SOME CAUSES OF THE PREVAILING DISCONTENT
By Charles Dudley Warner
The Declaration of Independence opens
with the statement of a great and fruitful political
truth. But if it had said: “We
hold these truths to be self-evident: that all
men are created unequal; that they are endowed by
their Creator with certain inalienable rights; that
among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness,”
it would also have stated the truth; and if it had
added, “All men are born in society with certain
duties which cannot be disregarded without danger to
the social state,” it would have laid down a
necessary corollary to the first declaration.
No doubt those who signed the document understood that
the second clause limited the first, and that men
are created equal only in respect to certain rights.
But the first part of the clause has been taken alone
as the statement of a self-evident truth, and the
attempt to make this unlimited phrase a reality has
caused a great deal of misery. In connection
with the neglect of the idea that the recognition of
certain duties is as important as the recognition
of rights in the political and social state that
is, in connection with the doctrine of laissez faire this popular notion of equality is one
of the most disastrous forces in modern society.
Doubtless men might have been created
equal to each other in every respect, with the same
mental capacity, the same physical ability, with like
inheritances of good or bad qualities, and born into
exactly similar conditions, and not dependent on each
other. But men never were so created and born,
so far as we have any record of them, and by analogy
we have no reason to suppose that they ever will be.
Inequality is the most striking fact in life.
Absolute equality might be better, but so far as we
can see, the law of the universe is infinite diversity
in unity; and variety in condition is the essential
of what we call progress it is, in fact,
life. The great doctrine of the Christian era the
brotherhood of man and the duty of the strong to the
weak is in sharp contrast with this doctrinarian
notion of equality. The Christian religion never
proposed to remove the inequalities of life or its
suffering, but by the incoming of charity and contentment
and a high mind to give individual men a power to
be superior to their conditions.
It cannot, however, be denied that
the spirit of Christianity has ameliorated the condition
of civilized peoples, cooperating in this with beneficent
inventions. Never were the mass of the people
so well fed, so well clad, so well housed, as today
in the United States. Their ordinary daily comforts
and privileges were the luxuries of a former age, often
indeed unknown and unattainable to the most fortunate
and privileged classes. Nowhere else is it or
was it so easy for a man to change his condition,
to satisfy his wants, nowhere else has he or had he
such advantages of education, such facilities of travel,
such an opportunity to find an environment to suit
himself. As a rule the mass of mankind have been
spot where they were born. A mighty change has
taken place in regard to liberty, freedom of personal
action, the possibility of coming into contact with
varied life and an enlarged participation in the bounties
of nature and the inventions of genius. The whole
world is in motion, and at liberty to be so.
Everywhere that civilization has gone there is an
immense improvement in material conditions during the
last one hundred years.
And yet men were never so discontented,
nor did they ever find so many ways of expressing
their discontent. In view of the general amelioration
of the conditions of life this seems unreasonable and
illogical, but it may seem less so when we reflect
that human nature is unchanged, and that which has
to be satisfied in this world is the mind. And
there are some exceptions to this general material
prosperity, in its result to the working classes.
Manufacturing England is an exception. There is
nothing so pitiful, so hopeless in the record of man,
not in the Middle Ages, not in rural France just before
the Revolution, as the physical and mental condition
of the operators in the great manufacturing cities
and in the vast reeking slums of London. The
political economists have made England the world’s
great workshop, on the theory that wealth is the greatest
good in life, and that with the golden streams flowing
into England from a tributary world, wages would rise,
food be cheap, employment constant. The horrible
result to humanity is one of the exceptions to the
general uplift of the race, not paralleled as yet
by anything in this country, but to be taken note
of as a possible outcome of any material civilization,
and fit to set us thinking whether we have not got
on a wrong track. Mr. Froude, fresh from a sight
of the misery of industrial England, and borne straight
on toward Australia over a vast ocean, through calm
and storm, by a great steamer, horses of
fire yoked to a sea-chariot, exclaims:
“What, after all, have these wonderful achievements
done to elevate human nature? Human nature remains
as it was. Science grows, but morality is stationary,
and art is vulgarized. Not here lie the ‘things
necessary to salvation,’ not the things which
can give to human life grace, or beauty, or dignity.”
In the United States, with its open
opportunities, abundant land, where the condition
of the laboring class is better actually and in possibility
than it ever was in history, and where there is little
poverty except that which is inevitably the accompaniment
of human weakness and crime, the prevailing discontent
seems groundless. But of course an agitation so
widespread, so much in earnest, so capable of evoking
sacrifice, even to the verge of starvation and the
risk of life, must have some reason in human nature.
Even an illusion and men are as ready to
die for an illusion as for a reality cannot
exist without a cause.
Now, content does not depend so much
upon a man’s actual as his relative condition.
Often it is not so much what I need, as what others
have that disturbs me. I should be content to
walk from Boston to New York, and be a fortnight on
the way, if everybody else was obliged to walk who
made that journey. It becomes a hardship when
my neighbor is whisked over the route in six hours
and I have to walk. It would still be a hardship
if he attained the ability to go in an hour, when
I was only able to accomplish the distance in six
hours. While there has been a tremendous uplift
all along the line of material conditions, and the
laboring man who is sober and industrious has comforts
and privileges in his daily life which the rich man
who was sober and industrious did not enjoy a hundred
years ago, the relative position of the rich man and
the poor man has not greatly changed. It is true,
especially in the United States, that the poor have
become rich and the rich poor, but inequality of condition
is about as marked as it was before the invention
of labor-saving machinery, and though workingmen are
better off in many ways, the accumulation of vast
fortunes, acquired often in brutal disregard of humanity,
marks the contrast of conditions perhaps more emphatically
than it ever appeared before. That this inequality
should continue in an era of universal education,
universal suffrage, universal locomotion, universal
emancipation from nearly all tradition, is a surprise,
and a perfectly comprehensible cause of discontent.
It is axiomatic that all men are created equal.
But, somehow, the problem does not work out in the
desired actual equality of conditions. Perhaps
it can be forced to the right conclusion by violence.
It ought to be said, as to the United
States, that a very considerable part of the discontent
is imported, it is not native, nor based on any actual
state of things existing here. Agitation has become
a business. A great many men and some women,
to whom work of any sort is distasteful, live by it.
Some of them are refugees from military or political
despotism, some are refugees from justice, some from
the lowest conditions of industrial slavery.
When they come here, they assume that the hardships
they have come away to escape exist here, and they
begin agitating against them. Their business
is to so mix the real wrongs of our social life with
imaginary hardships, and to heighten the whole with
illusory and often debasing theories, that discontent
will be engendered. For it is by means of that
only that they live. It requires usually a great
deal of labor, of organization, of oratory to work
up this discontent so that it is profitable.
The solid workingmen of America who know the value
of industry and thrift, and have confidence in the
relief to be obtained from all relievable wrongs by
legitimate political or other sedate action, have
no time to give to the leadership of agitations which
require them to quit work, and destroy industries,
and attack the social order upon which they depend.
The whole case, you may remember, was embodied thousands
of years ago in a parable, which Jotham, standing
on the top of Mount Gerizim, spoke to the men of Shechem:
“The trees went forth on a time
to anoint a king over them; and they said unto the
olive-tree, ‘Reign thou over us.’
“But the olive-tree said unto
them, ’Should I leave my fatness wherewith by
me they honor God and man, and go to be promoted over
the trees?’
“And the trees said to the fig-tree,
‘Come thou and reign over us.’
“But the fig-tree said unto
them, ’Should I forsake my sweetness and my
good fruit, and go to be promoted over the trees?’
“Then said the trees unto the
vine, ‘Come thou and reign over us.’
“And the vine said unto them,
’Should I leave my wine, which cheereth God
and man, and go to be promoted over the trees?’
“Then said the trees unto the
bramble, ‘Come thou and reign over us.’
“And the bramble said to the
trees, ’If in truth ye anoint me king over you,
then come and put your trust in my shadow; and if not,
let fire come out of the bramble, and devour the cedars
of Lebanon.’”
In our day a conflagration of the
cedars of Lebanon has been the only result of the
kingship of the bramble.
In the opinion of many, our universal
education is one of the chief causes of the discontent.
This might be true and not be an argument against
education, for a certain amount of discontent is essential
to self-development and if, as we believe, the development
of the best powers of every human being is a good
in itself, education ought not to be held responsible
for the evils attending a transitional period.
Yet we cannot ignore the danger, in the present stage,
of an education that is necessarily superficial, that
engenders conceit of knowledge and power, rather than
real knowledge and power, and that breeds in two-thirds
of those who have it a distaste for useful labor.
We believe in education; but there must be something
wrong in an education that sets so many people at
odds with the facts of life, and, above all, does not
furnish them with any protection against the wildest
illusions. There is something wanting in the
education that only half educates people.
Whether there is the relation of cause
and effect between the two I do not pretend to say,
but universal and superficial education in this country
has been accompanied with the most extraordinary delusions
and the evolution of the wildest theories. It
is only necessary to refer, by way of illustration,
to the greenback illusion, and to the whole group of
spiritualistic disturbances and psychological epidemics.
It sometimes seems as if half the American people
were losing the power to apply logical processes to
the ordinary affairs of life.
In studying the discontent in this
country which takes the form of a labor movement,
one is at first struck by its illogical aspects.
So far as it is an organized attempt to better the
condition of men by association of interests it is
consistent. But it seems strange that the doctrine
of individualism should so speedily have an outcome
in a personal slavery, only better in the sense that
it is voluntary, than that which it protested against.
The revolt from authority, the assertion of the right
of private judgment, has been pushed forward into a
socialism which destroys individual liberty of action,
or to a state of anarchy in which the weak would have
no protection. I do not imagine that the leaders
who preach socialism, who live by agitation and not
by labor, really desire to overturn the social order
and bring chaos. If social chaos came, their
occupation would be gone, for if all men were reduced
to a level, they would be compelled to scratch about
with the rest for a living. They live by agitation,
and they are confident that government will be strong
enough to hold things together, so that they can continue
agitation.
The strange thing is that their followers
who live by labor and expect to live by it, and believe
in the doctrine of individualism, and love liberty
of action, should be willing to surrender their discretion
to an arbitrary committee, and should expect that
liberty of action would be preserved if all property
were handed over to the State, which should undertake
to regulate every man’s time, occupation, wages,
and so on. The central committee or authority,
or whatever it might be called, would be an extraordinary
despotism, tempered only by the idea that it could
be overturned every twenty-four hours. But what
security would there be for any calculations in life
in a state of things in expectation of a revolution
any moment? Compared with the freedom of action
in such a government as ours, any form of communism
is an iniquitous and meddlesome despotism. In
a less degree an association to which a man surrenders
the right to say when, where, and for how much he
shall work, is a despotism, and when it goes further
and attempts to put a pressure on all men outside
of the association, so that they are free neither to
work nor to hire the workmen they choose, it is an
extraordinary tyranny. It almost puts in the
shade Mexican or Russian personal government.
A demand is made upon a railway company that it shall
discharge a certain workman because and only because
he is not a member of the union. The company
refuses. Then a distant committee orders a strike
on that road, which throws business far and wide into
confusion, and is the cause of heavy loss to tens
of thousands who have no interest in any association
of capital or labor, many of whom are ruined by this
violence. Some of the results of this surrender
of personal liberty are as illegal as illogical.
The boycott is a conspiracy to injure
another person, and as such indictable at common law.
A strike, if a conspiracy only to raise wages or to
reduce hours of labor, may not be indictable, if its
object cannot be shown to be the injury of another,
though that may be incidentally its effect. But
in its incidents, such as violence, intimidation, and
in some cases injury to the public welfare, it often
becomes an indictable offense. The law of conspiracy
is the most ill-defined branch of jurisprudence, but
it is safe to say of the boycott and the strike that
they both introduce an insupportable element of tyranny,
of dictation, of interference, into private life.
If they could be maintained, society would be at the
mercy of an irresponsible and even secret tribunal.
The strike is illogical. Take
the recent experience in this country. We have
had a long season of depression, in which many earned
very little and labor sought employment in vain.
In the latter part of winter the prospect brightened,
business revived, orders for goods poured in to all
the factories in the country, and everybody believed
that we were on the eve of a very prosperous season.
This was the time taken to order strikes, and they
were enforced in perhaps a majority of cases against
the wishes of those who obeyed the order, and who complained
of no immediate grievance. What men chiefly wanted
was the opportunity to work. The result has been
to throw us all back into the condition of stagnation
and depression. Many people are ruined, an immense
amount of capital which ventured into enterprises
is lost, but of course the greatest sufferers are
the workingmen themselves.
The methods of violence suggested
by the communists and anarchists are not remedial.
Real difficulties exist, but these do not reach them.
The fact is that people in any relations incur mutual
obligations, and the world cannot go on without a
recognition of duties as well as rights. We all
agree that every man has a right to work for whom he
pleases, and to quit the work if it does not or the
wages do not suit him. On the other hand, a man
has a right to hire whom he pleases, pay such wages
as he thinks he can afford, and discharge men who
do not suit him. But when men come together in
the relation of employer and employed, other considerations
arise. A man has capital which, instead of loaning
at interest or locking up in real estate or bonds,
he puts into a factory. In other words, he unlocks
it for the benefit partly of men who want wages.
He has the expectation of making money, of making more
than he could by lending his money. Perhaps he
will be disappointed, for a common experience is the
loss of capital thus invested. He hires workmen
at certain wages. On the strength of this arrangement,
he accepts orders and makes contracts for the delivery
of goods. He may make money one year and lose
the next. It is better for the workman that he
should prosper, for the fund of capital accumulated
is that upon which they depend to give them wages
in a dull time. But some day when he is in a corner
with orders, and his rivals are competing for the
market, and labor is scarce, his men strike on him.
Conversely, take the workman settled
down to work in the mill, at the best wages attainable
at the time. He has a house and family. He
has given pledges to society. His employer has
incurred certain duties in regard to him by the very
nature of their relations. Suppose the workman
and his family cannot live in any comfort on the wages
he receives. The employer is morally bound to
increase the wages if he can. But if, instead
of sympathizing with the situation of his workman,
he forms a combination with all the mills of his sort,
and reduces wages merely to increase his gains, he
is guilty of an act as worthy of indictment as the
strike. I do not see why a conspiracy against
labor is not as illegal as a conspiracy against capital.
The truth is, the possession of power by men or associations
makes them selfish and generally cruel. Few employers
consider anything but the arithmetic of supply and
demand in fixing wages, and workingmen who have the
power, tend to act as selfishly as the male printers
used to act in striking in an establishment which dared
to give employment to women typesetters. It is
of course sentimental to say it, but I do not expect
we shall ever get on with less friction than we have
now, until men recognize their duties as well as their
rights in their relations with each other.
In running over some of the reasons
for the present discontent, and the often illogical
expression of it, I am far from saying anything against
legitimate associations for securing justice and fair
play. Disassociated labor has generally been
powerless against accumulated capital. Of course,
organized labor, getting power will use its power (as
power is always used) unjustly and tyrannically.
It will make mistakes, it will often injure itself
while inflicting general damage. But with all
its injustice, with all its surrender of personal
liberty, it seeks to call the attention of the world
to certain hideous wrongs, to which the world is likely
to continue selfishly indifferent unless rudely shaken
out of its sense of security. Some of the objects
proposed by these associations are chimerical, but
the agitation will doubtless go on until another element
is introduced into work and wages than mere supply
and demand. I believe that some time it will
be impossible that a woman shall be forced to make
shirts at six cents apiece, with the gaunt figures
of starvation or a life of shame waiting at the door.
I talked recently with the driver of a street-car
in a large city. He received a dollar and sixty
cents a day. He went on to his platform at eight
in the morning, and left it at twelve at night, sixteen
hours of continuous labor every day in the week.
He had no rest for meals, only snatched what he could
eat as he drove along, or at intervals of five or
eight minutes at the end of routes. He had no
Sunday, no holiday in the year.
Between twelve o’clock at night
and eight the next morning he must wash and clean
his car. Thus his hours of sleep were abridged.
He was obliged to keep an eye on the passengers to
see that they put their fares in the box, to be always,
responsible for them, that they got on and off without
accident, to watch that the rules were enforced, and
that collisions and common street dangers were avoided.
This mental and physical strain for sixteen consecutive
hours, with scant sleep, so demoralized him that he
was obliged once in two or three months to hire a substitute
and go away to sleep. This is treating a human
being with less consideration than the horses receive.
He is powerless against the great corporation; if he
complains, his place is instantly filled; the public
does not care.
Now what I want to say about this
case, and that of the woman who makes a shirt for
six cents (and these are only types of disregard of
human souls and bodies that we are all familiar with),
is that if society remains indifferent it must expect
that organizations will attempt to right them, and
the like wrongs, by ways violent and destructive of
the innocent and guilty alike. It is human nature,
it is the lesson of history, that real wrongs, unredressed,
grow into preposterous demands. Men are much like
nature in action; a little disturbance of atmospheric
equilibrium becomes a cyclone, a slight break in the
levee ’a crevasse with immense destructive power.
In considering the growth of discontent,
and of a natural disregard of duties between employers
and employed, it is to be noted that while wages in
nearly all trades are high, the service rendered deteriorates,
less conscience is put into the work, less care to
give a fair day’s work for a fair day’s
wages, and that pride in good work is vanishing.
This may be in the nature of retaliation for the indifference
to humanity taught by a certain school of political
economists, but it is, nevertheless, one of the most
alarming features of these times. How to cultivate
the sympathy of the employers with the employed as
men, and how to interest the employed in their work
beyond the mere wages they receive, is the double
problem.
As the intention of this paper was
not to suggest remedies, but only to review some of
the causes of discontent, I will only say, as to this
double problem, that I see no remedy so long as the
popular notion prevails that the greatest good of
life is to make money rapidly, and while it is denied
that all men who contribute to prosperity ought to
share equitably in it. The employed must recognize
the necessity of an accumulated fund of capital, and
on the other hand the employer must be as anxious
to have about him a contented, prosperous community,
as to heap up money beyond any reasonable use for
it. The demand seems to be reasonable that the
employer in a prosperous year ought to share with the
workmen the profits beyond a limit that capital, risk,
enterprise, and superior skill can legitimately claim;
and that on the other hand the workmen should stand
by the employer in hard times.
Discontent, then, arises from absurd
notions of equality, from natural conditions of inequality,
from false notions of education, and from the very
patent fact, in this age, that men have been educated
into wants much more rapidly than social conditions
have been adjusted, or perhaps ever can be adjusted,
to satisfy those wants. Beyond all the actual
hardship and suffering, there is an immense mental
discontent which has to be reckoned with.
This leads me to what I chiefly wanted
to say in this paper, to the cause of discontent which
seems to me altogether the most serious, altogether
the most difficult to deal with. We may arrive
at some conception of it, if we consider what it is
that the well-to-do, the prosperous, the rich, the
educated and cultivated portions of society, most value
just now.
If, to take an illustration which
is sufficiently remote to give us the necessary perspective,
if the political economists, the manufacturers, the
traders and aristocracy of England had had chiefly
in mind the development of the laboring people of
England into a fine type of men and women, full of
health and physical vigor, with minds capable of expansion
and enjoyment, the creation of decent, happy, and contented
homes, would they have reared the industrial fabric
we now see there? If they had not put the accumulation
of wealth above the good of individual humanity, would
they have turned England into a grimy and smoky workshop,
commanding the markets of the world by cheap labor,
condemning the mass of the people to unrelieved toil
and the most squalid and degraded conditions of life
in towns, while the land is more and more set apart
for the parks and pleasure grounds of the rich?
The policy pursued has made England the richest of
countries, a land of the highest refinement and luxury
for the upper classes, and of the most misery for the
great mass of common people. On this point we
have but to read the testimony of English writers
themselves. It is not necessary to suppose that
the political economists were inhuman. They no
doubt believed that if England attained this commanding
position, the accumulated wealth would raise all classes
into better conditions. Their mistake is that
of all peoples who have made money their first object.
Looked at merely on the material side, you would think
that what a philanthropic statesman would desire,
who wished a vigorous, prosperous nation, would be
a strong and virile population, thrifty and industrious,
and not mere slaves of mines and mills, degenerating
in their children, year by year, physically and morally.
But apparently they have gone upon the theory that
it is money, not man, that makes a state.
In the United States, under totally
different conditions, and under an economic theory
that, whatever its defects on paper, has nevertheless
insisted more upon the worth of the individual man,
we have had, all the same, a distinctly material development.
When foreign critics have commented upon this, upon
our superficiality, our commonplaceness, what they
are pleased to call the weary level of our mediocrity,
upon the raging unrest and race for fortune, and upon
the tremendous pace of American life, we have said
that this is incident to a new country and the necessity
of controlling physical conditions, and of fitting
our heterogeneous population to their environment.
It is hardly to be expected, we have said, until,
we have the leisure that comes from easy circumstances
and accumulated wealth, that we should show the graces
of the highest civilization, in intellectual pursuits.
Much of this criticism is ignorant, and to say the
best of it, ungracious, considering what we have done
in the way of substantial appliances for education,
in the field of science, in vast charities, and missionary
enterprises, and what we have to show in the diffused
refinements of life.
We are already wealthy; we have greater
resources and higher credit than any other nation;
we have more wealth than any save one; we have vast
accumulations of fortune, in private hands and in enormous
corporations. There exists already, what could
not be said to exist a quarter of a century ago, a
class who have leisure. Now what is the object
in life of this great, growing class that has money
and leisure, what does it chiefly care for? In
your experience of society, what is it that it pursues
and desires? Is it things of the mind or things
of the senses? What is it that interests women,
men of fortune, club-men, merchants, and professional
men whose incomes give them leisure to follow their
inclinations, the young men who have inherited money?
Is it political duties, the affairs of state, economic
problems, some adjustment of our relations that shall
lighten and relieve the wrongs and misery everywhere
apparent; is the interest in intellectual pursuits
and art (except in a dilettante way dictated for a
season by fashion) in books, in the wide range of
mental pleasures which make men superior to the accidents
of fortune? Or is the interest of this class,
for the most part, with some noble exceptions, rather
in things grossly material, in what is called pleasure?
To come to somewhat vulgar details, is not the growing
desire for équipages, for epicurean entertainments,
for display, either refined or ostentatious, rivalry
in profusion and expense, new methods for killing
time, for every imaginable luxury, which is enjoyed
partly because it pleases the senses, and partly because
it satisfies an ignoble craving for class distinction?
I am not referring to these things
as a moralist at all, but simply in their relation
to popular discontent. The astonishing growth
of luxury and the habit of sensual indulgence are
seen everywhere in this country, but are most striking
in the city of New York, since the fashion and wealth
of the whole country meet there for display and indulgence, New
York, which rivals London and outdoes Paris in sumptuousness.
There congregate more than elsewhere idlers, men and
women of leisure who have nothing to do except to
observe or to act in the spectacle of Vanity Fair.
Aside from the display of luxury in the shops, in the
streets, in private houses, one is impressed by the
number of idle young men and women of fashion.
It is impossible that a workingman
who stands upon a metropolitan street corner and observes
this Bacchanalian revel and prodigality of expense,
should not be embittered by a sense of the inequality
of the conditions of life. But this is not the
most mischievous effect of the spectacle. It
is the example of what these people care for.
With all their wealth and opportunities, it seems
to him that these select people have no higher object
than the pleasures of the senses, and he is taught
daily by reiterated example that this is the end and
aim of life. When he sees the value the intelligent
and the well-to-do set upon material things, and their
small regard for intellectual things and the pleasures
of the mind, why should he not most passionately desire
those things which his more fortunate neighbors put
foremost? It is not the sight of a Peter Cooper
and his wealth that discontents him, nor the intellectual
pursuits of the scholar who uses the leisure his fortune
gives him for the higher pleasures of the mind.
But when society daily dins upon his senses the lesson
that not manhood and high thinking and a contented
spirit are the most desirable things, whether one
is rich or poor, is he to be blamed for having a wrong
notion of what will or should satisfy him? What
the well-to-do, the prosperous, are seen to value
most in life will be the things most desired by the
less fortunate in accumulation. It is not so
much the accumulation of money that is mischievous
in this country, for the most stupid can see that
fortunes are constantly shifting hands, but it is
the use that is made of the leisure and opportunity
that money brings.
Another observation, which makes men
discontented with very slow accumulation, is that
apparently, in the public estimation it does not make
much difference whether a man acquires wealth justly
or unjustly. If he only secures enough, he is
a power, he has social position, he grasps the high
honors and places in the state. The fact is that
the toleration of men who secure wealth by well known
dishonest and sharp practices is a chief cause of
the demoralization of the public conscience.
However the lines social and political
may be drawn, we have to keep in mind that nothing
in one class can be foreign to any other, and that
practically one philosophy underlies all the movements
of an age. If our philosophy is material, resulting
in selfish ethics, all our energies will have a materialistic
tendency. It is not to be wondered at, therefore,
that, in a time when making money is the chief object,
if it is not reckoned the chief good, our education
should all tend to what is called practical, that
is, to that which can be immediately serviceable in
some profitable occupation of life, to the neglect
of those studies which are only of use in training
the intellect and cultivating and broadening the higher
intelligence. To this purely material and utilitarian
idea of life, the higher colleges and universities
everywhere are urged to conform themselves. Thus
is the utilitarian spirit eating away the foundations
of a higher intellectual life, applying to everything
a material measure. In proportion as scholars
yield to it, they are lowering the standard of what
is most to be desired in human life, acting in perfect
concert with that spirit which exalts money making
as the chief good, which makes science itself the slave
of the avaricious and greedy, and fills all the world
with discontented and ignoble longing. We do
not need to be told that if we neglect pure science
for the pursuit of applied science only, applied science
will speedily be degraded and unfruitful; and it is
just as true that if we pursue knowledge only for
the sake of gain, and not for its own sake, knowledge
will lose the power it has of satisfying the higher
needs of the human soul. If we are seen to put
only a money value on the higher education, why should
not the workingman, who regards it only as a distinction
of class or privilege, estimate it by what he can see
of its practical results in making men richer, or
bringing him more pleasure of the senses?
The world is ruled by ideas, by abstract
thought. Society, literature, art, politics,
in any given age are what the prevailing system of
philosophy makes them. We recognize this clearly
in studying any past period. We see, for instance,
how all the currents of human life changed upon the
adoption of the inductive method; no science, no literature,
no art, practical or fine, no person, inquiring scholar,
day laborer, trader, sailor, fine lady or humblest
housekeeper, escaped the influence. Even though
the prevailing ethics may teach that every man’s
highest duty is to himself, we cannot escape community
of sympathy and destiny in this cold-blooded philosophy.
No social or political movement stands
by itself. If we inquire, we shall find one preponderating
cause underlying every movement of the age. If
the utilitarian spirit is abroad, it accounts for the
devotion to the production of wealth, and to the consequent
separation of classes and the discontent, and it accounts
also for the demand that all education shall be immediately
useful. I was talking the other day with a lady
who was doubting what sort of an education to give
her daughter, a young girl of exceedingly fine mental
capacity. If she pursued a classical course, she
would, at the age of twenty-one, know very little of
the sciences. And I said, why not make her an
intellectual woman? At twenty-one, with a trained
mind, all knowledges are at one’s feet.
If anything can correct the evils
of devotion to money, it seems to me that it is the
production of intellectual men and women, who will
find other satisfactions in life than those of the
senses. And when labor sees what it is that is
really most to be valued, its discontent will be of
a nobler kind.