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<h2> Chapter 31 </h2>
<p>One of the first things that Jurgis had done after he got a job was to go
and see Marija. She came down into the basement of the house to meet him,
and he stood by the door with his hat in his hand, saying, "I've got work
now, and so you can leave here."</p>
<p>But Marija only shook her head. There was nothing else for her to do, she
said, and nobody to employ her. She could not keep her past a secret—girls
had tried it, and they were always found out. There were thousands of men
who came to this place, and sooner or later she would meet one of them.
"And besides," Marija added, "I can't do anything. I'm no good—I
take dope. What could you do with me?"</p>
<p>"Can't you stop?" Jurgis cried.</p>
<p>"No," she answered, "I'll never stop. What's the use of talking about it—I'll
stay here till I die, I guess. It's all I'm fit for." And that was all
that he could get her to say—there was no use trying. When he told
her he would not let Elzbieta take her money, she answered indifferently:
"Then it'll be wasted here—that's all." Her eyelids looked heavy and
her face was red and swollen; he saw that he was annoying her, that she
only wanted him to go away. So he went, disappointed and sad.</p>
<p>Poor Jurgis was not very happy in his home-life. Elzbieta was sick a good
deal now, and the boys were wild and unruly, and very much the worse for
their life upon the streets. But he stuck by the family nevertheless, for
they reminded him of his old happiness; and when things went wrong he
could solace himself with a plunge into the Socialist movement. Since his
life had been caught up into the current of this great stream, things
which had before been the whole of life to him came to seem of relatively
slight importance; his interests were elsewhere, in the world of ideas.
His outward life was commonplace and uninteresting; he was just a
hotel-porter, and expected to remain one while he lived; but meantime, in
the realm of thought, his life was a perpetual adventure. There was so
much to know—so many wonders to be discovered! Never in all his life
did Jurgis forget the day before election, when there came a telephone
message from a friend of Harry Adams, asking him to bring Jurgis to see
him that night; and Jurgis went, and met one of the minds of the movement.</p>
<p>The invitation was from a man named Fisher, a Chicago millionaire who had
given up his life to settlement work, and had a little home in the heart
of the city's slums. He did not belong to the party, but he was in
sympathy with it; and he said that he was to have as his guest that night
the editor of a big Eastern magazine, who wrote against Socialism, but
really did not know what it was. The millionaire suggested that Adams
bring Jurgis along, and then start up the subject of "pure food," in which
the editor was interested.</p>
<p>Young Fisher's home was a little two-story brick house, dingy and
weather-beaten outside, but attractive within. The room that Jurgis saw
was half lined with books, and upon the walls were many pictures, dimly
visible in the soft, yellow light; it was a cold, rainy night, so a log
fire was crackling in the open hearth. Seven or eight people were gathered
about it when Adams and his friend arrived, and Jurgis saw to his dismay
that three of them were ladies. He had never talked to people of this sort
before, and he fell into an agony of embarrassment. He stood in the
doorway clutching his hat tightly in his hands, and made a deep bow to
each of the persons as he was introduced; then, when he was asked to have
a seat, he took a chair in a dark corner, and sat down upon the edge of
it, and wiped the perspiration off his forehead with his sleeve. He was
terrified lest they should expect him to talk.</p>
<p>There was the host himself, a tall, athletic young man, clad in evening
dress, as also was the editor, a dyspeptic-looking gentleman named
Maynard. There was the former's frail young wife, and also an elderly
lady, who taught kindergarten in the settlement, and a young college
student, a beautiful girl with an intense and earnest face. She only spoke
once or twice while Jurgis was there—the rest of the time she sat by
the table in the center of the room, resting her chin in her hands and
drinking in the conversation. There were two other men, whom young Fisher
had introduced to Jurgis as Mr. Lucas and Mr. Schliemann; he heard them
address Adams as "Comrade," and so he knew that they were Socialists.</p>
<p>The one called Lucas was a mild and meek-looking little gentleman of
clerical aspect; he had been an itinerant evangelist, it transpired, and
had seen the light and become a prophet of the new dispensation. He
traveled all over the country, living like the apostles of old, upon
hospitality, and preaching upon street-corners when there was no hall. The
other man had been in the midst of a discussion with the editor when Adams
and Jurgis came in; and at the suggestion of the host they resumed it
after the interruption. Jurgis was soon sitting spellbound, thinking that
here was surely the strangest man that had ever lived in the world.</p>
<p>Nicholas Schliemann was a Swede, a tall, gaunt person, with hairy hands and
bristling yellow beard; he was a university man, and had been a professor
of philosophy—until, as he said, he had found that he was selling
his character as well as his time. Instead he had come to America, where
he lived in a garret room in this slum district, and made volcanic energy
take the place of fire. He studied the composition of food-stuffs, and
knew exactly how many proteids and carbohydrates his body needed; and by
scientific chewing he said that he tripled the value of all he ate, so
that it cost him eleven cents a day. About the first of July he would
leave Chicago for his vacation, on foot; and when he struck the harvest
fields he would set to work for two dollars and a half a day, and come
home when he had another year's supply—a hundred and twenty-five
dollars. That was the nearest approach to independence a man could make
"under capitalism," he explained; he would never marry, for no sane man
would allow himself to fall in love until after the revolution.</p>
<p>He sat in a big arm-chair, with his legs crossed, and his head so far in
the shadow that one saw only two glowing lights, reflected from the fire
on the hearth. He spoke simply, and utterly without emotion; with the
manner of a teacher setting forth to a group of scholars an axiom in
geometry, he would enunciate such propositions as made the hair of an
ordinary person rise on end. And when the auditor had asserted his
non-comprehension, he would proceed to elucidate by some new proposition,
yet more appalling. To Jurgis the Herr Dr. Schliemann assumed the
proportions of a thunderstorm or an earthquake. And yet, strange as it
might seem, there was a subtle bond between them, and he could follow the
argument nearly all the time. He was carried over the difficult places in
spite of himself; and he went plunging away in mad career—a very
Mazeppa-ride upon the wild horse Speculation.</p>
<p>Nicholas Schliemann was familiar with all the universe, and with man as a
small part of it. He understood human institutions, and blew them about
like soap bubbles. It was surprising that so much destructiveness could be
contained in one human mind. Was it government? The purpose of government
was the guarding of property-rights, the perpetuation of ancient force and
modern fraud. Or was it marriage? Marriage and prostitution were two sides
of one shield, the predatory man's exploitation of the sex-pleasure. The
difference between them was a difference of class. If a woman had money
she might dictate her own terms: equality, a life contract, and the
legitimacy—that is, the property-rights—of her children. If
she had no money, she was a proletarian, and sold herself for an
existence. And then the subject became Religion, which was the Archfiend's
deadliest weapon. Government oppressed the body of the wage-slave, but
Religion oppressed his mind, and poisoned the stream of progress at its
source. The working-man was to fix his hopes upon a future life, while his
pockets were picked in this one; he was brought up to frugality, humility,
obedience—in short to all the pseudo-virtues of capitalism. The
destiny of civilization would be decided in one final death struggle
between the Red International and the Black, between Socialism and the
Roman Catholic Church; while here at home, "the stygian midnight of
American evangelicalism—"</p>
<p>And here the ex-preacher entered the field, and there was a lively tussle.
"Comrade" Lucas was not what is called an educated man; he knew only the
Bible, but it was the Bible interpreted by real experience. And what was
the use, he asked, of confusing Religion with men's perversions of it?
That the church was in the hands of the merchants at the moment was
obvious enough; but already there were signs of rebellion, and if Comrade
Schliemann could come back a few years from now—</p>
<p>"Ah, yes," said the other, "of course, I have no doubt that in a hundred
years the Vatican will be denying that it ever opposed Socialism, just as
at present it denies that it ever tortured Galileo."</p>
<p>"I am not defending the Vatican," exclaimed Lucas, vehemently. "I am
defending the word of God—which is one long cry of the human spirit
for deliverance from the sway of oppression. Take the twenty-fourth
chapter of the Book of Job, which I am accustomed to quote in my addresses
as 'the Bible upon the Beef Trust'; or take the words of Isaiah—or
of the Master himself! Not the elegant prince of our debauched and vicious
art, not the jeweled idol of our society churches—but the Jesus of
the awful reality, the man of sorrow and pain, the outcast, despised of
the world, who had nowhere to lay his head—"</p>
<p>"I will grant you Jesus," interrupted the other.</p>
<p>"Well, then," cried Lucas, "and why should Jesus have nothing to do with
his church—why should his words and his life be of no authority
among those who profess to adore him? Here is a man who was the world's
first revolutionist, the true founder of the Socialist movement; a man
whose whole being was one flame of hatred for wealth, and all that wealth
stands for,—for the pride of wealth, and the luxury of wealth, and
the tyranny of wealth; who was himself a beggar and a tramp, a man of the
people, an associate of saloon-keepers and women of the town; who again
and again, in the most explicit language, denounced wealth and the holding
of wealth: 'Lay not up for yourselves treasures on earth!'—'Sell
that ye have and give alms!'—'Blessed are ye poor, for yours is the
kingdom of Heaven!'—'Woe unto you that are rich, for ye have
received your consolation!'—'Verily, I say unto you, that a rich man
shall hardly enter into the kingdom of Heaven!' Who denounced in
unmeasured terms the exploiters of his own time: 'Woe unto you, scribes
and pharisees, hypocrites!'—'Woe unto you also, you lawyers!'—'Ye
serpents, ye generation of vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of
hell?' Who drove out the business men and brokers from the temple with a
whip! Who was crucified—think of it—for an incendiary and a
disturber of the social order! And this man they have made into the high
priest of property and smug respectability, a divine sanction of all the
horrors and abominations of modern commercial civilization! Jeweled images
are made of him, sensual priests burn incense to him, and modern pirates
of industry bring their dollars, wrung from the toil of helpless women and
children, and build temples to him, and sit in cushioned seats and listen
to his teachings expounded by doctors of dusty divinity—"</p>
<p>"Bravo!" cried Schliemann, laughing. But the other was in full career—he
had talked this subject every day for five years, and had never yet let
himself be stopped. "This Jesus of Nazareth!" he cried. "This
class-conscious working-man! This union carpenter! This agitator,
law-breaker, firebrand, anarchist! He, the sovereign lord and master of a
world which grinds the bodies and souls of human beings into dollars—if
he could come into the world this day and see the things that men have
made in his name, would it not blast his soul with horror? Would he not go
mad at the sight of it, he the Prince of Mercy and Love! That dreadful
night when he lay in the Garden of Gethsemane and writhed in agony until
he sweat blood—do you think that he saw anything worse than he might
see tonight upon the plains of Manchuria, where men march out with a
jeweled image of him before them, to do wholesale murder for the benefit
of foul monsters of sensuality and cruelty? Do you not know that if he
were in St. Petersburg now, he would take the whip with which he drove out
the bankers from his temple—"</p>
<p>Here the speaker paused an instant for breath. "No, comrade," said the
other, dryly, "for he was a practical man. He would take pretty little
imitation lemons, such as are now being shipped into Russia, handy for
carrying in the pockets, and strong enough to blow a whole temple out of
sight."</p>
<p>Lucas waited until the company had stopped laughing over this; then he
began again: "But look at it from the point of view of practical politics,
comrade. Here is an historical figure whom all men reverence and love,
whom some regard as divine; and who was one of us—who lived our
life, and taught our doctrine. And now shall we leave him in the hands of
his enemies—shall we allow them to stifle and stultify his example?
We have his words, which no one can deny; and shall we not quote them to
the people, and prove to them what he was, and what he taught, and what he
did? No, no, a thousand times no!—we shall use his authority to turn
out the knaves and sluggards from his ministry, and we shall yet rouse the
people to action!—"</p>
<p>Lucas halted again; and the other stretched out his hand to a paper on the
table. "Here, comrade," he said, with a laugh, "here is a place for you to
begin. A bishop whose wife has just been robbed of fifty thousand dollars'
worth of diamonds! And a most unctuous and oily of bishops! An eminent and
scholarly bishop! A philanthropist and friend of labor bishop—a
Civic Federation decoy duck for the chloroforming of the
wage-working-man!"</p>
<p>To this little passage of arms the rest of the company sat as spectators.
But now Mr. Maynard, the editor, took occasion to remark, somewhat
naively, that he had always understood that Socialists had a cut-and-dried
program for the future of civilization; whereas here were two active
members of the party, who, from what he could make out, were agreed about
nothing at all. Would the two, for his enlightenment, try to ascertain
just what they had in common, and why they belonged to the same party?
This resulted, after much debating, in the formulating of two carefully
worded propositions: First, that a Socialist believes in the common
ownership and democratic management of the means of producing the
necessities of life; and, second, that a Socialist believes that the means
by which this is to be brought about is the class conscious political
organization of the wage-earners. Thus far they were at one; but no
farther. To Lucas, the religious zealot, the co-operative commonwealth was
the New Jerusalem, the kingdom of Heaven, which is "within you." To the
other, Socialism was simply a necessary step toward a far-distant goal, a
step to be tolerated with impatience. Schliemann called himself a
"philosophic anarchist"; and he explained that an anarchist was one who
believed that the end of human existence was the free development of every
personality, unrestricted by laws save those of its own being. Since the
same kind of match would light every one's fire and the same-shaped loaf
of bread would fill every one's stomach, it would be perfectly feasible to
submit industry to the control of a majority vote. There was only one
earth, and the quantity of material things was limited. Of intellectual
and moral things, on the other hand, there was no limit, and one could
have more without another's having less; hence "Communism in material
production, anarchism in intellectual," was the formula of modern
proletarian thought. As soon as the birth agony was over, and the wounds
of society had been healed, there would be established a simple system
whereby each man was credited with his labor and debited with his
purchases; and after that the processes of production, exchange, and
consumption would go on automatically, and without our being conscious of
them, any more than a man is conscious of the beating of his heart. And
then, explained Schliemann, society would break up into independent,
self-governing communities of mutually congenial persons; examples of
which at present were clubs, churches, and political parties. After the
revolution, all the intellectual, artistic, and spiritual activities of
men would be cared for by such "free associations"; romantic novelists
would be supported by those who liked to read romantic novels, and
impressionist painters would be supported by those who liked to look at
impressionist pictures—and the same with preachers and scientists,
editors and actors and musicians. If any one wanted to work or paint or
pray, and could find no one to maintain him, he could support himself by
working part of the time. That was the case at present, the only
difference being that the competitive wage system compelled a man to work
all the time to live, while, after the abolition of privilege and
exploitation, any one would be able to support himself by an hour's work a
day. Also the artist's audience of the present was a small minority of
people, all debased and vulgarized by the effort it had cost them to win
in the commercial battle, of the intellectual and artistic activities
which would result when the whole of mankind was set free from the
nightmare of competition, we could at present form no conception whatever.</p>
<p>And then the editor wanted to know upon what ground Dr. Schliemann
asserted that it might be possible for a society to exist upon an hour's
toil by each of its members. "Just what," answered the other, "would be
the productive capacity of society if the present resources of science
were utilized, we have no means of ascertaining; but we may be sure it
would exceed anything that would sound reasonable to minds inured to the
ferocious barbarities of capitalism. After the triumph of the
international proletariat, war would of course be inconceivable; and who
can figure the cost of war to humanity—not merely the value of the
lives and the material that it destroys, not merely the cost of keeping
millions of men in idleness, of arming and equipping them for battle and
parade, but the drain upon the vital energies of society by the war
attitude and the war terror, the brutality and ignorance, the drunkenness,
prostitution, and crime it entails, the industrial impotence and the moral
deadness? Do you think that it would be too much to say that two hours of
the working time of every efficient member of a community goes to feed the
red fiend of war?"</p>
<p>And then Schliemann went on to outline some of the wastes of competition:
the losses of industrial warfare; the ceaseless worry and friction; the
vices—such as drink, for instance, the use of which had nearly
doubled in twenty years, as a consequence of the intensification of the
economic struggle; the idle and unproductive members of the community, the
frivolous rich and the pauperized poor; the law and the whole machinery of
repression; the wastes of social ostentation, the milliners and tailors,
the hairdressers, dancing masters, chefs and lackeys. "You understand," he
said, "that in a society dominated by the fact of commercial competition,
money is necessarily the test of prowess, and wastefulness the sole
criterion of power. So we have, at the present moment, a society with,
say, thirty per cent of the population occupied in producing useless
articles, and one per cent occupied in destroying them. And this is not
all; for the servants and panders of the parasites are also parasites, the
milliners and the jewelers and the lackeys have also to be supported by
the useful members of the community. And bear in mind also that this
monstrous disease affects not merely the idlers and their menials, its
poison penetrates the whole social body. Beneath the hundred thousand
women of the elite are a million middle-class women, miserable because
they are not of the elite, and trying to appear of it in public; and
beneath them, in turn, are five million farmers' wives reading 'fashion
papers' and trimming bonnets, and shop-girls and serving-maids selling
themselves into brothels for cheap jewelry and imitation seal-skin robes.
And then consider that, added to this competition in display, you have,
like oil on the flames, a whole system of competition in selling! You have
manufacturers contriving tens of thousands of catchpenny devices,
storekeepers displaying them, and newspapers and magazines filled up with
advertisements of them!"</p>
<p>"And don't forget the wastes of fraud," put in young Fisher.</p>
<p>"When one comes to the ultra-modern profession of advertising," responded
Schliemann—"the science of persuading people to buy what they do not
want—he is in the very center of the ghastly charnel house of
capitalist destructiveness, and he scarcely knows which of a dozen horrors
to point out first. But consider the waste in time and energy incidental
to making ten thousand varieties of a thing for purposes of ostentation
and snobbishness, where one variety would do for use! Consider all the
waste incidental to the manufacture of cheap qualities of goods, of goods
made to sell and deceive the ignorant; consider the wastes of
adulteration,—the shoddy clothing, the cotton blankets, the unstable
tenements, the ground-cork life-preservers, the adulterated milk, the
aniline soda water, the potato-flour sausages—"</p>
<p>"And consider the moral aspects of the thing," put in the ex-preacher.</p>
<p>"Precisely," said Schliemann; "the low knavery and the ferocious cruelty
incidental to them, the plotting and the lying and the bribing, the
blustering and bragging, the screaming egotism, the hurrying and worrying.
Of course, imitation and adulteration are the essence of competition—they
are but another form of the phrase 'to buy in the cheapest market and sell
in the dearest.' A government official has stated that the nation suffers
a loss of a billion and a quarter dollars a year through adulterated
foods; which means, of course, not only materials wasted that might have
been useful outside of the human stomach, but doctors and nurses for
people who would otherwise have been well, and undertakers for the whole
human race ten or twenty years before the proper time. Then again,
consider the waste of time and energy required to sell these things in a
dozen stores, where one would do. There are a million or two of business
firms in the country, and five or ten times as many clerks; and consider
the handling and rehandling, the accounting and reaccounting, the planning
and worrying, the balancing of petty profit and loss. Consider the whole
machinery of the civil law made necessary by these processes; the
libraries of ponderous tomes, the courts and juries to interpret them, the
lawyers studying to circumvent them, the pettifogging and chicanery, the
hatreds and lies! Consider the wastes incidental to the blind and
haphazard production of commodities—the factories closed, the
workers idle, the goods spoiling in storage; consider the activities of
the stock manipulator, the paralyzing of whole industries, the
overstimulation of others, for speculative purposes; the assignments and
bank failures, the crises and panics, the deserted towns and the starving
populations! Consider the energies wasted in the seeking of markets, the
sterile trades, such as drummer, solicitor, bill-poster, advertising
agent. Consider the wastes incidental to the crowding into cities, made
necessary by competition and by monopoly railroad rates; consider the
slums, the bad air, the disease and the waste of vital energies; consider
the office buildings, the waste of time and material in the piling of
story upon story, and the burrowing underground! Then take the whole
business of insurance, the enormous mass of administrative and clerical
labor it involves, and all utter waste—"</p>
<p>"I do not follow that," said the editor. "The Cooperative Commonwealth is
a universal automatic insurance company and savings bank for all its
members. Capital being the property of all, injury to it is shared by all
and made up by all. The bank is the universal government credit-account,
the ledger in which every individual's earnings and spendings are
balanced. There is also a universal government bulletin, in which are
listed and precisely described everything which the commonwealth has for
sale. As no one makes any profit by the sale, there is no longer any
stimulus to extravagance, and no misrepresentation; no cheating, no
adulteration or imitation, no bribery or 'grafting.'"</p>
<p>"How is the price of an article determined?"</p>
<p>"The price is the labor it has cost to make and deliver it, and it is
determined by the first principles of arithmetic. The million workers in
the nation's wheat fields have worked a hundred days each, and the total
product of the labor is a billion bushels, so the value of a bushel of
wheat is the tenth part of a farm labor-day. If we employ an arbitrary
symbol, and pay, say, five dollars a day for farm work, then the cost of a
bushel of wheat is fifty cents."</p>
<p>"You say 'for farm work,'" said Mr. Maynard. "Then labor is not to be paid
alike?"</p>
<p>"Manifestly not, since some work is easy and some hard, and we should have
millions of rural mail carriers, and no coal miners. Of course the wages
may be left the same, and the hours varied; one or the other will have to
be varied continually, according as a greater or less number of workers is
needed in any particular industry. That is precisely what is done at
present, except that the transfer of the workers is accomplished blindly
and imperfectly, by rumors and advertisements, instead of instantly and
completely, by a universal government bulletin."</p>
<p>"How about those occupations in which time is difficult to calculate? What
is the labor cost of a book?"</p>
<p>"Obviously it is the labor cost of the paper, printing, and binding of it—about
a fifth of its present cost."</p>
<p>"And the author?"</p>
<p>"I have already said that the state could not control intellectual
production. The state might say that it had taken a year to write the
book, and the author might say it had taken thirty. Goethe said that every
bon mot of his had cost a purse of gold. What I outline here is a
national, or rather international, system for the providing of the
material needs of men. Since a man has intellectual needs also, he will
work longer, earn more, and provide for them to his own taste and in his
own way. I live on the same earth as the majority, I wear the same kind of
shoes and sleep in the same kind of bed; but I do not think the same kind
of thoughts, and I do not wish to pay for such thinkers as the majority
selects. I wish such things to be left to free effort, as at present. If
people want to listen to a certain preacher, they get together and
contribute what they please, and pay for a church and support the
preacher, and then listen to him; I, who do not want to listen to him,
stay away, and it costs me nothing. In the same way there are magazines
about Egyptian coins, and Catholic saints, and flying machines, and
athletic records, and I know nothing about any of them. On the other hand,
if wage slavery were abolished, and I could earn some spare money without
paying tribute to an exploiting capitalist, then there would be a magazine
for the purpose of interpreting and popularizing the gospel of Friedrich
Nietzsche, the prophet of Evolution, and also of Horace Fletcher, the
inventor of the noble science of clean eating; and incidentally, perhaps,
for the discouraging of long skirts, and the scientific breeding of men
and women, and the establishing of divorce by mutual consent."</p>
<p>Dr. Schliemann paused for a moment. "That was a lecture," he said with a
laugh, "and yet I am only begun!"</p>
<p>"What else is there?" asked Maynard.</p>
<p>"I have pointed out some of the negative wastes of competition," answered
the other. "I have hardly mentioned the positive economies of
co-operation. Allowing five to a family, there are fifteen million
families in this country; and at least ten million of these live
separately, the domestic drudge being either the wife or a wage slave. Now
set aside the modern system of pneumatic house-cleaning, and the economies
of co-operative cooking; and consider one single item, the washing of
dishes. Surely it is moderate to say that the dish-washing for a family of
five takes half an hour a day; with ten hours as a day's work, it takes,
therefore, half a million able-bodied persons—mostly women to do the
dish-washing of the country. And note that this is most filthy and
deadening and brutalizing work; that it is a cause of anemia, nervousness,
ugliness, and ill-temper; of prostitution, suicide, and insanity; of
drunken husbands and degenerate children—for all of which things the
community has naturally to pay. And now consider that in each of my little
free communities there would be a machine which would wash and dry the
dishes, and do it, not merely to the eye and the touch, but scientifically—sterilizing
them—and do it at a saving of all the drudgery and nine-tenths of
the time! All of these things you may find in the books of Mrs. Gilman;
and then take Kropotkin's Fields, Factories, and Workshops, and read about
the new science of agriculture, which has been built up in the last ten
years; by which, with made soils and intensive culture, a gardener can
raise ten or twelve crops in a season, and two hundred tons of vegetables
upon a single acre; by which the population of the whole globe could be
supported on the soil now cultivated in the United States alone! It is
impossible to apply such methods now, owing to the ignorance and poverty
of our scattered farming population; but imagine the problem of providing
the food supply of our nation once taken in hand systematically and
rationally, by scientists! All the poor and rocky land set apart for a
national timber reserve, in which our children play, and our young men
hunt, and our poets dwell! The most favorable climate and soil for each
product selected; the exact requirements of the community known, and the
acreage figured accordingly; the most improved machinery employed, under
the direction of expert agricultural chemists! I was brought up on a farm,
and I know the awful deadliness of farm work; and I like to picture it all
as it will be after the revolution. To picture the great potato-planting
machine, drawn by four horses, or an electric motor, ploughing the furrow,
cutting and dropping and covering the potatoes, and planting a score of
acres a day! To picture the great potato-digging machine, run by
electricity, perhaps, and moving across a thousand-acre field, scooping up
earth and potatoes, and dropping the latter into sacks! To every other
kind of vegetable and fruit handled in the same way—apples and
oranges picked by machinery, cows milked by electricity—things which
are already done, as you may know. To picture the harvest fields of the
future, to which millions of happy men and women come for a summer
holiday, brought by special trains, the exactly needful number to each
place! And to contrast all this with our present agonizing system of
independent small farming,—a stunted, haggard, ignorant man, mated
with a yellow, lean, and sad-eyed drudge, and toiling from four o'clock in
the morning until nine at night, working the children as soon as they are
able to walk, scratching the soil with its primitive tools, and shut out
from all knowledge and hope, from all their benefits of science and
invention, and all the joys of the spirit—held to a bare existence
by competition in labor, and boasting of his freedom because he is too
blind to see his chains!"</p>
<p>Dr. Schliemann paused a moment. "And then," he continued, "place beside
this fact of an unlimited food supply, the newest discovery of
physiologists, that most of the ills of the human system are due to
overfeeding! And then again, it has been proven that meat is unnecessary
as a food; and meat is obviously more difficult to produce than vegetable
food, less pleasant to prepare and handle, and more likely to be unclean.
But what of that, so long as it tickles the palate more strongly?"</p>
<p>"How would Socialism change that?" asked the girl-student, quickly. It was
the first time she had spoken.</p>
<p>"So long as we have wage slavery," answered Schliemann, "it matters not in
the least how debasing and repulsive a task may be, it is easy to find
people to perform it. But just as soon as labor is set free, then the
price of such work will begin to rise. So one by one the old, dingy, and
unsanitary factories will come down—it will be cheaper to build new;
and so the steamships will be provided with stoking machinery, and so the
dangerous trades will be made safe, or substitutes will be found for their
products. In exactly the same way, as the citizens of our Industrial
Republic become refined, year by year the cost of slaughterhouse products
will increase; until eventually those who want to eat meat will have to do
their own killing—and how long do you think the custom would survive
then?—To go on to another item—one of the necessary
accompaniments of capitalism in a democracy is political corruption; and
one of the consequences of civic administration by ignorant and vicious
politicians, is that preventable diseases kill off half our population.
And even if science were allowed to try, it could do little, because the
majority of human beings are not yet human beings at all, but simply
machines for the creating of wealth for others. They are penned up in
filthy houses and left to rot and stew in misery, and the conditions of
their life make them ill faster than all the doctors in the world could
heal them; and so, of course, they remain as centers of contagion,
poisoning the lives of all of us, and making happiness impossible for even
the most selfish. For this reason I would seriously maintain that all the
medical and surgical discoveries that science can make in the future will
be of less importance than the application of the knowledge we already
possess, when the disinherited of the earth have established their right
to a human existence."</p>
<p>And here the Herr Doctor relapsed into silence again. Jurgis had noticed
that the beautiful young girl who sat by the center-table was listening
with something of the same look that he himself had worn, the time when he
had first discovered Socialism. Jurgis would have liked to talk to her, he
felt sure that she would have understood him. Later on in the evening,
when the group broke up, he heard Mrs. Fisher say to her, in a low voice,
"I wonder if Mr. Maynard will still write the same things about
Socialism"; to which she answered, "I don't know—but if he does we
shall know that he is a knave!"</p>
<p>And only a few hours after this came election day—when the long
campaign was over, and the whole country seemed to stand still and hold
its breath, awaiting the issue. Jurgis and the rest of the staff of
Hinds's Hotel could hardly stop to finish their dinner, before they
hurried off to the big hall which the party had hired for that evening.</p>
<p>But already there were people waiting, and already the telegraph
instrument on the stage had begun clicking off the returns. When the final
accounts were made up, the Socialist vote proved to be over four hundred
thousand—an increase of something like three hundred and fifty per
cent in four years. And that was doing well; but the party was dependent
for its early returns upon messages from the locals, and naturally those
locals which had been most successful were the ones which felt most like
reporting; and so that night every one in the hall believed that the vote
was going to be six, or seven, or even eight hundred thousand. Just such
an incredible increase had actually been made in Chicago, and in the
state; the vote of the city had been 6,700 in 1900, and now it was 47,000;
that of Illinois had been 9,600, and now it was 69,000! So, as the evening
waxed, and the crowd piled in, the meeting was a sight to be seen.
Bulletins would be read, and the people would shout themselves hoarse—and
then some one would make a speech, and there would be more shouting; and
then a brief silence, and more bulletins. There would come messages from
the secretaries of neighboring states, reporting their achievements; the
vote of Indiana had gone from 2,300 to 12,000, of Wisconsin from 7,000 to
28,000; of Ohio from 4,800 to 36,000! There were telegrams to the national
office from enthusiastic individuals in little towns which had made
amazing and unprecedented increases in a single year: Benedict, Kansas,
from 26 to 260; Henderson, Kentucky, from 19 to 111; Holland, Michigan,
from 14 to 208; Cleo, Oklahoma, from 0 to 104; Martin's Ferry, Ohio, from
0 to 296—and many more of the same kind. There were literally
hundreds of such towns; there would be reports from half a dozen of them
in a single batch of telegrams. And the men who read the despatches off to
the audience were old campaigners, who had been to the places and helped
to make the vote, and could make appropriate comments: Quincy, Illinois,
from 189 to 831—that was where the mayor had arrested a Socialist
speaker! Crawford County, Kansas, from 285 to 1,975; that was the home of
the "Appeal to Reason"! Battle Creek, Michigan, from 4,261 to 10,184; that
was the answer of labor to the Citizens' Alliance Movement!</p>
<p>And then there were official returns from the various precincts and wards
of the city itself! Whether it was a factory district or one of the
"silk-stocking" wards seemed to make no particular difference in the
increase; but one of the things which surprised the party leaders most was
the tremendous vote that came rolling in from the stockyards. Packingtown
comprised three wards of the city, and the vote in the spring of 1903 had
been 500, and in the fall of the same year, 1,600. Now, only one year
later, it was over 6,300—and the Democratic vote only 8,800! There
were other wards in which the Democratic vote had been actually surpassed,
and in two districts, members of the state legislature had been elected.
Thus Chicago now led the country; it had set a new standard for the party,
it had shown the workingmen the way!</p>
<p>—So spoke an orator upon the platform; and two thousand pairs of
eyes were fixed upon him, and two thousand voices were cheering his every
sentence. The orator had been the head of the city's relief bureau in the
stockyards, until the sight of misery and corruption had made him sick. He
was young, hungry-looking, full of fire; and as he swung his long arms and
beat up the crowd, to Jurgis he seemed the very spirit of the revolution.
"Organize! Organize! Organize!"—that was his cry. He was afraid of
this tremendous vote, which his party had not expected, and which it had
not earned. "These men are not Socialists!" he cried. "This election will
pass, and the excitement will die, and people will forget about it; and if
you forget about it, too, if you sink back and rest upon your oars, we
shall lose this vote that we have polled to-day, and our enemies will
laugh us to scorn! It rests with you to take your resolution—now, in
the flush of victory, to find these men who have voted for us, and bring
them to our meetings, and organize them and bind them to us! We shall not
find all our campaigns as easy as this one. Everywhere in the country
tonight the old party politicians are studying this vote, and setting
their sails by it; and nowhere will they be quicker or more cunning than
here in our own city. Fifty thousand Socialist votes in Chicago means a
municipal-ownership Democracy in the spring! And then they will fool the
voters once more, and all the powers of plunder and corruption will be
swept into office again! But whatever they may do when they get in, there
is one thing they will not do, and that will be the thing for which they
were elected! They will not give the people of our city municipal
ownership—they will not mean to do it, they will not try to do it;
all that they will do is give our party in Chicago the greatest
opportunity that has ever come to Socialism in America! We shall have the
sham reformers self-stultified and self-convicted; we shall have the
radical Democracy left without a lie with which to cover its nakedness!
And then will begin the rush that will never be checked, the tide that
will never turn till it has reached its flood—that will be
irresistible, overwhelming—the rallying of the outraged workingmen
of Chicago to our standard! And we shall organize them, we shall drill
them, we shall marshal them for the victory! We shall bear down the
opposition, we shall sweep if before us—and Chicago will be ours!
Chicago will be ours! CHICAGO WILL BE OURS!"</p>
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