“The present is enough
for common souls,
Who, never looking forward,
are indeed
Mere clay, wherein the footprints
of their age
Are petrified for ever.”
I received a letter the other day.
It was from a man in Arizona. It began, “Dear
Comrade.” It ended, “Yours for the
Revolution.” I replied to the letter,
and my letter began, “Dear Comrade.”
It ended, “Yours for the Revolution.”
In the United States there are 400,000 men, of men
and women nearly 1,000,000, who begin their letters
“Dear Comrade,” and end them “Yours
for the Revolution.” In Germany there are
3,000,000 men who begin their letters “Dear
Comrade” and end them “Yours for the Revolution”;
in France, 1,000,000 men; in Austria, 800,000 men;
in Belgium, 300,000 men; in Italy, 250,000 men; in
England, 100,000 men; in Switzerland, 100,000 men;
in Denmark, 55,000 men; in Sweden, 50,000 men; in
Holland, 40,000 men; in Spain, 30,000 men comrades
all, and revolutionists.
These are numbers which dwarf the
grand armies of Napoleon and Xerxes. But they
are numbers not of conquest and maintenance of the
established order, but of conquest and revolution.
They compose, when the roll is called, an army of
7,000,000 men, who, in accordance with the conditions
of to-day, are fighting with all their might for the
conquest of the wealth of the world and for the complete
overthrow of existing society.
There has never been anything like
this revolution in the history of the world.
There is nothing analogous between it and the American
Revolution or the French Revolution. It is unique,
colossal. Other revolutions compare with it
as asteroids compare with the sun. It is alone
of its kind, the first world-revolution in a world
whose history is replete with revolutions. And
not only this, for it is the first organized movement
of men to become a world movement, limited only by
the limits of the planet.
This revolution is unlike all other
revolutions in many respects. It is not sporadic.
It is not a flame of popular discontent, arising in
a day and dying down in a day. It is older than
the present generation. It has a history and
traditions, and a martyr-roll only less extensive
possibly than the martyr-roll of Christianity.
It has also a literature a myriad times more imposing,
scientific, and scholarly than the literature of any
previous revolution.
They call themselves “comrades,”
these men, comrades in the socialist revolution.
Nor is the word empty and meaningless, coined of mere
lip service. It knits men together as brothers,
as men should be knit together who stand shoulder
to shoulder under the red banner of revolt. This
red banner, by the way, symbolizes the brotherhood
of man, and does not symbolize the incendiarism that
instantly connects itself with the red banner in the
affrighted bourgeois mind. The comradeship of
the revolutionists is alive and warm. It passes
over geographical lines, transcends race prejudice,
and has even proved itself mightier than the Fourth
of July, spread-eagle Americanism of our forefathers.
The French socialist working-men and the German socialist
working-men forget Alsace and Lorraine, and, when
war threatens, pass resolutions declaring that as
working-men and comrades they have no quarrel with
each other. Only the other day, when Japan and
Russia sprang at each other’s throats, the revolutionists
of Japan addressed the following message to the revolutionists
of Russia: “Dear Comrades Your
government and ours have recently plunged into war
to carry out their imperialistic tendencies, but for
us socialists there are no boundaries, race, country,
or nationality. We are comrades, brothers, and
sisters, and have no reason to fight. Your enemies
are not the Japanese people, but our militarism and
so-called patriotism. Patriotism and militarism
are our mutual enemies.”
In January 1905, throughout the United
States the socialists held mass-meetings to express
their sympathy for their struggling comrades, the
revolutionists of Russia, and, more to the point, to
furnish the sinews of war by collecting money and
cabling it to the Russian leaders. The fact of
this call for money, and the ready response, and the
very wording of the call, make a striking and practical
demonstration of the international solidarity of this
world-revolution:
“Whatever may be the immediate
results of the present revolt in Russia, the socialist
propaganda in that country has received from it an
impetus unparalleled in the history of modern class
wars. The heroic battle for freedom is being
fought almost exclusively by the Russian working-class
under the intellectual leadership of Russian socialists,
thus once more demonstrating the fact that the class-conscious
working-men have become the vanguard of all liberating
movements of modern times.”
Here are 7,000,000 comrades in an
organized, international, world-wide, revolutionary
movement. Here is a tremendous human force.
It must be reckoned with. Here is power.
And here is romance romance so colossal
that it seems to be beyond the ken of ordinary mortals.
These revolutionists are swayed by great passion.
They have a keen sense of personal right, much of
reverence for humanity, but little reverence, if any
at all, for the rule of the dead. They refuse
to be ruled by the dead. To the bourgeois mind
their unbelief in the dominant conventions of the
established order is startling. They laugh to
scorn the sweet ideals and dear moralities of bourgeois
society. They intend to destroy bourgeois society
with most of its sweet ideals and dear moralities,
and chiefest among these are those that group themselves
under such heads as private ownership of capital,
survival of the fittest, and patriotism even
patriotism.
Such an army of revolution, 7,000,000
strong, is a thing to make rulers and ruling classes
pause and consider. The cry of this army is,
“No quarter! We want all that you possess.
We will be content with nothing less than all that
you possess. We want in our hands the reins of
power and the destiny of mankind. Here are our
hands. They are strong hands. We are going
to take your governments, your palaces, and all your
purpled ease away from you, and in that day you shall
work for your bread even as the peasant in the field
or the starved and runty clerk in your metropolises.
Here are our hands. They are strong hands.”
Well may rulers and ruling classes
pause and consider. This is revolution.
And, further, these 7,000,000 men are not an army
on paper. Their fighting strength in the field
is 7,000,000. To-day they cast 7,000,000 votes
in the civilized countries of the world.
Yesterday they were not so strong.
To-morrow they will be still stronger. And
they are fighters. They love peace. They
are unafraid of war. They intend nothing less
than to destroy existing capitalist society and to
take possession of the whole world. If the law
of the land permits, they fight for this end peaceably,
at the ballot-box. If the law of the land does
not permit, and if they have force meted out to them,
they resort to force themselves. They meet violence
with violence. Their hands are strong and they
are unafraid. In Russia, for instance, there
is no suffrage. The government executes the revolutionists.
The revolutionists kill the officers of the government.
The revolutionists meet legal murder with assassination.
Now here arises a particularly significant
phase which it would be well for the rulers to consider.
Let me make it concrete. I am a revolutionist.
Yet I am a fairly sane and normal individual.
I speak, and I think, of these assassins in
Russia as “my comrades.” So do all
the comrades in America, and all the 7,000,000 comrades
in the world. Of what worth an organized, international,
revolutionary movement if our comrades are not backed
up the world over! The worth is shown by the
fact that we do back up the assassinations by our comrades
in Russia. They are not disciples of Tolstoy,
nor are we. We are revolutionists.
Our comrades in Russia have formed
what they call “The Fighting Organization.”
This Fighting Organization accused, tried, found guilty,
and condemned to death, one Sipiaguin, Minister of
Interior. On April 2 he was shot and killed
in the Maryinsky Palace. Two years later the
Fighting Organization condemned to death and executed
another Minister of Interior, Von Plehve. Having
done so, it issued a document, dated July 29, 1904,
setting forth the counts of its indictment of Von Plehve
and its responsibility for the assassination.
Now, and to the point, this document was sent out
to the socialists of the world, and by them was published
everywhere in the magazines and newspapers. The
point is, not that the socialists of the world were
unafraid to do it, not that they dared to do it, but
that they did it as a matter of routine, giving publication
to what may be called an official document of the
international revolutionary movement.
These are high lights upon the revolution granted,
but they are also facts. And they are given
to the rulers and the ruling classes, not in bravado,
not to frighten them, but for them to consider more
deeply the spirit and nature of this world-revolution.
The time has come for the revolution to demand consideration.
It has fastened upon every civilized country in the
world. As fast as a country becomes civilized,
the revolution fastens upon it. With the introduction
of the machine into Japan, socialism was introduced.
Socialism marched into the Philippines shoulder to
shoulder with the American soldiers. The echoes
of the last gun had scarcely died away when socialist
locals were forming in Cuba and Porto Rico.
Vastly more significant is the fact that of all the
countries the revolution has fastened upon, on not
one has it relaxed its grip. On the contrary,
on every country its grip closes tighter year by year.
As an active movement it began obscurely over a generation
ago. In 1867, its voting strength in the world
was 30,000. By 1871 its vote had increased to
1,000,000. Not till 1884 did it pass the half-million
point. By 1889 it had passed the million point,
it had then gained momentum. In 1892 the socialist
vote of the world was 1,798,391; in 1893, 2,585,898;
in 1895, 3,033,718; in 1898, 4,515,591; in 1902, 5,253,054;
in 1903, 6,285,374; and in the year of our Lord 1905
it passed the seven-million mark.
Nor has this flame of revolution left
the United States untouched. In 1888 there were
only 2,068 socialist votes. In 1902 there were
127,713 socialist votes. And in 1904 435,040
socialist votes were cast. What fanned this
flame? Not hard times. The first four years
of the twentieth century were considered prosperous
years, yet in that time more than 300,000 men added
themselves to the ranks of the revolutionists, flinging
their defiance in the teeth of bourgeois society and
taking their stand under the blood-red banner.
In the state of the writer, California, one man in
twelve is an avowed and registered revolutionist.
One thing must be clearly understood.
This is no spontaneous and vague uprising of a large
mass of discontented and miserable people a
blind and instinctive recoil from hurt. On the
contrary, the propaganda is intellectual; the movement
is based upon economic necessity and is in line with
social evolution; while the miserable people have not
yet revolted. The revolutionist is no starved
and diseased slave in the shambles at the bottom of
the social pit, but is, in the main, a hearty, well-fed
working-man, who sees the shambles waiting for him
and his children and recoils from the descent.
The very miserable people are too helpless to help
themselves. But they are being helped, and the
day is not far distant when their numbers will go
to swell the ranks of the revolutionists.
Another thing must be clearly understood.
In spite of the fact that middle-class men and professional
men are interested in the movement, it is nevertheless
a distinctly working-class revolt. The world
over, it is a working-class revolt. The workers
of the world, as a class, are fighting the capitalists
of the world, as a class. The so-called great
middle class is a growing anomaly in the social struggle.
It is a perishing class (wily statisticians to the
contrary), and its historic mission of buffer between
the capitalist and working-classes has just about
been fulfilled. Little remains for it but to
wail as it passes into oblivion, as it has already
begun to wail in accents Populistic and Jeffersonian-Democratic.
The fight is on. The revolution is here now,
and it is the world’s workers that are in revolt.
Naturally the question arises:
Why is this so? No mere whim of the spirit can
give rise to a world-revolution. Whim does not
conduce to unanimity. There must be a deep-seated
cause to make 7,000,000 men of the one mind, to make
them cast off allegiance to the bourgeois gods and
lose faith in so fine a thing as patriotism.
There are many counts of the indictment which the
revolutionists bring against the capitalist class,
but for present use only one need be stated, and it
is a count to which capital has never replied and
can never reply.
The capitalist class has managed society,
and its management has failed. And not only has
it failed in its management, but it has failed deplorably,
ignobly, horribly. The capitalist class had an
opportunity such as was vouchsafed no previous ruling
class in the history of the world. It broke
away from the rule of the old feudal aristocracy and
made modern society. It mastered matter, organized
the machinery of life, and made possible a wonderful
era for mankind, wherein no creature should cry aloud
because it had not enough to eat, and wherein for every
child there would be opportunity for education, for
intellectual and spiritual uplift. Matter being
mastered, and the machinery of life organized, all
this was possible. Here was the chance, God-given,
and the capitalist class failed. It was blind
and greedy. It prattled sweet ideals and dear
moralities, rubbed its eyes not once, nor ceased one
whit in its greediness, and smashed down in a failure
as tremendous only as was the opportunity it had ignored.
But all this is like so much cobwebs
to the bourgeois mind. As it was blind in the
past, it is blind now and cannot see nor understand.
Well, then, let the indictment be stated more definitely,
in terms sharp and unmistakable. In the first
place, consider the caveman. He was a very simple
creature. His head slanted back like an orang-outang’s,
and he had but little more intelligence. He
lived in a hostile environment, the prey of all manner
of fierce life. He had no inventions nor artifices.
His natural efficiency for food-getting was, say, 1.
He did not even till the soil. With his natural
efficiency of 1, he fought off his carnivorous enemies
and got himself food and shelter. He must have
done all this, else he would not have multiplied and
spread over the earth and sent his progeny down, generation
by generation, to become even you and me.
The caveman, with his natural efficiency
of 1, got enough to eat most of the time, and no caveman
went hungry all the time. Also, he lived a healthy,
open-air life, loafed and rested himself, and found
plenty of time in which to exercise his imagination
and invent gods. That is to say, he did not
have to work all his waking moments in order to get
enough to eat. The child of the caveman (and
this is true of the children of all savage peoples)
had a childhood, and by that is meant a happy childhood
of play and development.
And now, how fares modern man?
Consider the United States, the most prosperous and
most enlightened country of the world. In the
United States there are 10,000,000 people living in
poverty. By poverty is meant that condition
in life in which, through lack of food and adequate
shelter, the mere standard of working efficiency cannot
be maintained. In the United States there are
10,000,000 people who have not enough to eat.
In the United States, because they have not enough
to eat, there are 10,000,000 people who cannot keep
the ordinary 1 measure of strength in their bodies.
This means that these 10,000,000 people are perishing,
are dying, body and soul, slowly, because they have
not enough to eat. All over this broad, prosperous,
enlightened land, are men, women, and children who
are living miserably. In all the great cities,
where they are segregated in slum ghettos by hundreds
of thousands and by millions, their misery becomes
beastliness. No caveman ever starved as chronically
as they starve, ever slept as vilely as they sleep,
ever festered with rottenness and disease as they
fester, nor ever toiled as hard and for as long hours
as they toil.
In Chicago there is a woman who toiled
sixty hours per week. She was a garment worker.
She sewed buttons on clothes. Among the Italian
garment workers of Chicago, the average weekly wage
of the dressmakers is 90 cents, but they work every
week in the year. The average weekly wage of
the pants finishers is $1.31, and the average number
of weeks employed in the year is 27.85. The
average yearly earnings of the dressmakers is $37;
of the pants finishers, $42.41. Such wages means
no childhood for the children, beastliness of living,
and starvation for all.
Unlike the caveman, modern man cannot
get food and shelter whenever he feels like working
for it. Modern man has first to find the work,
and in this he is often unsuccessful. Then misery
becomes acute. This acute misery is chronicled
daily in the newspapers. Let several of the
countless instances be cited.
In New York City lived a woman, Mary
Mead. She had three children: Mary,
one year old; Johanna, two years old; Alice, four years
old. Her husband could find no work.
They starved. They were evicted from their
shelter at 160 Steuben Street. Mary Mead strangled
her baby, Mary, one year old; strangled Alice,
four years old; failed to strangle Johanna, two
years old, and then herself took poison. Said
the father to the police: “Constant
poverty had driven my wife insane. We lived
at N Steuben Street until a week ago, when we
were dispossessed. I could get no work.
I could not even make enough to put food into
our mouths. The babies grew ill and weak.
My wife cried nearly all the time.”
“So overwhelmed is the
Department of Charities with tens of thousands
of applications from men out
of work that it finds itself unable to
cope with the situation.” New
York Commercial, January 11, 1905.
In a daily paper, because he cannot
get work in order to get something to eat, modern
man advertises as follows:
“Young man, good education,
unable to obtain employment, will sell to
physician and bacteriologist
for experimental purposes all right and
title to his body. Address
for price, box 3466, Examiner.”
“Frank A. Mallin went to the central
police station Wednesday night and asked to be
locked up on a charge of vagrancy. He said he
had been conducting an unsuccessful search for
work for so long that he was sure he must be a
vagrant. In any event, he was so hungry he must
be fed. Police Judge Graham sentenced him to
ninety days’ imprisonment.” San
Francisco Examiner.
In a room at the Soto House, 32 Fourth
Street, San Francisco, was found the body of W. G.
Robbins. He had turned on the gas. Also
was found his diary, from which the following extracts
are made
“March 3. No
chance of getting anything here. What will I
do?
“March 7. Cannot
find anything yet.
“March 8. Am
living on doughnuts at five cents a day.
“March 9. My
last quarter gone for room rent.
“March 10. God
help me. Have only five cents left. Can
get nothing to do. What next? Starvation
or ? I have spent my last nickel
to-night. What shall I do? Shall it be
steal, beg, or die? I have never stolen,
begged, or starved in all my fifty years of life,
but now I am on the brink death seems the
only refuge.
“March 11. Sick
all day burning fever this afternoon.
Had
nothing to eat to-day or since
yesterday noon. My head, my head.
Good-bye, all.”
How fares the child of modern man
in this most prosperous of lands? In the city
of New York 50,000 children go hungry to school every
morning. From the same city on January 12, a
press despatch was sent out over the country of a
case reported by Dr. A. E. Daniel, of the New York
Infirmary for Women and Children. The case was
that of a babe, eighteen months old, who earned by
its labour fifty cents per week in a tenement sweat-shop.
“On a pile of rags in a room bare
of furniture and freezing cold, Mrs. Mary Gallin,
dead from starvation, with an emaciated baby four
months old crying at her breast, was found this
morning at 513 Myrtle Avenue, Brooklyn, by Policeman
McConnon of the Flushing Avenue Station.
Huddled together for warmth in another part of the
room were the father, James Gallin, and three
children ranging from two to eight years of age.
The children gazed at the policeman much as ravenous
animals might have done. They were famished,
and there was not a vestige of food in their comfortless
home.” New York Journal,
January 2, 1902.
In the United States 80,000 children
are toiling out their lives in the textile mills alone.
In the South they work twelve-hour shifts. They
never see the day. Those on the night shift are
asleep when the sun pours its life and warmth over
the world, while those on the day shift are at the
machines before dawn and return to their miserable
dens, called “homes,” after dark.
Many receive no more than ten cents a day. There
are babies who work for five and six cents a day.
Those who work on the night shift are often kept
awake by having cold water dashed in their faces.
There are children six years of age who have already
to their credit eleven months’ work on the night
shift. When they become sick, and are unable
to rise from their beds to go to work, there are men
employed to go on horseback from house to house, and
cajole and bully them into arising and going to work.
Ten per cent of them contract active consumption.
All are puny wrecks, distorted, stunted, mind and
body. Elbert Hubbard says of the child-labourers
of the Southern cotton-mills:
“I thought to lift one of the
little toilers to ascertain his weight. Straightaway
through his thirty-five pounds of skin and bones there
ran a tremor of fear, and he struggled forward
to tie a broken thread. I attracted his
attention by a touch, and offered him a silver
dime. He looked at me dumbly from a face that
might have belonged to a man of sixty, so furrowed,
tightly drawn, and full of pain it was.
He did not reach for the money he did not
know what it was. There were dozens of such
children in this particular mill. A physician
who was with me said that they would all be dead probably
in two years, and their places filled by others there
were plenty more. Pneumonia carries off
most of them. Their systems are ripe for
disease, and when it comes there is no rebound no
response. Medicine simply does not act nature
is whipped, beaten, discouraged, and the child
sinks into a stupor and dies.”
So fares modern man and the child
of modern man in the United States, most prosperous
and enlightened of all countries on earth. It
must be remembered that the instances given are instances
only, but they can be multiplied myriads of times.
It must also be remembered that what is true of the
United States is true of all the civilized world.
Such misery was not true of the caveman. Then
what has happened? Has the hostile environment
of the caveman grown more hostile for his descendants?
Has the caveman’s natural efficiency of 1 for
food-getting and shelter-getting diminished in modern
man to one-half or one-quarter?
On the contrary, the hostile environment
of the caveman has been destroyed. For modern
man it no longer exists. All carnivorous enemies,
the daily menace of the younger world, have been killed
off. Many of the species of prey have become
extinct. Here and there, in secluded portions
of the world, still linger a few of man’s fiercer
enemies. But they are far from being a menace
to mankind. Modern man, when he wants recreation
and change, goes to the secluded portions of the world
for a hunt. Also, in idle moments, he wails
regretfully at the passing of the “big game,”
which he knows in the not distant future will disappear
from the earth.
Nor since the day of the caveman has
man’s efficiency for food-getting and shelter-getting
diminished. It has increased a thousandfold.
Since the day of the caveman, matter has been mastered.
The secrets of matter have been discovered.
Its laws have been formulated. Wonderful artifices
have been made, and marvellous inventions, all tending
to increase tremendously man’s natural efficiency
of in every food-getting, shelter-getting exertion,
in farming, mining, manufacturing, transportation,
and communication.
From the caveman to the hand-workers
of three generations ago, the increase in efficiency
for food- and shelter-getting has been very great.
But in this day, by machinery, the efficiency of the
hand-worker of three generations ago has in turn been
increased many times. Formerly it required 200
hours of human labour to place 100 tons of ore on a
railroad car. To-day, aided by machinery, but
two hours of human labour is required to do the same
task. The United States Bureau of Labour is
responsible for the following table, showing the comparatively
recent increase in man’s food- and shelter-getting
efficiency:
Machine Hours
Hand Hours Barley (100 bushels) 9
211 Corn (50 bushels 34
228 shelled, stalks, husks and
blades cut into fodder) Oats (160 bushels) 28
265 Wheat (50 bushels) 7
160 Loading ore (loading
2 200 100 tons iron ore on
cars) Unloading coal 20
240 (transferring 200 tons from canal-boats
to bins 400 feet distant) Pitchforks (50
12 200 pitchforks, 12-inch
tines) Plough (one landside 3
118 plough, oak beams and handles)
According to the same authority, under
the best conditions for organization in farming, labour
can produce 20 bushels of wheat for 66 cents, or 1
bushel for 3.5 cents. This was done on a bonanza
farm of 10,000 acres in California, and was the average
cost of the whole product of the farm. Mr. Carroll
D. Wright says that to-day 4,500,000 men, aided by
machinery, turn out a product that would require the
labour of 40,000,000 men if produced by hand.
Professor Herzog, of Austria, says that 5,000,000
people with the machinery of to-day, employed at socially
useful labour, would be able to supply a population
of 20,000,000 people with all the necessaries and
small luxuries of life by working 1.5 hours per day.
This being so, matter being mastered,
man’s efficiency for food- and shelter-getting
being increased a thousandfold over the efficiency
of the caveman, then why is it that millions of modern
men live more miserably than lived the caveman?
This is the question the revolutionist asks, and
he asks it of the managing class, the capitalist class.
The capitalist class does not answer it. The
capitalist class cannot answer it.
If modern man’s food- and shelter-getting
efficiency is a thousandfold greater than that of
the caveman, why, then, are there 10,000,000 people
in the United States to-day who are not properly sheltered
and properly fed? If the child of the caveman
did not have to work, why, then, to-day, in the United
States, are 80,000 children working out their lives
in the textile factories alone? If the child
of the caveman did not have to work, why, then, to-day,
in the United States, are there 1,752,187 child-labourers?
It is a true count in the indictment.
The capitalist class has mismanaged, is to-day mismanaging.
In New York City 50,000 children go hungry to school,
and in New York City there are 1,320 millionaires.
The point, however, is not that the mass of mankind
is miserable because of the wealth the capitalist
class has taken to itself. Far from it.
The point really is that the mass of mankind is miserable,
not for want of the wealth taken by the capitalist
class, but for want of the wealth that was never
created. This wealth was never created because
the capitalist class managed too wastefully and irrationally.
The capitalist class, blind and greedy, grasping
madly, has not only not made the best of its management,
but made the worst of it. It is a management
prodigiously wasteful. This point cannot be emphasized
too strongly.
In face of the facts that modern man
lives more wretchedly than the caveman, and that modern
man’s food- and shelter-getting efficiency is
a thousandfold greater than the caveman’s, no
other solution is possible than that the management
is prodigiously wasteful.
With the natural resources of the
world, the machinery already invented, a rational
organization of production and distribution, and an
equally rational elimination of waste, the able-bodied
workers would not have to labour more than two or
three hours per day to feed everybody, clothe everybody,
house everybody, educate everybody, and give a fair
measure of little luxuries to everybody. There
would be no more material want and wretchedness, no
more children toiling out their lives, no more men
and women and babes living like beasts and dying like
beasts. Not only would matter be mastered, but
the machine would be mastered. In such a day
incentive would be finer and nobler than the incentive
of to-day, which is the incentive of the stomach.
No man, woman, or child, would be impelled to action
by an empty stomach. On the contrary, they would
be impelled to action as a child in a spelling match
is impelled to action, as boys and girls at games,
as scientists formulating law, as inventors applying
law, as artists and sculptors painting canvases and
shaping clay, as poets and statesmen serving humanity
by singing and by statecraft. The spiritual,
intellectual, and artistic uplift consequent upon
such a condition of society would be tremendous.
All the human world would surge upward in a mighty
wave.
This was the opportunity vouchsafed
the capitalist class. Less blindness on its
part, less greediness, and a rational management, were
all that was necessary. A wonderful era was
possible for the human race. But the capitalist
class failed. It made a shambles of civilization.
Nor can the capitalist class plead not guilty.
It knew of the opportunity. Its wise men told
of the opportunity, its scholars and its scientists
told it of the opportunity. All that they said
is there to-day in the books, just so much damning
evidence against it. It would not listen.
It was too greedy. It rose up (as it rises
up to-day), shamelessly, in our legislative halls,
and declared that profits were impossible without the
toil of children and babes. It lulled its conscience
to sleep with prattle of sweet ideals and dear moralities,
and allowed the suffering and misery of mankind to
continue and to increase, in short, the capitalist
class failed to take advantage of the opportunity.
But the opportunity is still here.
The capitalist class has been tried and found wanting.
Remains the working-class to see what it can do with
the opportunity. “But the working-class
is incapable,” says the capitalist class.
“What do you know about it?” the working-class
replies. “Because you have failed is no
reason that we shall fail. Furthermore, we are
going to have a try at it, anyway. Seven millions
of us say so. And what have you to say to that?”
And what can the capitalist class
say? Grant the incapacity of the working-class.
Grant that the indictment and the argument of the
revolutionists are all wrong. The 7,000,000 revolutionists
remain. Their existence is a fact. Their
belief in their capacity, and in their indictment
and their argument, is a fact. Their constant
growth is a fact. Their intention to destroy
present-day society is a fact, as is also their intention
to take possession of the world with all its wealth
and machinery and governments. Moreover, it is
a fact that the working-class is vastly larger than
the capitalist class.
The revolution is a revolution of
the working-class. How can the capitalist class,
in the minority, stem this tide of revolution?
What has it to offer? What does it offer?
Employers’ associations, injunctions, civil
suits for plundering of the treasuries of the labour-unions,
clamour and combination for the open shop, bitter and
shameless opposition to the eight-hour day, strong
efforts to defeat all reform, child-labour bills,
graft in every municipal council, strong lobbies and
bribery in every legislature for the purchase of capitalist
legislation, bayonets, machine-guns, policemen’s
clubs, professional strike-breakers and armed Pinkertons these
are the things the capitalist class is dumping in
front of the tide of revolution, as though, forsooth,
to hold it back.
The capitalist class is as blind to-day
to the menace of the revolution as it was blind in
the past to its own God-given opportunity. It
cannot see how precarious is its position, cannot
comprehend the power and the portent of the revolution.
It goes on its placid way, prattling sweet ideals
and dear moralities, and scrambling sordidly for material
benefits.
No overthrown ruler or class in the
past ever considered the revolution that overthrew
it, and so with the capitalist class of to-day.
Instead of compromising, instead of lengthening its
lease of life by conciliation and by removal of some
of the harsher oppressions of the working-class,
it antagonizes the working-class, drives the working-class
into revolution. Every broken strike in recent
years, every legally plundered trades-union treasury,
every closed shop made into an open shop, has driven
the members of the working-class directly hurt over
to socialism by hundreds and thousands. Show
a working-man that his union fails, and he becomes
a revolutionist. Break a strike with an injunction
or bankrupt a union with a civil suit, and the working-men
hurt thereby listen to the siren song of the socialist
and are lost for ever to the political capitalist
parties.
Antagonism never lulled revolution,
and antagonism is about all the capitalist class offers.
It is true, it offers some few antiquated notions
which were very efficacious in the past, but which
are no longer efficacious. Fourth-of-July liberty
in terms of the Declaration of Independence and of
the French Encyclopaedists is scarcely apposite to-day.
It does not appeal to the working-man who has had
his head broken by a policeman’s club, his union
treasury bankrupted by a court decision, or his job
taken away from him by a labour-saving invention.
Nor does the Constitution of the United States appear
so glorious and constitutional to the working-man
who has experienced a bull-pen or been unconstitutionally
deported from Colorado. Nor are this particular
working-man’s hurt feelings soothed by reading
in the newspapers that both the bull-pen and the deportation
were pre-eminently just, legal, and constitutional.
“To hell, then, with the Constitution!”
says he, and another revolutionist has been made by
the capitalist class.
In short, so blind is the capitalist
class that it does nothing to lengthen its lease of
life, while it does everything to shorten it.
The capitalist class offers nothing that is clean,
noble, and alive. The revolutionists offer everything
that is clean, noble, and alive. They offer
service, unselfishness, sacrifice, martyrdom the
things that sting awake the imagination of the people,
touching their hearts with the fervour that arises
out of the impulse toward good and which is essentially
religious in its nature.
But the revolutionists blow hot and
blow cold. They offer facts and statistics,
economics and scientific arguments. If the working-man
be merely selfish, the revolutionists show him, mathematically
demonstrate to him, that his condition will be bettered
by the revolution. If the working-man be the
higher type, moved by impulses toward right conduct,
if he have soul and spirit, the revolutionists offer
him the things of the soul and the spirit, the tremendous
things that cannot be measured by dollars and cents,
nor be held down by dollars and cents. The revolutionist
cries out upon wrong and injustice, and preaches righteousness.
And, most potent of all, he sings the eternal song
of human freedom a song of all lands and
all tongues and all time.
Few members of the capitalist class
see the revolution. Most of them are too ignorant,
and many are too afraid to see it. It is the
same old story of every perishing ruling class in
the world’s history. Fat with power and
possession, drunken with success, and made soft by
surfeit and by cessation of struggle, they are like
the drones clustered about the honey vats when the
worker-bees spring upon them to end their rotund existence.
President Roosevelt vaguely sees the
revolution, is frightened by it, and recoils from
seeing it. As he says: “Above all,
we need to remember that any kind of class animosity
in the political world is, if possible, even more
wicked, even more destructive to national welfare,
than sectional, race, or religious animosity.”
Class animosity in the political world,
President Roosevelt maintains, is wicked. But
class animosity in the political world is the preachment
of the revolutionists. “Let the class
wars in the industrial world continue,” they
say, “but extend the class war to the political
world.” As their leader, Eugene V. Debs
says: “So far as this struggle is concerned,
there is no good capitalist and no bad working-man.
Every capitalist is your enemy and every working-man
is your friend.”
Here is class animosity in the political
world with a vengeance. And here is revolution.
In 1888 there were only 2,000 revolutionists of this
type in the United States; in 1900 there were 127,000
revolutionists; in 1904, 435,000 revolutionists.
Wickedness of the President Roosevelt definition
evidently flourishes and increases in the United States.
Quite so, for it is the revolution that flourishes
and increases.
Here and there a member of the capitalist
class catches a clear glimpse of the revolution, and
raises a warning cry. But his class does not
heed. President Eliot of Harvard raised such
a cry:
“I am forced to believe there
is a present danger of socialism never before so imminent
in America in so dangerous a form, because never before
imminent in so well organized a form. The danger
lies in the obtaining control of the trades-unions
by the socialists.” And the capitalist
employers, instead of giving heed to the warnings,
are perfecting their strike-breaking organization
and combining more strongly than ever for a general
assault upon that dearest of all things to the trades-unions the
closed shop. In so far as this assault succeeds,
by just that much will the capitalist class shorten
its lease of life. It is the old, old story,
over again and over again. The drunken drones
still cluster greedily about the honey vats.
Possibly one of the most amusing spectacles
of to-day is the attitude of the American press toward
the revolution. It is also a pathetic spectacle.
It compels the onlooker to be aware of a distinct
loss of pride in his species. Dogmatic utterance
from the mouth of ignorance may make gods laugh, but
it should make men weep. And the American editors
(in the general instance) are so impressive about it!
The old “divide-up,” “men-are-not-born-free-and-equal,”
propositions are enunciated gravely and sagely, as
things white-hot and new from the forge of human wisdom.
Their feeble vapourings show no more than a schoolboy’s
comprehension of the nature of the revolution.
Parasites themselves on the capitalist class, serving
the capitalist class by moulding public opinion, they,
too, cluster drunkenly about the honey vats.
Of course, this is true only of the
large majority of American editors. To say that
it is true of all of them would be to cast too great
obloquy upon the human race. Also, it would
be untrue, for here and there an occasional editor
does see clearly and in his case, ruled
by stomach-incentive, is usually afraid to say what
he thinks about it. So far as the science and
the sociology of the revolution are concerned, the
average editor is a generation or so behind the facts.
He is intellectually slothful, accepts no facts until
they are accepted by the majority, and prides himself
upon his conservatism. He is an instinctive
optimist, prone to believe that what ought to be, is.
The revolutionist gave this up long ago, and believes
not that what ought to be, is, but what is, is, and
that it may not be what it ought to be at all.
Now and then, rubbing his eyes, vigorously,
an editor catches a sudden glimpse of the revolution
and breaks out in naïve volubility, as, for instance,
the one who wrote the following in the Chicago Chronicle:
“American socialists are revolutionists.
They know that they are revolutionists. It
is high time that other people should appreciate the
fact.” A white-hot, brand-new discovery,
and he proceeded to shout it out from the housetops
that we, forsooth, were revolutionists. Why,
it is just what we have been doing all these years shouting
it out from the housetops that we are revolutionists,
and stop us who can.
The time should be past for the mental
attitude: “Revolution is atrocious.
Sir, there is no revolution.” Likewise
should the time be past for that other familiar attitude:
“Socialism is slavery. Sir, it will never
be.” It is no longer a question of dialectics,
theories, and dreams. There is no question about
it. The revolution is a fact. It is here
now. Seven million revolutionists, organized,
working day and night, are preaching the revolution that
passionate gospel, the Brotherhood of Man. Not
only is it a cold-blooded economic propaganda, but
it is in essence a religious propaganda with a fervour
in it of Paul and Christ. The capitalist class
has been indicted. It has failed in its management
and its management is to be taken away from it.
Seven million men of the working-class say that they
are going to get the rest of the working-class to
join with them and take the management away.
The revolution is here, now. Stop it who can.
SACRAMENTO RIVER.
March 1905.