THOUGHTS SUGGESTED BY MR. FROUDE’S “PROGRESS”
By Charles Dudley Warner
To revisit this earth, some ages after
their departure from it, is a common wish among men.
We frequently hear men say that they would give so
many months or years of their lives in exchange for
a less number on the globe one or two or three centuries
from now. Merely to see the world from some remote
sphere, like the distant spectator of a play which
passes in dumb show, would not suffice. They would
like to be of the world again, and enter into its
feelings, passions, hopes; to feel the sweep of its
current, and so to comprehend what it has become.
I suppose that we all who are thoroughly
interested in this world have this desire. There
are some select souls who sit apart in calm endurance,
waiting to be translated out of a world they are almost
tired of patronizing, to whom the whole thing seems,
doubtless, like a cheap performance. They sit
on the fence of criticism, and cannot for the life
of them see what the vulgar crowd make such a toil
and sweat about. The prizes are the same dreary,
old, fading bay wreaths. As for the soldiers
marching past, their uniforms are torn, their hats
are shocking, their shoes are dusty, they do not appear
(to a man sitting on the fence) to march with any
kind of spirit, their flags are old and tattered, the
drums they beat are barbarous; and, besides, it is
not probable that they are going anywhere; they will
merely come round again, the same people, like the
marching chorus in the “Beggar’s Opera.”
Such critics, of course, would not care to see the
vulgar show over again; it is enough for them to put
on record their protest against it in the weekly “Judgment
Days” which they edit, and by-and-by withdraw
out of their private boxes, with pity for a world
in the creation of which they were not consulted.
The desire to revisit this earth is,
I think, based upon a belief, well-nigh universal,
that the world is to make some progress, and that it
will be more interesting in the future than it is now.
I believe that the human mind, whenever it is developed
enough to comprehend its own action, rests, and has
always rested, in this expectation. I do not know
any period of time in which the civilized mind has
not had expectation of something better for the race
in the future. This expectation is sometimes
stronger than it is at others; and, again, there are
always those who say that the Golden Age is behind
them. It is always behind or before us; the poor
present alone has no friends; the present, in the
minds of many, is only the car that is carrying us
away from an age of virtue and of happiness, or that
is perhaps bearing us on to a time of ease and comfort
and security.
Perhaps it is worth while, in view
of certain recent discussions, and especially of some
free criticisms of this country, to consider whether
there is any intention of progress in this world, and
whether that intention is discoverable in the age
in which we live.
If it is an old question, it is not
a settled one; the practical disbelief in any such
progress is widely entertained. Not long ago Mr.
James Anthony Froude published an essay on Progress,
in which he examined some of the evidences upon which
we rely to prove that we live in an “era of
progress.” It is a melancholy essay, for
its tone is that of profound skepticism as to certain
influences and means of progress upon which we in
this country most rely. With the illustrative
arguments of Mr. Froude’s essay I do not purpose
specially to meddle; I recall it to the attention
of the reader as a representative type of skepticism
regarding progress which is somewhat common among
intellectual men, and is not confined to England.
It is not exactly an acceptance of Rousseau’s
notion that civilization is a mistake, and that it
would be better for us all to return to a state of
nature though in John Ruskin’s case
it nearly amounts to this; but it is a hostility in
its last analysis to what we understand by the education
of the people, and to the government of the people
by themselves. If Mr. Froude’s essay is
anything but an exhibition of the scholarly weapons
of criticism, it is the expression of a profound disbelief
in the intellectual education of the masses of the
people. Mr. Ruskin goes further. He makes
his open proclamation against any emancipation from
hand-toil. Steam is the devil himself let loose
from the pit, and all labor-saving machinery is his
own invention. Mr. Ruskin is the bull that stands
upon the track and threatens with annihilation the
on-coming locomotive; and I think that any spectator
who sees his menacing attitude and hears his roaring
cannot but have fears for the locomotive.
There are two sorts of infidelity
concerning humanity, and I do not know which is the
more withering in its effects. One is that which
regards this world as only a waste and a desert, across
the sands of which we are merely fugitives, fleeing
from the wrath to come. The other is that doubt
of any divine intention in development, in history,
which we call progress from age to age.
In the eyes of this latter infidelity
history is not a procession or a progression, but
only a series of disconnected pictures, each little
era rounded with its own growth, fruitage, and decay,
a series of incidents or experiments, without even
the string of a far-reaching purpose to connect them.
There is no intention of progress in it all. The
race is barbarous, and then it changes to civilized;
in the one case the strong rob the weak by brute force;
in the other the crafty rob the unwary by finesse.
The latter is a more agreeable state of things; but
it comes to about the same. The robber used to
knock us down and take away our sheepskins; he now
administers chloroform and relieves us of our watches.
It is a gentlemanly proceeding, and scientific, and
we call it civilization. Meantime human nature
remains the same, and the whole thing is a weary round
that has no advance in it.
If this is true the succession of
men and of races is no better than a vegetable succession;
and Mr. Froude is quite right in doubting if education
of the brain will do the English agricultural laborer
any good; and Mr. Ruskin ought to be aided in his
crusade against machinery, which turns the world upside
down. The best that can be done with a man is
the best that can be done with a plant-set him out
in some favorable locality, or leave him where he
happened to strike root, and there let him grow and
mature in measure and quiet especially quiet as
he may in God’s sun and rain. If he happens
to be a cabbage, in Heaven’s name don’t
try to make a rose of him, and do not disturb the vegetable
maturing of his head by grafting ideas upon his stock.
The most serious difficulty in the
way of those who maintain that there is an intention
of progress in this world from century to century,
from age to age a discernible growth, a
universal development is the fact that
all nations do not make progress at the same time or
in the same ratio; that nations reach a certain development,
and then fall away and even retrograde; that while
one may be advancing into high civilization, another
is lapsing into deeper barbarism, and that nations
appear to have a limit of growth. If there were
a law of progress, an intention of it in all the world,
ought not all peoples and tribes to advance pari
passu, or at least ought there not to be discernible
a general movement, historical and contemporary?
There is no such general movement which can be computed,
the law of which can be discovered therefore
it does not exist. In a kind of despair, we are
apt to run over in our minds empires and pre-eminent
civilizations that have existed, and then to doubt
whether life in this world is intended to be anything
more than a series of experiments. There is the
German nation of our day, the most aggressive in various
fields of intellectual activity, a Hercules of scholarship,
the most thoroughly trained and powerful though
its civilization marches to the noise of the hateful
and barbarous drum. In what points is it better
than the Greek nation of the age of its superlative
artists, philosophers, poets the age of
the most joyous, elastic human souls in the most perfect
human bodies?
Again, it is perhaps a fanciful notion
that the Atlantis of Plato was the northern part of
the South American continent, projecting out towards
Africa, and that the Antilles are the peaks and headlands
of its sunken bulk. But there are evidences enough
that the shores of the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean
Sea were within historic periods the seat of a very
considerable civilization the seat of cities,
of commerce, of trade, of palaces and pleasure gardens faint
images, perhaps, of the luxurious civilization of
Baia! and Pozzuoli and Capri in the most profligate
period of the Roman empire. It is not more difficult
to believe that there was a great material development
here than to believe it of the African shore of the
Mediterranean. Not to multiply instances that
will occur to all, we see as many retrograde as advance
movements, and we see, also, that while one spot of
the earth at one time seems to be the chosen theatre
of progress, other portions of the globe are absolutely
dead and without the least leaven of advancing life,
and we cannot understand how this can be if there
is any such thing as an all-pervading and animating
intention or law of progress. And then we are
reminded that the individual human mind long ago attained
its height of power and capacity. It is enough
to recall the names of Moses, Buddha, Confucius, Socrates,
Paul, Homer, David.
No doubt it has seemed to other periods
and other nations, as it now does to the present civilized
races, that they were the chosen times and peoples
of an extraordinary and limitless development.
It must have seemed so to the Jews who overran Palestine
and set their shining cities on all the hills of heathendom.
It must have seemed so to the Babylonish conquerors
who swept over Palestine in turn, on their way to greater
conquests in Egypt. It must have seemed so to
Greece when the Acropolis was to the outlying world
what the imperial calla is to the marsh in which it
lifts its superb flower. It must have seemed so
to Rome when its solid roads of stone ran to all parts
of a tributary world the highways of the
legions, her ministers, and of the wealth that poured
into her treasury. It must have seemed so to
followers of Mahomet, when the crescent knew no pause
in its march up the Arabian peninsula to the Bosporus,
to India, along the Mediterranean shores to Spain,
where in the eighth century it flowered into a culture,
a learning, a refinement in art and manners, to which
the Christian world of that day was a stranger.
It must have seemed so in the awakening of the sixteenth
century, when Europe, Spain leading, began that great
movement of discovery and aggrandizement which has,
in the end, been profitable only to a portion of the
adventurers. And what shall we say of a nation
as old, if not older than any of these we have mentioned,
slowly building up meantime a civilization and perfecting
a system of government and a social economy which
should outlast them all, and remain to our day almost
the sole monument of permanence and stability in a
shifting world?
How many times has the face of Europe
been changed and parts of Africa, and Asia
Minor too, for that matter by conquests
and crusades, and the rise and fall of civilizations
as well as dynasties? while China has endured, almost
undisturbed, under a system of law, administration,
morality, as old as the Pyramids probably existed
a coherent nation, highly developed in certain essentials,
meeting and mastering, so far as we can see, the great
problem of an over-populated territory, living in a
good degree of peace and social order, of respect for
age and law, and making a continuous history, the
mere record of which is printed in a thousand bulky
volumes. Yet we speak of the Chinese empire as
an instance of arrested growth, for which there is
no salvation, except it shall catch the spirit of
progress abroad in the world. What is this progress,
and where does it come from?
Think for a moment of this significant
situation. For thousands of years, empires, systems
of society, systems of civilization Egyptian,
Jewish, Greek, Roman, Moslem, Feudal have
flourished and fallen, grown to a certain height and
passed away; great organized fabrics have gone down,
and, if there has been any progress, it has been as
often defeated as renewed. And here is an empire,
apart from this scene of alternate success and disaster,
which has existed in a certain continuity and stability,
and yet, now that it is uncovered and stands face to
face with the rest of the world, it finds that it
has little to teach us, and almost everything to learn
from us. The old empire sends its students to
learn of us, the newest child of civilization; and
through us they learn all the great past, its literature,
law, science, out of which we sprang. It appears,
then, that progress has, after all, been with the shifting
world, that has been all this time going to pieces,
rather than with the world that has been permanent
and unshaken.
When we speak of progress we may mean
two things. We may mean a lifting of the races
as a whole by reason of more power over the material
world, by reason of what we call the conquest of nature
and a practical use of its forces; or we may mean
a higher development of the individual man, so that
he shall be better and happier. If from age to
age it is discoverable that the earth is better adapted
to man as a dwelling-place, and he is on the whole
fitted to get more out of it for his own growth, is
not that progress, and is it not evidence of an intention
of progress?
Now, it is sometimes said that Providence,
in the economy of this world, cares nothing for the
individual, but works out its ideas and purposes through
the races, and in certain periods, slowly bringing
in, by great agencies and by processes destructive
to individuals and to millions of helpless human beings,
truths and principles; so laying stepping-stones onward
to a great consummation. I do not care to dwell
upon this thought, but let us see if we can find any
evidence in history of the presence in this world
of an intention of progress.
It is common to say that, if the world
makes progress at all, it is by its great men, and
when anything important for the race is to be done,
a great man is raised up to do it. Yet another
way to look at it is, that the doing of something
at the appointed time makes the man who does it great,
or at least celebrated. The man often appears
to be only a favored instrument of communication.
As we glance back we recognize the truth that, at
this and that period, the time had come for certain
discoveries. Intelligence seemed pressing in
from the invisible. Many minds were on the alert
to apprehend it. We believe, for instance, that
if Gutenberg had not invented movable types, somebody
else would have given them to the world about that
time. Ideas, at certain times, throng for admission
into the world; and we are all familiar with the fact
that the same important idea (never before revealed
in all the ages) occurs to separate and widely distinct
minds at about the same time. The invention of
the electric telegraph seemed to burst upon the world
simultaneously from many quarters not perfect,
perhaps, but the time for the idea had come and
happy was it for the man who entertained it. We
have agreed to call Columbus the discoverer of America,
but I suppose there is no doubt that America had been
visited by European, and probably Asiatic, people
ages before Columbus; that four or five centuries before
him people from northern Europe had settlements here;
he was fortunate, however, in “discovering”
it in the fullness of time, when the world, in its
progress, was ready for it. If the Greeks had
had gunpowder, electro-magnetism, the printing press,
history would need to be rewritten. Why the inquisitive
Greek mind did not find out these things is a mystery
upon any other theory than the one we are considering.
And it is as mysterious that China,
having gunpowder and the art of printing, is not today
like Germany.
There seems to me to be a progress,
or an intention of progress, in the world, independent
of individual men. Things get on by all sorts
of instruments, and sometimes by very poor ones.
There are times when new thoughts or applications
of known principles seem to throng from the invisible
for expression through human media, and there is hardly
ever an important invention set free in the world
that men do not appear to be ready cordially to receive
it. Often we should be justified in saying that
there was a widespread expectation of it. Almost
all the great inventions and the ingenious application
of principles have many claimants for the honor of
priority.
On any other theory than this, that
there is present in the world an intention of progress
which outlasts individuals, and even races, I cannot
account for the fact that, while civilizations decay
and pass away, and human systems go to pieces, ideas
remain and accumulate. We, the latest age, are
the inheritors of all the foregoing ages. I do
not believe that anything of importance has been lost
to the world. The Jewish civilization was torn
up root and branch, but whatever was valuable in the
Jewish polity is ours now. We may say the same
of the civilizations of Athens and of Rome; though
the entire organization of the ancient world, to use
Mr. Froude’s figure, collapsed into a heap of
incoherent sand, the ideas remained, and Greek art
and Roman law are part of the world’s solid
possessions.
Even those who question the value
to the individual of what we call progress, admit,
I suppose, the increase of knowledge in the world from
age to age, and not only its increase, but its diffusion.
The intelligent schoolboy today knows more than the
ancient sages knew more about the visible
heavens, more of the secrets of the earth, more of
the human body. The rudiments of his education,
the common experiences of his everyday life, were,
at the best, the guesses and speculations of a remote
age. There is certainly an accumulation of facts,
ideas, knowledge. Whether this makes men better,
wiser, happier, is indeed disputed.
In order to maintain the notion of
a general and intended progress, it is not necessary
to show that no preceding age has excelled ours in
some special, development. Phidias has had no
rival in sculpture, we may admit. It is possible
that glass was once made as flexible as leather, and
that copper could be hardened like steel. But
I do not take much stock in the “lost arts,”
the wondering theme of the lyceums. The knowledge
of the natural world, and of materials, was never,
I believe, so extensive and exact as it is today.
It is possible that there are tricks of chemistry,
ingenious processes, secrets of color, of which we
are ignorant; but I do not believe there was ever an
ancient alchemist who could not be taught something
in a modern laboratory. The vast engineering
works of the ancient Egyptians, the remains of their
temples and pyramids, excite our wonder; but I have
no doubt that President Grant, if he becomes the tyrant
they say he is becoming, and commands the labor of
forty millions of slaves a large proportion
of them office holders could
build a Karnak, or erect a string of pyramids across
New Jersey.
Mr. Froude runs lightly over a list
of subjects upon which the believer in progress relies
for his belief, and then says of them that the world
calls this progress he calls it only change.
I suppose he means by this two things: that these
great movements of our modern life are not any evidence
of a permanent advance, and that our whole structure
may tumble into a heap of incoherent sand, as systems
of society have done before; and, again, that it is
questionable if, in what we call a stride in civilization,
the individual citizen is becoming any purer or more
just, or if his intelligence is directed towards learning
and doing what is right, or only to the means of more
extended pleasures.
It is, perhaps, idle to speculate
upon the first of these points the permanence
of our advance, if it is an advance. But we may
be encouraged by one thing that distinguishes this
period say from the middle of the eighteenth
century from any that has preceded it.
I mean the introduction of machinery, applied to the
multiplication of man’s power in a hundred directions to
manufacturing, to locomotion, to the diffusion of
thought and of knowledge. I need not dwell upon
this familiar topic. Since this period began
there has been, so far as I know, no retrograde movement
anywhere, but, besides the material, an intellectual
and spiritual kindling the world over, for which history
has no sort of parallel. Truth is always the
same, and will make its way, but this subject might
be illustrated by a study of the relation of Christianity
and of the brotherhood of men to machinery. The
theme would demand an essay by itself. I leave
it with the one remark, that this great change now
being wrought in the world by the multiplicity of
machinery is not more a material than it is an intellectual
one, and that we have no instance in history of a
catastrophe widespread enough and adequate to sweep
away its results. That is to say, none of the
catastrophes, not even the corruptions, which
brought to ruin the ancient civilizations, would work
anything like the same disaster in an age which has
the use of machinery that this age has.
For instance: Gibbon selects
the period between the accession of Trajan and the
death of Marcus Aurelius as the time in which the human
race enjoyed more general happiness than they had
ever known before, or had since known. Yet, says
Mr. Froude, in the midst of this prosperity the heart
of the empire was dying out of it; luxury and selfishness
were eating away the principle that held society together,
and the ancient world was on the point of collapsing
into a heap of incoherent sand. Now, it is impossible
to conceive that the catastrophe which did happen to
that civilization could have happened if the world
had then possessed the steam-engine, the printing-press,
and the electric telegraph. The Roman power might
have gone down, and the face of the world been recast;
but such universal chaos and such a relapse for the
individual people would seem impossible.
If we turn from these general considerations
to the evidences that this is an “era of progress”
in the condition of individual men, we are met by
more specific denials. Granted, it is said, all
your facilities for travel and communication, for
cheap and easy manufacture, for the distribution of
cheap literature and news, your cheap education, better
homes, and all the comforts and luxuries of your machine
civilization, is the average man, the agriculturist,
the machinist, the laborer any better for it all?
Are there more purity, more honest, fair dealing, genuine
work, fear and honor of God? Are the proceeds
of labor more evenly distributed? These, it is
said, are the criteria of progress; all else is misleading.
Now, it is true that the ultimate
end of any system of government or civilization should
be the improvement of the individual man. And
yet this truth, as Mr. Froude puts it, is only a half-truth,
so that this single test of any system may not do
for a given time and a limited area. Other and
wider considerations come in. Disturbances, which
for a while unsettle society and do not bring good
results to individuals, may, nevertheless, be necessary,
and may be a sign of progress. Take the favorite
illustration of Mr. Froude and Mr. Ruskin the
condition of the agricultural laborer of England.
If I understand them, the civilization of the last
century has not helped his position as a man.
If I understand them, he was a better man, in a better
condition of earthly happiness, and with a better
chance of heaven, fifty years ago than now, before
the “era of progress” found him out. (It
ought to be noticed here, that the report of the Parliamentary
Commission on the condition of the English agricultural
laborer does not sustain Mr. Froude’s assumptions.
On the contrary, the report shows that his condition
is in almost all respects vastly better than it was
fifty years ago.) Mr. Ruskin would remove the steam-engine
and all its devilish works from his vicinity; he would
abolish factories, speedy travel by rail, new-fangled
instruments of agriculture, our patent education,
and remit him to his ancient condition tied
for life to a bit of ground, which should supply all
his simple wants; his wife should weave the clothes
for the family; his children should learn nothing
but the catechism and to speak the truth; he should
take his religion without question from the hearty,
fox-hunting parson, and live and die undisturbed by
ideas. Now, it seems to me that if Mr. Ruskin
could realize in some isolated nation this idea of
a pastoral, simple existence, under a paternal government,
he would have in time an ignorant, stupid, brutal
community in a great deal worse case than the agricultural
laborers of England are at present. Three-fourths
of the crime in the kingdom of Bavaria is committed
in the Ultramontane region of the Tyrol, where the
conditions of popular education are about those that
Mr. Ruskin seems to regret as swept away by the present
movement in England a stagnant state of
things, in which any wind of heaven would be a blessing,
even if it were a tornado. Education of the modern
sort unsettles the peasant, renders him unfit for labor,
and gives us a half-educated idler in place of a conscientious
workman. The disuse of the apprentice system
is not made good by the present system of education,
because no one learns a trade well, and the consequence
is poor work, and a sham civilization generally.
There is some truth in these complaints. But
the way out is not backward, but forward. The
fault is not with education, though it may be with
the kind of education. The education must go
forward; the man must not be half but wholly educated.
It is only half-knowledge like half-training in a trade
that is dangerous.
But what I wish to say is, that notwithstanding
certain unfavorable things in the condition of the
English laborer and mechanic, his chance is better
in the main than it was fifty years ago. The world
is a better world for him. He has the opportunity
to be more of a man. His world is wider, and
it is all open to him to go where he will. Mr.
Ruskin may not so easily find his ideal, contented
peasant, but the man himself begins to apprehend that
this is a world of ideas as well as of food and clothes,
and I think, if he were consulted, he would have no
desire to return to the condition of his ancestors.
In fact, the most hopeful symptom in the condition
of the English peasant is his discontent. For,
as skepticism is in one sense the handmaid of truth,
discontent is the mother of progress. The man
is comparatively of little use in the world who is
contented.
There is another thought pertinent
here. It is this: that no man, however humble,
can live a full life if he lives to himself alone.
He is more of a man, he lives in a higher plane of
thought and of enjoyment, the more his communications
are extended with his fellows and the wider his sympathies
are. I count it a great thing for the English
peasant, a solid addition to his life, that he is
every day being put into more intimate relations with
every other man on the globe.
I know it is said that these are only
vague and sentimental notions of progress notions
of a “salvation by machinery.” Let
us pass to something that may be less vague, even
if it be more sentimental. For a hundred years
we have reckoned it progress, that the people were
taking part in government. We have had a good
deal of faith in the proposition put forth at Philadelphia
a century ago, that men are, in effect, equal in political
rights. Out of this simple proposition springs
logically the extension of suffrage, and a universal
education, in order that this important function of
a government by the people may be exercised intelligently.
Now we are told by the most accomplished
English essayists that this is a mistake, that it
is change, but no progress. Indeed, there are
philosophers in America who think so. At least
I infer so from the fact that Mr. Froude fathers one
of his definitions of our condition upon an American.
When a block of printer’s type is by accident
broken up and disintegrated, it falls into what is
called “pi.” The “pi,”
a mere chaos, is afterwards sorted and distributed,
preparatory to being built up into fresh combinations.
“A distinguished American friend,” says
Mr. Froude, “describes Democracy as making pi.”
It is so witty a sarcasm that I almost think Mr. Froude
manufactured it himself. Well, we have been making
this “pi” for a hundred years; it seems
to be a national dish in considerable favor with the
rest of the world even such ancient nations
as China and Japan want a piece of it.
Now, of course, no form of human government
is perfect, or anything like it, but I should be willing
to submit the question to an English traveler even,
whether, on the whole, the people of the United States
do not have as fair a chance in life and feel as little
the oppression of government as any other in the world;
whether anywhere the burdens are more lifted off men’s
shoulders.
This infidelity to popular government
and unbelief in any good results to come from it are
not, unfortunately, confined to the English essayists.
I am not sure but the notion is growing in what is
called the intellectual class, that it is a mistake
to intrust the government to the ignorant many, and
that it can only be lodged safely in the hands of the
wise few. We hear the corruptions of the
times attributed to universal suffrage. Yet these
corruptions certainly are not peculiar to the
United States: It is also said here, as it is
in England, that our diffused and somewhat superficial
education is merely unfitting the mass of men, who
must be laborers, for any useful occupation.
This argument, reduced to plain terms,
is simply this: that the mass of mankind are
unfit to decide properly their own political and social
condition; and that for the mass of mankind any but
a very limited mental development is to be deprecated.
It would be enough to say of this, that class government
and popular ignorance have been tried for so many ages,
and always with disaster and failure in the end, that
I should think philanthropical historians would be
tired of recommending them. But there is more
to be said.
I feel that as a resident on earth,
part owner of it for a time, unavoidably a member
of society, I have a right to a voice in determining
what my condition and what my chance in life shall
be. I may be ignorant, I should be a very poor
ruler of other people, but I am better capable of
deciding some things that touch me nearly than another
is. By what logic can I say that I should have
a part in the conduct of this world and that my neighbor
should not? Who is to decide what degree of intelligence
shall fit a man for a share in the government?
How are we to select the few capable men that are
to rule all the rest? As a matter of fact, men
have been rulers who had neither the average intelligence
nor virtue of the people they governed. And,
as a matter of historical experience, a class in power
has always sought its own benefit rather than that
of the whole people. Lunacy, extraordinary stupidity,
and crime aside, a man is the best guardian of his
own liberty and rights.
The English critics, who say we have
taken the government from the capable few and given
it to the people, speak of universal suffrage as a
quack panacea of this “era of progress.”
But it is not the manufactured panacea of any theorist
or philosopher whatever. It is the natural result
of a diffused knowledge of human rights and of increasing
intelligence. It is nothing against it that Napoleon
iii. used a mockery of it to govern France.
It is not a device of the closet, but a method of
government, which has naturally suggested itself to
men as they have grown into a feeling of self-reliance
and a consciousness that they have some right in the
decision of their own destiny in the world. It
is true that suffrage peculiarly fits a people virtuous
and intelligent. But there has not yet been invented
any government in which a people would thrive who
were ignorant and vicious.
Our foreign critics seem to regard
our “American system,” by the way, as
a sort of invention or patent right, upon which we
are experimenting; forgetting that it is as legitimate
a growth out of our circumstances as the English system
is out of its antecedents. Our system is not the
product of theorists or closet philosophers; but it
was ordained in substance and inevitable from the
day the first “town meeting” assembled
in New England, and it was not in the power of Hamilton
or any one else to make it otherwise.
So you must have education, now you
have the ballot, say the critics of this era of progress;
and this is another of your cheap inventions.
Not that we undervalue book knowledge. Oh, no!
but it really seems to us that a good trade, with
the Lord’s Prayer and the Ten Commandments back
of it, would be the best thing for most of you.
You must work for a living anyway; and why, now, should
you unsettle your minds?
This is such an astounding view of
human life and destiny that I do not know what to
say to it. Did it occur to Mr. Froude to ask the
man whether he would be contented with a good trade
and the Ten Commandments? Perhaps the man would
like eleven commandments? And, if he gets hold
of the eleventh, he may want to know something more
about his fellow-men, a little geography maybe, and
some of Mr. Froude’s history, and thus he may
be led off into literature, and the Lord knows where.
The inference is that education book
fashion will unfit the man for useful work.
Mr. Froude here again stops at a half-truth. As
a general thing, intelligence is useful in any position
a man occupies. But it is true that there is
a superficial and misdirected sort of education, so
called, which makes the man who receives it despise
labor; and it is also true that in the present educational
revival there has been a neglect of training in the
direction of skilled labor, and we all suffer more
or less from cheap and dishonest work. But the
way out of this, again, is forward, and not backward.
It is a good sign, and not a stigma upon this era
of progress, that people desire education. But
this education must be of the whole man; he must be
taught to work as well as to read, and he is, indeed,
poorly educated if he is not fitted to do his work
in the world. We certainly shall not have better
workmen by having ignorant workmen. I need not
say that the real education is that which will best
fit a man for performing well his duties in life.
If Mr. Froude, instead of his plaint over the scarcity
of good mechanics, and of the Ten Commandments in
England, had recommended the establishment of industrial
schools, he would have spoken more to the purpose.
I should say that the fashionable
skepticism of today, here and in England, is in regard
to universal suffrage and the capacity of the people
to govern themselves. The whole system is the
sharp invention of Thomas Jefferson and others, by
which crafty demagogues can rule. Instead of
being, as we have patriotically supposed, a real progress
in human development, it is only a fetich, which is
becoming rapidly a failure. Now, there is a great
deal of truth in the assertion that, whatever the
form of government, the ablest men, or the strongest,
or the most cunning in the nation, will rule.
And yet it is true that in a popular government, like
this, the humblest citizen, if he is wronged or oppressed,
has in his hands a readier instrument of redress than
he has ever had in any form of government. And
it must not be forgotten that the ballot in the hands
of all is perhaps the only safeguard against the tyranny
of wealth in the hands of the few. It is true
that bad men can band together and be destructive;
but so they can in any government. Revolution
by ballot is much safer than revolution by violence;
and, granting that human nature is selfish, when the
whole people are the government selfishness is on
the side of the government. Can you mention any
class in this country whose interest it is to overturn
the government? And, then, as to the wisdom of
the popular decisions by the ballot in this country.
Look carefully at all the Presidential elections from
Washington’s down, and say, in the light of history,
if the popular decision has not, every time, been
the best for the country. It may not have seemed
so to some of us at the time, but I think it is true,
and a very significant fact.
Of course, in this affirmation of
belief that one hundred years of popular government
in this country is a real progress for humanity, and
not merely a change from the rule of the fit to the
rule of the cunning, we cannot forget that men are
pretty much everywhere the same, and that we have
abundant reason for national humility. We are
pretty well aware that ours is not an ideal state
of society, and should be so, even if the English
who pass by did not revile us, wagging their heads.
We might differ with them about the causes of our
disorders. Doubtless, extended suffrage has produced
certain results. It seems, strangely enough, to
have escaped the observation of our English friends
that to suffrage was due the late horse disease.
No one can discover any other cause for it. But
there is a cause for the various phenomena of this
period of shoddy, of inflated speculation, of disturbance
of all values, social, moral, political, and material,
quite sufficient in the light of history to account
for them. It is not suffrage; it is an irredeemable
paper currency. It has borne its usual fruit
with us, and neither foreign nor home critics can
shift the responsibility of it upon our system of
government. Yes, it is true, we have contrived
to fill the world with our scandals of late.
I might refer to a loose commercial and political
morality; to betrayals of popular trust in politics;
to corruptions in legislatures and in corporations;
to an abuse of power in the public press, which has
hardly yet got itself adjusted to its sudden accession
of enormous influence. We complain of its injustice
to individuals sometimes. We might imagine that
something like this would occur.
A newspaper one day says: “We
are exceedingly pained to hear that the Hon. Mr. Blank,
who is running for Congress in the First District,
has permitted his aged grandmother to go to the town
poorhouse. What renders this conduct inexplicable
is the fact that Mr. Blank is a man of large fortune.”
The next day the newspaper says:
“The Hon. Mr. Blank has not seen fit to deny
the damaging accusation in regard to the treatment
of his grandmother.”
The next day the newspaper says:
“Mr. Blank is still silent. He is probably
aware that he cannot afford to rest under this grave
charge.”
The next day the newspaper asks:
“Where’s Blank? Has he fled?”
At last, goaded by these remarks,
and most unfortunately for himself, Mr. Blank writes
to the newspaper and most indignantly denies the charge;
he never sent his grandmother to the poorhouse.
Thereupon the newspaper says:
“Of course a rich man who would put his own
grandmother in the poorhouse would deny it. Our
informant was a gentleman of character. Mr. Blank
rests the matter on his unsupported word. It is
a question of veracity.”
Or, perhaps, Mr. Blank, more unfortunately
for himself, begins by making an affidavit, wherein
he swears that he never sent his grandmother to the
poorhouse, and that, in point of fact, he has not any
grandmother whatever.
The newspaper then, in language that
is now classical, “goes for” Mr. Blank.
It says: “Mr. Blank resorts to the common
device of the rogue the affidavit.
If he had been conscious of rectitude, would he not
have relied upon his simple denial?”
Now, if an extreme case like this
could occur, it would be bad enough. But, in
our free society, the remedy would be at hand.
The constituents of Mr. Blank would elect him in triumph.
The newspaper would lose public confidence and support
and learn to use its position more justly. What
I mean to indicate by such an extreme instance as
this is, that in our very license of individual freedom
there is finally a correcting power.
We might pursue this general subject
of progress by a comparison of the society of this
country now with that of fifty years ago. I have
no doubt that in every essential this is better than
that, in manners, in morality, in charity and toleration,
in education and religion. I know the standard
of morality is higher. I know the churches are
purer. Not fifty years ago, in a New England
town, a distinguished doctor of divinity, the pastor
of a leading church, was part owner in a distillery.
He was a great light in his denomination, but he was
an extravagant liver, and, being unable to pay his
debts, he was arrested and put into jail, with the
liberty of the “limits.” In order
not to interrupt his ministerial work, the jail limits
were made to include his house and his church, so
that he could still go in and out before his people.
I do not think that could occur anywhere in the United
States today.
I will close these fragmentary suggestions
by saying that I, for one, should like to see this
country a century from now. Those who live then
will doubtless say of this period that it was crude,
and rather disorderly, and fermenting with a great
many new projects; but I have great faith that they
will also say that the present extending notion, that
the best government is for the people, by the people,
was in the line of sound progress. I should expect
to find faith in humanity greater and not less than
it is now, and I should not expect to find that Mr.
Froude’s mournful expectation had been realized,
and that the belief in a life beyond the grave had
been withdrawn.