<h2><SPAN name="XII" id="XII"></SPAN><SPAN name="Page_277" id= "Page_277"></SPAN>XII</h2>
<h2>THE LIBERATION OF A PEOPLE'S VITAL ENERGIES</h2>
<p>No matter how often we think of it, the discovery of America
must each time make a fresh appeal to our imaginations. For
centuries, indeed from the beginning, the face of Europe had been
turned toward the east. All the routes of trade, every impulse and
energy, ran from west to east. The Atlantic lay at the world's
back-door. Then, suddenly, the conquest of Constantinople by the
Turk closed the route to the Orient. Europe had either to face
about or lack any outlet for her energies; the unknown sea at the
west at last was ventured upon, and the earth learned that it was
twice as big as it had thought. Columbus did not find, as he had
expected, the civilization of Cathay; he found an empty continent.
In that part of the world, upon that new-found half of the globe,
mankind, late in <SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278"></SPAN>its history,
was thus afforded an opportunity to set up a new civilization; here
it was strangely privileged to make a new human experiment.</p>
<p>Never can that moment of unique opportunity fail to excite the
emotion of all who consider its strangeness and richness; a
thousand fanciful histories of the earth might be contrived without
the imagination daring to conceive such a romance as the hiding
away of half the globe until the fulness of time had come for a new
start in civilization. A mere sea captain's ambition to trace a new
trade route gave way to a moral adventure for humanity. The race
was to found a new order here on this delectable land, which no man
approached without receiving, as the old voyagers relate, you
remember, sweet airs out of woods aflame with flowers and murmurous
with the sound of pellucid waters. The hemisphere lay waiting to be
touched with life,—life from the old centres of living,
surely, but cleansed of defilement, and cured of weariness, so as
to be fit for the virgin purity of a new bride. The whole thing
springs into the imagination like a wonderful vision, an exquisite
<SPAN name="Page_279" id="Page_279"></SPAN>marvel which once only in all
history could be vouchsafed.</p>
<p>One other thing only compares with it; only one other thing
touches the springs of emotion as does the picture of the ships of
Columbus drawing near the bright shores,—and that is the
thought of the choke in the throat of the immigrant of to-day as he
gazes from the steerage deck at the land where he has been taught
to believe he in his turn shall find an earthly paradise, where, a
free man, he shall forget the heartaches of the old life, and enter
into the fulfilment of the hope of the world. For has not every
ship that has pointed her prow westward borne hither the hopes of
generation after generation of the oppressed of other lands? How
always have men's hearts beat as they saw the coast of America rise
to their view! How it has always seemed to them that the dweller
there would at last be rid of kings, of privileged classes, and of
all those bonds which had kept men depressed and helpless, and
would there realize the full fruition of his sense of honest
manhood, would there be one of a great body <SPAN name="Page_280" id="Page_280"></SPAN>of brothers, not seeking to defraud and deceive one
another, but seeking to accomplish the general good!</p>
<p>What was in the writings of the men who founded
America,—to serve the selfish interests of America? Do you
find that in their writings? No; to serve the cause of humanity, to
bring liberty to mankind. They set up their standards here in
America in the tenet of hope, as a beacon of encouragement to all
the nations of the world; and men came thronging to these shores
with an expectancy that never existed before, with a confidence
they never dared feel before, and found here for generations
together a haven of peace, of opportunity, of equality.</p>
<p>God send that in the complicated state of modern affairs we may
recover the standards and repeat the achievements of that heroic
age!</p>
<p>For life is no longer the comparatively simple thing it was. Our
relations one with another have been profoundly modified by the new
agencies of rapid communication and transportation, tending swiftly
to concentrate life, widen communities, fuse interests, and
compli<SPAN name="Page_281" id="Page_281"></SPAN>cate all the processes
of living. The individual is dizzily swept about in a thousand new
whirlpools of activities. Tyranny has become more subtle, and has
learned to wear the guise of mere industry, and even of
benevolence. Freedom has become a somewhat different matter. It
cannot,—eternal principle that it is,—it cannot have
altered, yet it shows itself in new aspects. Perhaps it is only
revealing its deeper meaning.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>What is liberty?</p>
<p>I have long had an image in my mind of what constitutes liberty.
Suppose that I were building a great piece of powerful machinery,
and suppose that I should so awkwardly and unskilfully assemble the
parts of it that every time one part tried to move it would be
interfered with by the others, and the whole thing would buckle up
and be checked. Liberty for the several parts would consist in the
best possible assembling and adjustment of them all, would it not?
If you want the great piston of the engine to run with absolute
freedom, give it <SPAN name="Page_282" id="Page_282"></SPAN>absolutely
perfect alignment and adjustment with the other parts of the
machine, so that it is free, not because it is let alone or
isolated, but because it has been associated most skilfully and
carefully with the other parts of the great structure.</p>
<p>What it liberty? You say of the locomotive that it runs free.
What do you mean? You mean that its parts are so assembled and
adjusted that friction is reduced to a minimum, and that it has
perfect adjustment. We say of a boat skimming the water with light
foot, "How free she runs," when we mean, how perfectly she is
adjusted to the force of the wind, how perfectly she obeys the
great breath out of the heavens that fills her sails. Throw her
head up into the wind and see how she will halt and stagger, how
every sheet will shiver and her whole frame be shaken, how
instantly she is "in irons," in the expressive phrase of the sea.
She is free only when you have let her fall off again and have
recovered once more her nice adjustment to the forces she must obey
and cannot defy.</p>
<p>Human freedom consists in perfect adjust<SPAN name="Page_283" id="Page_283"></SPAN>ments of human interests and human activities and
human energies.</p>
<p>Now, the adjustments necessary between individuals, between
individuals and the complex institutions amidst which they live,
and between those institutions and the government, are infinitely
more intricate to-day than ever before. No doubt this is a tiresome
and roundabout way of saying the thing, yet perhaps it is worth
while to get somewhat clearly in our mind what makes all the
trouble to-day. Life has become complex; there are many more
elements, more parts, to it than ever before. And, therefore, it is
harder to keep everything adjusted,—and harder to find out
where the trouble lies when the machine gets out of order.</p>
<p>You know that one of the interesting things that Mr. Jefferson
said in those early days of simplicity which marked the beginnings
of our government was that the best government consisted in as
little governing as possible. And there is still a sense in which
that is true. It is still intolerable for the government to
<SPAN name="Page_284" id="Page_284"></SPAN>interfere with our individual
activities except where it is necessary to interfere with them in
order to free them. But I feel confident that if Jefferson were
living in our day he would see what we see: that the individual is
caught in a great confused nexus of all sorts of complicated
circumstances, and that to let him alone is to leave him helpless
as against the obstacles with which he has to contend; and that,
therefore, law in our day must come to the assistance of the
individual. It must come to his assistance to see that he gets fair
play; that is all, but that is much. Without the watchful
interference, the resolute interference, of the government, there
can be no fair play between individuals and such powerful
institutions as the trusts. Freedom to-day is something more than
being let alone. The program of a government of freedom must in
these days be positive, not negative merely.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Well, then, in this new sense and meaning of it, are we
preserving freedom in this land of ours, the hope of all the
earth?</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_285" id="Page_285"></SPAN>Have we, inheritors of this
continent and of the ideals to which the fathers consecrated
it,—have we maintained them, realizing them, as each
generation must, anew? Are we, in the consciousness that the life
of man is pledged to higher levels here than elsewhere, striving
still to bear aloft the standards of liberty and hope, or,
disillusioned and defeated, are we feeling the disgrace of having
had a free field in which to do new things and of not having done
them?</p>
<p>The answer must be, I am sure, that we have been in a fair way
of failure,—tragic failure. And we stand in danger of utter
failure yet except we fulfil speedily the determination we have
reached, to deal with the new and subtle tyrannies according to
their deserts. Don't deceive yourselves for a moment as to the
power of the great interests which now dominate our development.
They are so great that it is almost an open question whether the
government of the United States can dominate them or not. Go one
step further, make their organized power permanent, and it may be
too late <SPAN name="Page_286" id="Page_286"></SPAN>to turn back. The
roads diverge at the point where we stand. They stretch their
vistas out to regions where they are very far separated from one
another; at the end of one is the old tiresome scene of government
tied up with special interests; and at the other shines the
liberating light of individual initiative, of individual liberty,
of individual freedom, the light of untrammeled enterprise. I
believe that that light shines out of the heavens itself that God
has created. I believe in human liberty as I believe in the wine of
life. There is no salvation for men in the pitiful condescensions
of industrial masters. Guardians have no place in a land of
freemen. Prosperity guaranteed by trustees has no prospect of
endurance. Monopoly means the atrophy of enterprise. If monopoly
persists, monopoly will always sit at the helm of the government. I
do not expect to see monopoly restrain itself. If there are men in
this country big enough to own the government of the United States,
they are going to own it; what we have to determine now is whether
we are big enough, whether we are <SPAN name="Page_287" id="Page_287"></SPAN>men enough, whether we are free enough, to take
possession again of the government which is our own. We haven't had
free access to it, our minds have not touched it by way of
guidance, in half a generation, and now we are engaged in nothing
less than the recovery of what was made with our own hands, and
acts only by our delegated authority.</p>
<p>I tell you, when you discuss the question of the tariffs and of
the trusts, you are discussing the very lives of yourselves and
your children. I believe that I am preaching the very cause of some
of the gentlemen whom I am opposing when I preach the cause of free
industry in the United States, for I think they are slowly girding
the tree that bears the inestimable fruits of our life, and that if
they are permitted to gird it entirely nature will take her revenge
and the tree will die.</p>
<p>I do not believe that America is securely great because she has
great men in her now. America is great in proportion as she can
make sure of having great men in the next generation. She is rich
in her unborn children; rich, that is to <SPAN name="Page_288" id="Page_288"></SPAN>say, if those unborn children see the sun in a day
of opportunity, see the sun when they are free to exercise their
energies as they will. If they open their eyes in a land where
there is no special privilege, then we shall come into a new era of
American greatness and American liberty; but if they open their
eyes in a country where they must be employees or nothing, if they
open their eyes in a land of merely regulated monopoly, where all
the conditions of industry are determined by small groups of men,
then they will see an America such as the founders of this Republic
would have wept to think of. The only hope is in the release of the
forces which philanthropic trust presidents want to monopolize.
Only the emancipation, the freeing and heartening of the vital
energies of all the people will redeem us. In all that I may have
to do in public affairs in the United States I am going to think of
towns such as I have seen in Indiana, towns of the old American
pattern, that own and operate their own industries, hopefully and
happily. My thought is going to be bent upon the multiplication of
<SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289"></SPAN>towns of that kind and the
prevention of the concentration of industry in this country in such
a fashion and upon such a scale that towns that own themselves will
be impossible. You know what the vitality of America consists of.
Its vitality does not lie in New York, nor in Chicago; it will not
be sapped by anything that happens in St. Louis. The vitality of
America lies in the brains, the energies, the enterprise of the
people throughout the land; in the efficiency of their factories
and in the richness of the fields that stretch beyond the borders
of the town; in the wealth which they extract from nature and
originate for themselves through the inventive genius
characteristic of all free American communities.</p>
<p>That is the wealth of America, and if America discourages the
locality, the community, the self-contained town, she will kill the
nation. A nation is as rich as her free communities; she is not as
rich as her capital city or her metropolis. The amount of money in
Wall Street is no indication of the wealth of the American people.
That indication can be found <SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290"></SPAN>only in the fertility of the American mind and the
productivity of American industry everywhere throughout the United
States. If America were not rich and fertile, there would be no
money in Wall Street. If Americans were not vital and able to take
care of themselves, the great money exchanges would break down. The
welfare, the very existence of the nation, rests at last upon the
great mass of the people; its prosperity depends at last upon the
spirit in which they go about their work in their several
communities throughout the broad land. In proportion as her towns
and her country-sides are happy and hopeful will America realize
the high ambitions which have marked her in the eyes of all the
world.</p>
<p>The welfare, the happiness, the energy and spirit of the men and
women who do the daily work in our mines and factories, on our
railroads, in our offices and ports of trade, on our farms and on
the sea, is the underlying necessity of all prosperity. There can
be nothing wholesome unless their life is wholesome; there can be
no contentment unless they are contented.<SPAN name="Page_291" id="Page_291"></SPAN> Their physical welfare affects the soundness of the
whole nation. How would it suit the prosperity of the United
States, how would it suit business, to have a people that went
every day sadly or sullenly to their work? How would the future
look to you if you felt that the aspiration had gone out of most
men, the confidence of success, the hope that they might improve
their condition? Do you not see that just so soon as the old
self-confidence of America, just so soon as her old boasted
advantage of individual liberty and opportunity, is taken away, all
the energy of her people begins to subside, to slacken, to grow
loose and pulpy, without fibre, and men simply cast about to see
that the day does not end disastrously with them?</p>
<p>So we must put heart into the people by taking the heartlessness
out of politics, business, and industry. We have got to make
politics a thing in which an honest man can take his part with
satisfaction because he knows that his opinion will count as much
as the next man's, and that the boss and the interests have been
<SPAN name="Page_292" id="Page_292"></SPAN>dethroned. Business we have
got to untrammel, abolishing tariff favors, and railroad
discrimination, and credit denials, and all forms of unjust
handicaps against the little man. Industry we have got to
humanize,—not through the trusts,—but through the
direct action of law guaranteeing protection against dangers and
compensation for injuries, guaranteeing sanitary conditions, proper
hours, the right to organize, and all the other things which the
conscience of the country demands as the workingman's right. We
have got to cheer and inspirit our people with the sure prospects
of social justice and due reward, with the vision of the open gates
of opportunity for all. We have got to set the energy and the
initiative of this great people absolutely free, so that the future
of America will be greater than the past, so that the pride of
America will grow with achievement, so that America will know as
she advances from generation to generation that each brood of her
sons is greater and more enlightened than that which preceded it,
know that she is fulfilling the promise that she has made to
mankind.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_293" id="Page_293"></SPAN>Such is the vision of some
of us who now come to assist in its realization. For we Democrats
would not have endured this long burden of exile if we had not seen
a vision. We could have traded; we could have got into the game; we
could have surrendered and made terms; we could have played the
rôle of patrons to the men who wanted to dominate the
interests of the country,—and here and there gentlemen who
pretended to be of us did make those arrangements. They couldn't
stand privation. You never can stand it unless you have within you
some imperishable food upon which to sustain life and courage, the
food of those visions of the spirit where a table is set before us
laden with palatable fruits, the fruits of hope, the fruits of
imagination, those invisible things of the spirit which are the
only things upon which we can sustain ourselves through this weary
world without fainting. We have carried in our minds, after you had
thought you had obscured and blurred them, the ideals of those men
who first set their foot upon America, those little bands who came
to make a foothold <SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294"></SPAN>in the
wilderness, because the great teeming nations that they had left
behind them had forgotten what human liberty was, liberty of
thought, liberty of religion, liberty of residence, liberty of
action.</p>
<p>Since their day the meaning of liberty has deepened. But it has
not ceased to be a fundamental demand of the human spirit, a
fundamental necessity for the life of the soul. And the day is at
hand when it shall be realized on this consecrated soil,—a
New Freedom,—a Liberty widened and deepened to match the
broadened life of man in modern America, restoring to him in very
truth the control of his government, throwing wide all gates of
lawful enterprise, unfettering his energies, and warming the
generous impulses of his heart,—a process of release,
emancipation, and inspiration, full of a breath of life as sweet
and wholesome as the airs that filled the sails of the caravels of
Columbus and gave the promise and boast of magnificent Opportunity
in which America <i>dare not fail</i>.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p class="center"><b>THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY,
N.Y.</b></p>
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