The
Land Question
First published in 1881 as "The
Irish Land Question"
We hold these truths to be self-evident – that
all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their
Creator with certain unalienable rights; that among these are
life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness! That to secure
these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving
their just powers from the consent of the governed; that wheever
any form of government becomes destructive of these ends,
it is the right of the people to alter or abolish it. — Declaration
of Independence.
Preface
This book was first published in the early part
of 1881, under the title of The Irish Land Question." In
order better to indicate the general character of this subject,
and to conform to the title under which it had been republished
in other countries, the title was subsequently changed to "The
Land Question."
Chapter
1: Unpalatable Truth
IN charging the Dublin jury in the Land League cases, Mr. Justice
Fitzgerald told them that the land laws of Ireland were more favorable
to the tenant than those of Great Britain, Belgium, or the United
States.
As a matter of fact, Justice Fitzgerald is right. For in Ireland
certain local customs and the provisions of the Bright Land Act
mitigate somewhat the power of the landlord in his dealings with
the tenant. In Great Britain, save by custom in a few localities,
there are no such mitigations. In Belgium I believe there are none.
There are certainly none in the United States.
This fact which Justice Fitzgerald cites will be reechoed by the
enemies of the Irish movement. And it is a fact well worth the
consideration of its friends. For the Irish movement has passed
its first stage, and it is time for a more definite understanding
of what is needed and how it is to be got.
It is the fashion of Land League orators and sympathizing newspapers
in this country to talk as if the distress and disquiet in Ireland
were wholly due to political oppression, and our national House
of Representatives recently passed, by unanimous vote, a resolution
which censured England for her treatment of Ireland. But, while
it is indeed true that Ireland has been deeply wronged and bitterly
oppressed by England, it is not true that there is any economic
oppression of Ireland by England now. To whatever cause Irish distress
may be due, it is certainly not due to the existence of laws which
press on industry more heavily in Ireland than in any other part
of the United Kingdom.
And, further than this, the Irish land system, which is so much
talked of as though it were some peculiarly atrocious system, is
essentially the same land system which prevails in all civilized
countries, which we of the United States have accepted unquestioningly,
and have extended over the whole temperate zone of a new continent – the
same system which all over the civilized world men are accustomed
to consider natural and just.
Justice Fitzgerald is unquestionably right.
As to England, it is well known that the English landlords exercise
freely all the powers complained of in the Irish landlords, without
even the slight restrictions imposed in Ireland.
As to Belgium, let me quote the high authority of the distinguished
Belgian publicist, M. Émile de Laveleye, of the University
of Liége. He says that the Belgian tenantfarmers – for
tenancy largely prevails even where the land is most minutely divided – are
rack-rented with a mercilessness unknown in England or even in
Ireland, and are compelled to vote as their landlords dictate!
And as to the United States, let me ask the men who to applauding
audiences are nightly comparing the freedom of America with the
oppression of Ireland – let me ask the Representatives who
voted for the resolution of sympathy with Ireland, this simple
question: What would the Irish landlords lose, what would the Irish
tenants gain, if tomorrow, Ireland were made a State in the American
Union and American law substituted for English law?
I think it will puzzle them to reply. The truth is that the gain
would be to the landlords, the loss to the tenants. The simple
truth is that, under our laws, the Irish landlords could rack-rent,
distrain, evict, or absent themselves, as they pleased, and without
any restriction from Ulster tenant-right or legal requirement of
compensation for improvements. Under our laws they could, just
as freely as they can now, impose whatever terms they pleased upon
their tenants – whether as to cultivation, as to improvements,
as to game, as to marriages, as to voting, or as to anything else.
For these powers do not spring from special laws. They are merely
incident to the right of property; they result simply from the
acknowledgment of the right of the owner of land to do as he pleases
with his own – to let it, or not let it. So far as law can
give them to him, every American landlord has these powers as fully
as any Irish landlord. Cannot the American owner of land make,
in letting it, any stipulation he pleases as to how it shall be
used, or improved, or cultivated? Can he not reserve any of his
own rights upon it, such as the right of entry, or of cutting wood,
or shooting game, or catching fish? And, in the absence of special
agreement, does not American law give him, what the law of Ireland
does not now give him, the ownership at the expiration of the lease
of all the improvements made by the tenant? What single power has
the Irish landowner that the American landowner has not as fully?
Is not the American landlord just as free as is the Irish landlord
to refuse to rent his lands or his houses to any one who does not
attend a certain church or vote a certain ticket? Is he not quite
as free to do this as he is free to refuse his contributions to
all but one particular benevolent society or political committee?
Or, if, not liking a certain newspaper, he chooses to give notice
to quit to any tenant whom he finds taking that newspaper, what
law can be invoked to prevent him? There is none. The property
is his, and he can let it, or not let it, as he wills. And, having
this power to let or not let, he has power to demand any terms
he pleases.
That Ireland is a conquered country; that centuries ago her soil
was taken from its native possessors and parceled out among aliens,
and that it has been confiscated again and again, has nothing to
do with the real question of today – no more to do with it
than have the confiscations of Marius and Sylla. England, too,
is a conquered country; her soil has been confiscated again and
again; and, spite of all talk about Saxon and Celt, it is not probable
that, after the admixture of generations, the division of landholder
and non-landholder any more coincides with distinction of race
in the one country than in the other. That Irish land titles rest
on force and fraud is true; but so do land titles in every country – even
to a large extent in our own peacefully settled country. Even in
our most recently settled States, how much land is there to which
title has been got by fraud and perjury and bribery – by
the arts of the lobbyist or the cunning tricks of hired lawyers,
by double-barreled shotguns and repeating rifles?
The truth is that the Irish land system is simply the general
system of modern civilization. In no essential feature does it
differ from the system that obtains here – in what we are
accustomed to consider the freest country under the sun. Entails
and primogeniture and family settlements may be in themselves bad
things, and may sometimes interfere with putting the land to its
best use, but their effects upon the relations of landlord and
tenant are not worth talking about. As for rack-rent, which is
simply a rent fixed at short intervals by competition, that is
in the United States even a more common way of letting land than
in Ireland. In our cities the majority of our people live in houses
rented from month to month or year to year for the highest price
the landlord thinks he can get. The usual term, in the newer States,
at least, for the letting of agricultural land is from season to
season. And that the rent of land in the United States comes, on
the whole, more closely to the standard of rack, or full competition
rent, there can be, I think, little doubt. That the land of Ireland
is, as the apologists for landlordism say, largely under-rented
(that is, not rented for the full amount the landlord might get
with free competition) is probably true. Miss C. G. O'Brien, in
a recent article in the Nineteenth Century, states that
the tenant-farmers generally get for such patches as they sub-let
to their laborers twice the rent they pay the landlords. And we
hear incidentally of many "good landlords," i.e., landlords not
in the habit of pushing their tenants for as much as they might
get by rigorously demanding all that any one would give.
These things, as well as the peculiar bitterness of complaints
against middlemen and the speculators who have purchased encumbered
estates and manage them solely with a view to profit, go to show
the truth of the statement that the land of Ireland has been, by
its present owners, largely underlet, when considered from what
we would deem a business point of view. And this is but what might
be expected. Human nature is about the same the world over, and
the Irish Landlords as a class are no better nor worse than would
be other men under like conditions. An aristocracy such as that
of Ireland has its virtues as well as its vices, and is influenced
by sentiments which do not enter into mere business transactions – sentiments
which must often modify and soften the calculations of cold self-interest.
But with us the letting of land is as much a business matter as
the buying or selling of wheat or of stocks. An American would
not think he was showing his goodness by renting his land for low
rates, any more than he would think he was showing his goodness
by selling wheat for less than the market price, or stocks for
less than the quotations. So in those districts of France and Belgium
where the land is most sub-divided, the peasant proprietors, says
M. de Laveleye, boast to one another of the high rents they get,
just as they boast of the high prices they get for pigs or for
poultry.
The best measure of rent is, of course, its proportion to the
produce. The only estimate of Irish rent as a proportion of which
I know is that of Buckle, who puts it at one-fourth of the produce.
In this country I am inclined to think one-fourth would generally
be considered a moderate rent. Even in California there is considerable
land rented for one-third the crop, and some that rents for one-half
the crop; while, according to a writer in the Atlantic Monthly, the common rent in that
great wheat-growing section of the New Northwest now being opened
up is one-half the crop!
It does not seem to me that Justice Fitzgerald's statement can
be disputed, though of course its developments are not yet as strikingly
bad, for this is yet a new country, and tenants are comparatively
few, and land comparatively easy to get. The American land system
is really worse for the tenant than the Irish system. For with
us there is neither sentiment nor custom to check the force of
competition or mitigate the natural desire of the landlord to get
all he can.
Nor is there anything in our system to prevent or check absenteeism,
so much complained of in regard to Ireland. Before the modern era,
which has so facilitated travel and communication, and made the
great cities so attractive to those having money to spend, the
prevalence of Irish absenteeism may have been due to special causes,
but at the present day there is certainly nothing peculiar in it.
Most of the large English and Scotch landholders are absentees
for the greater part of the year, and many of them live permanently
or for long intervals upon the Continent. So are our large American
landowners generally absentees. In New York, in San Francisco,
in Washington, Boston, Chicago, and St. Louis, live men who own
large tracts of land which they seldom or never see. A resident
of Rochester is said to own no less than four hundred farms in
different States, one of which (I believe in Kentucky) comprises
thirty-five thousand acres. Under the plantation system of farming
and that of stock-raising on a grand scale, which are developing
so rapidly in our new States, very much of the profits go to professional
men and capitalists who live in distant cities. Corporations whose
stock is held in the East or in Europe own much greater bodies
of land, at much greater distances, than do the London corporations
possessing landed estates in Ireland. To say nothing of the great
land-grant railroad companies, the Standard Oil Company probably
owns more acres of Western land than all the London companies put
together own of Irish land. And, although landlordism in its grosser
forms is only beginning in the United States, there is probably
no American, wherever he may live, who cannot in his immediate
vicinity see some instance of absentee landlordism. The tendency
to concentration born of the new era ushered in by the application
of steam shows itself in this way as in many others. To those who
can live where they please, the great cities are becoming more
and more attractive.
And it is further to be remarked that too much stress is laid
upon absenteeism, and that it might be prevented without much of
the evil often attributed to it being cured. That is to say, that
to his tenantry and neighborhood the owner of land in Galway or
Kilkenny would be as much an absentee if he lived in Dublin as
if he lived in London, and that, if Irish landlords were compelled
to live in Ireland, all that the Irish people would gain would
be, metaphorically speaking, the crumbs that fell from the landlords'
tables. For if the butter and eggs, the pigs and the poultry, of
the Irish peasant must be taken from him and exported to pay for
his landlord's wine and cigars, what difference does it make to
him where the wine is drunk or the cigars are smoked?
Chapter 2: Distress and Famine
BUT it will be asked: If the land system which prevails in Ireland
is essentially the same as that which prevails elsewhere, how is
it that it does not produce the same results elsewhere?
I answer that it does everywhere produce the same kind of results.
As there is nothing essentially peculiar in the Irish land system,
so is there nothing essentially peculiar in Irish distress. Between
the distress in Ireland and the distress in other countries there
may be differences in degree and differences in manifestation;
but that is all.
The truth is, that as there is nothing peculiar in the Irish land
system, so is there nothing peculiar in the distress which that
land system causes. We hear a great deal of Irish emigration, of
the millions of sons and daughters of Erin who have been compelled
to leave their native soil. But have not the Scottish Highlands
been all but depopulated? Do not the English emigrate in the same
way, and for the same reasons? Do not the Germans and Italians
and Scandinavians also emigrate? Is there not a constant emigration
from the Eastern States of the Union to the Western – an
emigration impelled by the same motives as that which sets across
the Atlantic? Nor am I sure that this is not in some respects a
more demoralizing emigration than the Irish, for I do not think
there is any such monstrous disproportion of the sexes in Ireland
as in Massachusetts. If French and Belgian peasants do not emigrate
as do the Irish, is it not simply because they do not have such "long
families"?
There has recently been deep and wide-spread distress in Ireland,
and but for the contributions of charity many would have perished
for want of food. But, to say nothing of such countries as India,
China, Persia, and Syria, is it not true that within the last few
years there have been similar spasms of distress in the most highly
civilized countries – not merely in Russia and in Poland,
but in Germany and England? Yes, even in the United States.
Have there not been, are there not constantly occurring, in all
these countries, times when the poorest classes are reduced to
the direst straits, and large numbers are saved from starvation
only by charity?
When there is famine among savages it is because food enough is
not to be had. But this was not the case in Ireland. In any part
of Ireland, during the height of what was called the famine, there
was food enough for whoever had means to pay for it. The trouble
was not in the scarcity of food. There was, as a matter of fact,
no real scarcity of food, and the proof of it is that food did
not command scarcity prices. During all the so-called famine, food
was constantly exported from Ireland to England, which would not
have been the case had there been true famine in one country any
more than in the other. During all the so-called famine a practically
unlimited supply of American meat and grain could have been poured
into Ireland, through the existing mechanism of exchange, so quickly
that the relief would have been felt instantaneously. Our sending
of supplies in a national war-ship was a piece of vulgar ostentation,
fitly paralleled by their ostentatious distribution in British
gunboats under the nominal superintendence of a royal prince. Had
we been bent on relief, not display, we might have saved our government
the expense of fitting up its antiquated warship, the British gunboats
their coal, the Lord Mayor his dinner, and the Royal Prince his
valuable time. A cable draft, turned in Dublin into postal orders,
would have afforded the relief, not merely much more easily and
cheaply, but in less time than it took our war-ship to get ready
to receive her cargo; for the reason that so many of the Irish
people were starving was, not that the food was not to be had,
but that they had not the means to buy it. Had the Irish people
had money or its equivalent, the bad seasons might have come and
gone without stinting any one of a full meal. Their effect would
merely have been to determine toward Ireland the flow of more abundant
harvests.
I wish clearly to bring to view this point. The Irish famine was
not a true famine arising from scarcity of food. It was what an
English writer styled the Indian famine – a "financial famine," arising
not from scarcity of food but from the poverty of the people. The
effect of the short crops in producing distress was not so much
in raising the price of food as in cutting off the accustomed incomes
of the people. The masses of the Irish people get so little in
ordinary times that they are barely able to live, and when anything
occurs to interrupt their accustomed incomes they have nothing
to fall back on.
Yet is this not true of large classes in all countries? And are
not all countries subject to just such famines as this Irish famine?
Good seasons and bad seasons are in the order of nature, just as
the day of sunshine and the day of rain, the summer's warmth and
the winter's snow. But agriculture is, on the whole, as certain
as any other pursuit, for even those industries which may be carried
en regardless of weather are subject to alternations as marked
as those to which agriculture is liable. There are good seasons
and bad seasons even in fishing and hunting, while the alternations
are very marked in mining and in manufacturing. In fact, the more
highly differentiated branches of industry which advancing civilization
tends to develop, though less directly dependent upon rain and
sunshine, heat and cold, seem increasingly subject to alternations
more frequent and intense. Though in a country of more diversified
industry the failure of a crop or two could not have such wide-spread
effects as in Ireland, yet the countries of more complex industries
are liable to a greater variety of disasters. A war on another
continent produces famine in Lancashire; Parisian milliners decree
a change of fashion, and Coventry operatives are saved from starvation
only by public alms; a railroad combination decides to raise the
price of coal, and Pennsylvania miners find their earnings diminished
by half or totally cut off; a bank breaks in New York, and in all
the large American cities soup-houses must be opened!
In this Irish famine which provoked the land agitation, there
is nothing that is peculiar. Such famines on a smaller or a larger
scale are constantly occurring. Nay, more! the fact is, that famine,
just such famine as this Irish famine, constantly exists in the
richest and most highly civilized lands. It persists even in "good
times" 'when trade is "booming;" it spreads and rages whenever
from any cause industrial depression comes. It is kept under, or
at least kept from showing its worst phases, by poor-rates and
almshouses, by private benevolence and by vast organized charities,
but it still exists, gnawing in secret when it does not openly
rage. In the very centers of civilization, where the machinery
of production and exchange is at the highest point of efficiency,
where bankvaults hold millions, and show-windows flash with more
than a prince's ransom, where elevators and warehouses are gorged
with grain, and markets are piled with all things succulent and
toothsome, where the dinners of Lucullus are eaten every day, and,
if it be but cool, the very greyhounds wear dainty blankets – in
these centers in wealth and power and refinement, there are always
hungry men and women and little children. Never the sun goes down
but on human beings prowling like wolves far food, or huddling
together like vermin for shelter and warmth. "Always with You" is
the significant heading under which a New York paper, in these
most prosperous times, publishes daily the tales of chronic famine;
and in the greatest and richest city in the world – in that
very London where the plenty of meat in the butchers' shops seemed
to some savages the most wondrous of all its wonderful sights – in
that very London, the mortuary reports have a standing column for
deaths by starvation.
But no more in its chronic than in its spasmodic forms is famine
to be measured by the deaths from starvation. Perfect, indeed,
in all its parts must be the human machine if it can run till the
last bit of available tissue be drawn to feed its fires. It is
under the guise of disease to which physicians can give less shocking
names, that famine – especially the chronic famine of civilization – kills.
And the statistics of mortality, especially of infant mortality,
show that in the richest communities famine is constantly at its
work. Insufficient nourishment, inadequate warmth and clothing,
and unwholesome surroundings, constantly, in the very centers of
plenty, swell the death-rates. What is this but famine – just
such famine as the Irish famine? It is not that the needed things
are really scarce; but that those whose need is direst have not
the means to get them, and, when not relieved by charity, want
kills them in its various ways. When, in the hot midsummer, little
children die like flies in the New York tenement wards, what is
that but famine? And those barges crowded with such children that
a noble and tender charity sends down New York Harbor to catch
the fresh salt breath of the Antlantic – are they not fighting
famine as truly as were our food-laden war-ship and the Royal Prince's
gunboats? Alas! to find famine one has not to cross the sea.
There was bitter satire in the cartoon that one of our illustrated
papers published when subscriptions to the Irish famine fund were
being made – a cartoon that represented James Gordon Bennett
sailing away for Ireland in a boat loaded down with provisions,
while a sad-eyed, hungry-looking, tattered group gazed wistfully
on them from the pier. The bite and the bitterness of it, the humiliating
sting and satire of it, were in its truth.
This is "the home of freedom," and "the asylum of the oppressed;" our
population is yet sparse, our public domain yet wide; we are the
greatest of food producers, yet even here there are beggars, tramps,
paupers, men torn by anxiety for the support of their families,
women who know not which way to turn, little children growing up
in such poverty and squalor that only a miracle can keep them pure. "Always
with you," even here. What is the week or the day of the week that
our papers do not tell of man or woman who, to escape the tortures
of want, has stepped out of life unbidden? What is this but famine?
Chapter 3: A Universal Question
LET me be understood. I am not endeavoring to excuse or
belittle Irish distress. I am merely pointing out that distress
of the same kind exists elsewhere. This is a fact I
want to make clear, for it has hitherto, in most of the discussions
of the Irish Land Question, been ignored. And without an appreciation
of this fact the real nature of the Irish Land Question is
not understood, nor the real importance of the agitation seen.
What I contend for is this: That
it is a mistake to consider the Irish Land Question as a mere
local question, arising out of conditions peculiar to Ireland,
and which can be settled by remedies that can have but local
application. On the contrary, I contend that what has
been brought into prominence by Irish distress, and forced into
discussion by Irish agitation, is something infinitely more important
than any mere local question could be; it is nothing less than
that question of transcendent importance which is everywhere
beginning to agitate, and, if not settled, must soon convulse
the civilized world – the question
-
whether, their political
equality conceded (for, where this has not already been, it soon
will be), the masses of mankind are to remain mere hewers of
wood and drawers of water for the benefit of a fortunate few?
-
whether, having escaped from feudalism, modern society is to
pass into an industrial organization more grinding and oppressive,
more heartless and hopeless, than feudalism?
-
whether, amid the abundance
their labor creates, the producers of wealth are to be content
in good times with the barest of livings and in bad times to
suffer and to starve?
What is involved in this Irish Land Question is not a mere local
matter between Irish landlords and Irish tenants, but the great social
problem of modern civilization. What is arraigned in the arraignment
of the claims of Irish landlords is nothing less than the wide-spread
institution of private property in land. In the assertion of the
natural rights of the Irish people is the assertion of the natural
rights that, by virtue of his existence, pertain everywhere to man.
It is probable that the Irish agitators did not at first perceive
the real bearing and importance of the question they took in hand.
But they – the more intelligent
and earnest of them, at least – must now begin to realize it.(1) Yet, save,
perhaps, on the part of the ultra-Tories, who would resist any concession as
the opening of a door that cannot again be shut, there is on all sides a disposition
to ignore the real nature of the question, and to treat it as springing from
conditions peculiar to Ireland. On the one hand, there is a large class in England
and elsewhere, who, while willing to concede or even actually desire that something
should be done for Ireland, fear any extension of the agitation into a questioning
of the rights of landowners elsewhere. And, on the other hand, the Irish leaders
seem anxious to confine attention in the same way, evidently fearing that, should
the question assume a broader aspect, strong forces now with them might fall
away and, perhaps to a large extent, become directly and strongly antagonistic.
(1) The Irish World,
which, though published in New York, has exerted a large influence upon the
agitation on both sides of the Atlantic, does realize, and has from the first
frankly declared, that the fight must be against landlordism in toto and
everywhere.
But it is not possible so to confine the discussion; no more possible than
it was possible to confine to France the questions involved in the French Revolution;
no more possible than it was possible to keep the discussion which arose over
slavery in the Territories confined to the subject of slavery in the Territories.
And it is best that the truth be fully stated and clearly recognized. He who
sees the truth, let him proclaim it, without asking who is for it or who is
against it. This is not radicalism in the bad sense which so many attach to
the word. This is conservatism in the true sense.
What gives to the Irish Land Question its supreme significance is that it
brings into attention and discussion – nay, that it forces into attention
and discussion, not a mere Irish question, but a question of world-wide importance.
What has brought the land question to the front in Ireland, what permits the
relation between land and labor to be seen there with such distinctness – to
be seen even by those who cannot in other places perceive them – is certain
special conditions. Ireland is a country of dense population, so that competition
for the use of land is so sharp and high as to produce marked effects upon
the distribution of wealth. It is mainly an agricultural country so that production
is concerned directly and unmistakably with the soil. Its industrial organization
is largely that simple one in which an employing capitalist does not mind between
laborer and landowner, so that the connection between rent and wages is not
obscured. Ireland, moreover, was never conquered by the Romans, nor, until
comparatively recently, by any people who had felt in their legal system the
effect of Roman domination. It is the European country in which primitive ideas
as to land tenures have longest held their sway, and the circumstances of its
conquest, its cruel misgovernment, and the differences of race and religion
between the masses of the people and those among whom the land was parceled,
have tended to preserve old traditions and to direct the strength of Irish
feeling and the fervor of Irish imagination against a system which forces the
descendant of the ancient possessors of the soil to pay tribute for it to the
representative of a hated stranger. It is for these reasons that the connection
between Irish distress and Irish landlordism is so easily seen and readily
realized.
But does not the same relation exist between English pauperism and English
landlordism – between American tramps and the American land system? Essentially
the same land system as that of Ireland exists elsewhere, and, wherever it
exists, distress of essentially the same kind is to be seen. And elsewhere,
just as certainly as in Ireland, is the connection between the two that of
cause and effect.
When the agent of the Irish landlord takes from the Irish cottier for rent
his pigs, his poultry, or his potatoes, or the money that he gains by the sale
of these things, it is clear enough that this rent comes from the earnings
of labor, and diminishes what the laborer gets. But is not this in reality
just as clear when a dozen middlemen stand between laborer and landlord? Is
it not just as clear when, instead of being paid monthly or quarterly or yearly,
rent is paid in a lumped sum called purchase-money? Whence come the incomes
which the owners of land in mining districts, in manufacturing districts, or
in commercial districts, receive for the use of their land? Manifestly, they
must come from the earnings of labor – there is no other source from
which they can come. From what are the revenues of Trinity Church corporation
drawn, if not from the earnings of labor? What is the source of the income
of the Astors, if it is not the labor of laboring-men, women, and children?
When a man makes a fortune by the rise of real estate, as in New York and elsewhere
many men have done within the past few months, what does it mean? It means
that he may have fine clothes, costly food, a grand house luxuriously furnished,
etc. Now, these things are not the spontaneous fruits of the soil; neither
do they fall from heaven, nor are they cast up by the sea. They are products
of labor – can be produced only by labor. And hence, if men who do no
labor get them, it must necessarily be at the expense of those who do labor.
It may seem as if I were needlessly dwelling upon a truth apparent by mere
statement. Yet, simple as this truth is, it is persistently ignored. This is
the reason that the true relation and true importance of the question which
has come to the front in Ireland are so little realized.
To give an illustration: In his article in the North American Review last
year, Mr. Parnell speaks as though the building up of manufactures in Ireland
would lessen the competition for land. What justification for such a view is
there either in theory or in fact? Can manufacturing be carried on without
land any more than agriculture can be carried on without land? Is not competition
for land measured by price, and, if Ireland were a manufacturing country, would
not the value of her land be greater than now? Had English clamor for "protection
to home industry" not been suffered to secure the strangling of Irish industries
in their infancy, Ireland might now be more of a manufacturing country with
larger population and a greater aggregate production of wealth. But the tribute
which the landowners could have taken would likewise have been greater. Put
a Glasgow, a Manchester, or a London in one of the Irish agricultural counties,
and, where the landlords now take pounds in rent, they would be enabled to
demand hundreds and thousands of pounds. And it would necessarily come from
the same source – the ultimate source of all incomes – the earnings
of labor. That so large a proportion of the laboring-class would not have to
compete with each other for agricultural land is true. But they would have
to do what is precisely the same thing. They would have to compete with each
other for employment – for the opportunity to make a living. And there
is no reason to think that this competition would be less intense than now.
On the contrary, in the manufacturing districts of England and Scotland, just
as in the agricultural districts of Ireland, the competition for the privilege
of earning a living forces wages to such a minimum as, even in good times,
will give only a living.
What is the difference? The Irish peasant cultivator hires his little farm
from a landlord, and pays rent directly. The English agricultural laborer hires
himself to an employing farmer who hires the land, and who out of the produce
pays to the one his wages and to the other his rent. In both cases competition
forces the laborer down to a bare living as a net return for his work, and
only stops at that point because, when men do not get enough to live on, they
die and cease to compete. And, in the same way, competition forces the employing
farmer to give up to the landlord all that he has left after paying wages,
save the ordinary returns of capital – for the profits of the English
farmer do not, on the average, I understand, exceed five or six per cent. And
in other businesses, such as manufacturing, competition in the same way forces
down wages to the minimum of a bare living, while rent goes up and up. Thus
is it clear that no change in methods or improvements in the processes of industry
lessens the landlord's power of claiming the lion's share.
I am utterly unable to see in what essential thing the condition of the Irish
peasant would be a whit improved were Ireland as rich as England, and her industries
as diversified. For the Irish peasant is not to be compared with the English
tenant-farmer, who is really a capitalist, but with the English agricultural
laborer and the lowest class of factory operatives. Surely their condition
is not so much better than that of the Irish peasant as to make a difference
worth talking about. On the contrary, miserable as is the condition of the
Irish peasantry, sickening as are the stories of their suffering, I am inclined
to think that for the worst instances of human degradation one must go to the
reports that describe the condition of the laboring poor of England, rather
than to the literature of Irish misery. For there are three things for which,
in spite of their poverty and wretchedness and occasional famine, the very
poorest of Irish peasants are by all accounts remarkable – the physical
vigor of their men, the purity of their women, and the strength of the family
affections. This, to put it mildly, cannot be said of large classes of the
laboring populations of England and Scotland. In those rich manufacturing districts
are classes stunted and deteriorated physically by want and unwholesome employments;
classes in which the idea of female virtue is all but lost, and the family
affections all but trodden out.
But it is needless to compare sufferings and measure miseries. I merely wish
to correct that impression which leads so many people to talk and write as
though rent and land tenures related solely to agriculture and to agricultural
communities. Nothing could be more erroneous. Land is necessary to all production,
no matter what be the kind or form; land is the standing-place, the workshop,
the storehouse of labor; it is to the human being the only means by which he
can obtain access to the material universe or utilize its powers. Without land
man cannot exist. To whom the ownership of land is given, to him is given the
virtual ownership of the men who must live upon it. When this necessity is
absolute, then does he necessarily become their absolute master. And just as
this point is neared – that is to say, just as competition increases
the demand for land – just in that degree does the power of taking a
larger and larger share of the earnings of labor increase. It is this power
that gives land its value; this is the power that enables the owner of valuable
land to reap where he has not sown – to appropriate to himself wealth
which he has had no share in producing. Rent is always the devourer of wages.
The owner of city land takes, in the rents he receives for his land, the earnings
of labor just as clearly as does the owner of farming land. And whether he
be working in a garret ten stories above the street, or in a mining drift thousands
of feet below the earth's surface, it is the competition for the use of land
that ultimately determines what proportion of the produce of his labor the
laborer will get for himself. This is the reason why modern progress does not
tend to extirpate poverty; this is the reason why, with all the inventions
and improvements and economies which so enormously increase productive power,
wages everywhere tend to the minimum of a bare living. The cause that in Ireland
produces poverty and distress – the ownership by some of the people of
the land on which and from which the whole people must live – everywhere
else produces the same results. It is this that produces the hideous squalor
of London and Glasgow slums; it is this that makes want jostle luxury in the
streets of rich New York, that forces little children to monotonous and stunting
toil in Massachusetts mills, and that fills the highways of our newest States
with tramps.
Chapter 4: Proposed Remedies
THE facts we have been considering give to the Irish agitation a significance
and dignity that no effort for the redress of merely local grievances, no struggle
for mere national independence could have. As the cause which produces Irish
distress exists everywhere throughout modern civilization, and everywhere produces
the same results, the question as to what measures will fully meet the case
of Ireland has for us not merely a speculative and sentimental interest, but
a direct and personal interest.
For a year and more the English journals and magazines have been teeming with
articles on the Irish Land Question; but, among all the remedies proposed,
even by men whose reputation is that of clear thinkers and advanced Liberals,
I have seen nothing which shows any adequate grasp of the subject. And this
is true also of the measures proposed by the agitators, so far as they have
proposed any. They are illogical and insufficient to the last degree. They
neither disclose any clear principle nor do they aim at any result worth the
struggle.
From the most timid to the most radical, these schemes are restricted to one
or more of the following propositions:
1st. To abolish entails and primogenitures and other difficulties
in the way of sales.
2nd. To legalize and extend tenant-right.
3rd. To establish tribunals of arbitrament which shall decide upon appeal
the rent to be paid.
4th. To have the State buy out the landlords and sell again on time to
the tenants.
The first of these propositions is good in itself. To make the transfer of
land easy would be to remove obstacles which prevent its passing into the hands
of those who would make the most out of it. But, so far as this will have any
effect at all, it will not be toward giving the Irish tenants more merciful
landlords; nor yet will it be to the diffusion of landed property. Those who
think so shut their eyes to the fact that the tendency of the time is to concentration.
As for the propositions which look in various forms to the establishment of
tenant-right, it is to be observed that, in so far as they go beyond giving
the tenant surety for his improvements, they merely carve out of the estate
of the landlord an estate for the tenant. Even if the proposal to empower the
courts, in cases of dispute, to decide what is a fair rent were to amount to
anything (and the Land Leaguers say it would not), the fixing of a lower rent
as the share of the landlord would merely enable the tenant to charge a higher
price to his successor. Whatever might thus be done for present agricultural
tenants would be of no use to future tenants, and nothing whatever would be
done for the masses of the people. In fact, that the effect would be to increase
rent in the aggregate there can be no doubt. Whatever modification might be
made in the landlord's demands, the sum which the outgoing tenant would ask
would be very certain to be all he could possibly get, so that rent in the
aggregate, instead of being diminished, would be screwed up to the full competition
or rack-rent standard.
What seem to be considered the most radical propositions yet made are those
for the creation of a "peasant proprietary" – the State to buy out the
landlords and resell to the tenants, for annual payments extending over a term
of years, and covering principal and interest. Waiving all practical difficulties,
and they are very great, what could thus be accomplished? Nothing real and
permanent. For not merely is this, too, but a partial measure, which could
not improve the condition of the masses of the people or help those most needing
help, but no sooner were the lands thus divided than a process of concentration
would infallibly set in which would be all the more rapid from the fact that
the new landholders would be heavily mortgaged. The tendency to concentration
which has so steadily operated in Great Britain, and is so plainly showing
itself in our new States, must operate in Ireland, and would immediately begin
to weld together again the little patches of the newly created peasant proprietors.
The tendency of the time is against peasant proprietorships; it is in everything
to concentration, not to separation. The tendency which has wiped out the small
landowners, the boasted yeomanry, of England – which in our new States
is uniting the quarter-sections of preemption and homestead settlers into great
farms of thousands of acres – is already too strong to be resisted, and
is constantly becoming stronger and more penetrating. For it springs from the
inventions and improvements and economies which are transforming modern industry – the
same influences which are concentrating population in large cities, business
into the hands of great houses, and for the blacksmith making his own nails
or the weaver working his own loom substitute the factory of the great corporation.
That a great deal that the English advocates of peasant proprietorship have
to say about the results of their favorite system in continental Europe is
not borne out by the facts, any one who chooses to look over the testimony
may see. But it is useless to discuss that.
Peasant proprietorship in continental Europe is a survival. It exists only
among populations which have not felt fully the breath of the new era. It continues
to exist only by virtue of conditions which do not obtain in Ireland. The Irish
peasant is not the French or Belgian peasant. He is in the habit of having
very "long families," they very short ones. He has become familiar with the
idea of emigrating; they have not. He can hardly be expected to have acquired
those habits of close economy and careful forethought for which they are so
remarkable; and there are various agencies, among which are to be counted the
national schools and the reaction from America, that have roused in him aspirations
and ambitions which would prevent him from continuing to water his little patch
with his sweat, as do the French and Belgian peasant proprietors, when he could
sell it for enough to emigrate. Peasant proprietorship, like that of France
and Belgium, might possibly have been instituted in Ireland some time ago,
before the railroad and the telegraph and the national schools and the establishment
of the steam bridge across the Atlantic. But to do it now to any extent, and
with any permanency, seems to me about as practicable as to go back to hand-loom
weaving in Manchester. Much more in accordance with modern tendencies is the
notice I have recently seen of the formation of a company to buy up land in
Southern Ireland, and cultivate it on a large scale; for to production on a
large scale modern processes more and more strongly tend. It is not merely
the steam-plow and harvesting machinery that make the cultivation of the large
field more profitable than that of the small one; it is the railroad, the telegraph,
the manifold inventions of all sorts. Even butter and cheese are now made and
chickens hatched and fattened in factories.
But the fatal defect of all these schemes as remedial measures is, that they
do not go to the cause of the disease.
What they propose to do, they propose to do for merely one class of the Irish
people – the agricultural tenants. Now, the agricultural tenants are
not so large nor so poor a class (among them are in fact many large capitalist
farmers of the English type) as the agricultural laborers, while besides these
there are the laborers of other kinds – the artisans, operatives, and
poorer classes of the cities. What extension of tenant-right or conversion
of tenant-farmers into partial or absolute proprietors is to benefit them?
Even if the number of owners of Irish soil could thus be increased, the soil
of Ireland would still be in the hands of a class, though of a somewhat larger
class. And the spring of Irish misery would be untouched. Those who had merely
their labor would be as badly off as now, if not in some respects worse off.
Rent would soon devour wages, and the injustice involved in the present system
would be intrenched by the increase in the number who seemingly profit by it.
It is that peasant proprietors would strengthen the existing system that makes
schemes for creating them so popular among certain sections of the propertied
classes of Great Britain. This is the ground on which these schemes are largely
urged. These small landowners are desired that they may be used as a buffer
and bulwark against any questioning of the claims of the larger owners. They
would be put forward to resist the shock of "agrarianism," just as the women
are put forward in resistance to the process-servers. "What! do you propose
to rob these poor peasants of their little homesteads?" would be the answer
to any one who proposed to attack the system under which the larger landholders
draw millions annually from the produce of labor.
And here is the danger in the adoption of measures not based upon correct
principles. They fail not only to do any real and permanent good, but they
make proper measures more difficult. Even if a majority of the people of Ireland
were made the owners of the soil, the injustice to the minority would be as
great as now, and wages would still tend to the minimum, which in good times
means a bare living, and in bad times means starvation. Even were it possible
to cut up the soil of Ireland into those little patches into which the soil
of France and Belgium is cut in the districts where the morcellement prevails,
this would not be the attainment of a just and healthy social state. But it
would make the attainment of a just and healthy social state much more difficult.
Chapter 5: Whose Land is it?
WHAT, then, is the true solution of the Irish problem? The answer is as important
to other countries as to Ireland, for the Irish problem is but a local phase
of the great problem which is everywhere pressing upon the civilized world.
With the leaders of the Irish movement, the question is, of course, not merely
what ought to be done, but what can be done. But, to a clear understanding
of the whole subject, the question of principle must necessarily precede that
of method. We must decide where we want to go before we can decide what is
the best road to take.
The first question that naturally arises is that of right. Among whatever
kind of people such a matter as this is discussed, the question of right is
sure to be raised. This, to me, seems a very significant thing; for I believe
it to spring from nothing less than a universal perception of the human mind – a
perception often dim and vague, yet still a universal perception, that justice
is the supreme law of the universe, so that, as a short road to what is best,
we instinctively ask what is right?
Now, what are the rights of this case?
Let us settle this question clearly and decisively, before we attempt anything
else.
Let me go to the heart of this question by asking another question: Has or
has not the child born in Ireland a right to live? There can be but one answer,
for no one would contend that it was right to drown Irish babies, or that any
human law could make it right. Well, then, if every human being born in Ireland
has a right to live in Ireland, these rights must be equal. If each one has
a right to live, then no one can have any better right to live than any other
one. There can be no dispute about this. No one will contend that it would
be any less a crime to drown a baby of an Irish peasant woman than it would
be to drown the baby of the proudest duchess, or that a law commanding the
one would be any more justifiable than a law commanding the other.
Since, then, all the Irish people have the same equal right to life, it follows
that they must all have the same equal right to the land of Ireland. If they
are all in Ireland by the same equal permission of Nature, so that no one of
them can justly set up a superior claim to life than any other one of them;
so that all the rest of them could not justly say to any one of them, "You
have not the same right to live as we have; therefore we will pitch you out
of Ireland into the sea!" then they must all have the same equal rights to
the elements which Nature has provided for the sustaining of life – to
air, to water, and to land. For to deny the equal right to the elements necessary
to the maintaining of life is to deny the equal right to life. Any law that
said, "Certain babies have no right to the soil of Ireland; therefore they
shall be thrown off the soil of Ireland;" would be precisely equivalent to
a law that said, "Certain babies have no right to live; therefore they shall
be thrown into the sea." And as no law or custom or agreement can justify the
denial of the equal right to life, so no law or custom or agreement can justify
the denial of the equal right to land.
It therefore follows, from the very fact of their existence, that the right
of each one of the people of Ireland to an equal share in the land of Ireland
is equal and inalienable: that is to say, that the use and benefit of the land
of Ireland belong rightfully to the whole people of Ireland, to each one as
much as to every other; to no one more than to any other – not to some
individuals, to the exclusion of other individuals; not to one class, to the
exclusion of other classes; not to landlords, not to tenants, not to cultivators,
but to the whole people.
This right is irrefutable and indefeasible. It pertains to and springs from
the fact of existence, the right to live. No law, no covenant, no agreement,
can bar it. One generation cannot stipulate away the rights of another generation.
If the whole people of Ireland were to unite in bargaining away their rights
in the land, how could they justly bargain away the right of the child who
the next moment is born? No one can bargain away what is not his; no one can
stipulate away the rights of another. And if the new-born infant has an equal
right to life, then has it an equal right to land. Its warrant, which comes
direct from Nature, and which sets aside all human laws or title-deeds, is
the fact that it is born.
Here we have a firm, self-apparent principle from which we may safely proceed.
The land of Ireland does not belong to one individual more than to another
individual; to one class more than to another class; to one generation more
than to the generations that come after. It belongs to the whole people who
at the time exist upon it.
Chapter 6: Landlords' Right
is Labor's Wrong
I DO not dwell upon this principle because it has not yet been asserted. I
dwell upon it because, although it has been asserted, no proposal to carry
it out has yet been made. The cry has indeed gone up that the land of Ireland
belongs to the people of Ireland, but there the recognition of the principle
has stopped. To say that the land of Ireland belongs to the people of Ireland,
and then merely to ask that rents shall be reduced, or that tenant-right be
extended, or that the State shall buy the land from one class and sell it to
another class, is utterly illogical and absurd.
Either the land of Ireland rightfully belongs to the Irish landlords, or it
rightfully belongs to the Irish people; there can be no middle ground. If it
rightfully belongs to the landlords, then is the whole agitation wrong, and
every scheme for interfering in any way with the landlords is condemned. If
the land rightfully belongs to the landlords, then it is nobody else's business
what they do with it, or what rent they charge for it, or where or how they
spend the money they draw from it, and whoever does not want to live upon it
on the landlords' terms is at perfect liberty to starve or emigrate. But if,
on the contrary, the land of Ireland rightfully belongs to the Irish people,
then the only logical demand is, not that the tenants shall be made joint owners
with the landlords, not that it be bought from a smaller class and sold to
a larger class, but that it be resumed by the whole people. To propose to pay
the landlords for it is to deny the right of the people to it. The real fight
for Irish rights must he made outside of Ireland; and, above all things, the
Irish agitators ought to take a logical position, based upon a broad, clear
principle which can be everywhere understood and appreciated. To ask for tenant-right
or peasant proprietorship is not to take such a position; to concede that the
landlords ought to be paid is utterly to abandon the principle that the land
belongs rightfully to the people.
To admit, as even the most radical of the Irish agitators seem to admit, that
the landlords should be paid the value of their lands, is to deny the rights
of the people. It is an admission that the agitation is an interference with
the just rights of property. It is to ignore the only principle on which the
agitation can be justified, and on which it can gather strength for the accomplishment
of anything real and permanent. To admit this is to admit that the Irish people
have no more right to the soil of Ireland than any outsider. For, any outsider
can go to Ireland and buy land, if he will give its market value. To propose
to buy out the landlords is to propose to continue the present injustice in
another form. They would get in interest on the debt created what they now
get in rent. They would still have a lien upon Irish labor.
And why should the landlords be paid? If the land of Ireland belongs of natural
right to the Irish people, what valid claim for payment can be set up by the
landlords? No one will contend that the land is theirs of natural right, for
the day has gone by when men could be told that the Creator of the universe
intended his bounty for the exclusive use and benefit of a privileged class
of his creatures – that he intended a few to roll in luxury while their
fellows toiled and starved for them. The claim of the landlords to the land
rests not on natural right, but merely on municipal law – on municipal
law which contravenes natural right. And, whenever the sovereign power changes
municipal law so as to conform to natural right, what claim can they assert
to compensation? Some of them bought their lands, it is true; but they got
no better title than the seller had to give. And what are these titles? Titles
based on murder and robbery, on blood and rapine – titles which rest
on the most atrocious and wholesale crimes. Created by force and maintained
by force, they have not behind them the first shadow of right. That Henry II
and James I and Cromwell and the Long Parliament had the power to give and
grant Irish lands is true; but will any one contend they had the right? Will
any one contend that in all the past generations there has existed on the British
Isles or anywhere else any human being, or any number of human beings, who
had the right to say that in the year 1881 the great mass of Irishmen should
be compelled to pay – in many cases to residents of England, France,
or the United States – for the privilege of living in their native country
and making a living from their native soil? Even if it be said that might makes
right; even if it be contended that in the twelfth, or seventeenth, or eighteenth
century lived men who, having the power, had therefore the right, to give away
the soil of Ireland, it cannot be contended that their right went further than
their power, or that their gifts and grants are binding on the men of the present
generation. No one can urge such a preposterous doctrine. And, if might makes
right, then the moment the people get power to take the land the rights of
the present landholders utterly cease, and any proposal to compensate them
is a proposal to do a fresh wrong.
Should it be urged that, no matter on what they originally rest, the lapse
of time has given to the legal owners of Irish land a title of which they cannot
now be justly deprived without compensation, it is sufficient to ask, with
Herbert Spencer, at what rate per annum wrong becomes right? Even the shallow
pretense that the acquiescence of society can vest in a few the exclusive right
to that element on which and from which Nature has ordained that all must live,
cannot be urged in the case of Ireland. For the Irish people have never acquiesced
in their spoliation, unless the bound and gagged victim may be said to acquiesce
in the robbery and maltreatment which he cannot prevent. Though the memory
of their ancient rights in the land of their country may have been utterly
stamped out among the people of England, and have been utterly forgotten among
their kin on this side of the sea, it has long survived among the Irish. If
the Irish people have gone hungry and cold and ignorant, if they have been
evicted from lands on which their ancestors had lived from time immemorial,
if they have been forced to emigrate or to starve, it has not been for the
want of protest. They have protested all they could; they have struggled all
they could. It has been but superior force that has stifled their protests
and made their struggles vain. In a blind, dumb way, they are protesting now
and struggling now, though even if their hands were free they might not at
first know how to untie the knots in the cords that bind them. But acquiesce
they never have.
Yet, even supposing they had aquiesced, as in their ignorance the working-classes
of such countries as England and the United States now acquiesce, in the iniquitous
system which makes the common birthright of all the exclusive property of some.
What then? Does such acquiescence turn wrong into right? If the sleeping traveler
wake to find a robber with his hand in his pocket, is he bound to buy the robber
off – bound not merely to let him keep what he has previously taken,
but pay him the full value of all he expected the sleep of his victim to permit
him to get? If the stockholders of a bank find that for a long term of years
their cashier has been appropriating the lion's share of the profits, are they
to be told that they cannot discharge him without paying him for what he might
have got, had his peculations not been discovered?
Chapter 7: The Great-Great-Grandson
of Captain Kidd.
I APOLOGIZE to the Irish landlords and to all other landlords for likening
them to thieves and robbers.
I trust they will understand that I do not consider them as personally worse
than other men, but that I am obliged to use such illustrations because no
others will fit the case. I am concerned not with individuals, but with the
system. What I want to do is, to point out a distinction that in the plea for
the vested rights of landowners is ignored – a distinction which arises
from the essential difference between land and things that are the produce
of human labor, and which is obscured by our habit of classing them all together
as property.
The galleys that carried Caesar to Britain, the accoutrements of his legionaries,
the baggage that they carried, the arms that they bore, the buildings that
they erected; the scythed chariots of the ancient Britons, the horses that
drew them, their wicker boats and wattled houses – where are they now?
But the land for which Roman and Briton fought, there it is still. That British
soil is yet as fresh and as new as it was in the days of the Romans. Generation
after generation has lived on it since, and generation after generation will
live on it yet. Now, here is a very great difference. The right to possess
and to pass on the ownership of things that in their nature decay and soon
cease to be is a very different thing from the right to possess and to pass
on the ownership of that which does not decay, but from which each successive
generation must live.
To show how this difference between land and such other species of property
as are properly styled wealth bears upon the argument for the vested rights
of landholders, let me illustrate again.
Captain Kidd was a pirate. He made a business of
sailing the seas, capturing merchantmen, making their crews walk the plank,
and appropriating their cargoes. In this way he accumulated much wealth, which
he is thought to have buried. But let us suppose, for the sake of the illustration,
that he did not bury his wealth, but left it to his legal heirs, and they to
their heirs and so on, until at the present day this wealth or a part of it
has come to a great-great-grandson of Captain Kidd. Now, let us suppose that
some one – say a great-great-grandson of one of the shipmasters whom
Captain Kidd plundered, makes complaint, and says: "This man's great-great-grandfather
plundered my great-great-grandfather of certain things or certain sums, which
have been transmitted to him, whereas but for this wrongful act they would
have been transmitted to me; therefore, I demand that he be made to restore
them." What would society answer?
Society, speaking by its proper tribunals, and in accordance with principles
recognized among all civilized nations, would say: "We cannot entertain such
a demand. It may be true that Mr. Kidd's great-great-grandfather robbed your
great-great-grandfather, and that as the result of this wrong he has got things
that otherwise might have come to you. But we cannot inquire into occurrences
that happened so long ago. Each generation has enough to do to attend to its
own affairs. If we go to righting the wrongs and reopening the controversies
of our great-great-grandfathers, there will be endless disputes and pretexts
for dispute. What you say may be true, but somewhere we must draw the line,
and have an end to strife. Though this man's great-great-grandfather may have
robbed your great-great-grandfather, he has not robbed you. He came into possession
of these things peacefully, and has held them peacefully, and we must take
this peaceful possession, when it has been continued for a certain time, as
absolute evidence of just title; for, were we not to do that, there would be
no end to dispute and no secure possession of anything."
Now, it is this common-sense principle that is expressed in the statute of
limitations – in the doctrine of vested rights. This is the reason why
it is held – and as to most things held justly – that
peaceable possession for a certain time cures all defects of title.
But let us pursue the illustration a little further:
Let us suppose that Captain Kidd, having established a large and profitable
piratical business, left it to his son, and he to his son, and so on, until
the great-great-grandson, who now pursues it, has come to consider it the most
natural thing in the world that his ships should roam the sea, capturing peaceful
merchantmen, making their crews walk the plank, and bringing home to him much
plunder, whereby he is enabled, though he does no work at all, to live in very
great luxury, and look down with contempt upon people who have to work. But
at last, let us suppose, the merchants get tired of having their ships sunk
and their goods taken, and sailors get tired of trembling for their lives every
time a sail lifts above the horizon, and they demand of society that piracy
be stopped.
Now, what should society say if Mr. Kidd got indignant, appealed to the doctrine
of vested rights, and asserted that society was bound to prevent any interference
with the business that he had inherited, and that, if it wanted him to stop,
it must buy him out, paying him all that his business was worth – that
is to say, at least as much as he could make in twenty years' successful pirating,
so that if he stopped pirating he could still continue to live in luxury off
of the profits of the merchants and the earnings of the sailors?
What ought society to say to such a claim as this? There will be but one answer.
We will all say that society should tell Mr. Kidd that his was a business to
which the statute of limitations and the doctrine of vested rights did not
apply; that because his father, and his grandfather, and his great- and great-great-grandfather
pursued the business of capturing ships and making their crews walk the plank,
was no reason why lie should be permitted to pursue it. Society, we will all
agree, ought to say he would have to stop piracy and stop it at once, and that
without getting a cent for stopping.
Or supposing it had happened that Mr. Kidd had sold out his piratical business
to Smith, Jones, or Robinson, we will all agree that society ought to say that
their purchase of the business gave them no greater right than Mr. Kidd had.
We will all agree that that is what society ought to say. Observe, I do not
ask what society would say.
For, ridiculous and preposterous as it may appear, I am satisfied that, under
the circumstances I have supposed, society would not for a long time say what
we have agreed it ought to say. Not only would all the Kidds loudly claim that
to make them give up their business without full recompense would be a wicked
interference with vested rights, but the justice of this claim would at first
be assumed as a matter of course by all or nearly all the influential classes – the
great lawyers, the able journalists, the writers for the magazines, the eloquent
clergymen, and the principal professors in the principal universities. Nay,
even the merchants and sailors, when they first began to complain, would be
so tyrannized and browbeaten by this public opinion that they would hardly
think of more than of buying out the Kidds, and, wherever here and there any
one dared to raise his voice in favor of stopping piracy at once and without
compensation, he would only do so under penalty of being stigmatized as a reckless
disturber and wicked foe of social order.
If any one denies this, if any one says mankind are not such fools, then I
appeal to universal history to bear me witness. I appeal to the facts of to-day.
Show me a wrong, no matter how monstrous, that ever yet, among any people,
became ingrafted in the social system, and I will prove to you the truth of
what I say.
The majority of men do not think; the majority of men have to expend so much
energy in the struggle to make a living that they do not have time to think.
The majority of men accept, as a matter of course, whatever is. This is what
makes the task of the social reformer so difficult, his path so hard. This
is what brings upon those who first raise their voices in behalf of a great
truth the sneers of the powerful and the curses of the rabble, ostracism and
martyrdom, the robe of derision and the crown of thorns.
Am I not right? Have there not been states of society in which piracy has
been considered the most respectable and honorable of pursuits? Did the Roman
populace see anything more reprehensible in a gladiatorial show than we do
in a horse-race? Does public opinion in Dahomey see anything reprehensible
in the custom of sacrificing a thousand or two human beings by way of signalizing
grand occasions? Are there not states of society in which, in spite of the
natural proportions of the sexes, polygamy is considered a matter of course?
Are there not states of society in which it would be considered the most ridiculous
thing in the world to say that a man's son was more closely related to him
than his nephew? Are there not states of society in which it would be considered
disreputable for a man to carry a burden while a woman who could stagger under
it was around? – states of society in which the husband who did not occasionally
beat his wife would be deemed by both sexes a weak-minded, low-spirited fellow?
What would Chinese fashionable society consider more outrageous than to be
told that mothers should not be permitted to squeeze their daughters' feet,
or Flathead women than being restrained from tying a board on their infants'
skulls? How long has it been since the monstrous doctrine of the divine right
of kings was taught through all Christendom?
What is the slave-trade but piracy of the worst kind? Yet it is not long since
the slave-trade was looked upon as a perfectly respectable business, affording
as legitimate an opening for the investment of capital and the display of enterprise
as any other. The proposition to prohibit it was first looked upon as ridiculous,
then as fanatical, then as wicked. It was only slowly and by hard fighting
that the truth in regard to it gained ground. Does not our very Constitution
bear witness to what I say? Does not the fundamental law of the nation, adopted
twelve years after the enunciation of the Declaration of Independence, declare
that for twenty years the slave-trade shall not be prohibited nor restricted?
Such dominion had the idea of vested interests over the minds of those who
had already proclaimed the inalienable right of man to life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness!
Is it not but yesterday that in the freest and greatest republic on earth,
among the people who boast that they lead the very van of civilization, this
doctrine of vested rights was deemed a sufficient justification for all the
cruel wrongs of human slavery? Is it not but yesterday when whoever dared to
say that the rights of property did not justly attach to human beings; when
whoever dared to deny that human beings could be rightfully bought and sold
like cattle – the husband torn from the wife and the child from the mother;
when whoever denied the right of whoever had paid his money for him to work
or whip his own nigger was looked upon as a wicked assailant of the rights
of property? Is it not but yesterday when in the South whoever whispered such
a thought took his life in his hands; when in the North the abolitionist was
held by the churches as worse than an infidel, was denounced by the politicians
and rotten-egged by the mob? I was born in a Northern State, I have never lived
in the South, I am not yet gray; but I well remember, as every American of
middle age must remember, how over and over again I have heard all questionings
of slavery silenced by the declaration that the negroes were the property of
their masters, and that to take away a man's slave without payment was as much
a crime as to take away his horse without payment. And whoever does not remember
that far back, let him look over American literature previous to the war, and
say whether, if the business of piracy had been a flourishing business, it
would have lacked defenders? Let him say whether any proposal to stop the business
of piracy without compensating the pirates would not have been denounced at
first as a proposal to set aside vested rights?
But I am appealing to other states of society and to times that are past merely
to get my readers, if I can, out of their accustomed ruts of thought. The proof
of what I assert about the Kidds and their business is in the thought and speech
of to-day.
Here is a system which robs the producers of wealth as remorselessly and far
more regularly and systematically than the pirate robs the merchantman. Here
is a system that steadily condemns thousands to far more lingering and horrible
deaths than that of walking the plank – to death of the mind and death
of the soul, as well as death of the body. These things are undisputed. No
one denies that Irish pauperism and famine are the direct results of this land
system, and no one who will examine the subject will deny that the chronic
pauperism and chronic famine which everywhere mark our civilization are the
results of this system. Yet we are told – nay, it seems to be taken for
granted – that this system cannot be abolished without buying off those
who profit by it. Was there ever more degrading abasement of the human mind
before a fetish? Can we wonder, as we see it, at any perversion of ideas?
Consider: is not the parallel I have drawn a true one? Is it not just as much
a perversion of ideas to apply the doctrine of vested rights to property in
land, when these are its admitted fruits, as it was to apply it to property
in human flesh and blood; as it would be to apply it to the business of piracy?
In what does the claim of the Irish landholders differ from that of the hereditary
pirate or the man who has bought out a piratical business? "Because I have
inherited or purchased the business of robbing merchantmen," says the pirate, "therefore
respect for the rights of property must compel you to let me go on robbing
ships and making sailors walk the plank until you buy me out." "Because we
have inherited or purchased the privilege of appropriating to ourselves the
lion's share of the produce of labor," says the landlord, "therefore you must
continue to let us do it, even though poor wretches shiver with cold and faint
with hunger, even though, in their poverty and misery, they are reduced to
wallow with the pigs." What is the difference?
This is the point I want to make clearly and distinctly, for it shows a distinction
that in current thought is overlooked. Property in land, like property in slaves,
is essentially different from property in things that are the result of labor.
Rob a man or a people of money, or goods, or cattle, and the robbery is finished
there and then. The lapse of time does not, indeed, change wrong into right,
but it obliterates the effects of the deed. That is done; it is over; and,
unless it be very soon righted, it glides away into the past, with the men
who were parties to it, so swiftly that nothing save omniscience can trace
its effects; and in attempting to right it we would be in danger of doing fresh
wrong. The past is forever beyond us. We can neither punish nor recompense
the dead. But rob a people of the land on which they must live, and the robbery
is continuous. It is a fresh robbery of every succeeding generation – a
new robbery every year and every day; it is like the robbery which condemns
to slavery the children of the slave. To apply to it the statute of limitations,
to acknowledge for it the title of prescription, is not to condone the past;
it is to legalize robbery in the present, to justify it in the future. The
indictment which really lies against the Irish landlords is not that their
ancestors, or the ancestors of their grantors, robbed the ancestors of the
Irish people. That makes no difference. "Let the dead bury their dead." The
indictment that truly lies is that here, now, in the year 1881, they rob the
Irish people. And shall we be told that there can be a vested right to continue
such robbery?
Chapter 8: The Only Way, the Easy
Way
I HAVE dwelt so long upon this question of compensating landowners, not merely
because it is of great practical importance, but because its discussion brings
clearly into view the principles upon which the land question, in any country,
can alone be justly and finally settled. In the light of these principles we
see that landowners have no rightful claim either to the land or to compensation
for its resumption by the people, and, further than that, we see that no such
rightful claim can ever be created. It would be wrong to pay the present
landowners for "their" land at the expense of the people; it would likewise
be wrong to sell it again to smaller holders. It would be wrong to abolish
the payment of rent, and to give the land to its present cultivators. In
the very nature of things, land cannot rightfully be made individual property.
This principle is absolute. The title of a peasant proprietor deserves no more
respect than the title of a great territorial noble. No sovereign political
power, no compact or agreement, even though consented to by the whole population
of the globe, can give to an individual a valid title to the exclusive ownership
of a square inch of soil. The earth is an entailed estate – entailed
upon all the generations of the children of men, by a deed written in the constitution
of Nature, a deed that no human proceedings can bar, and no proscription determine.
Each succeeding generation has but a tenancy for life. Admitting that any set
of men may barter away their own natural rights (and this logically involves
an admission of the right of suicide), they can no more barter away the rights
of their successors than they can barter away the rights of the inhabitants
of other worlds.
What should be aimed at in the settlement of the Irish Land Question is thus
very clear. The "three F's" are, what they have already been called, three
frauds; and the proposition to create peasant proprietorship is no better.
-
It will not do merely to carve out of the estates of the landlords minor
estates for the tenants;
-
it will not do merely to substitute a larger for a smaller class of proprietors;
-
it will not do to confine the settlement to agricultural land, leaving
to its present possessors the land of the towns and villages.
None of these lame and impotent conclusions will satisfy the demands of justice
or cure the bitter evils now so apparent. The only true and just solution of
the problem, the only end worth aiming at, is to make all the land the common
property of all the people.
This principle conceded, the question of method arises. How shall this be
done? Nothing is easier. It is merely necessary to divert the rent which now
flows into the pockets of the landlords into the common treasury of the whole
people. It is not possible so to divide up the land of Ireland as to give each
family, still less each individual, an equal share. And, even if that were
possible, it would not be possible to maintain equality, for old people are
constantly dying and new people constantly being born, while the relative value
of land is constantly changing. But it is possible to divide the rent equally,
or, what amounts to the same thing, to apply it to purposes of common benefit.
This is the way, and this is the only way, in which absolute justice can be
done. This is the way, and this is the only way, in which the equal right of
every man, woman, and child can be acknowledged and secured. As Herbert Spencer
says of it (in Social Statics):
Such a doctrine is consistent with the highest
state of civilization; may be carried out without involving a community of
goods, and need cause no very serious revolution in existing arrangements.
The change required would simply be a change of landlords. Separate ownership
would merge into the joint-stock ownership of the public. Instead of being
in the possession of individuals, the country would be held by the great corporate
body – society. Instead of leasing his acres from an isolated proprietor,
the farmer would lease them from the nation. Instead of paying his rent to
the agent of Sir John or his Grace, he would pay it to an agent or deputy agent
of the community. Stewards would be public officials instead of private ones,
and tenancy the only land tenure. A state of things so ordered would be in
perfect harmony with the moral law. Under it, all men would be equally landlords;
all men would be alike free to become tenants. . . . Clearly, therefore, on
such a system, the earth might be inclosed, occupied, and cultivated, in entire
subordination to the law of equal freedom.
Now, it is a very easy thing thus to sweep away all private ownership of land,
and convert all occupiers into tenants of the State, by appropriating rent.
No complicated laws or cumbersome machinery is necessary. It is necessary only
to tax land up to its full value. Do that, and without any talk about dispossessing
landlords, without any use of the ugly word "confiscation," without any infringement
of the just rights of property, the land would become virtually the people's,
while the landlords would be left the absolute and unqualified possessors of – their
deeds of title and conveyance! They could continue to call themselves landlords,
if they wished to, just as that poor old Bourbon, the Comte de Chambord, continues
to call himself King of France; but, as what, under this system, was paid by
the tenant would be taken by the State, it is pretty clear that middlemen would
not long survive, and that very soon the occupiers of land would come to be
nominally the owners, though, in reality, they would be the tenants of the
whole people.
How beautifully this simple method would satisfy every economic requirement;
how, freeing labor and capital from the fetters that now oppress them (for
all other taxes could be easily remitted), it would enormously increase the
production of wealth; how it would make distribution conform to the law of
justice, dry up the springs of want and misery, elevate society from its lowest
stratum, and give all their fair share in the blessings of advancing civilization,
can perhaps be fully shown only by such a detailed examination of the whole
social problem as I have made in a book (Progress and Poverty)
which I hope will he read by all the readers of this, since in it I go over
much ground and treat many subjects which cannot be even touched upon here.
Nevertheless, any one can see that to tax land up to its full rental value
would amount to precisely the same thing as formally to take possession of
it, and then let it out to the highest bidders.
Chapter
9: Principle the Best Policy
WE have now seen the point that should be aimed at, and the method by which
it is to be reached. There is another branch of the subject which practical
men must consider: the political forces that may be marshaled; the political
resistance that must be overcome. It is one thing to work out such a problem
in the closet – to demonstrate its proper solution to the satisfaction
of a few intelligent readers. It is another thing to solve it in the field
of action, where ignorance, prejudice, and powerful interests must be met.
It cannot be that the really earnest men in the Irish movement are satisfied
with any program yet put forth. But they are doubtless influenced by the fear
that the avowal of radical views and aims would not merely intensify present
opposition, but frighten away from their cause large numbers and important
influences now with it. To say nothing of English conservatism, there is in
Ireland a large class now supporting the movement who are morbidly afraid of
anything which savors of "communism" or "socialism," while in the United States,
whence much moral support and pecuniary aid have been derived, it is certain
that many of those who are now loudest in their expressions of sympathy would
slink away from a movement which avowed the intention of abolishing private
property in land. A resolution expressive of sympathy with the Irish people
in their "struggle for the repeal of oppressive land laws" was, by a unanimous
vote of the National House of Representatives, flung full in the face of the
British lion. How many votes would that resolution have got had it involved
a declaration of hostility to the institution of individual property in land?
I understand all this. Nevertheless, I am convinced that the Irish land movement
would gain, not lose, were its earnest leaders, disdaining timid counsels,
boldly to avow the principle that the land of Ireland belongs of right to the
whole people of Ireland, and, without bothering about compensation to the landholders,
to propose its resumption by the people in the simple way I have suggested.
That, in doing this, they would lose strength and increase antagonism in some
directions is true, but they would in other directions gain strength and allay
antagonisms. And, while the loss would constantly tend to diminish, the gain
would constantly tend to increase. They would, to use the phrase of Emerson,
have "hitched their wagon to a star."
I admit, as will be urged by those who would hold back from such an avowal
as I propose, that political progress must be by short steps rather than by
great leaps; that those who would have the people follow them readily, and
especially those who would enjoy a present popularity and preferment, must
not go too far in advance; and that to demand a little at first is often the
surest way to obtain much at last.
So far as personal consideration is concerned, it is only to earnest men capable
of feeling the inspiration of a great principle that I care to talk, or that
I can hope to convince. To them I wish to point out that caution is not wisdom
when it involves the ignoring of a great principle; that it is not every step
that involves progression, but only such steps as are in the right line and
make easier the next; that there are strong forces that wait but the raising
of the true standard to rally on its side.
Let the time-servers, the demagogues, the compromisers, to whom nothing is
right and nothing is wrong, but who are always seeking to find some half-way
house between right and wrong – let them all go their ways. Any cause
which can lay hold of a great truth is the stronger without them. If the earnest
men among the Irish leaders abandon their present half-hearted, illogical position,
and take their stand frankly and firmly upon the principle that the youngest
child of the poorest peasant has as good a right to tread the soil and breathe
the air of Ireland as the eldest son of the proudest duke, they will have put
their fight on the right line. Present defeat will but pave the way for future
victory, and each step won makes easier the next. Their position will be not
only logically defensible, but will prove the stronger the more it is discussed;
for private property in land – which never arises from the natural perceptions
of men, but springs historically from usurpation and robbery – is something
so utterly absurd, so outrageously unjust, so clearly a waste of productive
forces and a barrier to the most profitable use of natural opportunities, so
thoroughly opposed to all sound maxims of public policy, so glaringly in the
way of further progress, that it is only tolerated because the majority of
men never think about it or hear it questioned. Once fairly arraign it, and
it must be condemned; once call upon its advocates to exhibit its claims, and
their cause is lost in advance. There is to-day no political economist of standing
who dare hazard his reputation by defending it on economic grounds; there is
to-day no thinker of eminence who either does not, like Herbert Spencer, openly
declare the injustice of private property in land, or tacitly make the same
admission.
Once force the discussion on this line, and the Irish reformers will compel
to their side the most active and powerful of the men who mold thought.
And they will not merely close up their own ranks, now in danger of being
broken; they will "carry the war into Africa," and make possible the most powerful
of political combinations.
It is already beginning to be perceived that the Irish movement, so far as
it has yet gone, is merely in the interest of a class; that, so far as it has
yet voiced any demand, it promises nothing to the laboring and artisan classes.
Its opponents already see this opportunity for division, which, even without
their efforts, must soon show itself, and which, now that the first impulse
of the movement is over, will the more readily develop. To close up its ranks,
and hold them firm, so that, even though they be forced to bend, they will
not break and scatter, it must cease to be a movement looking merely to the
benefit of the tenant-farmer, and become a movement for the benefit of the
whole laboring-class.
And the moment this is done the Irish land agitation assumes a new and a grander
phase. It ceases to be an Irish movement; it becomes but the van of a world-wide
struggle. Count the loss and the gain.
Chapter 10: Appeals to Animosity
THE Land League movement, as an Irish movement, has in its favor the strength
of Irish national feeling. In assuming the radical ground I urge, it would
lose some of this; for there are doubtless a considerable number of Irishmen
on both sides of the Atlantic who would shrink at first from the proposal to
abolish private property in land. But all that is worth having would soon come
back to it. And its strength would be more compact and intense – animated
by a more definite purpose and a more profound conviction.
But in ceasing to be a movement having relation simply to Ireland – in
proclaiming a truth and proposing a remedy which apply as well to every other
country – it would allay opposition, which, as a mere local movement,
it arouses, and bring to its support powerful forces.
The powerful landed interest of England is against the movement anyhow. The
natural allies of the Irish agitators are the English working-classes – not
merely the Irishmen and sons of Irishmen who, in the larger English cities,
are numerous enough to make some show and exert some voting power, without
being numerous enough to effect any important result – but the great
laboring masses of Great Britain. So long as merely Irish measures are proposed,
they cannot gain the hearty support even of the English radicals; so long as
race prejudices and hatreds are appealed to, counter-prejudices and -hatreds
must be aroused.
It is the very madness of folly, it is one of those political blunders worse
than crimes, to permit in this land agitation that indiscriminating denunciation
of England and everything English which is so common at Land League meetings
and in the newspapers which voice Irish sentiment. The men who do this may
be giving way to a natural sentiment; but they are most effectually doing the
work of the real oppressors of Ireland. Were they secret emissaries of the
London police, were they bribed with the gold which the British oligarchy grinds
out of the toil of its white slaves in mill and mine and field, they could
not better be doing its work. "Divide and conquer" is the golden maxim of the
oppressors of mankind. It is by arousing race antipathies and exciting national
animosities, by appealing to local prejudices and setting people against people,
that aristocracies and despotisms have been founded and maintained. They who
would free men must rise above such feelings if they would be successful. The
greatest enemy of the people's cause is he who appeals to national passion
and excites old hatreds. He is its best friend who does his utmost to bury
them out of sight. For that action and reaction are equal and uniform is the
law of the moral as of the physical world. Herein lies the far-reaching sweep
of those sublime teachings that, after centuries of nominal acceptance, the
so-called Christian world yet ignores, and which call on us to answer not revilings
with revilings, but to meet hatred with love. "For," as say the Scriptures
of the Buddhists, "hatred never ceases by hatred at any time; hatred ceases
by love; that is an old rule." To undiscriminately denounce Englishmen is simply
to arouse prejudices and excite animosities – to separate force that
sought to be united. To make this the fight of the Irish people against the
English people is to doom it to failure. To make it the common cause of the
people everywhere against a system which everywhere oppresses and robs them
is to make its success assured. Had this been made to appear, the Irish members
would not have stood alone when it came to the final resistance to coercion.
Had this been made to appear, Great Britain would be in a ferment at the proposal
to give the government despotic powers. If the Irish leaders are wise, they
may yet avail themselves of the rising tide of British democracy. Let the Land
Leaguers adopt the noble maxim of the German Social Democrats. Let them be
Land Leaguers first, and Irishmen afterward. Let them account him an enemy
of their cause who seeks to pander to prejudice and arouse hate. Let them arouse
to a higher love than the mere love of country; to a wider patriotism than
that which exhausts itself on one little sub-division of the human race, one
little spot on the great earth's surface; and in this name, and by this sign,
call upon their brothers, not so much to aid them, as to strike for themselves.
The Irish people have the same inalienable right to govern themselves as have
every other people; but the full recognition of this right need not necessarily
involve separation, and to talk of separation first is to arouse passions that
will be utilized by the worst enemies of Ireland. The demand for the full political
rights of the Irish people will be the stronger if it be made to line with
and include the demand for the full political rights of the unenfranchised
British people. And it must be remembered that all the tendencies of the time
are not to separation, but to integration; not to independence, but to interdependence.
This is observable wherever modern influences reach, and in all things. To
attempt to resist it is to attempt to turn back the tide of progress.
It is not with the English people that the Irish people have cause of quarrel.
It is with the system that oppresses both. That is the thing to denounce; that
is the thing to fight. And it is to be fought most effectually by uniting the
masses against it. Monarchy, aristocracy, landlordism, would get but a new
lease of life by the arousing of sectional passions. The greatest blow that
could be struck against them would be, scrupulously avoiding everything that
could excite antagonistic popular feeling, to carry this land agitation into
Great Britain, not as a mere Irish question, but as a home question as well.
To proclaim the universal truth that land is of natural right common property;
to abandon all timid and half-way schemes which attempt to compromise between
justice and injustice, and to demand nothing more nor less than a full recognition
of this natural right would be to do this. It would inevitably be to put the
British masses upon inquiry; to put British landholders upon the defensive,
and give them more than enough to do at home. Both England and Scotland are
ripe for such an agitation, and, once fairly begun, it can have but one result – the
victory of the popular cause.
Chapter 11: How to Win
NOR is it merely the laboring-classes of Great Britain who may thus be brought
into the fight, if the true standard be raised. To demand the nationalization
of land by the simple means I have proposed makes possible – nay, as
the discussion goes on, makes inevitable – an irresistible combination,
the combination of labor and capital against landlordism. This combination
proved its power by winning the battle of free trade in 1846 against the most
determined resistance of the landed interest. It would be much more powerful
now, and, if it can again be made on the land question, it can again force
the intrenchments of the landed aristocracy.
This combination cannot be made on any of the timid, illogical schemes as
yet proposed; but it can be made on the broad principle that land is rightfully
common property. Paradoxical as it may seem, it is yet true that, while the
present position of the Irish agitators does involve a menace to capital, the
absolute denial of the right of private property in land would not.
In admitting that the landlords ought to get any rent at all, in admitting
that, if the land is taken from them, they must be paid for it, the Irish agitators
give away their whole case. For in this they admit that the land really belongs
to the landlords, and put property in land in the same category with other
property. Thus they place themselves in an indefensible position; thus they
give to the agitation a "communistic" (2) character, and excite against it
that natural and proper feeling which strongly resents any attack upon the
rights of property as an attack upon the very foundations of society. It was
doubtless this mistake of the agitators in admitting the right of private property
in land to which Archbishop McCabe recently alluded in saying that some of
the utterances of the agitators excited the solicitude of the Holy See. For
this mistake gives to the agitation the character of an attack upon the rights
of property. If the land is really the property of the landlords (and this
is admitted when it is admitted that they are entitled to any rent or to any
compensation), then to limit the rent which they shall get, or to interfere
with their freedom to make what terms they please with tenants, is an attack
upon property rights. If the land is rightfully the landlords', then is any
compulsion as to how they shall let it, or on what terms they shall part with
it, a bad and dangerous precedent, which naturally alarms capital and excites
the solicitude of those who are concerned for good morals and social order.
For, if a man may be made to part with one species of property by boycotting
or agitation, why not with another? If a man's title to land is as rightful
as his title to his watch, what is the difference between agitation by Land
League meetings and Parliamentary filibustering to make him give up the one
and agitation with a cocked pistol to make him give up the other?
(2) I use the word in the
usual sense in which it is used by the vulgar, and in which a communist
is understood as one who wants to divide up other people's property.
But, if it be denied that land justly is, or can be, private property, if
the equal rights of the whole people to the use of the elements gratuitously
furnished by Nature be asserted without drawback or compromise, then the essential
difference between property in land and property in things of human production
is at once brought out. Then will it clearly appear not only that the denial
of the right of individual property in land does not involve any menace to
legitimate property rights, but that the maintenance of private property in
hand necessarily involves a denial of the right to all other property, and
that the recognition of the claims of the landlords means a continuous robbery
of capital as well as of labor.
All this will appear more and more clearly as the practical measures necessary
to make land common property are proposed and discussed. These simple measures
involve no harsh proceedings, no forcible dispossession, no shock to public
confidence, no retrogression to a lower industrial organization, no loaning
of public money, or establishment of cumbrous commissions. Instead of doing
violence to the rightful sense of property, they assert and vindicate it. The
way to make land common property is simply to take rent for the common benefit.
And to do this, the easy way is to abolish one tax after another, until the
whole weight of taxation falls upon the value of land. When that point is reached,
the battle is won. The hare is caught, killed, and skinned, and to cook him
will be a very easy matter. The real fight will come on the proposition to
consolidate existing taxation upon land values. When that is once won, the
landholders will not merely have been decisively defeated, they will have been
routed; and the nature of land values will be so generally understood that
to raise taxation so as to take the whole rent for common purposes will be
a mere matter of course.
The political art is like the military art. It consists in combining the greatest
strength against the point of least resistance. I have pointed out the way
in which, in the case we are considering, this can be done. And, the more the
matter is considered, the clearer and clearer will it appear that there is
every practical reason, as there is every theoretical reason, why the Irish
reformers should take this vantage-ground of principle. To propose to put the
public burdens upon the landholders is not a novel and unheard-of thing against
which English prejudice would run as something "newfangled," some new invention
of modern socialism. On the contrary, it is the ancient English practice. It
would be but a return, in a form adapted to modern times, to the system under
which English land was originally parceled out to the predecessors of the present
holders – the just system, recognized for centuries, that those who enjoy
the common property should bear the common burdens. The putting of property
in land in the same category as property in things produced by labor is comparatively
modern. In England, as in Ireland and Scotland, as in fact among every people
of whom we know anything, the land was originally treated as common property,
and this recognition ran all through the feudal system. The essence of the
feudal system was in treating the landholder not as an owner, but as a lessee.
William the Conqueror did not give away the land of England as the Church lands
were given away by Henry VIII, when he divided among his sycophants the property
of the people, which, after the manner of the times, had been set apart for
the support of religious, educational, and charitable institutions. To every
grant of land made by the Conqueror was annexed a condition which amounted
to a heavy perpetual tax or rent. One of his first acts was to divide the soil
of England into sixty thousand knights' fees; and thus, besides many other
dues and obligations, was thrown upon the landholders the cost of providing
and maintaining the army. All the long, costly wars that England fought during
feudal times involved no public debt. Public debt, pauperism, and the grinding
poverty of the poorer classes came in as the landholders gradually shook off
the obligations on which they had received their land, an operation culminating
in the abolition after the Restoration of the feudal tenures, for which were
substituted indirect taxes that still weigh upon the whole people. To now reverse
this process, to abolish the taxes which are borne by labor and capital, and
to substitute for them a tax on rent, would be not the adoption of anything
new, but a simple going back to the old plan. In England, as in Ireland, the
movement would appeal to the popular imagination as a demand for the reassertion
of ancient rights.
There are other most important respects in which this measure will commend
itself to the English mind. The tax upon land values or rent is in all economic
respects the most perfect of taxes. No political economist will deny that it
combines the maximum of certainty with the minimum of loss and cost; that,
unlike taxes upon capital or exchange or improvement, it does not check production
or enhance prices or fall ultimately upon the consumer. And, in proposing to
abolish all other taxes in favor of this theoretically perfect tax, the Land
Reformers will have on their side the advantage of ideas already current, while
they can bring the argumentum ad hominem to bear on those who might never comprehend
an abstract principle. Englishmen of all classes have happily been educated
up to a belief in free trade, though a very large amount of revenue is still
collected from customs. Let the Land Reformers take advantage of this by proposing
to carry out the doctrine of free trade to its fullest extent. If a revenue
tariff is better than a protective tariff, then no tariff at all is better
than a revenue tariff. Let them propose to abolish the customs duties entirely,
and to abolish as well harbor dues and lighthouse dues and dock charges, and
in their place to add to the tax on rent, or the value of land exclusive of
improvements. Let them in the same way propose to get rid of the excise, the
various license taxes, the tax upon buildings, the onerous and unpopular income
tax, etc., and to saddle all public expenses on the landlords.
This would bring home the land question to thousands and thousands who have
never thought of it before; to thousands and thousands who have heretofore
looked upon the land question as something peculiarly Irish, or something that
related exclusively to agriculture and to farmers, and have never seen how,
in various direct and indirect ways, they have to contribute to the immense
sums received by the landlords as rent. It would be putting the argument in
a shape in which even the most stupid could understand it. It would be directing
the appeal to a spot where even the unimaginative are sensitive – the
pocket. How long would a merchant or banker or manufacturer or annuitant regard
as dangerous and wicked an agitation which proposed to take taxation off of
him? Even the most prejudiced can be relied on to listen with patience to an
argument in favor of making some one else pay what they now are paying.
Let me illustrate by a little story what I feel confident would be the effect
of the policy I propose:
Once upon a time I was the Pacific-coast agent of an Eastern news association,
which took advantage of an opposition telegraph company to run against the
Associated Press monopoly. The association in California consisted of one strong
San Francisco paper, to which telegraphic news was of much importance, and
a number of interior papers, to which it was of minor importance, if of any
importance at all. It became necessary to raise more money for the expenses
of collecting and transmitting these despatches, and, thinking it only fair,
I assessed the increased cost to the strong metropolitan paper. The proprietor
of this paper was very indignant. He appealed to the proprietors of all the
other papers, and they all joined in his protest. I replied by calling a meeting.
At this meeting the proprietor of the San Francisco paper led off with an indignant
speech. He was seconded by several others, and evidently had the sympathy of
the whole crowd. Then came my turn. I said, in effect:
"Gentlemen, you can do what you please about this matter. Whatever satisfies
you satisfies me. The only thing fixed is, that more money has to be raised.
As this San Francisco paper pays now a much lower relative rate than you do,
I thought it only fair that it should pay the increased cost. But, if you think
otherwise, there is no reason in the world why you should not pay it yourselves." The
debate immediately took another turn, and in a few minutes my action was indorsed
by a unanimous vote, for the San Francisco man was so disgusted by the way
his supporters left him that he would not vote at all.
Now, that is just about what will happen to the British landlords if the question
be put in the way I propose. The British landowners are in numbers but an insignificant
minority. And, the more they protested against the injustice of having to pay
all the taxes, the quicker would the public mind realize the essential injustice
of private property in land, the quicker would the majority of the people come
to see that the landowners ought not only to pay all the taxes, but a good
deal more besides. Once put the question in such a way that the British working-man
will realize that he pays two prices for his ale and half a dozen prices for
his tobacco, because a landowners' Parliament in the time of Charles II shook
off their ancient dues to the State, and imposed them in indirect taxation
on him; once bring to the attention of the well-to-do Englishman, who grunts
as he pays his income tax, the question as to whether the landowner, who draws
his income from property that of natural right belongs to the whole people,
ought not to pay it instead of him, and it will not be long before the absurd
injustice of allowing rent to be appropriated by individuals will be thoroughly
understood. This is a very different thing from asking the British taxpayer
to buy out the Irish landlord for the sake of the Irish peasant.
I have been speaking as though all landholders would resist the change which
would sacrifice their special interests to the larger interests of society.
But I am satisfied that to think this is to do landholders a great injustice.
For landholders as a class are not more stupid nor more selfish than any other
class. And as they saw, as they must see, as the discussion progresses, that
they also would be the gainers in the great social change which would abolish
poverty and elevate the very lowest classes – the "mudsills" of society,
as a Southern Senator expressively called them during the Slavery discussion – above
the want, the misery, the vice, and degradation in which they are now plunged,
there are many landowners who would join heartily and unreservedly in the effort
to bring this change about. This I believe, not merely because my reading and
observation both teach me that low, narrow views of self-interest are not the
strongest of human motives, but because I know that today among those who see
the truth I have here tried to set forth, and who would carry out the reform
I have proposed, are many landholders.(3) And,
if they be earnest men, I appeal to landholders as confidently as to any other
class. There is that in a great truth that can raise a human soul above the
mists of selfishness.
(3) San Francisco, the owner of much valuable real
estate in and near that city; and Sir George Gray, og New Zealand, the
owner of a godd deal of land in that colony, of which he was former governor,
as well as, I understand, of valuable estates in England.
Among the warm friends my book "Progress and Poverty" has found are many landholders – some
of them large landholders. As types I may mention the names of D. A. Learnard,
of San Joaquin, a considerable farmer, who had no sooner read it than he sent
for a dozen copies to circulate among his neighbors; Hiram Tubbs, of San Francisco,
the owner of much valuable real estate in and near that city; and Sir George
Grey, of New Zealand, the owner of a good deal of land in that colony, of which
he was formerly governor, as well as, I understand, of valuable estates in
England.
The course which I suggest is the only course which can be logically based
on principle. It has everything to commend it. It will concentrate the greatest
strength against the least resistance. And it will be on the right line. Every
step gained will be an advance toward the ultimate goal; every step gained
will make easier the next.
Chapter 12: In the United States
IN speaking with special reference to the case of Ireland, I have, so far
as general principles are concerned, been using it as a stalking-horse. In
discussing the Irish Land Question, we really discuss the most vital of American
questions. And if we of the United States cannot see the beam in our own eye,
save by looking at the mote in our brother's, then let us look at the mote;
and let us take counsel together how he may get it out. For, at least, we shall
in this way learn how we may deal with our own case when we wake up to the
consciousness of it.
And never had the parable of the mote and the beam a better illustration than
in the attitude of so many Americans toward this Irish Land Question. We denounce
the Irish land system! We express our sympathy with Ireland! We tender our
advice by Congressional and legislative resolution to our British brethren
across the sea! Truly our indignation is cheap and our sympathy is cheap, and
our advice is very, very cheap! For what are we doing? Extending over new soil
the very institution that to them descended from a ruder and a darker time.
With what conscience can we lecture them? With all power in the hands of the
people, with institutions yet plastic, with millions of virgin acres yet to
settle, it should he ours to do more than vent denunciation, and express sympathy,
and give advice. It should be ours to show the way. This we have not done;
this we do not do. Out in our new States may be seen the growth of a system
of cultivation worse in its social effects than that which prevails in Ireland.
In Ireland the laborer has some sort of a home, and enjoys some of the family
affections. In these great "wheat-manufacturing" districts the laborer is a
nomad, his home is in his blankets, which he carries around with him. The soil
bears wheat, crop after crop, till its fertility is gone. It does not bear
children. These machine-worked "grain factories" of the great Republic of the
New World are doing just what was done by the slave-worked latifundia of the
Roman world. Here they prevent, where there they destroyed, "the crop of men." And
in our large cities may we not see misery of the same kind as exists in Ireland?
If it is less in amount, is it not merely because our country is yet newer;
because we have yet a wide territory and a sparse population – conditions
past which our progress is rapidly carrying us? As for evictions, is it an
unheard-of thing, even in New York, for families to be turned out of their
homes because they cannot pay the rent? Are there not many acres in this country
from which those who made homes have been driven by sheriffs' posses, and even
by troops? Do not a number of the Mussell Slough settlers lie in Santa Clara
jail today because a great railroad corporation set its envious eyes on soil
which they had turned from desert into garden, and they in their madness tried
to resist ejectment?
And the men on the other side of the Atlantic who vainly imagine that they
may settle the great question now pressing upon them by free trade in land,
or tenant-right, or some mild device for establishing a peasant proprietary – they
may learn something about their own case if they will turn their eyes to us.
We have had free trade in land; we have had in our American farmer, owning
his own acres, using his own capital, and working with his own hands, something
far better than peasant proprietorship. We have had, what no legislation can
give the people of Great Britain, vast areas of virgin soil. We have had all
of these under democratic institutions. Yet we have here social disease of
precisely the same kind as that which exists in Ireland and England. And the
reason is that we have had here precisely the same cause – that we have
made land private property. So long as this exists, our democratic institutions
are vain, our pretense of equality but cruel irony, our public schools can
but sow the seeds of discontent. So long as this exists, material progress
can but force the masses of our people into a harder and more hopeless slavery.
Until we in some way make the land, what Nature intended it to be, common property,
until we in some way secure to every child born among us his natural birthright,
we have not established the Republic in any sense worthy of the name, and we
cannot establish the Republic. Its foundations are quicksand.
Chapter 13: A Little
Island or a Little World
IMAGINE an island girt with ocean; imagine a little world swimming in space.
Put on it, in imagination, human beings. Let them divide the land, share and
share alike, as individual property. At first, while population is sparse and
industrial processes rude and primitive, this will work well enough.
Turn away the eyes of the mind for a moment, let time pass, and look again.
Some families will have died out, some have greatly multiplied; on the whole,
population will have largely increased, and even supposing there have been
no important inventions or improvements in the productive arts, the increase
in population, by causing the division of labor, will have made industry more
complex. During this time some of these people will have been careless, generous,
improvident; some will have been thrifty and grasping. Some of them will have
devoted much of their powers to thinking of how they themselves and the things
they see around them came to be, to inquiries and speculations as to what there
is in the universe beyond their little island or their little world, to making
poems, painting pictures, or writing books; to noting the differences in rocks
and trees and shrubs and grasses; to classifying beasts and birds and fishes
and insects – to the doing, in short, of all the many things which add
so largely to the sum of human knowledge and human happiness, without much
or any gain of wealth to the doer. Others again will have devoted all their
energies to the extending of their possessions. What, then, shall we see, land
having been all this time treated as private property? Clearly, we shall see
that the primitive equality has given way to inequality. Some will have very
much more than one of the original shares into which the land was divided;
very many will have no land at all. Suppose that, in all things save this,
our little island or our little world is Utopia – that there are no wars
or robberies; that the government is absolutely pure and taxes nominal; suppose,
if you want to, any sort of a currency; imagine, if you can imagine such a
world or island, that interest is utterly abolished; yet inequality in the
ownership of land will have produced poverty and virtual slavery.
For the people we have supposed are human beings – that is to say, in
their physical natures at least, they are animals who can live only on land
and by the aid of the products of land. They may make machines which will enable
them to float on the sea, or perhaps to fly in the air, but to build and equip
these machines they must have land and the products of land, and must constantly
come back to land. Therefore those who own the land must be the masters of
the rest. Thus, if one man has come to own all the land, he is their absolute
master even to life or death. If they can live on the land only on his terms,
then they can live only on his terms, for without land they cannot live. They
are his absolute slaves, and so long as his ownership is acknowledged, if they
want to live, they must do in everything as he wills.
If, however, the concentration of landownership has not gone so far as to
make one or a very few men the owners of all the land – if there are
still so many landowners that there is competition between them as well as
between those who have only their labor – then the terms on which these
non-landholders can live will seem more like free contract. But it will not
be free contract. Land can yield no wealth without the application of labor;
labor can produce no wealth without land. These are the two equally necessary
factors of production. Yet, to say that they are equally necessary factors
of production is not to say that, in the making of contracts as to how the
results of production are divided, the possessors of these two meet on equal
terms. For the nature of these two factors is very different. Land is a natural
element; the human being must have his stomach filled every few hours. Land
can exist without labor, but labor cannot exist without land. If I own a piece
of land, I can let it lie idle for a year or for years, and it will eat nothing.
But the laborer must eat every day, and his family must eat. And so, in the
making of terms between them, the landowner has an immense advantage over the
laborer. It is on the side of the laborer that the intense pressure of competition
comes, for in his case it is competition urged by hunger. And, further than
this: As population increases, as the competition for the use of land becomes
more and more intense, so are the owners of land enabled to get for the use
of their land a larger and larger part of the wealth which labor exerted upon
it produces. That is to say, the value of land steadily rises. Now, this steady
rise in the value of land brings about a confident expectation of future increase
of value, which produces among landowners all the effects of a combination
to hold for higher prices. Thus there is a constant tendency to force mere
laborers to take less and less or to give more and more (put it which way you
please, it amounts to the same thing) of the products of their work for the
opportunity to work. And thus, in the very nature of things, we should see
on our little island or our little world that, after a time had passed, some
of the people would be able to take and enjoy a superabundance of all the fruits
of labor without doing any labor at all, while others would be forced to work
the livelong day for a pitiful living.
But let us introduce another element into the supposition. Let us suppose
great discoveries and inventions – such as the steam-engine, the power-loom,
the Bessemer process, the reaping-machine, and the thousand and one labor-saving
devices that are such a marked feature of our era. What would be the result?
Manifestly, the effect of all such discoveries and inventions is to increase
the power of labor in producing wealth – to enable the same amount of
wealth to be produced by less labor, or a greater amount with the same labor.
But none of them lessen, or can lessen the necessity for land. Until we can
discover some way of making something out of nothing – and that is so
far beyond our powers as to be absolutely unthinkable – there is no possible
discovery or invention which can lessen the dependence of labor upon land.
And, this being the case, the effect of these labor-saving devices, land being
the private property of some, would simply be to increase the proportion of
the wealth produced that landowners could demand for the use of their land.
The ultimate effect of these discoveries and inventions would be not to benefit
the laborer, but to make him more dependent.
And, since we are imagining conditions, imagine laborsaving inventions to
go to the farthest imaginable point, that is to say, to perfection. What then?
Why then, the necessity for labor being done away with, all the wealth that
the land could produce would go entire to the landowners. None of it whatever
could be claimed by any one else. For the laborers there would be no use at
all. If they continued to exist, it would be merely as paupers on the bounty
of the landowners!
Chapter 14: The Civilization
that is Possible
IN the effects upon the distribution of wealth, of making land private property,
we may thus see an explanation of that paradox presented by modern progress.
The perplexing phenomena of deepening want with increasing wealth, of labor
rendered more dependent and helpless by the very introduction of labor-saving
machinery, are the inevitable result of natural laws as fixed and certain as
the law of gravitation. Private property in land is the primary cause of the
monstrous inequalities which are developing in modern society. It is this,
and not any miscalculation of Nature in bringing into the world more mouths
than she can feed, that gives rise to that tendency of wages to a minimum – that "iron
law of wages," as the Germans call it-that, in spite of all advances in productive
power, compels the laboring-classes to the least return on which they will
consent to live. It is this that produces all those phenomena that are so often
attributed to the conflict of labor and capital. It is this that condemns Irish
peasants to rags and hunger, that produces the pauperism of England and the
tramps of America. It is this that makes the almshouse and the penitentiary
the marks of what we call high civilization; that in the midst of schools and
churches degrades and brutalizes men, crushes the sweetness out of womanhood
and the joy out of childhood. It is this that makes lives that might be a blessing
a pain and a curse, and every year drives more and more to seek unbidden refuge
in the gates of death. For, a permanent tendency to inequality once set up,
all the forces of progress tend to greater and greater inequality.
All this is contrary to Nature. The poverty and misery, the vice and degradation,
that spring from the unequal distribution of wealth, are not the results of
natural law; they spring from our defiance of natural law. They are the fruits
of our refusal to obey the supreme law of justice. It is because we rob the
child of his birthright; because we make the bounty which the Creator intended
for all the exclusive property of some, that these things come upon us, and,
though advancing and advancing, we chase but the mirage.
When, lit by lightning-flash or friction amid dry grasses, the consuming flames
of fire first flung their lurid glow into the face of man, how must he have
started back in affright! When he first stood by the shores of the sea, how
must its waves have said to him, "Thus far shalt thou go, but no farther"!
Yet, as he learned to use them, fire became his most useful servant, the sea
his easiest highway. The most destructive element of which we know – that
which for ages and ages seemed the very thunderbolt of the angry gods – is,
as we are now beginning to learn, fraught for us with untold powers of usefulness.
Already it enables us to annihilate space in our messages, to illuminate the
night with new suns; and its uses are only beginning. And throughout all Nature,
as far as we can see, whatever is potent for evil is potent for good. "Dirt," said
Lord Brougham, "is matter in the wrong place." And so the squalor and vice
and misery that abound in the very heart of our civilization are but results
of the misapplication of forces in their nature most elevating.
I doubt not that whichever way a man may turn to inquire of Nature, he will
come upon adjustments which will arouse not merely his wonder, but his gratitude.
Yet what has most impressed me with the feeling that the laws of Nature are
the laws of beneficent intelligence is what I see of the social possibilities
involved in the law of rent. Rent (4) springs
from natural causes. It arises, as society develops, from the differences in
natural opportunities and the differences in the distribution of population.
It increases with the division of labor, with the advance of the arts, with
the progress of invention. And thus, by virtue of a law impressed upon the
very nature of things, has the Creator provided that the natural advance of
mankind shall be an advance toward equality, an advance toward cooperation,
an advance toward a social state in which not even the weakest need be crowded
to the wall, in which even for the unfortunate and the cripple there may be
ample provision. For this revenue, which arises from the common property, which
represents not the creation of value by the individual, but the creation by
the community as a whole, which increases just as society develops, affords
a common fund, which, properly used, tends constantly to equalize conditions,
to open the largest opportunities for all, and utterly to banish want or the
fear of want.
(4) I, of course, use the word in its economic,
not in its common sense, meaning by it what is commonly called ground-rent.
The squalid poverty that festers in the heart of our civilization, the vice
and crime and degradation and ravening greed that flow from it, are the results
of a treatment of land that ignores the simple law of justice, a law so clear
and plain that it is universally recognized by the veriest savages. What is
by nature the common birthright of all, we have made the exclusive property
of individuals; what is by natural law the common fund, from which common wants
should be met, we give to a few that they may lord it over their fellows. And
so some are gorged while some go hungry, and more is wasted than would suffice
to keep all in luxury.
In this nineteenth century, among any people who have begun to utilize the
forces and methods of modern production, there is no necessity for want. There
is no good reason why even the poorest should not have all the comforts, all
the luxuries, all the opportunities for culture, all the gratifications of
refined taste that only the richest now enjoy. There is no reason why any one
should be compelled to long and monotonous labor. Did invention and discovery
stop to day, the forces of production are ample for this. What hampers production
is the unnatural inequality in distribution. And, with just distribution, invention
and discovery would only have begun.
Appropriate rent in the way I propose, and speculative rent would be at once
destroyed. The dogs in the manger who are now holding so much land they have
no use for, in order to extract a high price from those who do want to use
it, would be at once choked off, and land from which labor and capital are
now debarred under penalty of a heavy fine would be thrown open to improvement
and use. The incentive to land monopoly would be gone. Population would spread
where it is now too dense, and become denser where it is now too sparse.
Appropriate rent in this way, and not only would natural opportunities be
thus opened to labor and capital, but all the taxes which now weigh upon production
and rest upon the consumer could be abolished. The demand for labor would increase,
wages would rise, every wheel of production would be set in motion.
Appropriate rent in this way, and the present expenses of government would
be at once very much reduced – reduced directly by the saving in the
present cumbrous and expensive schemes of taxation, reduced indirectly by the
diminution in pauperism and in crime. This simplification in governmental machinery,
this elevation of moral tone which would result, would make it possible for
government to assume the running of railroads, telegraphs, and other businesses
which, being in their nature monopolies, cannot, as experience is showing,
be safely left in the hands of private individuals and corporations. In short,
losing its character as a repressive agency, government could thus gradually
pass into an administrative agency of the great cooperative association-society.
For, appropriate rent in this way, and there would be at once a large surplus
over and above what are now considered the legitimate expenses of government.
We could divide this, if we wanted to, among the whole community, share and
share alike. Or we could give every boy a small capital for a start when he
came of age, every girl a dower, every widow an annuity, every aged person
a pension, out of this common estate. Or we could do with our great common
fund many, many things that would be for the common benefit, many, many things
that would give to the poorest what even the richest cannot now enjoy. We could
establish free libraries, lectures, museums, art-galleries, observatories,
gymnasiums, baths, parks, theaters; we could line our roads with fruit-trees,
and make our cities clean and wholesome and beautiful; we could conduct experiments,
and offer rewards for inventions, and throw them open to public use.(5)
(5) A million dollars spent in premiums and experiments
would, in all probability, make aerial navigation an accomplished fact.
Think of the enormous wastes that now go on: The waste of false revenue systems,
which hamper production and bar exchange, which fine a man for erecting a building
where none stood before, or for making two blades of grass grow where there
was but one. The waste of unemployed labor, of idle machinery, of those periodical
depressions of industry almost as destructive as war. The waste entailed by
poverty, and the vice and crime and thriftlessness and drunkenness that spring
from it; the waste entailed by that greed of gain that is its shadow, and which
makes business in large part but a masked war; the waste entailed by the fret
and worry about the mere physical necessities of existence, to which so many
of us are condemned; the waste entailed by ignorance, by cramped and undeveloped
faculties, by the turning of human beings into mere machines!
Think of these enormous wastes, and of the others which, like these, are due
to the fundamental wrong which produces an unjust distribution of wealth and
distorts the natural development of society, and you will begin to see what
a higher, purer, richer civilization would be made possible by the simple measure
that will assert natural rights. You will begin to see how, even if no one
but the present landholders were to be considered, this would be the greatest
boon that could be vouchsafed them by society, and that, for them to fight
it, would be as if the dog with a tin kettle tied to his tail should snap at
the hand that offered to free him. Even the greatest landholder! As for such
landholders as our working farmers and homestead-owners, the slightest discussion
would show them that they had everything to gain by the change. But even such
landholders as the Duke of Westminster and the Astors would be gainers.
For it is of the very nature of injustice that it really profits no one. When
and where was slavery good for slaveholders? Did her cruelties in America,
her expulsions of Moors and Jews, her burnings of heretics, profit Spain? Has
England gained by her injustice toward Ireland? Did not the curse of an unjust
social system rest on Louis XIV and Louis XV as well as on the poorest peasant
whom it condemned to rags and starvation – as well as on that Louis whom
it sent to the block? Is the Czar of Russia to be envied?
This we may know certainly, this we may hold to confidently: that which is
unjust can really profit no one; that which is just can really harm no one.
Though all other lights move and circle, this is the pole-star by which we
may safely steer.
Chapter 15: The Civilization that
is
WHEN we think of the civilization that might be, how poor and pitiful, how
little better than utter barbarism, seems this civilization of which we boast!
Even here, where it has had the freest field and fullest development! Even
here!
This is a broad land and a rich land. How wide it is, how rich it is, how
the fifty millions of us already here are but beginning to scratch it, a man
cannot begin to realize, till he does some thousands of miles of traveling
over it. There are a school and a church and a newspaper in every hamlet; we
have no privileged orders, no legacies of antiquated institutions, no strong
and covertly hostile neighbors, who in fancy or reality oblige us to keep up
great standing armies. We have had the experience of all other nations to guide
us in selecting what is good and rejecting what is bad. In politics, in religion,
in science, in mechanism, everything shows the latest improvements. We think
we stand, and in fact we do stand, in the very van of civilization. Food here
is cheaper, wages higher, than anywhere else. There is here a higher average
of education, of intelligence, of material comfort, and of individual opportunity,
than among any other of the great civilized nations. Here modern civilization
is at its very best. Yet even here!
Last winter I was in San Francisco. There are in San Francisco citizens
who can build themselves houses that cost a million and a half; citizens
who can give each of their children two millions of registered United States
bonds for a Christmas present; citizens who can send their wives to Paris
to keep house there, or rather to "keep palace" in a style that outdoes the
lavishness of Russian grand dukes; citizens whose daughters are golden prizes
to the bluest-blooded of English aristocrats; citizens who can buy seats
in the United States Senate and leave them empty, just to show their grandeur. There
are, also, in San Francisco other citizens. Last winter I could hardly walk
a block without meeting a citizen begging for ten cents. And, when a charity
fund was raised to give work with pick and shovel to such as would rather
work than beg, the applications were so numerous that, to make the charity
fund go as far as possible, one set of men was discharged after having been
given a few days' work, in order to make room for another set. This and much
else of the same sort I saw in San Francisco last winter. Likewise in Sacramento,
and in other towns.
Last summer, on the plains, I took from its tired mother, and held in my arms,
a little sun-browned baby, the youngest of a family of the sturdy and keen
Western New England stock, who alone in their two wagons had traveled near
three thousand miles looking for some place to locate and finding none, and
who were now returning to where the father and his biggest boy could go to
work on a railroad, what they had got by the sale of their Nebraska farm all
gone. And I walked awhile by the side of long, lank Southwestern men who, after
similar fruitless journeyings way up into Washington Territory, were going
back to the Choctaw Nation.
This winter I have been in New York. New York is .the greatest and richest
of American cities – the third city of the modern world, and moving steadily
toward the first place. This is a time of great prosperity. Never before were
so many goods sold, so much business done. Real estate is advancing with big
jumps, and within the last few months many fortunes have been made in buying
and selling vacant lots. Landlords nearly everywhere are demanding increased
rents; asking in some of the business quarters an increase of three hundred
per cent. Money is so plenty that government four per cents sell for 114, and
a bill is passing Congress for refunding the maturing national debt at three
per cent, per annum, a rate that awhile ago in California was not thought exorbitant
per month. All sorts of shares and bonds have been going up and up. You can
sell almost anything if you give it a high-sounding corporate name and issue
well-printed shares of stock. Seats in the Board of Brokers are worth thirty
thousand dollars, and are cheap at that. There are citizens here who rake in
millions at a single operation with as much ease as a faro-dealer rakes in
a handful of chips.
Nor is this the mere seeming prosperity of feverish speculation. The country
is really prosperous. The crops have been enormous, the demand insatiable.
We have at last a sound currency; gold has been pouring in. The railroads have
been choked with produce, steel rails are being laid faster than ever before;
all sorts of factories are running full time or overtime. So prosperous is
the country, so good are the times, that, at the Presidential election a few
months since, the determining argument was that we could not afford to take
the chance of disturbing so much material prosperity by a political change.
Nevertheless, prosperous as are these times, citizens of the United States
beg you on the streets for ten cents and five cents, and although you know
that there are in this city two hundred charitable societies, although you
realize that on general principles to give money in this way is to do evil
rather than good, you are afraid to refuse them when you read of men in this
great city freezing to death and starving to death. Prosperous as are these
times, women are making overalls for sixty cents a dozen, and you can hire
citizens for trivial sums to parade up and down the streets all day with advertising
placards on their backs. I get on a horse-car and ride with the driver. He
is evidently a sober, steady man, as intelligent as a man can be who drives
a horse-car all the time he is not asleep or eating his meals. He tells me
he has a wife and four children. He gets home (if a couple of rooms can be
called a home) at two o'clock in the morning; he has to be back on his car
at nine. Sunday he has a couple of hours more, which he has to put in in sleep,
else, as he says, he would utterly break down. His children he never sees,
save when one of them comes at noon or supper-time to the horse-car route with
something for him to eat in a tin pail. He gets for his day's work one dollar
and seventy-five cents – a sum that will buy at Dehnonico's a beefsteak
and cup of coffee. I say to him that it must be pretty hard to pay rent and
keep six persons on one dollar and seventy-five cents a day. He says it is;
that he has been trying for a month to get enough ahead to buy a new pair of
shoes, but he hasn't yet succeeded. I ask why he does not leave such a job.
He says, "What can I do? There are a thousand men ready to step into my place!" And
so, in this time of prosperity, he is chained to his car. The horses that he
drives, they are changed six times during his working-day. They have lots of
time to stretch themselves and rest themselves and eat in peace their plentiful
meals, for they are worth from one to two hundred dollars each, and it would
be a loss to the company for them to fall ill. But this driver, this citizen
of the United States, he may fall ill or drop dead, and the company would not
lose a cent. As between him and the beasts he drives, I am inclined to think
that this most prosperous era is more prosperous for horses than for men.
Our Napoleon of Wall Street, our rising Charlemagne of railroads, who came
to this city with nothing but a new kind of mouse-trap in a mahogany box, but
who now, though yet in the vigor of his prime, counts his wealth by hundreds
of millions, if it can be counted at all, is interviewed by a reporter just
as he is about to step aboard his palace-car for a grand combination expedition
into the Southwest. He descants upon the services he is rendering in welding
into one big machine a lot of smaller machines, in uniting into one vast railroad
empire the separated railroad kingdoms. He likewise descants upon the great
prosperity of the whole country. Everybody is prosperous and contented, he
says: there is, of course, a good deal of misery in the big cities, but, then,
there always is!
Yet not alone in the great cities. I ride on the Hudson River Railroad on
a bitter cold day, and from one of the pretty towns with Dutch names gets in
a constable with a prisoner, whom he is to take to the Albany penitentiary.
In this case justice has been swift enough, for the crime, the taking of a
shovel, has been committed only a few hours before. Such coat as the man has
he keeps buttoned up, even in the hot car, for, the constable says, he has
no underclothes at all. He stole the shovel to get to the penitentiary, where
it is warm. The constable says they have lots of such cases, and that even
in these good times these pretty country towns are infested with such tramps.
With all our vast organizing, our developing of productive powers and cheapening
of transportation, we are yet creating a class of utter pariahs. And they are
to be found not merely in the great cities, but wherever the locomotive runs.
Is it real advance in civilization which, on the one hand, produces these
great captains of industry, and, on the other, these social outcasts?
It is the year of grace 1881, and of the Republic the 105th. The girl who
has brought in coal for my fire is twenty years old. She was born in New York,
and can neither read nor write. To me, when I heard it, this seemed sin and
shame, and I got her a spelling-book. She is trying what she can, but it is
uphill work. She has really no time. Last night when I came in, at eleven,
she was not through scrubbing the halls. She gets four dollars a month. Her
shoes cost two dollars a pair. She says she can sew; but I guess it is about
as I can. In the natural course of things, this girl will be a mother of citizens
of the Republic.
Underneath are girls who can sew; they run sewing-machines with their feet
all day. I have seen girls in Asia carrying water-jugs on their heads and young
women in South America bearing burdens. They were lithe and strong and symmetrical;
but to turn a young woman into motive power for a sewing-machine is to weaken
and injure her physically. And these girls are to rear, or ought to rear, citizens
of the Republic.
But there is worse and worse than this. Go out into the streets at night,
and you will find them filled with girls who will never be mothers. To the
man who has known the love of mother, of sister, of sweetheart, wife, and daughter,
this is the saddest sight of all.
The ladies of the Brooklyn churches – they are getting up petitions
for the suppression of Mormon polygamy; they would have it rooted out with
pains and penalties, trampled out, if need be, with fire and sword; and their
reverend Congressman-elect is going, when he takes his seat, to introduce a
most stringent bill to that end; for that a man should have more wives than
one is a burning scandal in a Christian country. So it is; but there are also
other burning scandals. As for scandals that excite talk, I will spare Brooklyn
a comparison with Salt Lake. But as to ordinary things: I have walked through
the streets of Salt Lake City, by day and by night, without seeing what in
the streets of New York or Brooklyn excites no comment. Polygamy is unnatural
and wrong, no doubt of that, for Nature brings into the world something over
twenty-two boys for every twenty girls. But is not a state of society unnatural
and wrong in which there are thousands and thousands of girls for whom no husband
ever offers? Can we brag of a state of society in which one citizen can load
his wife with more diamonds than an Indian chief can put beads on his squaw,
while many other citizens are afraid to marry lest they cannot support a wife – a
state of society in which prostitution flourishes? Polygamy is bad, but is
it not better than that? Civilization is advancing day by day; never was such
progress as we are making! Yet divorces are increasing and insanity is increasing.
What is the goal of a civilization that tends toward free love and the madhouse?
This is a most highly civilized community. There is not a bear nor wolf on
Manhattan Island, save in a menagerie. Yet it is easier, where they are worst,
to guard against bears and wolves than it is to guard against the human beasts
of prey that roam this island. In this highly civilized city every lower window
has to be barred, every door locked and bolted; even door-mats, not worth twenty-five
cents, you will see chained to the steps. Stop for a moment in a crowd and
your watch is gone as if by magic; shirt-studs are taken from their owners'
bosoms, and ear-rings cut from ladies' ears. Even a standing army of policemen
do not prevent highway robbery; there are populous districts that to walk through
after nightfall is a risk, and where you have far more need to go armed and
to be wary than in the backwoods. There are dens into which men are lured only
to be drugged and robbed, sometimes to be murdered. All the resources of science
and inventive genius are exhausted in making burglar-proof strong rooms and
safes, yet, as the steel plate becomes thicker and harder, so does the burglar's
tool become keener. If the combination lock cannot be picked, it is blown open.
If not a crack large enough for the introduction of powder is left, then the
air-pump is applied and a vacuum is created. So that those who in the heart
of civilization would guard their treasures safely must come back to the most
barbarous device, and either themselves, or by proxy, sleeplessly stand guard.
What sort of a civilization is this? In what does civilization essentially
consist if not in civility – that is to say, in respect for the rights
of person and of property?
Yet this is not all, nor the worst. These are but the grosser forms of that
spirit that in the midst of our civilization compels every one to stand on
guard. What is the maxim of business intercourse among the most highly respectable
classes? That if you are swindled it will be your own fault; that you must
treat every man you have dealings with as though he but wanted the chance to
cheat and rob you. Caveat emptor. "Let the buyer beware." If a man steal a
few dollars he may stand a chance of going to the penitentiary – I read
the other day of a man who was sent to the penitentiary for stealing four cents
from a horse-car company. But, if he steal a million by business methods, he
is courted and flattered, even though he steal the poor little savings which
washerwomen and sewing-girls have brought to him in trust, even though he rob
widows and orphans of the security which dead men have struggled and stinted
to provide.
This is a most Christian city. There are churches and churches. All sorts
of churches, where are preached all sorts of religions, save that which once
in Galilee taught the arrant socialistic doctrine that it is easier for a camel
to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom
of God; all save that which once in Jerusalem drove the money-changers from
the temple. Churches of brown and gray and yellow stone, lifting toward heaven
in such noble symmetry that architecture seems invocation and benison; where,
on stained-glass windows, glow angel and apostle, and the entering light is
dimmed to a soft glory; where such music throbs and supplicates and bursts
in joy as once in St. Sophia ravished the souls of heathen Northmen; churches
where richly cushioned pews let for the very highest prices, and the auctioneer
determines who shall sit in the foremost seats; churches outside of which on
Sunday stand long lines of carriages, on each carriage a coachman. And there
are white marble churches, so pure and shapely that the stone seems to have
bloomed and flowered – the concrete expression of a grand, sweet thought.
Churches restful to the very eye, and into which the weary and heavy-laden
can enter and join in the worship of their Creator for no larger an admission
fee than it costs on the Bowery to see the bearded lady or the Zulu giant eight
feet high. And then there are mission churches, run expressly for poor people,
where it does not cost a cent. There is no lack of churches. There are, in
fact, more churches than there are people who care to attend them. And there
are likewise Sunday-schools, and big religious "book concerns," and tract societies,
and societies for spreading the light of the gospel among the heathen in foreign
parts.
Yet, land a heathen on the Battery with money in his pocket, and he will be
robbed of the last cent of it before he is a day older. "By their fruits ye
shall know them." I wonder whether they who send missionaries to the heathen
ever read the daily papers. I think I could take a file of these newspapers,
and from their daily chroniclings match anything that could be told in the
same period of any heathen community – at least, of any heathen community
in a like state of peace and prosperity. I think I could take a file of these
papers, and match, horror for horror, all that returning missionaries have
to tell-even to the car of Juggernaut or infants tossed from mothers' arms
into the sacred river; even to Ashantee "customs" or cannibalistic feasts.
I do not say that such things are because of civilization, or because of Christianity.
On the contrary, I point to them as inconsistent with civilization, as incompatible
with Christianity. They show that our civilization is one-sided and cannot
last as at present based; they show that our so-called Christian communities
are not Christian at all. I believe a civilization is possible in which all
could be civilized – in which such things would be impossible. But it
must be a civilization based on justice and acknowledging the equal rights
of all to natural opportunities. I believe that there is in true Christianity
a power to regenerate the world. But it must be a Christianity that attacks
vested wrongs, not that spurious thing that defends them. The religion which
allies itself with injustice to preach down the natural aspirations of the
masses is worse than atheism.
Chapter 16: True Conservatism
THERE are those who may look on this little book as very radical, in the bad
sense they attach to the word. They mistake. This is, in the true sense of
the word, a most conservative little book. I do not appeal to prejudice and
passion. I appeal to intelligence. I do not incite to strife; I seek to prevent
strife.
That the civilized world is on the verge of the most tremendous struggle,
which, according to the frankness and sagacity with which it is met, will be
a struggle of ideas or a struggle of actual physical force, calling upon all
the potent agencies of destruction which modern invention has discovered, every
sign of the times portends. The voices that proclaim the eve of revolution
are in the air. Steam and electricity are not merely transporting goods and
carrying messages. They are everywhere changing social and industrial organization;
they are everywhere stimulating thought, and arousing new hopes and fears and
desires and passions; they are everywhere breaking down the barriers that have
separated men, and integrating nations into one vast organism, through which
the same pulses throb and the same nerves tingle.
The present situation in Great Britain is full of dangers, of dangers graver
and nearer than those who there are making history are likely to see. Who in
France, a century ago, foresaw the drama of blood so soon to open? Who in the
United States dreamed of what was coming till the cannon-shot rang and the
flag fell on Sumter? How confidently we said, "The American people are too
intelligent, too practical, to go to cutting each other's throats"! How confidently
we relied upon the strong common sense of the great masses, upon the great
business interests, upon the universal desire to make money! "War does not
pay," we said, "therefore war is impossible." A shot rang over Charleston harbor;
a bit of bunting dropped, and, riven into two hostile camps, a nation sprang
to its feet to close in the death-lock.
And to just such a point are events hurrying in Great Britain today. History
repeats itself, and what happened a century ago on one side of the English
Channel is beginning again on the other. Already has the States-General met,
and the Third Estate put on their hats. Already Necker is in despair. Already
has the lit de justice been held, and the Tennis-Court
been locked, and ball-cartridge been served to the Swiss Guard! For the moment
the forces of reaction triumph. Davitt is snatched to prison; a "Liberal" government
carries coercion by a tremendous majority, and the most despotic powers are
invoked to make possible the eviction of Irish peasants. The order of Warsaw
is to reign in Ireland, and the upholders of ancient wrong deem it secure again,
as the wave that was mounting seems sweeping back. Let them wait a little and
they will see. For again the wave will mount, and higher and higher, and soon
the white foam will seethe and hiss on its toppling crest. It is not true conservatism
which cries "Peace! peace!" when there is no peace; which, like the ostrich,
sticks its head in the sand and fancies itself secure; which would compromise
matters by putting more coal in the furnace, and hanging heavier weights on
the safety-valve! That alone is true conservatism which would look facts in
the face, which would reconcile opposing forces on the only basis on which
reconciliation is possible – that of justice.
I speak again of Great Britain, but I speak with reference to the whole modern
world. The true nature of the inevitable conflict with which modern civilization
is everywhere beginning to throb, can, it seems to me, best be seen in the
United States, and in the newer States even more clearly than in the older
States. That intelligent Englishmen imagine that in the democratization of
political institutions, in free trade in land, or in peasant proprietorship,
can be found any solution of the difficulties which are confronting them, is
because they do not see what may be seen in the United States by whoever will
look. That intelligent Americans imagine that by these questions which are
so menacingly presenting themselves in Europe their peace is to be unvexed,
is because they shut their eyes to what is going on around them, because they
attribute to themselves and their institutions what is really due to conditions
now rapidly passing away – to the sparseness of population and the cheapness
of land. Yet it is here, in this American Republic, that the true nature of
that inevitable conflict now rapidly approaching which must determine the fate
of modern civilization may be most clearly seen.
We have here abolished all hereditary privileges and legal distinctions of
class. Monarchy, aristocracy, prelacy, we have swept them all away. We have
carried mere political democracy to its ultimate. Every child born in the United
States may aspire to be President. Every man, even though he be a tramp or
a pauper, has a vote, and one man's vote counts for as much as any other man's
vote. Before the law all citizens are absolutely equal. In the name of the
people all laws run. They are the source of all power, the fountain of all
honor. In their name and by their will all government is carried on; the highest
officials are but their servants. Primogeniture and entail we have abolished
wherever they existed. We have and have had free trade in land. We started
with something infinitely better than any scheme of peasant proprietorship
which it is possible to carry into effect in Great Britain. We have had for
our public domain the best part of an immense continent. We have had the preemption
law and the homestead law. It has been our boast that here every one who wished
it could have a farm. We have had full liberty of speech and of the press.
We have not merely common schools, but high schools and universities, open
to all who may choose to attend. Yet here the same social difficulties apparent
on the other side of the Atlantic are beginning to appear. It is already clear
that our democracy is a vain pretense, our make-believe of equality a sham
and a fraud.
Already are the sovereign people becoming but a roi fainéant, like the Merovingian
kings of France, like the Mikados of Japan. The shadow of power is theirs;
but the substance of power is being grasped and wielded by the bandit chiefs
of the stock exchange, the robber leaders who organize politics into machines.
In any matter in which they are interested, the little finger of the great
corporations is thicker than the loins of the people. Is it sovereign States
or is it railroad corporations that are really represented in the elective
Senate which we have substituted for an hereditary House of Lords? Where is
the count or marquis or duke in Europe who wields such power as is wielded
by such simple citizens as our Stanfords, Goulds, and Vanderbilts? What does
legal equality amount to, when the fortunes of some citizens can be estimated
only in hundreds of millions, and other citizens have nothing? What does the
suffrage amount to when, under threat of discharge from employment, citizens
can be forced to vote as their employers dictate? when votes can be bought
on election day for a few dollars apiece? If there are citizens so dependent
that they must vote as their employers wish, so poor that a few dollars on
election day seem to them more than any higher consideration, then giving them
votes simply adds to the political power of wealth, and universal suffrage
becomes the surest basis for the establishment of tyranny. "Tyranny!" There
is a lesson in the very word. What are our American bosses but the exact antitypes
of the Greek tyrants, from whom the word comes? They who gave the word tyrant
its meaning did not claim to rule by right divine. They were simply the Grand
Sachems of Greek Tammanys, the organizers of Hellenic "stalwart machines."
Even if universal history did not teach the lesson, it is in the United States
already becoming very evident that political equality can continue to exist
only upon a basis of social equality; that where the disparity in the distribution
of wealth increases, political democracy only makes easier the concentration
of power, and must inevitably lead to tyranny and anarchy. And it is already
evident that there is nothing in political democracy, nothing in popular education,
nothing in any of our American institutions, to prevent the most enormous disparity
in the distribution of wealth. Nowhere in the world are such great fortunes
growing up as in the United States. Considering that the average income of
the working masses of our people is only a few hundred dollars a year, a fortune
of a million dollars is a monstrous thing – a more monstrous and dangerous
thing under a democratic government than anywhere else. Yet fortunes of ten
and twelve million dollars are with us ceasing to be noticeable. We already
have citizens whose wealth can be estimated only in hundreds of millions, and
before the end of the century, if present tendencies continue, we are likely
to have fortunes estimated in thousands of millions – such monstrous
fortunes as the world has never seen since the growth of similar fortunes ate
out the heart of Rome. And the necessary correlative of the growth of such
fortunes is the impoverishment and loss of independence on the part of the
masses. These great aggregations of wealth are like great trees, which strike
deep roots and spread wide branches, and which, by sucking up the moisture
from the soil and intercepting the sunshine, stunt and kill the vegetation
around them. When a capital of a million dollars comes into competition with
capitals of thousands of dollars, the smaller capitalists must be driven out
of the business or destroyed. With great capital nothing can compete save great
capital. Hence, every aggregation of wealth increases the tendency to the aggregation
of wealth, and decreases the possibility of the employee ever becoming more
than an employee, compelling him to compete with his fellows as to who will
work cheapest for the great capitalist – a competition that can have
but one result, that of forcing wages to the minimum at which the supply of
labor can be kept up. Where we are is not so important as in what direction
we are going, and in the United States all tendencies are clearly in this direction.
A while ago, and any journeyman shoemaker could set up in business for himself
with the savings of a few months. But now the operative shoemaker could not
in a lifetime save enough from his wages to go into business for himself. And,
now that great capital has entered agriculture, it must be with the same results.
The large farmer, who can buy the latest machinery at the lowest cash prices
and use it to the best advantage, who can run a straight furrow for miles,
who can make special rates with railroad companies, take advantage of the market,
and sell in large lots for the least commission, must drive out the small farmer
of the early American type just as the shoe factory has driven out the journeyman
shoemaker. And this is going on today.
There is nothing unnatural in this. On the contrary, it is in the highest
degree natural. Social development is in accordance with certain immutable
laws. And the law of development, whether it be the development of a solar
system, of the tiniest organism, or of a human society, is the law of integration.
It is in obedience to this law – a law evidently as all – compelling
as the law of gravitation – that these new agencies, which so powerfully
stimulate social growth, tend to the specialization and interdependence of
industry. It is in obedience to this law that the factory is superseding the
independent mechanic, the large farm is swallowing up the little one, the big
store shutting up the small one, that corporations are arising that dwarf the
State, and that population tends more and more to concentrate in cities. Men
must work together in larger and in more closely related groups. Production
must be on a greater scale. The only question is, whether the relation in which
men are thus drawn together and compelled to act together shall be the natural
relation of interdependence in equality, or the unnatural relation of dependence
upon a master.
-
If the one, then may civilization advance in what is evidently the natural
order, each step leading to a higher step.
-
If the other, then what Nature has intended as a blessing becomes a curse,
and a condition of inequality is produced which will inevitably destroy civilization.
Every new invention but hastens the catastrophe.
Now, all this we may deduce from natural laws as fixed and certain as the law
of gravitation. And all this we may see going on to-day. This is the reason why
modern progress, great as it has been, fails to relieve poverty; this is the
secret of the increasing discontent which pervades every civilized country. Under
present conditions, with land treated as private property, material progress
is developing two diverse tendencies, two opposing currents.
-
On the one side, the tendency of increasing population and of all improvement
in the arts of production is to build up enormous fortunes, to wipe out the
intermediate classes, and to crowd down the masses to a level of lower wages
and greater dependence.
-
On the other hand, by bringing men closer together, by stimulating thought,
by creating new wants, by arousing new ambitions, the tendency of modern
progress is to make the masses discontented with their condition, to feel
bitterly its injustice. The result can be predicted just as certainly as
the result can be predicted when two trains are rushing toward each other
on the same track.
This thing is absolutely certain: Private property in land blocks the way
of advancing civilization. The two cannot long coexist. Either private property
in land must be abolished, or, as has happened again and again in the history
of mankind, civilization must again turn back in anarchy and bloodshed. Let the
remaining years of the nineteenth century bear me witness. Even now, I believe,
the inevitable struggle has begun. It is not conservatism which would ignore
such a tremendous fact. It is the blindness that invites destruction. He that
is truly conservative let him look the facts in the face; let him speak frankly
and dispassionately. This is the duty of the hour. For, when a great social question
presses for settlement, it is only for a little while that the voice of Reason
can be heard. The masses of men hardly think at any time. It is difficult even
in sober moments to get them to reason calmly. But when passion is roused, then
they are like a herd of stampeded bulls. I do not fear that present social adjustments
can continue. That is impossible. What I fear is that the dams may hold till
the flood rises to fury. What I fear is that dogged resistance on the one side
may kindle a passionate sense of wrong on the other. What I fear are the demagogues
and the accidents.
The present condition of all civilized countries is that of increasing unstable
equilibrium. In steam and electricity, and all the countless inventions which
they typify, mighty forces have entered the world. If rightly used, they are
our servants, more potent to do our bidding than the genii of Arabian story.
If wrongly used, they, too, must turn to monsters of destruction. They require
and will compel great social changes. That we may already see. Operating under
social institutions which are based on natural justice, which acknowledge the
equal rights of all to the material and opportunities of nature, their elevating
power will be equally exerted, and industrial organization will pass naturally
into that of a vast cooperative society. Operating under social institutions
which deny natural justice by treating land as private property, their power
is unequally exerted, and tends, by producing inequality, to engender forces
that will tear and rend and shatter. The old bottles cannot hold the new wine.
This is the ferment which throughout the civilized world is everywhere beginning.
Chapter 17: In Hoc
Signo Vinces
LET me recapitulate.
What I want to impress upon those who may read this book is this:
The land question is nowhere a mere local question; it is a universal question.
It involves the great problem of the distribution of wealth, which is everywhere
forcing itself upon attention.
It cannot be settled by measures which in their nature can have but local
application. It can be settled only by measures which in their nature will
apply everywhere.
It cannot be settled by half-way measures. It can be settled only by the acknowledgment
of equal rights to land. Upon this basis it can be settled easily and permanently.
If the Irish reformers take this ground, they will make their fight the common
fight of all the peoples; they will concentrate strength and divide opposition.
They will turn the flank of the system that oppresses them, and awake the struggle
in its very intrenchments. They will rouse against it a force that is like
the force of rising tides.
What I urge the men of Ireland to do is to proclaim, without limitation or
evasion, that the land, of natural right, is the common property of the whole
people, and to propose practical measures which will recognize this right in
all countries as well as in Ireland.
What I urge the Land Leagues of the United States to do is to announce this
great principle as of universal application; to give their movement a reference
to America as well as to Ireland; to broaden and deepen and strengthen it by
making it a movement for the regeneration of the world – a movement which
shall concentrate and give shape to aspirations that are stirring among all
nations.
Ask not for Ireland mere charity or sympathy. Let her call be the call of
fraternity: "For yourselves, O brothers, as well as for us!" Let her rallying
cry awake all who slumber, and rouse to a common struggle all who are oppressed.
Let it breathe not old hates; let it ring and echo with the new hope!
In many lands her sons are true to her; under many skies her daughters burn
with the love of her. Lo! the ages bring their opportunity. Let those who would
honor her bear her banner to the front!
The harp and the shamrock, the golden sunburst on the field of living green!
emblems of a country without nationality; standard of a people downtrodden
and oppressed! The hour has come when they may lead the van of the great world-struggle.
Types of harmony and of ever-springing hope, of light and of life! The hour
has come when they may stand for something higher than local patriotism; something
grander than national independence. The hour has come when they may stand forth
to speak the world's hope, to lead the world's advance!
Torn away by pirates, tending in a strange land a heathen master's swine,
the slave boy, with the spirit of Christ in his heart, praying in the snow
for those who had enslaved him, and returning to bring to his oppressors the
message of the gospel, returning with good to give where evil had been received,
to kindle in the darkness a great light – this is Ireland's patron saint.
In his spirit let Ireland's struggle be. Not merely through Irish vales and
hamlets, but into England, into Scotland, into Wales, wherever our common tongue
is spoken, let the torch be carried and the word be preached. And beyond! The
brotherhood of man stops not with differences of speech any more than with
seas or mountain-chains. A century ago it was ours to speak the ringing word.
Then it was France's. Now it may be Ireland's, if her sons be true.
But wherever, or by whom, the word must be spoken, the standard will be raised.
No matter what the Irish leaders do or do not do, it is too late to settle
permanently the question on any basis short of the recognition of equal natural
right. And, whether the Land Leagues move forward or slink back, the agitation
must spread to this side of the Atlantic. The Republic, the true Republic,
is not yet here. But her birth-struggle must soon begin. Already, with the
hope of her, men's thoughts are stirring.
Not a republic of landlords and peasants; not a republic of millionaires and
tramps; not a republic in which some are masters and some serve. But a republic
of equal citizens, where competition becomes cooperation, and the interdependence
of all gives true independence to each; where moral progress goes hand in hand
with intellectual progress, and material progress elevates and enfranchises
even the poorest and weakest and lowliest.
And the gospel of deliverance, let us not forget it: it is the gospel of love,
not of hate. He whom it emancipates will know neither Jew nor Gentile, nor
Irishman nor Englishman, nor German nor Frenchman, nor European nor American,
nor difference of color or of race, nor animosities of class or condition.
Let us set our feet on old prejudices, let us bury the old hates. There have
been "Holy Alliances" of kings. Let us strive for the Holy Alliance of the
people.
Liberty, equality, fraternity! Write them on the banners. Let
them be for sign and countersign. Without equality, liberty cannot be; without
fraternity, neither equality nor liberty can be achieved.
Liberty – the full freedom of each bounded only by the equal freedom
of every other!
Equality – the equal right of each to the use and enjoyment of all natural
opportunities, to all the essentials of happy, healthful, human life!
Fraternity – that sympathy which links together those who struggle in
a noble cause; that would live and let live; that would help as well as be
helped; that, in seeking the good of all, finds the highest good of each!
"By this sign shall ye conquer!"
"We hold these truths to be self-evident – that all men are created
equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights;
that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness!"
It is over a century since these words rang out. It is time to give them their
full, true meaning. Let the standard be lifted that all may see it; let the
advance be sounded that all may hear it. Let those who would fall back, fall
back. Let those who would oppose, oppose. Everywhere are those who will rally.
The stars in their courses fight against Sisera!
HENRY GEORGE
New York, February 28, 1881
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