Man Versus The Man by Robert Rives La Monte & H.L. Mencken
Man Versus The Man by Robert Rives La Monte & H.L. Mencken
Man Versus The Man by Robert Rives La Monte & H.L. Mencken
MEN
versus
THE MAN
A CORRESPONDENCE
BETWEEN
Socialist
H.
L.
MENCKEN,
Individualist
NEW YORK
COPYRIGHT, BY
zgio
IT
INTRODUCTION
THIS book
series
is
precisely
what
it
pretends to be
ten because the general subject of the organization of society was one which vastly attracted both of
made
and because a space of three hundred miles a more intimate discussion impossible. Into them there went, not so much a learned review of the evidence and the prophets, as a record of personal, and often transient opinions and impressions. Changes of position are to be noticed in more than one place, but inasmuch as the purpose of each disputant was to shake the stand of the other, this
us,
may
It
be accepted,
it
is
was thought
best
to print the letters without attempting to transform their epistolary freedom into a more sedate
dialectic
manner.
They
offer
tions of either fact or theory to the great questions they presume to discuss, but it is possible that they
may be
how
variously
the accepted facts and theories appear to two somewhat eager inquirers.
and appeal
LA MONTE. MENCKEN.
MEN
VS.
THE MAN
MY DEAR MENCKEN:
You and
I
cated young men and women of upper and middle class antecedents who are so far from satisfied with
life as it is that the
man
in the street
who
"
knockers
"
styles us
But yet we differ, and differ widely; you, in spite of your sturdy independence of mind, are in the main a disciple of Nietzsche, or, in other words, you are an Individualist whose ideal is a splendid
Beyond ruling over a hopelessly submerged rabble; I am a Socialist and a faithful disciple of Marx not that I believe
have been superhuman or infallible, but simply that I have found him to be right in so many
to
cases, that I feel that there
is
aristocratic oligarchy of
Men
Marx
a strong
I
tion that he
see that he
is.
is
presumpcannot clearly
Let us
first
agreement, and then it will be easier to recognize the reason for the very wide divergence of our con-
2
elusions.
Men
vs.
the
Man
We
Quixote and Jesus Christ and Thomas Jefferson were idealists, but there are idealists and ideal-
Don
ists.
The
difference
the ideal.
ment or
he
at least of reasonably close approximation, the idealist is what we call a practical man
may
as
even be a
are
scientist,
a materialist, or an
atheist,
many
If the ideal be determined fighters for Socialism. one hopelessly beyond reach of attainment, if the
idealist hitches his
wagon
studied astronomy sufficiently to ascertain whether the orbit of the star is along a road over which his
poor man-made wagon may pass in safety, then we call him a dreamer, a visionary, a Utopian, or a madman. It is probable that in our secret hearts this is the view each of us takes of the other.
You, recognizing that within historical times there has ever been a rabble of well-nigh sub-human men and women, believe that the only ideal that
such a rabble.
you, as a practical man, can accept is one including To you the man who proposes
the abolition of this sub-human herd
is
a mystical
dreamer who ignores the stern teachings of hisIt must be admitted that much of the curtory. rent Socialist literature H. G. Wells' "New 11 Worlds for Old, for instance which presents Socialism as a scheme for human amelioration which
Society
is
it
will, as
Men
or
vs.
the
Man
ills
human
which the
may not elect to imbibe; it must patient may be admitted that the great bulk of this literature
of polite propaganda goes far toward justifying your view.
But the typical Socialist of Germany, France, England, and America, the man or woman who gives his or her energies to educating and organizing and disciplining the wonderful, world-wide
army, ever growing, ever marching forward, undismayed by defeat, sure of ultimate victory, already thirty million strong the largest army under a single banner the world has ever seen this typwork-a-day, militant Socialist does not look upon himself or herself as a patent medicine venical,
John the Baptist proclaiming with no uncertain sound the advent of a New Order. Such
der, but as a
an army inspired by a common faith, even though the faith be a delusion, animated by a common
purpose, even though the purpose be incapable of realization, is a force that you as a practical man
a delusion?
Is the
see.
purpose
If
it
in-
capable of realization?
Let us
is
im-
Old Order to persist, then it folNew Order must come. I will postpone for the present discussing what that New Order is to be, and will proceed to show you that the Old Order cannot continue. I will give you
as
little
history, political
economy, and
statistics
Men
vs.
the
;
Man
as may be for two reasons first, I know very little of such things myself; second, I wish to be agreeable to you, and I have found by experience that
practical people
facts.
way the great difference between the of the Middle Ages and the economy of economy to-day, is that then production was chiefly for use
for local use
solely for sale.
In a broad
our modern industrial and commercial complexus depends upon the possibility of an adequate and uninterrupted sale of goods.
Whenever
was
the sale of
goods
is
interrupted, as
it
signally in
1873,
and are
day by day revolutionizing ever more rapidly our mode of production. The great net result of these
changes is that the productive power of man has been hugely multiplied. I think I am well within the mark in saying that one hour's work to-day
produces as much as one hundred hours' work in Adam Smith's day. Let us see what the concrete
effect
of this
is.
If
we
we
find
1900 employed was in round numbers $2,000, while the average wages were about $400. The diffi-
Men
vs.
the
Man
culty of disposing of the product is already beginIt is obvious that a man with ning to appear.
$400 cannot purchase $2,000 worth of goods. Over fifty per cent, of our population actually belong to the working class. Add to them the
farmers, whose purchasing power
tionally
is
much
greater,
It is obvious that if our handful of our people. total product were composed of articles of personal consumption, and if we were limited to the home
or domestic market, the disposition of the product But we have forby sale would be impossible.
eign markets, and
pig-meat.
facturing country, England, upon her foreign sales was recognized in her proud boast that England
was the workshop of the world. But to-day in every market in the world England is meeting the ever-fiercer competition of Germany and America,
while Japan is wresting the markets of the Orient from both Europe and America, and the coming
industrial
development of China
Peril
is
European and American conservative. The foreign market has been an immensely serviceable
safety-valve,
but
shut.
inexorable
if
ment
or Fate or Kismet,
it
developis
rapidly
screwing The other safety-valve the application of capital and labor to the production of pig-iron instead
6
of pig-meat
ises
Men
vs.
the
Man
outlast
The more
capital
from the production of articles of common everyday consumption, and employed in producing permanent industrial or transportation plant, the less becomes the immediate difficulty in disposing of There can be no doubt that our annual product. our recent period of prosperity was prolonged and the panic of 1907 postponed by the wholesale employment of capital and labor in such vast undertakings as the tunnels under the East and North rivers. But once such works are completed, they facilitate the production and distribution of goods, or save time or labor in some way, and thus in
the long run accentuate the difficulty they temporarily relieve. In our separate productive establishments a part of the capital employed must always be invested in
permanent plant and a part paid out for wages day by day and week by week. Competition between rival plants has always compelled the constant improvement and development of machinery, and has thus compelled the owners constantly to invest larger and larger portions of their total This change in what capital in permanent plant.
economists
call the composition of capital has been forced upon the captains of industry irrespective of their wishes, and its effect has been to in-
Men
vs.
the
Man
crease steadily and tremendously the disproportion between the value of the product and the purchas-
Alike in
the separate industrial plant and in the nation as a whole the constantly progressing change in the composition of capital a change necessitated by the process itself and that must go on in the long run makes ever more difficult the sale of the total
product. are thus confronted by a condition, not a The masses of the people are unable to theory.
We
purchase more than about one-fifth of the annual product, and this fatal lack of purchasing power
is
human
Are we not
conclusion
forced,
my
that
we
are
economic changes so vast that no word short of Revolution is adequate to describe them? I sincerely believe that purely as a matter of economics the progressive and inexorable change in the technical composition of capital
tion inevitable,
makes a Social Revoluand further that this revolution is so close upon us that it behooves you and me, as prudent men, to prepare for it. What sort of a revolution is it to be? Will it place in power an oligarchy of Nietzschean Immoralists
ancestors of the
Beyond
Men
to-be?
Something of this sort was predicted a few years " ago by W. J. Ghent in his Our Benevolent Feu-
Men
vs.
the
Man
dalism," and has just been far more vividly described as a possibility by Jack London in that " The vigorous and brilliant, if depressing book, Iron Heel."
Or
will
it
make
the
means of
life
the
common
possession of all, and thus abolish poverty forever, and usher in the era of fellowship so long foretold by bards and seers ?
answer these questions we must make a slight Economexcursion into the field of psychology. ics tell us that with all our male population between the ages of twenty-five and forty-five working three or four hours daily, we could produce
To
enough
year. If this
possible,
and no
statistician
or econ-
omist
is foolhardy enough to deny it, whether or not the coming Social Revolution will bring it to pass depends upon the intelligence or desires of
the masses.
of
man's mode of thought depends upon his mode life. The man who depends largely upon in weather or climate, which seem to him changes
to be utterly beyond the power of the human will to control, will be superstitious, whether he be a
New
Zealand, or a bar-
barian tan-tinted grower of vegetables on Long Island or in Connecticut. But the man who works
Men
ity
vs.
the
Man
almost absolutely under human control and direction, ceases to be superstitious, reasons straight from cause to effect or from effect back to
and
is
go to church or chapel to pray to for daily bread, and grows rudely and omGod inously unwilling to go barefooted because of an
cause, ceases to
Now,
as Professor
is
Machine Process
fecting indirectly ever more and more of our population, and the significant point is that these are
just the people
who
suffer
ance of the present system and who have everything to gain by making the factories and railroads
and farms the common property of all the people. The factory worker is disciplined in co-operation
in his daily
in
work
in the factory,
is
he
lives gregari-
accustomed to collective ously If the medium of his union. bargaining through he thinks at all, he must think toward Socialism. Often for years he hardly thinks at all, but panics
tenements, and
Unemployment
a powerful mental stimulus. When the panic passes and the unemployed man gets work, he is very likely to become a dues-paying member of the
Socialist party.
imminent,
com-
io
Men
vs.
the
Man
pelling to socialistic thought and desires that ever growing host of the population employed in con-
the very part of the popnection with machinery ulation who have nothing to fear from a revolu" have nothing tion, who, in the words of Marx,
and a whole world to But to-day no one wholly escapes the pergain." vasive psychological effects of the Machine Process. Every twentieth century man and woman thinks more or less after the fashion of the factory worker
to lose but their chains,
The
thought-life of
day by day more and more affected by proletarian ideals and proletarian modes of ratiocination. Here and there individuals shielded by a favorable economic situation from direct contact
our time
is
with the hard facts of contemporary bread-winning are but little affected by the new tendencies,
but no one wholly escapes this influence.
Thus
the economic and social forces which are organizing and drilling a mighty host of militant Socialists
same time making the rest of the population more or less mentally indisposed to combat with zeal and earnestness the forces making for a
are at the
new
social order.
the active components of our population the group which most nearly escapes the revolutionary
psychological influences we have been considering, is the class of independent small producers and
traders.
Of
the
But this class is fast disappearing before advance of the trust and the department
Men
store.
vs.
the
Man
we
still
n
find
sur-
Where
vivals of this formerly dominant typical American group, we find they have lost their sturdy inde-
pendence of mind and character. They live in daily and hourly fear of economic extinction; they dread to open their daily papers lest they see in
dying
of conpsychologically are no longer a self-reliant servatism, but they militant group, and within a decade, as a social
group
is
the
bulwark
professional classes formerly could be relied on to think and write and speak in defense of the established order, but
The educated
what of them
The
cation are overcrowding all the liberal professions, and are causing unemployment to be at least as
common
life.
in professional life as
difficulty
is
it is
in proletarian
This
Most support the professional men and women. of the ephemeral reform movements of the last
two decades have been inspired and
of this
class,
led
by men
but with the ever extending psychological influence of the Machine Process more and more of these discontented intellectuals will
the proletarian point of view,
adopt
their
and place
12
Men
vs.
the
Man
We
in
mak-
What
of the opposition?
real interest
is
constantly grow-
ing,
relatively smaller.
is
But
even more
strik-
This surely ing than their numerical weakness. no further illustration than a reference to needs
the recent Congressional debates on railway rebate The legislation and on the panic currency bill.
nearer
so that
the
Social
Revolution
approaches,
the
its active opponents becomes, seems likely that before the final struggle
is begun the forces of reaction will number little more than the small group of the multi-millionaires and the cowardly slum-proletariat.
conclusion, as you will have already seen, dear Mencken, is that we are hard up against my the Day of Judgment, and that the only issue pos-
My
some form of collectivism or communism. you and I felt that this outcome were deplorable, would it not be our duty, if we recognized its inevitability, to do our part toward preparing the public mind for the coming change?
sible
is
Even
if
To
to
is
but
the mighty social forces and thus violence and incendiarism and bloodshed the
likely.
dam up
make more
is
To work
Men
vs.
the
Man
13
to facilitate a peaceful revolution which will preserve for posterity unimpaired the priceless heritage
we have
received
from the
culture of the
In the words of Karl Marx, the Socialist ages. is merely a sort of midwife helping the Old Order
to give birth to the may be.
New
with as
little
pain as
But
is
the
to be de-
that educated
of affairs so perfect such as you should give of their Is the talent and energy to prolong it artificially? socialistic ideal so abhorrent that it is to be post-
plored?
men
poned
ert
at
any cost?
it is
I feel that
Hunter's
"
useless to quote to
"
Poverty
the hosts
or
the
who every year go to fill paupers' graves, " from H. G. Wells' New Worlds for Old "
still
more appalling
school
statistics
of the number
underfed, but repeat " Nietzsche's commandment, Be hard " and say
diseased,
4
of English
children
and verminous.
These are the weak; let them go to the wall! But surely even you would be unable to deafen
"
The Bitter Cry of the Children," so made articulate by John Spargo. But brilliantly I do confidently appeal to you in the name of arisYou tocracy, of art, literature, and the drama.
your ears to
believe
"
that the
aristocrats
mob
to rule; you believe the should be abandoned to its lot because it is fit
14
Men
To what
vs.
the
Man
Go
do the
aristocrats
and
that they possess? To the facts that they their ancestors for several generations have
and had
ample food and leisure. I do not say that a full stomach and time for idleness are all that is needed
But I do say that a gentleman or lady cannot be made without three generations of stomachs that have not suffered from
to
make
a gentleman or lady.
and three generations of hands that have not been so worn with toil as to make them
innutrition,
The
Socialist ideal
would mean full stomachs and ample leisure for all. I do not say that with a Presto, Change the Social Revolution will make the Bowery tough a Chesterfield. But I do say that it will give to all mankind the material foundation upon which alone
!
am
a So-
not because
I
am
or because
sible
undervalue
it,
maximum.
Surely it is needless for me to point out to you that to-day commercialism has so tainted and pol-
and the drama, that most artists, fiction-writers, and playwrights are mental prostitutes, and, saddest of all, some of them are so degraded that they do not even know
luted art,
literature,
of our
Men
I feel as
I
vs.
the
Man
15
though I were indulging in a platitude venture to remind you that it was because every Athenian freeman was a cultured and com-
when
petent critic that sculpture and painting and the drama attained to such perfection in the days of
Pericles.
The
socialistic ideal
is
that
no man or
woman, to say the least, shall be less cultivated than the average citizen of the Athens of Pericles. Today, as you know but too well, a play of the better sort can only be put on for an occasional matinee
at an
attend the theater, for to-day the only appreciable portion of the American community that has
leisure to attain
culture
classes.
is
made up of
manners, more worthy and nobler drama, as I know fiction, higher art, you do, your only course is to become a Socialist comrade, and give us your aid in hastening the
If
you wish to
Will you do
it?
Yours
faithfully,
MY
DEAR LA MONTE
In one thing, at least, you and I are in agreement, and that is in our common belief that the
world is by no means perfect. This, at first glance, seems to convict us of pessimism, but, as a matter of fact, we are thoroughgoing optimists, for both
of us are firmly convinced that, however lamentable its present degree of imperfection, the world may,
grow better. So far, indeed, we when we come to discuss the preagree fully, cise method and manner of this betterment, and to define the goal which lies ahead when we strive, in brief, to lay bare the anatomy of human progress
but
our divergence,
it
quickly appears,
is
abysmal.
Your
ideal picture of the best possible world seems to me a very fair picture of the worst possible
world, and I have no doubt that, until I convert you and lead you up to grace, my ideal picture, as I have sketched it elsewhere in the past, and as
I shall try to
draw
to
I
it,
bit
by
bit,
you much
the
same
go
my own
you a
16
Men
certain fault in the
tain fault
vs.
the
Man
17
just as
virulence to-day in the writings of Socialists, it reached a maximum sixty years ago in the It may be writings of Christian theologians.
imum
for want of a better label, a magnificent At its worst, it leads faith in incredible evidence. to a ready acceptance of generalizations that are
called,
supported by nothing more logical than a wish At its best, it seems to infect
you Socialists with a willingness to adopt and defend any alleged fact or group of facts, however
dubious,
case.
so
long
as
it
seems
to
prove
your
This fault, my dear La Monte, is not peculiar to you, and I am firmly convinced that, if you are ever hanged, it will be for some other offense. As a matter of fact, I have found it in far more glorious flower in the compositions of those older and more enraptured Socialists whose works you have sent me, for the good of my soul, from time to time. But you are guilty, too, if only in the second or third degree, and this I hope to prove to
you.
You
letter,
for ex-
ample, by quoting a government report, by which it appears that the average American workingman turns out $2,000 worth of goods a year, and gets
$400
am
these figures
which embarrassment
am
ex-
Men
vs.
the
Man
on a footing with the statistician who fathers them), but they seem very plausible, and so I shall Your own belief in join you in accepting them. their accuracy is plainly without reservation, for
actly
you proceed to make them the foundation of your " It is obvious," you say at the start, argument. " that a man with $400 cannot purchase $2,000 worth of goods," and then you go on to examine
this fact in the light
and
Setting aside, for the present, your final conclusions, I am perfectly willing to admit that you are right about
the man with $400. His money will buy but $400 worth of goods, and this leaves $1,600 worth to be sold to someone else. Two interesting questions now arise. The one is, What other man buys this $1,600 worth? and the other is, What does
this
The
first.
since
a consideration of
Your answer
is
if
understand you
that the $1,600 represents the individual workingman's annual contribution to the nation's
rightly,
store of goods, over and above the amount he is able to buy back with his $400 and consume.
This is what Karl Marx calls surplus produce," " and its value he calls surplus value." You very
properly observed that a surplus of $1,600 in every $2,000 is a very large one, and point out that,
lacking a ready market, the accumulation of such
"
Men
vs.
the
Man
19
surpluses is bound to get the nation into the unenviable position of a merchant with an enormous
and unsaleable stock. In all of this your logic is sound enough, but you start out, unfortunately, from fallacious premises, for the surplus of $1,600 about which you and the government statisticians discourse in such alarm is almost entirely an academic myth. In a word, it has no actual existence, save in small part. Outside of books on political it is never heard of. economy As a matter of sober fact and I speak here from experience in one very typical line of manufacturing, as I shall
show
age workman's contribution to the nation's store of goods, over and above the amount he buys back with his wages, is seldom equal to the value of the goods he thus buys back and consumes. The $400 man's contribution to the national surplus, far from being $1,600 a year, is probably little more than
$160, and certainly a good deal less than $400. You assume that, by the mere exercise of his necromancy upon an empty void, he creates a value
of $2,000, but here you assume altogether too much. What he really does do is this: he takes
less,
(let us
and takes back $400 for his labor. His employer now owns a lot of goods which has cost him $1,600 $1,200 for raw material and $400 paid to the workman and he offers it for sale at
skill,
2O
$2,000.
est
Men
The
vs.
the
Man
covers the inter-
difference
$400
upon the employer's capital, the cost of selling the goods, the cost of light, heat, and taxes, and
the cost of rent.
Whatever
is
left
wage As I hope to show you later on, this wage is as much a true wage as the workBut of this man's, no matter how large it may be.
industry,
and
skill.
more anon.
the $1,200 worth of raw material. You may argue, I fear, that this is a preposterously excessive valuation, but let me assure you that it is not. It so happens that I
is
What we
once enjoyed, for three years, a rather intimate acquaintance with the workings of a successful cigar
factory
a very typical example of the
American
Well,
ing produced a brand of cigars which cost about " $22 a thousand to manufacture I say to manu" " facture and not to sell," and the workmen who made them were getting $6 a thousand for
their labor.
sent?
it
did the balance of $16 reprethe profit of the employer? Was the workman's free contribution to the hoard
What
Was
it
of capital?
represent
Not
was
What
workman
made ready
for the
tables, with
all
and
Men
vs.
the
Man
21
It represented almost exinsurance charges paid. the cost of producing the cigars, packed, actly
stamped, and ready for the selling department This less the wages paid to the cigar-maker! sum, you will note, was almost thrice the amount
paid to the cigar-maker for the actual rolling of the cigars. Therefore, my assumption of a ratio to $1,200 in the preceding paragraphs of $400
was not without some justification in fact. But what did the cost of the raw material, of the taxes, and of the packing represent? My answer
is
The money paid simple: it represented labor. for the actual tobacco represented the labor of the farmers who had wrung it from a reluctant earth,
and the labor of the handlers and experts who had sorted it and cured it, and of the trainmen and mariners who had transported it. Without this labor, the tobacco would have had no existence; it was, literally, the incarnation
of hours of
toil.
The money
paid for
by the manufacturer went, in great part, back to these laborers. straight Putting the profits of landowners, of brokers, and of stockholders in
it
transportation companies at the maximum, the laborers got at least a half. And the tale of the
wood used
in the boxes, of the labels pasted upon of the gum used to fasten the labels was them, the same. Again, it was the same with the money It
paid as taxes.
went
hands of
in
who were
22
without which
Therefore,
Men
all
vs.
the
Man
civilized security.
let
all
paid for
as
italists
raw material, $600 goes to workingmen wages, and $600 goes to middlemen and capas profits.
We
$800 of the $2,000, but of this, as we have seen, $400 goes to the workingman principally under consideration. There remains, then, after all else has been accounted for, the sum of $400. What is Are we to regard it as the profit of the this?
manufacturer?
is
profit,
it
out of
keep.
It In part, yes; but in part no it is gross profit, and true enough, but must come the cost of selling and of up!
To
get
some notion of
go back
saw there, you will reto our cigar factory. call, that a cigar-maker got $6 a thousand for making cigars, and that the raw material, brought
to his table, together with the
We
work of
cost
sorting
packing
$22 a thouThe employer, let us say, got $30 a thousand. sand for these cigars in his market, and his gross But was his actual profit was thus $8 a thousand. It cost him, to begin, By no means profit $8 ? a thousand to maintain his office and sell fully $3 his goods, and he had to write off $1.50 more for bad bills, and another dollar or so for those expenses and hazards which no man can foresee.
!
made
$16.
and This
Men
Who
costs?
vs.
the
Man
23
Practically every cent, I believe, went to workingmen to coal miners for digging coal for
keeping his books, to salesmen for visiting his customers, to locomotive engineers for hauling his salesmen, to hotel cooks for cooking their meals, and so on ad infinitum.
what of that? show you some day, I hope, that this was the wages of the employer himwages, too to him for his skill at managing his self, paid capital, for his skill at buying raw material cheaply, and at inducing customers to buy his product, and for his skill, finally, at cajoling and
the net profit that remained
I shall
And
coercing his
workingmen
all
$6
he paid them.
Now,
to
what have
:
Simply produced by the $400 workman of your parable represents, not $400 worth of labor plus $1,600 worth of inflation, but $400 worth of labor plus
at least
to this fact
The $400
man may
his skill
be the principal actor in the drama, and may be the principal factor in the con-
version of sunlight and human energy into marketable commodities, but the men whose toil pre-
makes
pares his raw material and the men whose toil it possible for him to work at peace and
sell his
What product have had their share, too. remains over, after all of them have been paid, is
24
Men
vs.
the
Man
And so we come to a conclusion which very little. makes all of your argument about panics, crises, and changing social orders vain, and it is this that,
:
while your $400 workman can buy back but $400 worth of the $2,000 worth of goods, all of the workmen who have had a hand in producing it are
perfectly able to
their collective
I am not much of a hand wages, nearly all of it. at statistics, but I venture the guess that in every $1,000 worth of goods produced under normal
America to-day, fully $800 represents the wages of workmen. Thus your original survalue of $1,600, which you regard with such plus trembling and in which you see such staggering portents, shrinks, on cold inspection, to $400
conditions in
!
No
stands for capitalistic exploitation of the workingman, and that as such it is an evil. You may even
argue, with
size,
Marx, that
its
its
evil lies,
not in
its
actual
very existence that any surplus value is immoral, and that the workingman should I shall try to answer this in get all he produces. a future letter, but meanwhile it may be well for
bu* in
me
As
to record
my
a matter of fact, the possibility of exploiting the workingman seems to me to be the one thing
that justifies an optimistic view of human progress. It is this thing that gives existence a goal and a
zest.
human
race all
Men
vs.
the
Man
25
of those comforts and privileges which make it (at least in all save its lowest orders) superior to the
race of milch cows.
It is this that gives us the assurance that, however passionately we agreeable may occasionally embrace altruism, either as a
we
are
being driven forward and upward, unceasingly and willy-nilly, by the irresistible operation of the
law of natural selection. Your facts and figures puzzle me in places other than the one we have been considering, not because they seem to me to prove anything, but because I find it utterly impossible to put any faith in their accuracy. You say in one paragraph, for in" Economics tell us that with all our male stance:
population between the ages of twenty-five and forty-five working three to four hours a day, we
could produce enough to keep our whole population in such comfort as to-day requires an income of
$5,000 a year." Let us look into this a bit, and see what it means. You have already laid it down, you will recall, that the average American workman earns $400 a year, and you say in your letter that " over fifty per cent, of our population actually beLet us suppose that long to the working class." the number is exactly fifty per cent, and that each man produces $2,000 worth of goods a year, as
you say. Well, then, you propose to restrict labor to those between twenty-five and forty-five, and so cut our
26
Men
vs.
the
Man
working force in two by making idlers of those under twenty-five and those over forty-five. But at the same time you propose to double the force that remains by requiring every able-bodied person of the fifty per cent, now idle, between twentyfive and forty-five years old, to join the workers.
to reduce
"
three or four
"
a day,
What
workman's yearly output will be $1,000 worth of goods, instead of $2,000 worth, as at present, and that his income, even supposing him to get every cent of it back, will be but $1,000. On $1,000 a year how is he to obtain " such comSimply that your
fort as to-day requires an income of $5,000? In this I have given you the benefit of the doubt
I have assumed, for instance, that at every step. cent, of the population is now made up of fifty per
"
idlers,
even though you yourself admit, in one make up " but a handful of
our people." I have assumed, too, that Socialism could achieve the impossible feat of paying for the same thing twice of paying the farmer, that is,
for raising tobacco, and then paying the cigar-
maker for
you could
the end. "
raising
desire,
it.
and yet
Economics
tell
and therein
I see
Men
vs.
the
Man
too
27
You have
much
faith
of economics, and you acthe wildest notions of its most extravagant cept " " If economics tell us sages as gospel truth.
that our present
half
time, will be able, under Socialism, to earn twelve and a half times as much as at present well, then,
My
personal
is
The whole
There
no
of existence,
idea, in a
word,
for
is
it,
sheer nonsense.
in the actual facts
more ground
than for the doctrine that, if I had brown eyes instead of blue, I would be a Methodist bishop at
$8,000 a year.
The
it,
is
human
These deductions vary with the econexperience. omist's education, environment, religion, and poliIn those detics, and are often irreconcilable.
partments of the science, indeed, in which the most distinguished professors have exercised their intellects,
the divergence
is
most marked.
need
only refer, in support of this, to the appalling debates regarding the currency which break forth
The conclusion a layman every now and then. must necessarily derive from these debates is that This conthe vast majority of experts are wrong. clusion grows firmer on reflection, for it is apparent
that each economist's
fiscal
theory
is
drawn from
open to
28
all.
Men
vs.
the
Man
Why
Therefore, why pay too much heed to him ? not examine the facts themselves and evolve
reply to this that
its
You may
foolish,
my
science
application say pathology, for instance will reveal its fatuity. answer is that I am not applying it to pathology, for the facts of pathology are, in a
and that
to
My
man
specially trained
to observe accurately.
The
is
facts of everynot clear, let me direct my meaning day your attention to Adam Smith's Theory of Rents and Ehrlich's Theory of Immunity. If you will
life.
find
one man, of average intelligence and edufails to understand Smith at his first cation, If, on the other reading, I will give you a dollar.
me
who
me one man, of average intelligence and education, who understands Ehrlich on a first
The one reading, I will give you another dollar. requires only a reasonable degree of sanity; the
other requires special training and a wealth of
actual experience. For these reasons
I
am
chary of accepting
the verdict.
economic theories, and much prefer the evidence to I have no doubt that the gentleman
the government report you quote was an expert hired at enormous expense, and yet I can't rid myself of the notion that the money paid
to
who prepared
Men
But
I
vs.
the
Man
this series
29
of ob-
jections to
your authorities, else this letter will have exhausted you without any statement of the creed
propose to offer
in opposition to Socialism.
This
creed consists, first and last, in a firm belief in the beneficence and permanence of the evolutionary I believe, in other words, that the human process.
race
is
present existing in the world, and I believe further come and go, its superiority to
is
growing constantly believe that you and I are far superior men, in many ways, to our great-grandfathers, and
that our superiority over Christopher Columbus,
Julius Caesar,
finite.
and Moses,
I
in
is in-
But what do
other words,
ally
is
mean by
superiority?
What,
in
my
definition of progress ?
Natur-
enough, it is hard to frame such a definition in a few words, but I may throw some light upon my notion of the thing itself by showing how it is
to be measured.
to be
it,
is
measured by the accuracy of man's knowledge of nature's forces. If you examine this sentence
carefully you will observe that I conceive progress as a sort of process of disillusion. gets ahead, in other words, by discarding the theory of
Man
Moses believed to-day for the fact of to-morrow. that the earth was flat, Caesar believed that his
family doctor could cure pneumonia, and Columbus
30
Men
women and
vs.
the
Man
turned them into witches, and that the lightning was a bomb hurled by a wrathold
ful
God
at sinful
man.
You and
I,
knowing
wrong
extent.
of these distinguished men were in their beliefs, are their superiors to that
illusions
its
which have
afflicted
the
days of nonage
First
may
be divided
two
classes.
made
in the interpretation
of
An
excellent
example
of the
first class
is
day by the ignorant, and until very recently by all, that the disease called malaria is caused by
breathing impure
air.
the naked eye, this doctrine seemed entirely sound. But by and by men began to use microscopes to aid
their eyes,
and one day, seized by a happy thought, an enterprising man took the trouble to place a drop of blood from a malaria patient's veins beneath his glass. Since then the old doctrine has been put aside forever by all whose beliefs are worth hearing, and we know that malaria is caused, not by impure air, but by various minute parasites
The human race, within of the class of sporozoa. historic times, has rejected thousands of delusions
of this
class,
but
many
yet remain.
As we
perfect
Men
vs.
the
Man
31
apparatus to reinforce our dull senses they will go overboard, one by one. The delusions and illusions of the second class
resolve themselves into
sions.
delu-
One
of them
is
human
being,
by his words or acts, is capable of suspending or modifying the immutable laws which govern
is
the universe.
being
able to
human
Out of the first of these delusions springs the doctrine of the efficacy of prayer, and with it all of the world's vast and bizarre stock of religions.
Out of
morality, with all its multitude of efforts to combat the eternal and inexorable law that the strong
shall prevail over the
efforts
is
weak.
in
is
The
the
latest
of such
comprehended
It
it
political
theory
called
Socialism.
lot,
the
most fatuous of
proposes, not only to make human laws as immutable as natural laws, but actually to make them supersede and nullify those
the whole
for
Here, indeed, we behold human beon the topmost pinnacle of bombastic folly. I ings can imagine no more stupendous egotism.
natural laws.
In this you may perceive, though perhaps only dimly, for my exposition may be none too clear,
the reasons which impel me to decline your invitation to join your crusade. I am no apologist for the existing order of things. Like Huxley, I
32
Men
vs.
the
Man
the universe
is
management of
by
no means
cept
I
it.
perfect, but such as it is, we must acIf you point out that human progress, as
it,
have defined
ways runs the risk of having his brains knocked out by a particularly enterprising slave. If you out that, by my scheme of progress, it is point
only the upper stratum that actually progresses, I answer that only the upper stratum is capable of progressing unaided.
The mob
is
is
inert
it
dragged or driven.
is
with
a pertinacity that
is
required to rid
helpless
ceives,
and
every
appalling. geological epoch of a single error, and it is so cowardly that every fresh boon it reit
lift
upon
its
must come to
it as a free gift from its betters Great men as a gift not only free, but also forced. have fought and died for the truth for a thousand
years,
to-day, throughout Christendom, still believes that Friday is an unlucky day, still believes that ghosts
walk the
earth,
and
still
holds to an immovable
and
political
panaceas.
Men
It
vs.
the
Man
33
may
far as I
Whatable to see it, the thing is inevitable. ever you may say against it, you cannot deny that the existing order of things at least produces progIt produced, for instance, a Pasteur, and if, ress.
directly
am
and
of long ages,
a million serfs had to be used up to make this Pasteur possible, I, for one, believe that the result
cost.
The work
world put the clock of time ahead a hundred years, and conferred a permanent and constantly cumulative benefit upon the whole human race, freeman and slave alike, now and forevermore. Would the lives of a million serfs have been of Not at all! They would have equal value? to the world only the matter and energy that given they took out of it, and their influence on progress,
if
all,
would have
been reactionary.
You
cuses
and compromises
latter-day Socialists have all sorts of exto offer. You say, for
instance, that under Socialism the Pasteurs of the world would be cherished and encouraged just as much as under the law of natural selection. But the objection to this is that, after two generations of Socialism, there would be no more Pasteurs. To produce the things the world needs to-day and to-morrow we must have workmen who toil. But to produce the things that will make the world a
34
Men
vs.
the
Man
hundred years hence a better place to live in than the world of to-day we must have men who, by exploiting, either directly or indirectly, the work of
these toilers,
make
the ease and leisure to and to find out great truths. great plannings Yours sincerely,
may have
H.
L.
MENCKEN.
MY
I
DEAR MENCKEN:
have
derived
infinite
delight
from
sanguine confused
letter.
me where
your
statistics
your have
latter part of
has
made my
future task
far easier by helping me to place your mental posiI have no intention of being tion chronologically. offensive when I tell you that you appear to me to belong in part to the Greece of Pericles and in
part to the France of Diderot. When you assert that it is necessary to exploit and dehumanize millions of proletarians in order
to produce here
and there
a Pasteur or two,
you
merely paraphrase the defense of human slavery that we find again and again, now explicit and
now
implicit, in the
Xenophon. good one, for in their times the productivity of human labor was so pitifully small that only by keeping hordes in slavery was it possible for any
to enjoy the leisure requisite for the attainment of culture. But, though you, my dear Mencken, live
in
an age when steam and electricity have been harnessed by man, you still repeat arguments that
35
36
Men
vs.
the
Man
were obsolescent in the days of Cicero; for Antiparos, a Greek poet of that era, saw in the invention of the water-mill the promise that might be freed from the curse of slavery,
was bestowing upon mankind " Spare the arm which turns the mill, O millers, and sleep peacefully. Let the cock warn you in vain that the day is breaking. Demeter has imposed upon the nymphs the labor of the slaves, and behold them leaping merrily over the wheel, and behold the axle-tree, shaken, turning with its
spokes and making the heavy-rolling stone revolve. Let us live the life of our fathers, and let us rejoice in idleness
grants us."
How many
to catch
eons does
take for a
Mencken
up you measure progress by the increase of accurate knowledge, and thus apotheosize human
to an Antiparos?
When
reason, you reproduce perfectly the spirit that animated Rousseau and Diderot and the great French Encyclopedists. In the words of Engels, " the French philosophers of the eighteenth century, the forerunners of the Revolution,
appealed
to reason as the sole judge of all that is. tional government, rational society, were
A
to
ra-
be
founded; everything that ran counter to eternal reason was to be remorselessly done away with." When once this was done, all would be for the
Men
vs.
the
Man
37
This was best in the best of all possible worlds. But an entirely justifiable conception in their day. since then the experiment has been tried the French
;
Revolution has turned Christendom upside down, and the Third Estate has been enthroned in every
civilized land; but the reality attained
is
far
from
corresponding to the noble dreams of the great French materialists of the eighteenth century. Most of us have learned something from this ex-
and have begun to suspect that human progress is more dependent upon the development of the processes whereby human stomachs are filled and human backs are covered than it is upon the increase of academic knowledge. But you, dear child of the eighteenth century, continue to comperience,
now why
"
smile
when
and
men, in many and that our superiority over great-grandfathers, Christopher Columbus, Julius Caesar, and Moses, in many more ways, is infinite."
Do
you think
am
unreasonable
in
asking this
man
to
produce some
arguments against Socialism, not borrowed bodily from the Greece of Pericles and the France of Rousseau?
In
my
first
letter
merely to
illustrate
my
argument.
38
Men
letter leads
vs.
the
Man
Your
me
serving the purpose I had intended, they have on the contrary confused you and obscured my argu-
ment.
statistician
This is not to be wondered at, as I am no and have always found figures a burden.
In order to
make my
you
will permit
figures.
me
without
The
labor.
cost
work done by any given machine does not its owner less than it would cost him to have
the same labor done by men and women by the former methods, the machine will not be used.
But, in a society where the different producers of goods sell competitively on the market, each in-
dividual
is
driven,
whether he
will
or not, to
make
continuous im-
provements in his machinery. If he does not he be undersold and driven into bankruptcy. Every such improvement means an increase in the
product relatively to the wages paid out in that establishment, so that the proportion of the total
product
in society at large, that is in excess
of the
quantity that the wage-earners are able to purchase for their own consumption, is growing and
must continue
to
grow
until
it
eventually reaches
such proportions as to compel a Social Revolution. The more developed is the mechanical equipment,
Men
vs.
the
Man
39
own product
tively
backward countries, such as Italy, Spain, and Portugal; and the American workers of 1908 are
able to buy a much smaller fraction of the product of their labor than could the American workers
of 1850. vance in
You
letter, and I do not advance my now, any argument based on the immorality of such an arrangement. I would think as readily of the morality of the law of gravitation. questioning
former
It
matters very
little
to
my
argument
just
what
what
my
constant decrease in the ratio between the purchasing power of the working-class and the value
the total national product; and this ratio must decrease as long as we continue to improve our machinery, and competition makes such
of
improvement of our
tive.
As
I said in
my
is
the
"
pro-
and inexorable change in the technical composition of capital that makes a Social Revgressive
olution inevitable."
40
Men
The
vs.
the
Man
figures as to average wages and product worker that I used for illustrative purposes per in my former letter were quoted by memory from Tables i and 2 in Census Bulletin No. 150 (Second edition, September 15, 1902). This Bulletin No. 150 is based on manufactures alone, and shows the average wages to be $432, and the product per worker to be something in excess of $2,000. The figures
in
these
census
bulletins
are
gathered
the growth of industry, and for other commercial purposes, and not to meet the
chiefly to
show
needs of economic study, so that it is somewhat difficult, if not impossible, to ascertain just what
elements other than the
the
worker
Lucien Sanial, of Northport, Long Island, one of our ablest statisticians, has made a careful study of the census of
this
$2,000
contains.
1900
in connection
reports, sion is
and
that
other
and
in
his
conclu-
our
total
product
1900 was
$24,500,000,000, and the total value of the laborpower used in its production, $5,815,000,000, and
that the portion of the product that Labor was in a position to purchase was 23.74 per centum.
It should be remembered that the workers purchase everything at the very highest retail prices, while the value of product given in the census is
based on factory prices; so that in order to ascertain how much of the product the workers can purchase, one must add to the census valuation
Men
vs.
the
Man
41
have found by calculation added by Mr. Sanial was cent. forty-two per Using this percentage, I have from Census Bulletin No. 150 the workfigured ers' share of the total value of our manufactured product at every decade from 1850 to 1900.
and
retail
profits.
Even
if
this
not vitiate
workers
is decreasing, for the calculation for each tenth year is made on exactly the same basis. Here are my results tabulated :
1800.. 30.5
1900.. 27.0
You
ers'
share rose 2.4 per centum in if we turn to the figures for invested in manufacture, we will find that capital
in that
$2,118,208,769 to $2,790,272,606, which was scarcely enough to keep abreast of the growth of population, so that as a matter of fact there was little, if any, advance in industrial technique dur-
42
Men
vs.
the
Man
ing that decade, while in the decade from 1850 to 1860, when Labor's share decreased nearly five
growing from $533> 2 4535 I to $1,009,855,715, showing a tremendous improvement in machinery. I have no idea that these figures are strictly correct, but I think that they do show beyond cavil
that the purchasing power of the working-class is, to say the least, growing constantly more inadequate to perform its economic function in a
society based on private ownership of the means of If we take the figures for particular production.
same result is more strikingly Fred D. Warren of Girard, Kansas, brought " has extracted from the Eighteenth Annual Re" the followport of the Commissioner of Labor
industries,
the
out.
Product per man (in tons) ... Average wages Average profit made from each worker
66
$453
1890 260
1900
395
$304 $360
$460
$405
$506 $900
$322
take
ern
that pig-iron is a far more typical modindustry than is the cigar-making industry,
it
which you
been far
less
At revolutionized by machinery and chemistry. to enter upon any rate, I do not feel competent a discussion of the cigar business, as my only connection with
it
Men
when Fortune smiled
statistics
vs.
the
Man
43
and you give no source of save your own experience; so that I your am compelled to leave this field to you. You will, I think, admit that by the methods of
economists
there
is
and statisticians I have shown that growing surplus of goods, and that the
disposition of this surplus constitutes a very real difficulty, even if you are not ready to admit that
it is
of
itself sufficient to
But, curiously enough, you, the panegyrist of Eternal Reason, who measure progress by the
tion.
distrust this
same
human
and
this
intelligence
when
it is
applied to economics
sociology, and would appear to hold that in one domain more credence is to be given to the
in the street
man
than to the
man
with trained
in-
telligence
who
I am free to admit that it these very questions. is rather disconcerting for an opponent of Social-
ism
who
bring about a Nietzschean millennium to find that knowledge of economics is in inverse ratio to
that as the former prejudice against Socialism But this seems to rises, the latter melts away.
be the sad
fact.
woe poured
out not long ago by Leslie M. Shaw, ex-Secretary of the Treasury, at an alumni dinner of Dickinson College at the Hotel Saint Denis in
New
"
York.
is
Socialism
44
I
Men
vs.
the
Man
alarmed by the general trend of things in At our Chautauquas the lecturers are all preaching the doctrine. Teachers of Sociology in our schools and colleges are doing the same thing. With a few exceptions, they are Socialists, as you can find out by a few moments of conversation with them; and the exceptions are
this connection.
am
anarchists.
"
Our
erature.
public libraries are full of socialistic litWhy, in a large city recently, where
strike, the
reading-room was packed with all kinds of people. When the day day librarian was asked what they were reading, he There is Socialism, every one of them. replied
there
after
*
:
was a
is
not
"
Sociology, as
it
is
is
a fad
You
cannot build up
and
Wilshire, the socialistic editor, recently asked a friend of mine if he would arrange for a joint
Mr.
in
one of our
my
No,
Wilshire and
"
Even
the pulpit
nowadays
it is
reflects
some
so-
cialistic doctrines,
and
too bad."
doubt Mr. Shaw would agree with you " " of goods about that the troublesome surplus
No
Men
which
I
vs.
the
Man
45
and the government statisticians discourse in such alarm is almost entirely an academic " " it has no actual exthat, in a word, myth " outside of books save in small part," that istence, on political economy it is never heard of." But both you and he would have to admit that Chaun;
"
cey M. Depew's reputation for virginal ignorance of economics is spotless, and yet Senator Depew " his great in what many of his fellow-citizens call " at the Republican Convention of 1900 in speech
Philadelphia, that renominated President McKinproduce in this great country of ley, said:
"We
ours every year $2,500,000,000 more of goods It seems that knowledge than we can consume." of the existence of that surplus had leaked outside of purely academic circles eight years ago. York Sun of December 20, 1908, And the contained a long letter from Berlin, explaining
New
had been
at that time so
much
crisis,
adverse criticism of the Kaiser was that Gerpassing through a severe business and that therefore many indiscreet acts of
majesty that would have been passed over lightly in prosperous times had been the target for the most venomous attacks. Here is one
sentence from this letter which I commend to your " careful attention : Existing markets are crowded with wares for which there are no profitable
buyers." In Germany
it
46
Men
in the opinion
vs.
the
Man
Germany into a her desperate struggle to find an outlet into which she can pour this plethora of commodities.
war with England
in I think it is
must sooner or
later drive
now
pestilential
superabundance
I think economists, statisticians, and Socialists. that the figures I have already given you prove it
to be a
most pregnant
reality.
It
may
be well for
me
to say that in preparing my figures of the workers' share of the product of our manufactur-
and 1900,
first,
I,
in
the value of the partially manufactured goods used as materials in those industries, and, second,
the value of the true
in
them,
so that
my
nothing but the new value added by the workers in the process of manufacture. But, if you will still
remain skeptical about the real existence of this " academic myth," permit me to quote to you a
few figures from the Fifth Annual Report of the United States Steel Corporation for the Fiscal Year ended December 31, 1906," which, thanks to the kindness of Fred D. Warren, is lying before
"
me
as I write.
5, I
From page
quote:
Men
"
vs.
the
Man
47
The
deducting expenditures for ordinary repairs and maintenance (approximately $28,000,000), em-
bonus funds, and also interest on bonds and fixed charges of the subsidiary companies, amounted to $156,624,273. 18." On page 24 the average number of employees for the same year (1906) on all the properties of the Corporation is given as 202,457, and the total annual salaries and wages as $147,765,540. If you add together the net profits (from which you will note all possible deductions have been made), and the wages (which include the princely
ployees
salaries of the Steel
Trust
officials),
you
will find
that the profits are 51.46 per cent, of the whole and the wages are 48.54 per cent.
course the Steel Trust profits are figured on the basis of factory prices for the product,
Of
this
have
Bulletin 150. But I care not what the exact percentage may be. The fact that this Steel Trust report estabis
lishes
a tre-
In discussing the cigar business, after allowing " interest upon the employer's capital, the cost of selling the goods, the cost of light, heat,
48
taxes,
Men
and the
vs.
the
"
Man
and various other
cost of rent
items you say: "Whatever is left over represents the employer's reasonable wage for his enterprise,
industry,
and
skill.
is
on, this
wage
as
As much
man's, no matter
Let
me
call
enterprise, industry, and skill every particle of used in managing and superintending the vast busiis furnished by salaried " and that those salaries for enterprise, employees, " are included in the wage acindustry, and skill " count I have quoted, and that after this true as you call it, has been paid in full and wage," most liberally, our old friend " the Troublesome "
large it may be." your attention to the fact that " "
how
Surplus
still
stands
there,
with
"
undiminished
think he
is
entitled
and asking, Well, and what do with me?" Do you not to a serious answer?
captains of industry have been for the past few years, as I pointed out in
letter, has been to devote capital more more to the improvement and enlargement of and what we may call our permanent industrial and
my
former
lieves the
it
transportation plant, but while this effectively resymptoms of distress for the time being,
unfortunately aggravates the disease in the long run by facilitating production and transportation. There are two other answers you may be tempted
to
make: one
is
that
it
is
Men
class
vs.
the
Man
expenditure
49
suffi-
to
increase
its
wasteful
ciently to
other
is
meet the requirements of the case, the that war and calamity may intervene
and cause an adequate destruction of goods. Professor Thorstein Veblen has discussed both of these
possible remedies very interestingly in his remark" " The Theory of Business Enterprise able book,
(Scribners',
New
is
York, 1904).
His conclusions
out of the question for private exand waste to be raised to an adequate travagance pitch, but that we may look hopefully to war and
are that
it
calamity as palliatives. " The persistent defection of reasonable profits," " calls for he says, in discussing the former point,
a remedy. The remedy may be sought in one or the other of two directions ( i ) in an increased un:
reasonable If level. keeps profits below the enough of the work or of the output is turned to wasteful expenditures, so as to admit of but a
relatively slight aggregate saving, as counted
'
by
weight and
tained on
waste
in
is
investment
to
industrial
equipment
will not be
sufficient
lower prices appreciably through competition. " Wasteful expenditure on a scale adequate to
offset the surplus productivity
is
50
Men
vs.
the
Man
leading to saving and shrewd investment, are too ingrained in the habits of modern men to admit an effective retardation of the rate of saving.
ciples,
Something more to the point can be done, and indeed is being done, by the civilized governments
in the
way of
like,
lic edifices,
effectual waste.
and the
are almost altogether wasteful, so far as bears on the present question. " The waste of time and effort that goes into
military service, as well as the
employment of the
courtly, diplomatic, and ecclesiastical personnel, counts effectually in the same direction. But however extraordinary this public waste of substance
latterly has been,
machine industry, particularly when this productivity is seconded by the great facility which the modern business organization affords for the accumulaThere is tion of savings in relatively few hands.
also the
in military service reduces the purchasing power of the classes that are drawn into the service, and so
Men
vs.
the
Man
51
tinue to be distributed
somewhat
scheme, waste cannot be expected to overtake production, and can therefore not check the untoward
tendency to depression." (Pages 255-258.) But what waste is unable to do for us, war
fortunately has proved itself able to accomplish. But is the present generation of men, who, you tell us, are infinitely superior to Christopher Co-
lumbus, Julius Caesar, and Moses, going to remain long contented with a system that depends for its perpetuation on the frequent recurrence of
earthquake, and calamity? done for us of late is well brought the following passage out by Veblen in " Since the seventies as an approximate date
war,
fire,
and
less
as applying particularly to America and in a degree to Great Britain, the course of affairs
in
business
has
apparently
crises
change as regards
this recent period,
and with increasing persistency, chronic depression has been the rule rather than the exception in business. Seasons of easy times,
ordinary prosperity,' during this period are pretty uniformly traceable to specific causes extraneous
*
In to the process of industrial business proper. one case, the early nineties, it seems to have been
a peculiar crop situation, and in the most notable case of a speculative inflation, the one now
to a close,
it
was the
the
ex-
coupled
with
52
penditures
Men
for
vs.
the
Man
and
services
stores,
munitions,
incident to placing the country on a war footing, that lifted the depression and brought prosperity
to
the
business
community.
If
the
outside
stimulus from which the present prosperity takes its impulse be continued at an adequate pitch, the
season of prosperity may be prolonged; otherwise there seems little reason to expect any other out-
come than
more or
less
(Pages 250-251.) This was written in 1904. We were soon blessed with the Russo-Japanese War, the San Francisco Earthquake, and the Baltimore Fire, so " " " that the stimulus was continued at an ade" " was season of prosperity quate pitch," and the
liquidation."
"prolonged"
occurred
" a
liquidation."
until November, 1907, when there more or less abrupt and searching
cap of an unusually thorough knowledge of political economy, do you not think Professor Veblen
was able
to
make
situation?
Relying upon my own far more limited knowledge of economics, I have no hesitation in predicting that the present period of depression will last at least seven years unless (i) in the meantime " " or the hard the increase of accurate knowledge
of adversity lead us to establish the Cooperative Commonwealth, or (2) unless a great war, such as the Sun (N. Y.) Berlin correspondfacts
Men
vs.
the
Man
53
ent suggests between Germany and England, breaks I confess the second alternative appears to out.
me
I
to be far the more probable. This letter is already so unconscionably long that can but touch upon the question of the prob-
and the standard of comfort In my former letter I suggested that from three to four hours a day with all the male population between the ages of twenty-five and forty-five working usefully would suffice to keep all our people in such comable hours of labor
in the society
of the future.
to-day requires an income of $5,000 a This arouses your incredulity, naturally year. enough, and you devote several pages to proving its impossibility. Perhaps I should have made it that I had in mind the income per family, plainer and not per capita. But, had I done so, I doubt not my statement would have appeared scarcely less incredible to you. One fundamental difficulty
fort as
is
such a
"
life
as
is
pictured "
William Morris'
where
"
In the days of the years we dwell that wear our lives away,"
in,
that the two quantities are really incommensurable, but I can think of no feasible way of giving you
I believe
"
54
Men
all shall
vs.
the
Man
"
save by suggesting in dollars an income that enables an American family to-day to approach a similar standard of " comfort and well-being I say approach," beI do not believe any income, however large, cause
will to-day
when
make
will be
world-wide
own opinion is that in my former named too low a figure. In many of our
My
takes $5,000 a year to pay the rent of such a house as every family ought to demand.
day
it
trouble with your mathematical demonstration of my folly is that you make no allowance for
The
the
amount of labor
that
is
now wasted by
the
anarchy of our competitive system. The simplest illustration of this is the oft-used milk-business.
Count the number of wagons delivering milk on your block some morning, and compare it with the number of postmen delivering letters, and you will begin to form some faint idea of the vast aggregate I of unnecessary labor that is being done to-day.
believe
tity
it impossible to estimate exactly the quanof this wasted labor that could be eliminated
under a co-operative system. Sidney A. Reeve, " in his book "The Cost of Competition (New
the
York: McClure, Phillips & Co., 1906), states that amount of labor thus wasted is at least double
I that actually usefully employed in production. do not vouch for the accuracy of this calculation,
but
am
more
inclined to
Men
give
it
vs.
the
Man
55
when I gladly assure you that Mr. not an economist. I have ascertained by " " reference to Who's Who that he was Professor
credence
Reeve
is
Wor1906,
from 1896
Engineering
to at
and
Lecturer
on
Steam
Har-
vard University in 1907. These subjects would seem to me to require an aptitude for acquiring your summum bonum, accurate knowledge. Another vast economy we will make, and that
you did not take into consideration, is to close up all the smaller and more poorly equipped plants, and do all our work in the most perfect plants that science can devise. The trusts have already begun this process for us. The Sugar Trust closed
up about
trolled a
it
con-
out of
eighty. impossible to set a limit to the econin this direction. omy possible
I believe it
impossible to prove
my
estimate ac-
thought
along the lines I have suggested will convince you that it is distinctly moderate.
Professor Hertzka of Austria some years ago " in his Laws of Social Evolution " calculated
what the (then) 22,000,000 people of Austria might do, if properly organized.
"
It takes,"
he estimates,
agricultural land,
"
56
all
Men
vs.
the
Man
Then I allowed a house agricultural products. for every family, consisting of five to be built I found that all industries, agriculture, rooms.
architecture, building, flour, sugar, coal, iron,
maneed
employed eleven hours per day, a year, to satisfy every imaginable want 300 days for 22,000,000 inhabitants.
are only 12.3 per of the population able to do work, excluding women and all persons under sixteen or over fifty
cent,
and
chemical
production,
"These 615,000
laborers
all
Should
all
men
in
the country be engaged in work, instead of 615,000, they need only to work 36.9 days every year to
produce everything needed for the support of the But should the 5,000,000 population of Austria. work all the year, say 300 days which they would probably have to do to keep the supply fresh in every department each one would only work one
hour and twenty-two and a half minutes per day. " But to engage to produce all the luxuries, in addition, would take, in round figures, 1,000,000 workers, classed and assorted as above, or only
twenty per cent, of all those able, excluding every woman, or every person under sixteen or over
fifty,
as before.
The 5,000,000
able, strong
male
members could produce everything imaginable for the whole nation of 22,000,000 in two hours and
Men
twelve minutes
year."
vs.
the
Man
57
per day,
It is nearly impossible to judge of the accuracy of such an estimate, but there are some accurate data forthcoming to show what we could do in this country. J. L. Franz has shown by figures
"
Commissioner of Labor
1899) that by using the methods actually used on the big western wheat farms in 1898, to produce the wheat (350,000,000 bushels) actually used for home consumption in 1898, would have required only the labor of 1,000,000 persons working one hour a day on every week-day of the
year.
I,
P-357-)
Work
to-day
it
is
very
natural and pardonable to hail extremely short hours of labor as the chiefest of blessings, but we
err in doing so, for, as
my good
friend,
Henry L.
in
Slobodin of
New
York, reminded
me
a letter
" the other day, those who emphasize the short hours of labor which will be necessary in future
society as a great Socialist position.
is
The modern
is
Socialist's position
considered at present a hardship and almost a calamity, in the future it will be a glad and joyous exercise of natural
is
and
functions.
The
tendencies which
now
in a
are to
58
Men
make
vs.
the
Man
is
On
tendency to
pleasures
These two
tendencies converge and will meet in the society of So that generally speaking in the the future.
future all labor will be more of a pleasure than the pleasures are now, and the pleasures of the future will be more productive than the labor is now.
From
that point of view, to discuss how short the hours of labor will be in the future is unneces-
sary."
me
to take
Socialism,
there
"
up here your
Surely you do not mean to contend that adversity and penury are favorable to the development of
scientific genius,
will
am
and that by abolishing poverty we the genesis of genius impossible ? But I comforted by the thought that, even if you
make
are right, and we are to produce no more Pasteurs in the society of the future, at any rate we shall have far less need for them than we have to-day.
When we
shall
have
definitely abolished
poverty
from the earth those medical and chemical savants who have hitherto found their chief occupation in devising means of fighting or curing diseases that
are in large part the products, direct or indirect, of poverty and the filth caused by poverty, will have leisure to devote to devising chemical
work which is done by cheap and dirty men and women. to-day
processes for performing the dirty
Men
They
chemical
stances.
vs.
the
Man
field in
59
discovering
sub-
fertile
methods
of
producing
nutritive
the abolition of poverty will compel our Pasteurs to change their occupations was strikingly brought home to his hearers by Dr. Linsly
How
Williams of the Vanderbilt Clinic in a speech he made before the delegates of the Brooklyn Central Labor Union in the Auditorium Hall of the Mu-
seum of Natural History. The occasion was Brooklyn Labor Union Day of the International I quote briefly from Tuberculosis Exhibition.
the newspaper account of his speech: " Dr. Williams began by saying that although everybody was more or less affected by the rav-
ages of tuberculosis, the working class suffered particularly, as thirty-three per cent, of the workers
died
disease.
Then,
striking the keynote of his discourse, the doctor declared that the greatest predisposing cause of the
white plague was low wages and working under He told of the unhealthful unsanitary conditions.
way
in which a great deal of the work of the world was done, and as a proof of his statements
said that while the average annual death rate per thousand from tuberculosis was two and a half for
the general public, the rate for stone-cutters was 5.4, for cigar-makers 5.3, and for printers, 4.3, with the majority of the workers in the other
On
the other
60
Men
vs.
the
Man
1.6,
hand, the death rate for doctors was farmers only i.i.
"
and for
impressive plea for cleanliness and concerted effort in the work of fighting the white plague, and also took occasion
to score
made an
those
'
superior
individuals
who
calmly assert that everybody can be clean and have ' fresh air if they want to. It is easy to tell people
to be clean/ said he,
*
but
to
work
long hours for low wages I tell you it is almost impossible to be clean and have plenty of fresh
When people are huddled together in the crowded tenements it is no easy thing to take a bath, and if one opens the windows for air, instead of real air, a volume of smoke and dirt makes one close them again. The main thing in
air.
is to get better pay for your labor so that can live in better houses and have better food you and thus be enabled to resist the attacks of the "
this fight
disease.
would
like to
you regard to this Pasteur argument of but they will have to wait for another letter, yours, as this one is already far too long. I hope you
will
when
pardon its excessive length and believe me I promise not to sin in this particular way
again.
R. R.
LA MONTE.
MY
box there went with it a pious hope that the modest reductio ad absurdum I had attempted might rescue you from your maze of fantastic statistics,
you a certain But I see now salutary distrust of statisticians. that this hope was a vain thing, and doomed to an
or, at least, that
it
might implant
in
early death, for you return to the attack with figures that are even more fantastic than those you
first salvo. Perhaps, however, have no right to dispute these figures in such an offhand manner, for I have no doubt that, at bottom, there may be a good deal of truth in them. But I am on the safe side, I believe, when I maintain that, whatever their degree of accuracy may be, you and your Socialist friends demand no proof of it, but take it on trust, and that the deductions you draw from them show a great deal more en-
discharged in your
I
You begin, for instance, by summoning to the witness stand a professor from faraway Austria, and he, in turn, starts out by announcing a discov61
62
ery.
is
Men
He
vs.
the
Man
has found, he says, that a lot of energy wasted in Austria, and that the work of that
country, which
now engages
all
might be done very well by ity few of them. Following the cuscomparatively tom of statisticians, he does not offer us the facts
of
its
inhabitants,
upon which
conclusion
truth. Given an eleven-hour work-day, he says, and 300 workdays a year, and it would be possible for 615,000 Austrians to provide all the necessities of life
itself,
he
is
very sure of
its
22,000,000 inhabitants of the empire. he reaches the conclusion that, if men lent a hand (there are just about 5,000,000
for
the
From
this
5,000,000 able-bodied men of working age in the empire), instead of but 615,000, each man would have to labor but one hour and twenty-two and a half minutes a day. All of this makes an interesting experiment in
simple arithmetic, but when you cite it, in all seriousness, as proof of your argument that, under Socialism,
the
average
workingman of America,
working but three or four hours a day, would earn $5,000 a year, you exhibit a lamentable inability to differentiate between the possible and the probable, the abstract and the actual, the conceivable and the
ponderable. Your Austrian professor discourses so glibly, not of real human beings, but of algebraic
#'s
of his
own
creation,
Men
aside, as of
vs.
the
Man
63
of the multitude of yearnings, ambitions, desires, and appetites which distinguish man from the red
and you follow him in holding them to be He draws figures on a slate and you negligible. assume they are alive. It would take a long letter to show, in detail,
ant,
how
widely your professor's elaborate syllogism from the facts of existence. I need only point out here the absurdity of supposing that it
varies
would be
possible to find 5,000,000 men who would be at once capable of doing their work efficiently, and willing to do it, day after day, even for but
an hour and a half a day, without some effort to rid themselves of the necessity for doing it at all. To make this clear, let me recall to you the strong human impulse which Friedrich Nietzsche (whom " the will to power." you despise) denominated This will to power is more than a mere emotion
every man, even and the mere fact that a man the most degraded, makes some effort to keep alive shows that he posit
or idea, for
exists in practically
sesses
it.
It
is,
which Arthur Schopenhauer, long before Nietzsche " was born, called the will to live." " " " But how does this or will to power will
to live" manifest itself?
cieties, I believe,
it
In civilized
human
so-
shows itself chiefly in a sort of constant emulation and rivalry, which, beginning
minimum of
64
muscular
Men
vs.
the
Man
effort for the maximum of food, expands, higher up, into the complex and powerful thing called ambition. That is to say, there lies, deep
man who
irresistible
deserves to
and never-
failing impulse to sell his energy and ability as The more he gets in payment, dearly as he can.
more consideration and comforts he will enjoy, and the more desirable his position will appear when compared to the condition of other men.
the
" " " will to live into will to ing Schopenhauer's for he saw clearly that the only way a power,"
man may
fort
his
is
by observing the extent of his mastery of environment which includes, as one of its prinfactors,
cipal
his
fellow-men.
a man's
No
matter
how
slight
the
degree of
victory over the work for his deto that extent the
superior of the
slaved.
It is
man who
Even
has a yearning to be, to some appreciable extent, more sacrificing than his rival on the next pillar. Even the Pope, at the very pinnacle of
human eminence, would be glad, no doubt, to exchange places with an archangel. Well, you will find, on looking into the matter,
Men
that the average
vs.
the
Man
65
workingman has before him two practicable methods for satisfying his will to power. By the first method he enters into a conspiracy
with other workingmen which has for its object an " " of the market wherein their artificial bulling
skill
is
sold.
That
raise the
market
in its quality.
By
the second method, the individual workman seeks so to improve his own skill that it shall bring more
than the average price. The second method would seem to be the more
shows that it frequently the result of lifting the man who adopts it has out of the ranks of workingmen altogether, since
attractive, for experience
man who
is
ease for permanent benefit is a man of forethought, and forethought is a quality so valuable and so
rare that
its
But as a matter of fact, comparafew workmen adopt this method of making tively secure their livelihood and safety. The vast Instead of seekmajority adopt the first method.
automatically.
their
ing to increase their efficiency, they try to force employer (who is but the spokesman or rep-
resentative of the rest of humanity) to take it for In other words, they try to do as little granted.
as they can for their wages, and to do that little with the least possible expenditure of skill and at-
tention.
66
Men
vs.
the
Man
indeed, particularly
America, is notable chiefly for his firm faith that his need for working is an intolerable evil,
which has been laid upon him by diabolical taskmasters, and which he is justified in shirking as
much
less
as possible.
It is his
energy to his work to-day than he gave to it yesterday, and he forces society to condone and even encourage
threat to cease
this effort
by a sort of permanent
working altogether. Search the whole history of trades-unionism in America, and you will find scarcely half a dozen attempts, by unions, to increase the efficiency of their members. But you will find a million attempts
to penalize society
question.
And
figures.
so, after a
long journey,
very serious
difficulty in
mathematical
brought forward his proofs and he has forgotten the objections He has shown that 5,000,000 psychological. faithful and efficient workingmen could do all the work of Austria in less than two hours a day and he has overlooked the fact that there are not 5,000,000 faithful and efficient workingmen in the
has
He
word, made the colossal mistake of assuming that, during one hour of work,
country.
has, in a
He
the
sible to
the
He
has
is
posallow-
Men
vs.
the
Man
67
He has made no allow-, drunkenness, for illness. for the fact that, in a large number of necesance sary industries, seasonal and climatic variations
make long and unavoidable
He
workingman
and holidays. He has wasted all of his fine logic upon a purely theoretical workman, who never was on land or sea. Putting the efficiency of this monster at 100,
go on
strikes
think I
am
of the real
set
workman of
down
at fifteen.
And
if this is true,
theoretical
of
one
Monte, that you actually held to any such would certainly not give over my scant
belief,
leisure
to this correspondence. As a matter of fact, you must be well aware that the traits and weaknesses
which make the workman of to-day an unwilling and inefficient laborer are ingrained characteristics of all low-caste men as plainly so, indeed, as their superstitiousness, grossness, emotional sug-
gestibility
(particularly in political matters), and fear of hell and that no social cataclysm, however appalling, will convert them at one stroke
68
into
Men
new
beings.
I
vs.
the
Man
will
That they
improve
in the
course of time,
firmly convinced, for they have improved steadily in the past, but their progress
am
toward perfect efficiency, like their progress toward perfect knowledge, will always be behind that of the classes above them. The average workingof to-day is a better man than Moses in at one respect, for he is far less superstitious, but the Pasteurs of to-day are still as far ahead
least
man
who
built
Herein you
will discern
my
first
and
last
ob-
I believe, in a word, that it jection to Socialism. overlooks certain ineradicable characteristics of the
human
animal, and certain immutable laws of the Going further, I believe that
and laws deserve to be fostered and obeyed rather than opposed, for to their influence we owe all that we have of progress. Every comfort that we have to-day was devised by some man who yearned to get more out of life
than the
unearthed by some philosopher who yearned to be honored above all other philosophers; every law
and order was written by some law-maker who yearned to see his own notion of security and order prevail over the notions of
that gives us safety
others.
ooze
Just as every micro-organism in the sea fights for that pin point of space which will
Men
give
it
vs.
the
Man
69
life
while
its
fights for that microscopic degree of superiority which gives him eminence over his fellowman better food, a better coat, more leisure,
man
greater honor, respect and love, and a more poignant and widespread feeling of something lacking
You Socialists, seeing part of gone. " materialistic conception of this dimly, talk of a and say Karl Marx invented it. But you history,"
after he
is
are wrong, for it was invented for all time on the day that the first living cells began to fight over
their
first
is
meal.
the law of the survival of the
fittest,
Such
so
it
and
stands immutable.
Socialism
is
only one of
a hundred plans for ameliorating it, and since all of the others have failed, I believe that Socialism
will fail too.
me thought the invention of the water-wheel would turn all of the mill-slaves of
you quote against
day in was wrong, for, Antiparos like all the Greeks, he was entirely ignorant of the laws which govern living organisms. Had he
leisure, lolling all
and
idleness, but
lived after Malthus, instead of thousands of years known that the water-
wheel, by making bread cheaper, would soon decrease the death-rate and increase the birth-rate
of Greece,
and that
this
increased
population,
This
70
Men
vs.
the
Man
process has been repeated over and over again ever since.
You Socialists make a somewhat similar mistake. You propose to wipe out competition, with its frank
acceptance of the law of natural selection, and to put co-operation in its place. By this plan, you life will be relieved of most of its present hazsay,
and every man in the world will enjoy perfect security, peace, and comfort. Well, supposing all this to be true, what will be the result ? First and foremost, I believe, an enormous increase in
ards,
Even admitting the possibility of population. curbing the actual birth-rate, it is apparent that the concerted efforts to put an end to the struggle
death-rate
for existence will, for a time at least, reduce the among what are now the lowest orders
is
now
a time, perhaps, things will go on serenely, for these extra people, let us assume, will all do
their share of the
For
work of
the
the world.
But soon
or
late,
take
it,
human
race will
startling discovery that the satisfaction desires is limited, not only by the finiteness of human energy, but also by the finiteness of the
That
is
to say, there
come
a time
when
the race.
And
Men
it,
vs.
the
Man
71
come with
You Socialist state will disappear. that the same impasse will be reached may say eventually with things as they are, but a moment's
and your
reflection will
all.
show you
;
that that
is
no answer at
is
I
all
am
the best
of
possible worlds
you that Socialism Whether we adopt Socialism or accept things as they are, we must come eternally upon periods of stress and storm, and during these periods the strong will prevail over the weak, and every man-
am
made law
them
will be
swept
away. This happened after the French Revolution, as you yourself point out. You seem to think that the fact constitutes a criticism of my argument, but The French Revolution, in reality it supports me.
as
when
seed back in the Middle Ages, certain citizens of France, by reason of their
its
superior intelligence and craft, began to acquire a vast power over the rest of the population. The sons of these medieval lords of the soil maintained
supremacy after them, and it was maintained by so many succeeding generations that, after awhile, it came to be regarded as a matter of
their
course.
Even
began to
degenerate, no one thought of disputing their sway. Meanwhile, they kept going downhill, and by the
72
race
Men
of
vs.
the
Man
parasites,
incompetent,
helpless
rested, not
whose
upon any
people are ever thick of wit, ever longsuffering, and ever slow to advocate a change. The aristocracy of France was so inefficient in the time
the
common
of Louis XIV that the peasants of France might have overthrown it with ease, but it took a long series of outrages and the urging of many men to make them act, and so it was not until the reign of Louis XVI that they declared open war.
Well,
foe,
their almost instantaneous conquest, at once jumped to the conclusion that there was no such thing as
that because this one had turned out aristocracy to be a hollow sham, all were shams. The im-
mediate result was the grotesque mob-rule of the few months following the murder of Louis XVI. Here was an actual experiment in Socialism, for
all
advantages of birth, wealth, and rank were swept away. Every citizen of France was the
equal of every other citizen, and each was expected to serve the state according to his particular
talents
and
training.
It Well, did this mob-rule last? Not at all! was soon found that a populace, as a populace,
could no more govern itself than a drunken man could drag himself home, or a sober man could
pull his
own
teeth.
Strong
to
Men
make laws and
vs.
the
Man
73
enforce them, to deal with matters above the comprehension of the rabble, to decide between parties and factions and in a very short while these strong men began to move toward the top, while the weak went back to their old station
aristocracy of strong men's great-grandsons, there arose a new and actual aristocracy of strong men. In the end,
underfoot.
In place of the
artificial
the strongest of
them lorded it over all France, and nearly all of Europe. Napoleon Bonaparte, under the influence of the
old order of things, tried to perpetuate his supremacy in his descendants, but here he overlooked
new idea which had come into the world. That idea was this: that an aristocracy must constantly
a
justify
its
existence.
be no
artificial
conversion of
present strength
into perpetual rights. The way must be always open for the admission of strong men from the
too,
lower orders, and the way must be always open, for the automatic expulsion of men whose
Our governmental hierarchy, here strength fails. in the United States, partially satisfies this description of a sound aristocracy. That is to say, it is
a despotism so long as
its
it
rules at
all,
but
it
must
in constantly prove the future, I am convinced, there will arise a man strong enough to hold the supreme power as long as he lives, just as Sefior Diaz seems likely to
right to rule.
Some day
do
in
Mexico
at present.
In the department of
74
Men
vs. the
Man
commercial enterprise we have plenty of such men. James J. Hill, I suppose, will be able to keep his immense power until he dies, for it is unlikely that, in the course of the few years remaining to
him, he will encounter a foe efficient enough to wrest it from him, but, for all his potency, he can
it
against the
is
gone.
peculiar
The word
system of titles and its peculiar privileges in the affairs of government. But there are aristocrats of many other sorts, and aristocracy, in itself, by
nobility
and
House of Lords. As a matter of fact, have shown that these things are evidences, not of
real aristocracy, but of that old, artificial aristocracy which, in some countries, has managed to sur-
vive
though always with lessened powers. The rank and governmental influence are by no means omnipotent. In their own
aristocrats of social
they constitute the first estate, but in some other field they may be slaves. The French Encyclopedists who spurred the
field
peasants of France on to the massacre of the old nobility did the world a service by wiping out a
it a new sham to take the place of the old one. This new sham was the theory that all men were equal before
the Lord.
Voltaire, Diderot,
called
Men
they were sincere
vs.
the
I
Man
75
cept the absurdities of Christian theology, but all the same they accepted, whether openly or tacitly, the corner-stone of that theology, which is the
man
has a soul.
Their whole
philosophy, indeed, was based upon a belief in the sacredness of that soul. Every man, they
argued, had a soul, and since every soul was of each one was as good as any other. Upon this they erected the theory of
infinite sacredness,
human
equality.
These men were bold and ingenious, but, as I have tried to show in another place, they were
vastly handicapped by their ignorance. They could scoff at Christianity all they pleased, but in the end they had to admit that they couldn't disprove it.
This was because they lived a hundred years too soon. Had they written their books after instead of before the day of Charles Darwin, they would have been free from that anthropomorphism, which, despite their great powers of ratiocinaBefore tion, constantly colored their thoughts.
Darwin
it
work gave
and
set
was only
new view of
the universe,
time, to exploring its in an orderly fashion, that it became posmysteries sible for anyone to argue of Christianity not only
first
76
that
it
Men
vs.
the
Man
also that
it
was
actu-
ally impossible.
I
this reference to
Chris-
tianity not by accident, but intentionally, and because it seems to me that, as schemes of civilization,
Christianity
cialists call
identical.
You
So-
yourselves agnostics, but you still mainfundamental tenet of Christian theology, which is the notion that all men are God's children, and equal in his sight and you still advocate
tain the
;
the primary rule of Christian ethics, which is the command that every man shall love his neighbor as
himself.
My
human
is
my
with an
ends with a
command
man
Christianity is impossible is shown by the fact that the world has never beheld a single real
Christian.
That
Even
Christ himself
that,
fell
short,
for
there
is
abundant proof
of his love for humanity in general, he had a strong and quite human dislike of the money-
Temple, and that he gave way to tried to do them injury. Like Socialism suffers from this irreconcilChristianity, able difference between its doctrines and the nature of man. Every human being comes into the world, with instincts which both Christianity and indeed, But as all moralists Socialism denounce as sinful
changers
this
in the
dislike
and
Men
vs.
the
Man
77
discover to their horror, soon or late, it is one thing to invent and denounce a sin, and quite another
thing to destroy
it.
This
very
letter
little
already very long, and so there is space left to deal with your mass of
is
statistics
regarding surplus values and other such All you manage to prove is socialistic scarecrows. this: that under our present free competition and with our
efficient
machines,
we Americans produce
a great deal more than we can use. Well, is this For my part, I think not. On to be lamented?
the contrary, it seems to me to be a good cause for congratulation, for it is indubitable proof that, in the struggle for existence, we Americans are
measurably superior to certain other races. As we forge ahead in productiveness, these other races
become more and more dependent upon us life, and in the end they will become our serfs. That is to say, practically all
will
of their energy will be devoted to earning the money we demand for the things they need You may say that this can never happen, since
tariff
in the
walls and national pride will always stand If that is your answer, I advise you to way.
go to your history books and see what becomes of national pride and tariff walls when a strong, rich nation looks about for an outlet for its over-production.
do
not, at
once and without resistance, open their gates and begin to buy, as China has but recently done, they
78
Men
vs.
the
Man
are forced to do so by the sword, and reduced, as security for their future complaisance, to the position of vassals, as has been the case in India.
it
If
showing some day Germany will conquer England, for in England the whole social fabric has been made rotten by Christian sentimentality, with its accompanying coddling of the inefficient and parasitical. Your proof that the profits of the United States Steel Corporation exceed the amount paid out as wages to its workmen is interesting, but far from You seem to regard the Steel Corportentous. as a mysterious, gigantic ogre which sucks poration the blood of the people, and does no public service As a matter of fact, it is no ogre at whatever.
super-efficiency, I venture to predict that
all,
is
Germany
is
as
but a collection of quite human persons, such you and I, and many of these persons belong to
That is to the class whose wrongs you deplore. say, a great deal of the Corporation's stock is
owned by
its employees, who are thus doubly paid for their labor first in wages and then in profits.
No
are
law prevents an employee from buying more stock. You yourself must admit that his wages
to keep him he should have a alive, consequence, surplus for investment at the end of each year. Why doesn't he buy stock with it? Well, in many but in other cases he invests his cases he does
sufficient
money
in
Men
of beer.
ident
vs.
the
Man
his
79
He
is,
in brief,
man
wrongs.
That share of
Corporation profits
which goes to the very rich men and this is the share, I have no doubt, which you regard as the worst menace to humanity is not lost to the world forever, for these rich men, like poor men, have to die in the end, and even while they live
they
commonly give
it is
willingly, In a republic,
lic
impossible to devote much pubthose large but not immediately profitable enterprises which advance culture and civilization such things, for instance, as the estab-
money
lishment of libraries and museums, the erection of monuments, the cleansing of cities, and the systematic study of the higher scientific (and particThis is because the ularly medical) problems. common people, and their elected representatives,
entirely ignorant of human history, nothing in these things but idle vanities.
being
see
Well, here
their debt to
is
rich
pay back
They know the vast value of such enterprises, and their money In this way the common people goes into them. profit by the forced taxes they must pay to men of
humanity
In this way the superior ingenuity and foresight. millions so feloniously acquired by Mr. Rockefeller
paid for the Rockefeller Institute, which squared the account by giving the world a specific for
80
Men
vs.
the
Man
It seems to me that, cerebro-spinal meningitis. before this old planet vanishes into empty air, the
value of that one specific, to the human race, will be a hundred thousand times the value of all the
securities
amass
in a lifetime.
You seem
money acquired by a
single rich man is value lost to the race in general for all time. Nothing could be more erroneous.
The
millions of
Mr. Carnegie
the public even while he lives, and a hundred years hence, perhaps, there will not be a single rich man of his blood in the world. When George Wash-
man
in the
New
absorbed into the commonalty that few Americans have ever even heard of this man.
Such
is
ward
gain,
may
must lose. Say what you will against it, you must at least admit that it has worked for human progress. And say what you will against it, you can never hope to set it aside. Wherefore, my dear La Monte, I must again
another
decline
your comrade.
courteous
invitation
to
call
you
Sincerely,
MENCKEN.
MY DEAR MENCKEN:
to receive your entertaining letand hasten to congratulate you on your complete freedom from that weakness of small minds But I regret to see that you are consistency.
I
ter,
When
Tennyson
human
Saw
wonders
would be;
fill
Saw
the heavens
of magic sails;
Pilots of the purple
twilight,
down
fill
rain'd a ghastly
dew
From
central blue;
With
the
standards
of
the
peoples
plunging
82
Till the
Men
battle-flags
vs.
the
Man
longer, and the
And
slumber,
lapt
in
There you have the sublime optimism that It was not glory of the youthful mind.
is
the
until
forty-four years later in his extreme old age that Tennyson allowed himself to be frightened by the
Malthusian bogey of over-population which so perturbs your soul, and even then he himself half suspected that the change of view was due to his fast" for," he tells us, coming dotage,
doubtless
I
thoughts, for I
am am
old,
and
think
gray
find a
gray;
After
all
we
changeless
May?
Some
When
doms and
all
for each
Men
vs.
the
Man
83
All the full-brain, half-brain races, led by Justice, Love, and Truth; All the millions one at length with
all
the
visions of
my
youth?
man
halt,
of
weaker,
lustier
body,
mind?
world, a single race, a
for
Earth
I
at last a warless
single tongue
is
not Earth as
young?
madness muzzled, every serpent
Every
tiger
passion kill'd,
Robed
in
universal
harvest
up
to either pole
she smiles,
all
her warless
all
too
narrow
who
can fancy
men?
late then.
Will
as
it
Can
it,
till
this
yon
moon?
84
Men
vs.
the
Man
But, in spite of your nightmare of over-population, and your fear that we Socialists in our " blindness will reduce the death-rate among what
are
now
what
is
now
the highest, and that this reduction will quickly swell the population of the world," you lavish the
scientists
and
make
possible just this very reduction of the death-rate " at which you stand aghast ! The work that " Pasteur did in the world," you tell us, put the
now and
Your conscience evidently forevermore." troubled you over the mildness of this praise, for in your second letter you went it one better by
Mr.
ing the world a specific for cerebro-spinal menin" It seems to me," you add, that, before gitis.
this old planet vanishes into
empty
air,
the value
of that one
specific, to the human race, will be a thousand times the value of all the securi-
Were
find
you using your influence with that Senor Diaz, who, you tell us, is one day to be our Dictator, to
Men
vs.
the
Man
85
induce him to punish with death any doctor who should give to the rabble the benefit of any of these
discoveries. But, knowing you as I do, I know that in spite of all your invective hurled at the mob you would be the first to put your hand into your
pocket to help a poor printer threatened with rabies to get to the nearest Pasteur Institute. Speaking of Pasteur reminds me of your fear
two generations of Socialism there will be no more Pasteurs. How many boys who might
that after
develop into Pasteurs ever get the chance to? By good luck the wealthy Cimabue chanced to come
little
shepherd lad, Giotto, and see the picture of a Cimabue sheep the lad had drawn on a stone. took Giotto to Florence, and Giotto's paintings
do you suppose, have drawn pictures equally good that no Cimabue chanced to see ? I still fail to understand what you meant by your startling assertion that Pasteurs would fail us. It must be that you think
still
How many
Giottos,
a bitter struggle for bare existence necessary to the development of talent or genius, or that you think
work
that will be
de-
in
the devotion of the necessary time to science. In regard to the first point, Lester F. Ward,
who
Ap-
86
Men
vs.
the
Man
" " tells us that about eleven times plied Sociology as many talented persons belong to the wealthy or
well-to-do classes as to the poor or laboring classes, although the latter are about five times as numer-
The
same degree of
class
former
extremes, of course, are very much greater, and for absolute poverty or uninterrupted labor at long hours the chance of success is necessarily zero, no matter how
to one
The
great
may
is
digence other hand, the resources of society may be enormously increased by abolishing poverty, by reducing the hours of labor, and by making
bers comfortable
tions.
all its
be the native talent or even genius. Inan effective bar to achievement. On the
memrela-
and secure
in their
economic
that society might make in Any these ends would be many times repaid by securing the actual contributions that the few really talented
sacrifice
among
would make
For
talent
is
distributed all through this great mass in the same proportions as it exists in the much smaller well-
to-do or wealthy class, and the only reason why the latter contribute more is because their economic
condition
*
affords
them
opportunity."
(Page
228.)
*This calculation of Lester Ward's is based on data taken " Gentsc des from Professor A. Odin's monumental work, See especially Vol. I. page Grands Hommes" Paris, 1895.
529-
Men
As examples of
Petrarch,
vs.
the
Man
who
87
did not
talented persons
names Tasso,
Milton,
Cervantes,
Buckle,
Dante, Chaucer,
Hegel,
Fichte,
Kant,
Bacon,
Smith, Harvey, Darwin, Hobbes, Galileo, Newton, Descartes, Byron, Shelley, Macaulay, Comte, Herbert Spencer, Gibbon, Disraeli, Robert Browning, John Ruskin, Victor Hugo, and
Adam
many
others."
In regard to the second point, an hour or two of productive labor will keep our savants in the
pink of physical condition for their intellectual labors, and their experiences of real, practical life
will
make
more
manity.
your bogey of over-population any more subI will not say posithan a phantom? tively that it is not; but I do say confidently that that bridge is so far ahead that we need not be
Is
stantial
preparing to cross
it
now.
What
reason have
for saying that this is an extremely remote danger? Compare the number of offspring a single pair of codfish are responsible for in a year with the
number
a single pair of rabbits bestow upon the earth in a like time; and then compare the rabbit from this point of view with the higher apes or the
elephants or man.
What do
you find?
Is
it
not
1 Ward takes this list from " Genius, Fame, and the Comparison of Races," by Charles H. Cooley. Annals of the Am. Acad. Pol and Soc. Science, Philadelphia. Vol. IX. May,
88
Men
vs.
the
Man
that the higher the type, the lower the rate of increase? Again compare different races and
classes
of men.
Do
If you will go to the Antipodes, where the average standard of comfort is the highest in the world, you will find a birth-rate almost as low as that of France. I well remember that Mr. Kelley, the able editor of the New Zealand Times, was as much of an alarmist on this subject as our own Roosevelt, and seldom let a day go by without an editorial warning on the subject, but his warnings were in vain, for the people were
birth-rates?
and Hungarian peasants. The historical fact, my dear Mencken, is that comfort and education decrease the birth-rate.
and education to
all.
Sun,
in a
now going on
it,
that
it
is
difficult
have so many things that I want to say to you, that I grudge every bit of space and time given to
I
Men
in
vs.
the
Man
But
I
89
must note
many passing your assumption Austrian workingmen now are drunken, lazy, and inefficient, therefore Professor Hertzka's hypothetical
that
because
5,000,000
in the future
would
suffer
from
you really think they would? for the future has the average Austrian What hope workingman now? What inducement has he to
the same vices.
Do
me my
be anything but lazy and drunken? What gives firm and unshakeable faith in his high potentialities as an efficient worker in the future, is
the very fact that he has sense and manhood enough to be discontented with the conditions under which
he works now, and his laziness, inefficiency, and drunkenness are the very best possible proofs of that discontent, so pregnant with hope for humanity.
Your statement that I despise Friedrich Nietzsche can scarcely be called ingenuous, and it pains me because I am sure you cannot be ignorant that in the International Socialist Review
for July, 1908,
ists,
11
I,
said:
I do not see how any of us can help feeling that Nietzsche, the magnificently assured prophet
of
BEYOND-MAN,
'
is
we
cannot but grieve that his ideal included a vast mass of suffering and exploited humanity, a herd '
or
rabble
'
reign in
9O
I
Men
submit that
say that
vs.
the
Man
language of
contempt.
You
we
Socialists
"
same letter you competition," and admit that Mr. Hill has so effectually wiped out " he will competition in the railway business, that
later
on
in the
How
I
are
we
which Cap-
ment that we
cannot allow to pass unchallenged your state" Socialists still advocate the primary
which
is
the
command
that
every man shall love his neighbor as himself." On the contrary we know only too well that the only practical ethics in a society based on the produc-
goods for profit are the tooth, fang, and claw ethics of the jungle. You have but strengthened the Socialist argument by showing that even
tion of
We
Christ himself could not practise the Golden Rule. know that ethics are relative and changing,
that every stage of economic development has its own code of ethics, and we are revolutionists be-
cause
we
economic foundation on which all men will practise the Golden Rule as naturally and with as little
thought of duty as they now breathe. I am sorry that I should once more have to repeat that I have never made any moral argument I against the existence of surplus-value per se.
did not represent the
"
Steel
Corporation as a
Men
vs.
the
Man
91
mysterious, gigantic ogre which sucks the blood of the people, and does no public service whatever."
did prove right up to the hilt from their own figures that after every bit of what you and Mai" " had been paid for at lock would call ability the highest market rates, the profits from owner-
But
muscle and
ship alone were far in excess of the wages for both " ability," and that this excess of proover purchasing power as represented by duction
wages made a Social Revolution inevitable. But now that you have suggested it I am entirely willing to admit that drawing profit from ownership without service rendered " sucking perfect propriety,
may
when you
tell
me
cause they are given the opportunity to become Ask those minority stock-holders in the Trust.
who were
minority stock-holders in the Erie Railroad when Jay Gould got control of it what this
Or, if that is ancient history, privilege is worth? ask those who were minority stock-holders in the
Chicago and Alton when it was captured by Harriman. If one fact stands out above another in
modern
financial history it is that stock companies are the most efficient means ever devised to trans-
and working
in the
classes
When
92
Men
vs.
the
Man
back to the community all the wealth they have drawn from it, you do not bear in mind that the great bulk of real wealth has to be reproduced " in the long It cannot be paid back every year.
run."
Its physical
nature forbids
is
intelligent
workingmen (which
saying Socialists or Revolutionists) do not ask or expect rich men to give or pay them back anything, but they are irrevocably determined to prevent rich men or any men in the future from
way of
taking from them the lion's share of the wealth that their labor produces and reproduces every
year.
What vast wealth in practice consists of are certain legal papers that give their holders the power to compel other men to work for them ; and
in the case
and the Vanderbilts and the great landlords of England this power is handed down from generation to generation, so that no sane man looks forward to the day when the head of the Rockefeller " a small-fry drugclan shall be nothing more than " unless perin a one-horse country town gist
chance that
in the
case I think I
am
no
I
I hope you will have thus far written nothing in this need have been written had you read
letter that
my
former
Men
letters
vs.
the
Man
93
more carefully. And now I would gladly enter more fruitful fields, but, alas, I cannot yet do so, for I have not yet touched upon your gracious intimation that you would refuse to give
over your scant leisure to this correspondence if you were convinced that I actually believed that " " under Socialism (by the way, Socialism is not " men will look upon an umbrella or an awning) "
work
as a pleasure,"
and that
Much as I should regret to see this correspondence cut short (and I would regret it most deeply), I am compelled to assure you that I do most
sanguinely expect
I
work
to
become
a pleasure, nay,
hold that all work that has been worth the doing has always given pleasure to the worker, and I " all do expect that the worker in the days when " shall be better than well will fear the imputation of shirking even more than most women do to-day
firm faith that
a
the imputation of unchastity. But, in spite of my work of the right kind should give
concede
normal being pleasure, I am wholly willing to " with William Morris that whatever
pleasure there
is in some work, there is certainly some pain in all work, the beast-like pain of stirring up our slumbering energies to action, the beast-like
dread of change when things are pretty well with us." And here I am going to depart from my regular custom and ask you to do a little reading
for yourself.
I
am
94
Men
vs.
the
Man
Socialist point of view on of work from reading William Mor" Useful Work versus Useless ris's Lecture on " than it is possible for me to give you in the Toil
comprehension of the
this subject
limits of a letter.
You
volume
entitled
"
Longmans, Green & Company. William Morris discriminates between "two kinds of work one good, the other bad, one not far removed from a blessing, a lightening of life; the other a mere curse, a burden to life.
"What is the difference between them, then? This: one has hope in it, the other has not. It is manly to do one kind of work, and manly also to
refuse to
do the
is
other.
"
is
What
when
it
worth doing? " It is threefold, I think hope of rest, hope of product, hope of pleasure in the work itself; and hope of these also in some abundance and of good quality; rest enough and good enough to be worth having; product worth having by one who is neither
present in
it
work, makes
us to be conscious of
a fool nor an ascetic; pleasure enough for all for it while we are at work; not a
habit, the loss of
mere
which we
shall feel as a
fidgety
man
fidgets with."
William Morris anticipated that the idea of pleasure in work would come as a shock to men like yourself, for he added:
Men
"
vs.
the
Man
95
of pleasure in the work itself, how that hope must seem to some of my readstrange Yet I think that to all livto most of them. ers
The hope
is
and that even beasts rejoice in beBut a man at lithe and swift and strong. ing which he feels will exist work, making something because he is working at it and wills it, is exercising the energies of his mind and soul as well as of his body. Memory and imagination help him
only his own thoughts, but the thoughts of the men of past ages guide his hands; and, as a part of the human race, he creates. If we work thus we shall be men, and
as he works.
Not
our days will be happy and eventful." I rejoice with you in the conquests of Science " over Nature, but I hold with Morris that Nature will not be finally conquered till our work becomes
a part of the pleasure of our lives." And I hold " if there be any work which canwith Morris that
not be
made
shortness of
its
recurrence, or by the sense of special and peculiar usefulness (and therefore honor) in the mind of
the
it
freely,
were better to
"
leave
undone."
The produce
price of it."
"
must be well
96
aware that the
the
Men
traits
vs.
the
Man
to-day an unwilling and inefficient laborer are ingrained characteristics of all low-
workman of
men."
I
caste
am aware
of
is
what
am aware
without hope, and that in what you would call high-caste men this hatred is never wholly rooted
what you would call low-caste men and centuries of discipline have made even " feel hopeless toil a habit, the loss of which they
out, but that in
centuries
as a fidgety
man
he fidgets with."
It is precisely
you describe as
"
among
low-caste
work's sake has become a true nervous disease, and the great task before us is to cure the proletariat of
its
work.
The
and Rome
in
the
days of their glory had a most healthy hatred for " I could not affirm," says Herodotus, work. " whether the Greeks derived from the Egyptians
the contempt which they have for work, because I find the same contempt established among the
Thracians,
in
the
a
Scythians,
the
Persians,
the
word, because among most barLydians; those who learn mechanical arts and even barians, their children are regarded as the meanest of
their citizens.
Men
tured
"
in
vs.
the
Man
the
*
97
Lace'
this
principle,
particularly
in his
daemonians."
Republic (Book V), "has made no shoemaker nor smith. Such occupations degrade the people who exercise Vile mercenaries, nameless wretches, who them.
are by their very condition excluded from political As for the merchants accustomed to lying rights. and deceiving, they will be allowed in the city only
as a necessary evil.
noble
The
citizen
who
shall
have
degraded himself by the commerce of the shop If he is convicted, he shall be condemned to a year in prison; the punishment shall be doubled for each repeated
shall be prosecuted for this offense.
offense."
In his
"
Economics
"
Xenophon
"
writes,
The
people give themselves up to manual labor are never promoted to public offices, and with good
reason. The greater part of them, condemned to be seated the whole day long, some even to endure the heat of the fire continually, cannot fail to be
who
changed
the
*
in
body, and
affected."
it
is
mind be
honorable thing can come out of a " What can commerce proshop? duce in the way of honor ? Everything called shop
"
asks Cicero.
What
unworthy an honorable man. Merchants can gain no profit without lying, and what is more shameful than falsehood? Again, we must regard
is
as
of those
who
98
sell their toil
Men
and
vs.
the
Man
industry, for
labor for
money
sells
There is no use in multiplying these quotations, which Paul Lafargue has collected from the classics, to show you that just those traits which
you regard as the special attributes of low-caste men were in fact the characteristic traits of highcaste men in ancient Greece and Rome, just as they are in Europe and America to-day. " " But I deny the validity of and high-caste
"
low-caste
"
recog-
men, but
men who have had a chance to live human lives, and men who have been condemned to live the
lives
of
beasts.
If
the
term
"
low-caste
can properly be applied to any human beings it is surely to those pitiable members of the upper
classes who have been so cut off from all contact with the masses of humanity that in their breasts the broad human sympathies, the sense of human fellowship and solidarity, of racial oneness, have
atrophied and died out until in their relations with all mankind outside their narrow social circles
command
of
Hard!" your master, Nietzsche, I have no doubt that you would classify the
vate soldiers in the Italian
u Be
Army
as
"
pri-
low-caste
men."
Let us judge them by their actions. Right after the Messina Earthquake the New York Sun
Men
sent
its
vs.
the
Man
to the scene,
99
and his I have
London correspondent
appeared
letter
newspaper work
ever seen)
in the issue
of January 17,
stopped for half an hour on Monday after" to watch the dramatic climax noon," he writes, of a rescue operation which had been going on for
I
1909. "
forty-eight hours.
feet
was in the ruins piled forty the principal theater in Garihigh adjoining
It
baldi street.
On
re-
sponse was heard deep down in the debris to the Is any one constant cry of the rescue parties,
there?'
solid
The
one of
six stories
had been as complete as if a rock the house had been dropped upon it from It seemed imposthe sky and then rolled away. sible that anything could remain alive beneath that
destruction
size of a
But the cry was human and fifty men set to work. They dug valiantly for hours above where the voice came. They seemed to get no nearer and night came. Searchlights were brought and the work went on. On Sunday morning the location of the sufferer
apparently solid mass of pulverized walls, blocks of granite, and a few splinters of wood. "
was
fixed
more
definitely.
They
could talk with him, and he told them he was not much hurt, there were a few inches of space
about his head, and his hands were free. He pleaded not so much for release as for drink and
ioo
food.
Men
The
if
vs.
the
Man
The
soldiers
would choke
forced a pipe
down through
prisoned
cession.
man succeeded in reaching the end of it. Beef tea and brandy were poured down in suc"
came in response was as fellow was already in the poor free light and air instead of crushed down beneath twenty feet of ruins. That additional twenty feet
gratitude that
heartfelt as if the
The
amid material impossible to excavate by ordinary methods required another thirty hours to conquer. The impalpable powder which filled every crevice of the more solid material slipped back almost as fast as it was taken out. Besides, it was necessary
to
sake.
was
just as the
rescuers
had come
in
tun-
which had been driven through the side of the excavation. And then, when safety was in sight,
the treacherous sides of the great hole began to slip, and in a few seconds the man was buried anew.
There was
The downpour
stopped for a charge cried:
in
Men
"
'
vs.
the
Man
101
Who will go in with this rope and fasten it beneath his arms underneath the dirt? It may
mean death, for if the dust comes down again it will mean suffocation for whoever goes? " I don't mind Let me go Let me go
'
' ! !
what happens
every man
"
to
me
' !
were the
cries
from almost
in the
detachment.
A noose was quickly made in a stout rope and a lithe young private went quickly into the bottom of that suffocating funnel. He dug away He with his hands around the head of the victim. found, fortunately, that a small arch had protected him from the worst of the last dust slide. In a few moments the rope was fixed and a dozen men
dragged the poor creatures into freedom." " " If those soldiers were low-caste men, then so were Jesus Christ and Saint Francis of Assisi.
It is
you cherish
but too obvious, my dear Mencken, that u what Dr. Lester F. Ward calls the
great sullen stubborn error, so universal and ingrained as to constitute a world view, that the difference between the upper and lower classes of society is due to a difference in their intellectual
something existing in the nature of things, something preordained and inherently inevitable." ("Applied Sociology," page 96.) On page 100 of the same work he tells us:
capacity,
"
The
essential fact,
however,
is
that there
is
no valid reason why not only the other partially emerged eight-tenths but the completely submerged
102
Men
vs.
the
Man
tenth should not completely emerge. They are all This does not at all imply equally capable of it.
men are equal intellectually. It only inthat intellectual inequality is common to all classes, and is as great among the members of the
that all
sists
it
is
between that
and the completely submerged tenth. Or, to state it more clearly, if the individuals who constitute the intelligent class at any time or place had been surrounded from their birth by exactly the same conditions that have surrounded the lowest stratum of society, they would inevitably have found themselves in that stratum; and if an equal number taken at random of the lowest stratum of society had been surrounded from their birth by exactly the same conditions by which the intelligent class has been surrounded, they would in fact have
constituted the intelligent class instead of the particular individuals
who happen
actually to consti-
tute
In other words, class distinctions in sociare wholly artificial, depend entirely on environety
it.
ing conditions, and are in no sense due to differences in native capacity. Differences in native
capacity exist, and are as great as they have ever
The proposition that the lower classes of sociare the intellectual equals of the upper classes," ety
will probably shock he says in another place, minds. At least it will be almost unanimously most Yet I do not hesitate to mainrejected as false.
"
Men
tain
vs.
the
Man
103
and defend
it
as
an abstract proposition."
(Page 95.) Ferdinand Lassalle long ago pointed out that the upper classes in order to defend their class privileges were obliged to oppose human progress. It is true that, here and there, there shines out like a beacon-light on the tragic pages of human history the name of a truly noble noble who rose above his petty class interests and gave his life and talents
freely to humanity; but it is but too true that the majority of the upper classes in all times have been
led, consciously
consciously,
by forward march
oppose the
for
of
humanity.
"
those
whom
you describe as
low-caste
Fortunately "
men
they
are free from this demoralizing influence, for, to " the working class is the last and quote Lassalle,
outside of
all,
munity, which sets up and can set up no further exclusive condition, either legal or actual, neither nobility
nor landed possessions nor the possession of capital, which it could make into a new privilege and force upon the arrangements of society. " We are all workingmen in so far as we have
even the will to
make
way
This working class in whose heart therefore no germ of a new privilege is contained, is for this very reason synonymous with the whole human
race.
Its interest
is
of the
IO4
Men
vs.
the
Man
whole of humanity, its freedom is the freedom of humanity itself, and its domination is the domination of
all.
"
Whoever
working
not put forth a cry that divides and separates the classes of society. On the contrary, he utters a of reconciliation, a cry which embraces the cry
cry of union in which all should join who do not wish for privileges, and the oppression of the people by privileged classes; a cry of love which, having once gone up from the heart of the people, will forever remain the true cry of the people, and
will make it still a cry of love, even when it sounds the war cry of the people." Weismann pointed out the biological reasons for
whose meaning
the sociological facts stated by Lester F. Ward in the passages I have quoted when he tried to show that acquired characteristics were not inherited,
but Weismann's theories have always been disputed, though unquestionably the majority of mod-
have inclined to agree with him. But it was left for Gregor Mendel to establish by proof almost as clear as a demonstration in Euclid
ern
scientists
that
the
characteristics,
talents,
aptitudes,
and
graces acquired by education and environment cannot be transmitted by heredity. But, as Mendel
Men
expect you markable results of
rate I shall
vs.
the
Man
monk,
105
I shall
a Christian
may
I shall certainly
prone to accept evidence and theories that tend to help their side of the argument, and I
shall
show you that this peculiarity and I shall draw some from these facts. ductions
to Socialists,
is
not confined
interesting deto
your prayerfrom the editorial columns of the esteemed Boston Tranful consideration the following excerpt
In closing permit
me
to
commend
script:
Whatever the outcome of the Socialist movement in this country, ill-considered opinions on the
subject are likely to be less frequent in the future than they have been. President Roosevelt, ac-
11
cording to an apparently well authenticated story, recently wrote a paper on Socialism, severely arraigning what he supposed to be
its
fundamental
His article was submitted for propositions. criticism to two sociologists, neither of them professed
Socialists,
as
it
versant with the literature of the subject. So adverse was their judgment regarding the Presidential
effort that
time
against the
investigate
io6
the
actual
Men
status
vs.
the
Man
Socialist
of
present-day
doc-
trine."
that you greatly admire Mr. Roosevelt for his insistent and incessant preaching
While
know
life,
you
will not
il-
Ever,
LA MONTE.
MY
DEAR LA MONTE
letter,
Your
with a
make
it
a comprehensive reply to all the propositions In this emergency I shall have to lays down.
That is to say, I shall beat the beginning and proceed, as gracefully as gin possible, to the end; maintaining, all the while, a
as catch-as-catch-can.
and dealing, from time to time, deft wallops at such of your arguments, theories, and ideas as may appear to stand in greatest need
careful look-out,
At
me
of a violent,
and by all the rules of in such cases made and provided, you evidence, also convict me. But I shall show you, I believe (and if you have ever sat in a court of justice and listened to its endless comedy, you will scarcely
need
this
and even
proof)
sense.
common
Specifically,
have
io8
Men
vs.
the
Man
been blowing both hot and cold. In one place, you point out, I maintain that a sudden and rapid increase of population, among the lower orders,
would be a menace
other place
his
ilk,
to
human
progress
and
in
some and
re-
orders, high and low. On the face of the thing, I seem to argue here, (a) that it is well to let the ape-men die; and (b) that
we should encourage
But
this
seeming,
error
my
dear
La Monte,
is
only
seeming.
your neglect of the vast difference between an increase in population in which the lowest caste makes the greatest strides, and an
lies in
Your
increase in population in which, if there is any relative advantage at all, the highest caste enjoys it.
It
if
is
an increase of the
first
sort that
would appear
the wealth in the world to-day were distributed among the loafers and incompetents. But
all
it
is
when
antitoxin,
vaccine, rule of clean living or health resort. It must be plain to you, I am sure, that the
epoch-making medical discoveries of the last halfcentury have benefited the lowest caste far less If you than they have benefited the highest caste. have never given the matter thought, just consider,
moment, the case of tuberculosis. Fifty years ago the mortality in this wide-spread disease,
for a
Men
among
all
vs.
the
Man
alike,
109
who developed
high and low, rich and poor not far from sixty per cent.
was probably
To-day,
among
in-
telligent persons of the higher castes, the mortality is not much above twenty per cent.; but among
and foreigners
is
it is still
And why ?
ment of
tuberculosis is a tedious and exceedingly expensive business, and that those patients who are poor and friendless must perforce die. This is a
fair
as
it
go very far. In place of it other answer, and it is this: that the majority of persons who succumb to preventable and curable
diseases to-day
much
their graves, not so because they are poor, as because they are
go down to
ignorant low-caste
because they are handicapped by the man's chronic and ineradicable suspi-
own city of Baltimore, on account of its wealth of hospitals and clinics, has been called the medical capital of the New World. Its hospitals
My
are open to
all,
treatment free.
It is possible for a man without a cent in his pocket to profit by the skill of the
greatest physicians
yond the
city
no
eases.
Men
ill
vs.
the
Man
Those
in
too
to
Medicines and nursing are free. move are treated and nursed
their
homes.
all
The
attentions for
which
visitors
from
parts of the country pay thousands of dollars are free to every indigent citizen. And yet the death-rate of Baltimore is higher than that of any
other city of its size in the United States. The Christian Scientists, of course, say that this
is
many
reason
in
the
fact that
among
Baltimore's
600,000 inhabitants there are 100,000 negroes and 200,000 ignorant and superstitious foreigners.
The
race.
negroes,
ill,
filthy
some frowsy quack of their own When they grow worse, they summon a black ecclesiastic and begin to pray to God.
is
The
result
among
the lowest
classes of these
semi-human savages is fully sixty thousand per annum. This is just about five per times the normal death-rate among civilized white men. or low-caste white man to blame Is the negro for his poverty and ignorance ? No more, I think, than he is to blame for his filthiness and dishonesty. He can't help being lazy and he can't help being stupid, for he is a low-caste man, and he has a
That mind is unable to grasp any Tell him, as his but the most elemental concepts. pastors tell him, that if he gives five cents to the
low-caste mind.
hell,
Men
derstand
it.
vs.
the
Man
in
plicated chains of ratiocination whereby civilized man has determined that vaccination will almost
prevent smallpox and rabies, that quinine will cure malaria, and that a long and complex treatment will arrest tuberculosis and he is as
infallibly
pitifully helpless as the
in the presence
books. think you perceive, by now, that I do not regard Pasteur and his fellow-explorers as saviours of the great masses. Their work, true enough,
I
has perceptibly alleviated the sufferings of even the lowest castes, but its chief value, by long odds, has
been to the higher castes. It is only, indeed, by reason of the despotic intimidation of these higher
castes
an intimidation,
its
it
may
be said, which
al-
ways has
nilly,
chief spring in notions of self-defense that the lower castes have been compelled, willy
to enjoy
any
benefit at all.
We
vaccinate
negroes, not because they want to be vaccinated or because we harbor a yearning to preserve their
useless lives, but because
fall
ill
we
of smallpox
in
so expose us to inconvenience,
pense.
exceptions, they are piously opto baring their arms, and regard the necesposed sity for so doing as proof positive that they are
With few
down-trodden and oppressed. Let them choose for themselves, and they would be dying of small-
ii2
Men
vs.
the
Man
dying of
pox to-day
tuberculosis.
which make
In their vain rebellion against the very things life bearable for them, they reveal the eternal philosophy of the low-caste man. He is
forever down-trodden and oppressed. He is forever opposed to a surrender of his immemorial
and inertia. some god would only lend him a hand and give him his just rights, he would be rich, happy, and care-free. And he is forever and utterly wrong.
superstitions, prejudices, swinishness,
He
is
if
am
glad you
made
necessary
all this
explana-
tion of
apparent inconsistency, for it gives me a chance to explain another matter in which you
my
to
The thing I refer probably misunderstand me. be best indicated, perhaps, by the question, may
factors determine the caste of a
what
stand Socialists are prone to assume that without your ranks subscribe to what you call the capitalistic or bourgeois theory of civilization, and I have no doubt that you regard me as one of its
advocates.
You
That
is
to say,
that I judge a man's importance by his material that I look upon all poor men success in life
as
men
men
As
all million-
aires,
and
as
of high caste.
true.
Men
to set
vs.
the
Man
113
this bour-
They admit many a relatively poor geois test. man to the highest of all castes, and they place many a very rich man in that nadir caste which
offers a
lous,
the
in
signs,
Anthony of Padua. They are as I have said, of a certain complexity, standards, and if, at times, they seem to admit one and the
same man
to both a very high caste
hunches and
and
a very
low
one, I have only to urge in their defense that human existence is a very complex and puzzling thing, and that I have no faith whatever in the socialistic
idea that
of
it will be possible, some day, to solve all riddles with one master-equation. Well, then, what virtues do I demand in the
its
man who
Briefly, I
demand
striking degree, all of those qualities, or most of them, which most obviously distinguish the average man from the average baboon. If you look into
the matter, you will find that the chief of these qualities is a sort of restless impatience with things
as they are a sort of insatiable desire to help along the evolutionary process. The man who possesses this quality is ceaselessly eager to increase and
He
has a
vast curiosity and a vast passion for solving the problems it unfolds before him. His happiness
lies
he has
made some
ii4
Men
vs.
the
Man
progress to-day in comprehending and turning to his uses those forces which menaced him yesterday.
His eye is fixed, not upon heaven, but upon earth; not upon eternity, but upon to-morrow. He enters the world infinitely superior to a mere brute, and
when he
(in
leaves
it
his superiority
may
be expressed
bad algebra) by
infinity plus x.
By
his life
and labors, the human race, or some part of it, makes some measurable progress, however small, upward from the ape.
You
provement, for change, for progress, is entirely absent in even the highest of the lower animals.
also absent, perhaps, in the very lowest types beings but here, at least, it certainly beThe most igto appear far down the scale. gins norant and miserable slave in central Asia is able,
It
is
of
human
take
it,
to formulate
some idea of
own;
is
a state of
just as the
most de-
But here we land flowing with milk and honey. begin to note a distinction which differentiates the
merely sentient man from the unmistakably higher man. The one dreams chaotic dreams, without
working out practicable plans for their realizaThe other, having efficiency as well as tion. imagination, makes the thing itself arise out of the
idea of
it.
The one
Socialism, or some other vaporous miracle-cult. The other peers through microscopes, builds great
Men
vs.
the
Man
115
And
caste
so I arrive at
my
man.
to
He
is
world
some measurable extent, that everwidening gap which separates civilized man from It is possible, you the protozoon in the sea ooze. will note, for a man to amass billions, and yet lend no hand in this progress; and it is possible, again, for a man to live in poverty, and yet set It is possible, the clock ahead a thousand years.
increases,
man
in
way
And
so, to
up, it is possible for a poor man to belong to the highest caste of men, and for a rich man to belong to the lowest; and it is possible, again,
sum
for one and the same man to belong, at different times or even at the same time, to both castes. If think this last idea an absurdity, let me cite you
John D. Rockefeller
in the
as an example.
provements interchange of commodities entitle him to a place in the front rank of those whose
lives
have made for human progress; and yet his belief, as a good Baptist, that total immersion in water is a necessary prerequisite for entry into
est caste
in the
low-
Now, what
not so
want
is
the product,
as of inborn
n6
differences.
I
Men
vs.
the
Man
ful
many
generations,
it
might
be possible to make an appreciable improvement in the stock of the American negro, for example, but I must maintain that this enterprise would be
a ridiculous waste of energy, for there
caste white stock ready to hand,
is
a high-
able that the negro stock, might be nurtured, could ever even remotely apThe educated negro of to-day is a proach it.
failure,
insuperable
diffi-
His brain but because he is a negro. for the higher forms of mental effort; his ideals, no matter how laboriously he is trained and sheltered, remain those of the clown. He is,
culties in life,
is
not
fitted
in brief, a low-caste man, to the manner born, and he will remain inert and inefficient until fifty generations of him have lived in civilization. And even then, the superior white race will be fifty generations ahead of him. I have used the negro as an example because in
marks of the low-caste man are In some of the European peculiarly conspicuous. and peasants who are now coming to America the same marks particularly in those from Russia These peasants differ as much are to be seen. from the high-caste white man as a mustang differs from a Kentucky stallion, and this difference is the
him
the inherited
Men
their
vs.
the
Man
117
forefathers'
able generations. They represent a step in the ladder of evolution below that of the civilized white
man, and no conceivable change of environment could lift them to the top en masse, in a lifetime.
Individuals of extraordinary capacity occasionally appear among them the naturalists call such ab" " and pass over autonormal individuals sports
matically and at once into
some higher caste. But can get no higher than a caste in which inthey
dividuals fully equal to them are the rule instead of the exception; and the generality of their race
made by man,
world
is
They
and every
whose
it
may
be,
It
is
this
variation
which makes progress possible, for it gives certain individuals an advantage in the struggle for existence, and these individuals tend to crowd out their weaker brothers, and to make their own heartier qualities dominant in the general racial
strain.
Among
is
existence
the lower animals the struggle for frankly a matter of dog eat dog.
it is
Among
men,
more
I
elusive,
and the
alert, curi-
ous, intelligent
man
greater advantage, perhaps, than the man of mere But whether the weapons in the physical vigor.
n8
Men
vs.
the
Man
must always be a
vanquished.
struggle be sharp teeth or efficient brains, there caste of victors and a caste of
Any
effort to
I
empty vanity
its
and
common
meanings.
But Professor
"
Ward
dissents.
He
holds that
artificial,
wholly
depend entirely upon environing conditions, and are in no sense due to differences in native capacity."
At
sight this sentence seems to be an una qualified denial of the law of natural selection thesis, I fancy, that not even a Socialist would care
first
to maintain
Ward
is
differences,
merely trying to argue that congenital while actually existing, are counter-
balanced by class privileges and vested rights. In other words, he believes that a man's place in the world is determined, not by the intelligence and
tuitous circumstances, opportunities, ings he encounters after his arrival.
man
with
may remain
until the
and degraded
end of
And
circle
man
imbecility,
may
square the
or change the
map
of the world.
This theory, as I have before indicated, is the favorite fallacy and chief solace of all degenerate " If I had a million and inefficient races of men.
Men
dollars
It
is
vs.
the
Man
it
119
as well as
I.
"
but you
know
the rest of
one of the multitude of sophistries that meet the pragmatic test of truth, for it plainly makes The man who formulates it life more bearable.
enjoys a comforting glow of relief, of conscious He has found a scapegoat virtue, of martyrdom.
to bear the
blame for
above
have us
ness
the pragmatists and supernaturalists would believe, the mere persistence and agreeable-
of an idea were proofs of its truth, this one would be perpetually and indubitably true.
cannot bring myself to accept so ingenuous a As a matter of fact, I am firmly gnosiology.
I
But
are discussing tends to become, not true, but false, in exact ratio to its persistence
we
and agreeableness.
That
is
to say, in the
case of a
man
to
in
whom
it
of the
working philosophy of
in ten million
life,
it
is
not true
times.
The
out his
efficient
man
it
his
world as he
and
to
work
own
His joy
is in effort, in
work,
in progress.
A difficulty over-
Men
vs.
the
Man
come, a riddle solved, an enemy vanquished, a fact in such things he proved, an error destroyed
meaning of life and surcease from its sorrows. But the inefficient man, unable by his own hand and brain to cope with the conditions which beset and menace him, seeks refuge, soon or late, in the notion that the world is out of joint. Sometimes he concludes, finally, that the horrors of existence are irremediable, and then he is ripe for religion, with its promises of repayment in some
finds the
At other gaseous paradise beyond the grave. times he arrives at the idea that all would be well
if there were some abysmal reconstruction of the scheme of things some new deal of the cards, with four aces pushed his way. When this madness falls upon him he gropes about for a ready guide
to the
Utopia that
it is
And
men
thus
dreamers,
and
become
single-taxers,
Christian
Scientists, Anarchists,
or Socialists.
great objections to Socialism, as a philosoare that it encourages and aggravates the feelphy, ing of martyrdom which burns in the breasts of
all such incompetents, and that it inflames them, at the same time, with the idea that their discomfort is due, not to the operation of natural laws, which
The
world by ridding it automatically and of the unfit, but to the deliberate and devilharshly Your true Socialist is ish cruelty of their betters.
benefit the
Men
vs.
the
Man
121
firmly convinced, before everything else, that his personal existence is of vast and undoubted value
and that the world, if it were not a swindling felon, would reward him handsomely
to the world,
for remaining alive. Now, since the majority of all Socialists belong to the laboring class, and get their living by join-
man
by
ing their muscle-power to the natural forces which has harnessed because of this circumstance, the general idea I have set forth is transformed,
Socialists, into the specific doctrine that the
only " That is to valuable man is the producer." truly say, the only human service which fully earns and
deserves the reward provided by the law of supply and demand, is that sort of service which results in the
sary to the actual day-to-day existence of mankind. Such a service deserves, not some definite reward,
reward that those who require it may bludgeoned into paying for it. Thus the farmer who hoes a cabbage patch, and by taking advantage of the hunger of his fellow-men, makes them pay for his cabbages, is, by the socialistic His fellow-men have philosophy, a virtuous man. less cabbages than they need and the farmer himbut
all the
be
has more than he needs. Very well, then, let them pay his price But the man who has a surplus of some other valuable thing, say shrewdness, capital, forethought, intelligence, or cunning, and demands a fair profit on the exchange from those
self
!
122
Men
less
vs.
the
Man
philosophy,
is
who have
him
this
man, by the
criminal.
You
Socialists,
my
dear
La Monte,
here over-
man worthy
of the
He wants to be
richer,
name is more
learned or
In other words, he looks, not only for yesterday. a fair equivalent, but also for a profit, in all of his
Your laboring exchanges with his fellow-men. brothers are demanding that profit to-day. They want, not only fair wages, but the whole value
of the things they produce.
selfish
weakness
afflicts
The
latter,
when they buy muscle-power, want enough to balance the money they pay for it and a profit be-
The laboring man has nothing to give exmuscle-power, and so, after he has given enough of it to balance his pay, he must give a litside.
cept
tle
more
to
make up
As
have
told you in the past, I think you greatly exaggerate the actual percentage of profit, in all such transactions; but that there always
distinctly appreciable one, If there were none at all,
I
is
a profit,
and
no
high-caste
man would engage in industrial enterprises; for no man of that sort could possibly rest content
with standing
still.
Sincerely,
MENCKEN.
swering your
is
very interesting
The
fact
that your great and good friend, Mr. Roosevelt, did not take the advice of his sociological friends
his anti-socialist manuscripts, but instead unloaded them on the Outlook, with the result that on the very day I had set apart to
and destroy
write to you I received a hurry-up call for a reply to that eminent Nietzschean, our ex-President.
And
and
now, when I should be planting potatoes peas, I must devote a few hours to your en-
lightenment, but my little encounter with Mr. Roosevelt has vastly increased my respect for you. In your three letters thus far you have not made
as
many
first
blunders as
in
the
Outlook
article alone,
shown
mind
After reading your letter there arose in my a picture of you which, had I the pencil of a Ryan Walker or a McCutcheon, I should draw
hostile
In this picture you are hotly pursued by and malevolent Socialists, and seeing no escape elsewhere you have sought rescue and shel"3
for you.
124
Men
vs.
the
Man
ter by throwing yourself into the arms of a good " old Baltimore colored mammy." Really, this pic-
ture has so captivated my imagination that I have not the heart at once to tear you from her proFor the present, I shall content tecting arms.
from the
terrible Socialists.
should never have guessed from the appearance of the Baltimore darky that he (or she) was
the Palladium of our sacred institutions. the language of Bernard Shaw,
tell."
But, in
"
This important role has, by most critics of Socialism, been forced upon that humble and useful person, the scavenger.
I have seldom," says Robert Blatchford in " Merrie England," heard an argument or read an adverse letter or speech against the claims of justice in social matters, but our friend the
"
"
Truly
Yet scavenger is a most important person. one would not suppose that the whole cosmic
scheme revolved on him as on an axis; one would not imagine him to be the keystone of European at least his appearance and his wages society would not justify such an assumption. But I begin
to believe that the fear of the scavenger is really the source and fountain head, the life and blood
and
breath
of
all
conservatism.
Good
old
His ash-pan is the bulwark of capscavenger! italism, and his besom the standard around which
Men
vs.
the
Man
125
to the you have given his job of saving society Baltimore darky. " colored man and But we shall return to the
"
brother
"
later.
At
present
last
want
to express
my
discovered what you mean by your favorite phrase, " high-caste men." It is now obvious to me that the perfect type of
gratification at
having at
your
first-caste
man
is
the
Christian
priest
or
clergyman.
You
"
is
In other words he shows primitionary process." tive animistic habits of thought by exhibiting what " I described in Socialism Positive and Nega" tive as "the tendency to give a tele(page 97)
:
ological interpretation to evolution, to attribute a meliorative trend to the cosmic process, as in Ten'
nyson's
runs.'
That this cropping out of a semi-theological habit of thought in your last letter is not a mere fortuitous phrase, but is on the contrary part and parcel of your habitual view of the universe, is
shown by your statement
"
in
your
first
letter that
your creed consists, first and last, in a firm belief in the beneficence and permanence of the evolutionary process."
126
Men
vs.
the
Man
of
Thorstein Veblen has this to say of the origin this habit of attributing ethical purposes or ef" " natural laws fects to " Along with the habits of thought peculiar to the technology of handicraft, modern science also
:
much of
the institutional
preconceptions of the era of handicraft and petty The natural laws,' with the formulation trade.
of which this early modern science is occupied, are the rules governing natural uniformities of sequence/ and they punctiliously formulate the due
'
procedure of any given cause creatively working out the achievement of a given effect, very much as the craft rules sagaciously specified the due
routine for turning out a staple article of merchant' able goods. But these natural laws of science
*
and
are also felt to have something of that integrity prescriptive moral force that belongs to the
'
principles of the system of natural rights which the era of handicraft has contributed to the insti-
'
The natural laws tutional scheme of later times. were not only held to be true to fact, but they were also felt to be right and good. They were looked upon as intrinsically meritorious and beneficent, and were held to carry a sanction of their own. This habit of uncritically imputing merit and
equity to the natural laws of science continued in force through much of the nineteenth century;
4 '
very
much
*
ciples of
natural rights
Men
'
vs.
the
Man
127
tradition long after the exigencies of experience out of which these rights sprang ceased to shape
'
men's habits of
This traditional attitude of toward the natural laws of submissive approval science has not yet been wholly lost, even among
life.
' '
whom
the scientists of the passing generation, many of ' have uncritically invested these laws with
'
a prescriptive rectitude and excellence; but so far, at least, has this animus progressed toward disuse
that it is now chiefly a matter for expatiation in the pulpit, the accredited vent for the exudation of * effete matter from the cultural organism."
You,
wholly
my
free
thought, as it is obvious you give the clergy no inconsiderable aid in their onerous task of exuding
effete
My
matter from the cultural organism. own ideal man would be a man wholly de-
voted to promoting human happiness (and mind I have said human happiness, not a hog's conception of happiness), and who would be entirely prepared, in case it should be necessary to achieve his goal, to strive manfully to modify, avert, or de-
feat
the
natural
'
results
of the
"
evolutionary
The man who feels a sort of insatiable process. " desire to help along the evolutionary process is still fast enmeshed in the bonds of and superstition,
'THORSTEIN VEBLEN. "The Evolution of the Scientific Point of View." University of California Chronicle, Vol. X, pp. 4U-4I4.
ia8
Men
vs.
the
Man
" has merely made a fetish of the evolutionary " to erect upon the altar from which he has process hurled the old gods.
If the hypotheses of
Mr.
book on Mars are correct, the " u there, had it not been evolutionary process modified and interfered with by intelligence, would
recent
brilliant
by
time have almost wholly exterminated both vegetable and animal life on that interesting planet.
this
But whether
wrong,
this
stances may arise that will make the opposing of " " the highest function the evolutionary process " of the high-caste man." But, although it would be difficult to find many
educated and intelligent men to-day outside the ranks of the clergy who could give in an unqualithe creed of your fied allegiance to your creed
"
men
of the
first
caste
"
know
well
enough
not your belief that the whole scheme of should be shaped with a view to producing things For you, inthe maximum number of clergymen.
that
it is
is
synonymous with
you really mean men of intelligence truly emancipated men, and if the increase of such men is to produce the effects you expect, you must also impute to them
men
"
and energy
man
"
of the
Men
vs.
the
Man
"
129
"
rabble ? future be terribly lonesome amid the Without insulting the good people of Baltimore, may I ask if you do not at times feel impelled to
Bernard Shaw's Eugene Marchbanks in " " That Candida and talk to yourself out loud? " is what all poets do," Marchbanks said, they talk to themselves out loud; and the world overhears them. But it's horribly lonely not to hear someone else talk sometimes." That remark pierces the fundamental weak spot in your ideal and Nietzsche's; could you realize fully your ideal to-morrow, loneliness would turn
imitate "
your
hell.
paradise
for
Supermen
into
veritable
Any
sible
ideal that does not include the closest posapproximation to economic equality suffers
from
this
same
vice.
Without economic
equality,
you may mitigate but you cannot eradicate the hell of loneliness which to-day makes discontented per" sons of you and me and hosts of others.
wholly emancipated person," says Lester F. Ward, " finds himself almost completely alone in the
world.
in
not one perhaps in a whole city which he lives with whom he can converse five
is
There
minutes, because the moment anyone begins to talk he reveals the fact that his mind is a bundle of errors,
of false conceits, of superstitions, and of prejudices that render him utterly uninteresting.
The
great majority are running off after some popular fad. Of course the most have already abro-
130
Men
vs.
the
Man
some
gated their reasoning powers entirely by accepting The few that have begun to doubt creed.
their creed are looking for another. They may think they are progressing, but their credulity is as complete as ever, and they are utterly devoid
of any knowledge by which to test the credibility of their beliefs." ("Applied Sociology," page 8 1. Boston, 1906.) And here we come back for a minute or two to " the colored man and brother." As long as you are compelled to live in the same city with some
thousands of negroes,
whom
you appear
to find
more or
it
would
If
by increased opportunities
interesting?
made more
min and
your
syphilis
they undoubtedly are, a perpetual menace to your peace and happiness, would it not be wise to make a brave and honest attempt to free
city are, as
negroes from poverty and syphilis and drunkenness? Would not Baltimore then be a
the
to
go to the
Nietzschean extreme and boldly advocate the extermination of the negro (and the Russian peasant,
whom
you place
in the
must
join the Socialists in their efforts to enable the negroes to live human lives under human conditions.
this
is
Men
preservation.
vs.
the
Man
131
self-
To demand for the negro a chance to live human life is not to assert his equality in
spects with the white race.
a truly
all re-
"
Socialism says:
Men
men.
And, in fact, although each individual is born and develops in a fashion more or less different from that of all other individuals, just as there are not in a forest two leaves identically alike, so in the whole world there are not two men in all renevertheless spects equals, the one of the other, because he is a human being, has every man, simply
a right to the existence of a man, and not of a slave or a beast of burden." ("Socialism and
"
Modern
1904.)
Science,"
pages
20,
21.
New
York,
But
as a matter of fact
negroes as a race have enjoyed so few opportunities that it is utterly unscientific to dogmatize about their potentialities. It is just as unwarranted to
it
is
to
Ward,
:
against
matter as follows
It
is
not therefore proved that intellectual inequality, which can be safely predicated of all classes in the white race, in the yellow race, or in
132
Men
vs.
the
Man
the black race, each taken by itself, cannot also be predicated of all races taken together, and it is
still
more
is
no race and no
class
of human beings who are incapable of assimilating the social achievement of mankind and of profita" bly employing the social heritage. ("Applied
Sociology," page no.) That is all that Socialism
negro, and the South will never be a desirable place of residence till that demand is granted. That is my honest belief, and I probably im-
bibed in my youth as much prejudice on the negro question as you did, for I passed three years at a Southern boarding school and at the University of
Virginia.
In closing my last letter, I promised in this to admit your charge that Socialists are prone to accept evidence and theories that tend to help their side of the argument, and to show you that this peculiarity was not confined to Socialists, and to
these
The
fact
is
that
all beliefs
by considerable bodies of people have been begotten by desires, and that these desires are the Alemotional expressions of economic interests. I would not blame you if you should be though growing weary of my frequent quotations from Lester F. Ward, I cannot refrain from quoting his
admirable exposition of
this point.
Men
"
It
vs.
the
Man
"
133
that the uni-
may
be said," he writes,
world ideas which are said to lead or rule This is very nearly the world are simply beliefs. and therefore we need to inquire specially into true, The difference between bethe nature of beliefs. lief and opinion is slight, at least in popular usage.
versal
might be defined as fixed or settled opinion, is also embraced in it a certain disregard of the evidence upon which it rests, while in
Belief
but there
opinion a certain amount of evidence is implied. Opinions admit of comparison as regards their
strength depending upon the evidence, and may be very feebly held, the weight of evidence in their
' '
favor being nearly balanced by that against them. beliefs. In these the evinot thought of. independent of all proof.
they rest?
They
Upon
the
Here we reach
It is feeling.
problem.
interest?
But what
is
World
They
are the
conditions to group as well as to individual salvait is just this element of interest that links beliefs to desires and reconciles the ideological
"
Now
and
economic
its
interpretations
of
history;
for
economics, by
mass of de-
134
sires.
Men
In this
effects.
lies
vs.
the
Man
its
the secret of
power
to pro-
duce
The
purely intellectual phenomenon, is not a force. The force lies in the desire. And here we must
be careful not to invert the terms. does not cause the desire.
nearer the truth.
The
is
belief
The
reverse
much
arising out of the nature of man and the conditions of existence. They are demands for satis-
and the sum total of the influences, ternal and external, acting upon a group or an
faction,
in-
in-
dividual, leads to the conclusion, belief, or idea that a certain proposition is true. That proposireducible to the indicative tion, though always
form, is essentially an imperative, and prompts certain actions regarded as essential to the preservation of the individual or the group. The fact that
the interests involved are sometimes transcendental
interests
tellectual
and become increasingly so with the indevelopment of the race, does not affect
all
the truth of
this.
All interest
is
essentially
terests are as completely economic as the so-called material interests. All conduct enjoined by relinot only the most primitive but also the gion
most highly developed religions aims at the satisfaction of desire, of which the avoidance of punishment is only a form, for economic considerations are always both positive and negative in this
sense.
And
if in
Men
interests
vs.
the
Man
135
predominate over the negative renders them more typically ecoones, only nomic in their character." (" Applied Sociology/'
to
this
come
pages 45;46.) This idea that religious ideals have economic roots cannot be unfamiliar to such a student of
call that
Friedrich Nietzsche as yourself. Do you not re" wonderful passage in Genealogy of " ideals are Morals " in which he tells us how
manufactured" on earth?
He
desert" and
* '
;
and
impotence which requiteth not into timorous meanness into humility,' goodness " " "
'
"
called
not-to-be-able-to-take-revenge
not-
to-will-revenge, perhaps even forgiveness." But while the idea that religious beliefs have
been moulded by economic conditions is familiar to you, you will probably be startled when I assert that this is equally true of scientific beliefs. I developed
"
crat
very inadequately in a paper on " Science and Revolution in the Social-Demothis thesis
15, 1909,
I
and after
Point
which
have already quoted in this letter) which develops the same thesis with far greater clearness
I
and
ability.
I
wrote
136
I
Men
vs.
the
Man
Modern
have no disposition to deny the essential truth of Science and the great potential benefits it has
conferred upon humanity, when I assert that the form of scientific theories has been largely determined by the
desires
of those adherents.
This general
in
his
still
his
"
Social
disposal,
was assumed by Karl Kautsky Revolution," and, with more facts at Arthur Morrow Lewis has elaborated it
position
De
"
Vries'
"
Mutation
:
"
in
his
handbook
Evolution
Social
and
Organic" (Chicago, 1908); but even since those books were written the development of scientific theory has
overwhelmingly reenforced the view that science responds to economic stimuli.
Space will not permit
me
during the
last
century
and a quarter.
When
lution
tionary conflict
with feudalism
still
and were
iconoclastic
were
in
and revolutionary
It
was
precisely
then
that
geology and
fossil
theories of science.
of
remains of animals different from any living species by assuming that from time to time in the past
great cataclysms (earthquakes and eruptions) had occurred and wiped out all living forms of life, and that
Men
fresh
at
vs.
the
Man
the
137
This theory
creations
had
filled
the vacancies.
for
the
conformation of
The same
cataclysms had
dug oceans
up mountains. Contemporary with Cuvier was Lamarck, and Lamarck proclaimed the true theory that animals had descended
piled
of people to
whom
this
doctrine
was
acceptable,
and Lamarck died disgraced, and Cuvier in the height of his glory was called upon to pronounce his eulogy, and took advantage of the opportunity to malign him.
By
were firmly seated in the saddle; the last vestige of feudalism and the restrictions of the guild system (and in England of protective tariffs) had been wiped out;
the bourgeoisie had the proletariat just where they wanted them. In a word, they had no more use for revolutionary
in their business; if changes must come, let them come a step at a time. Thus the conditions for the wide acceptance of evolutionary theories in biology and geology were ripe, so that in spite of the rage of the
theories
clergy
general
conquest of
Darwin
and
Wallace, and the uniformitarian geology of Sir Charles Lyell. So true is this that on last Fpriday
(February
12,
1909),
the
Abraham Lincoln and Charles Darwin, many of clergy who had been called upon to deliver Lincoln
tions
were unable to
restrain themselves
from adding a
word of
tribute to Charles Darwin. Darwin, like Lamarck, taught that animals had descended from ancestors unlike themselves, and that the
138
Men
vs.
the
Man
changes in animals leading to new species had been very slow and gradual. It is true that Darwin and
Lamarck differed as to the means by which these changes had been brought about, but in the particulars I have named they were at one. Yet Lamarck was dishonored, and to-day most men look upon Darwin as the greatest
this difference? genius of the nineteenth century. Economic conditions is the only possible answer.
Why
changes in the earth's surface that are always in progress, and reduced the role of cataclysms to an extremely inand he became the recognized father significant one
of
modern
geology.
much
and valuable truth; the small changes he noted are actually constantly going on, and their accumulated effects are tremendous, and before Lyell's day they had been unnoticed and neglected. But his great reputation
raised to a sacred
dogma
that
Nature makes
upon the
even
the
no
leaps."
Darwin taught
minutest
variation
that
gives
the
individual
advantage in the struggle for existence, and that the fixing and accumulation of these infinitesimal variations in time brings about the introducslightest imaginable
tion of
new
species.
At
was pursuing
his researches,
in Briinn, Austria,
being experimentally worked out in a monastery garden by a monk who had previously studied
This monk was Gregor science in Vienna. Mendel, the discoverer and formulator of the laws of His studies have enabled us to predict matheheredity.
natural
Men
in
vs.
the
Man
his
139
advantage to the individual in whom no more likely to appear again in his progeny than they were in the progeny of less favored individuals. The
in the
remarkable results of Mendel's studies were published " Proceedings of the Natural History Society of
"
in
of Darwin's famous
1865, just six years after the publication " Origin of Species." It is only fair to note that, so far as we know, Darwin never knew
Briinn
that there
was
no market for the discovery that the raw material for work upon must consist of " leaps " or, in other words, of much more marked and considerable variations than Darwin and Wallace had worked so hard to prove the adequacy of. And the fact is that Mendel's remarkable paper was forgotten and buried, and was not exhumed and resurrected until the dawn of the twentieth century by some earnest scientific workers at the Uninatural selection to
versity of
Cambridge. had happened in the meantime to bring about a readiness in the minds of large bodies of intelligent men and women to accept cataclysmic theories in the
What
natural sciences?
the
De-
Economic conditions had created an army of 30,000,000 or 40,000,000 earnest men and women steadfastly striving for revolution, and among them were to be numbered the cream of the intellectuals of both " " Here was the demand for cataclysmic hemispheres.
140
theories,
Men
science
is
vs.
the
Man
century
supply
and with the closing decade of the nineteenth " began to furnish the supply." This
now
increasing
so
rapidly
is
that
the
task
of
new
theories
bewildering, and
this,
the
decade of the twentieth century, our most advanced scientists will be teaching that nature makes nothing
but leaps, that
lutions.
all
development
is
by cataclysms or revo-
At
all events,
we
charge of being unscientific will not much longer be hurled at the revolutionists in the Socialist ranks. In the
second decade of the twentieth century we may expect to see the opportunists and reformers using their utmost
ingenuity to answer the very charge they have so often hurled at our heads.
Toward the close of the nineteenth century a Dutch botanist, Hugo De Vries, noticed some new varieties of evening primroses in his garden near Amsterdam. They came from some self-sown plants of the common American " In the test condition of De Vries' own Lamarckiana. Mr. Lewis tells us, " in an experiment covering garden,"
thirteen
years,
he observed over
fifty
thousand of the
Lamarckiana spread over eight generations, and of these eight hundred were mutations divided among seven new elementary species. These mutations when self-fertilized,
or fertilized from plants like themselves, bred true to themselves, thus answering the test of a real species.
De
field
from which
his original
forms were taken, and saw that similar mutations occurred there, so that they were not in any way due to cultivation."
That was
century
to
the
cataclysmic
De
Vries
held
that
Men
Darwin admitted
vs.
the
Man
141
which Wallace and most Darwinians have held to be the only raw material that Nature provides for natural
selection to
in this
he
is
probably correct,
fluctuations."
though
of his
it
is
life to
the leading ex" of Mendelism, in his book on that subject, Menponent " delism that where fluctuations (Cambridge, 1907), says " in reality small appear to be inherited they are probably mutations." He summarizes the case in this way: "Of the inheritance of mutations there transmission of fluctuations there
dence.
It
is
Mr. Punnett,
who
is
is
no doubt.
Of
the
therefore reasonable to
if
as the main,
Remember,
this
not the only, basis of evolution." is the extreme swing of the pendulum.
really admits that natural selection preserves some " small changes, too, but he re-christens such changes small mutations." But it would be just as fair for a revolutionist
He
to
infer
it
from
ever
this
that
revolutions, as
to infer
was
by evolution.
As
a matter of
fact,
in
neither case
is
law of biology
me
to give
See, who has been in charge of the United States Astronomical Observatory at Mare Island, near San Francisco, has made a profound study of earthquakes, and published
"
142
ical
Men
in
vs.
the
Man
He has also summarized more popular form in the September (1908) number of the Pacific Monthly. His conclusion is that all
Society" at Philadelphia.
them
that
enough
it
for
you?
Is
it
true?
do not
appears to have the indorsement of such scientists as the Swedish physicist, Arrhenius, and the
know, but
French astronomer, Camille Flammarion. At least, it seems beyond question that s^me mountains are formed in that way, so we must bid a long farewell to the old
itself equally unable to resist the cataclysmic tendency of the day. In Harper's Magazine for January, 1909, Professor Robert Kennedy
Duncan, of the University of Kansas, tells us that the nebular hypothesis of Laplace is no longer tenable,"
that
its
"
"
planetesimal hy-
"
pothesis
sity of
of Professor
Chicago.
lieve that
infinitely
our solar system has been formed, not by the slow cooling down of a vast sphere of fiery
vapor, forming one ring and then one planet after another during almost an infinity of time, but by a sudden explosion in our ancestral sun which formed all our planets To describe the at once by a single cataclysmic stroke!
Duncan
uses the
It
is
difficult to
name a branch
is
of science in
coming
maxim that "Nothing is; everything is behas become the fundamental assumption of all
Men
science.
vs.
the
Man
143
The
chemists
who have
into another in
shown us one chemical element turning a fashion to make rejoice the heart of an
Discussing this point,
shall
old-time
alchemist.
M.
Lucien
Poincare says:
"We
thing in the universe, and to admit, on the contrary, that all bodies whatever are a kind of explosive decomposing with extreme slowness." ("The New Physics,"
Appleton, 1908.) Let us be careful not to go to extremes and deny the fact and the fruitfulness of slow evolution, but let us
and
efficacy
of cataclysmic revolution!
You see, my dear Mencken, I freely admit that we Socialists believe in the theories and arguments making for Socialism because we want to believe in them, because we believe it is to our interest or to
the interest of humanity for us to believe in them. But those who oppose Socialism do so because they
believe
I
it
to their interest to
I
do
so.
have demonstrated the economic field in which such a foundation would have been least suspected that
believe
so that
think
we may
both the friends and on economic foundations, prime difference between them: the
beliefs of
144
Men
in
vs.
is
the
Man
Socialist foundation
and growing
anti-Socialist
foundation
crumbling away.
The
Machine Process is extending ever farther and deeper and making more thoroughgoing the standardization of life, and is thus ever multiplying and invigorating the desires that make for Socialism at the same time that it is sapping the
strength of the desires that stand in the way of Socialism. Unless you can point to some new force that will intervene and retard the spread of
the
influence
of the
Machine
Process,
you are
the vast
when
majority of mankind will be Socialists is not far " distant. This is the sort of an evolutionary "
process
that I and
as
regard them
"
my
have a sort of insatiable desire to help along." But though I saw plainly enough the effect of economic conditions upon scientific theory when I wrote the paper from which I have quoted so libread the illumining paper " The Evolution of the by Thorstein Veblen on " that I saw that so long Scientific Point of View
erally,
it
was not
until I
as science
was
thither by varying class interests nothing worthy of the name of science was so much as possible.
Not
have wiped
Men
is
vs.
the
Man
class,
145
science,
a broadly
human, instead of a
arise.
the
Literature too awaits the vivifying breath of " Under class civilizaSocial Revolution. " Marcus Hitch, all literature as well tion," says as all science may be called toy work; it does not
for
make
dentally. ploited by corporations primarily for profit, and all new discoveries merely broaden the field of ex-
human progress directly but only inciThe sciences and inventions are ex-
and give rise to larger corporations. and arts merely serve for the diversion of the same class; they affect the upper surface of society only and do not rise to the digploitation
The
toy literature
human productions, because they are not participated in by humanity, nor is it intended " that they should be." Faust." Chi(Goethe's
nity of really
The same point is possibly more clearly brought out by M. Alfred Odin, Professor in the University of Sofia, in his great work, Genese des grand hommes,gens de lettres frangais moderns. (Paris,
" in its not," he writes, and hence in its essence, that vague, ethereal, origin, spontaneous thing whose phantom so many historians and literary critics have been pleased to
Literature then
is
1895.) "
evoke.
ficial
of the term an
arti-
146
Men
vs.
the
Man
and has not resulted from the simple natural evomankind. It is a natural phenomenon as it faithfully reflects the inner mental workonly
lution of
It possesses nothing ings of certain social strata. national or popular. Literature can only be na-
when it springs from the very bosom of the people, when it serves to express with equal ardor
tional
the interests and the passions of the whole world. French literature does not do this. With rare
exceptions
it is
ileged so many efforts of every kind to spread it among the people, it has remained upon the whole so un-
circles.
and so foreign to the masses. Born in the atmosphere of the hotbed it cannot bear the open air. Not until, from some cause or other,
attractive
be pos-
come forth
which
become the common property of all classes of society." (Page 564.) The same story is to be told of art as of literature and science. But this letter is already overso I shall content myself by giving William long, Morris's reason why to-day we can have no true
shall
art.
"
"
slavery
lies
be-
Men
vs.
the
Man
147
Do you wish to see a great human literature blossom? Then, become a soldier of the Social
Revolution
!
you wish to see all life made beautiful by noble art? Then, become a soldier of the Social
Do
Revolution!
recruiting office
The
is
LA M.
MY
The
DEAR LA MONTE:
begin
You
your
I
letter
by
discoursing
of
scavengers, and
shall
imitate
your example.
scavenger, you point out quite accurately, is of many of the favorite bugaboo and Exhibit
the principal opponents of Socialism. They wonder who will volunteer to do the scavenging in the
Socialist
state,
and
their
wonderment
is
soon
transformed into a denial that any scavenging will be done at all. So pictured, the socialistic landHeaps of scape takes on a disagreeable aspect.
Thomas Dixon's anti-socialist novel, " ComThe comrades of his socialistic island, rades." when the time comes to choose avocations, forget More entirely the daily drudgery of the world. than half of the women want to be chorus girls,
Rev.
college professors, and wealthy widows, per cent, of the men immolate themselves
148
and ten
upon the
Men
vs.
the
Man
149
Not a hero asks an altar of national banking. on the ash-cart. Not a soul offers to look option
after the plumbing.
There
deal
is
humor As of truth.
is
by no means the most ignoble of men, and His profession never lacks willing recruits.
cial position,
is
his
so-
indeed, palpably higher than that of the prostitute, male or female, the pickpocket
or the mendicant.
The
undertaker, a scavenger
is
a respected citizen in
every American village, and even in so large a town as Philadelphia the freemen once chose an undertaker for mayor. The scavengers who have rid the Canal Zone of mosquitoes will live in history, and not many years hence their effigies will
The trained grace the public places of Colon. nurse spends half of her waking hours in scavenging, and so do the doctor, the sailor, the dairyman
all
honorable men.
The
housewife's
eternal
so the soap advertisements tell us, is dirt. I are scavengers, too you, when you apthe whisk-broom to your raiment, and I when ply I flick my cigar ashes out of the window, instead
foe,
You and
No,
there
is
but rather,
among
and so far
active
calls
no very
is
ostracism
of scavengers.
my
150
Men
vs.
the
Man
high dignitary in the Patriotic Order Sons of America, and has ten times as much political influence as I have. On election day he ceases from
his labors
to inoculating the
great masses of the plain people of whom I have the honor to be one with enthusiasm. At public
howls
gatherings of the electorate he bears a torch and like a wolf. On election day I find that he
I
and
lot
Later on, perhaps, he will has nullified mine. vote again, for he has nothing else to do all day. As for me, I must get back to my desk and finish " my article on The Republic versus Despotism." Considering all this, I agree with you that the
reverend, but fanciful Dixon, and all those other critics of Socialism who hail the scavenger as their
deliverer, are trusting themselves to a far triumphant hero.
from
But
all
willingly and
critics,
for
too, fasten
cialism
upon
My argu-
from theirs, for ment, however, see in Socialism a scheme of things that while they would annihilate him, I see in it a scheme that would elevate him to the high estate and dignity
of the gods.
if
Under our
in him, may become scavenger, the equal of an Edison or a Cyrus Field on cer-
he have ambition
Men
spects.
vs.
the
Man
151
and
in
Under
!
these infinitely
respects
In other words, Socialism is indissolubly linked with the doctrine that a man, merely by virtue of
being a man, is fitted to take a hand in the adjudication of all the world's most solemn and difficult causes.
of the
ig-
norant shall be heard as respectfully as the voice of the learned. It contends that the yearning of the hod-carrier for a high hat and a keg of beer
shall receive as
much
main-
and the devotee of an outlandish, incomprehensible creed of nonsensical text-searching, shall be the equal of the men who conquer the wildertips
It
sees
some-
trivial accident
that the negro loafer, drowsing in his wallow, was born without a tail. It fastens a transcendental " human " and conimportance upon the word " " verts it into a synonym for honest," intelligent," " " for every adjective that distinguishes wise
one caste of men from the caste below it. You may protest all you please, and qualify your meaning of
"
"
however you
please,
but the
is
if this
good
as
citi-
Men
zen
"
vs.
the
Man
in-
But am I arguing, I hear you ask, against government by the consent of the governed? Do I propose the overthrow of our democracy and the
erection
in
its
place of
monarchy or oligarchy?
considered, I
Not at all. All things convinced, as you are, that the republican form of government in vogue in the United States and England to-day is the best,
am
safest,
in the
world.
and most efficient government ever set up But its comparative safety and efnot in the eternal truth of the some-
ficiency lie,
what
florid strophes of the Declaration of Independence, but in the fact that those strophes must ever remain mere poetry. That is to say, its practice is beneficent
because
a year
its
theory
possible.
Once
we
that
all
men
are free
and
equal.
the twelvemonth
we
ing that they are not. It is lucky for civilization that democracy must ever remain a phantasm, to entertain and hearten
the lowly like the hope of heaven, but to fall short If it were actually poseternally of realization.
every citizen an equal voice in the of the world if it were practicable to management provide machinery whereby the collective will of
sible to give
made
effective
Men
the democratic ideal
surdity in six
vs.
the
Man
153
would reduce itself to an abThere would be an end Emotion would take the place to all progress. It would be impossible to achieve of reason. The mind of the coherent governmental policies. as a government, would be the mind government,
months.
of the average citizen of the nether majority a mind necessarily incapable of grasping the complex
concepts
it
formulated
by
the
progressive
more would be adopted and put into execueagerly tion. The more unreasoning the prejudice, the more desperately it would be cherished and the longer it would survive. An example may make this somewhat more clear. You are familiar, I suppose, with the enormous
minority.
childish the idea the
The more
value of the
work done by
It
it
ment of Agriculture.
tional wealth,
the national Departhas multiplied our nahas reduced the labor of our
leisure,
and
it
has
And yet, greatly elevated our standards of living. as you know, its efforts were ridiculed and opposed
by nine-tenths of the farmers in the United States when it began, and even to-day the majority of them look upon it as their officious enemy. But a few months ago, when experts went through
Maryland showing the peasants how to increase the yield of their cornfields, a howl of objurgation
154
Men
vs.
the
Man
Department of Agriculture had been referred to a universal manhood plebiscite, and that all the votes had been counted fairly. Do you believe that the
farmers of the country, with their seven-tenths
majority,
would have said aye? I think not. And supposing the Department established, do you believe that a referendum would have supported it
in
its
infinitely useful,
obnoxious,
work?
it
is
denaturized
or even upon the major issues of general policy. Theoretically, true enough, they determine the latter
actually,
it
is
always possi-
ble for the intelligent minority to drive them, buy them, or lead them by the nose. The use of brute
mob
is
recognized expedient of civilized government. President of honesty and intelligence sacrifices his
chance of re-election
in
him out on that day, but meanwhile he has the power of the State behind him, and so his plan is put through. Again, there a crisis, in some division of the State, in the comes conflict between the intelligent minority and the
lowest caste of the majority. The latter attempts " " to substitute to assert its god-given rights
Men
barbarism
for
vs.
the
Man
155
civilization.
as a foot-note to the Declaration of Independence. Marcus Brutus and the Ku Klux Klan were of a
piece.
In despotism
it
is
between the slave and his ultimate, unbearable wrong, and in republics it is despotism that saves civilization from the slave. The lesser weapons that I have mentioned are You know, as well as I, bribery and sophistry. how each is wielded, and you know, too, that each, in the long run, works as much good as harm. If it were not possible for politicians to hoodwink and bamboozle the electorate, the Secretary of
State at
Washington would
of the village grocery store. Luckily for all of the truly vital problems of government are selus,
dom left to the decision of the majority. If, by chance, they enter into a campaign, it is always possible to drag a herring across the trail, and so Their send the plain people galloping after it.
actual choosing, when it a choice between a fat
is
man and
platitude and a fallacy, tweedledum and tweedledee. One candidate proposes to curb the trusts,
and his opponent proposes to curb the trusts. There is a noisy wrangle over identities and the luckier of the two aspirants gets his chance. Once
he
is
156
Men
vs.
the
Man
mentioned, perhaps, in his canvass, but which he knows to be of importance and value. The platitudes of the platforms have served their purpose, and no one will hear of them again until the next
campaign.
Bribery, I believe, is often bating the eternal running
dala caste, than either brute force or sophistry. Certainly, it is more subtile than the former and
more honorable than the latter. The minority decides what it wants and what it can afford to pay and the majority gratefully accepts its money.
glorious State of Maryland fifty per to be cent, of the voters expect nay, demand If, by any accident, there paid for their votes. were no competitive bids on election day, it would
In
my own
In puzzle them sorely to decide how to vote. some of the counties, I am told, fully ninety per cent, accept honorariums from the party disburs-
Horrible? Not at all. Just supthat these swine actually recorded their own pose Just suppose that the thoughts in the ballot-box! honest opinions of the Eastern Shore of Maryland,
ing
officers.
white and black, were transformed into laws upon If they were, it the statute-books of the State 1
would be
man
an
ass,
house door.
And
Men
to admit
vs.
the
Man
157
it or not, propose to wipe out the just and providential disabilities which now differentiate all such vermin from their betters. You
the whining, inefficient man, with his constant cry of injustice and oppression, that he must get " the things he wants through the ballot-box. Vote " for Debs," you say to him, and you will be paid, not only your fair wage, but your employer's profit
tell
Vote for Debs, and you will be able to live $5,000 a year. Vote for Debs, and hours of labor will be cut to two a day. Vote your for Debs, and the by-laws of your trades-union will become the constitution of the Republic." Well, suppose he does it, and gets all that he now seeks. Will he be content, then, to loll conalso.
at the rate of
tentedly in his
his
new
twenty-two hours of idleness, his crayon portrait of his grandmother, his automatic piano, his
diamond
think not.
comes the economic and political equal of former employer he will proceed to enforce
his
He
His philosopher and after that, God help us! heroes will be the men who think as he thinks.
He
to
will send the intellectual giant in the next ditch to Congress. The boss of his union will aspire
the
shifters will
158
Men
picture,
vs.
the
Man
is
This
tastic.
my
dear
La Monte,
not fan-
The
Our
even after he
is
the
Rockefeller, will still view such men with suspicion if there be, indeed, any men of their sort in the
socialistic state
because
it
is
an inherent and
in-
men
to
look with suspicion upon those whose ambitions, ethics, and ideals are more complex than theirs.
The
a
rather read
in the
the world.
And
still
old cry of sorcery is still raised. the low-caste man, whenever he has the chance,
The
prefers to trust himself to a delegate from his own caste, whose yearnings are his, and whose
mental processes he can follow. Socialism can It is a matter of anatomy never change this. more than of economics. At the present time, when an election district
peopled in overwhelming majority by low-caste men, sends one of them to a state legislature, his power for evil is obscured and neutralized by two In the first place, he meets few of his felthings.
lows there, for the average low-caste electoral body
is
so corrupt that
in
its
class-feeling
is
easily
overcome
by money, and
self
felt.
corrupt himself.
practical
ac-
Men
vs.
the
Man
159
quaintance with politics in any American state, you must be well aware that the legislators who are most easily purchased are those who come from
the ranks of the
bucolic statesman,
ital,
workingmen and farmers. The when he gets to the state caplaws that
makes
his
is
own
self-interest
for sale to
demands, and after that he the highest bidder. The more im-
portant matters before the law-making body are He doesn't entirely beyond his comprehension.
understand them, and he doesn't want to underI know, indeed, of a case wherein a stand them.
large city, seeking authority from the state legislature to make improvements demanded urgently
by the public
to get that authority because it was impossible, under its charter, for it to pay certain county members for their votes.
safety,
was unable
had been time, I have no doubt, these members would have obligingly amended county the charter to make the payments legal.
If there
Socialism
will
not
convert
such simple
bar-
Despite their
$5,000
their twenty-two hours of leisure, they will still cling to their rag-time, their yellow journals, their medicated flannels, and their fear of
hell,
and
learning,
cialism,
tion.
and the bath-tub. But under Soyou say, they will have leisure for educastill
ent custom of devoting an hour a day to pinochle, they will yet devote some other hour to John Stuart
160
Men
vs.
the
Man
It
is
a beautiful
theory, but the facts, I fear, do not point to its truth. Education, considered in its broad sense, and not as a mere piling up of special knowledge,
is
in-
clination
and capacity. It is perfectly possible in the United States to-day for the average boy,
white or black, to obtain, without cost to his parents, just as much education as Herbert Spencer ever had from others from beginning to end of
his life.
In
for
all that,
to Spencer. As a matter of fact, the typical low-caste man is entirely unable to acquire that power of ordered
and independent reasoning which distinguishes the man of higher caste. You may, by dint of heroic endeavors, instil into him a parrotlike knowledge of certain elemental facts, and he may even make
a shift to be a schoolmaster himself, but he will remain a stupid and ignorant man, none the less. More likely, you will find that he is utterly un-
binomial theorem
The able to assimilate even the simplest concepts. is as far beyond his comprehen-
And
this inability
to understand the concepts formulated by others is commonly but the symptom of a more marked in-
capacity for formulating new concepts of his own. In the true sense, such a being cannot think. Within well-defined limits,
he
may
be trained, just as
Men
vs.
the
Man
161
any other sentient creature may be trained, but beyond that he cannot go. The public school can never hope to raise him It can fill him to the brim but out of his caste.
is congenitally unteachable. stop. after he has left school, he has forgotten year At twenty-one, nearly all that he learnt there.
then
it
must
He
when
cils,
him
into
its
coun-
he is laboring with pick and shovel in his predestined ditch, a glad glow in his heart and a strap around his wrist to keep off rheumatism.
are not
artificial,
my
dear
the Sudra I have been discussing is a boy whose He is from the future will rise above ditches.
lowest caste, too, but he is a variation, a mutation. He has a thirst for learning, and a capacity for it. He may be the Galileo of to-morrow, and then
again he
may
But ing a dealer in the toil of ditch-diggers. the actual toilers be whether his progress beyond
great or small, he must forever stand as a living proof that there is a caste of men higher than
a caste of men more intelligent than they, and more nearly approaching the maximum of human efficiency. His superiority owes nothing to vested rights, and nothing to special privileges.
theirs
It
is
based entirely upon the eternal biological more complex varieties of liv-
62
Men
vs.
the
Man
individuals,
tremities, produce a caste barely entitled to life and a caste far advanced upon the upward path
which the
The negro
loafer
is
There are schools opportunity and oppression. for him, and there is work for him, and he disdains both. That his forty-odd years of freedom have given him too little opportunity to show his mettle is a mere theory of the chair. As a matter of fact, the negro, in the mass,
seems to be
going backward. The most complimentary thing that can be said of an individual of the race today is that he is as industrious and honest a man
as his grandfather,
who was
a slave.
There are
exceptional negroes of intelligence and ability, I am well aware, just as there are miraculous Rus-
but the great In the bulk of the race is made up of inefficients. the negro runs true to type. biological phrase, There are few variations, except downward. I
sian
live in filth;
have known,
negroes in
ten have
rise
my
should say, at least five hundred time, and of all these not more than
racial level.
it,
above their
proposes to let It holds that these savages plunder civilization. should get more pay for their loafing; that they the comforts and luxuries which represent the ideals
Socialism, as I understand
caste of
human
be-
Men
ings should be
parasites.
It
vs.
the
Man
163
yearnings,
gratuitously, to these to heed and satisfy their proposes to take account of their opinions, to
handed over,
give them a
hand
in the
government of the
state,
to dignify their laziness with sounding names, to I am unable, my dear La hail them as brothers.
Monte, to subscribe
to this scheme.
am
far
from
a Southerner in prejudice and sympathies, though born on the borders of the South, but it seems to
long as we refrain, in the case of the negro loafer, from the measures of extermination we have adopted in the case of parasites further
that, so
me
amply and even ideal which excessively makes constant war upon expediency and common
the scale,
are being
faithful
to
down
we
an
ethical
sense.
And now
part of
it,
let
me
I note,
ingenuous friend, you juggle with words, for you are certainly well aware of the meaning of an-
thropomorphism, and if you are, you are certainly " the beneficence and well aware that my belief in
does not permanence of the evolutionary process make me an anthropomorphist. But I shall as"
sume that you are actually in error regarding the meaning of the word, and so expound it. Anthropomorphism, then, is a name for a theological theory which assumes that the universe is
164
Men
vs.
the
Man
managed by
tal
processes
human
phic
beings.
is
god
man.
The
is to say the anthropomoran omnipotent and omniscient merely Greeks believed that there was a whole
That
and that they spent their time on Olympus much as the Athenians spent their time in Athens carousing, drabbing, playing politics, fighting, intriguing, and indulging in all sorts of
race of such gods,
The modern soldier of the outbreaks of passion. Salvation Army believes there is only one god,
god he pictures as an enlarged and simulacrum of General William Booth gaseous as a venerable but somewhat dictatorial and revengeful old man with a white beard and a large The Salvationcorps of favorites and assistants.
this
and
god manages the world just Booth manages the Army rewarding the faithful, denouncing the traitor, and watching eternally for fidelity and treason. The other anthropomorphic sects draw pictures, more or less fantastic and incredible, of other manmade gods, and there are endless differences in detail. One holds that its god sometime enters the that he has done so in the of an actual man body Apostolic Chrispast or will do so in the future. and Mohammedanism are examples. tianity
ist
as General
own
hand.
Of
Men
Yet another
vs.
the
Man
its
165
own
in
race,
consequence.
comforting doctrine
is
taught by Judaism.
As you
morphism
attributes.
god is given essentially human not only intelligent, but also He has fits of temper, pasextremely emotional. He is bland sions, prejudices, even superstitions.
that the
is
He
and forgiving
and
It is furiously vengeful upon those he dislikes. in order to get a favor, or even comnecessary, mon justice from him, that he be put in a good
humor
by abasing one's
by mak-
ing some
emissaries,
bribing him.
mies,
He
has hordes of
who
He is, in a word, his business. an exceedingly inflammatory being, with the hot
and manage
passions, arbitrary likes and dislikes, rages of a medieval bishop.
and
violent
Now, it seems to me that the cosmic process shows no traces at all of this human emotionalism. It is, indeed, utterly unemotional, and its lack of emotion is its principal characteristic. Since the dawn of history men have been trying to read into it some notion of right and wrong some anthropoideal but they have always failed. morphic Judged by those human standards which we apply to sociological processes
the operation of the
66
Men
vs.
the
it is
Man
utterly
example
immoral and
meaningless. Try as we may, we can never show that our particular god punishes the guilty and rewards the righteous, or even that he compre-
We
it.
hends the concepts represented by these words. may assume it, but all the evidence is against
Huxley was needed to point out that the weather, for one thing, is managed, humanly speakNo ing, in an ignorant and outrageous manner. was needed to prove that the wicked Johan Bojer often triumph in the world, and the righteous often And no Joseph Conrad was needed to perish. show us that human destiny is one with the fall
of the die.
Fortunately, it is not necessary for a civilized human being of the twentieth century to believe in a man-like god. I may observe and study the
No
workings of the universe, and still make no attempt to explain them in terms of passion and emotion. It would interest me immensely to learn
the globes are kept spinning, but in view of the limits which hedge in my perceptions, I doubt that I shall ever find out. Meanwhile, however, I can
make
spin in a certain way, and that they have done so ever since the first human observers began to
study them, and from this I can deduce the not unreasonable idea that they will continue to spin in that way for a good while to come. Thus, very
simply, I
may
arrive at
my
Men
vs.
the
Man
167
nence of the cosmic process. And, going further, I can note that the spinning of these globes, however
much
it
in-
to time, has at least resulted in the gradual development of a race which seems to me to be measurably superior, in its higher
ranks, to the asexual cell from which it has sprung. And so I may come to the notion that the cosmic
Yet I is beneficent. have not touched anthropomorphism, directly or indirectly, at any place. You yourself are the anthropomorphist not I. You still hold to the ancient theological doctrine
process, considered broadly,
;
that the
it is
human
"
race
is
a race apart
that because
it is
molded
in the
image of
God
"
races.
to natural laws
superior In the
men
the
was the
credible
doctrine; but the history of all exact knowledge is the history of its gradual decay. When ad-
venturers proved, despite St. Augustine's masterly logic, that the earth was a sphere, it received a When they proved, despite Moses, telling blow.
that the earth
was but one of countless worlds, it received another. And when Darwin came, and his like, it ceased to be a living doctrine, and became a mere empty shell upon the garbage-pile of dead ideas. But you Socialists want to resurrect
it.
You
ask us
it
all
to believe
believed
despite a
68
Men
man
vs.
the
Man
its
that one
daily accretions.
so I find myself at the end of my letter many of the arguments in your last epistle unanswered. One or two brief notes must suf-
And
with
fice.
You say in one place, for example, that your " ideal man is one wholly devoted to promoting human happiness," and then proceed to explain,
with
somewhat unparliamentary innuendo, that " you mean human happiness, and not a hog's happiness." My answer here must be the " You're
another," of the small boy, for it is your scheme of things, and not mine, that considers the yearnings of the hog. the hog entirely.
My
Its
own philosophy
concern
is
disregards
and aspirations of the higher man, and with those expedients which permit him to widen the gap which separates him from the hog. But you are for the nether swine. Their desire for forty acres and a mule, for ten hours of pinochle instead of
one, for leisure to be hoggish, for a chance to plunder their betters this desire appears to you
as a holy thing. You want to strike an average between the topmost man and the hog, and to achieve a level of civilization in which intelligence and hoggishness shall be blended in equal portions. Let us have no more talk of hogs. Your argument that the individualist must suffer
agonizing loneliness demands a more extensive anFor the present, I can only swer than I can give.
Men
vs.
the
Man
169
point out that you are assuming too much when you assume that solitude is inevitably painful. The low-caste man's insatiable desire for company, for
fraternity,
for brotherhood,
is
proof of his
low caste. He has no resources within himself. Save in association with his fellows he has no means of defending himself, or amusing himself.
Even
in his
own
sight,
he
is
inconceivable save as
an undifferentiated molecule in a larger mass. So he joins fraternal orders, goes to church, and afA man of greater filiates with a political party.
complexity
is
is
in better case.
Human
it,
intercourse
it is
open
to
him when he
desires
but
not the
because he wants
The human
and he
Ward,
that
all
beliefs
are grounded
is
and emotions,
upon the
The
progress
is
and biology
the main,
to
the
fortuitous
collocation
(humanly speaking) of apparently disconnected observations and discoveries, and has nothing
whatever to do with the food supply of the
state or
the political theories of the people. The discovery of the bacillus of tuberculosis was made possible by the microscope, and not by the French Revolution. As for your argument that the present age is
"
"
catastrophic
and
that,
in consequence,
"
cata-
70
Men
vs.
the
Man
" theories are dominant in all departments clysmic of science, I am unable to offer a serious answer to
it,
because
it
seems to
me
and ridiculous. What is ment in Metchnikoff's theory of phagocytes, or in Wright's theory of opsonins ? What had political economy to do with Dr. Remsen's discovery of saccharin? And what had the war on the bourgeoisie to do with the rise of abdominal surgery?
you are joking. If you are not, you have been sadly led astray by the sound of words.
I fear
As
always,
H. L. M.
MY
for
Permit
in
interesting denunciation
is
of the herd.
The
fact
my
of what you say in your last letter is unWere our legislation to become the deniably true. crystallization of the cultural stage reached by the majority of the denizens of the Eastern Shore of Maryland, it would be well-nigh fatal to such civilization as
Much
we
have.
That
is
why we
Socialists
are so eager to raise the cultural level of, not only the Eastern Shore, but of America and the World.
also true that in a society divided into classes democracy must be tempered by bribery and corIt
is
ruption or perish. prefer to put an end to the that necessitate bribery, sophistry, and intimidation rather than to give up democracy
class-divisions
We
on account of
but from
its
evils that
its
nature,
incompleteness. racy industrial as well as political, and corruption, That is the bribery, and sophistry will disappear.
Make
our democ-
way
172
Men
vs.
the
Man
if
me your favorite and somewhat overworked javelin by branding my reasoning as that of " a low-caste man." Incidentally let me remind
you hurl at
a large majority of low-caste men in the country and that we still have the simulacrum of democracy, so that
is
it
may
yet
be ruled by that low-caste reasoning that avers that all men by virtue of their humanity ought to have
a chance to lead
human
lives.
In your last letter you conjure up a bogey and tremble before it like good Doctor Faust before
You draw a grotesque picture Mephistopheles. of the emancipated proletariat sending ditch(Do you really think ditchdiggers to Congress.
diggers would be less intelligent and honest than some of the millionaires who now adorn the Senwill aspire to the Presidency. The secretary of the scene-shifters will go to the Court of Saint
ate?) "
"The
tell
me,
James."
I feel tempted to drop into slang to express the horror with which this picture thrills my bosom, but I will refrain, and instead inquire how much
is in it? For a quarter of a century the working-class Socialists have been sending their chosen representatives to the Parliaments of Ger-
truth there
Have
men " ?
they chosen
Have
Men
term the
istics
vs.
the
Man
173
"
inherent
of all low-caste men to look with suspicion those whose ambitions, ethics, and ideals are upon The facts are more complex than theirs"?
greater oraagainst you, my dear Mencken. tors or abler parliamentarians than Liebknecht,
Bebel, and Singer have ever sat in the German Vandervelde is the greatest statesman Reichstag.
No
Belgium has yet produced, and Jaures in France is probably the greatest living orator. These are the men my " low-caste " comrades have freely chosen to represent them. When the Clemenceau Cabinet
fell,
upon
whom
French Republic
call to
form
a cabinet?
Upon
that great statesman, Briand, to whom more than to any other one man is due the accomplishment
and Briand was originally sent to the French Chamber by the votes of Socialist workingmen. In the face of these facts you solemnly assure
me
"
is
not fantastic."
It
is
to
In
my
second letter
fell into
prophet, and
I preaccount all of the factors in the problem. " dicted that the present period of depression will last at least seven years unless (i) in the meantime the increase of accurate knowledge or the
* '
hard
facts
174
Men
vs.
the
Man
war breaks
out." Shortly after I had written that prediction my good friend, Gaylord Wilshire, suggested to me in conversation that the costs of
preparation for war might rise so tremendously as to be quite as adequate as actual war in caus-
This is precisely what has and we have now started on another happened, great boom. Germany's need for an outlet for her surplus production was fast driving her toward
ing business revival.
and the
result
almost incredible increase in military and more Incredible as it apespecially naval expenditure.
pears the excess of the world's military and naval expenditure in 1909 over that of 1906 is more
than equal to what Russia and Japan both spent in the year of the Russo-Japanese War. The exact
figures
article
with their sources are given in a leading in a recent issue of Wilshire' s Magazine.
I frankly confess my error an error due to inexcusable ignorance, for I ought to have been keeping track of the increase in military and naval ex-
penditure and I must now revise my prophecy. are now launched on as wild an era of inflated
We
prosperity as that of 1905 and 1906 which brought us to the collapse of 1907 and 1908.
How
It is certain that it will last I cannot tell. an industrial boom such as we are now having will lead to the introduction of much improved machin-
long
Men
uct
vs.
the
Man
175
ing of the ever growing gulf between annual prodand annual wage-account, and that this must
crisis
than
it is
that through which we recently passed. But also true that this crisis could be almost
in-
definitely postponed could we go on indefinitely constantly increasing the stimulus by ever larger
military
Here
is
the ele-
ment of
ica
much increased taxauncertainty. tion will the ruling classes of Europe and Amerpermit?
How
These taxes must be paid by the propertied classes, for the propertiless have nothing to pay them with, and in every parliament in Christendom we have recently witnessed the most frantic opposition to the increase in taxation made necessary by the new naval programmes. It appears fairly
certain that
it
will
be impossible to keep the stimulus to business at an So that it is safe to say that after adequate pitch.
a
will
disastrous panic the world has ever known, and that the middle classes will be so weakened by the
taxation necessary in the meantime that they will be even worse prepared for the next panic than
As
middle
classes
this
vital
Where
are you going to breed your Immoralists or Supermen after the middle class is annihilated?
176
Men
vs.
the
Man
They cannot come from the gutter. The conditions of working-class life are, I feel sure you will
agree, not favorable for their production.
billionaires
Our
may be immoral enough to breed Imbut unfortunately there are not enough moralists, of them to answer your purpose. Besides I suspect
Where
they have not the right brand of immorality. can you find more conventional and ortho-
dox people than John D. Rockefeller and J. Pierpont Morgan? Surely you are not sanguine enough to expect to breed Supermen from such
sires ?
is
to be a
If your Nietzschean philosophy of aristocracy workable philosophy, and you have often
assured
me
its
Socialism, then
workableness
pendent upon the preservation of the middle class, for from that class alone can you hope to breed the progenitors of your Supermen. America was formerly the paradise of the middle class.
Our
typical
American
Our
But even
requires a careful search to find here and to-day there a survival of the sturdy middle class who
made American
history.
The
and the department store have either annihilated or transformed beyond recognition that sturdy, admirable class among whom you and I grew up.
As independent producers or
Men
vs.
the
Man
177
exist to-day by exceeding the rate of exploitation of employees practised by the trust and the de-
partment store. They exist economically only by the contemptuous sufferance of their more powerful rivals. Whether they wish it or not the conditions of their economic existence compel them to be
either sycophants or vampires or more often both. This is a far cry from the men who elected Jack-
Wash-
Do
this
change
fit
in their character
less
to be the ancestors
Within a decade a new and ominous figure has loomed upon the economic horizon. He as yet has no accepted name, but I will use the name that Professor Veblen has bestowed upon him in his brilliant paper, " On the Nature of Capital." Veblen calls him
yet to come.
The
difference
Veblen's Pecuniary Magnate is this they are both owners of factories and railways, etc., and ac-
cumulate money by taking the surplus-value produced by the workers, but the Pecuniary Magnate is more than a capitalist. Besides the money that
he makes as a capitalist (a la Marx) he makes far more tremendous profits as a dealer in capital securities. What he makes as a capitalist comes
in
most
cases has
no per-
178
Men
vs.
the
Man
He
makes ceptible relation to his business ability. as much if he is in Europe or confined in an just
he makes on the market as a Pecuniary Magnate comes from the middle class (up to and including the lesser millionaires, and
asylum.
What
Magnates), and the profit depends very directly and perceptibly on his ability, or on that of his brokers and lawyers. It is not infrequently to his interest as a Pecuniary Magnate to wreck an industry from which he draws revenue as a capitalist. Such Pecuniary Magnates as we have yet had, Veblen points out, have spent their years of strength and virility in amassing sufficient capital to make them formidable as Pecuniary Magnates, and by the time the accumulation has reached the requisite dimensions, they have lost the vigor to use this vast power energetically. We have yet to
at times including his brother
amount of
this
power of the typical Pecuniary Magnate wielded by a young man of Napoleonic grasp and But Harriman has given us a hint or energy. two of what we may expect in the not distant
see the
future.
From
up cago and Alton, most of our railway stocks and bonds were fairly safe investments for middle class people. Since the Alton coup few investors have been wholly free from insomnia. Sooner or later there is bound to appear a Pe-
Men
cuniary
vs.
the
Man
179
will combine the energy and of a Roosevelt with the Napoleonic grasp brutality and Nietzschean hardness of a Harriman and the
Magnate who
sagacity of a
will
class.
Jim
Hill.
With
become epidemic
in all
ing
Men
will seek
and they
feeling of utter insecurity among the lesser All millionaires will become wholly unbearable.
intelligent
The
will
become
Socialists,
and the
peaceably that few will know till years afterward that a revolution has taken place.
This
to
is
my
creed,
my
philosophy, and
me
Napoleonic Pecuniary Magnate, and denying the socialistic denoument, your philosophy of Aristocracy seems to me not only unworkable but utterly impossible. Again I ask, where will you breed your Immoralists? But it is not merely on economics that we differ. Ethically and philosophically we are as far asunder as the poles. I hold that it is profoundly true that " No man lives unto himself alone," and that the most insane sentence that was ever penned is Max
Stirner's
I
Nothing is more to me than myself." hold that Nietzsche taught an insane philosophy, and that the most logical thing he ever did was to
"
go insane
know
is
himself. The most sacred thing we the individual, but the individual can never
180
Men
vs.
the
Man
reach a high or noble development by trampling upon his infinitely complex obligations to other individuals.
is,
all
that therein
all
is
dialectically interrelated
throughout
time
You and I are bound by countless ties space. to all the men and women, aye, and apes and monkeys and reptiles and fishes, who have lived on the earth before us, and we have just as close and inescapable ties with all those who shall follow us, and with equal firmness are we bound up with all the men and women and beasts and birds and trees and flowers now on earth. Disregard of human
and
solidarity
and
of
cosmical
inter-relation
ends
logically in insanity.
The
introduction of the
Machine Process tended and thus to cramp Individuas a Chinawoman's feet are deformed in
her shoes.
The
revolt, the
movement
to assert
individuality,
found noble expression in literature. Byron and Shelley and Goethe are full of it. But it was not carried to a false and insane extreme until the middle of the last century by Max Stirner. Nietzsche has done little more than repeat the extravagances of Stirner, though he has " clothed them in more poetic beauty in his Thus
Spake Zarathustra." Curiously enough the extreme Individualists always claim Ibsen as one of their prophets. They forget that while he en" A Doll's House " the riched the world with noblest expression of the right and even the duty
Men
vs.
the
Man
181
of the individual to be herself and live out her own " " " Little Eyolf and he also gave us The life " " to complement Doll's Lady from the Sea
House
"
work
for others.
standing of his teaching that is so wide-spread, for long before he preached his gospel of healthy In" Doll's House," he had given dividualism in " " us in Peer Gynt the deepest, truest, and most " satire upon the absurd attempt to delicious be "
oneself
to
at all costs.
He
it
led
Surely you remember how Peer with his mania " " for was greeted by Professor being himself
Begriffenfeldt, the Director of the Cairo, as the Kaiser of the lunatics.
Mad-house
at
"Kaiser?"
the professor.
says Peer.
"Of
course!" replies
PEER.
BEGRIFFENFELDT.
Oh, do not
let
any
false
At an hour such
as this.
PEER.
But
at least give
me
time
fit;
82
Men
vs.
the
Man
BEGRIFFENFELDT.
PEER.
Ay, but
It's
am
To
be, so to phrase
beside oneself.
BEGRIFFENFELDT.
Beside ?
Oneself and nothing whatever besides. go, full sail, as our very selves.
We
Each one shuts himself up in the barrel of self, In the self-fermentation he dives to the bottom, With the self-bung he seals it hermetically,
And
self.
No No
ideas.
We're our very selves, both in thought and tone, Ourselves to the spring-board's uttermost verge,
And
It
is
so, if
a Kaiser's to
clear that
The same
philosophy
Friedrich Nietzsche kings of the lunatics. You will also, no doubt, remember that
the Button-Molder
came
Men
melt
his
it
vs.
the
Man
insisted
183
upon
"
What
'
'
is it,
at bottom, this
being oneself
"
?
"To
This
be oneself
is:
to slay oneself."
is
the highest
word of wisdom of
the
greatest and sanest Individualist of modern times, and it is but a paraphrase of the words of Jesus: " For whosoever will save his life shall lose it; and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall
find it."
" " " " Peer Gynt and Little Eyolf writing " " the author of Doll's House has shown us
By
that he realized as fully as Jesus that love was the only soil upon which true and noble Individuality
could flourish.
Marx and Engels expressed the same thought with equal clearness, though with less warmth, in that classic of the Socialist movement, the Communist Manifesto, when, in describing the society of the future, they said
:
"
its
classes
and
class
antagonisms, we
shall
have an
asis
sociation, in
the condition for the free development of all." Solidarity is the condition precedent for the
184
Men
vs.
the
Man
blossoming of individuality. Jesus, Ibsen, Marx, and Engels were all Individualists, but they were
sane enough to recognize that Love is the highest and noblest expression of Individuality. Nietzsche
and Peer Gynt were blind to this simple truth and they became Princes in Bedlam. Many a Giotto to-day has no chance to develop
his individuality, because
be discovered by a Cimabue. The Socialist aim is not to provide a Cimabue for every Giotto, but
to
make
We
do not hold
that every boy and girl has the genius of a Giotto, but we do hold that every human being has an
individuality worth developing, and that stunted, dwarfed, or atrophied individuality
every
makes
The
of individuality robs
it
life
is
in the
name of
rade of
R. R.
LA M.
MY DEAR LA MONTE
as Socialism.
Saving only psychical research, no modern cult seems to be so well outfitted with college professors
Early
in this
correspondence,
set
if
remember
heels
rightly,
you began to
them
at
my
Prof. What's-His-Name, the assassin of the doctrine of inherited traits; Prof. This-and-That,
the Austrian statistician, rhapsodist and seventh son of a seventh son, half Diophantus of Alex-
Lawson, with his crusade $5,000 plowboys and a workday of one hour, twenty-two minutes and thirty seconds; and sundry other instructors of 'rah-' rah boys, first and last, specified and anonymous, whiskered and astonNow, near the ishing, cocksure and preposterous. end, comes Prof. Veblen, with his discovery of the Pecuniary Magnate, a fantastic and apparently
andria and half
for
Tom
The name
his Pecuniary
of Prof. Veblen
is
familiar; I have
And
is
no stranger,
either, for
86
Men
vs.
the
Man
ans,
excoriated
the
whose compositions I read diligently, has long him under the style or appellation of
Hell
Hound
is
of
a
Plutocracy.
Col.
Watteranbe-
son, I believe,
In medieval Venice they called him Shylock, and there he preyed upon Antonio, the merchant, who preyed, in turn, upon the
groundlings of that fair city. Shylock was not a of industry, for the Jews, in his time, captain had not yet invented ready-made clothing. He
was, on the contrary, a purely Pecuniary
a star
Magnate
upon panics, a and autopsies. Your description of the Magnate of Veblen would have fitted him exactly, as the paper fits the wall.
gambler performer at
financial inquests
in credits, a fattener
" argosies with portly sail were posted as overdue, the gods seemed to smile upon Shylock, for it was out of just such mis-
When
Antonio's
"
fortunes that his potency arose. Antonio, the honest ship-owner, who deprecated speculation and tried to put an end to it by lending money, when
he had
it,
without
interest,
was now
in
hard
case,
and had
less
to
the Jew.
ing the advantage, the Jew drove it than the complete annihilation of his victim
would content him. The lust for mere money was transcended and forgotten: the thing that moved him now was a yearning to achieve a stagHe wanted to gering and unprecedented coup.
Men
vs.
the
Man
187
wreck a great merchant, as Jay Gould, years after, was to wreck a great railroad, for thereby it would be proclaimed to all Venice that he, Shylock, was
a financial czar of czars.
He
had the
"
onic grasp
and energy of which you speak. He not only money, but also imagination. had But Shylock came a cropper, and I rather fancy
that any Pecuniary
"
Napole-
Magnate who
tries to imitate
him
in his
The
plan will also imitate him in his failure. It lies in reason for this is not far to seek.
the fact that a Pecuniary Magnate, no matter how enormous his resources and how magnificent his
immorality,
life, like
is
still
a merely mortal
man, whose
a single hair.
Cut that
you have yourself pointed the might and menace of capital, when all is out, said and done, are not so much in the capital itas an Antichrist, for, as
self
as
in
the
Shylock made
his
that discovery
flesh.
pound of
The
that he have
it,
the public opinion of that republic, ordered also Thus that it be the last entry upon his cashbook.
Shylock faced a perfectly simple situation: either he could give up his pound of flesh or he could
give up his
life.
it
He
may
Strange as
same choice
of the future
much
the
Magnate
who
88
Men
vs.
the
Man
He
cenies of Prof. Veblen's nightmare. will go on gobbling lesser millionaires until he has sent
them
back to work, and then he will proceed to inoculate the middle classes with those insomnia germs you mention, and then he will push up the price of a wheaten loaf to six cents, to eight, to ten, and the price of a can of beer to twenty-five
all
and then, one fine cents, to $i, to $10, to $100 morning, a nickel-tipped bullet, proceeding from a Mauser pistol " in the hands of some party or
parties
unknown
to this
through
his viscera,
harassed world.
Sic
semper tyrannis!
!
Men
will
You are a philosopher and melodrama and bloodshed. You are an agnostic and have none of the demonologist's flair for executions and butchery. You believe that the
sorrows of the world are to find their surcease, not in assassinations, but in laws. Like the lamented
William
J.
You proorder, you put your faith in legislation. abolish castes by an amendment to the Conpose to
stitution.
perform sanguinary major operations upon body politic, using one Act of Congress as saw, sponge, and scalpel, and another Act of Congress as anaesthetic. This sweet faith in whereases and therefore-beit-resolveds, my dear La Monte, seems to me to
the
You propose
to
in
Men
vs.
the
Man
189
divine revelations, holy shrines, and all the other In a large gimcrackery of Christian sorcery.
sense, I
convinced, legislation is always an efthan a cause, and as such, it can play but a minor role in the reformation of the world. It is inevitably a good distance behind the event,
fect rather
it is shockingly inaccurate in inthe event. Witness, for example, the terpreting Fifteenth Amendment. Witness, again, the efforts of the Liberal Party in England to overcome,
am
bills in Parliament, the operation of the law of The posnatural selection in the lower orders.
by
make
the American
negro a civilized man, though every one knows that the franchise is an important part of every civilized man's heritage. And by the same token, the state's effort to keep England's loafers and incompetents
from starving
efficient men, with palpable claims upon life and happiness, though every one knows that efficient men are principally notable for
the fact that they never starve to death. But here I go sky-hooting into the interstellar
when my
actual
show that, by merely very mortality, the ultimate Pecuniary Magnate of Prof. Veblen's dreams must ever remain more
purpose
is
to
virtue of his
phantom than
true,
I
actual
felon.
It
is
undoubtedly
his enor-
suppose, that
his epic
190
into the
Men
world
it
vs.
the
Man
in
ever find
agous
admit.
Human
existence
is
dangerous wounds.
Given certain changes in the time, place, conditions or weapons of the contest and the under-dog, in truth, may suddenly become
the upper-dog.
what I mean, and going back to Peperhaps, by dropping dogs In a struggle for money, let cuniary Magnates. us say, between a Pecuniary Magnate and the great
I
may
best explain
masses of the plain people, it is obvious that the Magnate has enormous advantages, for struggling
for
money
is
his profession,
acquired extraordinary
attained to a
skill in
monopoly of the necessary materials and apparatus. But suppose the efforts of this
shifted
jail.
Not
On
advantages
the contrary, he suffers enormous disso enormous that they place him com-
pletely at the
mercy of
his foes.
If
of them decide, for instance, that he must go to jail for the rest of his life, or that he must pay a half
or
all
common
treasury in ex-
piation of his misdeeds, he must inevitably do these things. Nothing in the world can save him then,
for once in
jail,
his stock
Men
comes as useless as
is
it
vs.
the
Man
191
his automobile, arid once his can no longer buy him liberty. gone, money Going further, it is demonstrable, I think, that if but one solitary man in all his host of foes decides
must die for the public good, he will on schedule time. And once dead,
he
no longer a Pecuniary Magnate. easy answer to all this is that the experience of the past and present proves the Magnate
is
The
to
stand
in
no such
perils.
There
is
John D.
sent to
Has he been
Has anyone
When that $32,000,000 was assessed against him did anyone save Judge Landis believe seriously that he would ever have to pay it? As a sincere friend, my dear La Monte, I warn you to steer clear of this easy anvocated killing him?
fine
it
there
criticism of Socialism, which well explain at once, lies in the fact that the vast majority of sane persons hold all of your socialistic scarecrows and bugaboos to be harmless. The
American people,
in
Rockefeller to live because, after giving a great deal of attention to him and listening to all of
the pleas for his extinction, they have decided (that is, through the medium of their regular staff of
leaders, bosses,
childish
and
192
Men
vs.
the
Man
it is
he makes an excellent profit on the oil he sells, but hard to convince a nation of traders that such
an accomplishment,
in itself, is felonious,
or even in
bad
taste.
of money to evangelistic
payer, paying policeman
and fireman to guard untaxed convents, mosques, and mission houses, will throw the first stone? No; John will never do
as a Hell Hound. He is valuable as a herring, to drag across the trail in political campaigns, and he provides a livelihood, as Immoralist, to a few dozen Juniuses of the uplift magazines, but the only permanent emotion that his life and deeds
nourish in the breast of the average healthy American is that of envy. There, but for the unfairness of
God, go
I.
sumer.
He envies John, but does not hate him. hear you say that John is not the worst that his industrial enterprise and wise spending
Do
I
in
his
money-changing
that he
Magnate type? Shame on you! The spectacle of a good Socialist defending Rockefeller, even I with reservations and apologies, is indecent.
shall save
That
is
is
not a fair specimen of the Veblenian Magnate, for his principal business is that of selling oil, and not that of raiding the
Rockefeller
stock market.
Men
vs.
the
Man
193
been prompted, indeed, chiefly by lawful, and even He is not a laudable, notions of self-defense.
speculator and his activities have seldom produced the insomnia of which you speak in the retired
shop-keepers,
widows,
and superannuated
clergymen who
Mexican mines and other rosy enterprises. But John's disqualification need not halt us. He fails to meet Prof. Veblen's specifications, but that
does not prove the Pecuniary Magnate to be a mere John Doe of the Socialist indictment. This
Magnate, you may argue, actually does exist, healthy, happy, and immoral, with his atrophied conscience, his exaggerated ego, and his sneer upon his face. One day we find him cornering the wheat market in Chicago; and next day he is bearIn legitimate coming Coppers in New York. merce and industry he has no interest whatever. His business is to sell, at famine prices, commodities
own
money
to prey, in a word,
upon fear, poverty, hunger, and sore need; to profit inhumanly by droughts, catastrophes, and acts of God. His name, in the wheat pit or on the curb, is Joe Leiter, or Curtis Jadwin, or Charlie Morse. He is as nefariously useless as an archbishop, and
as indecently unpatriotic as a politician. Is there anything to be said for this man?
Does
194
Men
vs.
the
Man
vote of thanks to him for his perilous and painful labors ? I think not. Not even the church, which
of honor for witch-burners, tyrants, and cut-throats unspeakable, for the savages who killed Bruno and drove Galileo to his
its
has room on
roll
knees
this
adventurer to
not even the church undertakes to clasp its bosom. It will take his
will even point out to but it will not
liberal,
guarantee him safe conduct beyond the Styx. a word, the whole world is this man's foe
only
In
but
when
it sits
down calmly
as moralist, to ponIt
this:
You
ist,
catch
my
meaning, of course.
sits
;
is
finds
ponder anything any serious meditation a toilsome and feverIts acts, like those
down
ish business.
of a woman, are
the product, not of ratiocination, but of emotion. and then, a gust of violent anger strikes it,
Now
and then
it is
Mag-
nate on the instant, as one stamps out a spider, and without paying any regard whatever to the laws
it
has
made
its
in the past,
belong to
victim as criminal.
appears in but one aspect; he is a villain undiluted, a wretch beyond mercy, a felon unpardonable. The that he fact that he may also bear other aspects
may
law
in
Men
may have
vs.
the
Man
195
and innumerable children him for support, that he may hold depending upon
a wife or wives
excellent views regarding total immersion, the glory of the Stars and Stripes, and the curse of rum
is forgotten. He appears merely as a outlaw, waiting to be lynched, and while captured the public anger flames, nothing is thought of but
all
of this
the rope. But the emotion of anger, luckily for all such You and I, for all our gentlemen, is short-lived.
self-indulgence and lack of piety, find it impossible to be thoroughly angry for more than the fraction
of an hour.
Salvation
thunder beneath
Ten minutes after the drum ceases to my window I cease to damn the
Army and the laws which permit it to me. Ten minutes after the first spurt of torture blood you rescue your offending razor from its exile in the ash-barrel. The public sticks to anger but not much longer. longer, By dint of heroic to remain desperately effort, it sometimes manages
enraged for a month, but that is the limit of its Before the chance assassin can summon capacity.
up his courage, or the slow-moving court can get to No. 2367, or the conservative committee is ready
to report
back
B. 6667, the public's temperature is has sunk to 75, and the reaction has set in. By that time, as a rule, the
at 98.5, its pulse
H.
Pecuniary Magnate has gone broke. His widowed mother, to save him from ignominious toil, must give him alms from her scanty millions.
196
Men
vs.
the
Man
No; the public's anger doesn't last long, and is seldom very violent while it lasts. Nine times out of ten, indeed, the Pecuniary Magnate doesn't
anger
it
at
all.
To
the farmers
whose wheat he
doubles in value, he appears in the light of an economic Messiah; and to the consumers whose bread he fills with gases well, setting aside the
and other connoisseurs of outrage among them, how do these consumers actually regard their Do they denounce him as a criminal oppressor? and demand his banishment? I think not. Do
Socialists
they call upon their representatives to make laws against him, or even to enforce the laws already
Seldom. Do they burn him in effigy, sack his palaces, guillotine his morganatic wives, I fear they and teach the young to loathe him?
existing?
do
not.
And
dear
La Monte,
the reason for their doing not, my lies in the fact that they are too
It is the king of all busy cheering the sport. It is this cornering of the wheat market. games,
made
by stroke and counter-stroke, thrust, and surprise. It has the dramatic grip of parry, a colossal melodrama, with a hero twelve feet tall, and as strong as an aurochs. It is better than a
brilliant
battle
minor war.
sport
made
This, I presume to maintain, is the customary attitude of the public toward the Pecuniary Magnate's
When
it
gives seri-
Men
vs.
the
Man
197
at-
tempts to estimate the morality, utility, mate effect of his activity, it is apt, as I
mitted, to advocate his demolition; but it is quite extraordinary, you must grant, for the public, as a public, to undertake any such elaborate meditations.
To
the
common man,
business.
sinister
reflection
is
a pain-
There
it.
is,
indeed,
about
Its natural
fruit
His
inclination
the event
and
to let
its
inner significance
go hang.
He
inquiry into causes is bound to engender a feeling of discomfort as acute as that which accompanies
as standing
clothes. It is an enterprise as tedious on one leg. What ho the band brays and the clowns are in the ring Away to the big
his
Sunday
show
Who
cares ?
But the Pecuniary Magnate what of him? Does all of this prove him harmless? Not at all.
merely proves that, taking one year with another, the great masses of the plain people choose to treat him as if he were so. When he is a MorIt
gan, gobbling trusts by the dozen, and disgorging them again, after absorbing their proteids, as super-trusts and trust-trusts, he is a hero, pure and The drama of it overcomes them; they simple. pass into a state of emotional ecstasy, as at the
apotheosis of Little
Eva or
at
Monte
Cristo's
198
blood-curdling
Men
"
vs.
the
Man
young Chicago upon the price of
is
One
"
1
If he
gambler,
sort of glorified Dr. Cook and the Sharkey, with a flavor, too, of Wright Brothers. Some hold that he will win,
hope for
a hot fight. If he wins he remains a public charIf he loses, acter until the next prodigy appears. he is mourned for a day as a David foully murdered by an army corps of Goliaths.
But what of your lesser millionaires," racked by their epidemic of insomnia ? Are they equally fascinated by the rattle and the roar, and equally forgetful of morals and balance-sheets? Experience proves that they are not. So long as the performing Magnate observes the rules made and provided, and leaves
"
public.
enough openings for reprisals, their attention is concentrated upon plans for fattening, to-morrow or next day, upon his accumulated winnings. But if he presumes to play unfairly, or to put an end to the game by laying about him with a bludgeon then his undoing comes swiftly and certainly.
Beginning as a stimulating antagonist, he ends as an outlaw, with a posse at his heels. If he is a James J. Hill, he is relieved of his Illinois Central and provided with a few gray hairs. If he is a Charlie Morse, he is railroaded to the Tombs.
I
alas
Men
him
vs.
the
Man
199
ancestor
left him a powerful thirst for dominion. Outist wardly he was a sober, home-loving, god-fearing man of strict chastity and Methodist principles, but
fires of ambition raged. The result one of the most fascinating characters imagwas inable. He had no vices and no virtues. Profan-
within the
ity
ness he
all
other persons shudder. Still the man was not avaricious, for it was not money, but power, merely
that he craved.
He
wanted
in
to
fix
prices, juggle
He
and
society.
control of a
Well, this Pecuniary Magnate began by getting commodity without which life would
be unendurable.
The
have
him.
out.
it,
and
in a short
He
tifically.
When
sociologists
him, he was ready with mazes of statistics in his defense. Meanwhile, he grew rich and eminent.
The
plain people were angry with him now and then, but taking one day with another, the emotion that he most steadily inspired in them was that of
2OO
Men
vs.
the
Man
envy. He became a Prominent Citizen. He was turned to for advice when public improvements
were planned, or a mayor was to be was himself pressed to accept high public, in a word, licked his hand.
elected.
office.
He
The
eminence, he sought to That is to say, he protake a step still higher. " " lesser millionaires of his posed to reduce the
Having achieved
this
same vassalage which the masses had so amicably. No easier said than done. accepted He bought a bank, he began promoting stock comcity to that
panies; he went into the stock market and began At the start to prey upon less astute operators. there was much ill-natured opposition, for the
were an old-fashioned lot, methods and ideals, like their actual bank accounts, were three or four generations old. But before long, the more ambitious came to the conclusion that it would be better to join the rising MagHe needed their capital nate than to fight him. and he let them in. An inspiring journey to the pink clouds of illimitable opulence was announced, and the airship was crowded to the
financiers of this city
and
their
Venerable bankers hung upon the ropes. guards. Brisk young stock-brokers begged to be taken
along,
if
only as ballast.
stowaways.
then, with the journey just begun, the gasburst and the airship came tumbling down. bag " " With what result? Did the lesser millionaires
And
Men
blame
it
vs.
the
Man
201
all
on
fate, as the
Not
at all.
fore the first gust of gas was out of their lungs, and by the time they reached the ground they were at the luckless Magnate's throat. It was all against one. They took his bank away from him, they forced some of his other enterprises into bankis ruptcy, they gave him his first gray hairs. but the melancholy shell of a Pecuniary to-day
He
Magnate. No doubt he still dreams his old dreams, and plans epoch-making coups for the He made future but no one fears him any more.
;
the epic mistake of trying to enslave his own kind. Had he confined his efforts to the plain people he might have been a billionaire by now a billionaire
snoozing comfortably in a Senate cloak-room, with a horde of press agents inventing a log-cabin biography for him and whispering aloud that he
would make an
excellent President.
I confess that I
am
hard and fast moral from all this. Does the cosmic process prove that the millionaire is necessary, or beneficent? I am sure I don't know. But it
does prove, I think, that he is inevitable at least, at our present stage of progress. He is one of the
concrete facts which inevitably arise to visualize world-ideas. He is the incarnation of the dominant concept of mankind to-day, the palpable symbol of the race's current philosophy of life. He is
as authentic, I believe, as
2O2
future.
Men
vs.
the
Man
him no more than
papal bulls
He will live and injured Luther. flourish until the ideals of humanity are changed
as changed they must be, over and over again, so long as nature knows no standing still, but only
was an eternity of bliss at Lord Jehovah. At that time the material prizes of the earth seemed paltry, and men were esteemed
in
men had other Once the ideal the right hand of the
was then a perfectly comprehensible charand men actually tried to follow him. Some left homes and families and went to live in caves and on pillars. Others sought to slay the Messiah's enemies, at home and abroad. Still others had to be content with imitating his humility in the face of outrage and persecution. At that time, the gods of to-day, had anyone sought to preach them, would have seemed groChrist
acter,
The Pecuniary Magnate, as we know him now, was then well-nigh unthinkable,
tesquely obscene.
not only because the laws of the land scourged him with dire penalties and forfeitures, but also because
the sacred laws pronounced him anathema for all If it were true that a rich man could eternity.
in that
truth
what
Men
sibly
vs.
the
Man
203
Heaven was every man's lurk in usury? and the man shut out suffered a punishment goal, which no worldly prosperity, however magnificent, The Jews, being could quite make him forget. invented excuses for themaccomplished sophists,
could not escape the penalties of the law of the land, but their rabbis found means
selves.
They
whereby, despite their usury, they might evade the These quibbles gave them plain law of heaven.
such a great advantage over the races surrounding them that they managed to survive the most earnest
efforts to
stamp them out. That advantage they have never lost. They are still a bit more firm
than the rest of us in their grip upon reality. After the age of faith, there followed an age of
endeavor, brought on by the gradual crowding of western Europe. Then came the dismilitary
commercial
all
ideas.
three ages.
He
military
conqueror,
To-day we have lost our old faith, and there more hemispheres to explore. The whole energy of the race is thus directed toward completare no
ing
its
it
pos-
sesses.
profits from the to improve its devices for exchanging comsoil, modities, to organize and systematize the business of living. The effort is one which produces Rocke-
seeks to increase
its
2O4
fellers,
Men
vs.
the
Man
Havemeyers, and Harrimans as inevitably as it produces airships, canned vegetables, teleThese latter-day barons phones, and antitoxins. are merely men who are able to do more efficiently
man the things that the race, as trying to do. They are as truly raceheroes, in twentieth century America, as Ulysses was a race-hero in military Greece, or Jesus of
than the average
a race,
is
Nazareth in dreaming, hopeful, down-trodden Judea. They visualize the aspirations of their fellow-men.
That
mankind
How long it will forever I by no means assert. remain more powerful than all other ideas I don't know, and neither do I know what other idea will
It is constantly conditioned and place. modified by lesser concepts, any or all of which
take
its
may
it. The military idea, for For a few often rises to rivalry with it. example, brief weeks in the summer of 1898, most Amer-
icans envied Dewey more than Rockefeller, and thought him a more useful and honorable citizen. Even the old religious idea of sacrifice and post mortem reward occasionally has its meager innings.
gold.
Millionaires, longing for heaven, disgorge their Whole nations, sunk into Christian bathos,
pension their doddering inefficients, and encourage the nether swine, with orphan asylum, hospital, and
almshouse, to beget copiously and riotously, to the extreme limit of sub-human capacity.
Men
vs.
the
Man
205
own private view (the child, I must admit, of a very ardent wish) is that the idea of truthseeking will one day take the place of the idea That is to say, I believe that of money-making.
My
and Behrings of the world will one loom up, in the eye of the race, as greater day heroes than the St. Pauls and Augustines, the William Conquerors and Alexanders, the Rockefellers, But that Cecil Rhodeses, Krupps, and Morgans.
the Huxleys
day
of
is
far distant.
its
dawn.
upon their daily thought is remote and infinitesimal. They still pay numbskulls to mount pulpits and preach down at them the dead fallacies of a primeval necromancy. They still insist that Friday is an unlucky
still infinitely
As yet there is scarcely a sign The name of Huxley is still as common people, as that of Duns
day, that blasphemy is a crime, that the Book of The race is yet in its Revelation is authentic. Its yearning for the truth is yet swalchildhood.
lowed up by
It
its
doing
its
best.
is, indeed, a necessary forerunner of that truth ideal I have mentioned. Before we may seek the
ultimate verities with any hope of success, we must first put our house in order. must complete our mastery of those natural forces which will help
We
us,
being enchained, just as readily as they now must solve the probdestroy us, being free. lems of food-supply, of transportation, of govern-
We
206
ment.
that
it
Men
will
vs.
the
Man
We must so organize
adapt
itself,
matically, to the vicissitudes of terrestrial life. At present, if I may be permitted a metaphor, the
body
ach,
politic suffers
from
stiff
knees, a
It
is
bad stomef-
and
a disordered mind.
it
our present
clean, red blood, flowing freely clean, red blood, hard muscles, an alert brain, and a sound digestion.
fort to give
Would
therapy ?
cure
Socialism lend a hand in this gigantic I think not. It would merely make the
difficult.
more
is
selection
selection.
aiding the man-made laws of artificial Under Socialism the unfit would surSocialism the efficient
vive.
Under
man would
H.
L.
M.
MY DEAR MENCKEN:
trituration
have been highly entertained by your vivacious of the hapless Pecuniary Magnate, I was greatly surprised that you so magthough nified his importance as to devote over six thousand words to replying to an argument that I presented in six hundred. But, before commenting briefly on your argument on this subject, will you permit me to remind
I
you that your promise in your first letter to draw, " " bit by bit, once more," your ideal picture It may be (of future society) is still unfulfilled?
that
I
"
am
definite idea of
obtuse, but certainly I have no more your ideal than I had before this
I hope that you will decorrespondence began. vote your next letter to enlightening me on this
point.
anticipate your reply that I have given no definite picture of my own ideal, by reyou minding you that the Socialist ideal has been so frequently sketched by master hands that I have felt it unnecessary and a waste of space once again
I will
draw it here. But, while it is absurd to attempt to give a detailed description of a future stage of
to
207
2o8
Men
vs.
the
Man
ideal
is
no
to be consid-
ered ultimate or
final,
point for new and indefinite progress, it is still entirely reasonable for the opponents of Socialism
to
sort of concrete picture of the sort of society Socialists expect to see succeed CapitalThe picture drawn by William Morris in ism. " News from Nowhere " seems to me so infinitely
demand some
preferable in every way to the conditions surrounding us, that I, for one, would be delighted to see it
realized to-morrow.
But, let me repeat, this is not my ultimate ideal, for I have no ultimate ideal, as I do not expect social evolution to come to a standstill till this old " world shall be, in the words of Tennyson, as dead
as
yon dead earth, the moon." Let me guard against a probable misapprehen" " sion. By reading News from Nowhere you
might not unnaturally get the idea that in my ideal society but little use would be made of machinery. On the contrary, as I have said elsewhere, I believe I bethe Machine Age to be still in its infancy.
lieve
will be so
that after the Social Revolution machinery developed that practically all the un-
attractive
will be
'done by machinery, and that the left for manual labor will all
was
Men
the expectation of
in
vs.
the
Man
209
for, writing of machinery "Signs of Change," he said: " In a true society these miracles of ingenuity would be for the first time used for minimizing
William Morris,
amount of time spent in unattractive labor, which by their means might be so reduced as to
the
be but a very light burden on each individual. All the more as these machines would most certainly
was no longer a question as to whether their improvement would pay the individual, but rather whether it would
be very
4
it
'
community." So much for my ideal; will you give me an equally definite idea of your own? Now, to return to the Pecuniary Magnate, if I have analyzed your somewhat rambling (pardon me) remarks correctly, they amount in substance to this. You do not deny that sooner or later he is
benefit the
bound
to
appear;
effects
neither
economic
that
ascribed to him.
career proves
But you do
if
his
remove him.
too devastating, assassination will This does not meet the question,
Secondly, and
somewhat
inconsistently,
you say
he does not alarm the people, but that on the contrary they admire and envy him, and are consebe true, and
If this quently unlikely to interfere with him. I will not dispute it here, he will have
2io
class
Men
vs.
the
Man
predicted.
him and
lesser
Thirdly, you say that while the masses admire will not impede his mad career, the lesser
Did
the
millionaires
Mr. Mr. Harriman of the Pacific Roads as victims? Ask Mr. Lawson of Boston and Mr. Fish of New
the late
enjoy a cannibal orgy with Rogers of Standard Oil and the late
York.
You imply
aires.
I
that
Mr. James
J.
Hill once
fell
explicit.
The
obituary notices of Mr. Harriman led me to believe that it was that prince of Pecuniary Magnates,
millionaires,
who
oc-
casionally defeated the able plans of Mr. Hill. But I stand open to correction on this point. You also say that Mr. Rockefeller's activities
have seldom caused insomnia among investors. Permit me to commend to you the history of Amalgamated Copper. Finally, you say the Pecuniary Magnates are " truly race-heroes in twentieth century America.
They
That
visualize the aspirations of their fellow-men. the commercial idea will rule mankind for-
How long it will reever I by no means assert. main more powerful than all other ideas I don't know, and neither do I know what other idea will
take
its
place."
Men
Here, we
for
vs.
the
Man
211
Socialists
we do know, in the language of Friedrich " how ideals are manufactured on Nietzsche, earth." We do know that human ideals are determined by the modes of production and exchange;
and, therefore,
we know
of boundless wealth will persist just as long as the means of production and distribution remain
we do know that the Social now close at hand, which will transform these into common or collective property will usher in the new and glorious ideal of social
private property, and
Revolution,
service
an
ideal
that
includes
truth-seeking," just as it includes the Hellenic ideal of beauty and the Dionysian ideal of joy.
"
your
ideal
of
Only by becoming
hosts, can
ideal.
soldier
in
the comrade-
you hasten the realization of your own is because you feel the imperious of this inward urge toward Socialism that strength you argue so desperately against it. I rejoice at this unconscious testimony to the resistless might of
It
In attempting to cure what you conceive to be my boundless faith in the omnipotence of legisla" tion you tell me that legislation is always an ef" " fect rather than a cause and that it is inevitably
a
good
You
are
mak-
ing progress, my dear Mencken, and I venture to hope that it will not be long before you are able to comprehend the meaning of Marx's pregnant
212
statement that
is
Men
"
vs.
the
Man
political superstructures
definite
me
and to which correspond forms of social consciousness." But, let remind you that every effect is also a cause, and
that while the roots of legislation are to be delved for in the economic soil, legislation also exercises
velopment.
We
want
it
Socialists
faith in
legislation.
Our eggs
We want the
Co-operative Commonwealth, and we soon, and we do not scorn or disdain any weapon that may be of service in the struggle to attain our goal. regard the ballot as one of our
We
it
might be
almost our sole weapon if our adversaries would But play the game of political democracy fairly.
we we
are not so naive as to expect this. Accordingly weapon that the evolution of the
The recent history of Russia, struggle develops. Sweden, and the Latin countries of Europe has
that the strike, in its later forms, is capable of rivaling, if not surpassing, the ballot as a means shall certainly use both of Social Revolution.
shown
We
have no doubt that other and equally powerful weapons will be evolved in
ballot
and
strike,
and
the future.
this distinct
advantage: by
we demonstrate our
strength,
and the
Men
vs.
the
Man
213
mightier the power we show at the ballot-box, the less likely are our opponents to force us to make
So that it is true use of our auxiliary methods. that we do lay great stress upon the ballot as a
means
little
to
Social
Revolution.
In the struggle for Socialism, as in all other struggles, the victory must go to the stronger of From this point of view the contesting parties.
both the ballot and the strike are crude therfor registering our rising strength. When either of these thermometers shows that we
mometers
possess the superior social force, there will be need, not so much for legislation, as for a parley to ar-
For,
blink
struggle in
as we Americans try to, this it, which we are engaged is and must re-
main a
wipes out class antagonisms forever. The greatest contribution that America has
to anthropology
late
made
Lewis H. Morgan of Rochester, New York. Unfortunately, the biography of this transcendent scientific genius is yet unwritten. His more important works were published over thirty years ago by Henry Holt and Company. Chiefest among " them stands out Ancient Society." In this monu-
214
mental work
Men
vs.
the
Man
his study of the gens
Morgan through
and the marriage systems of the Iroquois Indians and the Kanakas of Hawaii for the first time enabled us to understand the social organization of the Greeks of Homeric and pre-Homeric times.
He
institutions
broadly sketched the development of human through three stages of savagery and
and
did
How
he differentiate the divers stages of advance? By the tools that men had invented and employed,
human
of
all social
what
us
to
sort of a
determines
in.
Since
is
possible for
when we know the tools in use at any given era, draw in broad outline the whole cultural scheme
life
of
Owen
could reconstruct
from a
single
tools
there inevitably result handicraft production, anthropomorphic religion, and the natural rights
When
present titanic
the technique of production reaches its development, the very nature of the
Men
tools
vs.
the
Man
215
(huge plants that can only be run by vast armies of co-operating men and women) makes
the social ownership of those plants necessary and " Private property in the instruments inevitable.
" has its roots in of production," says Kautsky, Individual production makes small production.
individual ownership necessary. Large producon the contrary denotes co-operative, social In large production each individual production.
tion
does not
ers, a
work alone, but a large number of workwhole commonwealth, work together to pro-
duce a whole. Accordingly, the modern instruments of production are extensive and gigantic.
With them
duction.
it is
reached by
ownership "
First, private
the instruments of production used by co-operative labor; that means the existing system of cap-
production, with its train of misery and exploitation as the portion of the workers, idleness and excessive abundance as the portion of the capitalist
italist;
and
"
mon
Second, ownership by the workers in the cominstruments of production; that means a co-
operative system of production, and the extinction of the exploitation of the workers, who become masters of their own products, and who themselves
216
Men
vs.
the
Man
appropriate the surplus of which, under our system, they are deprived by the capitalists.
To substitute common for private ownership the means of production, this it is that the economic development is urging upon us with ever
in
"
increasing force."
table,
This substitution, my dear Mencken, is ineviand it cannot be much longer deferred. But,
"
as
when
clares the abolition of private property in the instruments of production to be unavoidable, he does not mean that some fine morning, without their helping themselves, the exploited classes will find
the
the ravens feeding them. The Socialist considers breakdown of the present social system to be
unavoidable, because he knows that the economic evolution inevitably brings on those conditions that will compel the exploited classes to rise against
system of private ownership; that this system multiplies the number and the strength of the exthis
ploited,
the exploiting classes, both of whom are still adhering to it; and that it will finally lead to such
unbearable conditions for the masses of the population that they will have no alternative but
either to
go down
in silence,
or to overthrow that
system of property."
This is what Marx and Engels meant when " What they wrote in the Communist Manifesto, the bourgeoisie therefore produces, above all, are
Men
vs.
the
Man
217
Its fall and the victory of its own grave-diggers. the proletariat are equally inevitable."
present ethics and our present jurisprudence are both legacies from the era of handicraft. Un-
Our
seemed wholly right and natural who owned his own tools and worked with his own hands should own absolutely his own product. Property rested, as it were, on But to-day the great mass the right of creation.
der handicraft
it
of property has not been created by its owners, but by the labor of others. But we still adhere to the
old ethics and jurisprudence begotten by handi" " concraft. Political economy," said Marx,
fuses
vate property, of which one rests on the producer's own labor, the other on the employment of the
labor of others.
is
It forgets that the latter not only the direct antithesis of the former, but absolutely
its
grows on
tomb only."
history of the nineteenth centuries
is
The
economic
from the This divorce was accomplished with much violence and suffering, but it was absolutely necessary for the
of the peasant land and the artisan from his tools.
modern
class
is
development of the highly productive powers of When this process neared comindustry. pletion, there began the divorce of the middle
capitalist
from
his
capital
still
"
process that
rapidly
proceeding.
This
expropria-
2i 8
tion,"
Men
Marx
tells
vs.
in
the
"
Man
"
is
us
Capital,"
accom-
production
itself,
capthe centralization of by
kills
immanent laws of
many." I have dwelt so often upon this tendency of our modern commercial life, and all American business men are so painfully familiar with it, that no more need
capital.
capitalist
One
always
be said of
it
here.
Here
in
the di-
vorce of the worker from the means of production and the divorce of the smaller capitalists from
their
have proceeded so far that the further development of our productive powers is The limited purchasing power seriously impeded. of the proletarians who have been freed from their
capital
petty property compels the pecuniary magnates who control our great industrial trusts to curtail production, while the fear of the crushing competition of the trusts prevents our lesser capitalists from venare turing upon new productive enterprises.
We
indeed hard up against the day of judgment. have reached here in America to-day the condition
that
We
predicted over forty years ago in these " memorable words The monopoly of capital be:
Marx
comes a fetter upon the mode of production, which has sprung up and flourished along with it, and under it. Centralization of the means of production and socialization of labor at last reach a point where they become incompatible with their This integument is burst capitalist integument.
Men
asunder.
vs.
the
Man
219
sounds.
"
The
erty, arising
from individual
is,
private property
parably more protracted, violent, and difficult than the transformation of capitalistic private property,
already practically resting on socialized production, into socialized property. In the former case, we had the expropriation of the mass of the people by a
tion of a
few usurpers; in the latter, we have the expropriafew usurpers by the mass of the people." But besides showing us the tremendous importance of the nature of man's tools, Lewis H. " Morgan, in Ancient Society," also shed a flood of
on the nature of political government. The two distinguishing marks of political government, or the State, as we moderns conceive it, are, first, the power to levy and collect taxes, and, second, the power to make and enforce laws. Morgan showed that among the Iroquois Indians and other primitive societies in which the institution of private property was not developed, while there was a fairly elaborate social organization, the two distinguishing marks of the modern State were utThe public power of coercion was terly lacking. after the powers of production were only developed so developed as to enable the worker to produce more than his own subsistence and thus to make
light
220
it
Men
vs.
the
Man
to enslave the prisoners of war than to kill or eat them, and after the breeding on
a large scale of domestic animals
more expedient
in flocks
its
rise to
government has
and non" Deville puts it, for the of a social order involving the division of security the population into classes, a public power calsion of society into privileged classes
privileged classes.
As
is
culated to compel the respect of the non-privileged Political government, in the modnecessary."
classes
ern sense, does not exist so long as there are no in society; it makes its appearance in a
more or less developed form with the emergence of classes and the antagonisms they involve. The
product of a definite social order, it will last as long as the conditions that have rendered it inevitable.
When, in the course of development," says the Communist Manifesto, " class distinctions have
disappeared, and all production has been concentrated in the hands of a vast association of the
"
will lose
its
political
power, properly so called, is the organized power of one class for opmerely If the proletariat during its pressing another.
contest with the bourgeoisie is compelled, by the force of circumstances, to organize itself as a class,
by means of a revolution, it makes itself the ruling class, and, as such, sweeps away by force
if,
Men
vs.
the
Man
221
it will, along have swept away the condiwith these conditions, tions for the existence of class antagonisms, and of classes generally, and will thereby have abol-
ished
its
"
own supremacy
class
as a class.
its
antagonisms, we shall have an aswhich the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all." Since political government is in essence an organ of conservation whose chief function has been to
classes
and
sociation, in
it
follows that
we
can-
not destroy economic privilege without first capturing the powers of political government. Here
you have the key to the political tactics of the Socialist movement. We despise no reform that
makes more
tolerable
masses, but we know also that we cannot remove the source of poverty and misery private ownerso long as we leave ship of tools and machinery
the powers of political government in the control of the propertied classes. Hence, the immediate
is
the
We
aim
to capture political
when
it
ing-class, to
inequality
remove its own foundation economic and thus, to commit suicide." In the
222
Men
vs.
the
Man
"
words of Friedrich Engels, the government of will be replaced by the administration of persons
things."
hope I have now made it clear that we urge the workers to vote for Debs, not for the sake of such crumbs of reform as we may attain by immediate legislation (though I repeat we do not
I
know
despise or spurn such reforms), but because we the powers of government in the hands of
not by conscious self-sacrifice (which I agree with you and Nietzsche is morbid and pathological),
but by such whole-souled devotion to the welfare of others as leads to forgetfulness of one's own
interests.
Socialist ethics, as I conceive them, are well expressed in what W. D. Howells tells us was the " " " : that you lesson Ibsen taught in Little Eyolf must not and you cannot be happy except through
the welfare of others, and that to seek your bliss outside of this is to sin against reason and right-
eousness both."
Men
I
vs.
the
Man
223
hold that, even if the goal of Socialism should prove an iridescent dream, it has already enriched the world immeasurably by the nobility of character
it
because
it
their complete devotion to a great cause and a noble ideal, that it is to-day the most vital regenerating religious force in the world.
Socialism will abolish poverty and satiety, and make joyousness the dominant note of humanity;
it
will
make
it
with social welfare, and will thus make the Golden " Rule work universally and automatically. May
we not
" that under such expect," asks Kautsky, conditions a new type of mankind will arise which will be far superior to the highest type which culture has hitherto created?
(Uebermensch), if you will, not as an exception but as a rule, an Over-man compared with his predecessors,
An Over-man
who
but not as opposed to his comrades, a noble man seeks his satisfaction not by being great among
crippled dwarfs, but great among the great, happy among the happy who does not draw his feeling
of strength from the fact that he raises himself upon the bodies of the down-trodden, but because
a union with his fellow-workers gives him courage to dare the attainment of the highest tasks." Awaiting with serene confidence the soon-com-
ing day
when
"
your comrade,"
Yours
as ever,
LA MONTE.
MY
DEAR LA MONTE
In the matter of the Pecuniary Magnate well content to leave you in possession of the
am
field.
This is not because I think you have disposed of the few modest suggestions I ventured to put forth in my last letter, but because I see no hope of
rescuing you from your errors by the ordinary You Socialists, when you processes of disputation.
come
to discuss the magnates, surplus values, bourgeoisie, and other fantastic fowl in your aviary of
borrow a
dialectic device
your blood brothers, the Christian Scientists. is to say, you insist upon using private brands of epistemology and logic, unknown and incomprehensible to
from That
in the
conduct of
the
mind upon
powerful than the influence of the liver upon the mind, and he will bowl you over with the staggering answer that the liver is a
It
seems to
me
en-
tirely impossible for an everyday disputant, handicapped by a reverence for Aristotle, to controvert,
224
Men
vs.
the
Man
How
225
are you or even to denounce such a theory. are you going to going to lay hold of it? measure or weigh it? It wipes out the whole uni-
How
you know that universe, and suspends all laws of evidence, logic, and causation. It in a word, gasping in an empty void. leaves you,
verse, as
the
The only thing to do is to steal away in silence. The same fate, I fear, sometimes overtakes the controversialist who engages a Socialist in debate. My own case offers sorry proof of it. In my last
letter,
pointed out that the Pecuniary Magnate's capacity for evil, while boundless in theory, would be ever limited in practice, for not
for instance,
I
even
class
legislation
safety from
I flattered
some groaning hero's bullet. This myself, would give you pause,
In the single paragraph that
it,
you wipe
it
completely from
the record, just as a Christian Scientist, with one shattering denial, wipes out the whole science of
physiology.
As soon
argument, you maintain, is vain for it is not an argument at all. Asfutile, sassination a remedy? Pooh! What's the use? "
My
and
as one Magnate is assassinated, his successor will have equal power." Well, let us look into this a bit. Let us suppose
upon the
a horde of potential Magnates, all eager to feast public. Many of them have the will and
many
comparatively rare.
But by
226
Men
vs.
the
Man
toil-
and by, one of them with the will, by dint of some effort, achieves the means also, and in his
face
we
lenian monster. He loses no time; he is at the throat of the great masses instanter. period of barbarous pillage ensues. The price of beer goes
to twenty-five cents a can. The unemployed stalk the earth in tragic misery. Many of them, are forced to accept work from facing despair,
up
their conqueror.
more idealistic, starve. Children are Desperate men murder and rob.
Others,
eaten.
bomb
Socialism grows popular. One day beneath the private train of the explodes
. .
Nameless One, and he rolls a thousand feet down the Alleghany Mountains. A month after his One funeral, his wealth is divided into two parts.
swells the
endowment of
wildest
Arkansas, and
"
man whose
is
prima donna.
lover of a
The
will
already moldering But another Magnate springs into the saddle. He is even worse than the first one. He rowels
The cries of starving the proletariat mercilessly. He delights in children are music to his ears. human misery, in unmentionable horrors, in unnamable
suffering.
. .
.
One
day
his
fore-
ordained bullet reaches him, and he troubles no more. So He has "equal power." third!
...
Men
fifth!
.
. .
vs.
the
Man
!
227
Four hunto large numbers. dred million Magnates have been slain. The earth is littered with their carcasses. By their wills they
have established 5,000,000 Baptist sent out 50,000,000 missionaries to and founded the fortunes of a whole girls, shyster lawyers, head waiters,
"
universities,"
A We
one-hundredth!
come
the heathen,
race of
show
!
and
alienists.
What a
mouth
four-hundred-million-and-first
Mag-
by your astonishing theory of infinite series, is ready and willing to face the same fate and That monster who at the taste the same ashes. moment you introduced him was rare to the point
nate,
of actual non-existence,
heresy.
is
now
as
common
as
he
is
now
selfish
Frankly,
my
dear
La Monte,
do not think
Unless that you have disposed of my contention. I am vastly mistaken, a very real fear of death
(made real by practical examples) is apt to shake the determination of even the most determined
man.
And
unless I
am
execution, whether official or unofficial, is certain to end the activity of even the most active, and to make his particular form of activity lose its lure for others. The case of General Trepoff may occur to you. General Trepoff, true enough, has a
Russian
228
Men
vs.
the
Man
Secret Police, but I fancy that even the most rabid Russian patriot will admit that the administration
still
leaving
much
to be de-
sired, measurably If you maintain, in answer, that Trepoff himself. there is but one Chief of the Secret Police in
less
Russia, while the United States offers pasturage for a large number of Pecuniary Magnates, of
varying ambitions and degrees of evil, I need only remind you that in the cemetery of Picpus in Paris
you will find the headless skeletons of 1,306 French nobles of the Terror year, who were also of varyBullets are ing ambitions and degrees of evil.
cheap to-day. the odds?
One
or ten thousand
what are
yet the Terror did not turn France into Paradise. Of course not! No more would So-
And
The French peasants got rid of their feudal masters, and it was good riddance, but new masters appeared next day. The name of the
cialism.
thing was changed, but the thing itself remained. be observed if there
were a wholesale slaughter of millionaires in the United States to-morrow, followed by a grand inauguration of Socialism.
In that case,
my
dear
La Monte, you yourself would become a Magnate. You edit a Socialist paper to-day and write Socialist
books, and the high privates and corporals of the Socialist army quite naturally attach a good deal
skill
and judgment as
Men
a virtuoso
vs.
the
Man
229
disgust.
In the Socialist state they would still look to you for guidance, for they would still be common
men and
as such
still in
and masters.
You would
we
tary of the Treasury or Governor of the State of New York with a presidential bee buzzing in your
ears.
.
.
Let
me
confess
it
pect
Between communism does not please me. dominated by Robert Rives La Monte and a democracy tempered by John D. Rockefeller I am
constrained to choose the latter
not because I
has convinced
hate you, but because a patient and painful inquiry me that, on the whole, the philosophy
lived by John is safer, saner, and more wholesome for the human race than the philosophy preached The average American, I take it, by you.
.
.
Maybe
bad
that
is
why
a proposal
him
taste,
perhaps, but
is
Do
safe.
So
we
are an in-
Your other
Veblen and
his
God without
is
already o'er-long, and before closing this letter I must try to answer your charge that I have no philosophy of life to offer in
place of Socialism.
This charge,
at least in part,
230
is
Men
vs.
the
Man
I
have no
your
materialistic concep-
It is not static but dynamic appalling complexity. not a being, but an eternal becoming. The con-
upon
a fluent
environment produces a series of phenomena which seems to me, at times, to be beyond all ordering and ticketing. When one attempts to interpret these phenomena, and to reduce them to ordered
chains and classes, the result
is
Unlike things are given the same name, and their possession of that name in common is taken to be a proof of their identity. Again, the same thing is given two names, x and y, and elaborate equations are built up from them, withwaste of words.
in
out anyone noticing the fallacies that fairly bristle both members. Most of the absurdities of the
it is
quack-science of sociology, as
college
taught by vapid
professors, and of the quasi-science of political economy, as it is taught by professors, labor leaders, editorial writers, and rhapsodists, arise
out of just such errors. You Socialists often blunder into the trap. In " given your last letter, for example, you say that, small hand tools and no motive power, and there
On the inevitably results handicraft production." surface, this seems to be a sound enough generalization, but a moment's inspection will show that its
Men
soundness
is
vs.
the
Man
What
hand
you
tools
231
actu-
mere appearance.
:
that given
and
There is just as much intelligibiland no more, as you will find the statement that all one-eyed men must see
out of one eye. But you are not alone in your errors. Others just as gross are made by all other men who seek
and disorderly phenomena of life to rigid rules. I fall into them myself whenever I set pen to paper as you have noticed and only the full often in these letters of mine
to reduce the complex
soothing knowledge that I am not alone in my blundering that even the Huxleys, the Newtons, and
the Darwins are sometimes with
me
keeps
me
have their
limits
even
this one.
Apply them often enough, and you will come inevitably upon some disconcerting exception, some
radioactive anarchist.
The
cosmic process
up of innumerable acts, and the amine any of them, the more we become convinced But because that, in many respects, it is unique. philosophy is long and life is short we must assume, even when
fall
we
that
and classes, else we could they never hope to study them at all. In Prof. James' phrase, we must use short cuts in our reasoning.
into groups
232
But we may
Men
still
vs.
the
Man
And now
regard as more accurate and more satisfactory than Socialism. You complain that I have failed to
state it in my letters, simply and unequivocably, but you must admit that I have given you more than one glimpse of its outlines. These glimpses,
doubt, have long ago informed you in the rough, a square denial of all the doctrines and ideals at the botpractically tom of Christianity and Socialism. Whenever and
I
make no
it
is,
that
however Christianity and Socialism differ, my vote is for Socialism, and to that extent, perhaps, I may Like you, I claim membership in your fraternity.
hold
the abhorrence the false promise that " meek shall inherit the earth the one ingredient
in
"
which
all
effectually separates Christian morality from other moralities and like you, I hold that life upon the earth is a very agreeable thing, and that
men should
making
it
more agreeable
est Christian,
in
the ineradicable
vileness of humanity,
fort,
all this
and the
futility
of
human
ef-
In can harbor without a feeling of guilt. we are one, but when it comes to the doc-
trines,
in
refer here, of course, to " before the the doctrines that all men are equal
common, we
his brother
is
greater
Men
vs.
the
Man
233
than his duty to himself, that the hopeless yearnings of a stupid, helpless, and inefficient man are,
some recondite manner, more pleasing to the Master of the universe than the well-ordered, intelligible plans and achievements of an efficient man. I cannot believe these things. It seems to me, indeed, that they are palpably untrue, and that,
in
human progress. You Socialists, in the very first paragraph of your philosophy, make one of the errors that I have mentioned in a preceding paragraph. That
to
to say, you give very unlike things the same name, and then assume that they are like. As exis
amples of these unlike things, I can do no better than mention Thomas Henry Huxley and a man whom we may call the Rev. Jasper Johnson. On the surface you will find many points of resemblance between the two. Huxley was a male of the genus homo, and so is Johnson; Huxley had five fingers on each hand, and so has Johnson;
Huxley expressed his ideas in the English language, and so does Johnson Huxley was carnivorous and so is Johnson. Reckon up all these points of resemblance and you will find them almost infinite in
;
number.
But, reckon up, then, the points of difference between the two men, and you will find
to #
n
them equal
plus a million.
In every char-
to differentiate
and quality which serves man from any ape, Huxley any
234
Men
man
vs.
the
Man
at
all,
well-nigh impossible to detect them. Huxley, in a word, was an intellectual colossus while John;
The one
pushed the clock of progress ahead a hundred years ; the other is a foul, ignorant, thieving, superstitious,
Belt, whose mental life is made up of three ambitions to eat a whole hog at one meal, to be a white man in heaven, and to meet a white woman, some day, in a lonely wood. And yet, by the socialistic and Christian philoso-
are equal. According to the Christian seers, they will kneel before the throne of God side by side, and spend eternity as brothers.
phies,
these
men
According to the
fitted to
the state, equally worthy of ease, protection, and leisure, and equally entitled to have the aid of their
fellow-men
I
in the
am
unable,
It
my
La Monte,
to grant this
much.
man who
attempts to prove merely that Huxley and Johnson belong to the same order of living creatures has The gap bea staggering task ahead of him.
tween them, I am convinced, is greater than that between Johnson and the anthropoid apes. Phys-
Men
ically,
vs.
the
is
Man
probably only a
235
dif-
ference in degree, but mentally there is an abysmal conceivable course of traindifference in kind.
No
however protracted, could convert Johnson an imitation of Huxley. The one came into the world with certain inherited traits, certain invaluable forms of congenital efficiency, which the The one beother can never hope to acquire.
ing,
into
men whose value to the human and whose consequent right to life, no sane person would venture to deny; the other belongs to a caste whose value is obviously nil, and whose right to life, in consequence, must be proved belonged to a caste of
race,
fore
it is
admitted.
Here, then, I arrive at that doctrine of human rights which seems to me to be most in accord with the inflexible and beneficent laws of nature which rule man in his complex communities just as rigidly
as they rule staphylococci in their culture tubes. Of these rights there are two classes first, those
which a man (or a class of men) wrests from his environment by force; and secondly, those which he obtains by an exchange of values. A man is
exercising rights of the first class when he kills the wolf that seeks to devour him, or wrings a living directly from the earth; he is exercising a right of the second class when he takes his skill and industry into the open market and sells them for whatever they will bring. If the service that he
offers
is
236
Men
it
vs.
the
Man
it.
And
if,
per-
has no value, he must accept nothing as his reward. There is, in a word, no irreducible minimum of compensation, due to every man by
virtue of his
mere
existence as a
human
being.
has any right to life, save that which he proves by mastering his environment. This view of the world and its people is not
quite so
it
No man
anthropophagous as
it
my
bald statement of
may make
seem.
It
that wise foresight which sometimes prompts the strong man to aid the weak man, that the latter,
perchance, may shake off his weakness and become a helper instead of a pensioner. But it does exclude that sentimental reverence for the human be-
per se, which credits him with a long catalogue of gratuitous and complex rights, all
ing,
grounded upon the ancient theological notion that This notion, I behe is, in some sense, divine. is to blame for nine-tenths of the wretchedlieve, It is to blame for that ness in the world to-day. unhealthy charity which coddles the degenerate, half-human pauper of England, and encourages him, in the name of God, to beget more of his kind; it is to blame for that maudlin theory of liberty which, in the United States, makes the vote
of a negro loafer as potent as that of a Charles Eliot or a Thomas Edison; and it is to blame,
Men
finally,
vs.
the
Man
237
which, as Socialism or
efficient
for that insidious and paralyzing unrest what not, is making the instill
is
man
more
inefficient
by convincing him
that efficiency
valueless
is
No
needed to make a roustabout begreat eloquence lieve that he is as good a man as the governor of his state, but his belief in that absurdity is no proof of its truth, and in the process of instilling it into his foggy mind you have ruined him as a roustabout.
In order that the human race may go forward, it seems to me desirable that the rewards of extraordinary efficiency should be magnificently alluring,
and that the penalties of complete should be swift, merciless, and terrible.
sufficient that the
inefficiency
It is
not
be given enough to and a roof to shelter him from the weather, eat, for such things are within the easy reach of pracHe must have, in addition, a retically all men.
unusual
man
ward which
ity
effectively
It is for
common man.
If he wants money, let he wants power, honor, him have what he wants. Per-
If
but, to the
common man,
incomprehensible
sciousness of
haps, on the contrary, he will demand, not only riches for himself, but also a guarantee that his
238
Men
vs.
the
Man
What-
ever he desires, he proves title to it by getting it. In the free market of the world he finds his
price.
The man
of
less efficiency
makes a
less
splendid
bargain, for the things that he offers for sale have less value. If he is at the bottom of the scale
his
wares have scarcely any value at all, since they are within the reach of nearly every one: There
is
no art at which he
men
of normal
desire to
Men who
escape their share of the world's drudgery, because more agreeable and more profitable work invites
their skill, give
it
over to him.
The
thing that he
word, is exactly that elemental functional energy which a draught horse offers for sale, and nothing more; and the price that he gets for it, as Adam Smith showed long ago, is the same price paid to the horse food and shelter, and nothing more. If he superimposes upon that
offers for sale, in a
functional energy the slightest skill, his pay begins to include something beside the bare means of existence,
and as
his
it.
skill
increases,
his
pay
in-
evitably follows
It
an admirable arrangeIf I had the power to change it, I should ment. If I were told not make the slightest alteration. seems to
that this
is
me
off to create a
new
Men
whole plan bodily.
offer
vs.
the
Man
239
our thanks to
brutes.
dumb
it
human beings may well for our emergence from the It has lifted us up in the past, and
it
We
will lift us
out, automatically
efficient
up for all time to come. It stamps and certainly, not only the inindividual but also the useless class and
Its
tendency
is
to accentuate
and make more conspicuous all of those traits and forms of skill which best differentiate the human It offers enormous being from all other beings. to the man who can do well the things premiums which all other men can do only badly, or not at
all. It reduces to slavery the man who has only the strength of a weak ox to sell. And in its dealthe countless individuals between this ings with
master-man and this slave-man, it determines every man's value, not by his yearnings or his intentions, but by the immediate value of his acts. Dealing thus with countless individuals, it sets them off, roughly, into castes, but there are no A man born palpable barriers about these castes.
race as die in the highest. as the African may produce generally an occasional Hannibal or Dumas, and a race at
into the lowest
may
inefficient
the top of the scale may have its hordes of idiots. In one century, when the general environment of humanity puts a premium upon a certain kind of
skill,
it
may
and two centuries later, when changes in environment make some other kind of skill more valuable,
240
that
Men
vs.
the
Man
same race may sink to practical slavery. The great reward is always to the race, as to the individual, which best masters the present difficulty and meets the present need.
Civilization,
castes, erects
make
their
growing conscious of the natural them into classes, and then seeks to prerogatives and disabilities permanent.
But this effort, in the long run, inevitably fails. There was a time in the history of the world, for
example, when its priest class possessed absolute power over all other classes power infinitely
greater than that wielded by the military class in the middle ages, or by the commercial class to-day.
seemed utterly incredible, at that time, that the priest class would one day become a rabble of scarcely tolerated parasites, and yet that thing has The military class, in the same come to pass.
It
and to-day its very the good-will of the comupon mercial class. Perhaps the latter, too, will be deI am sure I don't know. It is throned in time.
way, has
lost its old kingship,
existence depends
"
"
producer
I
class
may have
innings.
But
to
lift
Again, do know: that the plan of Socialism " " up the producer class to sovereignty by
this I
is
don't know.
of the uni-
and
as a
symptom of changes
needs
Men
and
desires of the
vs.
the
Man
At
241
present the
offers
it
human
most
in
race.
need of improvements
of
life.
To
the
man who
a
is
it
secret
little
password to heaven, it gives little, for it interested in heaven, but for him who offers
in
some
for
travel
it has rewards as investing savings large as those that once went to popes and em-
And
in this
it
To the man esteems most the unique service. who makes shoes which, whatever their excellence, are no more comfortable than the shoes made at
the next bench,
ward.
And
gives a comparatively small reso, too, it has no prize for the man
it
who
it
raises
in his bin.
wheat in the old, old way, and stores But to the man who, by inventing
better organizing the work,
new machinery or by
improves the comfort of shoes, and to the man who buys the wheat of the farmers and hauls it
craftily to
it
where
it
is
most needed
to these
men
The
to
me
inevitably futile. When the workingman, going into the market to sell his skill, attempts, by fair
means, to strike the best bargain he may, he has my unfeigned sympathy. But when, as a man
242
of
Men
skill,
vs.
the
Man
common
sideration due only to the man of uncommon skill, it seems to me that the more efficient men on the
when they
other side of the counter are within their rights use their power and cunning to oppose
his exactions.
in addition to his
just wages he deserves a definite reward for the mere act of remaining alive is one to which I can-
not subscribe.
And
his
mere condition of aliveness makes him as fit to solve the most difficult problems of existence as those men whose extraordinary efficiency has lifted them up in this matter, too, I must diverge from
him.
No
one, I
am
sure, regards
it
as
an act of
tyranny that bricklayers have no vote in the determination of the treatment of pneumonia. In the same way it seems to me equally natural that negro
in the
determina-
tion of those great questions of government, commerce, and the art of living which sorely tax even
the highest men. But do the great rewards always go to the most efficient and worthy? about the idle rich.
How
And how
millions,
Is there about luck and brute strength? excuse for the besotted master of inherited any
dragging out
his
it
useless
days
in
self-
indulgence?
And
isn't
may
also
finally,
weak body, an incomparable mind? And destroy isn't it true that the sole difference between
Men
master and slave
opportunity
?
is
vs.
the
Man
243
in
The
What
of them?
Does
my
it
scheme of things
does not
justify
them?
it
To
be sure
demand
their im-
them
to be as sinister as
of being, two factors, it their capacity for actual evil-doing. One is the fact that they are few in number, and the other is
the fact that their hold upon their opulence is always precarious. In other words, the utterly idle
You must go
to find
to
in
the stage
and the
uplift
magazines
him
force. In real life he is met with as seldom as a married philosopher or the horrid behemoth of Holy Writ. The vast majority of our millionaires are not
idle
parasites,
but
simply
well-paid
is
workmen.
their
The money
that rolls in
upon them
wage
for devoting extraordinary talents to extraordinary acts. That these acts are sometimes judged to be
immoral by eminent (though self-appointed) experts has nothing to do with the case, for in the struggle for existence an act is never actually moral or immoral, but only (in the broadest sense of the
words) profitable or unprofitable, worth doing or not worth doing. The view of it taken by a moralist, however accomplished he may be, is al-
244
Men
vs.
the
Man
ways a mere opinion, and you can always find some To show you how other moralist to contradict it.
nearly this
is
true, I
need only
recall to
you that
human
beings has
To
while to another
the act of eating flesh seems indecent, it appears as the most agreeable To one man the habit of operation imaginable. taking money from ignorant folk, on the promise
one
man
nified
of getting them into heaven, seems the most digand honorable of human avocations, while to
me it bears the aspect of a peculiarly heartless and nefarious form of fraud. To one man the soldier
is
marriage holy In sacrament; to another, it is a dangerous vice. view of all this, is it for you or me to determine, once and for all time, that the manner in which a
particular
millionaire
I
is
vile
loafer
is
and
makes
his
money
is
im-
moral?
think not.
him the
know, even the cornering of the wheat market may have some recondite value; and whether intrinsically valuable
or not, it is certainly valued, for the public pays for it lavishly. No; the average millionaire is no inert leech,
toiler.
but a busy
to
Even when
from
his
his
wealth comes
father, he
Men
care of any
will
vs.
the
Man
however
is
245
small,
amount of
capital,
this
you
true.
further
and familiar proof is offered by the fact that great fortunes seldom remain intact for more than a few generations. The rich man can be entirely It sometimes costs idle only at enormous expense. him a million dollars to nurse a bad cold, for while he is incommunicado all the rest of humanity joins in a desperate effort to relieve him of his
fiscal
burdens.
The
protected in their properties by the most cunning laws ever devised by man, are yet far from secure.
not
more than
five
per
cent,
that country's peerage have come down unbroken for two generations. Noble and rich clans, as a
rule,
The
absorbed into the proletariat. great-grandson of a duke may be a barber. But even admitting the idle and rich son of a
are
quickly
millionaire to be entirely and perniciously useless, I His fail to see what can be fairly done about it.
father received from the public certain enormous sums for certain services, which, by the law of supply and demand, bore a high market value, and, as I have shown before, they went to him upon the distinct understanding that he was to have the free use of them. If he had chosen to devote them to useful public purposes, no one would have objected; and if he had chosen to pay them, on his deathbed, into the public treasury, even you Socialists would
246
Men
vs.
the
Man
should he be de-
Why
nounced, then, because he chose to hand them over to his dissolute and half-imbecile son? Would it be fair or honest, after making a definite treaty with him, to abrogate it without his consent?
And would
be even expedient? Isn't it plain is the worst of all possible enough foes to impregnable wealth ?
it
And now
Do
the
greatest rewards really go to the most efficient and worthy? Doesn't the struggle for existence, by
warring upon weak bodies, sometimes rob the world of incomparable minds? And doesn't luck
I anplay the principal part in the struggle? swered most of these questions, I believe, in a
eral
it
may
It is this
in this discussion
it
is,
and not
If
it
might or should
be.
were
possible,
fittest
by a
human
law
that the
and
all
other
that they are almost beyond the pale of debatable ideas. Whether for woe or weal, nature provides that the strong shall have an advantage over the weak, and that the fortunate shall outrun the
luckless
It is scarcely worth while to judge nature here. All we for us to attempt
in
the race.
Men
may
safely
vs.
the
Man
247
do
is
to
make
this scheme of things, whatever its horrors, at least makes for progress; and to thank whatever gods
moved from
I
there be that we, personally, are measurably rethe bottom of the scale.
not a religious man, but I cannot think upon my own good fortune in life without a feeling that my thanks should go forth, somewhere and to
am
someone.
are
beyond
my
of sheer chance
favored beyond all computation. work is not an affliction, but a day's pleasure; my labor, selling in the open market, brings me the comforts that I desire; I am assured
am
My
against all but a remote danger of starvation in my old age. Outside my window, in the street, a man labors in the rain with pick and shovel, and
reward is merely a roof for to-night and tomorrow's three meals. Contemplating the difference between his luck and mine, I cannot fail to
his
wonder at the eternal meaninglessness of life. I wonder thus and pity his lot, and then, after
awhile, perhaps,
I
begin to
reflect that in
many
ways he is probably luckier than I. But I wouldn't change places with him.
Sincerely,
MENCKEN.
INDEX
Ability, reward 237, 238, 241 of,
48,
91,
Catastrophism,
140,
142,
170
Centralization, 55, 218 Chamberlain, T. C, 142 Child-labor, 13 Christianity, 75, 76, 114, 135,
75,
127,
232
Cicero, 36, 97
163-167 Antiparos, 36, 38, 69 Aristocracy, 13, 14, 72, 74, 176, 179
Aristotle, 35, 224
73,
Army
Arrhenius,
Columbus,
37, 5i,. 203
Christopher,
29,
Astronomy,
Athens, 15
142
Ballot
216, 217, 220, 221 Competition, 38, 49, 54, 70, 77,
economic
I,
basis -of,
89,
129,
Beyond-man,
7,
223
90 Cooley, Charles H., 87 Co-operation, 70 Co-operative Commonwealth, 92 Culture, 13, 15 Cuvier, 136, 137
Blatchford, Robert, 124 Bonaparte, Napoleon, 73 Briand, Aristide, 173 Bribery, 155, 156, 159, 171 Bryan, W. J., 188
Caesar, Julius, 29, 37, 51 Capital, composition of, 6,
Darwin, Charles,
139,
141,
Death-rate,
167, 84,
231 108
7,
Karl "Capital," quoted, 217, 218, 219 Carnegie, Andrew, 80 Caste, 98, 101, no, 112, 113,
115, 162,
116, 117, 125, 128,
Marx,
De
Deville, Gabriel, 220 Vries, Hugo, 136, 140 Diaz, Porfirio, 73, 84
161,
Diderot, 35, 36, 74 Disease, due to poverty, 58 Dixon, Rev. Thomas, 148, 150
240
249
Don
Quixote, 2
250
Index
Harriman,
179,
E.
H.,
91,
178,
210
8,
37,
55,
89
214
James
J., 74,
145
future, 54 13
31,
118, 166,
204,
205,
131,
;
151;
eco-
Immoralists,
7,
175,
179
180,
intellectual, iqi, 102; racial, 131, 132 Ethics, 76, 232; of capitalism, 90, 243, 244; of So-
nomic,
129
Individualism,
179,
184
7,
222
Inevitability, of Socialism, 38, 91, 216
economic basis
80,
113,
Evolution,
128,
29,
143,
127,
141,
167
Exploitation,
Intellectuals, n, 139 Intemperance, 67, 89, 130 International Socialist Review, 57, 89 Intimidation, 154, 171
Jaures, Jean, 173 Jefferson, Thomas, 2 Jesus Christ, 2, 76, 101, 184,
Kautsky, Karl,
Labor,
136, 215,
223
its share of product, 40-42; hours of, 8, 25, 26, 53, 56, 57, 62; pleasure in,
Lamarck,
137, 138
184
Lewis, Arthur Morrow, 136, 140 Lincoln, Abraham, 137, 177 Literature, 14, 145, 146
Index
London, Jack, 8
Lonesomeness, 129, Louis XIV., 72 Louis XVI., 72
Lowell, Percival,
168,
251
70,
169
Ovtr-population, 108
82,
87,
128
Panics, 4, 24, 51, 175 Pasteur, 33, 35, 58, 60, 68, 84,
85, 108,
in
The
Russian,
116,
Machine Process,
144,
9,
10,
n,
180
Peasant, 130
Machinery,
economic
208
effects
229
Pericles,
15,
Pig-iron,
35, 37 production
and
wages, 42
i,
Marx, Karl,
69,
10,
13,
18,
24,
177,
183,
184,
2ii
Materialist
Conception
of
142
(see Eco-
221
nomic determinism)
Mendel, Gregor, 104, 138, 139 Messina earthquake, 98-101 Middle ages, 4 Middle classes, 10, n, 175,
176 Militarism, 174 Morality, 243 (see Ethics) Morgan, J. P., n, 176, 205 Morgan, Lewis H., 85, 213,
214, 219 Morris, William, 93, 94, 95, 146, 208 Moses, 29, 37, 51, 68, 167 Mutations, 141, 161
growth
32,
29,
80,
Proletariat,
12,
96,
103,
172,
5,
7,
18,
Rabble, The,
2,
89, 129
Race
suicide, 88
Natural Selection,
70,
246
Reason, Eternal, 36, 37, 43 Reeve, Sidney A., 54 Reform, 222 government, Representative limits of taxation under,
Rockefeller, John D., 79, 84,
115, 158, 176, 191, 203, 205,
234
I,
Nietzsche,
43, 63, 64, 89, 98, 129, 135, 179, 180, 211
86,
Friedrich,
210, 229
105,
Odin, A.,
123
36,
Beyond-
man)
252
School
13
Index
children,
under-fed,
141
Unemployment, 9
University of Virginia, 132
49, 51, 126, 135, 144, 177, 185, 188, 189, 193, 209, 229
Voltaire, 74
8,
12,
13,
15,
38,
39,
43,
90,
91,
144,
145,
147,
179,
4, 17, 40, 47, 9L 238; of employer, 20 Wallace, Alfred R., 137, 139,
Wages,
141
Spargo, John, 13 Spencer, Herbert, 160 State, The, 219 Steel Corporation, U. 78, 90
S.,
46,
Stirner, Max, 179, 180 Strauss, N., Strike, The, 212, 213 Suffrage, 154, 189, 212, 242
Warren, Washington, George, 80 Waste, 49, 50, 54, 88 Wealth, as an ideal, 201,
245
169
202,
Super-man
(see
Beyond-
man)
Surplus produce, 18, 43, 44, 47 Surplus, Troublesome, 44, 46, 48 Surplus value, 24, 77, 90
Xenophon,
35,
97
WILLIAM
T.
WALSH
novel placed in a large American city during a supposed and showing results inevitable in the present It is hard to tell whether the greater state of human nature. interest is in the story or the problems. The characters are
Socialistic regime,
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"
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By LOGAN G. MCPHERSON,
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With maps,
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CONTENTS
THE THEORY
Theatre
of
Drama: Tragedy and Melodrama; Comedy and Farce. The Modern Social Drama. OTHER PRINCIPLES OF DRAMATIC CRITICISM. The Public and the Dramatist. Dramatic Art and the Theatre Business. The Happy EndThe Boundaries of Approbation. Imitation and ings in the Theatre. Suggestion in the Drama. Holding the Mirror up to Nature. Blank Verse on the Contemporary Stage. Dramatic Literature and Theatric Journalism. The Intention of Performance. The Quality of New Endeavor. The Effect of Plays upon the Public. Pleasant and Unpleasant Plays. Themes in the Theatre. The Function of Imagination.
OF THE THEATRE. What is a Play? The Psychology Audiences. The Actor and the Dramatist. Stage Conventions in Modern Times. Economy of Attention in Theatrical Performances. Emphasis in the Drama. The Four Leading Types of
DRAMATISTS OF TO-DAY
ROSTAND,
PINERO,
By
PROF.
of Union College.
With
(By mail, $1.60.) gilt top, $1.50 net. An informal discussion of their principal plays and of the perform" ances of some of them. The volume opens with a paper On Stand" Our Idea of Tragedy," and ards of Criticism," and concludes with an appendix of all the plays of each author, with dates of their first performance or publication. New York Evening Post: " It is not often nowadays that a theatrical book can be met with so free from gush and mere eulogy, or so an excellent chronological appendix weighted by common sense and full "index . . . uncommonly useful for reference." Dial: Noteworthy example of literary criticism in one of the most interesting of literary fields. . . . Well worth reading a second
...
time."
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Assistant Professor in
following each chapter, and index. $1.25 net; by mail, $1.37. a clear "An almost ideal book of its kind and within its scope idea of the development and of the really significant men of events of that cardinal epoch in the history of France and Europe is conveyed to readers, many of whom will have been bewildered by the anecdotal fulness or the rhetorical romancing of Professor Johnston's most conspicuous predecessors."
...
Churchman.
and as such to be given a place admirably written, but it singles out the persons and events best worth understanding, viewing the great social upheaval from a long perspective." San Francisco Chronicle.
"Deserves
to take
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little classic
in all libraries.
Not only
is this
NAPOLEON
A Short Biography.
I2mo.
by
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"Scholarly, readable, and acute." Nation. "It is difficult to speak with moderation of a lucid, so skillful." Boston Transcript.
work
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book."
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FEW YORK
WIILLAM DE MORGAN'S
The
IT
Blind Jim" and his little girl, story of the great love of and of the affairs of a successful novelist. Fourth printing. $1.75"William De Morgan at his very best." Independent. "Another long delightful voyage with the best English company.
The
story of a child certainly not less appealing to our generation than Little Nell was to hers." New York Times Saturday Review.
WILLIAM DE MORGAN'S
The dramatic
"
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Fourth printing.
book as sound, as sweet, as wholesome, as wise, as any in the range of The Nation. "Our older novelists (Dickens and Thackeray) will have to look to their for the new one is fast proving himself their equal. A higher quality laurels, of enjoyment than is derivable from the work of any other novelist now living and active in either England or America." The Dial.
fiction."
story of a
London
and
Seventh printing.
$1.75.
.
will be hailed as a masterpiece. . Really worth reading and praising . any writer of the present era is read a half century hence, a quarter century, or even a decade, that writer is William De Morgan." Boston
Transcript. " It is the Victorian age itself that speaks in those rich, interesting, over-
crowded books. Will be remembered as Dickens's novels are remembered." Springfield Republican.
.
novel of
life
near
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in the 5o's.
Tenth printing.
$1.75" The book of the last decade the best thing in fiction since Mr. Meredith and Mr. Hardy must take its place as the first great English novel that has appeared in the twentieth century." LEWIS MELVILLE in New York Times Saturday Review. " ' If the reader likes both David Copperfield and Peter Ibbetson,' he can find the two books in this one." The Independent.
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twenty-four page illustrated leaflet about Mr. De Morgan, with complete reviews of his books, sent on request.
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