Se.
The first-the chief aspect
of social life in relation to which the Socialist
finds the world now planless and drifting, and for
which he earnestly propounds the scheme of a better
order, is that whole side of existence which is turned
towards children, their begetting and upbringing,
their care and education. Perpetually the world
begins anew, perpetually death wipes out failure,
disease, unteachableness and all that has served life
and accomplished itself; and to many Socialists, if
not to all, this is the supreme fact in the social
scheme. The whole measure of progress in a generation
is the measure in which the children improve in physical
and mental quality, in social co-ordination, in opportunity,
upon their parents. Nothing else matters in the
way of success if in that way the Good Will fails.
Let us now consider how such matters
stand in our world at the present time, and let us
examine them in the light of the Socialist spirit.
I have already quoted certain facts from the London
Education Committee’s Report, by which you have
seen that by taking a school haphazard-dipping
a ladle, as it were, into the welter of the London
population-we find more than eighty in the
hundred of the London children insufficiently clad,
more than half unwholesomely dirty-eleven
per cent. verminous-and more than half the
infants infested with vermin! The nutrition of
these children is equally bad. The same report
shows clearly that differences in clothing and cleanliness
are paralleled with differences in nutrition that are
equally striking.
“The 30 boys of the lowest class
showed considerable failure to reach the average
weight for their age of the school; the average
shortage per boy for his age being as much as .7 kilogram.
The effect upon weight was more striking than upon
height, as the average failure in height was one
centimetre. The 141 boys of the next class
worked out at exactly the average. The 49
well-clad boys showed an average excess per age-weight
of .54 kilogram and age-height of 1.8 centimetres.”
And who can doubt the amount of mental
and moral dwarfing that is going on side by side with
this physical shortage?
Now, it may be argued that this is
not a fair sample of our general population, that
these facts have been culled from a special section
of the population, that here we are dealing with the
congestion of London slums and altogether exceptional
conditions. This is not so. The school examined
was not from a specially bad district. And it
happens that the entire working-class population of
one typical English town, York, has been exhaustively
studied by Mr. B. S. Rowntree, and here are some facts
from his result that quite confirm the impression
given by the London figures.
“It was quite impossible to make
a thorough examination of the physical condition
of all the children, but as they came up to be
weighed and measured, they were classified under the
four headings, ‘Very Good,’ ‘Good,’
‘Fair,’ or ‘Bad,’ by an investigator
whose training and previous experience in similar
work enabled her to make a reliable, even if rough,
classification....
“‘Bad’ implies
that the child bore physical traces of
underfeeding and neglect.
“It will be seen that the proportion
of children classed as ‘very good’
in Section 3 is about ten times as large as in the
poorest section, and that more than half of
the children in the poorest section are classed
as ’bad.’ed
as ’bad.’
“These ‘bad’ children
presented a pathetic spectacle, all bore some
mark of the hard conditions against which they were
struggling. Puny and feeble bodies, dirty
and often sadly insufficient clothing, sore eyes,
in many cases acutely inflamed through continued
want of attention, filthy heads, cases of hip
disease, swollen glands-all these and other
signs told the same tale of privation and neglect.
It will be noticed that the condition of the children
in Section 2 (middle-class labour) comes about
half-way between Sections 1 and 3. In considering
the above table it must of course be remembered
that there was no absolute standard by which each
child could be judged, but the broad comparison
between the different classes is unimpeachable.
The table affords further evidence of serious
physical deterioration amongst the poorest section
of the community.”
And if York and London will not satisfy,
let the reader take Edinburgh, whose Charity Organization
Society has produced an admirable but infinitely distressing
report of the physical conditions of the school children
there. It gives a summary account of the homes
of fourteen hundred children in one of the Edinburgh
Elementary Schools, selected because it represented
a fair mixture of prosperous and unprosperous people.
I take the first ten entries of this list just as
they come, representing thirty-eight children, and
they are a fair sample of the whole list. No
amount of writing could make these little thumbnail
sketches of the reality of domestic life among our
population to-day more impressive than they are, thus
barrenly given.
“1. A bad home. Woman
twice married; second husband deserted her six
or seven years ago and she now keeps a bad house in
which much drinking and rioting goes on. Daughter
on stage sends 10/- a week, son is out of work.
A son is in an institution. All as filthy
as is the house. The food is irregular.
Two children have had free dinners from school this
and last winter, clothes were also given for one
each time. The boy attends regularly.
The woman is a hard drinker, and gets money in
undesirable ways. The eldest child has glands,
neck; hair not good but clean; fleabitten.
The second child, adenoids and tonsils. Housing:
five in one room. Evidence from Police, School
Charity, Headmistress, School Officers and Doctors.
“2. The drinking capacity
of this family cannot be too much emphasized.
The parents can’t agree, and live apart, the
man allowing 7/6 a week when girl is with mother,
and 5/- when she comes to him. She is verminous
and very badly kept. Mother can’t get
charing, as she lives in so bad a neighbourhood, so
means to move; at present she keeps other women’s
babies at 6_d._ a day each. Elder boy out
of work, a tidy lad, reads in Free Library.
One child has died. Housing: three in one
room. House not so very untidy. Evidence
from Police, Church and Officer.
“3. A miserable family and
in very wretched circumstances. Father deserts
home at intervals, but last time seemed ’sent
back by providence,’ as the works in the
town he was in were burnt down. Children
starving in his absence; one had pneumonia, and
died since of the effects. The eldest child has
adenoids; the second, urticaria; lice, bad; clothes
full of pediculi. Housing: six in two
rooms. Mother hard-working, does her best,
but has chronic bronchitis; does not keep house over
tidy. The two elder boys are very idle, tiresome
fellows, and worry the father a great deal.
They improved and found work during the year following
the visit, in which time the father got into decent
work in the City. The S. P. C. C. branch had
to interfere on behalf of small children.
Three dead since marriage, when parents were at
ages 23 and 20. Food good when there is any.
School gave free dinners and clothes to two.
Evidence from Police, S. P. C. C. branch, School
Charity, Parish Sister, Employer, Headmistress,
School Officer and Doctors.
“4. The father a complete
wreck through intemperate and fast living; speculation
first brought him down. Was later moved to hospital,
where he died. Had worked on railway a little
time. Mother hard-working, works out, home
untidy owing to her being out so much. She
pays rent regularly, and does her best. An elder
boy groom, fed and clad by his master, sends home what
he can. Eldest boy does odd jobs, but seems
a wastrel. Parish gave 7/6 after father ill,
and feeds four children now. Winter of visit
school dined five free daily, and clothed three, and
previous winter three had free dinners and two
had clothes. A school-boy earns. The
twins are delicate. There are two lodgers.
The eldest child very dirty; the second, glands; the
third, knock-kneed, pigeon chest; very feeble,
enlarged radices. Three children have died.
Housing: nine in three rooms. Evidence
from Police, Poor Law Officer, Parish Sister, School
Charity, Army Charity, Children’s Employment,
School Officer, Factor, Pawnbroker and Doctors.
“5. The mother, a nice, clean,
tidy woman, doing pretty well by the children.
They kept a little shop for a time, and she used
to do a day’s charing now and then, but has too
many babies now. Parents married at 21 and
18 respectively; two children dead and another
expected. He reads papers a good deal, gets
them out of trains. This is his first spell of
regular work. Two boys sell papers, and a
Mission gives cheap meal. Food none too plentiful.
One child gets free dinners. The eldest child
has glands; impetigo; thin and badly nourished.
The second, glands, hair lice and nits bad. The
third, boils on neck, glands, thin. The fourth,
glands. Housing: eight in two rooms.
They are in two thrift societies. Evidence
from School-master, Police, Parish Sister, Club, Army
Charity, Charity School, Pawnbroker and Doctors.
“6. Father works in a shop
in daytime, and in a public-house at night.
Rather soft; but wife industrious and energetic and
does her best. Children well fed and regular
at school. Two children have enlarged tonsils.
They get no help, and belong to two thrift societies.
One of six children dead in ten years of married
life. Housing: seven in two rooms. Evidence
from Police, Doctors, Society, Church, Mission,
Club, Headmistress, Charity School and Pawnbrokers.
“7. A family where parents
are much given to drink; father invalided and
being helped by a Sick Society, 3/- a week, and Parish
5/- a week. Housing: five in two rooms.
They are in a burying club. Children fleabitten.
Two have died. Food is rather scanty.
Wife very quarrelsome and drunken. The
boys play truant often. Two were given free
food and clothes two winters ago, and this winter
one has free dinners and clothes given. A
Mission has given cheap clothes. Evidence from
School-master, Police, Poor Law Officer, C.O.S.
branch, Church, School Charity, Sick Society,
Children’s Employment, Factor, School Officer,
Charity School, Pawnbroker and Doctors.
“8. Fairly decent family;
mother washes out, and man has very early work.
He drinks, and his employment is somewhat irregular.
A son in the country on a farm, and two dead.
They were married at 21 and 18. The food
is erratic, the children getting ‘pieces’
at dinner-time, or free school dinners; or when
mother comes home, soup with her. The children
are rather neglected, and the police give the
parents an indifferent character. The eldest
child has Eustacian catarrh and nasopharyngitis;
glands. The second, enlarged uvula. Housing:
four in two very small rooms. Evidence from
School-master, Police, Parish Sister, Church,
Factor and Doctors.
“9. Father an old soldier
without a pension, who reads novels. All
the small children were found eating a large meal of
ham and eggs and strong tea after 8 p.m., he in
bed at the time. They have lapsed from thrift
society membership. They are extremely filthy
and the man drinks. A Mission sells them meal
cheap. Wife 18 at marriage and one child died.
They feed pretty largely but unhealthily, and
eat ‘pieces’ at lunch-time. At
time of visit, though very dirty, they were tidier
than ever found before. The eldest child has chronic
suppuration and large perforation of ear.
Housing: five in two rooms. Evidence
from Police, Parish Sister, Factor, Soldiers’
Society, Charity School and Doctors.
“10. The man a carter, who
drank to a certain extent, and died some months
after visit, when a Charity gave her help. She
had an illegitimate child and two others.
He was careless, and both neglected church-going.
No medical evidence. Housing: five in
two rooms. Evidence from Police, two Churches,
Parish Sister, Employer and Charity School.”
Se.
Now to the Socialist, as to any one
who has caught any tinge of the modern scientific
spirit, these facts present themselves simply as an
atrocious failure of statesmanship. Indeed, a
social system in which the mass of the population
is growing up under these conditions, he scarcely
recognizes as a State, rather it seems to him a mere
preliminary higgledy-piggledy aggregation of human
beings, out of which a State has to be made.
It seems to him that this wretched confusion of affairs
which repeats itself throughout the country wherever
population has gathered, must be due to more than individual
inadequacy; it must be due to some general and essential
failure, some unsoundness in the broad principles
upon which the whole organization is conducted.
What is this general principle of
failure beneath all these particular cases?
In any given instance this or that
reason for the failure of a child may be given.
In one case it may be the father or mother drinks,
in another that the child is an orphan, neglected
by aunt or stepmother, in another that the mother
is an invalid or a sweated worker too overwrought
to do much for him, or, though a good-hearted soul,
she is careless and dirty or ignorant, or that she
is immoral and reckless, and so on and so on.
Our haphazard sample of ten Scotch cases gives instances
of nearly all these alternatives. And from these
proximate causes one might work back to more general
ones, to the necessity of controlling the drink traffic,
of abolishing sweating, of shortening women’s
hours of labour, of suppressing vice. But for
the present argument it is not necessary to follow
up these special causes. We can make a wider
generalization. For our present analysis it is
sufficient to say that one more general maladjustment
covers every case of neglected or ill-brought-up children
in the world, and that is this, that with or without
a decent excuse, the parent has not been equal to
the task of rearing a civilized citizen. We have
demanded too much from the parent, materially and
morally, and the ten cases we have quoted are just
ten out of ten millions of the replies to that demand.
Of fifty-two children born, fourteen are dead; and
of the remainder we can hardly regard more than thirteen
as being tolerably reared.
Is it not obvious then that, unless
we are content that things should remain as they are,
we must put the relations of parent to child on some
securer and more wholesome footing than they are at
the present time? We demand too much from the
parent, and this being recognized, clearly there are
only two courses open to us. The first is to relieve
the parents by lowering the standard of our demand;
the second is to relieve them by supplementing their
efforts.
The first course, the Socialist holds,
is not only cruel and unjust to the innocent child,
but an entirely barbaric and retrogressive thing to
do. It is a frank abandonment of all ideas of
progress and world betterment. He puts it aside,
therefore, and turns to the alternative. In doing
that he comes at once into harmony with all the developmental
tendencies of the last hundred years. For a hundred
years there has been going on a process of supplementing
and controlling parental effort.
A hundred years or so ago, the parent
was the supreme authority in a child’s destiny-short
only of direct murder. Parents were held responsible
for their children’s rearing to God alone; should
they fail, individual good-hearted people might, if
they thought proper, step in, give food, give help-provided
the parents consented, that is, but it was not admitted
that the community as a whole was concerned in the
matter. Parents (and guardians in the absence
of parents) were allowed to starve their children,
leave them naked, prey upon their children by making
them work in factories or as chimney-sweeps and the
like; the law was silent, the State acquiesced.
Good-hearted parents, on the other hand, who were unsuccessful
in the world’s affairs, had the torment of seeing
their children go short of food and garments, grow
up ignorant and feeble, their only hope of help the
chancy kindliness of their more prosperous neighbours
and the ill-organized charities left by the benevolent
dead.
Through all the nineteenth century
the irresistible logic of necessity has been forcing
people out of the belief in that state of affairs,
has been making them see the impossibility of leaving
things so absolutely to parental discretion and conscience,
has been forcing them towards a constructive and organizing,
that is to say towards a Socialist attitude.
Essentially the Socialist attitude is this, an insistence
that parentage can no longer be regarded as an isolated
private matter; that the welfare of the children is
of universal importance, and must, therefore, be finally
a matter of collective concern. The State, which
a hundred years ago was utterly careless of children,
is now every year becoming more and more their Guardian,
their Over-Parent.
To-day the power of the parents is
limited in ways that would have seemed incredible
a hundred years ago. In the first place they must
no longer unrestrictedly use their very young children
to earn money for them in toil and suffering.
A great mass of labour legislation forbids them.
In the next place their right to inflict punishment
or to hurt wantonly has been limited in many ways.
The private enterprises of charitable organizations
for the prevention of cruelty and neglect has led
to a growing system of law in this direction also.
Nor may a parent now prevent a child getting some
rudiments of an education.
Between the parent and Heaven now,
in addition to the more or less legalized voluntary
interference of well-disposed private people, there
do appear certain rare functionaries who-while
they interfere not at all between good and competent
parents and their children, do, in certain instances,
save a parental default from its complete fruition.
There are the school attendance officer and the sanitary
inspector. Then there are-in the London
County Council area-the “Ringworm”
nurses, who examine the children systematically and
by means of certain white and red cards of remonstrance
and warning intimidate the parent into good behaviour
or pave the way for a prosecution. Everywhere
there is the factory inspector-and in certain
cases the police. All these functionaries and
“accessory consciences” have been thrust
in between the supremacy of the parent and the child
within the century.
So much the Socialist regards as all
to the good, as all in the direction of that great
constructive plan of organized human welfare at which
he aims. And they all amount to a destruction,
so much with this and so much with that, of the independence
of the family, an invasion of the old moral isolation
of parent and child.
But while a number of people (who
haven’t read the Edinburgh Charity Organization
Society’s Report) are content to regard these
interventions as “going far enough,” the
Socialist considers these things as only the beginning
of the organization of the welfare of the nation’s
children. You will notice that all these laws
and regulations at which we have glanced are in the
nature of prohibitions or compulsions; few have any
element of aid. By virtue of them we have diminished
the power of the inferior sort of parents to do evil
by their child, but we have done little or nothing
to increase and stimulate their powers to do good.
We may prevent them doing some sorts of evil things
to the child; they may not give it poisonous things,
or let it live in morally or physically contagious
places, but we do not insure that they shall give
it wholesome things-better than they had
themselves. We must, if our work is ever to reach
effectual fruition, go on to the logical completion
of that process of supplementing the parent that the
nineteenth century began.
Consider, for instance, the circumstances
of parentage among the large section of the working
classes whose girls and women engage in factory labour.
In many cases the earnings of the woman are vitally
necessary to the solvency of the family budget, the
father’s wages do not nearly cover the common
expenditure. In some cases the women are unmarried,
or the man is an invalid or out of work. Consider
such a woman on the verge of motherhood. Either
she must work in a factory right up to the birth of
her child-and so damage its health through
her strain and fatigue, or she must give up her
work, lose money and go short of food and necessities
and so damage the coming citizen. Moreover,
after the child is born, either she must feed it artificially
and return to work (and prosperity) soon, with a very
great risk indeed that the child will die, or she
must stay at home to nourish and tend it-until
her landlord sells her furniture and turns her out!
Now it does not need that you should
be a Socialist to see how cruel and ridiculous it
is to have mothers in such a dilemma. But while
people who are not Socialists have no remedy to suggest,
or only immediate and partial remedies, such, for
example, as the forbidding of factory work to women
who are about to be or have recently been mothers-an
expedient which is bound to produce a plentiful crop
of “concealment of birth” and infanticide
convictions-the Socialist does proffer
a general principle to guide the community in dealing
not only with this particular hardship, but with all
the kindred hardships which form a system with it.
He declares that we are here in the presence of an
unsound and harmful way of regarding parentage; that
we treat it as a private affair, that we are
still disposed to assume that people’s children
are almost as much their private concern as their
cats, and as little entitled to public protection and
assistance. The right view, he maintains, is altogether
opposed to this; parentage is a public service and
a public duty; a good mother is the most precious
type of common individual a community can have, and
to let a woman on the one hand earn a living as we
do, by sewing tennis-balls or making cardboard boxes
or calico, and on the other, not simply not to pay
her, but to impoverish her because she bears and makes
sacrifices to rear children, is the most irrational
aspect of all the evolved and chancy ideas and institutions
that make up the modern State. It is as if we
believed our civilization existed to make cheap cotton
and tennis-balls instead of fine human lives.
The Socialist takes all that the nineteenth
century has done in remedial legislation as a mere
earnest of all that it has still to do. He works
for a consistent application of the principle that
England, for example, tacitly admitted when she opened
her public elementary schools and compelled the children
to come in; the principle that the Community as a
whole is the general Over-Parent of all its children;
that the parents must be made answerable to the community
for the welfare of their children, for their clear
minds and clean bodies, their eyesight and weight
and training; and that, on the other hand, the parents
who do their duty well are as much entitled to collective
provision for their needs and economic security as
a soldier, a judge or any other sort of public servant.
Se.
Now do not imagine the case for the
State being regarded as the Over-Parent, and for the
financial support of parents is based simply upon
the consideration of neglected, underfed, undereducated
and poverty-blighted children. No doubt in every
one of the great civilized countries of the world
at the present time such children are to be counted
by the hundred thousand-by the million;
but there is a much stronger case to be stated in
regard to that possibly greater multitude of parents
who are not in default, those common people, the mass
of our huge populations, the wives of the moderately
skilled workers or the reasonably comfortable employees,
of the middling sort of people, the two, three and
four hundred pounds a year families who toil and deny
themselves for love of their children, and do contrive
to rear them cleanly, passably well grown, decent minded,
taught and intelligent to serve the future. Consider
the enormous unfairness with which we treat them,
the way in which the modern State, such as it is,
trades upon their instincts, their affections, their
sense of duty and self-respect, to get from them for
nothing the greatest social service in the world.
For while the least fortunate sort
of children have at any rate the protection of the
police and school inspectors, and the baser sort of
parent has all sorts of public and quasi-public helps
and doles, the families that make the middle mass
of our population are still in the position of the
families of a hundred years ago, and have no help
under heaven against the world. It matters not
how well the home of the skilled artisan’s wife
or the small business man’s wife has been managed-she
may have educated her children marvellously, they may
be clean, strong, courteous, intelligent-if
the husband gets out of work or suffers from business
ill-luck or trade depression, or chances to be killed
uninsured, down they all go to want. Such insurance
as they are able to make, and it needs a tremendously
heavy premium to secure an insurance that will not
mean a heavy fall of income with the bread-winner’s
death-must needs be in a private insurance
office, and there is no effectual guarantee for either
honesty or solvency in that. In most of the petty
insurance business the thrifty poor are enormously
overcharged and overreached. Rumour has been busy,
and I fear only too justly, with the financial outlook
of some of the Friendly Societies upon which the scanty
security of so many working-class families depends.
Such investments as the lower and middle-class father
makes of surplus profits and savings must be made
in ignorance of the manoeuvres of the big and often
quite ruthless financiers who control the world of
prices. If he builds or trades, he does so as
a small investor, at the highest cost and lowest profit.
Half the big businesses in the world have been made
out of the lost savings of the small investor; a point
to which I shall return later. People talk as
though Socialism proposed to rob the thrifty industrious
man of his savings. He could not be more systematically
robbed of his savings than he is at the present time.
Nowhere beyond the limit of the Post Office Savings’
Bank is there security-not even in the
gilt-edged respectability of Consols, which in the
last ten years have fallen from 114 to under 82.
Consider the adventure of the thrifty well-meaning
citizen who used his savings-bank hoard to buy Consols
at the former price, and now finds himself the poorer
for not having buried his savings in his garden.
The middling sort of man saves for the sake of wife
and child; our State not only fails to protect him
from the adventures of the manipulating financier,
but it deliberately avoids competition with banker,
insurance agent and promoter. In no way can the
middle-class or artisan parent escape the financier’s
power and get real security for his home or his children’s
upbringing.
Not only is every parent of any but
the richest classes worried and discouraged by the
universal insecurity of outlook in this private adventure
world, but at every turn his efforts to do his best
for his children are discouraged. If he has no
children, he will have all his income to spend on
his own pleasures; he need only live in a little house,
he pays nothing for school, less for doctor, less for
all the needs of life, and he is taxed less; his income
tax is the same, no bigger; his rent, his rates, his
household bills are all less....
The State will not even help him to
a tolerable home, to wholesome food, to needed fuel
for the new citizens he is training for it. The
State now-a-days in its slow awakening does show a
certain concern in the housing of the lowest classes,
a concern alike stimulated and supplemented by such
fine charities as Peabody’s for example, but
no one stands between the two-hundred-a-year man and
his landlord in the pitiless struggle to get.
For every need of his children whom he toils to make
into good men and women, he must pay a toll of owner’s
profits, he must trust to the anything but intelligent
greed of private enterprise.
The State will not even insist that
a sufficiency of comfortable, sanitary homes shall
be built for his class; if he wants the elementary
convenience of a bathroom, he must pay extra toll to
the water shareholder; his gas is as cheap in quality
and dear in price as it can be; his bread and milk,
under the laws of supply and demand, are at the legal
minimum of wholesomeness; the coal trade cheerfully
raises his coal in mid-winter to ruinous prices.
He buys clothes of shoddy and boots of brown paper.
To get any other is nearly impossible for a man with
three hundred pounds a year. His newspapers, which
are supported by advertisers and financiers, in order
to hide the obvious injustice of this one-man-fight
against the allied forces of property, din in his
ears that his one grievance is local taxation, his
one remedy “to keep down the rates”-the
“rates” which do at least repair his roadway,
police his streets, give him open spaces for his babies
and help to educate his children, and which, moreover,
constitute a burthen he might by a little intelligent
political action shift quite easily from his own shoulders
to the broad support of capital and land.
If the children of the decent skilled
artisan and middle-class suffer less obviously than
the poorer sort of children, assuredly the parents
in wearing anxiety, in toil and limitation and disappointment,
suffer more. And in less intense and dramatic,
but perhaps even more melancholy ways, the children
of this class do suffer. They do not die so abundantly
in infancy, but they grow up, too many of them, to
shabby and limited lives; in Britain they are still,
as a class, extraordinarily ill educated-many
of them still go to incompetent, understaffed and
ill-equipped private adventure schools-they
are sent into business prematurely, often at fourteen
or fifteen, they become mechanical “respectable”
drudges in processes they do not understand.
They may escape want and squalor for a while, perhaps,
but they cannot escape narrowness and limitation and
a cramped and anxious life. If they get to anything
better than that, it is chiefly through almost heroic
parental effort and sacrifice.
The plain fact is that the better
middle-class parents serve the State in this matter
of child-rearing, the less is their reward, the less
is their security, the greater their toil and anxiety.
Is it any wonder then that throughout this more comfortable
but more refined and exacting class, the skilled artisan
and middle-class, there goes on something even more
disastrous, from the point of view of the State, than
the squalor, despair and neglect of the lower levels,
and that is a very evident strike against parentage?
While the very poor continue to have many children
who die or grow up undersized, crippled or half-civilized,
the middle mass, which can contrive with a struggle
and sacrifice to rear fairly well-grown and well-equipped
offspring, which has a conscience for the well-being
and happiness of the young, manifests a diminishing
spirit for parentage, its families fall to four, to
three, to two-and in an increasing number
of instances there are no children at all.
With regard to the struggling middle-class
and skilled artisan class parent, even more than to
the lower poor, does the Socialist insist upon the
plain need, if only that our State and nation should
continue, of endowment and help. He deems it not
simply unreasonable but ridiculous that in a world
of limitless resources, of vast expenditure, of unparalleled
luxury, in which two-million-pound battleships and
multi-millionaires are common objects, the supremely
important business of rearing the bulk of the next
generation of the middling sort of people should be
left almost entirely to the unaided, unguided efforts
of impoverished and struggling women and men.
It seems to him almost beyond sanity to suppose that
so things must or can continue.
Se.
And what I have said of the middle-class
parent is true with certain modifications of all the
classes above it, except that in a monarchy you reach
at last one State-subsidized family-in the
case of Britain a very healthy and active group, the
Royal family-which is not only State supported,
but also beyond the requirements of any modern Socialist,
State bred. There are enormous handicaps at every
other social level upon efficient parentage, and upon
the training of children for any public and generous
end. Parentage is treated as a private foible,
and those who undertake its solemn responsibilities
are put at every sort of disadvantage against those
who lead sterile lives, who give all their strength
and resources to vanity and socially harmful personal
indulgence. These latter, with an ampler leisure
and ampler means, determine the forms of pleasure and
social usage, they “set the fashion” and
bar pride, distinction or relaxation to the devoted
parent. The typical British aristocrat is not
parent bred, but class bred, a person with a lively
sense of social influences and no social ideas.
The one class that is economically capable of making
all that can be made of its children is demoralized
by the very irresponsibility of the wealth that creates
this opportunity. This is still more apparent
in the American plutocracy, where perhaps half the
women appear to be artificially sterilized spenders
of money upon frivolous things.
No doubt there is in the richer strata
of the community a certain proportion of families
with a real tradition of upbringing and service; such
English families as the Cecils, Balfours and Trevelyans,
for example, produce, generation after generation,
public-spirited and highly competent men. But
the family tradition in these cases is an excess of
virtue rather than any necessary consequence of a social
advantage; it is a defiance rather than a necessity
of our economic system. It is natural that such
men as Lord Hugh and Lord Robert Cecil, highly trained,
highly capable, but without that gift of sympathetic
imagination which releases a man from the subtle mental
habituations of his upbringing, should idealize
every family in the world to the likeness of their
own-and find the Socialist’s Over-Parent
of the State not simply a needless but a mischievous
and wicked innovation. They think-they
will, I fear, continue to think-of England
as a world of happy Hatfields, cottage Hatfields,
villa Hatfields, Hatfields over the shop, and Hatfields
behind the farmyard-wickedly and wantonly
assailed and interfered with by a band of weirdly
discontented men. It is a dream that the reader
must not share. Even in the case of the rich
and really prosperous it is an illusion. In no
class at the present time is there a real inducement
to the effectual rearing of trained and educated citizens;
in every class are difficulties and discouragements.
This state of affairs, says the Socialist,
is chaotic or indifferent to a sea of wretchedness
and failure, in health, vigour, order and beauty.
Such pleasure as it permits is a gaudy indulgence filched
from children and duty; such beauty-a hectic
beauty stained with injustice; such happiness-a
happiness that can only continue so long as it remains
blind or indifferent to a sea of wretchedness and
failure. Our present system of isolated and unsupported
families keeps the mass of the world beyond all necessity
painful, ugly and squalid. It stands condemned,
and it must end.
Se.
Let me summarize what has been said
in this chapter in a compact proposition, and so complete
the statement of the First Main Generalization of
Socialism.
The ideas of the private individual
rights of the parent and of his isolated responsibility
for his children are harmfully exaggerated in the
contemporary world. We do not sufficiently protect
children from negligent, incompetent, selfish or wicked
parents, and we do not sufficiently aid and encourage
good parents; parentage is too much a matter of private
adventure, and the individual family is too irresponsible.
As a consequence there is a huge amount of avoidable
privation, suffering and sorrow, and a large proportion
of the generation that grows up, grows up stunted,
limited, badly educated and incompetent in comparison
with the strength, training and beauty with which
a better social organization could endow it.
The Socialist holds that the community
as a whole should be responsible, and every individual
in the community, married or single, parent or childless,
should be responsible for the welfare and upbringing
of every child born into that community. This
responsibility may be entrusted in whole or in part
to parent, teacher or other guardian-but
it is not simply the right but the duty of the State-that
is to say of the organized power and intelligence of
the community-to direct, to inquire, and
to intervene in any default for the child’s
welfare.
Parentage rightly undertaken is
a service as well as a duty to the world, carrying
with it not only obligations but a claim, the strongest
of claims, upon the whole community. It must be
provided for like any other public service; in any
completely civilized State it must be sustained, rewarded
and controlled. And this is to be done not to
supersede the love, pride and conscience of the parent,
but to supplement, encourage and maintain it.
Se.
This is the first of the twin generalizations
upon which the whole edifice of modern Socialism rests.
Its fellow generalization we must consider in the
chapter immediately to follow.
But at this point the reader unaccustomed
to social questions will experience a difficulty.
He will naturally think of this much of change we
have broached, as if it was to happen in a world that
otherwise was to remain just as the world is now, with
merchants, landowners, rich and poor and all the rest
of it. You are proposing, he may say, what is
no doubt a highly desirable but which is also a quite
impossible thing. You propose practically to educate
all the young of the country and to pay at least sufficient
to support them and their mothers in decency-out
of what? Where will you get the money?
That is a perfectly legitimate question
and one that must be answered fully if our whole project
is not to fall to the ground.
So we come to the discussion of material
means, of the wherewithal, that is to say to the “Economics”
of Socialism. The reader will see very speedily
that this great social revolution we propose necessarily
involves a revolution in business and industry that
will be equally far reaching. The two revolutions
are indeed inseparable, two sides of one wheel, and
it is scarcely possible that one could happen without
the other.
Of course the community supports all
its children now-the only point is that
it does not support them in its collective character
as a State “as a whole.” All the
children in the world are supported by all the people
in the world, but very unfairly and irregularly, through
the intervention of that great multitude of small private
proprietors, the parents. When the parents fail,
Charity and the Parish step in. If the reader
will refer to those ten cases from Edinburgh I have
already quoted in Chapter III., Se, he will note
that in eight out of the ten there comes in the eleemosynary
element; in the seventh case especially he will get
an inkling of its waste. A change in the system
that diminished (though it by no means abolished) this
separate dependence of children upon parents, each
child depending upon those “pieces” from
its particular parental feast, need not necessarily
diminish the amount of wheat, or leather, or milk in
the world; the children would still get the bread
and milk and boots, but through different channels
and in a different spirit. They might even get
more. The method of making and distribution will
evidently have to be a different one and run counter
to currently accepted notions; that is all. Not
only is it true that a change of system need not diminish
the amount of food in the world; it might even increase
it. The Socialist declares that his system would
increase it. He proposes a method of making and
distribution, a change in industrial conditions and
in the conventions of property, that he declares will
not only not diminish but greatly increase the production
of the world, and changes in the administration that
he is equally convinced will insure a far juster and
better use of all that is produced.
This side of his proposals we will
proceed to consider in our next chapter.