It is currently reported that the
late King Edward once said, “We are all Socialists,
now”: and if the term “Socialism”
meant to-day what His Majesty probably meant by it,
many of us could truthfully make a similar statement.
Without any doubt, we could do so if we attached to
the term the meaning which it had when it was first
invented. It came into use in the thirties of
the last century, and expressed a certain disappointment
over the result of political reform. The bill
which gave more men the right to vote did not give
them higher wages. The conditions of labor were
deplorable before the Reform Bill was passed and they
continued to be so for some time afterwards. A
merely political change, therefore, was not all that
was wanted, and it was necessary to carry democracy
into a social sphere in order to improve the condition
of the poorer classes. The term “Socialism,”
therefore, was chosen to describe a play of forces
that would act in this way on society itself, and
was an excellent term for describing this right and
just tendency. The name was quickly adopted by
those with whose practical plans most of us do not
agree; but its original idea was democracy carried
into business, and at present that is the dominant
tendency of all successful parties. For six months
we have been living under what may be called “triumphant
democracy,” not because the Democratic Party
has beaten its rivals and come into control of the
Government, but for a much deeper reason, namely, that
a democracy carried into industrial life is the dominating
principle of every political body that can hope for
success. Every party must show by its action
that it values the man more than the dollar. To
this extent we are all democrats and wish the Government
to act for the people as well as to be controlled
by the people.
When we differ, it is in deciding
on the means to carry out our common purpose; and
here we differ very widely. Some would use the
power of the State to correct and improve our system
of industry, and these constitute a party of reform.
Others would abolish that system and substitute something
untried. For private capital they would put public
capital and for private management, public management either
in the whole field of industry or in that great part
of it where large capital rules. These are Socialists
in the modern and current sense of the term.
One difference of view which was formerly
very sharp is now scarcely traceable. Every one
knows that we must invoke the aid of the State in
order to make industry what it should be. The
rule that would bid the State keep its hands off the
entire field of business, the extreme laissez-faire
policy once dominant in literature and thought, now
finds few persons bold enough to advocate it or foolish
enough to believe in it. In a very chastened
form, however, the spirit that would put a reasonable
limit on what the State shall be asked to do happily
does survive and is powerful. It seeks a golden
mean between letting the State do nothing and asking
it to do everything. It is this plan of action
that I shall try to outline, and it will appear that
even this plan requires that the State should do very
much. Under an inert government the industrial
system would suffer irreparably.
The thing first to be rescued is competition meaning
that healthful rivalry between different producers
which has always been the guaranty of technical progress.
That such progress has gone on with bewildering rapidity
since the invention of the steam engine is nowhere
denied; and neither is it denied that competition
of the normal kind the effort of rivals
to excel in productive processes has caused
it. It has multiplied the product of labor here
tenfold, there, twentyfold, and elsewhere a hundredfold
and more.
This increased power to produce has
rescued us from an appalling evil. Without it,
such a crowding of population as some countries have
experienced would have carried their peoples to and
below the starvation level. Machinery now enables
us to live; and if world-crowding were to go on in
the future as it has done, and the technical progress
should cease, many of us could not live. Poverty
would increase till its cruelest effects would be realized
and lives enough would be crushed out to enable the
survivors to get a living. Of all conditions
of human happiness, the one which is most underestimated
is progress in power to produce. Hardly any of
those who would revolutionize the industrial State,
and not all of those who would reform it, have any
conception of the importance of this progress.
It is the sine qua non of any hopeful outlook
for the future of mankind.
I am to speak, however, of justice
in the business relations of life, and it might seem
that this shut out the mere question of general prosperity.
The most obvious issue between different social classes
concerns the division of whatever income exists.
Whatever there is, be it large or small, may be divided
rightly or wrongly; but I am not able to see that
the mere division of it exhausts the application of
the principle of justice. While it is clearly
wrong for one party to plunder another, it is almost
as clearly wrong for one party to reduce the general
income and so, in a sense, rob everybody. A party
that should systematically hinder production and reduce
its fruits would rob a myriad of honest laborers who
are ill prepared to stand this loss and have a perfect
right to be protected from it.
Every man, woman, and child has a
right to demand that the powers that be remove hindrances
in the way of production, and not only allow the general
income to be large and grow larger, but do everything
that they possibly can do to make it grow larger.
It is an unjust act to reduce general earnings, even
though no one is singled out for particular injury.
On this ground we insist on trust legislation, tariff
reform, the conservation of natural resources, etc.
I am prepared to claim that it is in this spirit that
we demand that private initiative, which has given
us the amount of prosperity that we have thus far obtained,
shall be enabled to continue its work without being
supplanted by monopoly. In a general way I should
include public monopoly as well as private among the
things which would put a damper on the progress of
improvement and lessen the income on which the comfort
of laborers in the near future will be dependent.
Monopoly of any sort is hostile to improvement, and
in this chiefly lies the menace which it holds for
mankind.
It is a fairly safe prediction that,
if a public monopoly were to exist in every part of
the industrial field, the per capita income
would grow less, and that it would be only a question
of time, and a short time at that, when the laborers
would be worse off than they are now. Though,
at the outset, they might absorb the entire incomes
of the well-to-do classes, the amount thus gained
would shrink in their hands until their position would
be worse than their present one. They would have
pulled down the capitalists without more than a momentary
benefit for themselves and with a prospect of soon
sinking to a lower level than as a class they have
thus far reached.
The impulse to revolutionize the system
comes from the belief that it is irreclaimably bad.
The first thing to be done is to see how much reclaiming
the system is capable of; and the only sure way to
test this question is to use all our power in the
effort to improve it. When all such efforts shall
have failed, it will be time for desperate measures.
Our industrial system has many faults: here
we are happily agreed. It is the inferences we
draw from this fact that are different. The one
that I draw is like one which is recorded in a famous
case in antiquity. When the Macedonian armies
seemed about to overwhelm Greece, Demosthenes encouraged
the Athenians by this very sound bit of philosophy:
“The worst fact in our past affords the brightest
hope for our future. It is the fact that our
misfortunes have come because of our own faults.
If they had come when we were doing our best, there
would be no hope for us.” Now the evils
of our own social system which result from mistakes
or faults are just such a ground of hope. Every
such evil which can be cited describes one possible
reform, and the longer the list of evils, the greater
is the sum total of gain which we can make by doing
away with them. If we cite them all seriatim,
what impression shall we get? Will it merely
show how badly off we are? Will it make us despair
for our future? On the contrary, it should fill
us with hope for the future. We start from the
fact that we have thus far survived in spite of the
faults. The worst off among us is above starvation
and most of us are in a tolerable state. If we
can remove the evils that exist, we shall make our
state very much more than tolerable. The greatness
of the evils measures the gain from removing them.
Every single one that is removed improves the status
of our people. We can take, as it were, a social
account of stock, measure our present state, measure
the extent to which we can improve it by putting an
end to one bad influence, count the number of such
bad influences, and so get an estimate of the gains
of carrying out a complete reformatory programme.
It will show an enormous possibility of improvement.
In the struggle for reforms we have
the great middle class with us. All honest capitalists,
great and small alike, are natural allies of honest
labor, and they are interested mainly in the same reforms
as are the members of the working-class. If we
recognize a necessity for a struggle of classes, it
is not one that marshals labor against all wealth.
The contention is rather between honest wealth allied
with honest labor, on the one hand, and dishonest
wealth on the other; and in a contest so aligned,
victory for the former party means social justice.
There is a preliminary reform to be
carried through as a condition of securing most of
the others. Who can estimate the benefit which
would come from merely making our Government what
it purports to be government by the people?
The initiative, the referendum, the recall, the short
ballot, direct primaries, and proportionate representation
are all designed to transfer power from rings and bosses
to the people themselves. If they actually do
it, as sooner or later those or kindred measures probably
will, they will so far restore the democracy of our
earlier and simpler days as to make us look back on
the rule of rings and bosses as on a nightmare of the
past. When the Government is thus really controlled
by the people we can count on having its full power
exerted for them.
What are a few of the things that
we shall then try to get?
The working day is too long.
In some occupations it covers far too many hours,
and in most occupations it covers more than it ideally
should. There are doubtless some industries in
which hours might be reduced with no lessening of
wages, because profits are large enough to bear some
reduction. In these cases a strong union might
get either more pay for a day of the present length
or the present rate for a shorter day. A universal
reduction of the period of labor would have to mean
a reduction of the product of industry, and without
immediate improvements in method of production it
would entail smaller wages. Improvements, however,
might soon obviate that necessity. With machinery
growing more and more efficient, the day may be shortened
with no diminution of wages; and the natural effect
of increasing power to produce has always been some
shortening of labor-time coupled with some enlargement
of pay. Within the last one hundred years the
period of daily labor in some types of manufacturing
has come to cover only a little over one third of
the twenty-four hours, instead of more nearly two
thirds; while the earnings have become much larger
than they were at the beginning of the period.
Normally this progress should continue, and long before
the dawn of the twenty-first century we should see
work still less severe, less prolonged, and better
paid. Where, as in some departments of steel-making,
labor in two shifts continues through the twenty-four
hours, there is a chance to make this gain without
appreciable waiting; and elsewhere it should be possible
to make it without waiting for the twenty-first century
to come much nearer than it is.
Dangerous and injurious occupations
still continue; and our country is slower than others
in remedying this trouble. Many safeguards that
are easily obtainable are neglected. Protection
for the workers and indemnities for injuries when
they occur can be insured by well-made laws, properly
enforced. Sanitary regulations and pure-food laws
need to be strengthened and more fully enforced.
Our protective tariff bears heavily
on the poor man. His wardrobe contains little
or nothing that is made of wool, and he may well sigh
for the mixed cotton and shoddy of earlier days.
Our import duties, which do, indeed, try to spare
his dinner-pail, should be made to spare his wardrobe
and the modest comforts of his life.
Commercial crises still occur and
are followed by hard times; and while a really wise
reform of money and banking would not wholly prevent
them, it would greatly mitigate their severity.
Emergency employment is desperately
needed when hard times come. European Governments
excel our own in providing it, but it is entirely
possible to adopt their methods and improve on them.
Our natural resources have been wasted
in a prodigal way. Forests have been recklessly
cut, fires been invited and the soil itself has been
sacrificed. Natural gas and oil have been burned
with no regard for the future. Coal and other
minerals have not been husbanded. It should be
possible for us to cease to play the spendthrift with
the patrimony that nature has given to us.
We have the beginnings of a parcel
post, but we need a more highly developed one that
will come nearer to the standards maintained in other
countries. With it we need telephone and telegraph
systems that can be universally used.
In our larger cities, we are struggling
to get rapid transit and shall have to continue the
struggle; but we ought to have, with urban railroads,
subways, and the like, measures that would reduce the
amount of traveling that has to be done between homes
and places of labor. A free use of the principle
of “eminent domain” would make it possible
to acquire land for carrying out any policy of general
beneficence, and that, too, without robbing the owners
of it. By resorting to this measure much of the
manufacturing which exposes great cities to imminent
danger of conflagration might and should be moved bodily
to outlying districts.
Of all industrial abuses of the past
the cruelest has been the crushing of the life of
young children by hard and prolonged labor. We
are making headway in removing this evil, but much
still remains to be gained; and a vast amount is to
be gained by a comprehensive policy for improving
the status of working-women.
Social justice demands some effective
means of getting legal justice. We have courts,
certainly. Do they give the service that we need
and, in particular, do they give it to the poor?
We do not here impugn the motives of judges.
Generally speaking, they are honest; but the whole
system of court procedure is hampered by detailed statutes
and technical rules, that mean an amount of cost and
delay which in itself is the very quintessence of
injustice. A citizen is offered a choice between
submitting to the wrong inflicted by a fellow-citizen
and accepting the wrong inflicted by a dilatory and
crushingly costly legal procedure. We probably
excel some nations in the rightfulness of the decisions
we can get if we live long enough and have money enough
to get them; but there are few civilized nations that
do not excel us in the rapidity and cheapness of the
process. A Chinese student in Columbia University
served, during the first year of his residence in
New York, as judge of Chinatown, and, by giving up
only the Saturday evening of each week to the service,
he settled the disputes which arose between Chinese
residents. As he was learned in the principles
of Confucius, I doubt not he settled them justly,
and many a time in that same city I have sighed for
his services for native Americans.
The line of division between labor
and capital ought not always to be the sharp boundary
that it is. Labor should be enabled to acquire
a modest share of capital and to invest it securely.
Protection for small investments is urgently needed,
and would do much to change a proletariat into an
independent working-class. This is an essential
feature of the social system we wish for and work for.
The man who hereafter shall correspond to Longfellow’s
“village blacksmith” will perhaps be the
owner of a hundred shares in some corporation.
In agriculture small holdings may always survive;
but there may be large ones also, and in that case
the farmer of the future may have either five acres
and a hoe, or forty acres and a mule, or a hundred
and sixty acres and a reaper, or an undivided share
in a thousand acres and a traction engine.
If we could carry through even the
reforms thus far enumerated, it would make us feel
as if we had been lifted from a slough and placed on
a plateau abounding in air and sunlight; but if we
stopped with this, we should leave much to be desired.
There are still more pressing measures to be enacted.
Nearly the greatest evil we are facing
is monopoly. This is not the universal view.
Though there are few who approve of monopoly, there
are those who regard it with toleration and think
that, if we accept it and regulate prices under it,
we shall fare sufficiently well. As yet, it is
in an incipient stage of development and has by no
means revealed its full power for evil. If we
let it grow freely, we shall find later what it is
capable of. Wise measures, adopted even now, will
come early enough to prevent it from ever growing
to maturity.
With the steel trust, the Standard
Oil trust, and other combinations before our eyes,
it seems an absurdity to speak of monopolies as being
in an incipient stage. Is it possible that anything
whatever which these great combinations represent
can be nipped in the bud? Are they not already
in the fullest flower, and big and mature as they are
ever likely to be? The companies themselves,
with their vast material plants, certainly are so.
What we are talking about, however, is not the mere
size of the companies, but the element of monopoly
that is in them. Have they such a power that
they can safely charge anything they please for their
products? Is it as though they were licensed by
the Government to be the sole makers and vendors of
their special wares? Business men know that this
is not the case; and that something puts a check on
their action. They can make their prices higher
than they should be higher than it is for
the interest of the country to have them; but they
cannot make them as high as they would be under a real
and secure monopoly. The point I am making is
that we can destroy such monopolistic power as they
have. We can liberate competition, which has,
in the main, afforded reasonable prices, and has also
guaranteed that progress which is indispensable for
maintaining a human life that is worth living.
It is to-day the only means of insuring a constantly
increasing power over nature an ability
to turn out, in greater and greater abundance, the
things which make life comfortable.
These combinations now possess a power
which it is highly perilous to let them keep.
They can disable their rivals by foul play, which would
be impossible under proper rules of the ring.
By securing control of raw materials, by selling goods
below cost in the territory where a small rival is
operating and keeping up the prices everywhere else,
by forcing merchants to boycott independent manufacturers,
by getting, in spite of laws and commissions, some
advantages from railroads, and by other similar practices,
they can drive competitors out of business. Yet
every one of these practices can be defined and prohibited,
and resorting to any of them can be, if not wholly
prevented, at least made so perilous that the practices
will become extinct.
It is possible to give to every competitor
a fair field and no favor, and, in so doing, to infuse
again into the industrial system the life and vigor
which competition guarantees. This and only this
will insure that progress in production itself which
is the sine qua non of future comfort.
It may then be expected that inventions will continue,
that machines will become more perfect, and that the
power of society to pay wages will grow larger.
Labor will then be the heir of the centuries, and
under proper laws can claim and get its inheritance.
If the world crowds itself fuller and fuller of population
and progress at the same time stagnates, nothing can
prevent an increase of poverty unrelieved by any bright
outlook. Technical progress, power to make two
blades of grass grow where one grows now, and to do
it in the various departments where men labor, is
the sole condition of a sound hope for the future
of the wage-earner. It will be as necessary under
Socialism as under the present system; but under Socialism
it will be difficult to get. In so far as it
is possible to judge, it depends on the preservation
of normal competition in the general economic field.
Leaders of the Industrial Workers
of the World have recently announced an intention
of forcing the hours of labor downward from ten hours
per day to eight, six, and finally, four, while at
the same time the pay will be forced up in a more
or less corresponding ratio. They have also announced
an intention of making capital useless to its owners,
by crippling its productive power, and so making it
easier to seize it. It goes without saying that
a four-hour day and high wages can never come by a
war which destroys most of the income to be divided.
Make the figures more moderate and allow time enough
for it, and it may be made to come by the diametrically
opposite plan of making industry more and more fruitful.
The ten-hour day succeeded the twelve- or fourteen-hour
one of former times in exactly that way.
The division of the social income
is of vital importance as well as the general size
of it. I have claimed for the regulation of monopoly
that it is nearly the greatest of possible reforms.
Perhaps the very greatest is a change in the mode
of adjusting wages. They are fixed at present
in a rough-and-ready way, though not without some reference
to what labor produces and what employers can pay,
and not, therefore, without the action of a principle
which makes, in a powerful way, for justice.
Any method, however, which involves many strikes and
lockouts, is bad economically and worse morally.
The contests are always costly, and they easily run
into violent warfare; but underneath all these struggles
and the hates and horrors that result, there is working,
if we will see it, a law that makes for peace founded
on justice. It tends in the direction of a fair
division of products between employers and employed,
and if it could work entirely without hindrances, would
actually give to every laborer substantially what he
produces. In the midst of all prevalent abuses
this basic law asserts itself like a law of gravitation,
and so long as monopoly is excluded and competition
is free, so long as both labor and capital
can move without hindrance to the points at which
they can create the largest products and get the largest
rewards its action cannot be stopped, while
that of the forces that disturb it can be so.
In this is the most inspiriting fact for the social
reformer. If there are “inspiration points”
on the mountain-tops of science, as well as on those
of nature, this is one of them, and it is reached
whenever a man discovers that in a highly imperfect
society the fundamental law makes for justice, that
it is impossible to prevent it from working and that
it is entirely possible to remove the hindrances it
encounters and let it have the first play. Nature
is behind the reformer, often unseen, always efficient,
and, in the end, resistless. To get a glimpse
of what it can do and what man can help it do is to
get a vision of the kingdoms of the earth, and the
glory of them a glory that may come from
a moral redemption of the economic system. It
is a redemption that man and nature can together bring
about if only man himself is worthy of this alliance.
Differences of mere interest between
the various social classes are inevitable. There
will never be a time when, in the division of any
common property, the mere bald interests of the claimants
are alike. When two fishermen own one boat and
fish together, each one is interested in taking the
whole catch. They divide, however, by a fair
rule and live in peace. Any similar division may
proceed in harmony if what the parties want is justice.
Till recently American workmen have lived with their
employers without hating them; and if wages can be
fixed now by some appeal to the principle of justice,
they can live with them in that way again. This
means a better method of adjudicating claims than
by a crude test of strength. There is no time
to discuss a scheme by which this can be done.
I must claim that it can be done, and take the responsibility
of proving it when more time is available. There
are beginnings of a good method in New Zealand, in
Australia, and in Canada, and the point I am making
now is that if we get a plan which works well in the
United States, we shall save a deplorable waste and
do more to revive the spirit of fraternity than we
can by any measure ever attempted. Struggles
of classes there may be, as there are between buyers
and sellers everywhere; but this need not make the
parties enemies. Its effects do not need to extend
to the heart and character and to put distrust and
hatred in the place of confidence and good will.
The moral effects of this reform will be the best ones,
but the economic effects also will be vast and beneficent.
I am not predicting a complete millennium
merely as the result of the reforms I have described.
That would require also the moral perfection of the
human race. Not a little moral improvement is
to be expected as the effect of these measures, but
it is too much to claim that they will repress all
vice and crime, reclaim all criminals, and give to
the race generally a keen devotion to duty. A
belief in a State where even this will be realized
is deeply implanted in human nature, and Socialism
itself might easily get a major premise from it.
The syllogism would run thus: (1) A better State
is bound to come. (2) It cannot come under the system
of private capital. (3) Therefore that system must
be abolished. So would we all say if the minor
premise were true “The good State
is impossible under private capital.” We
claim that it is possible and that we can see how
to realize it. We can trace the forces which,
without revolution, will make work lighter, pay better.
We also can make a syllogism, and it reads thus:
(1) The present State is tolerable. (2) Every reform
will make it better, and there are many to be made.
(3) The coming State will be whatever we have wit
and energy enough to make it.
Our plea for the justice of the coming
system will not convince any man who starts with the
assertion that capital ought to have no return
whatever, and that interest is robbery, and that the
men who bring empty hands to the mill should take
all the product of it. To most men’s instinctive
judgment this view does not appeal. The general
verdict is that it is right for capital to get something.
If we are fishing together from the
shore and I make a canoe which multiplies my catch
by five, I have a right to the extra return which
my new instrument gives me. If my neighbor asks
me to lend it to him and I do so, I deprive myself
of the extra product I have been getting by means
of it, and it is right for him to pay me interest on
the cost of the boat. He can do it and make money
by the transaction. If his catch is now five
times what it was, he can afford to pay me a part of
the extra return and still be better off than he was
before.
If my share is still large, other
men will make boats and offer them for hire.
They will compete in lending them till a modest percentage
of the cost is all that any owner can get. The
borrowers will then get the major benefit. This
implies competition and shows the necessity of preserving
it.
If, in lieu of lending my canoe, I
persuade another man to take it and fish for me, I
shall have to give him more fish than he was originally
catching; and the more the boats multiply, the larger
the share which will have to be given to the men who
are hired to work them, and the smaller the share
which will be kept by the owner of any one boat. Under
a normal condition, multiplying capital means in itself
higher wages. Higher wages mean that laborers,
in the end, begin to get boats of their own, or shares
in boats, and that the laboring-class and the capitalist
class are more and more merged. Invention that
is, devising and introducing canoes and
accumulation of capital that is, active
canoe-building mean for laborers higher
pay and a chance to save capital.
Do you tell me that this is a primitive
State, an Eden of the past and hopelessly vanished
from the present earth; that it is a lost Paradise
whose gates are forever barred? The whole point
of the economic study of which I have given the briefest
outline is that it is practicable to create in complex
modern life the most essential condition of this primitive
life its tendency toward justice. In
the Scriptures the primitive Eden was a garden, but
the New Jerusalem is a city. What we have before
us for study is a vast centralized economic system
suggesting the city; and we have to see what can be
made of it.
It is something extremely good.
The late Edward Atkinson was fond of saying that,
if improvements are allowed to do their best, the time
will come when, as he expressed it, “it will
not pay to be rich.” The workers will be
so comfortable that the care of a great capital will
more than offset any additional comfort a man can get
by owning it. Grotesquely exaggerated as this
claim may appear to be, it was based on serious economic
study. There are forces at work which, if they
have free play, will carry human life very far in
the direction of the State so described, with its
comfort, contentment, and fraternity.
That fraternity is possible in spite
of sharp contention is clear whenever athletic teams
meet and celebrate a game which has been a victory
for one and a defeat for the other; and the parties
that contend in the great industrial field may be
equally brotherly if they play fairly. Foul play
always means enmity, and fair play, friendship.
The finest possible type of character grows up in the
course of keen but honorable rivalry. The noblest
manhood that can anywhere be developed would come
from competing vigorously in the market and living
together as brothers when the contest closes.
The beaten man may not enjoy his defeat, but he may
act rightly and feel rightly toward the victor.
Develop in these economic contests the sense of justice let
both parties seek to follow a rule of right and
men’s hearts, at least, will not need to be
embittered. You will then see a contest, which,
when it is waged with bombs and bludgeons, looks like
a Sheol, so changed that it shall open the way to
a transformed world and make the hope of a future
Eden no day-dream, but a scientific deduction from
cosmic law. We may build a new earth out of the
difficult material we have to work with, and cause
justice and kindness to rule in the very place where
strife now holds sway. A New Jerusalem may actually
arise out of the fierce contentions of the modern
market. The wrath of men may praise God and his
Kingdom may come, not in spite of, but by means of
the contests of the economic sphere.
Socialism can have no monopoly of
beatific visions. It offers much in that direction.
It draws a picture of a future State of great riches
and general equality; and the picture is glorified
by a vision of general brotherhood. To some this
seems more attractive than any other which imagination
can create. I confess to a preference for a prospect
which assures, before all else, the continuance of
progress, and shows humanity striving to make forward
steps and actually making them so long as the universe
shall exist. As between a stationary paradise
and a progressive purgatory, I should prefer the latter,
for the sake of the permanent well-being of the human
race; but what I should choose in preference to either
is a progressive paradise. The capacity for further
improvement is the essential trait of the best condition
now in sight. The reformer can point to his delectable
mountains and trace an unending route to and over
them, as they rise range beyond range and lose themselves
in the distance. Men are, in general, following
the route, and each generation advances beyond the
point attained by its predecessor. Every step
is forward and upward, and the nearest goal will soon
be reached and passed. Our descendants will reach
a better and more distant goal and then press on to
something remoter and still better. Again and
again barriers seemingly insurmountable will be passed.
The impossibility of to-day will be the reality of
to-morrow, and the dazzling vision of to-day will
be the reality of the future and the starting-point
for still grander achievements.