[The capitalist, or industrial oligarch,
Roger Vanderwater, mentioned in the narrative,
has been identified as the ninth in the line
of the Vanderwaters that controlled for hundreds of
years the cotton factories of the South. This
Roger Vanderwater flourished in the last decades
of the twenty- sixth century after Christ, which
was the fifth century of the terrible industrial
oligarchy that was reared upon the ruins of the
early Republic.
From internal evidences we are convinced
that the narrative which follows was not reduced
to writing till the twenty- ninth century.
Not only was it unlawful to write or print such
matter during that period, but the working-class was
so illiterate that only in rare instances were
its members able to read and write. This
was the dark reign of the overman, in whose speech
the great mass of the people were characterized
as the “herd animals.” All literacy
was frowned upon and stamped out. From the
statute-books of the times may be instanced that
black law that made it a capital offence for
any man, no matter of what class, to teach even the
alphabet to a member of the working-class. Such
stringent limitation of education to the ruling
class was necessary if that class was to continue
to rule.
One result of the foregoing was the
development of the professional story-tellers.
These story-tellers were paid by the oligarchy,
and the tales they told were legendary, mythical,
romantic, and harmless. But the spirit of freedom
never quite died out, and agitators, under the
guise of story-tellers, preached revolt to the
slave class. That the following tale was
banned by the oligarchs we have proof from the
records of the criminal police court of Ashbury, wherein,
on January 27, 2734, one John Tourney, found guilty
of telling the tale in a boozing-ken of labourers,
was sentenced to five years’ penal servitude
in the borax mines of the Arizona Desert. Editor’s
Note.]
Listen, my brothers, and I will tell
you a tale of an arm. It was the arm of Tom Dixon,
and Tom Dixon was a weaver of the first class in a
factory of that hell-hound and master, Roger Vanderwater.
This factory was called “Hell’s Bottom"...
by the slaves who toiled in it, and I guess they ought
to know; and it was situated in Kingsbury, at the other
end of the town from Vanderwater’s summer palace.
You do not know where Kingsbury is? There are
many things, my brothers, that you do not know, and
it is sad. It is because you do not know that
you are slaves. When I have told you this tale,
I should like to form a class among you for the learning
of written and printed speech. Our masters read
and write and possess many books, and it is because
of that that they are our masters, and live in palaces,
and do not work. When the toilers learn to read
and write all of them they will
grow strong; then they will use their strength to
break their bonds, and there will be no more masters
and no more slaves.
Kingsbury, my brothers, is in the
old State of Alabama. For three hundred years
the Vanderwaters have owned Kingsbury and its slave
pens and factories, and slave pens and factories in
many other places and States. You have heard
of the Vanderwaters who has not? but
let me tell you things you do not know about them.
The first Vanderwater was a slave, even as you and
I. Have you got that? He was a slave, and that
was over three hundred years ago. His father was
a machinist in the slave pen of Alexander Burrell,
and his mother was a washerwoman in the same slave
pen. There is no doubt about this. I am telling
you truth. It is history. It is printed,
every word of it, in the history books of our masters,
which you cannot read because your masters will not
permit you to learn to read. You can understand
why they will not permit you to learn to read, when
there are such things in the books. They know,
and they are very wise. If you did read such
things, you might be wanting in respect to your masters,
which would be a dangerous thing... to your masters.
But I know, for I can read, and I am telling you what
I have read with my own eyes in the history books
of our masters.
The first Vanderwater’s name
was not Vanderwater; it was Vange Bill
Vange, the son of Yergis Vange, the machinist, and
Laura Carnly, the washerwoman. Young Bill Vange
was strong. He might have remained with the slaves
and led them to freedom; instead, however, he served
the masters and was well rewarded. He began his
service, when yet a small child, as a spy in his home
slave pen. He is known to have informed on his
own father for seditious utterance. This is fact.
I have read it with my own eyes in the records.
He was too good a slave for the slave pen. Alexander
Burrell took him out, while yet a child, and he was
taught to read and write. He was taught many things,
and he was entered in the secret service of the Government.
Of course, he no longer wore the slave dress, except
for disguise at such times when he sought to penetrate
the secrets and plots of the slaves. It was he,
when but eighteen years of age, who brought that great
hero and comrade, Ralph Jacobus, to trial and execution
in the electric chair. Of course, you have all
heard the sacred name of Ralph Jacobus, but it is news
to you that he was brought to his death by the first
Vanderwater, whose name was Vange. I know.
I have read it in the books. There are many interesting
things like that in the books.
And after Ralph Jacobus died his shameful
death, Bill Vange’s name began the many changes
it was to undergo. He was known as “Sly
Vange” far and wide. He rose high in the
secret service, and he was rewarded in grand ways,
but still he was not a member of the master class.
The men were willing that he should become so; it
was the women of the master class who refused to have
Sly Vange one of them. Sly Vange gave good service
to the masters. He had been a slave himself, and
he knew the ways of the slaves. There was no
fooling him. In those days the slaves were braver
than now, and they were always trying for their freedom.
And Sly Vange was everywhere, in all their schemes
and plans, bringing their schemes and plans to naught
and their leaders to the electric chair. It was
in 2255 that his name was next changed for him.
It was in that year that the Great Mutiny took place.
In that region west of the Rocky Mountains, seventeen
millions of slaves strove bravely to overthrow their
masters. Who knows, if Sly Vange had not lived,
but that they would have succeeded? But Sly Vange
was very much alive. The masters gave him supreme
command of the situation. In eight months of fighting,
one million and three hundred and fifty thousand slaves
were killed. Vange, Bill Vange, Sly Vange, killed
them, and he broke the Great Mutiny. And he was
greatly rewarded, and so red were his hands with the
blood of the slaves that thereafter he was called
“Bloody Vange.” You see, my brothers,
what interesting things are to be found in the books
when one can read them. And, take my word for
it, there are many other things, even more interesting,
in the books. And if you will but study with me,
in a year’s time you can read those books for
yourselves ay, in six months some of you
will be able to read those books for yourselves.
Bloody Vange lived to a ripe old age,
and always, to the last, was he received in the councils
of the masters; but never was he made a master himself.
He had first opened his eyes, you see, in a slave pen.
But oh, he was well rewarded! He had a dozen
palaces in which to live. He, who was no master,
owned thousands of slaves. He had a great pleasure
yacht upon the sea that was a floating palace, and
he owned a whole island in the sea where toiled ten
thousand slaves on his coffee plantations. But
in his old age he was lonely, for he lived apart, hated
by his brothers, the slaves, and looked down upon
by those he had served and who refused to be his brothers.
The masters looked down upon him because he had been
born a slave. Enormously wealthy he died; but
he died horribly, tormented by his conscience, regretting
all he had done and the red stain on his name.
But with his children it was different.
They had not been born in the slave pen, and by the
special ruling of the Chief Oligarch of that time,
John Morrison, they were elevated to the master class.
And it was then that the name of Vange disappears
from the page of history. It becomes Vanderwater,
and Jason Vange, the son of Bloody Vange, becomes Jason
Vanderwater, the founder of the Vanderwater line.
But that was three hundred years ago, and the Vanderwaters
of to-day forget their beginnings and imagine that
somehow the clay of their bodies is different stuff
from the clay in your body and mine and in the bodies
of all slaves. And I ask you, Why should a slave
become the master of another slave? And why should
the son of a slave become the master of many slaves?
I leave these questions for you to answer for yourselves,
but do not forget that in the beginning the Vanderwaters
were slaves.
And now, my brothers, I come back
to the beginning of my tale to tell you of Tom Dixon’s
arm. Roger Vanderwater’s factory in Kingsbury
was rightly named “Hell’s Bottom,”
but the men who toiled in it were men, as you shall
see. Women toiled there, too, and children, little
children. All that toiled there had the regular
slave rights under the law, but only under the law,
for they were deprived of many of their rights by
the two overseers of Hell’s Bottom, Joseph Clancy
and Adolph Munster.
It is a long story, but I shall not
tell all of it to you. I shall tell only about
the arm. It happened that, according to the law,
a portion of the starvation wage of the slaves was
held back each month and put into a fund. This
fund was for the purpose of helping such unfortunate
fellow-workmen as happened to be injured by accidents
or to be overtaken by sickness. As you know with
yourselves, these funds are controlled by the overseers.
It is the law, and so it was that the fund at Hell’s
Bottom was controlled by the two overseers of accursed
memory.
Now, Clancy and Munster took this
fund for their own use. When accidents happened
to the workmen, their fellows, as was the custom, made
grants from the fund; but the overseers refused to
pay over the grants. What could the slaves do?
They had their rights under the law, but they had
no access to the law. Those that complained to
the overseers were punished. You know yourselves
what form such punishment takes the fines
for faulty work that is not faulty; the overcharging
of accounts in the Company’s store; the vile
treatment of one’s women and children; and the
allotment to bad machines whereon, work as one will,
he starves.
Once, the slaves of Hell’s Bottom
protested to Vanderwater. It was the time of
the year when he spent several months in Kingsbury.
One of the slaves could write; it chanced that his
mother could write, and she had secretly taught him
as her mother had secretly taught her. So this
slave wrote a round robin, wherein was contained their
grievances, and all the slaves signed by mark.
And, with proper stamps upon the envelope, the round
robin was mailed to Roger Vanderwater. And Roger
Vanderwater did nothing, save to turn the round robin
over to the two overseers. Clancy and Munster
were angered. They turned the guards loose at
night on the slave pen. The guards were armed
with pick handles. It is said that next day only
half of the slaves were able to work in Hell’s
Bottom. They were well beaten. The slave
who could write was so badly beaten that he lived
only three months. But before he died, he wrote
once more, to what purpose you shall hear.
Four or five weeks afterward, Tom
Dixon, a slave, had his arm torn off by a belt in
Hell’s Bottom. His fellow-workmen, as usual,
made a grant to him from the fund, and Clancy and
Munster, as usual, refused to pay it over from the
fund. The slave who could write, and who even
then was dying, wrote anew a recital of their grievances.
And this document was thrust into the hand of the
arm that had been torn from Tom Dixon’s body.
Now it chanced that Roger Vanderwater
was lying ill in his palace at the other end of Kingsbury not
the dire illness that strikes down you and me, brothers;
just a bit of biliousness, mayhap, or no more than
a bad headache because he had eaten too heartily or
drunk too deeply. But it was enough for him,
being tender and soft from careful rearing. Such
men, packed in cotton wool all their lives, are exceeding
tender and soft. Believe me, brothers, Roger
Vanderwater felt as badly with his aching head, or
thought he felt as badly, as Tom Dixon really
felt with his arm torn out by the roots.
It happened that Roger Vanderwater
was fond of scientific farming, and that on his farm,
three miles outside of Kingsbury, he had managed to
grow a new kind of strawberry. He was very proud
of that new strawberry of his, and he would have been
out to see and pick the first ripe ones, had it not
been for his illness. Because of his illness he
had ordered the old farm slave to bring in personally
the first box of the berries. All this was learned
from the gossip of a palace scullion, who slept each
night in the slave pen. The overseer of the plantation
should have brought in the berries, but he was on
his back with a broken leg from trying to break a
colt. The scullion brought the word in the night,
and it was known that next day the berries would come
in. And the men in the slave pen of Hell’s
Bottom, being men and not cowards, held a council.
The slave who could write, and who
was sick and dying from the pick-handle beating, said
he would carry Tom Dixon’s arm; also, he said
he must die anyway, and that it mattered nothing if
he died a little sooner. So five slaves stole
from the slave pen that night after the guards had
made their last rounds. One of the slaves was
the man who could write. They lay in the brush
by the roadside until late in the morning, when the
old farm slave came driving to town with the precious
fruit for the master. What of the farm slave being
old and rheumatic, and of the slave who could write
being stiff and injured from his beating, they moved
their bodies about when they walked, very much in
the same fashion. The slave who could write put
on the other’s clothes, pulled the broad-brimmed
hat over his eyes, climbed upon the seat of the wagon,
and drove on to town. The old farm slave was kept
tied all day in the bushes until evening, when the
others loosed him and went back to the slave pen to
take their punishment for having broken bounds.
In the meantime, Roger Vanderwater
lay waiting for the berries in his wonderful bedroom such
wonders and such comforts were there that they would
have blinded the eyes of you and me who have never
seen such things. The slave who could write said
afterward that it was like a glimpse of Paradise!
And why not? The labour and the lives of ten
thousand slaves had gone to the making of that bedchamber,
while they themselves slept in vile lairs like wild
beasts. The slave who could write brought in
the berries on a silver tray or platter you
see, Roger Vanderwater wanted to speak with him in
person about the berries.
The slave who could write tottered
his dying body across the wonderful room and knelt
by the couch of Vanderwater, holding out before him
the tray. Large green leaves covered the top
of the tray, and these the body-servant alongside
whisked away so that Vanderwater could see. And
Roger Vanderwater, propped upon his elbow, saw.
He saw the fresh, wonderful fruit lying there like
precious jewels, and in the midst of it the arm of
Tom Dixon as it had been torn from his body, well washed,
of course, my brothers, and very white against the
blood-red fruit. And also he saw, clutched in
the stiff, dead fingers, the petition of his slaves
who toiled in Hell’s Bottom.
“Take and read,” said
the slave who could write. And even as the master
took the petition, the body-servant, who till then
had been motionless with surprise, struck with his
fist the kneeling slave upon the mouth. The slave
was dying anyway, and was very weak, and did not mind.
He made no sound, and, having fallen over on his side,
he lay there quietly, bleeding from the blow on the
mouth. The physician, who had run for the palace
guards, came back with them, and the slave was dragged
upright upon his feet. But as they dragged him
up, his hand clutched Tom Dixon’s arm from where
it had fallen on the floor.
“He shall be flung alive to
the hounds!” the body-servant was crying in
great wrath. “He shall be flung alive to
the hounds!”
But Roger Vanderwater, forgetting
his headache, still leaning on his elbow, commanded
silence, and went on reading the petition. And
while he read, there was silence, all standing upright,
the wrathful body-servant, the physician, the palace
guards, and in their midst the slave, bleeding at
the mouth and still holding Tom Dixon’s arm.
And when Roger Vanderwater had done, he turned upon
the slave, saying
“If in this paper there be one
lie, you shall be sorry that you were ever born.”
And the slave said, “I have
been sorry all my life that I was born.”
Roger Vanderwater looked at him closely,
and the slave said
“You have done your worst to
me. I am dying now. In a week I shall be
dead, so it does not matter if you kill me now.”
“What do you with that?”
the master asked, pointing to the arm; and the slave
made answer
“I take it back to the pen to
give it burial. Tom Dixon was my friend.
We worked beside each other at our looms.”
There is little more to my tale, brothers.
The slave and the arm were sent back in a cart to
the pen. Nor were any of the slaves punished for
what they had done. Indeed, Roger Vanderwater
made investigation and punished the two overseers,
Joseph Clancy and Adolph Munster. Their freeholds
were taken from them. They were branded, each
upon the forehead, their right hands were cut off,
and they were turned loose upon the highway to wander
and beg until they died. And the fund was managed
rightfully thereafter for a time for a time
only, my brothers; for after Roger Vanderwater came
his son, Albert, who was a cruel master and half mad.
Brothers, that slave who carried the
arm into the presence of the master was my father.
He was a brave man. And even as his mother secretly
taught him to read, so did he teach me. Because
he died shortly after from the pick-handle beating,
Roger Vanderwater took me out of the slave pen and
tried to make various better things out of me.
I might have become an overseer in Hell’s Bottom,
but I chose to become a story-teller, wandering over
the land and getting close to my brothers, the slaves,
everywhere. And I tell you stories like this,
secretly, knowing that you will not betray me; for
if you did, you know as well as I that my tongue will
be torn out and that I shall tell stories no more.
And my message is, brothers, that there is a good time
coming, when all will be well in the world and there
will be neither masters nor slaves. But first
you must prepare for that good time by learning to
read. There is power in the printed word.
And here am I to teach you to read, and as well there
are others to see that you get the books when I am
gone along upon my way the history books
wherein you will learn about your masters, and learn
to become strong even as they.