FREEMEN
Yes, it is strange how little a while
at a time a person can be contented. Only a
little while back, when I was riding and suffering,
what a heaven this peace, this rest, this sweet serenity
in this secluded shady nook by this purling stream
would have seemed, where I could keep perfectly comfortable
all the time by pouring a dipper of water into my
armor now and then; yet already I was getting dissatisfied;
partly because I could not light my pipe for,
although I had long ago started a match factory, I
had forgotten to bring matches with me and
partly because we had nothing to eat. Here was
another illustration of the childlike improvidence
of this age and people. A man in armor always
trusted to chance for his food on a journey, and would
have been scandalized at the idea of hanging a basket
of sandwiches on his spear. There was probably
not a knight of all the Round Table combination who
would not rather have died than been caught carrying
such a thing as that on his flagstaff. And yet
there could not be anything more sensible. It
had been my intention to smuggle a couple of sandwiches
into my helmet, but I was interrupted in the act, and
had to make an excuse and lay them aside, and a dog
got them.
Night approached, and with it a storm.
The darkness came on fast. We must camp, of
course. I found a good shelter for the demoiselle
under a rock, and went off and found another for myself.
But I was obliged to remain in my armor, because
I could not get it off by myself and yet could not
allow Alisande to help, because it would have seemed
so like undressing before folk. It would not
have amounted to that in reality, because I had clothes
on underneath; but the prejudices of one’s breeding
are not gotten rid of just at a jump, and I knew that
when it came to stripping off that bob-tailed iron
petticoat I should be embarrassed.
With the storm came a change of weather;
and the stronger the wind blew, and the wilder the
rain lashed around, the colder and colder it got.
Pretty soon, various kinds of bugs and ants and worms
and things began to flock in out of the wet and crawl
down inside my armor to get warm; and while some of
them behaved well enough, and snuggled up amongst
my clothes and got quiet, the majority were of a restless,
uncomfortable sort, and never stayed still, but went
on prowling and hunting for they did not know what;
especially the ants, which went tickling along in wearisome
procession from one end of me to the other by the hour,
and are a kind of creatures which I never wish to
sleep with again. It would be my advice to persons
situated in this way, to not roll or thrash around,
because this excites the interest of all the different
sorts of animals and makes every last one of them want
to turn out and see what is going on, and this makes
things worse than they were before, and of course
makes you objurgate harder, too, if you can.
Still, if one did not roll and thrash around he would
die; so perhaps it is as well to do one way as the
other; there is no real choice. Even after I
was frozen solid I could still distinguish that tickling,
just as a corpse does when he is taking electric treatment.
I said I would never wear armor after this trip.
All those trying hours whilst I was
frozen and yet was in a living fire, as you may say,
on account of that swarm of crawlers, that same unanswerable
question kept circling and circling through my tired
head: How do people stand this miserable armor?
How have they managed to stand it all these generations?
How can they sleep at night for dreading the tortures
of next day?
When the morning came at last, I was
in a bad enough plight: seedy, drowsy, fagged,
from want of sleep; weary from thrashing around, famished
from long fasting; pining for a bath, and to get rid
of the animals; and crippled with rheumatism.
And how had it fared with the nobly born, the titled
aristocrat, the Demoiselle Alisande la Carteloise?
Why, she was as fresh as a squirrel; she had slept
like the dead; and as for a bath, probably neither
she nor any other noble in the land had ever had one,
and so she was not missing it. Measured by modern
standards, they were merely modified savages, those
people. This noble lady showed no impatience
to get to breakfast and that smacks of
the savage, too. On their journeys those Britons
were used to long fasts, and knew how to bear them;
and also how to freight up against probable fasts before
starting, after the style of the Indian and the anaconda.
As like as not, Sandy was loaded for a three-day
stretch.
We were off before sunrise, Sandy
riding and I limping along behind. In half an
hour we came upon a group of ragged poor creatures
who had assembled to mend the thing which was regarded
as a road. They were as humble as animals to
me; and when I proposed to breakfast with them, they
were so flattered, so overwhelmed by this extraordinary
condescension of mine that at first they were not
able to believe that I was in earnest. My lady
put up her scornful lip and withdrew to one side; she
said in their hearing that she would as soon think
of eating with the other cattle a remark
which embarrassed these poor devils merely because
it referred to them, and not because it insulted or
offended them, for it didn’t. And yet
they were not slaves, not chattels. By a sarcasm
of law and phrase they were freemen. Seven-tenths
of the free population of the country were of just
their class and degree: small “independent”
farmers, artisans, etc.; which is to say, they
were the nation, the actual Nation; they were about
all of it that was useful, or worth saving, or really
respect-worthy, and to subtract them would have been
to subtract the Nation and leave behind some dregs,
some refuse, in the shape of a king, nobility and
gentry, idle, unproductive, acquainted mainly with
the arts of wasting and destroying, and of no sort
of use or value in any rationally constructed world.
And yet, by ingenious contrivance, this gilded minority,
instead of being in the tail of the procession where
it belonged, was marching head up and banners flying,
at the other end of it; had elected itself to be the
Nation, and these innumerable clams had permitted it
so long that they had come at last to accept it as
a truth; and not only that, but to believe it right
and as it should be. The priests had told their
fathers and themselves that this ironical state of
things was ordained of God; and so, not reflecting
upon how unlike God it would be to amuse himself with
sarcasms, and especially such poor transparent ones
as this, they had dropped the matter there and become
respectfully quiet.
The talk of these meek people had
a strange enough sound in a formerly American ear.
They were freemen, but they could not leave the estates
of their lord or their bishop without his permission;
they could not prepare their own bread, but must have
their corn ground and their bread baked at his mill
and his bakery, and pay roundly for the same; they
could not sell a piece of their own property without
paying him a handsome percentage of the proceeds,
nor buy a piece of somebody else’s without remembering
him in cash for the privilege; they had to harvest
his grain for him gratis, and be ready to come at
a moment’s notice, leaving their own crop to
destruction by the threatened storm; they had to let
him plant fruit trees in their fields, and then keep
their indignation to themselves when his heedless
fruit-gatherers trampled the grain around the trees;
they had to smother their anger when his hunting parties
galloped through their fields laying waste the result
of their patient toil; they were not allowed to keep
doves themselves, and when the swarms from my lord’s
dovecote settled on their crops they must not lose
their temper and kill a bird, for awful would the
penalty be; when the harvest was at last gathered,
then came the procession of robbers to levy their
blackmail upon it: first the Church carted off
its fat tenth, then the king’s commissioner
took his twentieth, then my lord’s people made
a mighty inroad upon the remainder; after which, the
skinned freeman had liberty to bestow the remnant
in his barn, in case it was worth the trouble; there
were taxes, and taxes, and taxes, and more taxes, and
taxes again, and yet other taxes upon this
free and independent pauper, but none upon his lord
the baron or the bishop, none upon the wasteful nobility
or the all-devouring Church; if the baron would sleep
unvexed, the freeman must sit up all night after his
day’s work and whip the ponds to keep the frogs
quiet; if the freeman’s daughter but
no, that last infamy of monarchical government is
unprintable; and finally, if the freeman, grown desperate
with his tortures, found his life unendurable under
such conditions, and sacrificed it and fled to death
for mercy and refuge, the gentle Church condemned
him to eternal fire, the gentle law buried him at
midnight at the cross-roads with a stake through his
back, and his master the baron or the bishop confiscated
all his property and turned his widow and his orphans
out of doors.
And here were these freemen assembled
in the early morning to work on their lord the bishop’s
road three days each gratis; every head
of a family, and every son of a family, three days
each, gratis, and a day or so added for their servants.
Why, it was like reading about France and the French,
before the ever memorable and blessed Revolution,
which swept a thousand years of such villany away
in one swift tidal-wave of blood one:
a settlement of that hoary debt in the proportion
of half a drop of blood for each hogshead of it that
had been pressed by slow tortures out of that people
in the weary stretch of ten centuries of wrong and
shame and misery the like of which was not to be mated
but in hell. There were two “Reigns of
Terror,” if we would but remember it and consider
it; the one wrought murder in hot passion, the other
in heartless cold blood; the one lasted mere months,
the other had lasted a thousand years; the one inflicted
death upon ten thousand persons, the other upon a
hundred millions; but our shudders are all for the
“horrors” of the minor Terror, the momentary
Terror, so to speak; whereas, what is the horror of
swift death by the axe, compared with lifelong death
from hunger, cold, insult, cruelty, and heart-break?
What is swift death by lightning compared with death
by slow fire at the stake? A city cemetery could
contain the coffins filled by that brief Terror which
we have all been so diligently taught to shiver at
and mourn over; but all France could hardly contain
the coffins filled by that older and real Terror that
unspeakably bitter and awful Terror which none of us
has been taught to see in its vastness or pity as
it deserves.
These poor ostensible freemen who
were sharing their breakfast and their talk with me,
were as full of humble reverence for their king and
Church and nobility as their worst enemy could desire.
There was something pitifully ludicrous about it.
I asked them if they supposed a nation of people
ever existed, who, with a free vote in every man’s
hand, would elect that a single family and its descendants
should reign over it forever, whether gifted or boobies,
to the exclusion of all other families including
the voter’s; and would also elect that a certain
hundred families should be raised to dizzy summits
of rank, and clothed on with offensive transmissible
glories and privileges to the exclusion of the rest
of the nation’s families including
his own.
They all looked unhit, and said they
didn’t know; that they had never thought about
it before, and it hadn’t ever occurred to them
that a nation could be so situated that every man could
have a say in the government. I said I had seen
one and that it would last until it had
an Established Church. Again they were all unhit at
first. But presently one man looked up and asked
me to state that proposition again; and state it slowly,
so it could soak into his understanding. I did
it; and after a little he had the idea, and he brought
his fist down and said he didn’t believe
a nation where every man had a vote would voluntarily
get down in the mud and dirt in any such way; and
that to steal from a nation its will and preference
must be a crime and the first of all crimes.
I said to myself:
“This one’s a man.
If I were backed by enough of his sort, I would make
a strike for the welfare of this country, and try to
prove myself its loyalest citizen by making a wholesome
change in its system of government.”
You see my kind of loyalty was loyalty
to one’s country, not to its institutions or
its office-holders. The country is the real
thing, the substantial thing, the eternal thing; it
is the thing to watch over, and care for, and be loyal
to; institutions are extraneous, they are its mere
clothing, and clothing can wear out, become ragged,
cease to be comfortable, cease to protect the body
from winter, disease, and death. To be loyal
to rags, to shout for rags, to worship rags, to die
for rags that is a loyalty of unreason,
it is pure animal; it belongs to monarchy, was invented
by monarchy; let monarchy keep it. I was from
Connecticut, whose Constitution declares “that
all political power is inherent in the people, and
all free governments are founded on their authority
and instituted for their benefit; and that they have
at all times an undeniable and indefeasible
right to alter their form of government in
such a manner as they may think expedient.”
Under that gospel, the citizen who
thinks he sees that the commonwealth’s political
clothes are worn out, and yet holds his peace and
does not agitate for a new suit, is disloyal; he is
a traitor. That he may be the only one who thinks
he sees this decay, does not excuse him; it is his
duty to agitate anyway, and it is the duty of the
others to vote him down if they do not see the matter
as he does.
And now here I was, in a country where
a right to say how the country should be governed
was restricted to six persons in each thousand of
its population. For the nine hundred and ninety-four
to express dissatisfaction with the regnant system
and propose to change it, would have made the whole
six shudder as one man, it would have been so disloyal,
so dishonorable, such putrid black treason.
So to speak, I was become a stockholder in a corporation
where nine hundred and ninety-four of the members furnished
all the money and did all the work, and the other
six elected themselves a permanent board of direction
and took all the dividends. It seemed to me
that what the nine hundred and ninety-four dupes needed
was a new deal. The thing that would have best
suited the circus side of my nature would have been
to resign the Boss-ship and get up an insurrection
and turn it into a revolution; but I knew that the
Jack Cade or the Wat Tyler who tries such a thing without
first educating his materials up to revolution grade
is almost absolutely certain to get left. I
had never been accustomed to getting left, even if
I do say it myself. Wherefore, the “deal”
which had been for some time working into shape in
my mind was of a quite different pattern from the
Cade-Tyler sort.
So I did not talk blood and insurrection
to that man there who sat munching black bread with
that abused and mistaught herd of human sheep, but
took him aside and talked matter of another sort to
him. After I had finished, I got him to lend
me a little ink from his veins; and with this and
a sliver I wrote on a piece of bark
Put him in the Man-factory
and gave it to him, and said:
“Take it to the palace at Camelot
and give it into the hands of Amyas lé Poulet,
whom I call Clarence, and he will understand.”
“He is a priest, then,”
said the man, and some of the enthusiasm went out
of his face.
“How a priest?
Didn’t I tell you that no chattel of the Church,
no bond-slave of pope or bishop can enter my Man-Factory?
Didn’t I tell you that you couldn’t
enter unless your religion, whatever it might be,
was your own free property?”
“Marry, it is so, and for that
I was glad; wherefore it liked me not, and bred in
me a cold doubt, to hear of this priest being there.”
“But he isn’t a priest, I tell you.”
The man looked far from satisfied. He said:
“He is not a priest, and yet can read?”
“He is not a priest and yet
can read yes, and write, too, for that
matter. I taught him myself.” The
man’s face cleared. “And it is the
first thing that you yourself will be taught in that
Factory ”
“I? I would give blood
out of my heart to know that art. Why, I will
be your slave, your ”
“No you won’t, you won’t
be anybody’s slave. Take your family and
go along. Your lord the bishop will confiscate
your small property, but no matter. Clarence
will fix you all right.”