In the city, as I now recall it (having
escaped), it seemed to be the instinctive purpose
of every citizen I knew not to get into politics but
to keep out. We sedulously avoided caucuses and
school-meetings, our time was far too precious to
be squandered in jury service, we forgot to register
for elections, we neglected to vote. We observed
a sort of aristocratic contempt for political activity
and then fretted and fumed over the low estate to
which our government had fallen and never
saw the humour of it all.
At one time I experienced a sort of
political awakening: a “boss” we
had was more than ordinarily piratical. I think
he had a scheme to steal the city hall and sell the
monuments in the park (something of that sort), and
I, for one, was disturbed. For a time I really
wanted to bear a man’s part in helping to correct
the abuses, only I did not know how and could not
find out.
In the city, when one would learn
anything about public matters, he turns, not to life,
but to books or newspapers. What we get in the
city is not life, but what someone else tells us about
life. So I acquired a really formidable row of
works on Political Economy and Government (I admire
the word “works” in that application) where
I found Society laid out for me in the most perfect
order with pennies on its eyes. How often, looking back, I see myself as
in those days, read my learned books with a sort of fury of interest!
From the reading of books I acquired
a sham comfort. Dwelling upon the excellent theory
of our institutions, I was content to disregard the
realities of daily practice. I acquired a mock
assurance under which I proceeded complacently to
the polls, and cast my vote without knowing a single
man on the ticket, what he stood for, or what he really
intended to do. The ceremony of the ballot bears
to politics much the relationship that the sacrament
bears to religion: how often, observing the formality,
we yet depart wholly from the spirit of the institution.
It was good to escape that place of
hurrying strangers. It was good to get one’s
feet down into the soil. It was good to be in
a place where things are because they grow,
and politics, not less than corn! Oh, my friend,
say what you please, argue how you like, this crowding
together of men and women in unnatural surroundings,
this haste to be rich in material things, this attempt
to enjoy without production, this removal from first-hand
life, is irrational, and the end of it is ruin.
If our cities were not recruited constantly with the
fresh, clean blood of the country, with boys who still
retain some of the power and the vision drawn from
the soil, where would they be!
“We’re a great people,”
says Charles Baxter, “but we don’t always
work at it.”
“But we talk about it,” says the Scotch
Preacher.
“By the way,” says Charles
Baxter, “have you seen George Warren? He’s
up for supervisor.”
“I haven’t yet.”
“Well, go around and see him.
We must find out exactly what he intends to do with
the Summit Hill road. If he is weak on that we’d
better look to Matt Devine. At least Matt is
safe.”
The Scotch Preacher looked at Charles
Baxter and said to me with a note of admiration in
his voice:
“Isn’t this man Baxter
getting to be intolerable as a political boss!”
Baxter’s shop! Baxter’s
shop stands close to the road and just in the edge
of a grassy old apple orchard. It is a low, unpainted
building, with generous double doors in front, standing
irresistibly open as you go by. Even as a stranger
coming here first from the city I felt the call of
Baxter’s shop. Shall I ever forget!
It was a still morning one of those days
of warm sunshine and perfect quiet in the
country and birds in the branches and
apple trees all in bloom. Baxter whistling at
his work in the sunlit doorway of his shop, in his
long, faded apron, much worn at the knees. He
was bending to the rhythmic movement of his plane,
and all around him as he worked rose billows of shavings.
And oh, the odours of that shop! the fragrant, resinous
odour of new-cut pine, the pungent smell of black
walnut, the dull odour of oak wood how they
stole out in the sunshine, waylaying you as you came
far up the road, beguiling you as you passed the shop,
and stealing reproachfully after you as you went onward
down the road.
Never shall I forget that grateful
moment when I first passed Baxter’s shop a
failure from the city and Baxter looking
out at me from his deep, quiet, gray eyes eyes
that were almost a caress!
My wayward feet soon took me, unintroduced,
within the doors of that shop, the first of many visits.
And I can say no more in appreciation of my ventures
there than that I came out always with more than I
had when I went in.
The wonders there! The long bench with its huge-jawed
wooden vises, and the little dusty windows above looking out into the orchard,
and the brown planes and the row of shiny saws, and the most wonderful pattern
squares and triangles and curves, each hanging on its own peg; and above, in the
rafters, every sort and size of curious wood. And oh! the old bureaus and
whatnots and high-boys in the corners waiting their turn to be mended; and the
sticky glue-pot waiting, too, on the end of the sawhorse. There is family
history here in this shop no end of it the small and yet great (because
intensely human) tragedies and humours of the long, quiet years among these
sunny hills. That whatnot there, the one of black walnut with the top
knocked off, that belonged in the old days to
“Charles Baxter,” calls
my friend Patterson from the roadway, “can you
fix my cupboard?”
“Bring it in,” says Charles
Baxter, hospitably, and Patterson brings it in, and
stops to talk and stops and stops There
is great talk in Baxter’s shop the
slow-gathered wisdom of the country, the lore of crops
and calves and cabinets. In Baxter’s shop
we choose the next President of these United States!
You laugh! But we do exactly
that. It is in the Baxters’ shops (not in
Broadway, not in State Street) where the presidents
are decided upon. In the little grocery stores
you and I know, in the blacksmithies, in the schoolhouses
back in the country!
Forgive me! I did not intend
to wander away. I meant to keep to my subject but
the moment I began to talk of politics in the country
I was beset by a compelling vision of Charles Baxter
coming out of his shop in the dusk of the evening,
carrying his curious old reflector lamp and leading
the way down the road to the schoolhouse. And
thinking of the lamp brought a vision of the joys
of Baxter’s shop, and thinking of the shop brought
me naturally around to politics and presidents; and
here I am again where I started!
Baxter’s lamp is, somehow, inextricably
associated in my mind with politics. Being busy
farmers, we hold our caucuses and other meetings in
the evening and usually in the schoolhouse. The
schoolhouse is conveniently near to Baxter’s
shop, so we gather at Baxter’s shop. Baxter
takes his lamp down from the bracket above his bench,
reflector and all, and you will see us, a row of dusky
figures, Baxter in the lead, proceeding down the roadway
to the schoolhouse. Having arrived, some one
scratches a match, shields it with his hand (I see
yet the sudden fitful illumination of the brown-bearded,
watchful faces of my neighbours!) and Baxter guides
us into the schoolhouse with its shut-in
dusty odours of chalk and varnished desks and yes,
leftover lunches!
Baxter’s lamp stands on the
table, casting a vast shadow of the chairman on the
wall.
“Come to order,” says
the chairman, and we have here at this moment in operation
the greatest institution in this round world:
the institution of free self-government. Great
in its simplicity, great in its unselfishness!
And Baxter’s old lamp with its smoky tin reflector,
is not that the veritable torch of our liberties?
This, I forgot to say, though it makes
no special difference a caucus would be
the same is a school meeting.
You see, ours is a prolific community.
When a young man and a young woman are married they
think about babies; they want babies, and what is
more, they have them! and love them afterward!
It is a part of the complete life. And having
babies, there must be a place to teach them to live.
Without more explanation you will
understand that we needed an addition to our schoolhouse.
A committee reported that the amount required would
be $800. We talked it over. The Scotch Preacher
was there with a plan which he tacked up on the blackboard
and explained to us. He told us of seeing the
stone-mason and the carpenter, he told us what the
seats would cost, and the door knobs and the hooks
in the closet. We are a careful people; we want
to know where every penny goes!
“If we put it all in the budget
this year what will that make the rate?” inquires
a voice from the end of the room.
We don’t look around; we know
the voice. And when the secretary has computed
the rate, if you listen closely you can almost hear
the buzz of multiplications and additions which is
going on in each man’s head as he calculates
exactly how much the addition will mean to him in taxes
on his farm, his daughter’s piano his wife’s
top-buggy.
And many a man is saying to himself:
“If we build this addition to
the schoolhouse, I shall have to give up the new overcoat
I have counted upon, or Amanda won’t be able
to get the new cooking-range.”
That’s real politics:
the voluntary surrender of some private good for the
upbuilding of some community good. It is in such
exercises that the fibre of democracy grows sound
and strong. There is, after all, in this world
no real good for which we do not have to surrender
something. In the city the average voter is never
conscious of any surrender. He never realises
that he is giving anything himself for good schools
or good streets. Under such conditions how can
you expect self-government? No service, no reward!
The first meeting that I sat through
watching those bronzed farmers at work gave me such
a conception of the true meaning of self-government
as I never hoped to have.
“This is the place where I belong,” I
said to myself.
It was wonderful in that school meeting
to see how every essential element of our government
was brought into play. Finance? We discussed
whether we should put the entire $800 into the next
year’s budget or divide it paying part in cash
and bonding the district for the remainder. The
question of credit, of interest, of the obligations
of this generation and the next, were all discussed.
At one time long ago I was amazed when I heard my
neighbours arguing in Baxter’s shop about the
issuance of certain bonds by the United States government:
how completely they understood it! I know now
where they got that understanding. Right in the
school meetings and town caucuses where they raise
money yearly for the expenses of our small government!
There is nothing like it in the city.
The progress of a people can best
be judged by those things which they accept as matters-of-fact.
It was amazing to me, coming from the city, and before
I understood, to see how ingrained had become some
of the principles which only a few years ago were
fiercely-mooted problems. It gave me a new pride
in my country, a new appreciation of the steps in
civilisation which we have already permanently gained.
Not a question have I ever heard in any school meeting
of the necessity of educating every American child at
any cost. Think of it! Think how far we have
come in that respect, in seventy yes, fifty years.
Universal education has become a settled axiom of
our life.
And there was another point so
common now that we do not appreciate the significance
of it. I refer to majority rule. In our school
meeting we were voting money out of men’s pockets money
that we all needed for private expenses and
yet the moment the minority, after full and honest
discussion, failed to maintain its contention in opposition
to the new building, it yielded with perfect good
humour and went on with the discussion of other questions.
When you come to think of it, in the light of history,
is not that a wonderful thing?
One of the chief property owners in
our neighbourhood is a rather crabbed old bachelor.
Having no children and heavy taxes to pay, he looks
with jaundiced eye on additions to schoolhouses.
He will object and growl and growl and object, and
yet pin him down as I have seen the Scotch Preacher
pin him more than once, he will admit that children
("of course,” he will say, “certainly,
of course”) must be educated.
“For the good of bachelors as
well as other people?” the Scotch Preacher will
press it home.
“Certainly, of course.”
And when the final issue comes, after
full discussion, after he has tried to lop off a few
yards of blackboard or order cheaper desks or dispense
with the clothes-closet, he votes for the addition
with the rest of us.
It is simply amazing to see how much
grows out of these discussions how much
of that social sympathy and understanding which is
the very tap-root of democracy. It’s cheaper
to put up a miserable shack of an addition. Why
not do it? So we discuss architecture blindly,
it is true; we don’t know the books on the subject but
we grope for the big true things, and by our own discussion
we educate ourselves to know why a good building is
better than a bad one. Heating and ventilation
in their relation to health, the use of “fad
studies” how I have heard those things
discussed!
How Dr. North, who has now left us
forever, shone in those meetings, and Charles Baxter
and the Scotch Preacher broad men, every
one how they have explained and argued,
with what patience have they brought into that small
schoolhouse, lighted by Charles Baxter’s lamp,
the grandest conceptions of human society not
in the big words of the books, but in the simple,
concrete language of our common life.
“Why teach physiology?”
What a talk Dr. North once gave us on that!
“Why pay a teacher $40 a month when one can
be had for $30?”
You should have heard the Scotch Preacher
answer that question! Many a one of us went away
with some of the education which we had come, somewhat
grudgingly, to buy for our children.
These are our political bosses:
these unknown patriots, who preach the invisible patriotism
which expresses itself not in flags and oratory, but
in the quiet daily surrender of private advantage to
the public good.
There is, after all, no such thing
as perfect equality; there must be leaders, flag-bearers,
bosses whatever you call them. Some
men have a genius for leading; others for following;
each is necessary and dependent upon the other.
In cities, that leadership is often perverted and
used to evil ends. Neither leaders nor followers
seem to understand. In its essence politics is
merely a mode of expressing human sympathy. In
the country many and many a leader like Baxter works
faithfully year in and year out, posting notices of
caucuses, school meetings and elections, opening cold
schoolhouses, talking to candidates, prodding selfish
voters and mostly without reward.
Occasionally they are elected to petty offices where
they do far more work than they are paid for (we have
our eyes on ’em); often they are rewarded by
the power and place which leadership gives them among
their neighbours, and sometimes and that
is Charles Baxter’s case they simply
like it! Baxter is of the social temperament:
it is the natural expression of his personality.
As for thinking of himself as a patriot, he would
never dream of it. Work with the hands, close
touch with the common life of the soil, has given
him much of the true wisdom of experience. He
knows us and we know him; he carries the banner, holds
it as high as he knows how, and we follow.
Whether there can be a real democracy
(as in a city) where there is not that elbow knowledge,
that close neighbourhood sympathy, that conscious
surrender of little personal goods for bigger public
ones, I don’t know.
We haven’t many foreigners in
our district, but all three were there on the night
we voted for the addition. They are Polish.
Each has a farm where the whole family works and
puts on a little more Americanism each year.
They’re good people. It is surprising how
much all these Poles, Italians, Germans and others,
are like us, how perfectly human they are, when we
know them personally! One Pole here, named Kausky,
I have come to know pretty well, and I declare I have
forgotten that he is a Pole. There’s
nothing like the rub of democracy! The reason
why we are so suspicious of the foreigners in our
cities is that they are crowded together in such vast,
unknown, undigested masses. We have swallowed
them too fast, and we suffer from a sort of national
dyspepsia.
Here in the country we promptly digest
our foreigners and they make as good Americans as
anybody.
“Catch a foreigner when he first
comes here,” says Charles Baxter, “and
he takes to our politics like a fish to water.”
The Scotch Preacher says they “gape
for education,” And when I see Kausky’s
six children going by in the morning to school, all
their round, sleepy, fat faces shining with soap,
I believe it! Baxter tells with humour how he
persuaded Kausky to vote for the addition to the schoolhouse.
It was a pretty stiff tax for the poor fellow to pay,
but Baxter “figgered children with him,”
as he said. With six to educate, Baxter showed
him that he was actually getting a good deal more than
he paid for!
Be it far from me to pretend that
we are always right or that we have arrived in our
country at the perfection of self-government.
I do not wish to imply that all of our people are
interested, that all attend the caucuses and school-meetings
(some of the most prominent never come near they
stay away, and if things don’t go right they
blame Charles Baxter!) Nor must I over-emphasise the
seriousness of our public interest. But we certainly
have here, if anywhere in this nation, real self-government.
Growth is a slow process. We often fail in our
election of delegates to State conventions; we sometimes
vote wrong in national affairs. It is an easy
thing to think school district; difficult, indeed,
to think State or nation. But we grow. When
we make mistakes, it is not because we are evil, but
because we don’t know. Once we get a clear
understanding of the right or wrong of any question
you can depend upon us absolutely to
vote for what is right. With more education we
shall be able to think in larger and larger circles until
we become, finally, really national in our interests
and sympathies. Whenever a man comes along who
knows how simple we are, and how much we really want
to do right, if we can be convinced that a thing is
right who explains how the railroad question,
for example, affects us in our intimate daily lives,
what the rights and wrongs of it are, why, we can understand
and do understand and we are ready to act.
It is easy to rally to a flag in times
of excitement. The patriotism of drums and marching
regiments is cheap; blood is material and cheap; physical
weariness and hunger are cheap. But the struggle
I speak of is not cheap. It is dramatised by
few symbols. It deals with hidden spiritual qualities
within the conscience of men. Its heroes are yet
unsung and unhonoured. No combats in all the world’s
history were ever fought so high upward in the spiritual
air as these; and, surely, not for nothing!
And so, out of my experience both
in city and country, I feel yes, I know that
the real motive power of this democracy lies back in
the little country neighbourhoods like ours where
men gather in dim schoolhouses and practice the invisible
patriotism of surrender and service.