WORKING ARISTOCRACY.
A poor Working Mammonism getting itself
’strangled in the partridge-nets of an Unworking
Dilettantism,’ and bellowing dreadfully, and
already black in the face, is surely a disastrous
spectacle! But of a Midas-eared Mammonism, which
indeed at bottom all pure Mammonisms are, what better
can you expect? No better; if not
this, then something other equally disastrous, if not
still more disastrous. Mammonisms, grown asinine,
have to become human again, and rational; they have,
on the whole, to cease to be Mammonisms, were it even
on compulsion, and pressure of the hemp round their
neck! My friends of the Working Aristocracy,
there are now a great many things which you also,
in your extreme need, will have to consider.
The Continental people, it would seem,
are ’exporting our machinery, beginning to spin
cotton and manufacture for themselves, to cut us out
of this market and then out of that!’ Sad news
indeed; but irremediable; by no means the
saddest news. The saddest news is, that we should
find our National Existence, as I sometimes hear it
said, depend on selling manufactured cotton at a farthing
an ell cheaper than any other People. A most
narrow stand for a great Nation to base itself on!
A stand which, with all the Corn-Law Abrogations
conceivable, I do not think will be capable of enduring.
My friends, suppose we quitted that
stand; suppose we came honestly down from it, and
said: “This is our minimum of cotton-prices.
We care not, for the present, to make cotton any cheaper.
Do you, if it seem so blessed to you, make cotton
cheaper. Fill your lungs with cotton-fuzz, your
hearts with copperas-fumes, with rage and mutiny;
become ye the general gnomes of Europe, slaves of the
lamp!” I admire a Nation which fancies
it will die if it do not undersell all other Nations,
to the end of the world. Brothers, we will cease
to undersell them; we will be content to equal-sell
them; to be happy selling equally with them!
I do not see the use of underselling them. Cotton-cloth
is already two-pence a yard or lower; and yet bare
backs were never more numerous among us. Let
inventive men cease to spend their existence incessantly
contriving how cotton can be made cheaper; and try
to invent, a little, how cotton at its present cheapness
could be somewhat justlier divided among us.
Let inventive men consider, Whether the Secret of
this Universe, and of Man’s Life there, does,
after all, as we rashly fancy it, consist in making
money? There is One God, just, supreme, almighty:
but is Mammon the name of him? With a Hell
which means ‘Failing to make money,’ I
do not think there is any Heaven possible that would
suit one well; nor so much as an Earth that can be
habitable long! In brief, all this Mammon-Gospel,
of Supply-and-demand, Competition, Laissez-faire,
and Devil take the hindmost, begins to be one of the
shabbiest Gospels ever preached; or altogether the
shabbiest. Even with Dilettante partridge-nets,
and at a horrible expenditure of pain, who shall regret
to see the entirely transient, and at best somewhat
despicable life strangled out of it? At
the best, as we say, a somewhat despicable, unvenerable
thing, this same ‘Laissez-faire;’
and now, at the worst, fast growing an altogether
detestable one!
“But what is to be done with
our manufacturing population, with our agricultural,
with our ever-increasing population?” cry many. Ay,
what? Many things can be done with them, a hundred
things, and a thousand things, had we once
got a soul, and begun to try. This one thing,
of doing for them by ‘underselling all people,’
and filling our own bürsten pockets and appetites
by the road; and turning over all care for any ‘population,’
or human or divine consideration except cash only,
to the winds, with a “Laissez-faire”
and the rest of it: this is evidently not the
thing. Farthing cheaper per yard? No great
Nation can stand on the apex of such a pyramid; screwing
itself higher and higher; balancing itself on its
great-toe! Can England not subsist without being
above all people in working? England never
deliberately purposed such a thing. If England
work better than all people, it shall be well.
England, like an honest worker, will work as well
as she can; and hope the gods may allow her to live
on that basis. Laissez-faire and much else
being once well dead, how many ‘impossibles’
will become possible! They are impossible, as
cotton-cloth at two-pence an ell was till
men set about making it. The inventive genius
of great England will not forever sit patient with
mere wheels and pinions, bobbins, straps and billy-rollers
whirring in the head of it. The inventive genius
of England is not a Beaver’s, or a Spinner’s
or Spider’s genius: it is a Man’s
genius, I hope, with a God over him!
Laissez-faire, Supply-and-demand, one
begins to be weary of all that. Leave all to
egoism, to ravenous greed of money, of pleasure, of
applause: it is the Gospel of Despair!
Man is a Patent-Digester, then: only give
him Free Trade, Free digesting-room; and each of us
digest what he can come at, leaving the rest to Fate!
My unhappy brethren of the Working Mammonism, my unhappier
brethren of the Idle Dilettantism, no world was ever
held together in that way for long. A world of
mere Patent-Digesters will soon have nothing to digest:
such world ends, and by Law of Nature must end, in
‘over-population;’ in howling universal
famine, ‘impossibility,’ and suicidal madness,
as of endless dog-kennels run rabid. Supply-and-demand
shall do its full part, and Free Trade shall be free
as air; thou of the shotbelts, see thou
forbid it not, with those paltry, worse than
Mammonish swindleries and Sliding-scales of thine,
which are seen to be swindleries for all thy canting,
which in times like ours are very scandalous to see!
And Trade never so well freed, and all Tariffs settled
or abolished, and Supply-and-demand in full operation, let
us all know that we have yet done nothing; that we
have merely cleared the ground for doing.
Yes, were the Corn-Laws ended tomorrow,
there is nothing yet ended; there is only room made
for all manner of things beginning. The Corn-Laws
gone, and Trade made free, it is as good as certain
this paralysis of industry will pass away. We
shall have another period of commercial enterprise,
of victory and prosperity; during which, it is likely,
much money will again be made, and all the people may,
by the extant methods, still for a space of years,
be kept alive and physically fed. The strangling
band of Famine will be loosened from our necks; we
shall have room again to breathe; time to bethink
ourselves, to repent and consider! A precious
and thrice-precious space of years; wherein to struggle
as for life in reforming our foul ways; in alleviating,
instructing, regulating our people; seeking, as for
life, that something like spiritual food be imparted
them, some real governance and guidance be provided
them! It will be a priceless time. For our
new period or paroxysm of commercial prosperity will
and can, on the old methods of ‘Competition
and Devil take the hindmost,’ prove but a paroxysm:
a new paroxysm, likely enough, if we do
not use it better, to be our last. In
this, of itself, is no salvation. If our Trade
in twenty years, ‘flourishing’ as never
Trade flourished, could double itself; yet then also,
by the old Laissez-faire method, our Population
is doubled: we shall then be as we are, only twice
as many of us, twice and ten times as unmanageable!
All this dire misery, therefore; all
this of our poor Workhouse Workmen, of our Chartisms,
Trades-strikes, Corn-Laws, Toryisms, and the general
downbreak of Laissez-faire in these days, may
we not regard it as a voice from the dumb bosom of
Nature, saying to us: “Behold! Supply-and-demand
is not the one Law of Nature; Cash-payment is not
the sole nexus of man with man, how far
from it! Deep, far deeper than Supply-and-demand,
are Laws, Obligations sacred as Man’s Life itself:
these also, if you will continue to do work, you shall
now learn and obey. He that will learn them, behold
Nature is on his side, he shall yet work and prosper
with noble rewards. He that will not learn them,
Nature is against him, he shall not be able to do work
in Nature’s empire, not in hers.
Perpetual mutiny, contention, hatred, isolation, execration
shall wait on his footsteps, till all men discern
that the thing which he attains, however golden it
look or be, is not success, but the want of success.”
Supply-and-demand, alas!
For what noble work was there ever yet any audible
‘demand’ in that poor sense? The man
of Macedonia, speaking in vision to an Apostle Paul,
“Come over and help us,” did not specify
what rate of wages he would give! Or was the Christian
Religion itself accomplished by Prize-Essays, Bridgwater
Bequests, and a ’minimum of Four thousand five
hundred a year’? No demand that I heard
of was made then, audible in any Labour-market, Manchester
Chamber of Commerce, or other the like emporium and
hiring establishment; silent were all these from any
whisper of such demand; powerless were all
these to ‘supply’ it, had the demand been
in thunder and earthquake, with gold Eldorados
and Mahometan Paradises for the reward. Ah me,
into what waste latitudes, in this Time-Voyage, have
we wandered; like adventurous Sindbads; where
the men go about as if by galvanism, with meaningless
glaring eyes, and have no soul, but only a beaver-faculty
and stomach! The haggard despair of Cotton-factory,
Coal-mine operatives, Chandos Farm-labourers, in these
days, is painful to behold; but not so painful, hideous
to the inner sense, as that brutish godforgetting
Profit-and-Loss Philosophy and Life-theory, which
we hear jangled on all hands of us, in senate-houses,
spouting-clubs, leading-articles, pulpits and platforms,
everywhere as the Ultimate Gospel and candid Plain-English
of Man’s Life, from the throats and pens and
thoughts of all-but all men!
Enlightened Philosophies, like Moliere
Doctors, will tell you: “Enthusiasms, Self-sacrifice,
Heaven, Hell and suchlike: yes, all that was
true enough for old stupid times; all that used to
be true: but we have changed all that, nous
avons change tout cela!” Well; if the heart
be got round now into the right side, and the liver
to the left; if man have no heroism in him deeper
than the wish to eat, and in his soul there dwell
now no Infinite of Hope and Awe, and no divine Silence
can become imperative because it is not Sinai Thunder,
and no tie will bind if it be not that of Tyburn gallows-ropes, then
verily you have changed all that; and for it, and
for you, and for me, behold the Abyss and nameless
Annihilation is ready. So scandalous a beggarly
Universe deserves indeed nothing else; I cannot say
I would save it from Annihilation. Vacuum, and
the serene Blue, will be much handsomer; easier too
for all of us. I, for one, decline living as a
Patent-Digester. Patent-Digester, Spinning-Mule,
Mayfair Clothes-Horse: many thanks, but your
Chaosships will have the goodness to excuse me!