reactions,
-coincide, no distinction can be made between culture and civilization.
-Every element of the practical culture is a spiritual
-symbol, and there is no other logic or reason than that which
-is made manifest by the structure and habits of the social
-group. Life is a religion, in the two meanings of the word, that
-of a binding together of men, and the deeper one—of gathering
-the manifold activities of the individual in one compact spiritual
-mass. The mythical concepts, which limit and integrate
-the data of experience, in a sphere which is neither purely
-imaginative nor purely intellectual, present to the individual
-mind as irresistibly as to the mind of the group, a world of
-complementary objects which are of the same stuff as the
-apprehended data. Thought—practical, æsthetic, ethical—is
-still undifferentiated, unindividualized, as if a collective mind
-were an active reality, a gigantic, obscure, coherent personality,
-entering into definite relations with a world homogeneous
-with itself.</p>
-
-<p>Such an abstract, ideal scheme of the life of the human
-spirit before it has any history, before it is even capable of
-history, affords, in its hypothetical indistinction (within the
-group, within the individual), a prefiguration of a certain
-higher relationship of culture with civilization, of a <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">humana
-civilitas</i>, in which the practical should be related to the spiritual,
-nature to the mind, in the full light of consciousness,
-with a perfect awareness of the processes of distinction and
-individualization. In the twilight and perspective of historical
-knowledge, if not in their actuality, Greece before Socrates,
-Rome before Christ, the Middle Ages before Saint Francis
-(each of them, before the apparition of the disrupting and
-illuminating element of growth), are successive attempts or
-<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">étapes</i> towards the creation of a civilization of such a kind—a
-human civilization.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_509">509</span></p>
-
-<p>Between these two limits—the primitive and the human—the
-ideal beginning and the ideal end—we can recognize, at
-any given moment in history, through the segmentation and
-aggregation of a multitude of cultures, different ages and strata
-of culture coexisting in the same social group; and the individual
-mind emerges at the confluence of the practical cultures,
-with science and philosophy and the ethical, non-tribal
-ideals, germs and <em>initia</em>, of the human civilization remaining
-above the given society as a soul that never entirely vivifies
-its own body. History begins where first the distinction between
-civilization and culture appears, or, to state the same
-fact from a different angle, where individual consciousness is
-born. It ends, ideally, where the same distinction fades away
-into Utopia, or death, or the Kingdom of Heaven; where the
-highest form of individual consciousness is at no point higher
-than the consciousness of the group from which it originally
-differentiated itself.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>The writer of these pages belongs, by birth, education, and
-election, to the civilization of Rome and to the culture, or
-cultures, of Italy. The civilization of Rome, the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">latina
-civilitas</i>, is a complex mind, whose successive phases of growth
-are the abstract humanism of ancient Greece, the civic and
-legal humanism of Rome, the moral and spiritual humanism
-of the Latin church, the æsthetic and metaphysical humanism
-of the Renaissance. Each phase is an integration of the preceding
-one and the acquisition of a new universal principle,
-made independent of the particular social body in which it has
-partially realized itself before becoming a pure, intelligible
-ideal, an essential element of the human mind. The first three
-phases, Greece, Rome, and the Church, are still more or less
-closely associated, in relation to the forms of humanism which
-are peculiar to each of them, with particular cultures. But the
-last one, which, in its progress from the 13th century to
-our days, has been assimilating, purifying, and clarifying all
-the preceding ones, does not, at any given moment, directly
-connect itself with any definite social body. In its inception,
-as a purely Italian Renaissance, it may appear as the spiritual
-form of Italian society from the 13th to the 15th century; but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_510">510</span>
-its apparition coincides with the natural growth of the several,
-sharply defined European nationalities, and very soon (and
-apart from the evident insufficiency of any individual nation
-to fulfil its spiritual exigencies) it manifests its intrinsic character
-of universality by overflowing the frontiers of Italy and
-becoming the law of the whole Western European world.</p>
-
-<p>The history of Europe during the last six centuries is the
-history of the gradual penetration of that idea within the circle
-of the passively or actively resistant, or inert, local, national
-cultures. The Reformation, of all active resistances, is the
-strongest and most important. The Germanic tribes rebel
-against the law of Rome, because a delay of from five to ten
-centuries in the experience of Christianity, and an experience
-of Christianity to be made not on a Græco-Roman, but on an
-Odinic background, create in them the spiritual need of an
-independent elaboration of the same universal principles. Germany
-is practically untouched by the spirit of the Renaissance
-until the 18th century, and Italy herself is for two centuries
-reduced to spiritual and political servitude by the superior
-material strength which accompanies and sustains the spiritual
-development of the nations of the North. Through the
-whole continent, within the single national units, as well as
-between nation and nation, the contrast and collaboration of
-the Romanic and Germanic elements, of Renaissance and Reformation,
-is the actual dialectic of the development of European
-civilization: of the successive approximations of the single
-cultures, or groups of cultures, in a multitude of more or
-less divergent directions, with alternating accelerations and
-involutions, towards the common form, the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">humana civilitas</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Of all the nations of Europe, Italy is the only one that,
-however contingently and imperfectly, has actually realized all
-of the four phases of humanism in a succession of historical
-cultures: Magna Græcia, the Roman Empire, the Catholic
-Church, the Renaissance. And as each of these successive
-cultures was trying to embody in itself a universal, not a
-particular, principle, nationality in Italy is not, as for other
-nations, the acceptance of certain spiritual limits elaborated
-from within the social body, but a reaction to the pressure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_511">511</span>
-of adjoining nationalities, which presented themselves as obstacles
-and impediments, even within the life of Italy herself,
-to the realization of a super-national principle. This is the
-process through which the humanism of the Renaissance, after
-having received its abstract political form at the hands of
-the thinkers and soldiers of the French Revolution, becomes
-active and militant in Mazzini’s principle of nationality, which
-is a heroic effort towards the utilization of the natural growth
-of European nations for the purposes of a universal civilization.</p>
-
-<p>The distance between that civilization and the actual cultures
-of the nations of Europe can easily be measured by the
-observer of European events during the last seven years. To
-that civilization belong the ideals, to those cultures, the realities,
-of the Great War. And all of us who have thought and
-fought in it have souls which are irremediably divided between
-that civilization and those cultures. If we should limit ourselves
-to the consideration of present facts and conditions, we
-might well give way to despair: not for a good many years
-in the past have nationalities been so impervious to the voice
-of the common spirit as they are in Europe to-day. And the
-sharp contrast between ideals and realities which has been
-made visible even to the blind by the consequences of the
-war, has engendered a temper of violence and cynicism even
-among those rare men and parties who succeeded in keeping
-their ideals <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">au dessus de la mêlée</i>, and therefore did not put
-them to the destructive test of a promise which had to be
-broken.</p>
-
-<p>The moral problem which every nation of Europe will have
-to labour at in the immediate future, is that of the relations
-of its historical culture or cultures with the exigencies of the
-<i xml:lang="la" lang="la">humana civilitas</i>. It is the problem that presents itself more
-or less dimly to the most earnest and thoughtful of Europeans,
-when they speak of the coming “death of our civilization,” or
-of the “salvaging of civilization.” To many of them, it is
-still a problem of institutions and technologies: its essentially
-spiritual quality does not seem to have been thoroughly
-grasped as yet. But it is also the problem that confronts, less
-tragically, with less urgency, but not less inevitably, this great<span class="pagenum" id="Page_512">512</span>
-European Commonwealth which has created its own life on
-the North American continent for the space of the last three
-centuries.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>This European Commonwealth of America owes its origin
-to a small number of adventurers and pilgrims, who brought
-the seeds of English culture to the new world. Let us very
-rapidly attempt a characterization of that original culture.</p>
-
-<p>England holds as peculiar and distinctive a position among
-the nations of Europe as Italy. She is the meeting-point of
-the Romanic and Germanic elements in European history;
-and if her culture may appear as belonging to the family of
-mediterranean cultures (to what we have called the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">latina
-civilitas</i>), to an English Catholic, like Cardinal Newman, there
-was a time, and not very remote, when the Protestant could be
-proud of its Teutonic associations. From a Catholic and
-Franco-Norman mediæval England, logically emerges, by a
-process similar to that exemplified by Italy and France and
-Spain, the England of Henry VIII and Elizabeth, of Shakespeare
-and the Cavaliers: Renaissance England. She flourishes
-between the suppression of the monasteries and the suppression
-of the theatres. She moulds, for all centuries to come,
-the æsthetic and political mind of the English people. But
-she carries the germs of a widely different culture in her womb:
-she borrows from them, already during the Elizabethan age,
-some traits that differentiate her from all other Renaissance
-cultures. And these germs, slowly gaining impetus through
-contrast and suppression, ultimately work her overthrow with
-the short-lived triumph of Cromwell and the Puritans.</p>
-
-<p>After 1688, the law of English life is a compromise between
-Puritan and Cavalier, between Renaissance and Reformation,
-which sends the extreme representatives of each type
-out of the country, builders of an Empire of adventurers and
-pilgrims—while at home the moderate Cavalier, and the moderate
-Puritan, the Tory and the Whig, establish a Republic
-with a King, and a Parliamentary feudal régime. But the
-successive stages of English culture do not interest us at this
-point, except in so far as America has always remained closer
-to England than to any other European nation, and has again<span class="pagenum" id="Page_513">513</span>
-and again relived in her own life the social, political, spiritual
-experiences of the Mother Country.</p>
-
-<p>It is from the two main directions of English spiritual life
-that America, through a double process of segmentation, Elizabethan
-or Cavalier in the South, Puritan in the North, draws
-the origins of her own life. It is in the Cavalier and the Puritan,
-still within the circle of English life, that the germs of
-American culture must be sought. The peculiar relations of
-the Cavalier and the Puritan to the general design of European
-civilization define the original attitude of this Commonwealth
-beyond the sea towards the other European cultures,
-and are the origins of the curves which, modified in their
-development by the addition of new elements and by the action
-of a new, distinctive environment, American culture has described
-and will describe in the future.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Puritanism is essentially a culture and not a civilization.
-The Puritan mind, in its quest for an original Christian experience,
-falls upon the Old Testament and the Ancient Law. The
-God of the tribes of Israel becomes its God, a God finding a
-complete expression in the law that rules his chosen people. A
-compact, immovable spiritual logic, a set of fixed standards, a
-rhetoric of the virtues, the identification of any element of
-growth and change with the power of evil, a dualistic morality,
-and the consequent negation of a spiritually free will, these
-are the characteristics of Puritanism, constituting at the
-same time, and with the same elements, a system of truth and
-a system of conduct. In both the meanings in which we have
-used the word religion at the beginning of this essay, Puritanism
-is a perfect, final religion. Transplanted to America
-when Europe was slowly becoming conscious of the metaphysical
-implications of the destruction of the old Cosmology—when
-the discovery of an infinite universe was depriving a
-purely transcendent divinity of the place it had been given
-beyond the limits of a finite universe—the infinite universe
-itself being manifest, in the words of Bruno, as <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">lo specchio della
-infinita deità</i>,—it gave birth to an intrinsically static culture,
-standing out against a background of transcendental thought.</p>
-
-<p>The principles of growth in Puritanism were not specifically<span class="pagenum" id="Page_514">514</span>
-Puritan: they were those universal values that Puritan discipline
-succeeded in rediscovering because every moral discipline,
-however fettered by its premises, will inevitably be led towards
-them. Quite recently, a sincere and ardent apologist of Puritanism
-recognized in a document which he considers as the
-highest expression of that culture in America, a paraphrase of
-the Roman <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">dulce et decorum</i>. The irrationality which breaks
-through the most hermetically closed system of logic, in the
-process of life, asserts itself by extracting from a narrowly
-institutional religion values which are not dependent upon a
-particular set of institutions, nor are valid for one people only.
-But we might detect the germs of that irrationality already in
-the very beginnings of the system, when Milton adds the whole
-weight of the Roman tradition to the Puritan conception of
-democracy—or in the divine words of the Gospels, through
-which in all times and places every <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">anima naturaliter christiana</i>
-will hear the cry of Love rebelling against the letter of the
-Ancient Law.</p>
-
-<p>What the Cavalier brought to America, we should have to
-investigate only if we were tracing the history of divergent
-directions, of local cultures: because the original soul of America
-is undoubtedly the Puritanic soul of New England, and
-the South, even before the War of Secession, in relation to the
-main direction, to the general culture, has a merely episodical
-significance. Yet, though the founders of New England were
-only Puritans, certain traits of the Cavalier spirit, the adventurer
-in the pilgrim, will inevitably reappear in their descendants,
-repeating the original dichotomy in the generations issuing
-from an apparently pure stock: partly, because a difference
-in beliefs is not always the mark of a fundamental
-difference in temperaments, and partly because those traits
-correspond to some of the generally human impulses suppressed
-by the choice of the Puritan.</p>
-
-<p>There is one element which is common to Puritan and
-Cavalier in America, and which cannot be said to belong in
-precisely the same fashion to their ancestors in England. It
-is, in England and the rest of Europe, a mythology formed
-by similar hopes and desires, by a similar necessity of giving
-an imaginary body to certain thoughts and aspirations, on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_515">515</span>
-part of the spirit of the Renaissance as well as of the spirit
-of the Reformation: a mythology which, in the mind of the
-European during the centuries between the discovery of America
-and the French Revolution, inhabits such regions as the
-island of Utopia, the city of the Sun, and the continent of
-America. In that mythology, Utopism and American exoticism
-coincide. But the adventurer and the pilgrim were actually
-and firmly setting their feet on one of the lands mapped
-in that purely ideal geography, and thoughts and aspirations
-confined by the European to the continent of dreams, became
-the moral exigencies of the new Commonwealth. Thus America
-set herself against Europe as the ideal against the real,
-the land of the free, and the refuge of the oppressed; and was
-confirmed in such a position by her natural opportunities, by
-the conditions of pioneer life, by contrast to European despotism—finally,
-by the Revolution and the Constitution, in
-which she felt that the initial moral exigencies were ultimately
-fulfilled. It is to this myth of a Promised Land, which is
-neither strictly Puritan nor strictly Cavalier, and yet at times
-seems to coincide with the less static aspects of Puritanism,
-that a peculiarly American idealism, unconquerable by defeat
-and even by the evidence of facts, abstract, self-confident, energetic,
-youthful and optimistic, owes its strength and its courage:
-an idealism which is hardly conscious of what Europe
-has been taught by centuries of dire experience—the irreparable
-contingency and imperfection of history; and which believes,
-as firmly as the Puritan legislator believes it, that such
-institutions have been devised, or can be devised, through which
-the ideal law, when thought out and written, will not fail to
-become the law of reality for all times to come.</p>
-
-<p>From two contrasting elements, a firm belief in a Law which
-was at the beginning, and a romantic mythology, a third characteristic
-of the American mind is thus engendered: a full confidence
-in the power of intellect conceived as a mechanism apt
-to contrive practical schemes for the accomplishment of ideal
-ends. This intellectual faith is similar in its static nature to
-the moral faith of the Puritan: it is the material weapon of
-Puritanism. Perfectibility is within its reach, but not the
-actual processes of evolution. The intellect that does not conceive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_516">516</span>
-itself as a process or function, but as a mechanism, can
-tend towards, and theoretically possess, a state of perfection,
-but will resent and condemn the gropings and failings of actual,
-imperfect growth and change. Not without reason, the greatest
-individual tragedy of the war, in a typically American
-mind confronted with the sins and misery of Europe, was a
-tragedy of intellectual pride: of the inability of a static intellect
-to become charitably active in the tragic flux of European
-life; a tragedy which a little moral and intellectual humility
-might well have spared to the generous hopes of America,
-and the childish, messianic faith which irradiated for only too
-short a time the bleeding soul of Europe.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>If we have called Puritanism a culture, what name shall we
-reserve for that vast and complicated collection of mechanical
-contrivances which constitute the material body of American
-society to-day? We are in the presence of a technology, a
-more highly developed one, perhaps (with the possible exception
-of Germany before the war), than any that has ever existed
-in the world. Technologies have a logic of their own, and
-that logic is apt to take the place of higher spiritual constructions;
-either when conditions of life lend a miraculous character
-to the means of sustaining life itself and invest the practical
-actions of hunting or agriculture with a religious significance;
-or when the complexity of their organization is such
-that the workings of that practical logic inevitably transcend
-the power of observation of the individual agent, however
-highly placed in the machinery itself, and moral or intellectual
-myths are born of an imperfect knowledge. This is the case
-of America, and in America this technological or industrial
-mythology has crushed out of existence the rival myths of the
-farms and the prairie, allowing them a purely romantic value
-and decorative function, through the industrially controlled
-power of the press. Even pioneering, and the conquest of
-the West, a process in which Americans of another age found
-an energetic, if partly vicarious, satisfaction for certain moral
-and ideal yearnings, has receded, in the mind of Americans of
-to-day, into the shades of a fabulous and solemn background.</p>
-
-<p>The industrial revolution followed in America the lines of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_517">517</span>
-development of its early English model. This commonwealth
-beyond the sea, agricultural and democratic, found in itself the
-same elements which gave birth in the original country to an
-industrial feudalism, grafting itself, without any solution of
-continuity, on a feudalism of the land. The ineradicable
-optimism of the American invested the whole process with
-the same halo of moral romance which had coloured the age
-of pioneering, and accepted as a useful substitute (or rather, as
-a new content) for Puritanic moralism the philosophy of opportunity
-and of success constantly commensurate with true merit.
-The conception of intellect as a mechanism to be used for
-moral and ideal ends, gave way to a similar though more complex
-conception, modelled not on the methods of pure science,
-from whose early conquests the revolution itself had been
-started, but on those of applied science or of practical machinery.</p>
-
-<p>When, in the natural course of events, the bonds which
-kept together the purely economic elements of the country
-became more powerful and real than any system of political
-institutions, when, in fact, a financial syndicalism became the
-structure underlying the apparent organs of government, all
-the original ideals of America had already gathered to the
-defence of the new order. Hence the extraordinary solidity of
-the prevailing economic system in this country, when compared
-with any European country. Economic, as well as political
-systems, ultimately rest on convictions rather than on
-sheer force, and the radical in America, in all spheres of
-thought, is constantly in the necessity of fighting not mere
-institutions, as in Europe, but institutionalized ideals, organisms
-and personalities which establish their right on the same
-assumptions which prompt him in his rebellion. There is less
-difference in fundamentals between a Carnegie and a Debs
-than between any two individuals placed in similar positions
-in Europe.</p>
-
-<p>An interesting by-product of this particular development is
-the myth of the captain of industry, possessed, in the popular
-imagination, of all the virtues. And a consequence of this
-myth is an unavoidable revision of the catalogue of virtues,
-from which some were expunged that do not lead to industrial<span class="pagenum" id="Page_518">518</span>
-success, and others were admitted because industrial success
-is thought to be impossible without them. This myth is not
-believed in by the aspiring multitudes only, but by a good
-many among the captains of industry themselves, who accept
-their wealth as a social trust, and conceive of their function in
-a manner not dissimilar from that of the old sovereign by the
-grace of God.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>This transposition of ideals from the religious and moral
-field to the practical and economic, leaves only a very thin
-ground for personal piety and the religion of the Churches.
-Yet there is no country in the world (again, with the only possible
-exception of Northern Africa during the first centuries of
-the Christian Era) which has produced such a wealth and such
-a variety of religious movements as America. The substance
-of that very thin ground is diluted Puritanism, Puritanism
-which, in a vast majority of the population, converts itself,
-strangely enough, as we have seen, into social optimism, a
-belief sufficient to the great active masses, but not to the needs
-of “the heart,” when the heart is given enough leisure to consider
-itself, through either too much wealth or too little hope:
-through the discovery of its emptiness, when the possession of
-the means makes manifest the absence of an end, or through
-the spasms of its hunger, when means are beyond reach, in
-the hands of the supposed inferior and unworthy. In this
-second case, even a purely sensual craving dignifies itself with
-the name of the Spirit. The more or less official Churches,
-in an attempt to retain the allegiance of their vast congregations,
-have followed the masses in their evolution: they pride
-themselves essentially on their social achievements, a little
-doubtfully, perhaps, knowing that their particular God has
-no more reason to inhabit a church than a factory, and that
-the highest possible embodiment of their doctrine is an orderly
-and paternally governed industrial organization.</p>
-
-<p>To the needs of “the heart” minister the innumerable sects
-(and here again, the American religious history repeats, in magnified
-proportions, the characteristics of English religious life).
-But because of the gradual impoverishment of the central religious
-tradition of the country, because of the scanty cultural<span class="pagenum" id="Page_519">519</span>
-background of both apostles and neophytes, it is hard to recognize
-in the whole movement an intimate spiritual dialectic
-which might lend strength and significance to the individual
-sects. A vague mysticism appropriates to itself, in a haphazard
-and capricious fashion, shadows and ghosts of religious
-experiences and opinions, whose germs of truth lie in other
-ages and other climates. The only common feature seems to
-be a distrust of intellect, derived from the original divorce of
-the intellectual from the spiritual in the Puritan, a distrust
-which at times becomes active in the denunciation of the supposed
-crimes of science. It is this fundamental common feature
-which will for ever prevent any of them from becoming
-what all sects fail to be, a religion.</p>
-
-<p>The two states of mind which are nearer to-day to being
-true religions are, on one side, Americanism (a religion as a
-common bond), and on the other, Radicalism (a religion as
-a personal experience). Americanism is the more or less perfect
-expression of the common belief that American ideals
-realize themselves in American society. Radicalism is the
-more or less spasmodic protest against such a belief, sometimes
-coupled with an individual attempt at realizing those ideals in
-one’s life and actions. The sharpest contrast between the two
-attitudes is to be found in their ideas of political and spiritual
-freedom; which to one is a condition actually existing by the
-mere fact of the existence of American society such as it is,
-and to the other a dynamic principle which can never be permanently
-associated with any particular set of institutions.</p>
-
-<p>The original spirit of Puritanism can hardly be said to be
-alive to-day in America. In a few intellectuals, it confuses
-itself with other high forms of moral discipline in the past,
-and reappears with a strange fidelity to form rather than substance,
-as Platonism, Classicism, Mediævalism, Catholicism, or
-any other set of fixed standards that can be accepted as a
-whole, and can give the soul that sense of security which is
-inherent in the illusion of possessing the final truth. The consequence
-of such a deviation is that these truly religious souls,
-after having satisfied themselves with a sufficiently vast and
-beautiful interpretation of their creed, resent any cruder and
-more dangerous form of intellectual experience much more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_520">520</span>
-keenly than they resent crudities and dangers actually present
-in the nature of things. They are intellectuals, but again, with
-no faith in intellect; they are truly isolated among their fellow-countrymen,
-and yet they believe in conformity, and assume
-the conformity of American society to be the conformity of
-their dreams.</p>
-
-<p>Such a static apprehension of truth, such an identification
-of universal spiritual values with one or another particular
-tradition, is in fact as much an obstacle to the new life of
-the human spirit as the external conformity enforced by social
-optimism. But the polemic against the older intellectuals is
-carried on by younger men, many of them of recent immigrant
-blood, but all of them reared in the atmosphere of American
-culture, and who differ from them more in the objects of their
-preference than in the vastness or depth of their outlook.
-There is a way of clinging to the latest fashion in philosophy or
-in art which is not a progress in any sense in relation to older
-faiths; of combating a manifest logical fallacy by the use of
-the same sophism; of embracing sin with the same moral enthusiasm
-that in less enlightened times was kept in reserve for
-the highest virtues only.</p>
-
-<p>More important, for their influence on certain phases of
-American life, than these intellectual echoes, are the moralistic
-remnants of Puritanism. It is always possible, for small
-groups of people, strongly endowed with the sense of other
-people’s duties, to intimidate large sections of public opinion
-into accepting the logical consequences of certain undisputed
-moral assumptions, however widely they may differ from the
-realities of American life. It is under such circumstances that
-the kind-hearted, easy-going American pays the penalty for
-his identification of realities with ideals, by being deprived of
-some very dear reality in the name of an ideal which had
-long since ceased to have any meaning for him.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>From whatever side we look at American culture, we are
-constantly brought face to face with a disregard or distrust,
-or a narrow conception, of purely intellectual values, which
-seems to be the common characteristic of widely divergent
-spiritual attitudes. The American does not, as the Englishman,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_521">521</span>
-glory in his capacity for muddling through: he is proud
-of certain logical achievements, and has a fondness for abstract
-schemes, an earnest belief in their validity and efficiency;
-but no more than the English does he believe that
-intellect is an integral part of the human personality. He
-recognizes the identity of goodness and truth, provided that
-truth can be found out by other means than purely intellectual:
-by common sense, by revelation, by instinct, by imagination,
-but not by intellect. It is here that even the defenders,
-among Americans, of the classical tradition miss the true meaning
-of the message of Socrates and Plato, the foundation of
-humanism.</p>
-
-<p>What is peculiarly American in the opinions of American
-philosophers is a clear and distinct expression of the common
-attitude. The official philosophy of America has repeated for
-a century the views of English empiricists and of German idealists,
-sometimes with very interesting and illuminating personal
-variations. It has even, and it is an original achievement,
-brought them to lose their peculiar accents and to coincide in
-new theories of knowledge. But the heart of American philosophy
-is not there: it is in pragmatism, in instrumentalism,
-in whatever other theory clearly establishes the purely functional
-character of truth, the mechanical aspect of intellect.
-Having put the criterion of truth outside the intellect, and
-considered intellect as the mere mechanism of belief, these
-doctrines try to re-establish the dignity of intellect by making
-of it a machine for the reproduction of morally or socially
-useful beliefs. The operation is similar to that of an anatomist
-who, having extracted the heart from a living body, would presume
-to reconstruct the body by artificially promoting the
-movements of the heart. The doctrine of the purely pragmatic
-or instrumental nature of intellect, which is the logical clarification
-of the popular conception, is a doctrine of radical scepticism,
-whatever the particular declarations of faith of the
-philosophers themselves might say to the contrary: it destroys
-not the objects of knowledge only, but the instrument itself.</p>
-
-<p>American philosophers came to this doctrine through the
-psychological and sociological approach to the problems of
-the mind. Such an approach is in keeping with the general<span class="pagenum" id="Page_522">522</span>
-tendency towards assuming the form of natural and mathematical
-sciences, which moral sciences in American universities
-have been obeying during the last thirty or forty years, partly
-under the influence of a certain kind of European positivism,
-and partly because of the prestige that natural and mathematical
-sciences gained from their practical applications.
-Even now it is easier to find a truly humanistic mind, a sound
-conception of intellectual values, among the great American
-scientists than among the philosophers and philologists: but
-pure science has become the most solitary of occupations, and
-the scientist the most remote of men, since his place in society
-has been taken by the inventor and by the popularizer. Psychology
-and sociology, those half-literary, half-scientific disciplines,
-gave as a basis to philosophy not the individual effort
-to understand and to think, but the positive observation of the
-more or less involuntary processes of thought in the multitude.
-Intellect was sacrificed to a democratic idea of the equality of
-minds: how could the philosopher presume to think, I do not
-say better or more efficiently than, but differently from the
-multitude? To European philosophy the reproach has been
-made again and again, and with some justice, of imposing laws
-upon reality which are only the laws of individual philosophic
-thought; and yet what else does the scientist ultimately do?
-But both scientist and philosopher find their justification in
-their faith in the validity of their instruments: in a spirit of
-devotion and humility, not in a gratuitous presumption. The
-typical American philosopher has sold his birthright, not for
-a pottage of lentils, but for mere love.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>I am painfully aware of the fact that, through the meshes
-of this necessarily abstract and sketchy analysis, a good deal
-of the beauty and vastness, the vigour and good-humour of
-American life inevitably escapes. The traveller from the old
-countries experiences here a sense of great spaces and of practically
-unbounded possibilities, which reflects itself in an unparalleled
-gaiety and openness of heart, and freedom of social
-intercourse. The true meaning of the doctrine of opportunity
-lies much more in these individual attitudes than in any difference
-between the structures of American and European<span class="pagenum" id="Page_523">523</span>
-societies. And I do not believe that the only explanation for
-them is in the prosperity of America when compared to the
-misery of Europe, because this generosity stands in no direct
-relation with individual wealth. The lumberman and the longshoreman
-are as good as, if not better than, the millionaire.</p>
-
-<p>These individual attitudes find their collective expression
-in the idea of, and readiness for, service, which is universal
-in this country. Churches, political parties, movements for
-social reform, fraternal orders, industrial and business organizations,
-meet on this common ground. There is no material
-interest or spiritual prejudice that will not yield to an appeal
-for service: and whenever the object of service is clearly
-defined, action follows the impulse, intolerant of any delay.
-But Service is a means and not an end: you can serve a God,
-or a man, or a group of men, and in that man or group of men
-what you conceive to be his or their need, but you cannot serve
-Service. And the common end can only be given by a clear
-intellectual vision of the relations between a set of ideals and
-the realities of life.</p>
-
-<p>This intrinsic generosity of the American people is the motive
-of the song, and the substance of the ideal, of the one great
-poet that America has added to the small family of European
-poets: Walt Whitman. In him that feeling and that impulse
-became a vision and a prophecy. There is a habit on the
-part of American intellectuals to look with a slight contempt
-on the admiration of Europeans for the poetry of Walt Whitman,
-as just another symptom of their ignorance of American
-things. But I, for one, will confess that what I have loved
-passionately, as little more than a boy, in that poetry, is that
-same quality whose presence I have now recognized as the
-human flower of American culture, and which makes me love
-this country as passionately as I loved that poetry.</p>
-
-<p>It is one of the many paradoxes of American intellectual
-life that even the cultural preparation of a Walt Whitman
-should have been deeper and more substantial, if not more
-systematic, than that of any professor or writer of his times.
-These were minds which had as fully imbibed European
-thought and imagination as any professor or writer in Europe:
-but that thought, that imagination, transplanted to the new<span class="pagenum" id="Page_524">524</span>
-country, stood in no real relation with the new practical and
-moral surroundings, and were therefore thin and sterile. Walt
-Whitman knew and understood the great traditions of European
-civilization, and tried to express them in the original
-idiom, moral and literary, of his America.</p>
-
-<p>But <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">nemo propheta</i>, and it takes centuries to understand a
-poet. Walt Whitman still waits for his own generation. The
-modern schools of American poetry, curious of all winds of
-fashion, working for the day rather than for the times, have
-not yet fully grasped, I do not say the spirit of his message,
-but even, for all their free-versifying, the mystery of his magnificent
-rhythms. His successors are rather among some of
-the younger novelists, and in a few men, spiritually related to
-them, who approach the study of American conditions from
-a combined economic and psychological point of view. The
-novelists are busy in discovering the actual traits of the American
-physiognomy, with sufficient faith in the future to describe
-the shades with as much care as the lights, and with a deeper
-passion; the economists are making way for the highest and
-purest American ideals by revealing the contingent and merely
-psychological basis of the supposedly scientific axioms of classical
-economics.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>My own experience of American life, between the autumn
-of 1919 and the summer of 1921, has brought me in contact
-with all sorts and manners of people from one end to the other
-of the country, from the Atlantic to the Pacific. It is from
-this direct intercourse with Americans, rather than from my
-readings of American literature, continued for a much longer
-time, that I have formed the opinions expressed in this paper.
-But as my work has brought me in closer communion with colleges
-and universities than with any other kind of institutions,
-I feel a little more assured in writing of the educational aspect
-of the American problem.</p>
-
-<p>A university is in any case more a <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">universitas studentium</i>
-than a corporation of professors. I have enjoyed my life in
-American faculties, and I have gained a good deal from the
-many noble souls and intellects that I have met among them;
-but, whenever it has been possible to me, I have escaped from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_525">525</span>
-the faculties to the students and tried to understand the tendencies
-of the coming generations.</p>
-
-<p>The students of the American college or university, from the
-comparatively ancient institutions of the East, to the young
-co-educational schools of the Middle and Far West, form a
-fairly homogeneous, though very widely representative, cross-section
-of the American community. They are, in a very precise
-and inclusive meaning, young America, the America of to-morrow.
-A good many of their intellectual and spiritual characteristics
-are the common traits of American culture which
-we have studied in the preceding paragraphs; and yet, because
-of the social separation of individuals according to ages,
-which is carried in this country much farther than in any
-European country, they develop also a number of independent
-traits, which are peculiar to each one of the “younger generations”
-in their turn. The life of the American boy or girl,
-up to the time of their entrance into college, is mainly the life
-of a beautiful and healthy young organism, not subject to any
-too strict intellectual or spiritual discipline. The High Schools
-seem to understand their function in a spirit which is substantially
-different from that of the European secondary schools,
-owing especially to certain prevailing educational doctrines
-founded on a fiction which is used also in many other fields
-of American life, but which in the field of education has
-wrought more harm than in any other one, the fiction of the
-public demand—in this particular case of one or another type
-of education. A fiction undoubtedly it is, and used to give
-prestige and authority to the theories of individual educationalists,
-since in no country and in no time there have existed
-educational opinions outside the circle of the educators themselves.
-But this fiction has unfortunately had practical consequences
-because American educators, subject to big business
-in the private institutions, and to the politicians in the State
-schools and universities, have not found in themselves the
-energy, except in a few isolated instances, to resist what came
-to them strengthened by such auspices. And the public itself
-was easily convinced that it wanted what it was told that it
-wanted. The students, more sinned against than sinning,
-enjoy the easy atmosphere of the school, and it is only when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_526">526</span>
-they reach college that they become aware of their absolute
-unpreparedness for the higher studies.</p>
-
-<p>This consciousness of their inferiority manifests itself in an
-attitude of “low-browism,” which is not contempt of that
-which they think is beyond them, but rather an unwillingness
-to pretend that they are what they know they are not. It is
-practically impossible for them to acquire any standards in
-matters of scholarship, and they are thus forcibly thrown back
-on that which they know very well, the sports, and social life
-among themselves. A Chinese friend of mine once quaintly
-defined an American university as an athletic association in
-which certain opportunities for study were provided for the
-feeble-bodied. Now, in athletics and social life, the student
-finds something that is real, and therefore is an education: there
-is no pretence or fraud about football, and in their institutions
-within the college and the university the students obey certain
-standards and rules which are not as clearly justified as those
-of athletics, but still are made by themselves, and therefore
-readily understood. They are standards and rules that sometimes
-strangely resemble those of primitive society, as it is
-only too natural when the ground on which they grow is a
-community of the very young only, and yet undoubtedly they
-are a preparation for a life after college in which similar features
-are very far from being the exception. And besides, that
-social life has a freedom and beauty of its own, evident in one
-at least of its most hallowed institutions, the dance. American
-dances, with those captivating and vital rhythms which
-American music has appropriated for itself from the Negro,
-are a perfect expression of the mere joy of life. The older
-generations are shocked and mystified by these dances, and
-also by many other ways and by the implicit opinions of the
-young; but so they have been in all ages and countries. To
-a curious and passionate observer, the youth of America seems
-to be obscurely labouring at a liberation of the sexual life
-from pretences and unjustified inhibitions, and, through an
-original experience of the elements of love, at a creation of new
-values, perhaps of a new morality.</p>
-
-<p>But the student is an object of perplexity and wonder to
-the professor, who generally ends by taking very seriously,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_527">527</span>
-very literally, as something that cannot be changed, his attitude
-towards athletics and the social life of the college. Starting
-from such an assumption, the professor becomes shy of
-teaching; that is, he keeps for himself whatever true intellectual
-and spiritual interests he may have, and deals out to
-the students in the classroom rations of knowledge, which go
-up to form a complicated system of units and credits symbolizing
-the process of education. There is, to my mind, no
-more tragic misunderstanding in American life.</p>
-
-<p>My own experience (and I give it for what it is worth) tells
-me that athletics and the social life are vicarious satisfactions
-for much deeper spiritual and intellectual needs. The student
-receives from the common American tradition a desire for spiritual
-values; from his individual reaction to that tradition,
-a craving for intellectual clarity. But he is handicapped by
-his scholastic unpreparedness, and disillusioned by the aloofness
-of the professor, by the intricacies and aridity of the curriculum:
-by the fact, only too evident to him, that what he is
-given is not science or thought, but their scholastic version.
-Whenever a man stands before him, and without trying to
-“put himself at his level,” talks to him as one talks to a man,
-thinking for him as one thinks for oneself, there is no more
-ready and enthusiastic response to be had than from the
-American student. He is not afraid of the difficulties or
-dangers, but he must trust his guide, and know that his guide
-trusts him. There is evidence for this in the cases which are
-too frequent to be called mere exceptions, of those American
-professors who are truly popular in the colleges and universities.
-But until many more of them realize what splendid
-material is in their hands, what big thirst there is for them to
-quench, and go back to their work with this new faith, the
-gulf will not be bridged, and young America will have to attempt
-to solve her own problems without the help of the
-spiritual experience of the centuries.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>This condition in the institutions of higher learning is a symbol
-and a mirror of the condition of the country. With an
-impoverished religious tradition, with an imperfect knowledge
-of the power of intellect, America is starving for religious and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_528">528</span>
-intellectual truth. No other country in the world has, as the
-phrase goes, a heart more full of service: a heart that is constantly
-<i xml:lang="la" lang="la">quaerens quem amet</i>. With the war, and after the war,
-America has wished to dedicate herself to the world, and has
-only withdrawn from action when she has felt that she could
-not trust her leaders, what was supposed to be her mind.</p>
-
-<p>In a few years, the children of the recent millions of immigrants
-from all regions of Europe will come forward in American
-life and ask for their share in the common inheritance of
-American tradition, in the common work of American civilization.
-They will not have much to contribute directly from
-their original cultures, but they will add an unexampled variety
-of bloods, of intellectual and moral temperaments, to the
-population of America. Their Americanization, in habits and
-language and manners, is a natural process which, left to itself,
-invariably takes place in the second generation. America
-must clarify and intensify her tradition, the moral discipline
-of the Puritan, the moral enthusiasm of the Discoverers and
-Pioneers, for them, and they will gladly embrace her heritage;
-but this clarification and intensification is only possible
-through the revision of the original values in the light of the
-central humanistic tradition of European thought.</p>
-
-<p>The dreams of the European founders of this Commonwealth
-of Utopia may yet come true, in the way in which human
-dreams come true, by becoming the active, all-pervading
-motive of spiritual effort, the substance of life. Exiles, voluntary
-or forced, from England and Ireland, from Russia and
-Italy, from Germany and Israel, children of one mother, unified
-in America as they will not be unified for centuries to come
-in Europe, will thus have a chance to anticipate, in the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">civilitas
-americana</i>, the future developments of the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">humana civilitas</i>.</p>
-
-<p>And if this generation needs a motto, I would suggest one
-line of Dante:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry short">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">luce intellettual piena d’amore</i>:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">the light of intellect, in the fulness of love.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="attrib"><span class="smcap">Raffaello Piccoli</span></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_527" class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BIBLIOGRAPHICAL_NOTES">BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES</h2>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_531">531</span></p>
-
-<h3>THE CITY</h3>
-
-<p>There is no adequate literature of cities in America. Some of
-the larger cities possess guide-books and local histories; but the
-most valuable illuminations on the history and development of the
-American city lie buried in contemporary papers, narratives of
-travel, and speeches. The reader who wishes to explore the ground
-farther should dip into volumes and papers drawn from all periods.
-The recent editions of “Valentine’s Manual” should be interesting
-to those who cannot consult the original “Manual of the Common
-Council of New York.” During the last twenty years a great many
-reports and surveys have been printed, by city planning commissions
-and other bodies: these are valuable both for showing the limitations
-of the established régime and for giving hints of the forces
-that are working, more or less, for improvement. “The Pittsburgh
-Survey” (Russell Sage Foundation) is the great classic in this field.
-A compendious summary of American city developments during the
-last generation is contained in Charles Zueblin’s “American
-Municipal Progress” (Macmillan). Standing by itself in this literature
-is a very able book by Paul Harlan Douglass, called “The
-Little Town,” published by Macmillan. (A book which shall deal
-similarly with the Great Town is badly needed.) The best
-general approach to the city is that of Professor Patrick Geddes in
-“Cities in Evolution” (Williams and Norgate, London.) Those
-who are acquainted with Professor Geddes’s “A Study in City
-Development” or his contributions to “Sociological Papers” (Macmillan,
-1905, 1906, 1907) will perhaps note my debt to him: I
-hasten heartily to acknowledge this, as well as my debt, by personal
-intercourse, to his colleague, Mr. Victor V. Branford. If the lay
-reader can learn nothing else from Professor Geddes, he can learn
-the utility of throwing aside the curtains of second-hand knowledge
-and studying cities and social institutions by direct observation.
-The inadequacy of American civic literature will not be altogether
-a handicap if it forces the reader to obtain by personal explorations
-impressions which he would otherwise get through the blur of
-the printed page. Every city and its region is in a sense an exhibition<span class="pagenum" id="Page_532">532</span>
-of natural and social history. Let the reader walk the streets of
-our cities, as through the halls of a museum, and use the books that
-have been suggested only as so many tickets and labels. Americans
-have a reputation in Europe as voracious sightseers. One wonders
-what might not happen if Americans started to see the sights at
-home—not the Grand Canyon and the Yosemite, but a “Broadway,”
-and its back alleys, and the slums and suburbs that stretch beyond.
-If observation led to criticism, and criticism to knowledge, where
-might not knowledge lead?</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-L. M.
-</p>
-
-<h3>POLITICS</h3>
-
-<p>The standard works on the history of American politics are so
-well known (and so few) that they scarcely need mention. Bryce,
-Ostrogorski and de Tocqueville, I assume, have been read by all
-serious students, as have also such personal memoirs as those of
-Blaine and John Sherman. Bryce’s work is a favourite, but it suffers
-from the disingenuousness of the man. Dr. Charles A. Beard’s
-“Economic Interpretation of the Constitution” is less a complete
-treatise than a prospectus of a history that is yet to be written.
-As far as I know, the valuable suggestions in his preface have never
-inspired any investigation of political origins by other American
-historians, most of whom are simply unintelligent school-teachers, as
-their current “histories” of the late war well show. All such inquiries
-are blocked by the timorousness and stupidity that are so
-characteristic of American scholarship. Our discussion of politics,
-like our discussion of economics, deals chiefly with superficialities.
-Both subjects need ventilation by psychologists not dependent upon
-college salaries, and hence free to speak. Certainly the influence of
-religious enthusiasm upon American politics deserves a careful study;
-nevertheless, I have never been able to find a book upon it. Again,
-there is the difficult question of the relations between politics and
-journalism. My belief is that the rising power of newspapers has
-tended to drive intelligent and self-respecting men out of politics,
-for the newspapers are chiefly operated by cads and no such man
-wants to be at their mercy. But that sort of thing is never studied
-in the United States. We even lack decent political biography, so
-common in England. The best light to be obtained upon current
-politics is in the <cite>Congressional Record</cite>. It costs $1.50 a month and
-is well worth it. Soon or late the truth gets into the <cite>Record</cite>; it
-even got there during the war. But it seldom gets into the newspapers
-and it never gets into books.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-H. L. M.
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_533">533</span></p>
-
-<h3>JOURNALISM</h3>
-
-<p>I know of no quite satisfactory book on American journalism.
-“History of Journalism in the United States” by George Henry
-Payne and “History of American Journalism” by James Melvin
-Lee are fairly good in their treatment of the past, but neither of
-them shows any penetration in analyzing present conditions. The
-innocence of Mr. Payne may be judged by his opinion that the
-Kansas City <cite>Star</cite>, under Nelson, exemplifies a healthier kind of
-“reform journalism” than the <cite>Post</cite> under Godkin! “Liberty and
-the News” by Walter Lippmann is suggestive, but it does not pretend
-to contain any specific information. More specific in naming
-names and giving modern instances is a short essay by Hamilton
-Holt, “Commercialism and Journalism.” “The Brass Check” by
-Upton Sinclair contains much valuable material, and perhaps what
-I have said of it does not do it justice; certainly it should be read
-by everybody interested in this subject. Will Irwin published in
-<cite>Collier’s Weekly</cite> from January to July, 1911, a valuable series of
-articles, “The American Newspaper: A Study of Journalism.” I
-cannot find that these articles have been reprinted in book form.
-There is some information in autobiographies and biographies of
-important journalists, such as “Recollections of a Busy Life” by
-Horace Greeley, “Life of Whitelaw Reid” by Royal Cortissoz,
-“Life and Letters of E. L. Godkin” by Rollo Ogden, “Life of
-Charles A. Dana” by J. H. Wilson, “Life and Letters of John Hay”
-by William Roscoe Thayer, “An Adventure with Genius: Recollections
-of Joseph Pulitzer,” by Alleyne Ireland; also “The Story
-of the <cite>Sun</cite>” by Frank M. O’Brien. Biographies, however, celebrate
-persons and only indirectly explain institutions. A useful bibliography,
-which includes books and magazine articles, is “Daily Newspapers
-in U. S.” by Wieder Callie of the Wisconsin University School
-of Journalism. But after all the best source of information is the
-daily newspaper, if one knows how to read it—and read between the
-lines.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-J. M.
-</p>
-
-<h3>THE LAW</h3>
-
-<p>“Bryce’s Modern Democracies,” Chapter XLIII, is a recent survey
-of the American legal system; Raymond Fosdick, “American
-Police Systems,” Chapter I, states the operation of criminal law.
-For legal procedure, see Reginald Heber Smith, “Justice and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_534">534</span>
-Poor,” published by the Carnegie Endowment for the Advancement
-of Teaching and dealing with legal aid societies and other methods
-of securing more adequate legal relief; Charles W. Eliot and others,
-“Efficiency in the Administration of Justice,” published by the National
-Economic League; Moorfield Storey, “The Reform of Legal
-Procedure;” and many other books and articles; the reports of the
-American and New York Bar Associations are of especial value.
-John H. Wigmore, “Evidence,” vol. V (1915 edition) discusses
-recent progress; see his “Cases on Torts, Preface,” on substantive
-law. A very wide range of topics in American law, philosophical,
-historical, procedural, and substantive, is covered by the writings of
-Roscoe Pound, of which a list is given in “The Centennial History of
-the Harvard Law School.” The same book deals with many phases
-of legal education; see also “The Case Method in American Law
-Schools,” Josef Redlich, Carnegie Endowment. For the position
-of lawyers, the best book is, Charles Warren, “A History of the
-American Bar;” a recent discussion of their work is Simeon E.
-Baldwin, “The Young Man and the Law.” No one interested in
-this field should fail to read the “Collected Legal Papers of Justice
-Holmes;” see also John H. Wigmore, “Justice Holmes and the Law
-of Torts” and Felix Frankfurter, “The Constitutional Opinions of
-Justice Holmes,” both in the <cite>Harvard Law Review</cite>, April, 1916,
-and Roscoe Pound, “Judge Holmes’s Contributions to the Science
-of Law,” <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">ibid.</i>, March, 1921. A valuable essay on Colonial legal
-history is Paul S. Reinsch, “English Common Law in the Early
-American Colonies.” A mass of material will be found in the law
-reviews, which are indexed through 1907 by Jones, “Index to Legal
-Periodicals,” 3 vols., and afterwards in the <cite>Law Library Journal</cite>,
-cumulative quarterly.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Z. C., Jr.</span>
-</p>
-
-<h3>EDUCATION</h3>
-
-<p>The ideas contained in the article are so commonplace and of such
-general acceptance among educators that it is impossible to give
-specific authority for them. In addition to the articles mentioned,
-one of the latest by Dr. D. S. Miller, “The Great College Illusion”
-in the <cite>New Republic</cite> for June 22, 1921, should be referred to. For
-the rest the report of the Committee of Ten of the National Education
-Association, and the reports of President Eliot and President
-Lowell of Harvard, President Meiklejohn of Amherst, and President
-Wilson of Princeton, may be cited, with the recognition that any
-such selection is invidious.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-R. M. L.
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_535">535</span></p>
-
-<h3>SCHOLARSHIP AND CRITICISM</h3>
-
-<p>There has been no really fundamental discussion of American
-scholarship or American criticism. Those who merely seek a good
-historical sketch of our older literary scholarship, along conventional
-lines, will find one in the fourth volume of the “Cambridge
-History of American Literature” that is at all events vastly superior
-to the similar chapters in the “Cambridge History of English Literature.”
-But more illuminating than any formal treatise are the comments
-on our scholarly ideals and methods in Emerson’s famous
-address on “The American Scholar,” in “The Education of Henry
-Adams,” and in the “Letters” of William James. The “Cambridge
-History of American Literature” contains no separate chapter on
-American criticism, and the treatment of individual critics is
-pathetically inadequate. The flavour of recent criticism may be
-savoured in Ludwig Lewisohn’s interesting anthology, “A Modern
-Book of Criticism,” where the most buoyant and “modern” of our
-younger men are set side by side with all their unacademic masters
-and compeers of the contemporary European world. All that can
-be said in favour of the faded moralism of the older American
-criticism is urged in an article on “The National Genius” in the
-<cite>Atlantic Monthly</cite> for January, 1921, the temper of which may be
-judged from this typical excerpt: “When Mr. Spingarn declares that
-beauty is not concerned with truth or morals or democracy, he
-makes a philosophical distinction which I have no doubt that
-Charles the Second would have understood, approved, and could,
-at need, have illustrated. But he says what the American schoolboy
-knows to be false to the history of beauty in this country. Beauty,
-whether we like it or not, has a heart full of service.” The case
-against the conservative and traditional type of criticism is presented
-with slapdash pungency in the two volumes of H. L.
-Mencken’s “Prejudices.” But any one can make out a case for
-himself by reading the work of any American classical scholar side
-by side with a book by Gilbert Murray, or any history of literature
-by an American side by side with Francesco de Sanctis’s “History
-of Italian Literature,” or the work of any American critic side by
-side with the books of the great critics of the world.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-J. E. S.
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_536">536</span></p>
-
-<h3>SCHOOL AND COLLEGE LIFE</h3>
-
-<p>The “distinguished Englishman” to whom the Martian refers
-is of course Viscount Bryce, whose “American Commonwealth” discusses
-the external aspects of our uniformity, the similarity of our
-buildings, cities, customs, and so on. Our spiritual unanimity has
-been most thoroughly examined by George Santayana, both in his
-earlier essays—as notably in “The Genteel Tradition”—and in his
-recent “Character and Opinion in the United States.”</p>
-
-<p>For all the welter of writing about our educational establishment,
-only infrequent and incidental consideration has been bestowed,
-either favourably or unfavourably, on its regimental effect. As custodians
-of a going concern, the educators have busied themselves
-with repairs and replacements to the machinery rather than with the
-right of way; and lay critics have pretty much confined themselves
-to selecting between machines whose slightly differing routes all lie
-in the same general direction. The exception that proves the rule
-is “Shackled Youth,” by Edward Yeomans.</p>
-
-<p>But undergraduate life in America has a genre of its own, the
-form of fiction known as “college stories.” Nearly every important
-school has at some time had written round it a collection of tales
-that exploit its peculiar legends, traditions, and customs—for the
-most part a chafing-dish literature of pranks, patter, and athletic
-prowess whose murky and often distorted reflection of student attitudes
-is quite incidental to its business of entertaining. Owen
-Johnson’s Lawrenceville stories—“The Prodigious Hickey,” “Tennessee
-Shad,” “The Varmint,” “The Humming Bird”—are the
-classics of preparatory school life. Harvard has “Pepper,” by H. E.
-Porter, “Harvard Episodes” and “The Diary of a Freshman,” by
-Charles Flandrau, and Owen Wister’s “Philosophy 4,” the best of
-all college yarns. Yale has the books of Ralph D. Paine and of
-others. The Western universities have such volumes as “Ann Arbor
-Tales,” by Karl Harriman, for Michigan, and “Maroon Tales,” by
-W. J. Cuppy, for Chicago. George Fitch writes amusingly about
-life in the smaller Western colleges in “Petey Simmons at Siwash”
-and “At Good Old Siwash.”</p>
-
-<p>The catalogue of serious college fiction is brief, and most of the
-novels are so propagandist that they are misrepresentative. For
-example, Owen Johnson’s “Stover at Yale,” which was some years
-out of date when it was published, misses the essential club spirit in
-New Haven by almost as wide a margin as Arthur Train’s “The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_537">537</span>
-World and Thomas Kelly” departs from the normal club life in
-Cambridge; both authors set up the straw man of snobbery where
-snobs are an unimportant minority. Two recent novels, however,
-deal more faithfully with the college scene for the very reason that
-their authors were more interested in character than in setting:
-“This Side of Paradise,” by Scott Fitzgerald, is true enough to
-have provoked endless controversy in Princeton; and “Salt: The
-Education of Griffith Adams,” by Charles G. Norris, is a memorable
-appraisal of student ideals in a typical co-educational institution.
-Dorothy Canfield’s “The Bent Twig” is also laid in a co-educational
-college. Booth Tarkington’s “Ramsay Milholland” attends a State
-University; and the hero of “Gold Shod,” by Newton Fuessle, is
-a revelatory failure of the University of Chicago regimen. To these
-add an autobiography—“An American in the Making, The Life
-Story of an Immigrant,” by M. E. Ravage, whose candid report on
-his fellows at the Missouri State University is a masterpiece of sympathetic
-criticism.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-C. B.
-</p>
-
-<h3>THE INTELLECTUAL LIFE</h3>
-
-<p>To attempt to give references to specific books on so general and
-inclusive a topic would be an impertinence. But one may legitimately
-suggest the trends of investigation one would like to see
-thoroughly explored. In my own case they would be: (1) a study
-of the pioneer from the point of view of his cultural and religious
-interests, correlating those interests with his general economic status;
-(2) a study of the revolutionary <em>feeling</em> of America (not formulas)
-in psychological terms and of its duration as an emotional driving
-force; (3) a study of the effects of the post-Civil War period and
-the industrial expansion upon the position of upper-class women in
-the United States; (4) a study of sexual maladjustment in American
-family life, correlated again with the economic status of the successful
-pioneer; (5) a very careful study of the beginnings, rise, and
-spread of women’s clubs, and their purposes and accomplishments,
-correlated chronologically with the development of club life of men
-and the extent of vice, gambling, and drunkenness; (6) a study of
-American religions in more or less Freudian terms as compensations
-for neurotic maladjustment; (7) a study of instrumentalism in
-philosophy and its implications for reform; (8) a serious attempt
-to understand and appraise the more or less disorganized <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">jeunes</i>,
-with some attention to comparing the intensity of their bitterness
-or optimism with the places of birth and upbringing. No special<span class="pagenum" id="Page_538">538</span>
-study of American educational systems or of the school or college
-life would be necessary, it seems to me, beyond, of course, a general
-knowledge. The intellectual life of the nation, after all, has little
-relation to the academic life.</p>
-
-<p>When such special studies had been finished by sympathetic investigators,
-probably one of several writers could synthesize the results
-and give us a fairly definitive essay on the intellectual life of America.
-Such studies, however, have not yet been done, and without them I
-have had to write this essay to a certain extent <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">en plein air</i>. Thus
-it has been impossible entirely to avoid giving the impression of
-stating things dogmatically or intuitively. But as a matter of fact
-on all the topics I have suggested for study I have already given
-much thought and time, and consequently, whatever its literary form,
-the essay is not pure impressionism.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-H. E. S.
-</p>
-
-<h3>SCIENCE</h3>
-
-<p>There is no connected account of American achievement in science.
-Strangely enough, the most pretentious American book on the history
-of science, Sedgwick and Tyler’s “Short History of Science”
-(New York: Macmillan, 1917), ignores the most notable figures
-among the author’s countrymen. A useful biographical directory
-under the title of “American Men of Science” (New York
-Science Press, 1910, 2d edition), has been compiled by Professor
-James McKeen Cattell; a third revised edition has been prepared
-and issued this year prior to the appearance of the present volume.</p>
-
-<p>On the tendencies manifest in the United States there are several
-important papers. An address by Henry A. Rowland entitled “A
-Plea for Pure Science” (<cite>Popular Science Monthly</cite>, vol. LIX, 1901,
-pp. 170–188), is still eminently worth reading. The external conditions
-under which American scientists labour have been repeatedly
-discussed in recent years in such journals as <cite>Science</cite> and <cite>School and
-Society</cite>, both edited by Professor Cattell, who has himself appended
-very important discussions to the above-cited biographical lexicon.
-Against over-organization Professor William Morton Wheeler has
-recently published a witty and vigorous protest (“The Organization
-of Research,” <cite>Science</cite>, January 21, 1921, N. S. vol. LIII, pp.
-53–67).</p>
-
-<p>In order to give an understanding of the essence of scientific
-activity the general reader cannot do better than to trace the processes
-by which the master-minds of the past have brought order
-into the chaos that is at first blush presented by the world of reality.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_539">539</span>
-In this respect the writings of the late Professor Ernst Mach are
-unsurpassed, and even the least mathematically trained layman
-can derive much insight from portions of his book “Die Mechanik”
-(Leipzig, 7th edition, 1912), accessible in T. J. McCormack’s translation
-under the title of “The Science of Mechanics” (Chicago:
-Open Court Publishing Co.). The section on Galileo may be specially
-recommended. Mach’s “Erkenntnis und Irrtum” (Leipzig,
-1906) contains most suggestive discussions of the psychology of
-investigation, dealing with such questions as the nature of a scientific
-problem, of experimentation, of hypothetical assumptions, etc.
-Much may also be learned from the general sections of P. Duhem’s
-“La theorie physique, son objet et sa structure” (Paris, 1906).
-E. Duclaux’s “Pasteur: Histoire d’un Esprit” has fortunately been
-rendered accessible by Erwin F. Smith and Florence Hedges under
-the title “Pasteur, the History of a Mind” (Philadelphia; Saunders,
-1920). It reveals in masterly fashion the methods by which a great
-thinker overcomes not only external opposition but the more baneful
-obstacles of scientific folk-lore.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-R. H. L.
-</p>
-
-<h3>PHILOSOPHY</h3>
-
-<p>The omission of Mr. Santayana’s philosophy from the above account
-indicates no lack of appreciation of its merits. Although
-written at Harvard, it is hardly an American philosophy. On one
-hand, Mr. Santayana is free from the mystical religious longings
-that have given our Idealisms life, and on the other, he is too confident
-of the reality of culture and the value of the contemplative
-life to sanction that dominance of the practical which is the stronghold
-of instrumentalism.</p>
-
-<p>The only histories of American Philosophy are those by Professor
-Woodbridge Riley. His “Early Schools” (Dodd, Mead &amp; Co.,
-1907), is a full treatment of the period in question, but his “American
-Thought from Puritanism to Pragmatism” (H. Holt, 1915) is
-better reading and comes down to date. These are best read in connection
-with some history of American Literature such as Barrett
-Wendell’s “Literary History of America” (Scribner’s Sons, 1914).
-Royce’s system is given in good condensed form in the last four
-chapters of his “Spirit of Modern Philosophy” (Houghton Mifflin,
-1899). Its exhaustive statement is “The World and the Individual”
-(2 vols., Macmillan, 1900–1). The “Philosophy of Loyalty” (Macmillan,
-1908) develops the ethics, and the “Problem of Christianity”
-(2 vols., Macmillan, 1913), relates his philosophy to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_540">540</span>
-Christianity. Hocking’s religious philosophy is given in his “Meaning
-of God in Human Experience” (Yale University Press, 1912).
-His general position is developed on one side in “Human Nature and
-Its Remaking” (Yale University Press, 1918). Anything of James
-is good reading. His chief work is the “Principles of Psychology”
-(H. Holt, 1890), but the “Talks to Teachers on Psychology and
-Some of Life’s Ideals” (H. Holt, 1907) and the “Will to Believe”
-(Longmans, Green &amp; Co., 1899), better illustrate his attitude toward
-life. “Pragmatism” (Longmans, Green &amp; Co., 1907) introduces
-his technical philosophizing. His religious attitude can be got
-from the “Varieties of Religious Experience” (Longmans, Green
-&amp; Co., 1902). Dewey has nowhere systematized his philosophy. Its
-technical points are exhibited in the “Essays in Experimental Logic”
-(University of Chicago Press, 1916). The “Influence of Darwin
-on Philosophy” (H. Holt, 1910) has two especially readable essays,
-one the title-essay, the other on “Intelligence and Morals.” The
-full statement of his ethics is the “Ethics” (Dewey and Tufts, H.
-Holt, 1908). He is at his best in “Education and Democracy”
-(Macmillan, 1916). “German Philosophy and Politics” (H. Holt,
-1915) is a war-time reaction giving an interesting point of view
-as to the significance of German Philosophy. “The New Realism”
-(Macmillan, 1912) is a volume of technical studies by the Six
-Realists. “Creative Intelligence” (H. Holt, 1917), by John Dewey
-and others, is a similar volume of pragmatic studies. The reviews
-are also announcing another co-operative volume, “Essays in Critical
-Realism” by Santayana, Lovejoy and others. In a technical fashion
-Perry has discussed the “Present Tendencies in Philosophy” (Longmans,
-Green &amp; Co., 1912), but the best critical reaction to American
-philosophy is that of Santayana: “Character and Opinion in
-the United States” (Scribner’s Sons, 1920). Santayana’s own chief
-philosophic contributions are the “Sense of Beauty” (Scribner’s
-Sons, 1896), and the “Life of Reason” (5 vols., Scribner’s
-Sons, 1905–6). The first two chapters of his “Winds of Doctrine”
-(Scribner’s Sons, 1913), on the “Intellectual Temper of the Age”
-and “Modernism and Christianity,” are also relevant. Brief but
-excellent expositions of Royce, Dewey, James, and Santayana by
-Morris R. Cohen have appeared in the <cite>New Republic</cite>, vols. XX-XXIII.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-H. C. B.
-</p>
-
-<h3>LITERATURE</h3>
-
-<p>Perhaps the most illuminating books for any one interested in the
-subject of the essay on literature are the private memorials of certain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_541">541</span>
-modern European writers. For a sense of everything the American
-literary life is <em>not</em>, one might read, for instance, the Letters of
-Ibsen, Dostoievsky, Chekhov, Flaubert, Taine and Leopardi—all
-of which have appeared, in whole or in part, in English.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-V. W. B.
-</p>
-
-<h3>MUSIC</h3>
-
-<p>What little there is that is worth reading concerning American
-music is scattered through magazine articles and chapters in books
-upon other musical subjects. Daniel Gregory Mason has a sensible
-and illuminating chapter, “Music in America,” in his “Contemporary
-Composers.” The section, “America,” in Chapter XVI of the Stanford-Forsyth
-“History of Music” contrives to be tactful and at
-the same time just. Two books that should be read by any one
-interested in native composition are Cecil Forsyth’s “Music and
-Nationalism” and Lawrence Gilman’s “Edward MacDowell.”
-Rupert Hughes’s “Contemporary American Composers” is twenty
-years old, but still interesting; it contains sympathetic—not to say
-glowing—accounts of the lives and works of an incredibly large
-number of Americans who do and did pursue the art of musical
-composition. To know what an artist means when he asks to be
-understood read pages 240 and 241 of Cabell’s “Jurgen”—if you
-can get it; also the volume, “La Foire sur la Place,” of “Jean
-Christophe.”</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-D. T.
-</p>
-
-<h3>POETRY</h3>
-
-<p>Bodenheim, Maxwell: “Minna and Myself” (Pagan Publishing
-Co.); “Advice” (Alfred A. Knopf).</p>
-
-<p>“H. D.”: “Sea-Garden” (Houghton Mifflin).</p>
-
-<p>Eliot, T. S.: “Poems” (Alfred A. Knopf).</p>
-
-<p>Fletcher, John Gould: “Irradiations: Sand and Spray” (Houghton
-Mifflin); “Goblins and Pagodas” (Houghton Mifflin); “The
-Tree of Life” (Macmillan); “Japanese Prints” (Four Seas Co.);
-“Breakers and Granite” (Macmillan).</p>
-
-<p>Frost, Robert: “North of Boston” (Holt); “A Boy’s Will”
-(Holt); “Mountain Interval” (Holt).</p>
-
-<p>Kreymborg, Alfred: “Plays for Poem-Mimes” (Others); “Blood
-of Things” (Nicholas Brown); “Plays for Merry Andrews” (Sunwise
-Turn).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_542">542</span></p>
-
-<p>Lindsay, Vachel: “The Congo” (Macmillan); “The Chinese
-Nightingale” (Macmillan).</p>
-
-<p>Lowell, Amy: “Men, Women and Ghosts” (Houghton Mifflin);
-“Can Grande’s Castle” (Houghton Mifflin); “Pictures of the Floating
-World” (Houghton Mifflin); “Legends” (Houghton Mifflin).</p>
-
-<p>Masters, Edgar Lee: “Spoon River Anthology” (Macmillan);
-“The Great Valley” (Macmillan); “Domesday Book” (Macmillan).</p>
-
-<p>Pound, Ezra: “Umbra” (Elkin Matthews); “Lustra” (Alfred
-A. Knopf).</p>
-
-<p>Robinson, Edwin Arlington: “Children of the Night” (Scribners);
-“The Town Down the River” (Scribners); “The Man
-Against the Sky” (Macmillan); “Merlin” (Macmillan); “Captain
-Craig” (Macmillan); “The Three Taverns” (Macmillan);
-“Avon’s Harvest” (Macmillan); “Lancelot” (Scott and Seltzer).</p>
-
-<p>Sandburg, Carl: “Smoke and Steel” (Harcourt, Brace &amp; Co.).</p>
-
-<p>Stevens, Wallace: See “The New Poetry;” “Others” Anthology.</p>
-
-<p>Teasdale, Sara: “Rivers to the Sea” (Macmillan).</p>
-
-<p>Untermeyer, Louis: “The New Adam” (Harcourt, Brace &amp;
-Co.); “Including Horace” (Harcourt, Brace &amp; Co.).</p>
-
-<p>Anthologies: “The New Poetry.” Edited by Harriet Monroe
-and Alice Corbin Henderson (Macmillan); “An American Miscellany”
-(Harcourt, Brace &amp; Co.); “Others for 1919” edited by
-Alfred Kreymborg (A. A. Knopf); “Some Imagist Poets” First,
-Second and Third Series (Houghton Mifflin).</p>
-
-<p>Criticism: Untermeyer, Louis, “The New Era in American
-Poetry” (Henry Holt), a comprehensive, lively, but sometimes misleading
-survey.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-C. A.
-</p>
-
-<h3>ART</h3>
-
-<p>The reader may obtain most of the data on the history of American
-art from Samuel Isham’s “History of American Painting,”
-and Charles H. Caffin’s “Story of American Painting.” Very little
-writing of an analytical nature has been devoted to American art,
-and nearly all of it is devoid of a sense of perspective and of anything
-approaching a realization of the position that American work
-holds in relation to that of Europe. Outside of the writing that
-is only incompetent, there are the books and articles by men whose
-purpose is to “boost” the home product for nationalistic or commercial
-reasons. In contrast with all this is Mr. Roger E. Fry’s
-essay on Ryder, in the <cite>Burlington Magazine</cite> for April, 1908—a
-masterful appreciation of the artist.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-W. P.
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_543">543</span></p>
-
-<h3>THE THEATRE</h3>
-
-<p>The bibliography of this subject is extensive, but in the main
-unilluminating. It consists chiefly in a magnanimous waving aside
-of what is, and an optimistic dream of what is to be. Into this
-category fall most, if not all, of the many volumes written by the
-college professors and such of their students as have, upon graduation,
-carried with them into the world the college-professor manner
-of looking at things. Nevertheless, Professor William Lyon Phelps’
-“The Twentieth Century Theatre,” for all its deviations from fact,
-and Professor Thomas H. Dickinson’s “The Case of American
-Drama,” may be looked into by the more curious. Mr. Arthur
-Ruhl’s “Second Nights,” with its penetrating humour, contains
-several excellent pictures of certain phases of the native theatre.
-Section IV of Mr. Walter Prichard Eaton’s “Plays and Players,”
-Mr. George Bronson-Howard’s searching series of papers entitled,
-“What’s Wrong with the Theatre,” and perhaps even Mr. George
-Jean Nathan’s “The Popular Theatre,” “The Theatre, The Drama,
-The Girls,” “Comedians All,” and “Mr. George Jean Nathan Presents”
-may throw some light upon the subject. Miss Akins’
-“Papa” and all of Mr. O’Neill’s plays are available in book form.
-The bulk of inferior native dramaturgy is similarly available to the
-curious-minded: there are hundreds of these lowly specimens on
-view in the nearest book store.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-G. J. N.
-</p>
-
-<h3>ECONOMIC OPINION</h3>
-
-<p>The literature of economic opinion in America is almost as voluminous
-as the printed word. It ranges from the ponderous treatises
-of professed economists, wherein “economic laws” are printed in
-italics, to the sophisticated novels of the self-elect, in which economic
-opinion is a by-product of clever conversation. Not only can one
-find economic opinion to his taste, but he can have it in any form
-he likes. Perhaps the most human and reasonable application of the
-philosophy of laissez-faire to the problems of industrial society is
-to be found in the pages of W. G. Sumner. Of particular interest
-are the essays contained in the volumes entitled “Earth Hunger,”
-“The Challenge of Facts,” and “The Forgotten Man.” The most
-subtle and articulate account of the economic order as an automatic,
-self-regulating mechanism is J. B. Clark, “The Distribution of
-Wealth.” An able and readable treatise, characterized alike by a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_544">544</span>
-modified classical approach and by a recognition of the facts of
-modern industrial society, is F. W. Taussig, “The Principles of
-Economics.” The “case for capitalism” has never been set forth
-as an articulate whole. The theoretical framework of the defence is
-to be found in any of the older treatises upon economic theory. A
-formal <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">apologia</i> is to be found in the last chapter of almost every
-text upon economics under some such title as “A Critique of the
-Existing Order,” “Wealth and Welfare,” or “Economic Progress.”
-A defence of “what is,” whatever it may chance to be, characterized
-alike by brilliancy and ignorance, is P. E. More’s “Aristocracy and
-Justice.” Contemporary opinion favourable to capitalism may be
-found, in any requisite quantity and detail, in <cite>The Wall Street
-Journal</cite>, <cite>The Commercial and Financial Chronicle</cite>, and the publications
-of the National Association of Manufacturers. <cite>The Congressional
-Record</cite>, a veritable treasure house of economic fallacy, presents
-fervent pleas both for an unqualified capitalism and for capitalism
-with endless modifications. The literature of the economics
-of “control” is beginning to be large. The essay by H. C. Adams,
-“The Relation of the State to Industrial Activity,” elaborating the
-thesis that the function of the state is to regulate “the plane of
-competition,” has become a classic. The best account of the economic
-opinion of organized labour is to be found in R. F. Hoxie, “Trade
-Unionism in the United States.” Typical examples of excellent work
-done by men who do not profess to be economists are W. Lippmann,
-“Drift and Mastery,” the opinions (often dissenting) delivered by
-Mr. Justice Holmes and Mr. Justice Brandeis, of the United States
-Supreme Court, and the articles frequently contributed to periodicals
-by T. R. Powell upon the constitutional aspects of economic questions.
-The appearance of such studies as the brief for the shorter
-working day in the case of <cite>Bunting v. Oregon</cite>, prepared by F. Frankfurter
-and J. Goldmark, and of the “Report on the Steel Strike of
-1919,” by the Commission of Inquiry of the Interchurch World
-Movement indicates that we are beginning to base our opinions and
-our policies upon “the facts.” Among significant contributions are
-the articles appearing regularly in such periodicals as <cite>The New
-Republic</cite> and <cite>The Nation</cite>. At last the newer economics of the
-schools is beginning to assume the form of an articulate body of
-doctrine. The books of T. B. Veblen, particularly “The Theory of
-Business Enterprise,” and “The Instinct of Workmanship,” contain
-valuable pioneer studies. In “Personal Competition” and in the
-chapters upon “Valuation” in “Social Process,” C. H. Cooley has
-shown how economic institutions are to be treated. The newer
-economics, however, begins with the publication in 1913 of W. C.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_545">545</span>
-Mitchell, “Business Cycles.” This substitutes an economics of
-process for one of statics and successfully merges theoretical and
-statistical inquiry. It marks the beginning of a new era in the
-study of economics. The work in general economic theory has followed
-the leads blazed by Veblen, Cooley, and Mitchell. W. H.
-Hamilton, in “Current Economic Problems,” elaborates a theory of
-the control of industrial development, interspersed with readings
-from many authors. L. C. Marshal, in “Readings in Industrial
-Society,” attempts, through selections drawn from many sources, an
-appraisal of the institutions which together make up the economic
-order. D. Friday, in “Profits, Wages, and Prices,” shows how much
-meaning a few handfuls of figures contain and how much violence
-they can do to established principles. The National Bureau of
-Economic Research is soon to publish the results of a careful and
-thorough statistical inquiry into the division of income in the United
-States. Upon particular subjects such as trusts, tariffs, railroads,
-labour unions, etc., the literature is far too large to be catalogued
-here. There is no satisfactory history of economic opinion in the
-United States. T. B. Veblen’s “The Place of Science in Modern
-Civilization” contains a series of essays which constitute the most
-convincing attack upon the classical system and which point the
-way to an institutional economics. Many articles dealing with the
-development of economic doctrines are to be found in the files of
-<cite>The Quarterly Journal of Economics</cite> and of <cite>The Journal of Political
-Economy</cite>. An excellent statement of the present situation in economics
-is an unpublished essay by W. C. Mitchell, “The Promise of
-Economic Science.”</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-W. H. H.
-</p>
-
-<h3>RADICALISM</h3>
-
-<p>For exposition of the leading radical theories the reader is urged
-to go, not to second-hand authorities, but to their foremost advocates.
-“Capital” by Karl Marx (Charles H. Kerr) is of course the
-chief basis of Socialism. There is nothing better on Anarchism than
-the article in the “Encyclopedia Britannica” by Prince Kropotkin.
-For revolutionary industrial unionism it is important to know
-“Speeches and Editorials” by Daniel de Leon (New York Labor
-News Co.). De Leon was one of the founders of the I.W.W.,
-and his ideas not only influenced the separatist labour movements in
-the United States but the shop-steward movement in England and
-the Soviets of Russia. “Guild Socialism” by G. D. H. Cole is the
-best statement of this recent theory, while “The State and Revolution”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_546">546</span>
-by Nikolai Lenin (George Allen and Unwin) explains the
-principles and tactics of modern Communism. To these should be
-added another classic, “Progress and Poverty” by Henry George
-(Doubleday Page).</p>
-
-<p>On the origins of the American government it is important to
-read “Economic Origins of Jeffersonian Democracy” and “Economic
-Interpretation of the Constitution” by Charles A. Beard (Macmillan).</p>
-
-<p>The “History of Trade Unionism” by Sidney and Beatrice Webb
-(Longmans, Green), is an invaluable account of the growth of the
-British labour movement, which has many similarities to our own.
-“Industrial Democracy” by the same authors, issued by the same
-publisher, is the best statement of the theories of trade unionism.
-The “History of Labor in the United States” by John R. Commons
-and associates (Macmillan), is a scholarly work, while “Trade
-Unionism in the United States” by Robert F. Hoxie (Appleton), is
-a more analytical treatment. “The I. W. W.” by Paul F. Brissenden
-(Longmans, Green), is a full documentary history. Significant
-recent tendencies are recorded in “The New Unionism in the Clothing
-Industry” by Budish and Soule (Harcourt, Brace). The last
-chapters of “The Great Steel Strike” by William Z. Foster (B. W.
-Huebsch), expound his interesting interpretation of the trade unions.</p>
-
-<p>For a statement of the functional attitude toward public problems
-one should read “Authority, Liberty and Function” by Ramiro
-de Maeztu (Geo. Allen and Unwin). For a brief and readable
-application of this attitude to economics, “The Acquisitive Society”
-by R. H. Tawney (Harcourt, Brace), is to be recommended.</p>
-
-<p>“Modern Social Movements” by Savel Zimand (H. W. Wilson),
-is an authoritative guidebook to present radical movements throughout
-the world, and contains an excellent bibliography. And we
-must not forget the voluminous Report of the New York State
-Legislative Committee on Radicalism (the Lusk Committee), which
-not only collects a wealth of current radical literature, but offers an
-entertaining and instructive example of the current American attitude
-toward such matters.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-G. S.
-</p>
-
-<h3>THE SMALL TOWN</h3>
-
-<p>Bibliography: “A Hoosier Holiday,” by Theodore Dreiser.
-“Winesburg, Ohio,” by Sherwood Anderson. “Main Street,” by
-Sinclair Lewis.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-L. R. R.
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_547">547</span></p>
-
-<h3>HISTORY</h3>
-
-<p>The late Henry Adams had much in common with Samuel Butler,
-that other seeker after an education. He knew that he had
-written a very good book (his studies on American history were
-quite as excellent in their way as “Erewhon” was in a somewhat
-different genre) and he was equally aware of the sad fact
-that his work was not being read. In view of the general public
-indifference towards history it is surprising how much excellent
-work has been done. Three names suggest themselves when history
-in America is mentioned, Robinson, Beard, and Breasted.
-Their works for the elementary schools have not been surpassed in
-any country and their histories (covering the entire period from
-ancient Egypt down to the present time) will undoubtedly help to
-overcome the old and firmly established prejudice that “history is
-dull” and will help to create a new generation which shall prefer a
-good biography or history to the literature of our current periodicals.</p>
-
-<p>The group of essays published last year by Professor Robinson—the
-pioneer of our modern historical world—under the title of
-“The New History” contains several papers of a pleasantly suggestive
-nature and we especially recommend “History for the Common
-Man” for those who want to investigate the subject in greater
-detail, and “The New Allies of History” for those who want to
-get an idea of the struggle that goes on between the New and the
-Old Movements in our contemporary historical world.</p>
-
-<p>But it is impossible to suggest a three- four- or five-foot bookshelf
-for those who desire to understand the issues of the battle that is
-taking place. The warfare between the forces of the official School
-and University History and those who have a vision of something
-quite different is merely a part of the great social and economic and
-spiritual struggle that has been going on ever since the days of
-the Encyclopedists. The scene is changing constantly. The leaders
-hardly know what is happening. The soldiers who do the actual
-fighting are too busy with the work at hand to waste time upon
-academic discussions of the Higher Strategy. And the public will
-have to do what the public did during the great war—study the
-reports from all sides (the relevant and the irrelevant—the news
-from Helsingfors-by-way-of-Geneva and from Copenhagen-by-way-of
-Constantinople) and use its own judgment as to the probable
-outcome of the conflict.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-H. W. V. L.
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_548">548</span></p>
-
-<h3>SEX</h3>
-
-<p>As might be supposed, there has been little writing on sex in this
-country—such discussion, more or less superficial, of the social
-aspects as may be found in books on the family, on marriage or
-prostitution, some quasi-medical treatises and of late a few books
-along the lines of Freudian psychology, that is all. Among all the
-organizations of the country there is no society corresponding to the
-British Society for the Study of Sex. I doubt if such a society or
-its publications would be tolerated, since even novelists who, like
-Dreiser, express an interest in sex comparatively directly, run afoul
-of public opinion, and a book such as “Women in Love” by D. H.
-Lawrence, its publisher felt called upon to print without his name.</p>
-
-<p>It is not surprising, therefore, that in English the most adequate
-discussions of sex have been made by an Englishman, Havelock Ellis—“Studies
-in the Psychology of Sex.” Among less well known writing
-on the subject by Ellis I would note in particular an illuminating
-page or two in his essay on Casanova (“Affirmations”).</p>
-
-<p>Discussion of the theories of distinguishing between mating and
-parenthood and of crisis psychology may be found in articles by the
-writer in the <cite>International Journal of Ethics</cite>, July, 1915, January,
-1916, October, 1917, and in <cite>The American Anthropologist</cite>, March,
-1916, and <cite>The Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific
-Methods</cite>, March, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>“The Behaviour of Crowds” by E. D. Martin, and “French
-Ways and Their Meaning” by Edith Wharton are recent books that
-the reader of a comparative turn of mind will find of interest, and
-if he is not already familiar with the writings of the Early Christian
-Fathers I commend to him some browsing in the “Ante-Nicene
-Christian Library” and the “Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers.”</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-E. C. P.
-</p>
-
-<h3>THE FAMILY</h3>
-
-<p>For statistical facts which have a bearing on the tendencies of the
-family in the United States, the following group of sources has been
-consulted:</p>
-
-<p>“Abstract of the Census, 1910;” the preliminary sheets of the
-“Census of 1920;” Report on “Marriage and Divorce in 1916,”
-published by the Bureau of the Census; Bulletin of the Woman’s
-Bureau, U. S. Department of Labour on “What Became of Women<span class="pagenum" id="Page_549">549</span>
-Who Went Into War Industries;” Bulletin of the U. S. Department
-of Agriculture on “The Farm Woman;” Bulletin of the U. S. Children’s
-Bureau on “Standards of Child Welfare.” Economic aspects
-of the family and income data were acquired from “Conditions of
-Labour in American Industries,” by Edgar Sydenstricker, and “The
-Wealth and Income of the People of the United States,” by Willford
-I. King. For facts concerning longevity, the aid of the Census was
-supplemented by “The Trend of Longevity in the United States,”
-by C. H. Forsyth, in the <cite>Journal of the American Statistical Association</cite>,
-Vol. 128. For the long biological perspective to counteract the
-near-sighted view of the Census, “The New Stone Age in Northern
-Europe,” by John M. Tyler may be commended. Psychological
-aspects of family relationships are discussed in a scientific and stimulating
-way in the published “Proceedings of the International
-Women Physicians’ Conference, 1919.”</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-K. A.
-</p>
-
-<h3>RACIAL MINORITIES</h3>
-
-<p>No author or group of authors has yet attempted to treat in any
-systematic and comprehensive way the position and the problem of
-the several racial minorities in the United States. A perfect
-bibliography of existing materials on the subject would be most
-helpful, but it could not make good the existing shortage of fact,
-and of thoughtful interpretation.</p>
-
-<p>The anthropological phase of the subject is discussed with authority
-by Franz Boas in “The Mind of Primitive Man” (Macmillan,
-1913), and by Robert H. Lowie in “Culture and Ethnology”
-(McMurtrie, 1917). Some information on racial inter-marriage is
-to be found in Drachsler’s “Democracy and Assimilation—The
-Blending of Immigrant Heritages in America” (Macmillan, 1920).
-Among recent reports of psychological tests of race-difference, the
-following are of special interest: “A Study of Race Differences in
-New York City,” by Katherine Murdock, (<cite>School and Society</cite>,
-vol. XI, no. 266, p. 147, 31 January, 1920); “Racial Differences in
-Mental Fatigue,” by Thomas R. Garth (<cite>Journal of Applied
-Psychology</cite>, vol. IV, nos. 2 and 3, p. 235, June-Sept. 1920); “A
-Comparative Study in the Intelligence of White and Colored Children,”
-by R. A. Schwegler and Edith Winn (<cite>Journal of Educational
-Research</cite>, vol. II, no. 5, p. 838, December, 1920); “The Intelligence
-of Negro Recruits,” by M. R. Trabue (<cite>Natural History</cite>, vol.
-XIX, no. 6, p. 680, 1919); “The Intelligence of Negroes at Camp<span class="pagenum" id="Page_550">550</span>
-Lee, Virginia,” by George Oscar Ferguson, Jr. (<cite>School and Society</cite>,
-vol. IX, no. 233, p. 721, 14 June, 1919); and the Government’s
-official report of all the psychological tests given in the cantonments
-(“Memoirs of the National Academy of Science,” vol. XV, Washington,
-Government Printing Office, 1921).</p>
-
-<p>The most important single source of information on the present
-status of the coloured race in the United States is “The Negro Year
-Book,” edited by Monroe N. Work (Negro Year Book Pub. Co.,
-Tuskegee Institute, Alabama); the edition for 1918–19 contains an
-extensive bibliography. Brawley’s “Short History of the American
-Negro” (Macmillan, rev. ed., 1919) presents in text-book form a
-general narrative, together with supplementary chapters on such
-topics as religion and education among the Negroes. The Government
-report on “Negro Population, 1790–1915” (Washington,
-Bureau of the Census, Government Printing Office, 1918), is invaluable.
-Important recent developments are treated in “Negro
-Migration in 1916–17” and “The Negro at Work During the World
-War and During Reconstruction” (Washington, Dep’t of Labour,
-1919 and 1920 respectively). Some notion of the various manifestations
-of prejudice against the Negro may be gathered from the
-following sources: “Negro Education” (<cite>U. S. Bureau of Education
-Bulletin</cite>, 1916, nos. 38 and 39); “The White and the Colored
-Schools of Virginia as Measured by the Ayres Index,” by George
-Oscar Ferguson, Jr. (<cite>School and Society</cite>, vol. XII, no. 297, p. 170,
-4 Sept., 1920); “Thirty Years of Lynching in the United States,
-1889–1918,” and “Disfranchisement of Colored Americans in the
-Presidential Election of 1920” (New York, National Association for
-the Advancement of Coloured People, 1919 and 1921 respectively).
-A few representative expressions from the Negroes themselves are:
-“Up from Slavery, an Autobiography,” by Booker T. Washington
-(Doubleday, 1901); “Darkwater,” by W. E. Burghardt Du Bois
-(Harcourt, 1920); <cite>The Messenger</cite> (a Negro Socialist-syndicalist
-magazine, 2305 Seventh Avenue, New York); and the “Universal
-Negro Catechism” (Universal Negro Improvement Association, 56
-West 135th Street, New York).</p>
-
-<p>A great body of valuable information on the Indians is collected
-in two publications of the Government, the second of which contains
-a very extensive bibliography; “Indian Population in the United
-States and Alaska, 1910” (Washington, Bureau of the Census,
-Government Printing Office, 1915), and the “Handbook of American
-Indians North of Mexico,” edited by Frederick Webb Hodge (Washington,
-Bureau of Ethnology, Government Printing Office, 1907–10,
-2 vols.). An annual report containing current data on the status of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_551">551</span>
-the Indian is published by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs.
-Francis Ellington Leupp, who held this title from 1905 to 1909,
-was the author of a volume which presents in popular form the
-results of official experience (“The Indian and His Problem,”
-Scribner, 1910).</p>
-
-<p>The “American Jewish Year Book” (Philadelphia, Jewish Publication
-Society of America) is an extremely useful volume, and particularly
-so because one must refer to it for statistical information
-which in the case of the other racial minorities is available in the
-reports of the national census. In the <cite>American Magazine</cite> for April,
-1921, Harry Schneiderman, the editor of the “Year Book,” assembles
-a great many facts bearing upon the relation of the Jews to the
-economic, social, political, and intellectual life of the country (“The
-Jews of the United States,” p. 24). Of special interest to students
-of the Semitic problem is Berkson’s “Theories of Americanization; a
-Critical Study with Special Reference to the Jewish Group”
-(Teachers’ College, Columbia University, 1920).</p>
-
-<p>The standard works on the Oriental question are Coolidge’s
-“Chinese Immigration” (Holt, 1909), and Millis’s “Japanese Problem
-in the United States” (Macmillan, 1915). The Japanese problem
-in California is treated statistically in a booklet prepared recently
-by the State Board of Control (“California and the Oriental,”
-Sacramento, State Printing Office, 1920), and in a symposium which
-appeared in <cite>The Pacific Review</cite> for December, 1920 (Seattle, University
-of Washington).</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-G. T. R.
-</p>
-
-<h3>ADVERTISING</h3>
-
-<p>Expect from me no recommendation of the “scientific” treatises
-on advertising or of the professional psychological analyses of the
-instincts. Books, books in tons, have been written about advertising,
-and as far as I am concerned, every single one of them is right.
-Read these, if you have the hardihood, and remain mute. Read
-them, I should say, and be eternally damned. Read them and
-retire rapidly to a small room comfortably padded and securely
-locked.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-J. T. S.
-</p>
-
-<h3>BUSINESS</h3>
-
-<p>Within the limits of this space anything like an adequate reference
-to the source books of fact and thought is impossible. All<span class="pagenum" id="Page_552">552</span>
-that may be attempted is to suggest an arbitrary way through the
-whole of the subject—a thoroughfare from which the reader may
-take off where he will as his own interests develop. For the foundations
-of an economic understanding one needs only to read “Principles
-of Political Economy,” by Simon Newcomb, the American
-astronomer, who in a mood of intellectual irritation inclined his
-mind to this mundane matter and produced the finest book of its
-kind in the world. For the rough physiognomy of American economic
-phenomena there is “A Century of Population Growth,” Bureau of
-the Census, 1909, a splendid document prepared under the direction
-of S. N. D. North. Katharine Coman’s “Industrial History of the
-United States” is an important work in itself and contains, besides,
-an excellent and full bibliography. “Crises and Depressions” and
-“Corporations and the State,” by Theodore E. Burton; “Forty
-Years of American Finance,” by Alexander D. Noyes; “Railroad
-Transportation, Its History and Its Laws,” by A. T. Hadley;
-“Trusts, Pools and Corporations,” by Wm. Z. Ripley; and “The
-Book of Wheat,” by Peter Tracy Dondlinger, are books in which
-the separate phases indicated by title are essentially treated. For
-dissertation, interpretation, and universal thought every student will
-find himself deeply indebted to “Trade Morals, Their Origin, Growth
-and Province,” by Edward D. Page; “The Economic Interpretation
-of History,” by James E. Thorold Rogers; “History of the
-New World Called America,” by E. J. Payne; “Economic Studies,”
-by Walter Bagehot; “Essays in Finance,” by R. Giffen; “Recent
-Economic Changes,” by David A. Wells, and “The Challenge of
-Facts and Other Essays,” by William Graham Sumner.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-G. G.
-</p>
-
-<h3>ENGINEERING</h3>
-
-<p>Literature covering the function of the engineer in society, especially
-in America, is very limited compared with books of information
-on most subjects. Engineering activities such as are usually
-described cover the technical achievements of the profession. Useful
-material, however, will be found scattered throughout the technical
-literature and engineering society proceedings especially among
-the addresses and articles of leading engineers prepared for special
-occasions. A comprehensive history of engineering has never been
-written, although there are many treatises dealing with particular developments
-in this field. Among these may be mentioned Bright’s
-“Engineering Science, 1837–1897”; Matschoss’s “Beiträge zur<span class="pagenum" id="Page_553">553</span>
-Geschichte der Technik und Industrie” (“Jahrbuch des Vereines
-deutscher Ingenieure”); and Smiles’s “Lives of the Engineers.”
-On engineering education, the “Proceedings of the Society for the
-Promotion of Engineering Education” and Bulletin No. 11 of the
-Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, “A Study
-of Engineering Education,” by Charles R. Mann, offer useful information.
-Concerning the status of the engineer in the economic
-order, Taussig’s “Inventors and Money Makers,” Veblen’s “The
-Engineers and the Price System,” together with Frank Watts’s “An
-Introduction to the Psychological Factors of Industry,” will be
-found of value. On the relation between labour and the engineer,
-much can be found in <cite>The Annals of the American Academy of
-Political and Social Science</cite> for September, 1920, on “Labor, Management
-and Production.”</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">O. S. B., Jr.</span>
-</p>
-
-<h3>NERVES</h3>
-
-<p>Complete works of Cotton Mather; also of Jonathan Edwards.
-Complete works of Dr. George M. Beard, notably his “American
-Nervousness,” Putnam, 1881. Medical publications of Dr. S. Weir
-Mitchell. Dr. George M. Parker: “The Discard Heap—Neurasthenia,”
-<cite>N. Y. Medical Journal</cite>, October 22, 1910. Dr.
-William Browning: “Is there such a thing as Neurasthenia?”
-<cite>N. Y. State Medical Journal</cite>, January, 1911. Dr. Morton Prince:
-“The Unconscious,” Macmillan, 1914. Professor Edwin B. Holt:
-“The Freudian Wish.” Dr. Edward J. Kempf: “The Autonomic
-Function and the Personality.” Complete works of Professor Freud,
-in translation and in the original.</p>
-
-<p>Files of <cite>Journal of Abnormal Psychology</cite>, to date. Files of
-<cite>Psychoanalytic Review</cite>, to date. Files of <cite>Imago</cite>, to date. Files of
-<cite xml:lang="de" lang="de">Internationale Zeitschrift fuer Aerztliche Psychoanalyse</cite>, to date. Dr.
-A. A. Brill, “Psychoanalysis,” third edition. “Character and Opinion
-in the United States,” by George Santayana. “Studies in
-American Intolerance,” by Alfred B. Kuttner, <cite>The Dial</cite>, March 14
-and 28, 1918.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-A. B. K.
-</p>
-
-<h3>MEDICINE</h3>
-
-<p>No attempt is here made to give any exhaustive, or even suggestive,
-bibliography. Only specific references in the text itself are
-here given in full, so that the reader may find them for himself, if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_554">554</span>
-he so desires. But on the general subject of “Professionalism,”
-although it deals more with the profession of law than of medicine,
-some valuable and stimulating observations can be found in the
-chapter of that name in “Our Social Heritage,” by Graham Wallas
-(Yale University Press, 1921).</p>
-
-<p>Bezzola: Quoted from “Preventive Medicine and Hygiene,”
-Rosenau, 1920, p. 340.</p>
-
-<p>Clouston: “The Hygiene of the Mind,” 1909.</p>
-
-<p>Cole: “The University Department of Medicine,” Science, N. S.,
-vol. LI, No. 1318, p. 329.</p>
-
-<p>Elderton and Pearson: “A First Study of the Influence of Parental
-Alcoholism on the Physique and Ability of the Offspring,” Francis
-Galton Eugenics Laboratory <cite>Memoirs</cite>, 1910, No. 10.</p>
-
-<p>Pearl: “The Effect of Parental Alcoholism upon the Progeny in
-the Domestic Fowl,” <cite>Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci.</cite>, 1916, vol. II, p. 380.</p>
-
-<p>Peterson: “Credulity and Cures,” <cite>Jour. Amer. Med. Assn.</cite>, 1919,
-vol. LXXIII, p. 1737.</p>
-
-<p>Rosenau: “Preventive Medicine and Hygiene,” 1920.</p>
-
-<p>Stockard: <cite>Interstate Medical Jour.</cite>, 1916, vol. XXIII, No. 6.</p>
-
-<p>Vaughan: “The Service of Medicine to Civilization,” <cite>Jour.
-Amer. Med. Assn.</cite>, 1914, vol. LXII, p. 2003.</p>
-
-<p>Vincent: “Ideals and Their Function in Medical Education,”
-<cite>Jour. Amer. Med. Assn.</cite>, 1920, vol. LXXIV, p. 1065.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-ANON.
-</p>
-
-<h3>SPORT AND PLAY</h3>
-
-<p>Mr. Spalding, the well-known sporting goods manufacturer, is also
-the publisher of the Spalding Athletic Library, which contains,
-besides rule books and record books of various sports, a series of
-text-books, at ten cents the copy, bearing such titles as “How to
-Play the Outfield,” “How to Catch,” “How to Play Soccer,” “How
-to Learn Golf,” etc. Authorship of these works is credited to
-famous outfielders, catchers, soccer players, and golfers, but as the
-latter can field, catch, play soccer, and golf much better than they
-can write, the actual writing of the volumes was wisely left to
-persons who make their living by the pen. The books are recommended,
-as a cure for insomnia at least. The best sporting fiction
-we know of, practically the only sporting fiction an adult may read
-without fear of stomach trouble, is contained in the collected works
-of the late Charles E. Van Loan.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-R. W. L.
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_555">555</span></p>
-
-<h3>AMERICAN CIVILIZATION FROM THE FOREIGN POINT
-OF VIEW<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor"><span class="smaller">1</span></a></h3>
-
-<p>Frances Milton Trollope: “The Domestic Manners of the
-Americans,” London, 1832.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry short">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The rest is silence ... or repetition.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="attrib">E. B.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="fnanchor">1</a> The views of foreign travellers in the United States are summarized
-in John Graham Brooks’s “As Others See Us,” New York, 1908.—<cite>The
-Editor.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_557" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_557">557</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="WHOS_WHO">WHO’S WHO<br />
-OF THE CONTRIBUTORS TO<br />
-THIS VOLUME</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="smaller">
-<p><b>Conrad Aiken</b> was born in Savannah, Georgia, in 1889, and was
-graduated from Harvard in 1912. His books include several volumes
-of poems, “Earth Triumphant,” “Turns and Movies,” “The Jig of
-Forslin,” “Nocturne of Remembered Spring,” “The Charnel Rose,” “The
-House of Dust,” and “Punch: The Immortal Liar,” and one volume of
-critical essays, “Scepticisms: Notes on Contemporary Poetry.”</p>
-
-<p><b>Anonymous</b>, the author of the essay on “Medicine,” is an American
-physician who has gained distinction in the field of medical research, but
-who for obvious reasons desires to have his name withheld.</p>
-
-<p><b>Katharine Anthony</b> was born in Arkansas, and was educated at the
-Universities of Tennessee, Chicago, and Heidelberg. She has done
-research and editorial work for the Russell Sage Foundation, National
-Consumers’ League, The National Board, Y. W. C. A., and other national
-reform organizations, and is the author of “Feminism in Germany and
-Scandinavia,” “Margaret Fuller: A Psychological Biography,” and other
-books.</p>
-
-<p><b>O. S. Beyer, Jr.</b>, was graduated from the Stevens Institute of Technology
-as a mechanical engineer in 1907, and did graduate work in railway
-and industrial economics in the Universities of Pennsylvania and
-New York. After some experience as an engineering assistant and general
-foreman on various railways, and as research engineer in the University
-of Illinois, he helped organize the U. S. Army School of Military
-Aeronautics during the War, and later took charge of the Department of
-Airplanes. He was subsequently requested by the U. S. Army Ordnance
-Department to organize and operate schools for training ordnance specialists
-and officers, and in order to conduct this work, he was commissioned
-Captain. After the termination of the War, he helped promote, and
-subsequently assumed charge in the capacity of Chief, Arsenal Orders
-Section, of the significant industrial developments carried forward in the
-Army arsenals. He has contributed numerous articles to technical
-periodicals and proceedings of engineering and other societies.</p>
-
-<p><b>Ernest Boyd</b> is an Irish critic and journalist, who has lived in this
-country for some years, and is now on the staff of the New York <cite>Evening
-Post</cite>. He was educated in France, Germany, and Switzerland for the
-British Consular Service, which he entered in 1913. After having served
-in the United States, Spain, and Denmark, he resigned from official life
-in order to take up the more congenial work of literature and journalism.
-He has edited Standish O’Grady’s “Selected Essays” for Every Irishman’s
-Library and translated Heinrich Mann’s “Der Untertan” for the
-European Library, and is the author of three volumes dealing with modern
-Anglo-Irish Literature: “Ireland’s Literary Renaissance,” “The Contemporary
-Drama of Ireland,” and “Appreciations and Depreciations.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_560">560</span></p>
-
-<p><b>Clarence Britten</b> was born in Pella, Iowa, in 1887, and was graduated
-from Harvard in 1912 as of 1910. He was Instructor of English in the
-Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, in the Department of
-University Extension, State of Massachusetts, and in the University of
-Wisconsin. He has been editor of the <cite>Canadian Journal of Music</cite>, and
-from 1918 to 1920 was an editor of the <cite>Dial</cite>.</p>
-
-<p><b>Van Wyck Brooks</b> was born in Plainfield, New Jersey, in 1886, and
-was graduated from Harvard in 1907, as of 1908. He was instructor in
-English in Leland Stanford University from 1911 to 1913, and is now
-associate editor of the <cite>Freeman</cite>. Among his books are “America’s
-Coming-of-Age,” “Letters and Leadership,” and “The Ordeal of Mark
-Twain.”</p>
-
-<p><b>Harold Chapman Brown</b> was born in Springfield, Mass., in 1879, and
-was educated at Williams and Harvard, from which he received the
-degree of Ph.D. in 1905. He was instructor in philosophy in Columbia
-University until 1914, and since then has been an instructor in Leland
-Stanford University. During the War he was with the American Red
-Cross, Home Service, at Camp Fremont. He has contributed numerous
-articles on philosophy to technical journals, and is co-author of “Creative
-Intelligence.”</p>
-
-<p><b>Zechariah Chafee, Jr.</b>, was born in Providence, R. I., in 1885, and
-was educated at Brown University and the Harvard Law School. After
-several years’ practice of the law in Providence, and executive work in
-connection with various manufacturing industries, he became Assistant
-Professor of Law in Harvard University in 1916, and Professor of Law
-in 1919. He is the author of “Cases on Negotiable Instruments,” “Freedom
-of Speech,” and various articles in law reviews and other periodicals.</p>
-
-<p><b>Frank M. Colby</b> was born in Washington, D. C., in 1865, and was
-graduated from Columbia in 1888. He was Professor of Economics in
-New York University from 1895 to 1900, and has been editor of the
-“New International Encyclopedia” since 1900, and of the “New International
-Year Book” since 1907. He is the author of “Outlines of General
-History,” “Imaginary Obligations,” “Constrained Attitudes,” and
-“The Margin of Hesitation.”</p>
-
-<p><b>Garet Garrett</b> was born in Pana, Ill., in 1878, and from 1900 to 1912
-was a financial writer on the New York Sun, the <cite>Wall Street Journal</cite>,
-the New York <cite>Evening Post</cite>, and the New York <cite>Times</cite>. He was the first
-editor of the New York <cite>Times Annalist</cite> in 1913–1914, and was executive
-editor of the New York <cite>Tribune</cite> from 1916 to 1919. He is the author of
-“The Driver,” “The Blue Wound,” “An Empire Beleaguered,” “The
-Mad Dollar,” and various economic and political essays.</p>
-
-<p><b>Walton H. Hamilton</b> was born in Tennessee in 1881, was graduated
-from the University of Texas in 1907, and received the degree of Ph.D.
-from the University of Michigan in 1913. After teaching at the Universities
-of Michigan and Chicago, he became Olds Professor of
-Economics in Amherst College in 1915. He was formerly associate editor
-of the <cite>Journal of Political Economy</cite>, and is associate editor of the series,
-“Materials for the Study of Economics,” published by the University of
-Chicago Press. During the War he was on the staff of the War Labour
-Policies Board. He is co-editor with J. M. Clark and H. G. Moulton of
-“Readings in the Economics of War,” and the author of “Current Economic
-Problems” and of various articles in economic journals.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_561">561</span></p>
-
-<p><b>Frederic C. Howe</b> was born in Meadville, Pa., in 1867, and was educated
-at Allegheny College and Johns Hopkins University, from the latter
-receiving the degree of Ph.D. in 1892. After studying in the University of
-Maryland Law School and the New York Law School, he was admitted to
-the bar in 1894, and practised in Cleveland until 1909. He was director of
-the People’s Institute of New York from 1911 to 1914, and Commissioner
-of Immigration in the Port of New York from 1914 to 1920. He has
-been a member of the Ohio State Senate, special U. S. commissioner to
-investigate municipal ownership in Great Britain, Professor of Law in
-the Cleveland College of Law, and lecturer on municipal administration
-and politics in the University of Wisconsin. Among his books are “The
-City, the Hope of Democracy,” “The British City,” “Privilege and
-Democracy in America,” “Wisconsin: An Experiment in Democracy,”
-“European Cities at Work,” “Socialized Germany,” “Why War?” “The
-High Cost of Living,” and “The Land and the Soldier.”</p>
-
-<p><b>Alfred Booth Kuttner</b> was born in 1886, and was graduated from
-Harvard in 1908. He was for two years dramatic critic of the <cite>International
-Magazine</cite>, and is a contributor to the <cite>New Republic</cite>, <cite>Seven Arts</cite>,
-<cite>Dial</cite>, etc. He has pursued special studies in psychology, and has translated
-several of the books of Sigmund Freud.</p>
-
-<p><b>Ring W. Lardner</b> was born in Niles, Michigan, in 1885, and was educated
-in the Niles High School and the Armour Institute of Technology
-at Chicago. He has been sporting writer on the Boston <cite>American</cite>, Chicago
-<cite>American</cite>, Chicago <cite>Examiner</cite>, and the Chicago <cite>Tribune</cite>, and writer for
-the Bell Syndicate since 1919. Among his books are “You Know Me
-Al,” “Symptoms of Thirty-five,” “Treat ’Em Rough,” and “The Big
-Town.”</p>
-
-<p><b>Robert Morss Lovett</b> was born in Boston in 1870, and was graduated
-from Harvard in 1892. He has been a teacher in the English Departments
-of Harvard and the University of Chicago, and dean of the Junior
-Colleges of the latter institution from 1907 to 1920. He was formerly
-editor of the <cite>Dial</cite>, and is at present on the staff of the <cite>New Republic</cite>. He
-is a member of the National Institute of Arts and Letters, and is the
-author of two novels, “Richard Gresham” and “A Winged Victory,” of
-a play, “Cowards,” and with William Vaughn Moody of “A History of
-English Literature.”</p>
-
-<p><b>Robert H. Lowie</b> was born in Vienna in 1883, and came to New York
-at the age of ten. He was educated at the College of the City of New
-York and Columbia University, from which he received the degree of
-Ph.D. in 1908. He has made many ethnological field trips, especially to
-the Crow and other Plains Indians. He was associate curator of Anthropology
-in the American Museum of Natural History, New York,
-until 1921, and since then has become Associate Professor of Anthropology
-in the University of California. He is associate editor of the <cite>American
-Anthropologist</cite>, and was secretary of the American Ethnological Society
-from 1910 to 1919, and president, 1920–1921. He is the author of “Culture
-and Ethnology” and “Primitive Society,” as well as many technical
-monographs dealing mainly with the sociology and mythology of North
-American aborigines.</p>
-
-<p><b>John Macy</b> was born in Detroit in 1877, and was educated at Harvard,
-from which he received the degree of A.B. in 1899, and A.M. in 1900.
-After a year as assistant in English at Harvard, he became associate editor
-of <cite>Youth’s Companion</cite>, and later literary editor of the Boston <cite>Herald</cite>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_562">562</span>
-Among his books are “Life of Poe” (Beacon Biographies), “Guide to
-Reading,” “The Spirit of American Literature,” “Socialism in America,”
-and “Walter James Dodd: a Biography.”</p>
-
-<p><b>H. L. Mencken</b> was born in Baltimore in 1880, and was educated in
-private schools and at the Baltimore Polytechnic. He was engaged in
-journalism until 1916, and is now editor and part owner with George
-Jean Nathan of the <cite>Smart Set Magazine</cite>, and a contributing editor of
-the <cite>Nation</cite>. His books include “The Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche,”
-“A Book of Burlesques,” “A Book of Prefaces,” “The American
-Language,” and two volumes of “Prejudices.” In collaboration with
-George Jean Nathan he has published “The American Credo,” and
-“Heliogabalus,” a play.</p>
-
-<p><b>Lewis Mumford</b> was born in Flushing, Long Island, in 1895. He was
-associate editor of the Dial in 1919, acting editor of the <cite>Sociological
-Review</cite> (London), a lecturer at the Summer School of Civics, High
-Wycombe, England, and has contributed to the <cite>Scientific Monthly</cite>, the
-<cite>Athenaeum</cite>, the <cite>Nation</cite>, the <cite>Freeman</cite>, the <cite>Journal of the American institute
-of Architects</cite>, and other periodicals. He was a radio operator in
-the United States Navy during the War.</p>
-
-<p><b>George Jean Nathan</b> was born in Fort Wayne, Indiana, in 1882, and
-was graduated from Cornell University in 1904. He has been dramatic
-critic of various newspapers and periodicals, and is at present editor and
-part owner with H. L. Mencken of the <cite>Smart Set Magazine</cite>. Among his
-books are “The Popular Theatre,” “Comedians All,” “Another Book on
-the Theatre,” “Mr. George Jean Nathan Presents,” “The Theatre, the
-Drama, the Girls,” and, with H. L. Mencken, of “The American Credo,”
-and “Heliogabalus.”</p>
-
-<p><b>Walter Pach</b> was born in New York in 1883, and was graduated from
-the College of the City of New York in 19013. He studied art under
-Leigh Hunt, William M. Chase, and Robert Henri, and worked during
-most of the eleven years before the War in Paris and other European art-centres,
-exhibiting both here and abroad. He was associated with the
-work of the International Exhibition of 1913, as well as other exhibitions
-of the modern masters in America, and with the founding and carrying on
-of the Society of Independent Artists. He is represented by paintings
-and etchings in various public and private collections, has lectured at the
-Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, University of California,
-Wellesley College, and other institutions, has contributed articles on art
-subjects to the <cite xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Gazette des Beaux-Arts</cite>, <cite xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">L’Arts et les Artistes</cite>, <cite>Scribner’s</cite>,
-the <cite>Century</cite>, the <cite>Freeman</cite>, etc., and is the translator of Elie Faure’s
-“History of Art.”</p>
-
-<p><b>Elsie Clews Parsons</b> was graduated from Barnard College in 1896,
-and received the degree of Ph.D. from Columbia University in 1899.
-She has been Fellow and Lecturer in Sociology at Barnard College, Lecturer
-in Anthropology in the New School of Social Research, assistant
-editor of the <cite>Journal of American Folk-Lore</cite>, treasurer of the American
-Ethnological Society, and president of the American Folk-Lore Society.
-She is married and the mother of three sons and one daughter. Among
-her books are “The Family,” “The Old-Fashioned Woman,” “Fear and
-Conventionality,” “Social Freedom,” and “Social Rule.”</p>
-
-<p><b>Raffaello Piccoli</b>, who has written the article on “American Civilization
-from an Italian Point of View,” was born in Naples in 1886, and was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_563">563</span>
-educated at the Universities of Padua, Florence, and Oxford. In 1913
-he was appointed Lecturer in Italian Literature in the University of Cambridge,
-and in 1916 was elected Foreign Correspondent of the Royal
-Society of Literature. During the War he was an officer in the First
-Regiment of Italian Grenadiers, was wounded and taken prisoner while
-defending a bridge-head on the Tagliamento, and spent a year of captivity
-in Hungary. After the Armistice he was appointed to the chair of English
-Literature in the University of Pisa. During the years 1919–21 he has
-acted as exchange professor at various American universities. He has
-published a number of books, including Italian translations of Oscar Wilde
-and of several Elizabethan dramatists.</p>
-
-<p><b>Louis Raymond Reid</b> was born in Warsaw, N. Y., and was graduated
-from Rutgers College in 1911. Since then he has been engaged in newspaper
-and magazine work in New York City. He was for three years
-the editor of the <cite>Dramatic Mirror</cite>.</p>
-
-<p><b>Geroid Tanquary Robinson</b> was born in Chase City, Virginia, in 1892,
-and studied at Stanford, the University of California, and Columbia.
-He was a member of the editorial board of the <cite>Dial</cite> at the time when it
-was appearing as a fortnightly, and is now a member of the editorial
-staff of the <cite>Freeman</cite>, and a lecturer in Modern European History at
-Columbia University. He served for sixteen months during the War as
-a First Lieutenant (Adjutant) in the American Air Service. Residence in
-Virginia, North Carolina, Colorado, Arizona, and California has given
-him the opportunity to observe at first hand some of the modes and
-manners of race-prejudice.</p>
-
-<p><b>J. Thorne Smith, Jr.</b>, was born in Annapolis, Md., in 1892, and was
-graduated from Dartmouth College in 1914. He was Chief Boatswain’s
-Mate in the U. S. Naval Reserve during the War, and editor of the
-navy paper, <cite>The Broadside</cite>. He is the author of “Haunts and By-Paths
-and Other Poems,” “Biltmore Oswald,” and “Out-O’-Luck.”</p>
-
-<p><b>George Soule</b> was born in Stamford, Conn., in 1887, and was graduated
-from Yale in 1908. He was a member of the editorial staff of the <cite>New
-Republic</cite> from 1914 to 1918, and during 1919 editorial writer for the
-New York <cite>Evening Post</cite>. He drafted a report on the labour policy of the
-Industrial Service Sections, Ordnance Department and Air Service, for
-the War Department, and was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the
-Coast Artillery Corps. He is a director of the Labour Bureau, Inc., which
-engages in economic research for labour organizations, and is co-author
-with J. M. Budish of “The New Unionism in the Clothing Industry.”</p>
-
-<p><b>J. E. Spingarn</b> was born in New York in 1875, was educated at
-Columbia and Harvard, and was Professor of Comparative Literature in
-Columbia University until 1911. Among his other activities he has been a
-candidate for Congress, a delegate to state and national conventions,
-chairman of the board of directors of the National Association for the
-Advancement of Coloured People, vice-president of a publishing firm, and
-editor of the “European Library.” During the War he was a Major of
-Infantry in the A. E. F. His first book, “Literary Criticism in the Renaissance,”
-was translated into Italian in 1905, with an introduction by Benedetto
-Croce; he has edited three volumes of “Critical Essays of the 17th
-Century” for the Clarendon Press of Oxford, and contributed a chapter
-to the “Cambridge History of English Literature;” his selection of
-Goethe’s “Literary Essays,” with a foreword by Lord Haldane, has just
-appeared; and his other books include “The New Hesperides and Other
-Poems” and “Creative Criticism.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_564">564</span></p>
-
-<p><b>Harold E. Stearns</b> was born in Barre, Mass., in 1891, and was graduated
-from Harvard in 1913. Since then he has been engaged in journalism
-in New York, and has been a contributor to the <cite>New Republic</cite>, the
-<cite>Freeman</cite>, the <cite>Bookman</cite>, and other magazines and newspapers. He was
-associate editor of the <cite>Dial</cite> during the last six months of its appearance
-as a fortnightly in Chicago. Among his books are “Liberalism in
-America” and “America and the Young Intellectual.”</p>
-
-<p><b>Henry Longan Stuart</b> is an English author and journalist who has
-spent a considerable part of his life since 1901 in the United States. He
-served through the War as a Captain in the Royal Field Artillery, was
-attached to the Italian Third Army after Caporetto, and was press censor
-in Paris after the Armistice and during the Peace Conference. He is
-the author of “Weeping Cross,” a study of Puritan New England,
-“Fenella,” and a quantity of fugitive poetry and essays.</p>
-
-<p><b>Deems Taylor</b> was born in New York in 1885, and was graduated
-from New York University in 1906. He studied music with Oscar Coon
-from 1908 to 1911. He has been connected with the editorial staff of the
-“Encyclopedia Britannica,” and has been assistant Sunday editor of the
-New York <cite>Tribune</cite> and associate editor of <cite>Collier’s Weekly</cite>, and at present
-is a critic of the New York <cite>World</cite>. He has composed numerous
-musical works, including “The Siren Song” (symphonic poem, awarded
-the orchestral prize of the National Federation of Music Clubs in 1912),
-“The Chambered Nautilus” (cantata), “The Highwaymen” (cantata
-written for the MacDowell festival), and “Through the Looking Glass”
-(suite for symphonic orchestra).</p>
-
-<p><b>Hendrik Willem Van Loon</b> was born in Holland in 1882, and received
-his education in Dutch schools, at Cornell and Harvard, and at the University
-of Munich, from which he received his Ph.D., magna cum laude,
-in 1911. He was a correspondent of the Associated Press in various
-European capitals, and for some time was a lecturer on modern European
-history in Cornell University. He is at present Professor of the Social
-Sciences in Antioch College, and is the author of “The Fall of the Dutch
-Republic,” “A Short History of Discovery,” “Ancient Man,” “The Story
-of Mankind for Boys and Girls,” “The Rise of the Dutch Kingdom,” etc.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_565">565</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_565" class="chapter"><div class="index">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_567">567</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="INDEX">INDEX</h2>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">Abbott, Lyman, <a href="#Page_497">497</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Abolitionists, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Absolute, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Academic life, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Accident lawyers, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Acoustics, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adams, Henry, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_547">547</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">quoted on a school of literature, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ade, George, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Administrative officers, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adolescence, <a href="#Page_436">436</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adulteration, <a href="#Page_406">406</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Advertising, <a href="#Page_381">381–395</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">appeal, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_551">551</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects on the writers, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">efficacy, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">honest, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">justification, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">newspaper, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">newspaper control, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">objectionable, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">outdoor, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">over-production and, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">pro and con, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">signs, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">solicitor and writer, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">value, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">writers, <a href="#Page_387">387</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Æsthetic emotion, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Æsthetics, vii, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>, <a href="#Page_497">497</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Africa, association of negroes to establish empire, <a href="#Page_369">369</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Age of Innocence, The,” <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Agnosticism, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Agricultural implements, <a href="#Page_402">402</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aiken, Conrad, on poetry, <a href="#Page_215">215–226</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Akins, Zoë, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alcohol, <a href="#Page_451">451</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alcoholics, children of, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>, <a href="#Page_453">453</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alien Land Laws, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Aliens"></a>Aliens, <a href="#Page_337">337–350</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">economics and, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">legislative attitude to, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">protection, <a href="#Page_349">349</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alfieri, Vittorio, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alimony, <a href="#Page_331">331</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alleghany mountains, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Allied troops, <a href="#Page_469">469</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alphabetical order, <a href="#Page_469">469</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Amalgamated Clothing Workers, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">America, as economic support for Europe, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">feminization, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">germinal energy, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">original culture, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">provincialism, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">“real America,” <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“America First” Publicity Association, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“American ideals,” <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">American infantry in Paris, <a href="#Page_470">470</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">American Legion, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">American literature. <i>See</i> <a href="#Literature_American">Literature, American</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">American Philosophical Association, <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">American Revolution, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>, <a href="#Page_515">515</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Americanism, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_519">519</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Americanization, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="#Page_442">442</a>, <a href="#Page_528">528</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">spirit, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Americans, uniformity, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ames, Winthrop, <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Amusements, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">music, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anæmia, intellectual, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>, <a href="#Page_495">495</a>, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ancestor worship, <a href="#Page_506">506</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anderson, Sherwood, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anglin, Margaret, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anglo-American relations, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>, <a href="#Page_473">473</a>, <a href="#Page_474">474</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anglo-Saxonism, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>, <a href="#Page_442">442</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>, <a href="#Page_504">504</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anthony, Katharine, on the family, <a href="#Page_319">319–336</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anthropological groups, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anthropology, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anti-Saloon League, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anti-Semitism, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Appleseed, Johnny, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Applied science, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155–156</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Architecture, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">city, debasement, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">industrial city, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aridity of American life, <a href="#Page_480">480</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aristocracy, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aristocrats, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>, <a href="#Page_442">442</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Armageddon, <a href="#Page_440">440</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Armory Show, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Art, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227–241</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_542">542</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">colonial, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">conditions and opportunities, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">definition, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">feminization, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">morals and, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">poetry, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">tariff on works of art, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Art for art’s sake, <a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Artists, advertising as a benefit, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">definition, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">respect for, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Asiatics. <i>See</i> <a href="#Orientals">Orientals</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Associated Press, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Asylums, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_451">451</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Athletics, <a href="#Page_526">526</a>, <a href="#Page_527">527</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">college, <a href="#Page_117">117</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Atlantic City, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Atlantic Monthly</i>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Attorney-General, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Austin, Mrs. Mary, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Australia, farm policy, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Australian Courts of Conciliation, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Authority, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">educational, <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Automobile industry, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Back to the land, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Backgrounds, historical, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">intellectual, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bacteriologists, <a href="#Page_454">454</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baking industry, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ballot, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bar Associations, <a href="#Page_65">65–66</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bargaining, collective, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <a href="#Contract">Contract</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barnum, P. T., <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barrie’s “Peter Pan,” <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barrymore, John, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baseball, <a href="#Page_458">458</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baseball fans, <a href="#Page_457">457</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beard, C. A., <a href="#Page_532">532</a>, <a href="#Page_547">547</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beard, G. M., <a href="#Page_430">430</a>, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>, <a href="#Page_432">432</a>, <a href="#Page_438">438</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beautiful necessity, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beauty, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>, <a href="#Page_535">535</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beer-garden, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Behaviour, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">crowd, <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Behaviourism, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Belief, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bell, Sanford, <a href="#Page_436">436</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bergson, Henri, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bett, Miss Lulu, <a href="#Page_320">320</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beyer, O. S., Jr., on engineering, <a href="#Page_417">417–425</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Beyond the Horizon,” <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bibliographical notes, <a href="#Page_531">531</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Big business, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_568">568</span>Bigness, contrary effect on English and Americans, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Billboards, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Billiards, <a href="#Page_460">460</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Billings, Frank, <a href="#Page_449">449</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Biochemistry, <a href="#Page_456">456</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Biographical notes on contributors to this volume, <a href="#Page_557">559–564</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Biographies, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">political, <a href="#Page_532">532</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Biology, <a href="#Page_456">456</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">experimental, <a href="#Page_153">153</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Birth control, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">artificial, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Birth-rate, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Black Star Line, <a href="#Page_369">369</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blackburn, J. B., <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blashfield, E. H., <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blind Tom, <a href="#Page_207">207–208</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Board of Health, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boas, Franz, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bodenheim, Maxwell, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Book of Daniel Drew, The,” <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boosters, <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bosses, political, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boston, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dramatic taste, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">marriage age, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Public Library, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Trinity Church, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boxing, <a href="#Page_459">459</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boyd, Ernest, on American civilization, <a href="#Page_489">489–507</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brady, W. A., <a href="#Page_244">244</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brandeis, L. D., brief on Oregon law, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Branford, V. V., <a href="#Page_531">531</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Brass Check, The,” <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Breasted, J. H., <a href="#Page_547">547</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brewer, Justice P. J., <a href="#Page_73">73–74</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brill, A. A., <a href="#Page_434">434</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">British Institution of Civil Engineers, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>, <a href="#Page_419">419</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Britten, Clarence, on school and college life, <a href="#Page_109">109–133</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Broadway, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brokers, <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bronson-Howard, George, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brooke, Rupert, <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brookline, Mass., <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brooks, Van Wyck, iii;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on the literary life, <a href="#Page_179">179–197</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brown, H. C., on philosophy, <a href="#Page_163">163–177</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brown University, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brunetière, Ferdinand, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>, <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bryan, W. J., <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>, <a href="#Page_497">497</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bryce, James, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_490">490</a>, <a href="#Page_532">532</a>, <a href="#Page_536">536</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buddhism, <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bundling, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bush Terminal Tower, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Business, <a href="#Page_397">397–415</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">American conception, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_551">551</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">blind sequence, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">government and, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">honour, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">individual and corporate, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">revolution of methods, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">State and, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Business education, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Business life, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Business man’s chivalry, <a href="#Page_324">324</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Business world, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Butler, Samuel, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_547">547</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">California, early law, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">gold discovery, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Land Laws, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">race-prejudice, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Calvinism, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cambridge, Mass., <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Canals, <a href="#Page_403">403</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Canning industry, <a href="#Page_401">401</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Capital, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>, <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Capital and labour, engineers and, <a href="#Page_420">420</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Capitalism, <a href="#Page_544">544</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">case for, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Captains of industry, <a href="#Page_517">517</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carnegie, Andrew, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carnegie Institution, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Case-system, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Castberg, Johan, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Caste system in college, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Catechism, Negro, <a href="#Page_370">370</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Catholic Church, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cattell, J. Nick, <a href="#Page_538">538</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cavalier and Puritan, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>, <a href="#Page_513">513</a>, <a href="#Page_514">514</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Celibacy, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cézanne, Paul, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chafee, Zechariah, Jr., on the law, <a href="#Page_53">53–75</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">City, bibliography, <a href="#Page_531">531</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chain-store, <a href="#Page_407">407</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chambers, R. W., <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Character in business, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charm, personal, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chase, W. M., <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chastity, <a href="#Page_454">454</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chautauqua, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chekhov, A. P., <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chemistry of proteins, <a href="#Page_456">456</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chesterton, G. K., <a href="#Page_477">477</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on American genius, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chicago, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dramatic taste, <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chickens, alcoholic, <a href="#Page_452">452</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chief Justice, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Child labour, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Childhood, family influence, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">shortness, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Children, fewer and better, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on farms, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sexuality, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">spoiling, <a href="#Page_334">334</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Children’s Bureau, <a href="#Page_320">320</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chinese, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Californians and, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in America, <a href="#Page_357">357</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chiropractors, <a href="#Page_444">444</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chivalry of the business man, <a href="#Page_324">324</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Christian Science, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>, <a href="#Page_443">443</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Christianity, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Church, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Church-college, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cincinnati, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Circus parade, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cirrhosis of the liver, <a href="#Page_452">452</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cities, <a href="#Page_3">3–20</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">architectural debasement, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">civic equipment, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">civic life, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">country versus, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">drama, outside New York, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">future, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">growth and improvement, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">improvements, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">industrial, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">provincial, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">shifts of population and institutions, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">spiritual failure, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">State legislatures and, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">three periods, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Citizenship, good, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">City Beautiful movement, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Civil engineers, <a href="#Page_417">417</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Civil War, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Civilization, human, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Roman, <a href="#Page_509">509</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Civilization, American, as seen by an Englishman, <a href="#Page_469">469–488</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">as seen by an Irishman, <a href="#Page_489">489–507</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">as seen by an Italian, <a href="#Page_508">508–528</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clark University, <a href="#Page_434">434</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Classics, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cleanliness, <a href="#Page_392">392</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clients and lawyers, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clouston, T. S., <a href="#Page_452">452</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clubs, college, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coeducational forms, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cohan, G. M., <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_457">457</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cohen, M. R., <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colby, F. M., on humour, <a href="#Page_463">463–466</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cole, R., <a href="#Page_444">444</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Collective bargaining, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">College “Bible,” <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="College_life"></a>College life, <a href="#Page_109">109–133</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">athletics, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">avocations, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_536">536</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">caste system, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">clubs, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">course system, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">democracy, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">examination and passing, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_569">569</span>extra-collegiate social regimen, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">fellowship, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">moral crusades, <a href="#Page_124">124–125</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">political management of affairs, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">recreation, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sex lines and forms, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">social life, <a href="#Page_117">117–118</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">study, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">traditions, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">College professors, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <a href="#Professors">Professors</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">College stories, <a href="#Page_536">536</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Colleges"></a>Colleges, early church-college, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <a href="#Education2">Education</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colonial culture, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colonial law, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colonialism, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colonies, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_493">493</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colonists, <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colour of God, <a href="#Page_370">370</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Commercial city, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Commercial God, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Commercialism, <a href="#Page_484">484</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Common Law, American conditions and, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">New England and, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Communist parties, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Community, New England, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Compensation acts, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Competition, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Composers, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Compromise, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Compulsions, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>, <a href="#Page_440">440</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Concord, Mass., <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coney Island, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Conformity, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>, <a href="#Page_520">520</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">college, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Congress, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Congressional Record</i>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_532">532</a>, <a href="#Page_544">544</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Congressmen, character, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Conjugal fidelity, <a href="#Page_309">309</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Connecticut, early land act, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Conservatives, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Constitution, U. S., <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_506">506</a>, <a href="#Page_515">515</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Contingent fee, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Contract"></a>Contract, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">right of, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Contract labour law, <a href="#Page_343">343</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Contributors to this volume, brief biographies, <a href="#Page_557">559–564</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Control of industry, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_419">419</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Conventions, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">“iron hand of convention,” <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Conventionalities, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">college, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Co-operative movement, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Copley, J. S., <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cornell University, tradition, <a href="#Page_120">120</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corporation lawyers, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corporations, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">State and, <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corrective Eating Society, <a href="#Page_444">444</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Correspondence schools, <a href="#Page_385">385</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Country, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">envy of the city, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">social life, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <a href="#Small_town">Small town</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">County fair, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crisis-emotion, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Courage in journalism, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Courts, diversity, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Craftsmanship, <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crane, Frank, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cranks, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Craven, Frank, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Credit, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Credulity, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">medical, <a href="#Page_444">444</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Criminal law, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Criminals and lawyers, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Criticism, <a href="#Page_497">497</a>, <a href="#Page_503">503</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">American, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_535">535</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">definition, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dogmatic or intellectual, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">music, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">need, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">scholarship and, <a href="#Page_93">93–108</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">scholarship the basis, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">schools of, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cross of Gold, <a href="#Page_440">440</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crowd behaviour, <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Culture, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">original American, <a href="#Page_512">512</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Curiosity, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Daly, Arnold, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dancing, <a href="#Page_526">526</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dante, scholarship, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Darwin, Charles, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Days of grace, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Declaration of independence, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_506">506</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Decorators, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">De Leon, Daniel, <a href="#Page_545">545</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Demand and supply, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dementia præcox, <a href="#Page_434">434</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Democracy, college, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Denmark, farmers, <a href="#Page_347">347</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Department stores, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">advertising in the newspapers, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">newspapers and, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">private tribunals, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dependence, habits of, <a href="#Page_401">401</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Deportation, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Devil, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>, <a href="#Page_440">440</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dewey, John, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_540">540</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on education, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">psychology, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">weakness of his philosophy, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dickinson, Emily, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Differentiations, regional, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Diphtheria, <a href="#Page_450">450</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Diplomacy, shirt-sleeve, <a href="#Page_489">489</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Discipline, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>, <a href="#Page_488">488</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Disease"></a>Disease, <a href="#Page_443">443</a>, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prevention, <a href="#Page_449">449</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dishonesty in business, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_430">430</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Divorce, attitude to, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">growing prevalence, <a href="#Page_330">330</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Doctors, <a href="#Page_443">443</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <a href="#Disease">Disease</a>; <a href="#Physicians">Physicians</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dogmatic criticism, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Domestic Relations Courts, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Double personality, <a href="#Page_433">433</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dowden, Edward, <a href="#Page_504">504</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drachsler, Julius, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>, <a href="#Page_377">377</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drama. <i>See</i> <a href="#Theatre">Theatre</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drama League, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dreadnought Hams, <a href="#Page_386">386</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dreiser, Theodore, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">East, the, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Economic democracy, <a href="#Page_339">339</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Economic liberty, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Economic_opinion2"></a>Economic opinion, <a href="#Page_255">255–270</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">basis and value, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">opportunities, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_543">543</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">radicalism, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">volume, <a href="#Page_269">269–270</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Economics, classical, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">facts and statistics, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">“fundamental,” <a href="#Page_273">273</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">immigration and, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">newer, <a href="#Page_544">544</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">protest, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">system, <a href="#Page_517">517</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">waste, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eddy, Mrs. Mary Baker, <a href="#Page_443">443</a>, <a href="#Page_498">498</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Edison, T. A., <a href="#Page_436">436</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Editors, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Education2"></a>Education, <a href="#Page_77">77–92</a>, <a href="#Page_524">524</a>, <a href="#Page_525">525</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">corrupt practices, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Dewey’s philosophy, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">engineering, <a href="#Page_423">423</a>, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">enthusiasm for, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">feminization, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">general and special, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">medical, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">State and, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">superficial, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">superstitious mood toward, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Edwards, Jonathan, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Efficiency, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>, <a href="#Page_484">484</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">social, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Egoism, <a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eight-hour day, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elderton-Pearson report, <a href="#Page_453">453</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Election machinery, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elections, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elective system in education, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Electric lighting, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_570">570</span>Electrical engineers, <a href="#Page_417">417</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eliot, C. W., <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eliot, T. S., <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elizabethan literature, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ellis Island, <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Emerson, R. W., <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Emotion, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">crisis, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">lack, vii;</li>
-<li class="isub1">mother-love, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sex, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Emotionality, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Emperor Jones,” <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Empiricism, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Employer and employé, <a href="#Page_483">483</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Employés’ welfare, <a href="#Page_484">484</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Employment, <a href="#Page_482">482</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Engineering, <a href="#Page_417">417–425</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_552">552</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bulwark and inspiration, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">new problems, <a href="#Page_418">418</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Engineers, capital and labour, relation to, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">educational background, <a href="#Page_423">423</a>, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">formulating a policy, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">intellectual limitations, <a href="#Page_423">423</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">intelligence, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">larger function, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">original function, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">position, <a href="#Page_432">432</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">symbolic speculations, <a href="#Page_423">423</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">typical, <a href="#Page_417">417</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">England, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bond with America, <a href="#Page_473">473</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">competition with America, and courses open, <a href="#Page_474">474</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">proletariat, <a href="#Page_485">485</a>, <a href="#Page_487">487</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">war and post-war conditions, <a href="#Page_487">487</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">English language professors, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Englishman’s view of American civilization, <a href="#Page_469">469–488</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Englishmen, as immigrants, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">character, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Erie Railroad, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ethics, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ettinger, W. L., <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eucken, R. C., <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Europe, American attitude to, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">attraction, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">civilization and culture, <a href="#Page_511">511</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">history, <a href="#Page_510">510</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">impoverishment, <a href="#Page_473">473</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">problem, <a href="#Page_511">511</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Evangelical literature, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>, <a href="#Page_497">497</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Exchange, <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Exercise, <a href="#Page_458">458</a>, <a href="#Page_461">461</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Factory workers, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Facts, <a href="#Page_313">313</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Faith, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">defending, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">intellectual, <a href="#Page_515">515</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Faithful servant, <a href="#Page_320">320</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Family, <a href="#Page_319">319–336</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_548">548</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">financial arrangements, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">income, and distribution, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">influence on children 335;</li>
-<li class="isub1">nomadic habit, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">public opinion, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">reduction in size, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">reunions, <a href="#Page_294">294</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Farmer-Labour Party, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Farming and alien immigrants, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fear, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Federated Press, The, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Feminization, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">education, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">music, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ferguson, O. G., <a href="#Page_359">359</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fiction, American, <a href="#Page_495">495</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">college, <a href="#Page_536">536</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sporting, <a href="#Page_554">554</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fish phosphates, <a href="#Page_431">431</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fiske, John, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Five and ten cent store, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fletcher, J. G., <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flexner, Simon, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Focal infection, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>, <a href="#Page_449">449</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Folin, Otto, <a href="#Page_456">456</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Folksong, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Food, children’s, <a href="#Page_334">334</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Food products, <a href="#Page_401">401</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Football, <a href="#Page_459">459</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ford, Henry, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Foreign relations, <a href="#Page_486">486</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Foreign trade, <a href="#Page_414">414</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Foreign views of American civilization, bibliography, <a href="#Page_555">555</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Englishman’s, <a href="#Page_469">469–488</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Irishman’s, <a href="#Page_489">489–507</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Italian’s, <a href="#Page_508">508–528</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Foreigners, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">musical composers, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <a href="#Aliens">Aliens</a>; <a href="#Immigration">Immigration</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fosdick, Raymond, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Foster, W. Z., <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">France, journalism, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">medicine, <a href="#Page_434">434</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">France, Anatole, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Francis Galton Laboratory, <a href="#Page_453">453</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fraternal orders, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fraternities, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Freedom"></a>Freedom, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>, <a href="#Page_490">490</a>, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>, <a href="#Page_519">519</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in love, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sexes in youth, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">speech, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">thought, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <a href="#Liberty">Liberty</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Freeman</i>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Frémont, J. C., <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">French, D. C., <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Freshmen, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Freud, Sigmund, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">books on, <a href="#Page_435">435</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Friedenwald, Julius, <a href="#Page_452">452</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Front parlour, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Frontier, <a href="#Page_301">301</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Frost, Robert, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Freude, J. A., on Americans, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fugitive slave law, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Fundamental economics,” <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Fussing,” <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><i>Ga-Ga</i>, <a href="#Page_449">449</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Galileo, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Galli-Curci, Amelita, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Galsworthy, John, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Galton (Francis) Laboratory, <a href="#Page_453">453</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Garrett, Garet, on business, <a href="#Page_397">397–415</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gary, Ind., <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gauguin, Paul, <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Geddes, Patrick, <a href="#Page_531">531</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Generosity, <a href="#Page_523">523</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Genius, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Genteel tradition, the, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Gentleman and scholar,” <a href="#Page_94">94</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Georgia, legislature, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">German beer-garden, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">German idealism, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">German State, <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ghost Dance, <a href="#Page_372">372</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gibbs, Willard, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gilbert, G. K., <a href="#Page_153">153</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gimbel Brothers, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glad hand, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">God, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">colour of, <a href="#Page_370">370</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gold in California, <a href="#Page_403">403</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Golf, <a href="#Page_459">459</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gopher Prairie, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gorgas, W. C., <a href="#Page_450">450</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gorky, Maxim, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gould, Jay, <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gourmont, Rémy de, <a href="#Page_494">494</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Government, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">business and, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grade schools, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Graham, Stephen, <a href="#Page_365">365</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grandeur, <a href="#Page_397">397</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grape juice, <a href="#Page_451">451</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Great American novel,” <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Greatness, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Greeley, Horace, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Griffes, Charles, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Group medicine, <a href="#Page_446">446–447</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Group opinions, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grub Street, <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guinea-pigs, <a href="#Page_452">452</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_571">571</span>Gullibility, <a href="#Page_443">443</a>, <a href="#Page_449">449</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Hamilton, W. H., on economic opinion, <a href="#Page_255">255–270</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hamsun, Knut, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hancock, John, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hardy, Thomas, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harris, William, Jr., <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harvard College, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">democracy, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harvard Medical School, <a href="#Page_443">443</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hawthorne, Nathaniel, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“H. D.,” <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Health, exercise and, <a href="#Page_458">458</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">politics and, <a href="#Page_451">451</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Health, Board of, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Health crusade, <a href="#Page_450">450</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hearst newspapers, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heathen, <a href="#Page_450">450</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Helmholtz, H. L. F. von, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Herbert, Victor, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Herd sense, <a href="#Page_311">311</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hero-worship, <a href="#Page_461">461</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">High schools, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_525">525</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Highbrow, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Higher law, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hill, G. W., <a href="#Page_153">153</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Historians, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">scientific, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">History, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297–38</a>, <a href="#Page_509">509</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">American, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">as an art, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_547">547</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">early settlers, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">popular estimate, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hoar, E. R., quoted on law and private judgment, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hocking, W. E., <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holmes, Justice O. W., quoted on criminal law, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">quoted on the law, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holt, E. B., <a href="#Page_435">435</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Home, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Homer, Winslow, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Honesty in business, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Honourables, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hopkins, Arthur, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hopkins, E. M., quoted on propaganda, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hopwood, Avery, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Horse racing, <a href="#Page_459">459</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hotels, <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hours of work for women, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Housewife, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Howe, F. C., on the alien, <a href="#Page_337">337–350</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Howells, W. D., <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hubbard, Elbert, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hughes, C. E., <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Human civilization, <a href="#Page_508">508</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Humanism, <a href="#Page_509">509</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Italy, <a href="#Page_510">510</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Humboldt, Alexander von, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Humour, viii, <a href="#Page_463">463–466</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Husbands, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">as providers, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hypnotism, <a href="#Page_433">433</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hypocrisy, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_338">338</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hysteria, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>, <a href="#Page_438">438</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Ibsen, Henrik, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Idealism, advertising, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">American, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">German, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">peculiar American, <a href="#Page_515">515</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">reaction to, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ideas, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">political, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">real test, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ignorance, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Illusion, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Imagination, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_461">461</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Immigrants, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">English, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">law and, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">neurosis, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">protection, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">rapid rise and progress, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">savings, <a href="#Page_348">348</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Immigration"></a>Immigration, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">cause, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">constructive policy, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">economic cause, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">hostility, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">old and new, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">percentage law, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">problem, <a href="#Page_337">337</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Immortality, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_436">436</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Impressionism, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Impressionist criticism, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Impressionists, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Inalienable rights, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Incest-complex, <a href="#Page_438">438</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Independence Hall, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Indian reservations, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Indians, American, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Americanization, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">art influence, <a href="#Page_227">227–228</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_550">550</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">culture and education, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">marriage with whites, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">religious movement, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">treatment, <a href="#Page_362">362</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Individual, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Individualism, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>, <a href="#Page_506">506</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Individuality, lack, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Industrial accidents, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Industrial management, <a href="#Page_419">419</a>, <a href="#Page_421">421</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Industrial revolution, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_516">516</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">I. W. W., <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Industrialism, birth, <a href="#Page_9">9–10</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">city life, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">culture and, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">disputes, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">system, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <a href="#Labour_movement">Labour movement</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Industry, control, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_419">419</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">secrets, <a href="#Page_421">421</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Inhibitions, <a href="#Page_478">478</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Injustice, <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Inness, George, <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Insanity, <a href="#Page_452">452</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Instrumentalism, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_521">521</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Intellect, <a href="#Page_521">521</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">distrust of, <a href="#Page_519">519</a>, <a href="#Page_520">520</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">needs, <a href="#Page_527">527</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Intellectual anæmia, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>, <a href="#Page_495">495</a>, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Intellectual faith, <a href="#Page_515">515</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Intellectual life, <a href="#Page_135">135–150</a>, <a href="#Page_523">523</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">backgrounds, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_537">537</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">contempt for real values, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">cranks and mountebanks, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">pioneer point of view and, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Intellectualist, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Intellectualist criticism, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Intelligence, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">International Exhibition of 1913, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Interstate Commerce Commission, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Intolerance, <a href="#Page_430">430</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Investigators, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ireland, <a href="#Page_493">493</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish, <a href="#Page_338">338</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irishman’s view of American civilization, <a href="#Page_489">489–507</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irving, Washington, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Isolation, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Italian’s view of American civilization, <a href="#Page_508">508–528</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Italy, humanism, <a href="#Page_510">510</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">James, Henry, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">James, William, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_540">540</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">eminence, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on genius, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">pragmatism, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">psychology, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Janet, Pierre, <a href="#Page_433">433</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Japanese, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Californians and, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dislike and fear of, <a href="#Page_357">357</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jefferson, Thomas, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jensen, J. V., <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jews, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_551">551</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">jealousy and fear of, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">manifestations of prejudice against, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">mixed marriages, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">place, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">religion, <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jim Crow regulations, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Joan of Arc, canonization, <a href="#Page_428">428</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Johnson, Lionel, <a href="#Page_499">499</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jokes, <a href="#Page_463">463</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Journalism2"></a>Journalism, <a href="#Page_35">35–51</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">England, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">European continent, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">musical, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Journalists, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">courage and integrity, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">“training and outlook,” <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Judges, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">selection and training, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">unfair treatment, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Judiciary, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_572">572</span>Jumel Mansion, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jung, C. G., <a href="#Page_436">436</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Justice, Minister of, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Kallen, H. M., quoted on control of education, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kansas, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">industrial court, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kempf, E. J., <a href="#Page_435">435</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kent, James, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Keynes, J. M., <a href="#Page_506">506</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">King, Willford, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knowledge, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kodak, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Korsakow’s disease, <a href="#Page_451">451</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kraepelin, Emil, <a href="#Page_433">433</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kreymborg, Alfred, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ku Klux Klan, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kuttner, A. B., on nerves, <a href="#Page_427">427–442</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Labour, American and English, <a href="#Page_485">485</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Labour_movement"></a>Labour movement, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">engineers and, <a href="#Page_420">420</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Labour organization, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Labour-saving devices, <a href="#Page_402">402</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">La Forge, John, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Laissez-faire</i> economics, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_543">543</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Land, colonies and settlement, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">free, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">immigration and, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">speculation, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Landscape painters, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Langdell, C. C., <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Language of American leaders, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lanier, Sidney, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lardner, R. W., on sport and play, <a href="#Page_457">457–461</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Law, <a href="#Page_53">53–75</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">delays, expenses, etc., <a href="#Page_71">71</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">disrespect for, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">early hostility to English, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">flings at, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">lack of progress, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">newspaper discussion needed, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">obligation, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">private judgment and, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">real defect, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Law schools, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lawyers, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">changing function, <a href="#Page_58">58–59</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">laymen and, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laziness, <a href="#Page_366">366</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leadership, industrial, <a href="#Page_425">425</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">League of nations, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Learning, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legal aid societies, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legal education, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legal systems, various, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legislation and lawyers, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legislatures and law reforms, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leisure, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leisure class, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>, <a href="#Page_505">505</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lenin, Nicolai, lying about, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lewis, Sinclair, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Liberals, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Liberty"></a>Liberty, <a href="#Page_485">485</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">economic, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <a href="#Freedom">Freedom</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Libido theory, <a href="#Page_436">436</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lick Observatory, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lindsay, Vachel, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lippmann, Walter, quoted on journalism, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Literary test, <a href="#Page_344">344</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Literary theory, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Literature, morals and, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">three conceptions, <a href="#Page_101">101</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Literature_American"></a>Literature, American, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_492">492–493</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">absence, and reasons therefor, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_540">540</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">colonial, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">impotence of creative spirit, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">lack of leadership, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">namby-pamby books, <a href="#Page_495">495–496</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">radical, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>, <a href="#Page_502">502</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">school, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">variety, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Little red school-house, <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lloyd George, David, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lodge, G. C., <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Loeb, Jacques, <a href="#Page_456">456</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">London, Jack, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">London <i>Labour Herald</i>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">London <i>Times</i>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Long haul, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Longevity, <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Louisiana, early law, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Love, as an art, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">freedom in, <a href="#Page_309">309</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lovett, R. M., on education as degradation of energy, <a href="#Page_77">77–92</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Low-browism, <a href="#Page_526">526</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lowell, Amy, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on our poetry, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lowie, R. H., on science—lack of fruitful background, <a href="#Page_151">151–161</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lusk Committee, <a href="#Page_546">546</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lusk law, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lyceum, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lynching, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Mabie, H. W., <a href="#Page_496">496</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">McCormick reaper, <a href="#Page_402">402</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">MacDowell, E. A., <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mach, Ernst, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_539">539</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Machine politics, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Machinery, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>, <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">McKim, C. F., <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Macy, John, on journalism, <a href="#Page_35">35–51</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Madison Square Garden, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Magazines, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">radical, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maiden aunt, <a href="#Page_320">320</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Main Street, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Malnutrition, <a href="#Page_334">334</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Manchester <i>Guardian</i>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mandarins, <a href="#Page_493">493</a>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>, <a href="#Page_500">500</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Manet, Edouard, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mania a potu, <a href="#Page_451">451</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mann, Horace, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marden, O. S., <a href="#Page_496">496</a>, <a href="#Page_497">497</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marriage, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">ages for, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Indians and whites, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">mixed, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Negroes and whites, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">protection, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">war and, <a href="#Page_331">331</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Married persons, <a href="#Page_316">316</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mars, visitor from, and his thoughts, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Martians, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Martin, E. D., <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Martin, Homer, <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Masculine and feminine, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Masefield, John, <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mass fatalism, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mass production, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Masters, E. L., <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Masturbation, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, <a href="#Page_454">454</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Materialism, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>, <a href="#Page_516">516</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mather, F. J., <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mating, <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maury, M. F., <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Mayflower</i>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mazzini, Giuseppe, <a href="#Page_511">511</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Meat-packing, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">idealism, <a href="#Page_385">385</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mechanical engineers, <a href="#Page_417">417</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mechanics’ Hall, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Medical education, <a href="#Page_455">455</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Medicine2"></a>Medicine, <a href="#Page_443">443–456</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">art of healing in America, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_553">553</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">French, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">preventive, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">preventive, contamination by religion, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">preventive, retrogression, <a href="#Page_450">450</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">science and, <a href="#Page_444">444</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">specialization, and “group medicine,” <a href="#Page_446">446</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Melville, Herman, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Men and women, dichotomy, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mencken, H. L., on aristocracy, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on politics, <a href="#Page_21">21–34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mental hygiene, <a href="#Page_334">334</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Metaphysics, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_433">433</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Metropolitan Opera House, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_573">573</span>Metropolitanism, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Michelson, A. A., <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Microbes, <a href="#Page_448">448</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Middle classes, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Middle West, towns, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Migration, <a href="#Page_301">301</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Miller, C. G., <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Milling industry, <a href="#Page_401">401</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Milton, John, and Satan, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Minister of Justice, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Minorities, racial, <a href="#Page_351">351–379</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mitchell, S. Weir, <a href="#Page_432">432</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mob tyranny, <a href="#Page_441">441</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Money, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in college, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morality, vi, <a href="#Page_526">526</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">alien population, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">art and literature and, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">business, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">realistic, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">More, P. E., <a href="#Page_493">493</a>, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>, <a href="#Page_499">499</a>, <a href="#Page_500">500</a>, <a href="#Page_503">503</a>, <a href="#Page_544">544</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morellet, Abbe, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morgan, L. H., <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morgan, T. H., <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mormon Church, <a href="#Page_430">430</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morrill Act, <a href="#Page_417">417</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morse telegraph code, <a href="#Page_403">403</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moses, M. J., <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mosquitoes and yellow fever, <a href="#Page_450">450</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mother-love, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>, <a href="#Page_438">438</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Motion pictures, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">music accompaniment, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Motley, J. L., <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mulattoes, <a href="#Page_374">374</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mumford, Lewis, on the city, <a href="#Page_3">3–20</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Municipal Art societies, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Munsey’s Magazine</i>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Murry, J. M., on our poetry, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Music, <a href="#Page_199">199–214</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">American spirit, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_541">541</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">classical and popular, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">composers, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">criticism, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">exotic, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">feminization, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">German, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">journalism, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">motion pictures and, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Negro, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">technique, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Musical comedy, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Musical festivals, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Musical Quarterly</i>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mysticism, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_519">519</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mythology, <a href="#Page_514">514</a>, <a href="#Page_515">515</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Napoleonic code, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nathan, G. J., on the theatre, <a href="#Page_243">243–253</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">National Education Association, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">National Federation of Musical Clubs, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">National Research Council, report on intelligence, <a href="#Page_454">454</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nationality, <a href="#Page_511">511</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Natural resources, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Natural science, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nature, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Necessity, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Negro Catechism, <a href="#Page_370">370</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Negro Declaration of Independence, <a href="#Page_370">370</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Negroes, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_549">549</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">culture, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">decreasing proportion, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">economic progress, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">education, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">exodus organization, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">exodus to the North, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in literature, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">international convention, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">marriage with whites, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">music and religion, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">new defiance of whites, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Northern prejudice against, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">repression in the South, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Southern feeling about, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">white friends, <a href="#Page_361">361</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nerve tonics, <a href="#Page_431">431</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nerves, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>, <a href="#Page_427">427–442</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_553">553</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Neurasthenia, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>, <a href="#Page_432">432</a>, <a href="#Page_433">433</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Neuroses, <a href="#Page_437">437</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Neurotics, <a href="#Page_427">427</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New England, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>, <a href="#Page_502">502</a>, <a href="#Page_514">514</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">common law, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">culture, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">early trade, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">surplus women, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">town, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New Jersey, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New Realism, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New Realists, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>New Republic</i>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_544">544</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">exposure of false nature of Russian news, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New York (City), <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dominance, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">plan, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">School Board and trial of a teacher, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">theatre, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New York (State), early law, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New York Board of Health, <a href="#Page_450">450</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New York <i>Call</i>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New York Code of Civil Procedure, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New York <i>Globe</i>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New York <i>Herald</i>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New York <i>Nation</i>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_544">544</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">exposure of false nature of Russian news, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New York <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New York <i>Times</i>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on parenthood, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Russian news, character, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New York <i>Tribune</i>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New York <i>World</i>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New Yorkers, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newcomb, Simon, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_552">552</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">News, rough recipe, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sensational, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">world, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">News services, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newspaper writers’ organization, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Newspapers"></a>Newspapers, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>, <a href="#Page_532">532</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">advertising and corruption, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">advertisements, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">advertising, control by, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">attitude toward the theatre, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">circulation, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Congressional reports, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">correspondents, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">counting-room control, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">influence, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">legal questions, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">readers uncritical, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">stories, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <a href="#Journalism2">Journalism</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nietzsche, F. W., <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nomadism, <a href="#Page_333">333</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Non-conformism, reasoned, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Non-conformists, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nonpartisan League, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Novelists, <a href="#Page_495">495</a>, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>, <a href="#Page_524">524</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Ochs, Adolph, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Offences, minor legal, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Office-holders, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oil industry, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old Guard, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Omnistic philosophy, <a href="#Page_433">433</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">On the make, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>, <a href="#Page_440">440</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">One Big Union, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Neill, Eugene, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Open shop, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Opera, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ophthalmoscope, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Opinion"></a>Opinion, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <a href="#Economic_opinion2">Economic opinion</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Opportunity, <a href="#Page_522">522</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Optimism, <a href="#Page_517">517</a>, <a href="#Page_518">518</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Orchestras, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Orchestration, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Orders, fraternal, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Orientals"></a>Orientals, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>, <a href="#Page_450">450</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_551">551</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">culture, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">mixed marriages, <a href="#Page_376">376</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Origin of Species,” <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Over-production, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">advertising and, <a href="#Page_390">390</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Pach, Walter, on art, <a href="#Page_227">227–241</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Panama Canal, <a href="#Page_450">450</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Panics, <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parades, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paranoia, <a href="#Page_434">434</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parenthood, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_574">574</span>Paresis, <a href="#Page_453">453</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paris, entry of Allied troops on July 14, 1919, <a href="#Page_469">469</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parsons, E. C., on sex, <a href="#Page_309">309–318</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Party system, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parvenus, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pasteur, Louis, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>, <a href="#Page_539">539</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pattee, F. L., <a href="#Page_498">498</a>, <a href="#Page_500">500</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Patterson, J. M., <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paul, the Apostle, <a href="#Page_314">314</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pavements, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Payne, S. H., <a href="#Page_533">533</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pearl, Raymond, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>, <a href="#Page_453">453</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pearson, Karl, <a href="#Page_453">453</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pedants, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_492">492</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peirce, Charles, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pensions, widows’, <a href="#Page_329">329</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Perfectibility, <a href="#Page_515">515</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Periodicals, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Perry, R. B., <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Personal charm, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Personality, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">double, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">home and, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">lack, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">university life and, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">women, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Petting, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Phase rule, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Philadelphia, dramatic taste, <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Philadelphia <i>Press</i>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Philosophers, American, <a href="#Page_522">522</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Philosophy, <a href="#Page_163">163–177</a>, <a href="#Page_517">517</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">American, <a href="#Page_521">521</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_539">539</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Phosphates of fish, <a href="#Page_431">431</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Physicians"></a>Physicians, importance, <a href="#Page_443">443</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">intelligence, rank, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">modern kind, <a href="#Page_445">445–446</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">quasi-religious rôle, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">testimony, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Piccoli, Raffaello, on American civilization, <a href="#Page_508">508–528</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Picnics, pioneer, <a href="#Page_294">294</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pictures, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pioneers, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>, <a href="#Page_515">515</a>, <a href="#Page_516">516</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">hostility to law, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pittsburgh, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">newspapers and the steel strike, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pittsburgh Survey of 1908, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_531">531</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Platitude, <a href="#Page_497">497</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Play, <a href="#Page_457">457–461</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Playwrights, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">foreign and American, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plough, <a href="#Page_402">402</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plumbing, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poe, E. A., <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poetry, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215–226</a>, <a href="#Page_524">524</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_541">541</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">definition, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">modern vigorousness, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the “nonsense” of, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">poetic consciousness, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Poetry: a Magazine of Verse</i>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poets, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">definition, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Police and law enforcement, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Political biography, <a href="#Page_532">532</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Political economy, bibliography, <a href="#Page_552">552</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Political ideas, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Political machinery, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Politicians, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">local, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Politics, <a href="#Page_21">21–34</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_532">532</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">health movements and, <a href="#Page_451">451</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pool, <a href="#Page_460">460</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poor. <i>See</i> <a href="#Poverty">Poverty</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poor whites, <a href="#Page_355">355</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Population policies, <a href="#Page_322">322</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pound, Ezra, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Poverty"></a>Poverty, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">college life, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">injustice, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">our forebears, <a href="#Page_337">337</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Power, <a href="#Page_397">397</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Practical, the, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pragmatism, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_521">521</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Preaching and practice, vi</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prendergast, M. B., <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Preparatory school, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Presidency, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Presidential campaigns, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Press. <i>See</i> <a href="#Journalism2">Journalism</a>; <a href="#Newspapers">newspapers</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prevention of disease, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <a href="#Disease">Disease</a>; <a href="#Medicine2">Medicine</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prices, open, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Primitiveness, <a href="#Page_479">479</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Primogeniture, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prince, Morton, <a href="#Page_433">433</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Private property, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Production, engineers and, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">mass, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Professionalism, <a href="#Page_554">554</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Professors"></a>Professors, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>, <a href="#Page_527">527</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Profit, private, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>, <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Profit-making, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Progress, legal lack of, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prohibition, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>, <a href="#Page_495">495</a>, <a href="#Page_505">505</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">consequences, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">origin of movement, <a href="#Page_287">287</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Promenade, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Promiscuity, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>, <a href="#Page_502">502</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Promised Land, <a href="#Page_515">515</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Propaganda, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_440">440</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Property, governmental power over, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">private, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">rights, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Protection, beginnings, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <a href="#Tariff">Tariff</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Protest, economic, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Provincial city, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Provincialism, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prostitution, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prussia, educational system, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">family income, <a href="#Page_323">323</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Psychoanalysis, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>, <a href="#Page_437">437</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Psychoanalysts, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>, <a href="#Page_437">437</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Psychology, James’, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Psychotherapy, <a href="#Page_433">433</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Public Health Service, <a href="#Page_450">450</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Public opinion. <i>See</i> <a href="#Economic_opinion2">Economic opinion</a>; <a href="#Opinion">Opinion</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Public service commissions, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Publicists, writings, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Publicity pamphlets, <a href="#Page_483">483</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Publishing, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>; music, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Punch,” American, <a href="#Page_482">482</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pure-food acts, <a href="#Page_406">406</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Puritan and Cavalier, <a href="#Page_512">512</a>, <a href="#Page_513">513</a>, <a href="#Page_514">514</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Puritanism, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">culture, <a href="#Page_513">513</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">morbidity, <a href="#Page_502">502</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">original spirit, <a href="#Page_519">519</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">remnants, <a href="#Page_520">520</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pushkin, A. S., <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Quackery, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>, <a href="#Page_443">443</a>, <a href="#Page_444">444</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Quality of commodities, <a href="#Page_406">406</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Race-prejudice, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">manifestations, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">questions, <a href="#Page_378">378–379</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Race suicide, <a href="#Page_322">322</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Races, a quality or inequality, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rachmaninoff, S. V., <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Racial minorities, <a href="#Page_351">351–379</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">attitude, in face of race-prejudice, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_549">549</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">biological results, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">four most important, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">questions, <a href="#Page_378">378–379</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Radicalism, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271–284</a>, <a href="#Page_505">505</a>, <a href="#Page_519">519</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">associations of the word, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_545">545</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">definition, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">economic, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">historic American, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">reality and, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">tendency, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Radicals, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Railroad stations, <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Railroads, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">rates and hauls, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>, <a href="#Page_408">408</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">rebates, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rank, Otto, <a href="#Page_437">437</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rates, railroad, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Raw materials, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_575">575</span>Reactionaries, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Realism, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">new, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">small town, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Realistic morality, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Realists, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reaper, <a href="#Page_402">402</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rebates, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reconstruction, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Recreation, <a href="#Page_457">457</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">college, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reform, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reformation, Protestant, <a href="#Page_510">510</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reformers, <a href="#Page_439">439–440</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Regional differentiations, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Registration areas, <a href="#Page_320">320</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Registration of deeds, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reid, L. R., on the small town, <a href="#Page_285">285–296</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Relativity, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Religion, v, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_427">427</a>, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">founders, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Puritan, <a href="#Page_513">513</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Religious movements, <a href="#Page_518">518</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Renaissance, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_509">509</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">England, <a href="#Page_512">512</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Representatives, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Research, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Resources, natural, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Responsibility in business, <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Results, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Revolution, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">England, prospect, <a href="#Page_474">474</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Russian, <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Revolutionary War, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>, <a href="#Page_515">515</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rhode Island, Colonial legal training, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Richardson, H. H., <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Riesenfeld, Hugo, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rights and duties, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robinson, E. A., <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robinson, G. T., on racial minorities, <a href="#Page_351">351–379</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robinson, J. H., vi, <a href="#Page_547">547</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rockefeller Institute, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rome, civilization, <a href="#Page_509">509</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Roosevelt, Theodore, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on race suicide, <a href="#Page_322">322</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rosenau’s “Preventive Medicine and Hygiene,” <a href="#Page_453">453</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rothafel, S. L., <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rowland, H. A., <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Royce, Josiah, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">ethics, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">philosophy of religion, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Russia, false news, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Russian Revolution, <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ryder, A. P., <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_542">542</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rymer, Thomas, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">St. Louis, Mo., <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sainte-Beuve, C. A., <a href="#Page_498">498</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Salesmanship, <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sandburg, Carl, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sanitariums, <a href="#Page_431">431</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sanitary engineers, <a href="#Page_454">454</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sankey, Justice, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Santayana, George, <a href="#Page_539">539</a>, <a href="#Page_540">540</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sargent, J. S., <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Satire, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Saturday Evening Post</i>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_507">507</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Savings of aliens, <a href="#Page_348">348</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scholarship, definition, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scholarship and criticism, <a href="#Page_93">93–108</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_535">535</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">School and college life, <a href="#Page_109">109–133</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_536">536</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">School of literature, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schoolmaster, <a href="#Page_301">301</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schools, function, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">suppression of freedom of mind, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Science, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>, <a href="#Page_519">519</a>, <a href="#Page_522">522</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">American contributions, <a href="#Page_151">151–152</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">applied, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">applied and pure, <a href="#Page_155">155–156</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_538">538</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">hothouse growth in America, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">individual and organized, <a href="#Page_156">156–157</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">lack of fruitful background, <a href="#Page_151">151–161</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">medicine and, <a href="#Page_444">444</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">results and self-doubt, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">theology versus, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scientific schools, first, <a href="#Page_417">417</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scientists, equipment, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">spirit, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scope of the present volume, iv</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scotch, <a href="#Page_338">338</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scott, C. P., <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Secondary schools, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">private, <a href="#Page_115">115–116</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Secret societies, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sects, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>, <a href="#Page_519">519</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sensational news, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sense and poetry, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sentimentality, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Servants, <a href="#Page_320">320</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Service, <a href="#Page_523">523</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Settlers, early, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">immigrant, <a href="#Page_343">343</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sewers, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sex, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309–318</a>, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">attitudes, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_548">548</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">college relations, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">concept of sexuality, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">emotion, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_437">437</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in children, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">morality, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">problem, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">relations, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">relations classified, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sublimation, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">suppression of instinct, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">youth and, <a href="#Page_526">526</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shakespeare, William, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shaw, G. B., <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on America, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Shelburne Essays,” <a href="#Page_498">498</a>, <a href="#Page_500">500</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sherman, Stuart, <a href="#Page_493">493</a>, <a href="#Page_500">500</a>, <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shirt-sleeve diplomacy, <a href="#Page_489">489</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Simplification of American life, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sinclair, Upton, and “The Brass Check,” <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Single Tax, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sissies, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Slang, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Slavery, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Slopping over, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>, <a href="#Page_488">488</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Small Claims Courts, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Small_town"></a>Small town, <a href="#Page_285">285–296</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_546">546</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">character, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">life, <a href="#Page_289">289</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smith, J. Thorne, on advertising, <a href="#Page_381">381–395</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smith, Reginald H., <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smith, Theobald, <a href="#Page_449">449</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smoking, <a href="#Page_440">440</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smuggling, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Soap, <a href="#Page_392">392</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Social hygiene, <a href="#Page_453">453</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Social life, <a href="#Page_526">526</a>, <a href="#Page_527">527</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">freedom of youth, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Socialist Party, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Society, <a href="#Page_516">516</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Society column, <a href="#Page_333">333</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Solicitor, advertising, <a href="#Page_388">388</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Soul and scholarship, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Soule, George, on radicalism, <a href="#Page_271">271–284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Southern States, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Negro repression, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">society, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">white superiority, <a href="#Page_366">366</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Specialists, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Specialization, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">surgical, <a href="#Page_446">446</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Speculation in city land, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spingarn, J. E., <a href="#Page_535">535</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on scholarship and criticism, <a href="#Page_93">93–108</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spirit, <a href="#Page_518">518</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spiritual activity, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spiritual needs, <a href="#Page_527">527</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spiritual values, <a href="#Page_520">520</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spoiled child, <a href="#Page_334">334</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Spoon River Anthology,” <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sport and play, <a href="#Page_457">457–461</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_554">554</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Springfield <i>Republican</i>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Standard Oil Co., <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Standardization, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">American, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">newspapers and readers, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_576">576</span>Standards, economic, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">State, business and, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">corporations and, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">diversity of legal systems, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">education and, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">German, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">legislatures, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stearns, H. E., on the intellectual life, <a href="#Page_135">135–150</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sterility, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stevens, Wallace, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stewart, A. T., <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stock Exchange, <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stockard, C. R., <a href="#Page_452">452</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stories, newspaper, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Story, Joseph, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Strikes and the newspapers, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stuart, H. L., on American civilization, <a href="#Page_469">469–488</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Student Councils, college, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sturgis, Russell, quoted on art, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Style, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sublimation of sex, <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Suburbia, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Success, <a href="#Page_517">517</a>, <a href="#Page_518">518</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Suffrage, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sumner, W. G., <a href="#Page_543">543</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Super-docs,” <a href="#Page_447">447</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Superstition, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Supply and demand, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Suppression of sex impulse, <a href="#Page_311">311</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Surgeons, <a href="#Page_446">446</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swift, M. I., <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sydenstricker, Edgar, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Symbolists, <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Symons, Arthur, <a href="#Page_499">499</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sympathy, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">professional physician, <a href="#Page_445">445</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Symphony orchestras, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Syphilis, <a href="#Page_453">453</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Taboos, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Talk, college, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Tariff"></a>Tariff, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">works of art, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tarkington, Booth, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Taste, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">definition, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107–108</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">musical, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">theatrical, improvement, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Taylor, Deems, on music, <a href="#Page_199">199–214</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Teachers, control of teaching, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">status, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">suppression of freedom of mind, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">unions, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Teasdale, Sara, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Teeth, infected, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>, <a href="#Page_449">449</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Telegraph, Morse code, <a href="#Page_403">403</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ten Commandments, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tennis, <a href="#Page_460">460</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Teutonic school, <a href="#Page_303">303</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Texas fever, <a href="#Page_449">449</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Textile industry, <a href="#Page_402">402</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Theatre"></a>Theatre, <a href="#Page_243">243–253</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bibliography, <a href="#Page_543">543</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">New York City, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">newspapers and, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Theology versus science, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Things, <a href="#Page_397">397</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thomas, Augustus, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thomas, Theodore, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thoreau, H. D., <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thorndike’s tests, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thought, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">uniformity, <a href="#Page_439">439</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Threshing-machines, <a href="#Page_402">402</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thrift, family, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thucydides, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ticknor, George, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tildsley, John, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tolstoy, Leo, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_499">499</a>, <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tom, Blind, <a href="#Page_207">207–208</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tonsils, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>, <a href="#Page_449">449</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Towns, New England, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <a href="#Small_town">Small town</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trade-mark, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trade secrets, <a href="#Page_421">421</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trade-union movement, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Traditions, <a href="#Page_528">528</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">college, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">college and life at large, <a href="#Page_131">131–132</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Transportation, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trinity Church, Boston, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Truth, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">love of, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tschaikovsky, P. I., <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tuberculosis, bovine and human, <a href="#Page_449">449</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Turgeniev, I. S., <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Twachtman, J. H., <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Twain, Mark, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_464">464</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Typhoid, <a href="#Page_450">450</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Typography, <a href="#Page_391">391</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Unconscious, the, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>, <a href="#Page_436">436</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Undergraduate, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Unemployment, <a href="#Page_414">414</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Uniform Negotiable Instruments Law, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Uniformity, colleges and life, <a href="#Page_131">131–132</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Unions, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">U. S. Geological Survey, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Universal Negro Improvement Assn., <a href="#Page_369">369</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Universities, <a href="#Page_524">524</a>, <a href="#Page_526">526</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">materialism, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">mediocity of life and scholarship, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">professors, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>, <a href="#Page_527">527</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <a href="#College_life">College life</a>; <a href="#Colleges">Colleges</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Untermeyer, Louis, on our poetry, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Uplifters, <a href="#Page_450">450</a>, <a href="#Page_497">497</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Vaccination for typhoid, <a href="#Page_450">450</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Valparaiso University, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Van Dyke, Henry, <a href="#Page_496">496</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Van Loon, H. W., on history, <a href="#Page_297">297–308</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Van Slyke, D. D., <a href="#Page_456">456</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vanderlyn, John, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vaughan, V. C., <a href="#Page_444">444</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Veblen, T. B., <a href="#Page_544">544</a>, <a href="#Page_545">545</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Venereal peril, <a href="#Page_453">453</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Venereal prophylaxis, <a href="#Page_454">454</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Verihood, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Versailles, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Victrolas, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Villagers, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Villages, atmosphere, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Virginia schools, white and Negro, <a href="#Page_359">359</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vision, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vital statistics, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Volstead Act, debate on, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Volunteer firemen’s organizations, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Wanamaker, John, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">War. <i>See</i> <a href="#World_War">World War</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Washington, D. C., dramatic taste, <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Washington Square Players, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Waste, business, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">economic, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">industrial, <a href="#Page_419">419</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Water, danger of excessive use, <a href="#Page_451">451</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wealth, <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Weir, J. A., <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Welfare of employés, <a href="#Page_483">483</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wellman, Rita, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wells, H. G., <a href="#Page_457">457</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Weltanschauung</i>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wendell, Barrett, quoted on education, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Werner, Judge, W. E., <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">West, the, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wharton, Mrs. Edith, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whistler, J. A. M., <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">White, Stanford, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">White City, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">White Ways, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whitman, Walt, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>, <a href="#Page_523">523</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Who’s who in this volume, <a href="#Page_557">559–564</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Widowhood, prevention, <a href="#Page_329">329</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Widows, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wigmore, J. H., <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wild oats, <a href="#Page_316">316</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilson, Woodrow, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_450">450</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_577">577</span>“Winesburg, Ohio,” <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winsett, Ned, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i xml:lang="de" lang="de">Wissenschaftlichkeit</i>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Witchcraft, <a href="#Page_429">429</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wives, thrifty, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Women, beauty, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dominance in art, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dominance in intellectual life, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dominance in music, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">hours of work, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in industry, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">interests, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">longevity, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">maintenance at leisure, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">men and, dichotomy, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">men’s circumspection as to, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">nervous, <a href="#Page_432">432</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">personality, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">psychology, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">surplus, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Women’s clubs, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Woodberry, G. E., <a href="#Page_101">101</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Woods, A. H., <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Work for work’s sake, <a href="#Page_491">491</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Workmen’s compensation, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Workmen’s families, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">World news, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="World_War"></a>World War, business and, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">historians and, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">World’s Fair, Chicago, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wyant, A. H., <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Yeast, <a href="#Page_444">444</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Yeats, W. B., <a href="#Page_499">499</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Yellow fever, <a href="#Page_450">450</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Y.M.C.A., <a href="#Page_144">144</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">instruction, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Youth, sex life, <a href="#Page_526">526</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Zenger, Peter, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
-</ul>
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="chapter"><div class="transnote">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Transcribers_Notes">Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
-
-<p>Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made
-consistent within each article when a predominant
-preference was found in that article; otherwise,
-they were not changed.</p>
-
-<p>Simple typographical errors were corrected; unbalanced
-quotation marks were remedied when the change was
-obvious, and otherwise left unbalanced.</p>
-
-<p>Duplicate hemi-titles were removed.</p>
-
-<p>Table of Contents: replaced ditto marks with the
-actual words above them.</p>
-
-<p>The index was not systematically checked for
-proper alphabetization or correct page references.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_352">Page 352</a>: “singled out” was printed as
-“signalled out”; changed here.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_388">Page 388</a>: “full-fledged” was printed as
-“full-edged”; changed here.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_573">Page 573</a>: “New York <i>Herald</i>” was
-misprinted as “New York <i>World</i>”;
-changed here.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_576">Page 576</a>: “mediocity” was printed that way;
-may be a misprint for either “mediocrity”
-“meritocracy.”</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_576">Page 576</a>, under “State, business and”:
-“corporations” was misprinted as “co-operations”;
-changed here.</p>
-</div></div>
-
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