The slum is as old as civilization.
Civilization implies a race to get ahead. In
a race there are usually some who for one cause or
another cannot keep up, or are thrust out from among
their fellows. They fall behind, and when they
have been left far in the rear they lose hope and
ambition, and give up. Thenceforward, if left
to their own resources, they are the victims, not
the masters, of their environment; and it is a bad
master. They drag one another always farther down.
The bad environment becomes the heredity of the next
generation. Then, given the crowd, you have the
slum ready-made.
The battle with the slum began the
day civilization recognized in it her enemy.
It was a losing fight until conscience joined forces
with fear and self-interest against it. When
common sense and the golden rule obtain among men
as a rule of practice, it will be over. The two
have not always been classed together, but here they
are plainly seen to belong together. Justice
to the individual is accepted in theory as the only
safe groundwork of the commonwealth. When it is
practised in dealing with the slum, there will shortly
be no slum. We need not wait for the millennium,
to get rid of it. We can do it now. All that
is required is that it shall not be left to itself.
That is justice to it and to us, since its grievous
ailment is that it cannot help itself. When a
man is drowning, the thing to do is to pull him out
of the water; afterward there will be time for talking
it over. We got at it the other way in dealing
with our social problems. The wise men had their
day, and they decided to let bad enough alone; that
it was unsafe to interfere with “causes that
operate sociologically,” as one survivor of these
unfittest put it to me. It was a piece of scientific
humbug that cost the age which listened to it dear.
“Causes that operate sociologically” are
the opportunity of the political and every other kind
of scamp who trades upon the depravity and helplessness
of the slum, and the refuge of the pessimist who is
useless in the fight against them. We have not
done yet paying the bills he ran up for us. Some
time since we turned to, to pull the drowning man
out, and it was time. A little while longer,
and we should hardly have escaped being dragged down
with him.
The slum complaint had been chronic
in all ages, but the great changes which the nineteenth
century saw, the new industry, political freedom,
brought on an acute attack which put that very freedom
in jeopardy. Too many of us had supposed that,
built as our commonwealth was on universal suffrage,
it would be proof against the complaints that harassed
older states; but in fact it turned out that there
was extra hazard in that. Having solemnly resolved
that all men are created equal and have certain inalienable
rights, among them life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness, we shut our eyes and waited for the formula
to work. It was as if a man with a cold should
take the doctor’s prescription to bed with him,
expecting it to cure him. The formula was all
right, but merely repeating it worked no cure.
When, after a hundred years, we opened our eyes, it
was upon sixty cents a day as the living wage of the
working-woman in our cities; upon “knee pants”
at forty cents a dozen for the making; upon the Potter’s
Field taking tithe of our city life, ten per cent
each year for the trench, truly the Lost Tenth of the
slum. Our country had grown great and rich; through
our ports was poured food for the millions of Europe.
But in the back streets multitudes huddled in ignorance
and want. The foreign oppressor had been vanquished,
the fetters stricken from the black man at home; but
his white brother, in his bitter plight, sent up a
cry of distress that had in it a distinct note of
menace. Political freedom we had won; but the
problem of helpless poverty, grown vast with the added
offscourings of the Old World, mocked us, unsolved.
Liberty at sixty cents a day set presently its stamp
upon the government of our cities, and it became the
scandal and the peril of our political system.
So the battle began. Three times
since the war that absorbed the nation’s energies
and attention had the slum confronted us in New York
with its challenge. In the darkest days of the
great struggle it was the treacherous mob; later
on, the threat of the cholera, which found swine foraging
in the streets as the only scavengers, and a swarming
host, but little above the hog in its appetites and
in the quality of the shelter afforded it, peopling
the back alleys. Still later, the mob, caught
looting the city’s treasury with its idol, the
thief Tweed, at its head, drunk with power and plunder,
had insolently defied the outraged community to do
its worst. There were meetings and protests.
The rascals were turned out for a season; the arch-chief
died in jail. I see him now, going through the
gloomy portals of the Tombs, whither, as a newspaper
reporter, I had gone with him, his stubborn head held
high as ever. I asked myself more than once,
at the time when the vile prison was torn down, whether
the comic clamor to have the ugly old gates preserved
and set up in Central Park had anything to do with
the memory of the “martyred” thief, or
whether it was in joyful celebration of the fact that
others had escaped. His name is even now one to
conjure with in the Sixth Ward. He never “squealed,”
and he was “so good to the poor” evidence
that the slum is not laid by the heels by merely destroying
Five Points and the Mulberry Bend. There are other
fights to be fought in that war, other victories to
be won, and it is slow work. It was nearly ten
years after the Great Robbery before decency got a
good upper grip. That was when the civic conscience
awoke in 1879.
And after all that, the Lexow disclosures
of inconceivable rottenness of a Tammany police; the
woe unto you! of Christian priests calling vainly
upon the chief of the city “to save its children
from a living hell,” and the contemptuous reply
on the witness-stand of the head of the party of organized
robbery, at the door of which it was all laid, that
he was “in politics, working for his own pocket
all the time, same as you and everybody else!”
Slow work, yes! but be it ever so
slow, the battle has got to be fought, and fought
out. For it is one thing or the other: either
we wipe out the slum, or it wipes out us. Let
there be no mistake about this. It cannot be
shirked. Shirking means surrender, and surrender
means the end of government by the people.
If any one believes this to be needless
alarm, let him think a moment. Government by
the people must ever rest upon the people’s ability
to govern themselves, upon their intelligence and
public spirit. The slum stands for ignorance,
want, unfitness, for mob-rule in the day of wrath.
This at one end. At the other, hard-heartedness,
indifference, self-seeking, greed. It is human
nature. We are brothers whether we own it or
not, and when the brotherhood is denied in Mulberry
Street we shall look vainly for the virtue of good
citizenship on Fifth Avenue. When the slum flourishes
unchallenged in the cities, their wharves may, indeed,
be busy, their treasure-houses filled, wealth
and want go so together, but patriotism
among their people is dead.
As long ago as the very beginning
of our republic, its founders saw that the cities
were danger-spots in their plan. In them was the
peril of democratic government. At that time,
scarce one in twenty-five of the people in the United
States lived in a city. Now it is one in three.
And to the selfishness of the trader has been added
the threat of the slum. Ask yourself then how
long before it would make an end of us, if let alone.
Put it this way: you cannot let
men live like pigs when you need their votes as freemen;
it is not safe. You cannot rob a child of its childhood,
of its home, its play, its freedom from toil and care,
and expect to appeal to the grown-up voter’s
manhood. The children are our to-morrow, and
as we mould them to-day so will they deal with us then.
Therefore that is not safe. Unsafest of all is
any thing or deed that strikes at the home, for from
the people’s home proceeds citizen virtue, and
nowhere else does it live. The slum is the enemy
of the home. Because of it the chief city of
our land came long ago to be called “The Homeless
City.” When this people comes to be truly
called a nation without homes there will no longer
be any nation.
Hence, I say, in the battle with the
slum we win or we perish. There is no middle
way. We shall win, for we are not letting things
be the way our fathers did. But it will be a
running fight, and it is not going to be won in two
years, or in ten, or in twenty. For all that,
we must keep on fighting, content if in our time we
avert the punishment that waits upon the third and
the fourth generation of those who forget the brotherhood.
As a man does in dealing with his brother so it is
the way of God that his children shall reap, that
through toil and tears we may make out the lesson
which sums up all the commandments and alone can make
the earth fit for the kingdom that is to come.