It has seemed to me
for
reasons which I hope to make clear to you
that
the present occasion, the opening of our newly-acquired
Place of Gathering, is one on which something may be
said upon the subject of the Associated Life
that
is to say, on the union, or combination of men, or
of men and women, in order to effect by collective
action objects
objects worthy of effort
impossible
for the individual to attempt.
It would seem at first sight that
combination should be the very simplest thing in the
world. It is self-evident that those who want
anything have a much better chance of getting it if
they join together in order to demand it, or to work
for it. Like one or two other simple laws of
human nature, this, though the simplest, is the hardest
to get people to understand and to accept. Nothing
is so difficult as to persuade people to trust each
other, even to the extent of standing together and
sticking together and working together in order to
get what they want.
The first association of men was forced
upon them for protection, I wonder how many ages
hundreds
of thousands of years
it took to teach
men to join together in order to protect themselves
against starvation, wild beasts, and each other.
The necessity of self-preservation first made men
associate, and changed hunters into soldiers, and
turned the whole world into a camp. It was war,
which brought men together; it was war which taught
men the necessity of order, discipline, and obedience;
without the necessity for fighting, without the military
spirit, no association at all would now be possible.
A vast number of men practically use modern safety
at this day for the purpose of being fighters, every
man against his neighbour. Just as no one would,
even now, do any work but for the necessity of finding
food for himself and his family, so no one would ever
have begun to stand side by side with his neighbour
but for the absolute certainty that he would be killed
if he did not.
Let us, however, consider a more advanced
kind of association, that of men united for purposes
of trade and profit. The craftsman of the town,
who made things and sold them, found out by the experience
of some generations that his only chance, if he would
not become a slave, was to combine with others who
made the same things for the same purposes. He
therefore formed
here in London, as early
as the Saxon times an association for the protection
of his craft
a rough-and-ready association
at first, a religious guild or fraternity, something
which should persuade men to come together as friends,
not rivals, what we should now call a benefit society,
gradually developing into an association of officers,
a constitution, and rules; growing by slow degrees
into a powerful and wealthy body, having its period
of birth, development, vigour, and decay. In illustration
of such an association, I will sketch out for you
the history of a certain London Company
what
was called a Craft Company; a society of working-men
who were engaged upon the same craft; who all made
the same thing: as the Company of Bowyers who
made bows, or of Fletchers who made arrows. The
society began first of all with a Guild of the Craft,
such as I have just mentioned; that is to say, all
those who belonged to the Craft
according
to the custom of the time, they all lived in the same
quarter and were well known to each other
were
persuaded or compelled to belong to the Guild.
Here religion stepped in, for every Guild had its
own patron saint, and if a craftsman stood aloof,
he lost the protection and incurred the displeasure
of that saint, so that, apart from considerations
of the common weal, terror of how the offended saint
might punish the blackleg forced men to join.
Thus, St. George protected the armourers; St. Mary
and St. Thomas the Martyr, the bowyers; St. Catharine
the Virgin, the haberdashers; St. Martin, the sadlers; the Virgin Mary, the
cloth-workers, and so on. On the saints day they marched in procession to
the parish church and heard Mass; every year each man paid his fees of
membership; the Guild looked after the sick and maintained the aged of the
Craft. The next step, which was not taken until after many years, and was
not at first contemplated, was to obtain for the Guild
i.e., for the Craft
a
Royal Charter. This favour of the Sovereign conferred
certain powers of regulating their trade; and, this
once obtained, we hear no more of the Guild
it
became absorbed into the Company. The religious
observances remained, but they were no longer put
forward as the chief ‘articles’ of association.
The powers granted by Royal Charter were very strong.
The Company was empowered to prohibit anyone from
working at that trade within the jurisdiction of the
City who was not a member of the Company; it could
prevent markets from being held within a certain distance
of the City; it could oblige all the youth of the City
to be apprenticed to some Company; it could regulate
wages and hours of work; it could examine the work
before it could be sold; and it could limit the number
of the workmen. The Company, in fact, ruled its
own trade with an authority from which there was no
appeal. On the other hand, the Company exercised
a paternal care over its members. When they were
sick, the Company provided for them; when they became
old, the Company maintained them; if any became dishonest,
the Company turned them out of the City. You,
who think yourselves strong with your Trades Unions
(things as yet undeveloped and with all their history
before them), have never yet succeeded in getting a
tenth part of the power and authority over your own
men that was excercised by a City Company in the time
of Richard II. over its Livery.
Then, in order to maintain the dignity
of the Craft, a livery was chosen, the colours of
which were worn by every member. On their saint’s
day, as in the old days of the Guild, the Company marched
in great magnificence, with music and flags and new
liveries, with their wardens, officers, schoolboys,
almsmen, and priests, to church. After church
they banqueted together in the Company’s Hall,
a splendid building, where a great feast was served,
and where the day was honoured by the presence of
guests
great nobles, city worthies, even
the Lord Mayor, perhaps, or some of the Aldermen, or
the Bishop, or one of the Abbots of the City Religious
Houses. Every man was bidden to bring his wife
to the feast of the Company’s grand day
if
not his wife, then his sweetheart, for all were to
feast together. During dinner the musicians in
their gallery made sweet music. After dinner,
actors and tumblers came in, and they had pageants
and shows, and marvellous feats of skill and legerdemain.
Ask yourselves, at this point, whether
it is possible to conceive of an institution more
purely democratic than such a company as originally
designed. All the craftsmen of every craft combining
together, not one allowed to stand out, electing their
own officers, obeying rules for the general good,
building halls, holding banquets, and creating a spirit
of pride in their craft. What more could be desired?
Why do we not imitate this excellent example?
Yet, when we look at the City Companies,
what do we find? The old Craft Companies, it
is true, still exist; they have an income of many
thousands a year, and a livery, or list of members,
in number varying from twenty to four hundred, and
not one single craftsman left among them. What
has become, then, or the Association? Well, that
remains, the shadow remains, but the substance has
long since gone. Even the craft itself, in many
cases, has disappeared. There are no longer in
existence, for instance, Armourers, Bowyers, Fletchers,
or Poulterers.
What has happened, then? Why
did this essentially democratic Company
in
which all were subject to rules for the general good,
and none should undersell his brother, and the rate
of wages and the hours of labour were regulated
so
completely fail?
For many reasons, some of which concern
ourselves: it failed, because the members themselves
forgot the original reason of their combination, and
neglected to look after their own interests; it failed,
because the members were too ignorant to remember,
or to know, that the Company was founded for the interests
of the Craft itself, and not for those of the masters
alone or the men alone. Now every Association
must needs, of course, have wardens or masters; it
must needs elect to those posts of dignity and responsibility
such men as could understand law and maintain their
privileges if necessary before the dread Sovereign,
his Highness the King. The men they necessarily
elected were therefore those who had received some
education, master-workmen
their own employers
not
their fellows. It speedily came about, therefore,
that the masters, not the men, ruled the hours of
work, the wages of work, the quantity and quality of
work: the masters, not the craftsmen, admitted
members and limited their number. Do you now
understand? The officers ruled the Company of
the Craftsmen for the benefit of the masters and not
the men. Nay, they did more. Since in some
trades the men showed a disposition, on dimly perceiving
the reality, to form a union within a union, the masters
were strong enough to put down all combinations for
the raising of wages as illegal; to attempt such combinations
was ruled to be conspiracy. And conspiracy all
unions of working men have remained down to the present
day, as the founders of the first Trades Unions in
this country discovered to their cost. So the
men were gagged; they were silenced; they were enslaved
by the very institution that they had founded for
the insurance of their own freedom. The thing
was inevitable because they were ignorant, and because,
if you put into any man’s hands the power of
robbing his neighbour with impunity, that man will
inevitably sooner or later rob his neighbour.
I fear that we must acknowledge the sorrowful fact
that not a single man in the whole world, whatever
his position, can be trusted with irresponsible and
absolute power
with the power of robbery
coupled with the certainty of immunity.
Well, in this way came about the first
enslavement of the working man. It lasted for
three hundred years. Then followed a time of comparative
freedom, when, the wealth and population of the city
increasing, the craftsmen found themselves pushed
out beyond the walls, and taking up their quarters
beyond the power of the Companies. But it was
a freedom without knowledge, without order, without
forethought. It was the freedom of the savage
who lives only for himself. For they were now
unable to combine. In the long course of centuries
they had lost the very idea of combination; they had
forgotten that in an age we call rude and rough they
possessed the power and perceived the importance of
combination. The great-grandchildren of the men
who had formed this union of the trade had entirely
forgotten the meaning, the reason, the possibility,
of the old combination. In this way, then, the
Companies gradually lost their craftsmen, but retained
their property.
One very remarkable result may be noticed. Formerly,
the Lord Mayor of London was elected by the whole of the commonalty. All
the citizens assembled at Pauls Cross, and there, sometimes with tumult and
sometimes with fighting, they elected their mayor for the next year. But
since every man in the City was compelled to belong to his own Company, to speak
of the commonalty meant to speak of the Companies. Every man who voted for
the election of Lord Mayor was therefore bound to be a liveryman
i.e., a member
of a Company. This restriction is still in force;
that is to say, the City of London, the richest and
the greatest city in the world, now allows eight thousand
liverymen, or members of the Companies, to elect their
chief magistrate.
Why do I tell over again this old
threadbare tale? Perhaps, however, it is not
old or threadbare to you: perhaps there are some
here who learn for the first time that association,
trade union, combination, is a thousand years old
in this ancient city. I have told it chiefly,
however, because the history should be a warning to
you of London; because it shows that association itself
may be made the very weapon with which to destroy
its own objects; in other words, because you must
find in this history an illustration or the great truth
that the forms of liberty require the most unceasing
vigilance to prevent them from becoming the means
of destroying liberty. The Companies failed because
they could be, and were, used to destroy the freedom
of the very men for whose benefit they were founded.
At present, as you know, some of them are very poor
indeed: those which are rich are probably doing
far more good with their wealth in promoting all kinds
of useful work than ever they did in all their past
history.
There followed, I said, a long period
in which association among working men was absolutely
unknown. The history of this period, from a craftsman’s
point of view, has never been written. It is,
indeed, a most terrible chapter in the history of
industry.
Imagine, if you can, crowded districts
in which there were no schools, or but one school
for a very few, no churches, no newspapers or books,
a place in which no one could read; a place in which
every man, woman and child regarded the Government
of the country, in which they had not the least share,
as their natural enemy and oppressor. Among them
lurked the housebreaker, the highway robber, and the
pickpocket. Along the riverside, where many thousands
of working men lived
at St. Katherine’s,
Wapping, Shadwell, and Ratcliff
all the
people together, high and low, were in league with
the men who loaded and unloaded the ships in the river
and robbed them all day long. What could be expected
of people left thus absolutely to themselves, without
any power of action, without the least thought that
amendment was possible or desirable? Can we wonder
if the people sank lower and lower, until, by the
middle of the last century, the working men of London
had reached a depth of degradation that terrified
everyone who knew what things meant? Listen to
the following words, written in the year 1772:
’To paint the manners of the
lower rank of the inhabitants of London is to draw
a most disagreeable caricature, since the blackest
vices and the most perpetual scenes of villainy and
wickedness are constantly to be met with there.
The most thorough contempt for all order, morality,
and decency is almost universal among the poorer sort
of people, whose manners I cannot but regard as the
worst in the whole world. The open street for
ever presents the spectator with the most loathsome
scenes of beastliness, cruelty, and all manner of vice.
In a word, if you would take a view of man in his
debased state, go neither to the savages nor the Hottentots;
they are decent, cleanly, and elegant, compared with
the poor people of London.’
This is very strongly put. If
you will look at some of Hogarth’s pictures
you will admit that the words are not too strong.
Union had long since been forbidden;
union was called conspiracy; conspiracy was punishable
by imprisonment. If men cannot combine they sink
into their natural condition and become savages again.
All these evils fell upon our unfortunate working
men as a natural result of neglect first, and of enforced
isolation. Union was forbidden. During all
these years every man worked for himself, stood by
himself; there was no association. Therefore,
there followed savagery. There was no education.
Had there been either, association or rebellion must
have followed. The awakening of associated effort
took place at the beginning of the French Revolution.
It was caused, or stimulated, by that prodigious movement;
and the first combinations of working men were formed
for political purposes. Since then, what have
we seen? Associations for political purposes
formed, prohibited, persecuted, formed again in spite
of ancient laws. Associations victorious; we
have seen Trades Unions formed, prohibited, formed
again, and now flourishing, though not quite victorious.
And the spirit of association, I cannot but believe,
grows stronger every day. In this most glorious
century
the noblest century for the advancement
of mankind that the world has ever seen, yet only
the beginning of the things that are to follow
we
have gained an immense number of things: the
suffrage, vote by ballot, the Factory Acts, abolition
of flogging, the freedom of the press, the right of
public meeting, the right of combination, and a system
of free education by which the national character,
the national modes of thought; the national customs,
will be changed in ways we cannot forecast; but since
the national character will always remain British
we need have no fear of that change. All these
things
remember, all these things; every
one of these things
is the result, direct
or indirect, of association. Think, for instance,
of one difference in custom between now and a hundred
years ago. Formerly, when a wrong thing had to
be denounced, or an iniquity attacked, the man who
saw the thing wrote a pamphlet or a book, which never
probably reached the class for whom it was intended
at all. He now writes to the papers, which are
read by millions. He thus, to begin with, creates
a certain amount of public opinion; he then forms
a society composed of those who think like himself;
then, for his companions, he spreads his doctrines
in all directions. That is our modern method;
not to stand up alone like a prophet, and to preach
and cry aloud while the world, unheeding, passes by,
but to march in the ranks with brother soldiers, exhorting
and calling on our comrades to take up the word, and
pass it on
and when the soldiers in the
ranks are firm and fixed to carry that cause.
We are now witnessing one of the most
remarkable, one of the most suggestive, signs of the
time
a time which is, I verily believe,
teeming with social mange
a time, as I have
said above, of the most stupendous importance in the
history of mankind. We read constantly, in the
paper and everywhere, fears, prophecies, bogies of
approaching revolution. Approaching! Fears
of approaching revolution! Why, we are in the
midst of this revolution, we are actually in the midst
of the most wonderful social revolution! People
don’t perceive it, simply because the revolutionaries
are not chopping off heads, as they did in France.
But it has begun, all the same, and it is going on
around us silently, swiftly, irresistibly. We
are actually in the midst of revolution. Everywhere
the old order of things is slipping away; everywhere
things new and unexpected are asserting themselves.
Let me only point out a few things. We have become
within the last twenty years a nation of readers
we
all read; most of us, it is true, read only newspapers.
But what newspapers? Why, exactly the same papers
as are read by the people of the highest position
in the land. Perhaps you have not thought of
the significance, the extreme significance, of this
fact. Certainly those who continually talk of
the ignorance of the people have never thought of
it! What does it mean? Why, that every reasoning
man in the country, whatever his social position,
reads the same news, the same debates, the same arguments
as the statesman, the scholar, the philosopher, the
preacher, or the man of science. He bases his
opinions on the same reasoning and on the same information
as the Leader of the House of Commons, as my Lord
Chancellor, as my Lord Archbishop himself. Formerly
the working man read nothing, and he knew nothing,
and he had no power. He has now, not only his
vote, but he has as much personal influence among his
own friends as depends upon his knowledge and his
force of character, and he can acquire as much political
knowledge as any noble lord not actually in official
circles, if he only chooses to reach out his hand
and take what is offered him! Is not that a revolution
which has so much raised the working man? Again,
he was, formerly, the absolute slave of his employer;
he was obliged to take with a semblance of gratitude
whatever wages were offered him. What is he now?
A man of business, who negotiates for his skill.
Is not that a revolution? Formerly he lived where
he could. Look, now, at the efforts made everywhere
to house him properly. For, understand, association
on one side, which shows power, commands recognition
and respect on the other. None of these fine
things would have been done for the working men had
they not shown that they could combine. Consider,
again, the question of education. Here, indeed,
is a mighty revolution going on around us: the
Board Schools teaching things never before presented
to the children of the people; technical schools teaching
work of all kinds; and
a most remarkable
sign of the times
thousands upon thousands
of working lads, after a hard day’s work, going
off to a Polytechnic for a hard evening’s work
of another kind. And of what kind? It is
exactly the same kind as is found in the colleges of
the rich. The same sciences, the same languages,
the same arts, the same intellectual culture, are
learned by these working lads in their evenings as
are learned by their richer brothers in the mornings.
In many cases the teachers are men of the same standing
at the University as those who teach at the public
schools. There are, I believe, a hundred thousand
of these ambitious boys scattered over London, and
the number increases daily. If this is not revolution,
I should like to know what is. That the working
classes should study in the highest schools; that
they should enjoy an equal chance with the richest
and noblest of acquiring knowledge of the highest
kind; that they should be found capable actually of
foregoing the pleasures of youth
the rest,
the society, the amusements of the evenings
in
order to acquire knowledge
what is this
if it is not a revolution and an upsetting? As
for what is coming out of all these things, I have
formed, for myself, very strong views indeed, and
I think that I could, if this were a fitting time,
prophesy unto you. But, for the present, let us
be content with simply marking what has been done,
and especially with the recognition that everything
every
single thing
that has been gained has been
either achieved by association, or has naturally grown
and developed out of association.
Through association the way to the
higher education is open to you; through association
political power has been acquired for you; through
association you have made yourselves free to combine
for trade purposes; through association you have made
yourselves strong, and even, in the eyes of some,
terrible; it remains in these respects only that you
should make, as one believes you will make, a fit and
proper use of advantages and weapons which have never
before been placed in the hands of any nation, not
even Germany; certainly not the United States.
But what about the other side of life
the
social side, the side of recreation, the side which
has been so persistently ignored and neglected up
to the present day? Now, when we look round us
and consider that side of life we observe the plainest
and the most significant proof possible of the great
social revolution which is among us; plainer, more
significant, than the success of the Trades Unions.
For we see sprung up, already a vigorous plant, the
associated life applied to purposes above the mere
material interests. You have made them safe,
as far as possible, by your unions. The social
and recreative side of life you have now taken over
into your keeping, you order recreation which shall
be as music or as poetry in your associated lives,
harmonious, melodious, rhythmic, metrical. All
that I have said to-night leads up to this, that the
Associated Life is necessary for the enjoyment and
the attainment of the best and the highest things
that the world can give, as the Guild and the Company
formerly, and the Trade Union is now, for the safeguarding
of the craft. In entering upon this new association,
men and women together, learn the lessons of the past.
Be jealous of your democratic lines. Let every
step be a step for the general interest. Let the
individual perish. Let the wishes and intentions
of your founders be never lost to sight. Be not
carried away by religion, by politics, by any new
thing; never lose the principles of your association.
And now, I ask, when, before this
day, has it been recorded in the history of any city
that men and women should unite in order to procure
for themselves those social advantages which up to
the present have been enjoyed only by the richer class,
and not always by them? When, before this time,
has it been reported that men and women have banded
themselves together resolved that whatever good things
rich people could procure for themselves, they would
also make for themselves? Since the magistrates
refused to allow dancing, one of the most innocent
and delightful amusements, they would arrange their
own dancing for themselves without troubling the magistrates
for permission. Since going to concerts cost
money, they would have their own musicians and their
own singers. Since selection of companions is
the first essence of social enjoyment, they would have
their own rooms for themselves, where they would meet
none but those who, like themselves, desired education,
culture, and orderly recreation. In one word,
when, in the history of any city, has there been found
such a combination, so resolute for culture, as the
combination of men and women which has raised this
temple, this sacred Temple of Humanity? You are,
indeed, I plainly perceive, revolutionaries of the
most dangerous kind. As revolutionaries you are
engaged in the cultivation of all those arts and accomplishments
which have hitherto belonged to the West-end; as revolutionaries
you claim the right to meet, read, sing, dance, act,
play, debate, with as much freedom as if you lived
in Berkeley Square. Where will these things stop?