Questions

This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.

identifier question
11009And why should we venerate the memory of this man and the other victims of the Haymarket tragedy?
37141Is not this so evidently reasonable that the system should command the approval of every fair mind?
4290And how will the world travel a hundred years hence, in 2083?
4290But what would have been thought, if such a journey had been described a hundred years ago, in 1883?
4290To- day have we not fifteen provinces for the most part thickly peopled, and long since fully explored to the shores of the Arctic Ocean?
49854Will you never, O Socrates, have done with this?
33628Fifty years-- thirty of them on the firing line-- had they borne fruit or had I merely been repeating Don Quixote''s idle chase? 33628 Had my efforts served only to fill my inner void, to find an outlet for the turbulence of my being? 33628 Or was it really the ideal that had dictated my conscious course?
33628Russia had many heroic men and women, but who was there in America?
5624Will you never, O Socrates, have done with this?
2352I replied:"From the United States of America, and what country is this?"
2352I went ashore, when I was accosted in English with a foreign accent by a venerable looking man with the question:"Where did you come from?"
2352Will you do unto others always as you would desire that others should do to you?
31171Is the world nearly prepared for its great consummation?
31171Is there a spiritual atmosphere, with its heights and depths, mysteriously swayed from land to land?
31171Then, the triarchate; is it not surprising?
31171We ask, what are we to think of it?
31171What seemed so permanent as that?
2434And how many sick?"
2434And thereupon the man, whom I before described, stood up, and with a loud voice, in Spanish, asked,"Are ye Christians?"
2434He brought us first into a fair parlour above stairs, and then asked us,"What number of persons we were?
2434So likewise during marriage, is the case much amended, as it ought to be if those things were tolerated only for necessity?
2434We offered him also twenty pistolets; but he smiled, and only said;"What?
2816And how?
2816And what befell you here?
2816For who indeed would give them this facility?
2816Prithee, now, tell me what happened to you during that voyage?
2816What about their judges?
2816Who indeed can be so wise?
2816With whom do they wage war, and for what reasons, since they are so prosperous?
26051And are they not revealed in the attempts of a small minority to impose their will on the majority during our own strike influenza?
26051Are these not precisely the principles on which Lenin and Trotzky are striving to create this"Socialist Republic of a very high order"?
26051But what of supplies?
26051Is this the manner in which the spirit of self- sacrifice can be roused in the masses?
26051Is this the way in which to raise the enthusiasm of the workers for the cause of Socialism?
13706But what is"human nature"?
13706He added that the life of the city would have gone on just the same for a time at least; hence why the great fear of Socialism?
13706IV), in the old story of Cain''s murder of Abel, when Cain inquired of the Lord"Am I my brother''s keeper?"
13706Is not the viciousness of Prussian militarism plus the demoralizing influence of Socialism a sufficient explanation?
13706SOCIALISM-- IS IT AMERICAN?
13706What has the success of German Socialism amounted to?
37246But would it help the alert and resourceful man?
37246Do not functions develop by use?
37246Does the cell act or react?
37246If Socialism is a legitimate form of government, why have not the forces of government evolved it?
37246If not successful in these smaller experiments, how can it be expected to be in the larger field of a nation?
37246Is n''t it a fact that difficulties make daring, that effort makes efficiency?
37246It refuses to answer, nay, it insists that it is not necessary to answer the great question to every soul: If a man dies, shall he still live?
37246Why should I strive to set the crooked straight?"
37246Would brotherhood, supposing it to be achieved, do as well?
39257Already the British schoolman, Duns Scotus, asked,''whether it was impossible for matter to think?''
39257But, he adds, how do we know that our senses give us correct representations of the objects we perceive through them?
39257Had not the reign of terror in Paris proved what was the upshot, if the religious instincts of the masses were lost?
39257I asked myself, what became of the difference between the wealth consumed by 2,500 persons and that which would have been consumed by 600,000?
39257Is it not high time to set the anti- Socialist law in action against such teachings, subversive and to the common danger, by the late Professor Hegel?
39257Now, in what does this conflict consist?
39257Religious people would laugh at me, agnostics would indignantly ask, was I going to make fun of them?
39257Then, who was to lead and command?
39257What is, then, the position of modern Socialism in this connection?
39257What, indeed, is agnosticism, but, to use an expressive Lancashire term,"shamefaced"materialism?
16503Does a man throw his precious pearls and diamonds into the sea?
16503Improve Nature''s gifts, and with her elements form new compounds....Were man''s faculties given that they should slumber?"
16503Why, then, do ye cast the priceless health and beauty of your children to the winds?
16503Would ye triumph over the seas in all their fury? 16503 But how could all this be effected if the first step to so desirable an end were wanting? 16503 Do you not see the grimaces he is making at me?
16503Early inspired by the desire to benefit my fellow- creatures, I often asked myself why, in a world teeming with blessings, so much suffering existed?
16503How then can ye measure the infinite might of their Creator?"
16503I asked myself whether men could not be brought to seek knowledge and goodness as ardently as they sought money?
16503On awakening, the patient asked with the tone and manner of a child, how old she was?
16503She said,"Do you love Sylifa?"
16503When brought before me, I asked Vyora what he sought?
16503Why seek ye not the germs of disease poison in their minute receptacles?"
16503Would ye spare the lives of those who toil for you?
16503and why endless riches in the seas, in the air, in the earth, remained unworked as though they did not exist for the use of man?
13715***** But what of the future of Fabian ideas?
13715And in what relative proportions in any given period?"
13715Another interesting lecture was by William Morris, entitled"How Shall We Live Then?"
13715Can we depend on our country keeping free from the infection when we have far more poverty in our midst than the neighbouring European States?"
13715How does this little dribble of activities look then?"
13715Or was the cause of the decline a voluntary limitation of families?
13715Our first tract,"Why are the Many Poor?"
13715Profit- Sharing and Co- partnership: A fraud and a failure?
13715The original edition of"Why are the many poor?"
13715Was our race to perish by sterility, and if so, was sterility due to wealth and luxury or to poverty and disease?
13715Why are the Many Poor?
13715Will Socialism come through the making of Socialists?
61And how does the bourgeoisie get over these crises?
61But does wage- labour create any property for the labourer?
61Do you charge us with wanting to stop the exploitation of children by their parents?
61Do you mean the property of the petty artisan and of the small peasant, a form of property that preceded the bourgeois form?
61For how can people, when once they understand their system, fail to see in it the best possible plan of the best possible state of society?
61Has it not preached in the place of these, charity and poverty, celibacy and mortification of the flesh, monastic life and Mother Church?
61Has not Christianity declaimed against private property, against marriage, against the State?
61On what foundation is the present family, the bourgeois family, based?
61Or do you mean modern bourgeois private property?
61PROLETARIANS AND COMMUNISTS In what relation do the Communists stand to the proletarians as a whole?
61What does this accusation reduce itself to?
61What else does the history of ideas prove, than that intellectual production changes its character in proportion as material production is changed?
61Where is the party in opposition that has not been decried as Communistic by its opponents in power?
19468And what can they show, and what reason give, why they should be more the masters than ourselves?
19468Are we not all descended from the same parents-- Adam and Eve?
19468Basil says:''If you admit that God gave these temporal goods to you, is God unjust in thus unequally distributing His favours?
19468But on what foundation could his declaratory act be based?
19468By what standard are"superfluities"themselves to be judged?
19468How much"need"must first be endured before a man has a just claim on another''s superfluity?
19468How was it possible to determine whether such a one was in real need or not?
19468How, then, was this paradox to be explained?
19468If all were equal, what justification would there be for civil authority?
19468If civil authority was to be upheld, wherein lay the meaning of St. Paul''s many boasts of the new levelling spirit of the Christian religion?
19468Should we say, then, that in this way they had failed?
19468What else is this really but the teaching of Aristotle that there should be"private property and common use"?
19468What is to be done for them?
19468What was to be the Christian attitude towards them?
19468What, then, is to be done, for"they be commonly mighty, and no man dare take from them"?
19468Why should you abound, and another be forced to beg, unless it is intended thereby that you should merit by your generosity, and he by his patience?
19468and for what reason do they thus hold us in bondage?
55269SHEWING ITS EXCELLENT GOVERNMENT_ Traveller._ Well met sir, your habit professes scholarship, are you a Graduate?
55269Well, have you perused my book?
55269_ Sch._ Agreed; but as we goe, what good newes doe you heare of the Parliament?
55269_ Sch._ But how can the King of_ Macaria_ be so rich as you speak of?
55269_ Sch._ But how come they by their great riches which you speak of?
55269_ Sch._ But how cometh the Kings great honour which you speak of?
55269_ Sch._ But how cometh the facilitie of becoming good Divines?
55269_ Sch._ But you spoke of grat facilitie that these men have in their functions, how can that be?
55269_ Sch._ But you spoke of health, how can that be procured by a better way than wee have here in England?
55269_ Sch._ But you spoke of peace to be permanent in that Kingdome, how can that be?
55269_ Sch._ Have you a coppy of that booke of Husbandry about you, which is to bee propounded to the Parliament?
55269_ Sch._ How can that be?
55269_ Sch._ It seemeth that they are Christians by your relation of the Parochiall Ministers, but whether are they Protestants or Papists?
55269_ Sch._ Well, what will you doe toward the worke?
55269_ Trav._ Well, doe you know any man that hath any secrets, or good experiments?
55269_ Trav._ Well, what will you doe towards the worke?
45827Yes,said the runaway;"but would you go back if you were in my place?"
45827And even then he will sometimes say,"How about the brainwork?"
45827And here Mr. Tucker will cry,"Why not?
45827But if the natural man be indeed social as well as gregarious, how did the corruption and oppression under which he groans ever arise?
45827But must the transition system therefore be a system of despotic coercion?
45827But why insist on anybody occupying a logical halting place?
45827It is easy to say, Let the occupier be the owner; but the question is, Who is to be the occupier?
45827Principles, those of Adam Smith-- see''Wealth of Nations''_ passim_"?
45827What better can we have whilst collective action is inevitable?
45827What reason is there for doubting that they would attempt to take exactly the same advantage of Anarchist Communism?
45827Why not ascertain and charge the average cost of production taking good and bad land together?
31193A 48-PAGE PAMPHLET, 5 CENTS Send all orders to.... NEW YORK LABOR NEWS CO. 28 CITY HALL PLACE NEW YORK WHAT MEANS THIS STRIKE?
31193And how does the bourgeoisie get over these crises?
31193But does wage labor create any property for the laborer?
31193By DANIEL DE LEON"What Means This Strike?"
31193Do you charge us with wanting to stop the exploitation of children by their parents?
31193Do you mean the property of the petty artisan and of the small peasant, a form of property that preceded the bourgeois form?
31193For how can people, when once they understand their system, fail to see in it the best possible plan of the best possible state of society?
31193Has it not preached in the place of these charity and poverty, celibacy and mortification of the flesh, monastic life and Mother Church?
31193Has not Christianity declaimed against private property, against marriages, against the State?
31193In what relation do the Communists stand to the proletarians as a whole?
31193On what foundation is the present family, the bourgeois family, based?
31193Or do you mean modern bourgeois private property?
31193What does this accusation reduce itself to?
31193What else does the history of ideas prove, than that intellectual production changes its character in proportion as material production is changed?
31193Where is the party in opposition that has not been decried as Communistic by its opponents in power?
17350And why does it continue?
17350And would it collapse equally if a Communist revolution were to occur in a Western country?
17350But if their methods are rejected, how are we ever to arrive at a better economic system?
17350First, would the ultimate state foreshadowed by the Bolsheviks be desirable in itself?
17350How has this state of affairs arisen?
17350Is it surprising that professions of humanitarian feeling on the part of English people are somewhat coldly received in Soviet Russia?
17350The first question I asked him was as to how far he recognized the peculiarity of English economic and political conditions?
17350This brings us to our third question: Is the system which Communists regard as their goal likely to result from the adoption of their methods?
17350What are the chief evils of the present system?
17350What motive is possible except idealism, love of mankind, non- economic motives of the sort that Bolsheviks decry?
17350What motive would they have for not doing so?
17350Why has industry collapsed so utterly?
36272And the working- man''s house?
36272And what could the organisation and controlling of all labor by the State mean?
36272And why is not the farmer to be sustained by the laborers if that farmer grows the food the laborer requires?
36272Are these to be taken too?
36272But is this true?
36272But what will this mean?
36272But without the capitalist where would be the workshop, the plant, or the raw material?
36272By whom, and in what manner, would the selection of each individual for the pursuit, profession, or handicraft for which he was fittest be determined?
36272Do they ever do any good in the world?
36272If not how is he to be persuaded to put it into fixed capital as factory and plant?
36272If not, why not?
36272In what could it end?
36272It would be better if in co- operative production workmen would be their own capitalists, but surely the owner of capital is entitled to some reward?
36272and his savings in the savings- bank, or in the co- operative store?
36272and if yes, of how much of the fruits of his labor is the laborer to be left by the Socialists in"independent enjoyment"?
20666Are we opposed to Prussian militarism? 20666 Why should a Socialist be discouraged on the eve of the greatest triumph of all the history of the Socialist movement?
20666And why?
20666Can you see it?
20666Do you know of any difference between them?
20666Is n''t it strange that we Socialists stand almost alone today in defending the Constitution of the United States?
20666The people?
20666Was there any response to that noble appeal?
20666Were the Democrats of 1864 disloyalists and traitors because they condemned the war as a failure?
20666What are the implications of this position of the Supreme Court?
20666What chance had she in a corporation court with a put- up jury and a corporation tool on the bench?
20666What did she say?
20666What followed?
20666What has she said?
20666What is the Supreme Court of the United States?
20666What is the result?
20666What is the result?
20666What is there objectionable to internationalism?
20666What would you say if the Socialist Party were to meet in convention today and condemn the present war as a failure?
20666Who appoints the Federal Courts?
20666Who are these much- maligned revolutionists of Russia?
20666Why should I at the command of anyone else or at the command of any power on earth?
20666Why should I?
31104***** Do we require a government to educate our children?
31104Admitting that any man ever reasoned thus, would he not be a terrible egotist?
31104But some one may say to me;--"How comes it that millions of men thus allow the Rothschilds and the Mackays to appropriate the fruit of their labour?"
31104Does it not, by creating misery, increase the number of crimes instead of diminishing them?
31104If armed brigands attack a people, is not that same people, armed with good weapons, the surest rampart to oppose to the foreign aggressor?
31104If we were not crushed by taxation and exploited by employers, as we now are, could we not ourselves do much better than is now done for us?
31104In obliging us to commit to others the care of our affairs, does it not create the most terrible vice of societies-- indifference to public matters?
31104Is he therefore a moral man?
31104Is it from their labour?"
31104Is this the work of the State?
31104So long as the common lands afford abundant pasture, what Commune seeks to restrict their use?
31104What has been the result?
31104When brush- wood and chestnuts are plentiful, what Commune forbids its members to take as much as they want?
31104you have often asked yourselves--"Whence comes the wealth of the rich?
34649And how if he did not vote at all?
34649And must not government cease when crime ceases, for very lack of objects on which to perform its function?
34649And on what ground is any piece of secular legislation disapproved?
34649And this must be equally true of thirty as of three: and, if of thirty, why not of three hundred, or three thousand, or three millions?
34649And what does this mean?
34649And what is meant by ignoring the State?
34649But how have we done so?
34649But suppose he did not vote for him; and on the contrary did all in his power to get elected some one holding opposite views-- what then?
34649Could their resolution be justified?
34649Does any one think such an enactment would be warrantable?
34649Does it not exist because crime exists?
34649For what is the meaning of Dissent?
34649For why do they refuse to be instrumental in spreading error?
34649How if maintenance of this also turns out to be a matter of conscience?
34649How then can it be shown that the State ought to be resisted in the one case and not in the other?
34649Is it not strong, or, as we say, despotic, when crime is great?
34649Is it not the offspring of evil, bearing about it all the marks of its parentage?
34649Is there not more liberty-- that is, less government-- as crime diminishes?
34649Nay, indeed, have we not seen that government is essentially immoral?
34649True enough; but how if the same can be asserted of all other liberty?
34649What now does this proceeding amount to when regarded in the abstract?
34649What, then, is that law, if not the law of pure equity-- the law of equal freedom?
34649Would the authority of the greatest number be in such case valid?
53193And where is Intermere?
53193But how do you achieve all these different results with apparently the same means?
53193But it is an absolute mystery to you?
53193But what are the constituents of the medium in the accumulator, and what are the formulas of the various combinations?
53193How far have we traveled?
53193If your flying machine and airship builders could do that, what would your people think?
53193Is that supernatural?
53193Shall he be permitted?
53193What would you think of his conclusion?
53193Would one, coming out of the depths of absolute ignorance of scientific achievement, as you call it, regard it as a supernatural agency?
53193You communicate alike with friends and strangers hundreds of miles distant in an ordinary tone of voice?
53193You have what you call the telephone?
53193You would learn something of our educational system?
53193Could we find anything that would contribute to our enjoyments, our hopes, our aspirations?
53193Did we start on the journey?
53193Finally I was able to frame a consecutive thought, in the interrogative form, and it was this:"Where am I?
53193Have we halted just beyond the first milestone?
53193Is not this the Atlantis which enthralled the Egyptian sage, philosopher and priest more than ten cycles ago?
53193Is not this true, Maros?"
53193Is this the Heaven my mother taught me to seek?"
53193What would it profit us?
53193Wherein do you differ from the untutored barbarian?"
53193Will our remoter generations reach the Ultima Thule?
53193Will the journey be resumed?
53193Will you sell it me for five thousand rupees, Sahib?
35962A machine?
35962A piece of real estate?
35962Are these men free, the stoker and his like?
35962How could a man work gratuitously for others when his entire time was barely sufficient to procure him his own necessary means of existence?
35962In what does it consist?
35962Is the holder of a share in a mining or railway company or any sort of stock- company justified in speaking of"his"property?
35962V. What are the results of these revolutions in industrial methods, and what are their tendencies?
35962What are those facts?
35962What can he show if someone asks to see it?
35962What interest has the office- holder of to- day to reduce to the minimum the cost to the State of the services it is his function to perform?
35962What will be the fate of the capitalists?
35962What, then, is the property of"those silent multitudes who toil and struggle so hard for existence and who are in truth the artisans of our greatness?
35962When and how will this happen, if it does happen?
35962Where is his property?
35962Will it not, therefore, be to the interest of all to work, and to try to make the work as little toilsome and as productive as possible?
35962Would there be such a great difference between"his"property, as it now is, and his quota or share in the national property?
35962Would this shareholder be any the less a property- owner, if this undivided whole should become an integrant portion of the national property?
18397Who, then, will black the boots under the socialist regime?
18397), which were formerly private services and properties?
18397And from another point of view, what are the museums if not a form of collective ownership and use of the products of art?
18397But M. Garofalo devotes more attention to the practical(?)
18397For if they should thus quietly await its coming, who among them would survive to prove to the incredulous the truth of their predictions?
18397Has the failure of the exceptional laws against the socialist party in Germany been forgotten?
18397In view of all this, how can the work and the reward be equal for all?
18397Must it now halt and remain stationary in the present state of progress?
18397Of the great mass of the people_ deprived of artistic education_?"
18397Of what public?
18397To act, but_ how_?
18397Upon what point are orthodox political economy and socialism in absolute conflict?
18397What is the use of hypnotizing oneself with phrases about"the propaganda of the deed"and"immediate action?"
18397What, in substance, is the message of socialism?
18397Where will this social revolution start?
18397Why, finally, if we are to consider the amount and the character of this indemnity, should this indemnity be_ total_ and_ absolute_?
18397in the section called"Does the doctrine of Heredity support Aristocracy?"
23574Why should not the law run: the whole ancestral series must be reproduced in the development of each individual organism? 23574 [ 38] Are they willing to pay the price?
23574And what Socialist will deny that the chief function of the militant Socialist is to develop class- consciousness in the workers?
23574And what is this class- consciousness which it is our business to preach in season and out of season?
23574Are the"educated and professional"socialists prepared to accept gladly such tremendous changes?
23574But what will be added?
23574Can any one imagine William Morris writing a sentiment so perfectly satisfying to a doll''s sense of beauty?
23574Does not that again agree exactly with the doctrine as I have stated it?
23574Does not that agree exactly with the doctrine as I have stated it?
23574Does the new morality condemn what the old branded as"crimes against property?"
23574Granted the truth of historical materialism, how will future generations look on the literature of to- day and yesterday?
23574How then can we consistently praise or blame any conduct?
23574If one ancestral stage, that of the fish, is reproduced in the young animal belonging to a higher group, why not several?--why not all of them?
23574In the conversations"after the Change"between Melmount, the famous Cabinet Minister, and the pitiful, cowardly, inefficient hero(?
23574May we take you by the hand and call you''Comrade''?"
23574Seeing what is to be done then, seeing what the reward is, Seeing what the terms are,--are you willing to join us?
23574The doubt of the sceptics is: Will the workers create, in the language of economics, an effective demand for Socialism?
23574The second question is: If Socialism is inevitable-- is coming anyhow-- why do you Socialists vex your souls agitating for it?
23574To begin with, what is Labor- Power?
23574What are"wrong,""right,""vice,""virtue,""bad"and"good"?
23574What is the lure of Socialism that is appealing, according to Mr. Street, to more and more of our"educated and professional"people?
23574What mean ye that ye beat my people to pieces, and grind the faces of the poor?
23574What serious harm could happen to us then?
23574Why is he so helpless?
23574Will you lend us the aid of your voice, your money, your sympathy?
38138Ought we, then, to consider cheapness as a curse? 38138 What, then, can the unhappy man do?
38138*****"What is competition from the point of view of the workman?
38138And what are the other two workmen to do?
38138But is this the fact?
38138But what if they take to thieving?
38138But why persist in considering the effect of cheapness with a view only to the momentary advantage of the consumer?
38138Can he cultivate the earth for himself?
38138Can he draw water from a spring enclosed in a field?
38138Can he gather the fruits which the hand of God ripens on the path of man?
38138Can he hunt or fish?
38138Can he, dying from the cruel native land where everything is denied him, seek the means of living far from the place where life was given him?
38138Can he, dying of hunger and thirst, stretch out his hands for the charity of his fellow- creatures?
38138Can he, exhausted by fatigue and without a refuge, lie down to sleep upon the pavement of the streets?
38138Does not disorder give birth to poverty, as order and good management give birth to riches?
38138Has the population a limit which it can not exceed?
38138Is it a necessary evil?
38138Is it not the reverse of the fact?
38138Is it not, on the contrary, an irresistible claim upon every human being for protection against suffering?
38138Is not want of combination a source of weakness, as combination is a source of strength?
38138Is the poor man a member of society, or an enemy to it?
38138Is weakness a justification of suffering?
38138It is true the workhouses exist, menacing society with an inundation of beggars-- what way is there of escaping from the cause?...
38138To murder?
38138What is he to do then?"
38138Why should he check the supply, especially as he can throw any loss on the workman whose wages are so pre- eminently liable to rise and fall?
33549But is that the case? 33549 An objection then came from the right,With what shall we be fed?"
33549And yet is it credible?
33549And, meanwhile....(_ a voice timidly:''Meanwhile?
33549As for food, is not chemistry also capable of manufacturing butter, albumen, and milk from no matter what?
33549Auguste Comte?
33549Besides, has the last word been said on the subject?
33549But to what extent does it not appear to have been adulterated, and attenuated by animal and vegetable life?
33549But what shall I say of art and poetry?
33549But what was the glacial period compared with this new crisis of the globe and the sky?
33549Does it interest you?
33549Fishermen, hunters, ploughmen, and shepherds-- do we really understand to- day the meaning of these words?
33549Had he just traversed in his journey through space an exceptionally cold region?
33549Have you noticed in the retrospective museum that quaint bit of apparatus of our fathers, which is called an umbrella?
33549If the corridors of our abode possess this wealth and splendour, what shall we say of the dwelling- places, or of the cities?
33549Is it irretrievable?
33549Now, what did our settlers do at the sight of such cerebral atrophy?
33549One may speculate how this comes about?
33549Ought I to draw my conclusion?
33549The sun had certainly revived after the glacial periods; why should it not do so again?
33549Their light, what is it?
33549They listened, however, to the end of these accounts, then in an ironical tone they asked our envoys:"Have you seen all that?"
33549Was his fuel giving out?
33549What sensible person prides himself on having a beautiful digestive apparatus, a lovely liver or elegant lungs?
33549You desire it, you promise me to listen to the end to my absurd and extravagant project?
33549or"How do you do?"
33549who knows if our own descendants will not one day be reduced to this extremity?
33549yes!_) Even to give it a fair trial?
2130But as to the question,''What more convenient way of punishment can be found?'' 2130 Happier?"
2130Were you ever there?
2130''What is that?''
2130), or to go about and beg?
2130And what is delight but another name for pleasure?
2130But they have asked us,''What sort of pleasure is it that men can find in throwing the dice?''
2130For if you consider the use of clothes, why should a fine thread be thought better than a coarse one?
2130God has commanded us not to kill, and shall we kill so easily for a little money?
2130How can there be any plenty where every man will excuse himself from labour?
2130If it is said that health can not be felt, they absolutely deny it; for what man is in health, that does not perceive it when he is awake?
2130Is there any man that is so dull and stupid as not to acknowledge that he feels a delight in health?
2130Now, when the stomachs of those that are thus turned out of doors grow keen, they rob no less keenly; and what else can they do?
2130Very few go among them on the account of traffic; for what can a man carry to them but iron, or gold, or silver?
2130Who quarrel more than beggars?
2130Will the bending another man''s knees give ease to yours?
2130and who run to create confusions with so desperate a boldness as those who, having nothing to lose, hope to gain by them?
2130and will the head''s being bare cure the madness of yours?
2130answered Raphael,"is that to be compassed in a way so abhorrent to my genius?
2130for, since death does not restrain theft, if men thought their lives would be safe, what fear or force could restrain ill men?
2130or do you propose any other punishment that will be more useful to the public?
2130who does more earnestly long for a change than he that is uneasy in his present circumstances?
33979''Who is my mother?
33979And as for the People, what of them and their authority?
33979And what is that temperament?
33979And what is the result?
33979But what is there behind the leading- article but prejudice, stupidity, ca nt, and twaddle?
33979Define women as a sex?
33979Do you wish to love?
33979For what is a practical scheme?
33979For what is morbidity but a mood of emotion or a mode of thought that one can not express?
33979Have you a grief that corrodes your heart?
33979He has got as far as he can, and that is not far, is it?
33979How should they carry its burden?
33979How should they use it?
33979How will it benefit?
33979If the lower classes do n''t set us a good example what on earth is the use of them?
33979Is sincerity such a terrible thing?
33979Is the silly fellow to get angry and call out, and disturb the play, and annoy the artists?
33979Is the soul a shadow seated in the house of sin?
33979Is this Utopian?
33979Once a man begins to neglect his domestic duties he becomes painfully effeminate, does he not?
33979Or is the body really in the soul, as Giordano Bruno thought?
33979The problem then is, why do not the public become more civilised?
33979What are the virtues?
33979What do other things matter?
33979What do you call a bad man?
33979What do you call a bad woman?
33979What does it matter?
33979What does it mean?
33979What does it signify?
33979What happens then to Individualism?
33979What is a cynic?
33979What is a healthy, or an unhealthy work of art?
33979What is the difference between literature and journalism?
33979What is the difference between scandal and gossip?
33979What is truth?
33979What matter what the cost is?
33979What on earth should we men do going about with purity and innocence?
33979What stops them?
33979Who are my brothers?''
33979Who can say where the fleshly impulse ceases or the psychical impulse begins?
33979Who cares whether Mr Ruskin''s views on Turner are sound or not?
33979Who knows what the virtues are?
33979Who taught them the trick of tyranny?
33979Who told them to exercise authority?
33979Why do you talk so trivially about life?
33979Why should he?
33979Why should they be grateful for the crumbs that fall from the rich man''s table?
27341And why have you thrown your ideals and convictions overboard?
27341Are you not afraid that you might make a botch out of the whole job?
27341Can you really spare them? 27341 Cleaning up?"
27341Do you remember my emerald ring? 27341 HELLO, Morrison, may I come in?"
27341Has Ibsen no ideals? 27341 How about your statues?"
27341Is it not the custom of your clan to delegate every three days one of your members to take the life of some ruler?
27341Is there no way out of it?
27341No, what good would the little do that you could give me?
27341Only one insignificant life in three days?! 27341 Thanks,"he simply repeated,"Has anybody seen you enter the house?"
27341What do you mean?
27341Would money help you?
27341Would you object to my company?
27341*** Has the celebrated story been really understood which stands at the commencement of the Bible-- the story of God''s mortal terror of_ science_?
27341+5c.++ Who Is the Enemy;+ Anthony Comstock or You?
27341But can one read"Brand"or"Peer Gynt"and ask such questions?
27341But what is the cause of all this, what is wrong with our society and our civilization?
27341Does the accursed Midas- touch of his mind dissolve everything, one very Holy of Holies, into the ashes of nothing?"
27341He had a strange foreboding, but forced himself to ask in a jocular mood:"Going to Egypt again?"
27341How does one_ defend_ one''s self against science?
27341How few of them would be able to make a telescope, or even a plainer instrument?
27341Is it something towards which the steps of development in nature and history all go?
27341The literary man smiled:"Could any man influence you one way or another?
27341The workingmen?
27341What does he do?
27341What indeed is the much talked of marriage bond of to- day,--which is considered the cornerstone of both Church and State?
27341What is the result?
27341What wonder, then, that strikes fail?
27341Where are you going?"
27341Where, then, shall I find time to write articles for MOTHER EARTH?
27341Why do you ask?"
27341Why should I bother to think what might become of them after my death?"
27341_ Consequently_,_ science_ also comes from her.... Only through woman did man learn to taste of the tree of knowledge.--What had happened?
34745Chernishevsky? 34745 Did you ever see what a big tail that louse has under the microscope?"
34745Does that not come to the same thing?
34745This word must come from the Latin_ Nihil_, nothing, as far as I can judge; and consequently it signifies a man who... who recognizes nothing?
34745Who gave it to you?
34745Will you have some sweets?
34745( I know it has often been printed, but how can I help publishing it again?)
34745--what life could be intenser?
34745A tail?
34745Always to work for the liberation of humanity-- that is n''t such a bad idea, is it?
34745And did a woman do this deed?
34745And what do we care?
34745As to"exquisiteness,"have we not had too much of those egotistic sweets?"
34745But is excuse really necessary?
34745But what do we know about it?
34745But what has a foreign tongue to do with it?
34745By what standards of the eternal verities is it wrong to combat this kind of slaughter by removing the official or officials responsible?
34745Do you take me for a fool?
34745Does this mean that during her reign no one was exiled?
34745Even when he cried that we must seize the opportunity by the_ front hair_?
34745He sang from his favorite opera, Glinka''s_ Ruslan and Ludmila_--"Have I then to say farewell to love forever?"
34745Kropotkin was now a thoro- going revolutionist, and it is foolish to ask as Grand Duke Nicholas did,"When did you begin to entertain such ideas?"
34745No one?
34745Otherwise would not we see future tragedies that would rob us of all strength to live thru the present?
34745PRICE, ONE DOLLAR THE ALTRURIANS 12 MOUNT MORRIS PARK WEST NEW YORK CITY 1908 This book is not copyrighted-- How could it be?
34745The serf would tear it away, and say bitterly,"Let me alone; you too, when you grow up, will you not be just the same?"
34745Think you she laments that one so gifted should perish so young?
34745Was it for them to follow the craven footsteps of a cowardly generation?
34745Was it natural that a man of his refinement and high culture should have aided the schemes of wild and fruitless political conspiracies?"
34745Was not Kossuth just as much an artist in English as in his native pepper?
34745Were there ever before such luminous sons, such divine daughters?
34745What fortress held Pisarev?
34745What has he done?"
34745What is a stylist?
34745What matters to him if the cut- throats of the Government lay hands upon him?
34745What then is it which makes so much difference?
34745What to him are exile, Siberia, death?
34745When Kropotkin returned to St. Petersburg on an official commission, a high functionary said to him,"Do you know that Chernishevsky has been arrested?
34745When has Liberty been redeemed without victims?
34745Where was Lavrov?
34745Who heard of Mikhailov?
34745Why sat no ardent youths at Chernishevsky''s feet?
34745Yet is it not well that we can not lift the mysterious veil and peer behind the darksome curtain?
34745why dost thou devour Thy offspring, who by loving thee are curst?"
22733After all, what constitutes scientific method?
22733And how much less the slaves, whose condition, generally speaking, could not possibly change for the worse?
22733And how much, one wonders, was that splendid life influenced by that boyish interest in the regeneration of the world?
22733And what of the numerous and incalculable expenditures of labor to make the railroads, the railway engines, and to provide these with steam- power?
22733But what factors formed my will?
22733But what of the labor used to make the tools of the men who felled the trees and prepared the lumber?
22733But when we speak of"Marxism,"what mental picture does the word suggest, what intellectual concept is the word a name for?
22733Has there ever been a king in modern times with anything like the power of Mr. Rockefeller?
22733He was then seventy years old, and being asked,''Well, Mr. Owen, who is your disciple?
22733How is this to be done?
22733Is it his statement of the extent to which labor is exploited, or the_ fact_ of the exploitation?
22733Kipling asks in his ballad,"The British Flag"--"And what should they know of England, who only England know?"
22733May I not ask you, then, to follow carefully a brief series of propositions, or postulates, which I shall, with your permission, lay before you?
22733On the other hand, if compensation is given, will there not be still a privileged class, a wealthy class, that is, and a poorer class?
22733The question immediately arises: what is it that determines the relative value of commodities so exchanged?
22733The question is, can we go further in our attempt to scan the future without entering the realms of Utopian speculation?
22733Their work?
22733What circumstances determined my decision?
22733What did Marx contribute, and what Engels?
22733What object could the state have in taking away that farm and compelling the farmer to work upon a communal, publicly owned and managed farm?
22733What of the coal miner and the iron miner and the tool maker?
22733What reason could the state possibly have for forbidding the continuance of such an arrangement between two of its citizens?
22733What was the respective share of each of its creators?
22733What, then, should the proletariat care for the overthrow of the Roman state by the barbarians?
22733Who will do the dirty work, and the dangerous work, under Socialism?
22733Why do men pay out of their hard- earned wages to support unions now?
22733Why was the first union started?
22733Will not political manipulators and bosses betray their trusts?
22733Will society be bettered by the change of masters?
22733Will there be abuses?
22733[ 130] Why do men organize into unions?
22733_ God''s England or the Devil''s?_ 69 n. Godwin, William, 203, 204.
22733how many men are there possessed of your views who will remain after you are gone to put them in practice?''
27262And does she know?
27262And let those Republican Association women stand for more morality than we do?
27262Do you think they ought to be allowed to make their own laws?
27262How about the Supreme Court on divorces in Dakota?
27262Is it true,I asked,"that you have sent an invitation to Madame Andreieva to meet you to discuss the steps to be taken to reinstate yourselves?"
27262Please, sir, wo n''t you allow us, too, to have a little game?
27262Suppose Gorky is a Socialist,I said;"what has that to do with his morals?"
27262Then who is to take care of us women?
27262Then, why do you say that Gorky is not properly divorced from his first wife and married to his second? 27262 Til Frihet"( Towards Freedom) was his paper; and would you know how it came out?
27262What is it about?
27262What is morality for,demanded the voice from the corner,"if it is n''t to make people unhappy?"
27262What is there to find out?
27262Who makes the law?
27262Will Mrs. Warner be good enough to describe the exact status-- I think status is right-- of the woman he tried to pass as his wife?
27262Would she say it publicly if it were not true?
27262You want Russia to be free from the rule of the Tsar, do n''t you?
27262(?)
27262+5c.++ Who Is the Enemy;+ Anthony Comstock or You?
27262After all, can not one every day and in every large city observe the same phenomenon that has followed the disaster in San Francisco?
27262And how did he manage to get along all this time, these twenty- five years or more, since"pot boiling"had become an unpardonable crime to him?
27262And now,--what is really being done now?
27262And the fate of old Melville''s pictures?
27262Besides, is n''t he a Socialist?
27262But this way or that way, what is the difference?
27262Did he not observe with his own eyes how his Ideal had faded?
27262Do n''t you see that he is a foreigner and ca n''t very well know that our men are just as bad as he is?
27262Finally what is going to be the end of the great display of superficial sentimentality for the stricken city?
27262For what, indeed, is habit not responsible?
27262Heated dwellings in this stretch of land are luxuries, difficult of achievement; and how is one to prepare a warm meal out of nothing?
27262How can you speak as you do?
27262How could they?
27262I would like to know what would become of the holy institution of matrimony if it could be trifled with in such a fashion?"
27262If men and women could dispense with the law in that way what would become of society?"
27262Now the fresh impulse is needed for new growth; where shall it be sought if not in the expression of the emotional life?
27262O, what is it the people need?
27262Sarah rose and read in a clear, sharp voice from the clipping:"Should not we as women take some action against this man?
27262Suppose to- day the mortgages and railroad bonds, which are forms of ownership of land, were taken out of the market, what interest could we get?
27262The distress was thereby officially acknowledged; was that not sufficient?
27262The district physician?
27262There among lying words it rang out boldly, as the joyous harbinger of the time to come, of a new life open to all in the future;--far or near?
27262Warner?"
27262Was ever anything more ridiculous?"
27262Was it possible that human beings breathed within?
27262What does civilized humanity do with all this splendor?
27262What if the underlying force of education were spontaneous expression, instead of the limited method or system?
27262What is decorative art, if not a sense of beauty applied to objects of use?
27262Why not change them to suit our moods?
27262Why not, indeed?
27262Why then hold the conditions up before the special attention of the people?"
27262[ Illustration] 1792 the French people marched through the streets singing: O, what is it the people cry?
36568And what will the people be taught in these schools?
36568And its last word?
36568And the name of the Roman civilization?
36568And the proof?
36568But if no person has seen it, how is it that men have come to believe in its existence?
36568But suppose it were definitely developed, what could it give us?
36568But, if this social power exists, why has it not sufficed hitherto to moralize, to humanize men?
36568But, then, what is their God?
36568Could they have received in the distribution a particle at once divine and stupid?
36568Do you know what took place in the great Social Revolution of 1789- 1793?
36568Do you wish to render its authority and influence beneficent and human?
36568Does it follow that I reject all authority?
36568GOD AND THE STATE Who are right, the idealists or the materialists?
36568How do they get over this?
36568How is this sanction manifested?
36568How solve this antinomy?
36568In France, Chateaubriand, Lamartine, and-- shall I say it?
36568In the name of the bourgeois interest bluntly confessed?
36568In the name of what?
36568Is it necessary to point out to what extent and in what manner religions debase and corrupt the people?
36568Is it not plain that all these governments are systematic poisoners, interested stupefiers of the masses?
36568Is not the number of men who find supreme enjoyment in sacrifice and devotion exceedingly limited?
36568May we not suppose that all men are equally inspired by God?
36568Must it be concluded that this exploitation and this oppression are necessities absolutely inherent in the very existence of human society?
36568Must we, then, eliminate from society all instruction and abolish all schools?
36568Now, where find it if not in religion, that good protectress of all the well- fed and the useful consoler of the hungry?
36568On the contrary, can we not foresee in these new masters the same follies and the same crimes found in those of former days and of the present time?
36568Shall we blame the science of history?
36568To- day even, what is it that kills, what is it that crushes brutally, materially, in all European countries, liberty and humanity?
36568Unless we suppose that the various divine particles have been irregularly distributed, how is this difference to be explained?
36568Was not everybody mistaken?
36568What does it care for the particular conditions and chance fate of Peter or James?
36568What has been and still is the principal object of all her contests with the sovereigns of Europe?
36568What is authority?
36568What is more ancient and more universal than slavery?
36568What matters it?
36568Whence, then, could we derive the power and the wish to rebel against them?
36568Which is the most materialistic, the most natural, in its point of departure, and the most humanly ideal in its results?
36568Which?
36568Who are the real idealists-- the idealists not of abstraction, but of life, not of heaven, but of earth-- and who are the materialists?
36568Why not?
36568Why?
36568[ 7] But until the masses shall have reached this degree of instruction, will it be necessary to leave them to the government of scientific men?
6711''Who are they?'' 6711 Are we lost?"
6711Are you tired?
6711But you will let me help you, Philip?
6711Do you remember, Gloria,he said,"how unhappy you were over the thought of laboring among the rich instead of the poor?
6711How am I to change this condition?
6711How will you occupy your time, Philip?
6711How would it prevent your being an old maid, Janet?
6711I am wondering, Mr. Dru, why you came to West Point and why it is you like the thought of being a soldier?
6711I feel sure that I can, Senator, why do you ask?
6711If he had faith in the sober judgment of the American people, why not trust them to a measurable extent with the conduct of their own affairs? 6711 Rockland,"began Selwyn,"can you hold this state in line at next year''s election?"
6711Thank you, Senator, at what hour?
6711What do you mean, Gloria? 6711 What happened?"
6711What is to be the outcome, Philip?
6711What''s the matter, Philip?
6711Why could not I''try out''the sincerity of my rich converts and get them to help finance your campaign?
6711Administrator, why do n''t you marry?
6711After a long silence one afternoon she softly asked,"What are you going to do, Philip?"
6711And Janet wondered whether this was a message to some unknown woman, or was it meant for Gloria?
6711And how can man under such a moral code justify his dominion over land and sea?
6711Are you one of the bunch?''
6711At the very worst, can it mean more than a long and dreamless sleep?
6711But can they exercise that franchise, and have they equal rights?
6711But in what way?
6711But what of him?
6711Can you give me any information upon this matter?"
6711Cheer the fellow up a bit, ca n''t you?"
6711Did he love Gloria, or did his love encompass the earth, and was mankind ever to be his wife and mistress?
6711Do n''t you like Army Post life?"
6711Do you follow me, Governor, and do you endorse this unwritten law?"
6711He must be saved; but could he be?
6711How are your eyes now?"
6711How is that to be done?
6711Is it not so?"
6711Is that all you have in mind to do in the world?"
6711It was a perilous journey, and to what end?
6711May I come to your office at once?"
6711Men have fought, struggled and died, lured by the gleam of gold, and to what end?
6711Now what is the cause of the wide feeling of labor unrest?
6711Now, what does the substitution of such conditions for the conditions generally prevailing to- day in England mean for our country?
6711Now, what is the ideal of co- partnership?
6711Seriously, though, I think you should come, for if you would know something of politics, then why not get your lessons from the fountain head?
6711The girl regarded Philip for a second in silence, and then quietly asked,"For the betterment of whose life after death?"
6711The question is simply this: Can I stand a period of several years''enforced inactivity as a mere pensioner?"
6711Then Philip took Gloria''s unresisting hand, and said,"My beloved, will you come with me in my exile?
6711Was he to live and die a fathomless mystery?
6711Was there an attachment, an understanding, or was it one of those platonic friendships created by common interests and a common purpose?
6711What need was there?
6711What time is it?"
6711What was best to do?
6711What was the hoarding of money or land in comparison to the satisfaction of seeing each son happy in the possession of a home and family?
6711Where were they bound?
6711Who knows how large a part the mystery of birth and heredity play in one''s life and what environment and opportunity, or lack of it, means to us?
6711Who shall estimate the difference between the value of willing and unwilling service?
6711Would they return?
26600But what would you do, Teacher?
26600Why?
26600Why?
26600Why?
26600+ A Proposition.+--Would it not be wiser to explain theories out of life and not life out of theories?
26600A very enticing national independence, is it not?
26600All these busybodies, moral detectives, jailers of the human spirit, what will they say?
26600And what was the thing that was done?
26600And who does not wish to appear advanced and modern?
26600And why is not the whole museum purged of its nude figures?
26600Are the working people of America going to look on coolly at a repetition of the Black Friday in Chicago?
26600At this remark the scoundrel turned on the other side, with his back toward me, and said, while yawning:"What I want?
26600BOLTON HALL"What would you do,"asked the Idealist,"if you were Czar of Russia?"
26600But was anything done to eliminate the disease, or to remove its cause?
26600By what extraordinary process does Comstockery conjure decency into the stomach and indecency into the bowels?
26600Does he not know that it has ever been the mission of the Supreme Being to serve as Impresario to Falsehood and Wretchedness?
26600H. H. Rogers is my brother and keeper, and he insists he needs protection, and I must pay for it, so what can I do?
26600Has that purified our political life, as many well- meaning advocates have predicted?
26600Has the art censor decided that the photographs are innocuous, or that they are art?
26600Have they forgotten the censor here?
26600How then can he be expected to co- operate with them in the building of a Jewish commonwealth?
26600Humble in his heart, he is great and daring in his mind.... And who is Hamlet?
26600I walked over to the man and inquired interestedly:"Are you ill?"
26600In my park?
26600Is Comstockery to be our best expression of the most vital matter of existence?
26600It is true that, at last, there is a rift within the lute; or would it better be called a leak in the sewer?
26600Or are they going to awaken from their lethargy, ere America becomes thoroughly Russified?
26600Or is the national glory of the Jews to begin after the social revolution?
26600Perhaps there will also be a labor leader, á la Powderly, who will be willing to carry faggots to the stake?
26600Shall it remain so?
26600That last word was:"Why?"
26600The Joy or grief or love or shame That holds its little hour of sway Is only worth its destined time-- What use to try to make it stay?
26600Then why sex or sex functions?
26600There are our other friends(?).
26600What does it matter that, thinking that he has to deal with noxious giants, Don Quixote attacks useful windmills?...
26600What for?
26600What has she achieved through her emancipation?
26600What is it that makes the brain- worker just as dependent in the intellectual realm as the artisan in the material world?
26600What maintains the material and intellectual slavery of the masses and the insanity of the autocracy of the few?
26600What matters anything on earth So long as only I am I?
26600What would you do?"
26600What''s love or fame or place or power?
26600What''s wealth when we shall come to die?
26600What, if the workers, conscious of their economic power, cease to store up great wealth in the warehouses of the privileged?
26600Where are the governments which are supposed to serve as benefactors of suffering mankind?
26600Why a foot more than a hand?
26600Why any one part of the body more than another?
26600Why do they weep?
26600Why?
26600Why?
26600Will you be good enough to keep the mosquitoes away for two hours?"
26600[ Illustration] AND YOU?
40365According to what method will children be taught?
40365Again, be the governors good or bad, wise or ignorant, who is it that appoints them to their office?
40365And by what criterion?
40365And by whom?
40365And what will be the lot of the minority, who are the most intelligent, most active and most advanced in society?
40365And, of course, what would these officials do if there were no longer any wolves to exterminate?
40365Are the governors chosen from a certain class or party?
40365Are they elected by universal suffrage?
40365But how do those whose business it now is to make the laws, protect society?
40365But in what way does it really assist them?
40365But is the suppression of government possible, desirable, or wise?
40365But of the various minorities, who all believe themselves in the right, as no doubt many of them are in part, which shall be chosen to rule?
40365But what reason is there for the existence of government?
40365Do they impose themselves by right of war, conquest, or revolution?
40365How could it be otherwise?
40365How solve this problem of social alchemy: To elect a government of geniuses by the votes of a mass of fools?
40365How will children be educated?
40365How will production and distribution be organized?
40365If there were no government, who would organize the supply and distribution of provisions?
40365Is it on account of the police that more people are not murdered?
40365Or of those who might spread infectious disease in a country, by refusing to submit to the regulation of hygiene by science?
40365Or those others who live by seeking for and inventing new infringements of law?
40365Should government be, on the other hand, elected by universal suffrage, and so be the emanation, more or less sincere, of the wish of the majority?
40365The liberty of each, say they, has for its limit the liberty of others; but who will establish those limits, and who will cause them to be respected?
40365Then, what guarantees have the public that their rulers have the general good at heart?
40365Unless it be like the God of the Bible, who created the universe out of nothing?
40365What can government of itself add to the moral and material forces which exist in a society?
40365What is the government?
40365What of those who, disregarding the law of solidarity, would not work?
40365What purpose would it then serve?
40365What then?
40365What will happen if the engine- driver falls ill while the train is on its way?
40365When all have the means of instruction and self- development?
40365When the strife between men, with the hatred and rancour it breeds, will be no longer a necessary condition of existence?
40365Who are the best?
40365Who can foresee the activities which may develop in humanity when it is emancipated from misery and oppression?
40365Who can foresee the progress of science, the new sources of production, means of communication, etc.?
40365Who regulate matters pertaining to public hygiene, the postal, telegraph, and railway services, etc.?
40365Who will arrange the railway time- table?
40365Who will be able to prevent the individual citizen from offending the general will?
40365Who will be the miners and sailors?
40365Who will clear the drains?
40365Who would care for the preservation and increase of capital, that it might be transmitted to posterity, enriched and improved?
40365Who would direct public instruction?
40365Who would prevent the destruction of the forests, or the irrational exploitation, and therefore impoverishment of the soil?
40365Who would there be to prevent and repress crimes, that is, anti- social acts?
40365Why abdicate one''s own liberty, one''s own initiative in favor of other individuals?
40365Why give them the power to be the masters, with or contrary to the wish of each, to dispose of the forces of all in their own way?
40365Will all the inhabitants of Siberia winter at Nice?
40365Will every one dine on partridges and drink champagne?
40365Will not an educative government, composed of the best men, be necessary to prepare the advancing generations for their future destiny?
40365Will the sick be nursed at home or in hospitals?
40365Will there still be large cities, or will people spread equally over all the surface of the earth?
40365Would it not be more prudent to advance gradually towards the Anarchistic ideal, passing through Republican, Democratic and Socialistic stages?
40365Would it not rather paralyze or destroy it?
40365Would the people have the ability necessary to provide and distribute provisions?
30758How is it that on the Continent democratic bodies are so sceptical, or sceptical bodies so democratic? 30758 Where,"he asks,"shall we classify the stand of the Catholic Church against the open shop?
30758( 4) that a personal destroyer- Devil, incarnated in a talking serpent, tempted them into disobedience; or that there ever was any such Devil?
30758And what shall we say of all the inorganic and organic movements in a small cup of whole drops of water, let alone those of a great ocean of them?
30758But does wage- labor create any property for the laborer?
30758But why go further into this subject?
30758But why should I go while any of my brother clergymen remain?
30758Do the ideas of the ruling class, in any given epoch, correspond with the prevailing mode of economic production?
30758Do you mean the property of the petty artisan and of the small peasant, a form of property that preceded the bourgeois form?
30758Do you not now see with me that the christ of the world is not a conscious, personal god, but an unconscious, impersonal machine?
30758Have you ever been to Crazy Land,[N] Down on the Looney Pike?
30758How can I adequately express my contempt for the assertion that all things occur for the best, for a wise and beneficent end?
30758How do you explain the phenomena of History?
30758How many American families of five have even the smaller of these sums at their disposal?
30758How then, can the United States become the standard for the governments of the nations?
30758IV Would Socialism Change Human Nature?
30758If he is willing and can, which is the only one of these suppositions that can be applied to God, how happens it that there is evil on earth?
30758In what economic system, past or present, does surplus value appear?
30758Is the story of Adam and Eve a true story?
30758Or do you mean modern bourgeois private property?
30758Sceptics are reverently but earnestly asking: Why does He not keep the sparrows from falling?
30758Since labor power is a commodity, what condition is it subject to?
30758Since the economic factor is the determining factor, what does the law of Surplus Value furnish us?
30758So when all Israel saw that the king harkened not unto them, the people answered the king, saying, What portion have we in David?
30758Strange, is it not?
30758V What Will be the Form of the Workers''State?
30758WOULD SOCIALISM CHANGE HUMAN NATURE?
30758What bearing does this have on the materialistic conception of history?
30758What determines the value of labor power?
30758What effect do these ideas of the ruling class have on the interests of the subject class?
30758What effect have"great men"had on history?
30758What function does the state perform in the class struggle?
30758What great factor is responsible for the rise of"great men?"
30758What has brought about this startling change?
30758What is responsible for the birth of new ideas, and do they occur to some one individual only?
30758What is the most important question in life?
30758What man is found such an idiot as to suppose that God planted trees in Paradise like an husbandman?
30758What need have we for"ifs"and"buts"?
30758What of the attitude of the combined commission in Denver of Catholics, Protestants and Jews on the street car strike?"
30758What shall be said of the Interchurch report on the steel strike?
30758What single great idea occurred to both Darwin and Wallace independently?
30758What single great idea occurred to both Marx and Engels independently?
30758What was to be done?
30758What, then, is this right?
30758Why all these age- long safeguards against change?
30758Why do social institutions change and not remain fixed?
30758Why not?
30758Why?
30758where dost thou run?
45350And are they well frequented? 45350 But how did they come to erect a building of such gigantic dimensions so far beyond the circle of civilization?"
45350But how, then, is it that they all speak the same language?
45350But what became ultimately of the bird?
45350But what is the time? 45350 Do I then understand from your remarks that you have arrived at last at a system of Compulsory Education?"
45350Do n''t you even know the Solar Light?
45350Does the same apply to the inhabitants of all countries where Europeans have settled?
45350From Pekin? 45350 From where,"asked I,"did this train start?"
45350Have those then become the two contending parties in politics?
45350Have those tribes that belong to the so- called inferior races improved at all in civilization?
45350I apprehend, then, that we are in a so- called arcade?
45350I fully understand; the bird''s name was Java?
45350I know full well,said I,"what true time is, also what is understood by mean time, but what on earth is meant by aleutic time?"
45350Is it possible?
45350Londinia? 45350 Now we are among the literature of the two- winged insects; what work do you wish to see?"
45350On yonder tower, over the clock- face?
45350Shall we say the literature of entomology?
45350Then probably you warm your houses by a similar process, and you never use any stoves or fireplaces now?
45350Then you hear nothing more now of what was once termed''official science''?
45350Well?
45350What has become of the Maoris?
45350What kind of time is it you want to know?
45350Where do you think,I asked,"we are going to?"
45350; why should we not have the self- registering enkephalometer?
45350; why should we not succeed in inventing a speculum for the brain?
45350And do employers allow their workmen to make use of them?
45350And have they reduced their wages in consequence?
45350And what was the consequence?
45350Are they not afraid that their men will thus become too clever, too well educated?"
45350Besides, what else could have happened, since the continual invention of new machinery has done away with so much of our manual labour?
45350But what has become of the once so celebrated observatories of Leiden, Greenwich, the Pulkowa, etc., etc.?"
45350Did Galvani think of the telegraphic art when he noticed how the muscles of his frogs contracted under the influence of electricity?
45350Has not the introduction of compulsory education been accompanied by great, almost insuperable obstacles?"
45350How could you doubt that for a moment?
45350I asked Bacon did he know what this edifice was intended for?
45350I asked Bacon what business had those people there?
45350I exclaimed;"what have you come to at last?"
45350I first thought that these were a new kind of cannon; so I asked whether we were on board of a man- of- war?
45350If the difference of one penny constituted no vital distinction, why not still further descend until we arrived at zero?
45350Is that the same as London?"
45350Not even trusting my eyes, I asked the"trunculant figure"who, Bacon said, was my countryman: Was the whole of North Holland imbedded in the sea?
45350Not knowing what they meant, I once more inquired of my guide: what country did they represent?
45350Our fellow- passengers woke up one after the other, and Miss Phantasia asked me would I stay at the same hotel with them at Melbourne?
45350Right across or over the high mountains of Central Asia and Ural?"
45350Surely they are not of iron, as they would have been in my time?"
45350Surely you yourself remember the piercing of Mount Cenis?
45350Surely, sir, as a gentleman you must have heard of the telephon?"
45350Was not Pitt England''s prime minister on his coming of age?
45350What do you call the metal used for those elegant little bars which connect and support the roof of glass above us?
45350When comparing the present condition of society with that of past centuries the question naturally arises, what will the future be?
45350Which branch of human knowledge do you give the preference to?"
45350Why had the money qualification been abolished?
45350Why should a man at one and twenty be better than he was at twenty?
45350[ 4] or Volta, when, following up Galvani''s experiments, he produced the pile that bears his name?
45350asked he in reply;"true, mean, or Aleutic Time?
45350where did you ever know such tones to proceed from a musical instrument?
32644I am no Marxistsaid-- guess who?
32644And had not Vico already recognized that Providence does not act in history from without?
32644And in making this study who is there who will refuse to recognize that Thomas More was a heroic soul and a great writer on socialism?
32644And it was born to answer special questions: for example, is interest legitimate?
32644And when did it ever occur to any of their disciples, even of the strictest school, to represent these two thinkers as miracle- workers?
32644And why should it revolt at the pedagogy of the guillotine?
32644And, to speak like the amateurs of high- sounding phrases, will there ever be a humanization of all men?
32644But again, can subjective pedagogy construct of itself a social background upon which all these beautiful things ought to be realized?
32644But whence come and how persist all these inequalities which appear so irrational in the light of a concept of justice so simple and so elementary?
32644But why have they not asked the pope to become the head of the free thought league?
32644Eliminate pauperism?
32644Give the worker the entire product of his labor?
32644Had not Lessing affirmed that history is an education of the human race?
32644Had not Rousseau seen that ideas are born from needs?
32644Had they not carried on their shoulders all the ardent defenders of liberty and equality?
32644Has there not been a passing from revolution to the self- styled evolution?
32644Has there not been an acquiescence of the revolutionary spirit in the exigencies of the reform movement?
32644Have we not there, some ask, a deviation from the simple and imperative doctrine of the Manifesto?
32644How can it be hoped to destroy such a system by an act of logical negation and how eliminate it by reasoning?
32644How could a cherished ideal be still opposed to the hard reality of history?
32644How demand the suppression of poverty without demanding the overthrow of all the rest?
32644In the successive whole, and in the continuous necessity of all historical events, is there, then, some ask, any meaning, any significance?
32644Is it advantageous for states and for nations to accumulate money?
32644Is it not very significant?
32644Is not that in fact the vital part of the Manifesto, its essence and its distinctive character?
32644Need we remind the reader that writing was never lost, although the peoples who invented it have disappeared from historic continuity?
32644Others again say, have we not lost in intensity and precision what we have gained in extension and complexity?
32644Then, these ingenuous questions immediately arise: Why not abolish poverty?
32644There is one question which we can not evade: What has given birth to the belief in_ historic factors_?
32644What is the explanation of this change?
32644What were the causes of their failure?
32644What, for example, is the meaning of the lives of the great men?
32644Where shall we find the laws of this formation and of this development?
32644Why could not Michel de Lando have written the Communist Manifesto?
32644Why not eliminate lockouts?
32644Why not favor the direct exchange of products in consideration of the labor that they contain?
32644Why not give the worker the entire product of his labor, etc.?
32644Why not imagine a fief which, remaining a fief all the while, should become a factory producing commodities exclusively?
32644Why not suppress the middle man?
32644Why should the slave have had the ways of seeing and the passions and the sentiments of the master whom he feared?
32644Will this irony of human destinies ever cease?
32644[ 23] What is the doctrine of the structure of present society?
32644[ 26] Who would have thought a few years ago of the discovery and the authentic interpretation of an ancient Babylonian law?
14770Ah,quickly replied Agitator,"if the offer be sincere, why should it go by default on my simple refusal to be turned from my present course?
14770And have you no way of moving through the air at pleasure?
14770And how many people are on the Moon now?
14770And is that world inhabited by sensible creatures?
14770And what can that purpose be?
14770Are all as small as you whence you came?
14770Are they all pure- minded?
14770Are they smaller than you?
14770Are you in the image of the other human creatures in that far away world?
14770Are you not a god?
14770Are you not happy that you have wings with which fly?
14770Artificial machinery?
14770But how could you have traversed so great a distance?
14770But how did he learn our language?
14770But what would become of my other great work?
14770Did you walk or run?
14770Do you expect to meet, in that wider life, representatives from other worlds?
14770For what purpose came you hither?
14770From what part of our world?
14770From what section of our world have you come?
14770Happy? 14770 Hast thou time to spend with a friend from another world?"
14770Have you come to harm us?
14770Have you much soil there?
14770How came that lump in the middle of your face?
14770How came you here?
14770How came you to our world?
14770How can people live on diamonds?
14770How can that be true?
14770How could you have such power as to reach our world?
14770How did you succeed in getting the people to submit to such a system?
14770How do you account for this slow growth?
14770How many millions?
14770How many people live on your world?
14770How many planets, how many suns, how many milky ways are there?
14770How many were saved?
14770How soon shall we see you again?
14770If you are not a spirit, how could you have traveled such incredible distances?
14770No one having wings?
14770On what world then?
14770Pray, tell me, what are those gummy flabs at the sides of your head?
14770Shall we not see you again?
14770Talking of wings, do you object if I see more closely the cut and style of your wings? 14770 What are the evidences of this horrible world- ending?"
14770What can you mean by that?
14770What right,I asked,"has any one to form a monopoly on sunlight or rain which are free bounties from above?"
14770What shall we do?
14770What then can you be?
14770Where did you get this Fot- sil?
14770Will you stay with us forever?
14770Wo n''t you tell us, child, how far away that is?
14770After a while I was addressed by a trembling questioner:"Where is your home, my child?"
14770Are There More Worlds Than One?
14770Are There More Worlds Than One?
14770Are There More Worlds Than One?
14770But how can they live away from the great body of water while plucking these fruits?
14770Can any one predict the excitement that would prevail in our world if a human creature from some other planet were suddenly to set foot upon our soil?
14770Can you conceive the effect of a triple choir of these human warblers all trained in perfect harmony and unison?
14770Can you help me?"
14770Can you imagine the picture of workmen flying in all directions with tools, each one busily employed?
14770Can you realize what a refreshing moral atmosphere exists in a world where conventional lying is almost unknown?
14770For what purpose are all these immense worlds shining and swinging in the depths of immensity?
14770Have we not noted the laboring husband bending at his toil for eight or ten hours to pay the physician who calls for a few minutes?
14770Have you not yet seen the vast craters, the mountains of barren cinder, the stumps of immense pillars, partly excavated?
14770He exchanged a few sentences with the professor and again turned to me:"At what time do you want the telescope?"
14770Here, in this world of ours, we are proud of the wonderful genius displayed by our inventors, and is not this conceit pardonable?
14770How can all this be true?
14770In a moment the chief was at my side and, looking into my face, exclaimed:"Who are you and why have you remained silent?"
14770Is it not true that ignorance is the cause of nearly all the discontent in the world?
14770Is it possible to picture to your mind''s eye a line of lofty mountains whose sides are dressed in living colors and trimmed with rare flowers?
14770She was nervously agitated, but being of strong fibre she quickly rallied with her answer,"Where art thou and who art thou?"
14770Surrendering this line of inquiry, he went on to ask the following questions:"Are there more creatures than you where you came from?"
14770The timid professor ventured to accept it and, as he received it from my hand, he again asked:"Where is your home?"
14770What can we expect of such a race of people who have drifted from the light of civilization for so long a period?
14770Where can that be?"
14770Who can select language sufficiently graphic to portray such a lurid dissolution of a planet, and the gathering of the faithful, quick and dead?
14770Who can understand the universal plans of Jehovah?
14770Why are countless worlds swinging in the endless regions of space?
14770Will I do wrong if I quote that sublime beatitude, making it applicable to all worlds?
14770how can you be a spirit without wings?"
34012Did I belong to the A. R. U.? 34012 Did I?"
34012Say, Gene,he continued, still holding me with both hands,"I am pretty well down, ai n''t I?
34012And could I call him brother without insulting him?
34012And if not, who is entitled to any part of it?
34012And then what happened?
34012And when you are out of a job what can your union do for you?
34012And who shall say that they were not right; or that they forfeited their brave lives in vain?
34012And why is this awful battle raging and human beings murdering each other as if they were wild beasts?
34012Are their interest not diametrically opposite?
34012Are they not entitled to all of it?
34012At the same time Cook said,''Stop a minute-- where is Edwin''s hand?''
34012Because the Mine and Smelter Trust had kidnaped three citizens of the republic?
34012Boodle drawn from the veins of labor?
34012But even if you do find a master, if you have a job, can you boast of being a man among men?
34012But how about the working class?
34012But how is it at present?
34012But how is it in this outgrown capitalist system?
34012Can a door be both open and shut at the same time?
34012Can you increase both the workers''and the capitalist''s share at the same time?
34012Can you read this without being moved to tears?
34012Dared I call him brother?
34012Debs?"
34012Debs?"
34012Did Mr. Bryan utter a word?
34012Did he not know at the time that his man Cortelyou was holding up the trusts for all they would"cough up"for his election?
34012Did, or did not, the men known as trust magnates put up this boodle?
34012Do they not all alike stand for the private ownership of industry and the wage- slavery of the working class?
34012Do you endorse the supreme court decision making it lawful for a corporation to discharge a man because of his membership in a labor union?
34012Do you know how long you are going to have one?
34012Do you know whether you have a job or not?
34012Does not this brand the president with the duplicity of a Tweed and the cunning of a Quay?
34012Have the mill- owners gone stark mad?
34012Have they in their brutal rage become stone- blind?
34012He is marked as an agitator, he is discharged, and then what is his status?
34012How can any intelligent, self- respecting wage- worker give his support to either of these corrupt capitalist parties?
34012How is it with the average workingman today?
34012How many of their detractors and persecutors were animated by motives so pure and exalted?
34012If the man who produces wealth is not entitled to it, who is?
34012If you find yourself in a party that attacks your pocket do you not quit that party?
34012If you increase the share of the capitalist do n''t you decrease the share of the workers?
34012In other words, why do not the Republican and Democratic parties perform at Washington instead of promising at Chicago and Baltimore?
34012Is not that a fact?
34012Is there any doubt in the mind of any thinking workingman that we are in the midst of a class struggle?
34012Is there any doubt that the workingman ought to own the tool he works with?
34012Now why should not just these things come to pass and why should not you children help us speed the day when they_ shall_ come to pass?
34012Now, is it possible to be for the capitalist without being against the worker?
34012Now, what is class- consciousness?
34012Oh, my brothers, can you be satisfied with your lot?
34012U.?"
34012Was Jesus divinely begotten?
34012Was Roosevelt also"horrified"?
34012Was ever anything in all the annals of heartless persecution more monstrous than this?
34012What assurance has he that he is going to keep it?
34012What assurance has he that it is his in twenty- four hours?
34012What can the present economic organization do to improve the condition of the workingman?
34012What difference is there, judged by what they stand for, between Taft, Roosevelt, La Follette, Harmon, Wilson, Clark and Bryan?
34012What earthly difference can it make to the millions of workers whether the Republican or Democratic political machine of capitalism is in commission?
34012What is a party?
34012What is it that is responsible for their exploitation and for all of the ills they suffer?
34012What is it that keeps the working class in subjection?
34012What is politics?
34012What is the key to their ability as masters of language?
34012What right has Theodore Roosevelt to prejudge American citizens, pronounce their guilt and hand them over to the hangman?
34012What school subjects, or what kinds of training have entered into their lives that have given them power to express themselves effectively?
34012What, I ask, has any of these capitalist parties, or all of them combined, for the working and producing class in this campaign?
34012Who finances them?
34012Who is it that is so fearful you will discuss politics?
34012Why did not Mr. Byran speak?
34012Why forced to surrender to anybody any part of what his labor produces?
34012Why should a union man be afraid to discuss politics?
34012Why should any workingman need to beg for work?
34012Will Mr. Roosevelt deny it?
34012Will he dare plead ignorance to intelligent persons as to who put up the money that debauched the voters of the nation?
34012Will you insist that life shall continue a mere struggle for existence and one prolonged misery to which death comes as a blessed relief?
34012Would a president who is honest with the people clandestinely consort with the villain he characterizes as a liar and all that is vicious?
34012You do n''t unite with capitalists on the economic field; why should you politically?
34012You may, at times, temporarily better your condition within certain limitations, but you will still remain wage- slaves, and why wage- slaves?
31933Is human thought sovereign?
31933All?
31933And how could Robinson derive benefit from the labor of Friday?
31933And how did this come about?
31933And what does Herr Duehring say about it?
31933And what does he discover in his consciousness?
31933And what is the third direction?
31933And who gave the decisive impetus in that direction?
31933And why?
31933Are insect eating plants utterly without sensation?
31933But how are these subjective principles derived?
31933But how does he deal with the matter?
31933But in what consist these signs of life which are common to all living objects?
31933But is it absolute, a final truth of last instance within specific bounds?
31933But to what purpose is all this prolixity?
31933But what about the mechanical theory of heat and of latent heat which is a"stumbling block"in the path of the theory?
31933But what about those truths which are so well established that to doubt them is to be, as it were, crazy?
31933But what does Herr Duehring care for that?
31933But what effect has this argument on Herr Duehring?
31933But what has the realist philosophy of a positive nature to contribute with respect to the evolution of organic life?
31933But what is adaptation without conscious intention, without any intrusion of design of which he complains so loudly, but an unconscious teleology?
31933But what is the normal course of life of this plant?
31933But where was mechanical energy at the period of unchangeableness?
31933But who has given the impetus to the investigation as to whence these variations and differentiations proceed?
31933But who shall be judge as regards the realist philosophy?
31933By original creation?
31933Confused mixture, who changes his ground, who is a comical fellow Herr Duehring?
31933Did he not suffer defeat after defeat?
31933Do we not perceive then that there are eternal truths, final truths of last instance?
31933From thought itself?
31933How can these come into being?
31933How can this difficulty with respect to the economic society be overcome?
31933How did he get the sword?
31933How did this arise?
31933How do these forms of calculation fulfil themselves?
31933How do we arrive at the idea of the unity of existence from that of its soleness?
31933How is it possible to keep selling dearer than one buys under the assumption that equal values are always exchanged for equal values?
31933How is it to- day, however?
31933How then can there be any further interest in what I have to say about Herr Duehring?
31933How then do we solve the whole weighty question of the higher wages of compound labor?
31933How?
31933If the universe was in a condition in which no change occurred in it, how did it ever manage to get from that state to one of change?
31933In all cases therefore it implies a certain power of possession which transcends the ordinary?
31933In what are we manifest?
31933Is infinity in space expressed in this way, even remotely?
31933Is it not a fact that the competing entrepreneurs really sell the product of labor every day at its natural cost of production?
31933Is it the thought of an individual man?
31933Is this commandment, then, an eternal commandment?
31933Marx''contention rationally put is How is surplus value transformed into its subordinate forms, profit, interest, trade- profits, ground rents etc.?
31933That is all very well; but the question still persists what does force distribute?
31933The question is what becomes of the heat while it is latent?
31933There is confusion, indeed, but with whom, with Haeckel or with Herr Duehring?
31933This is the fact about the exchange in the economic society, but what about the form of it?
31933Was it merely for the pleasure of doing so?
31933Was not Napoleon utterly defeated in his conflict with Europe?
31933What are commodities?
31933What are we then to believe?
31933What attitude did Marx take to the negation of the negation?
31933What have we then?
31933What is the negation of the negation, therefore?
31933What is the origin of this surplus value?
31933What is there to hinder Herr Duehring himself from discovering the mechanical system of the original nebular state?
31933What system of ethics is preached to us to- day?
31933What then is left of the equality of all and every sort of labor?
31933What was before this beginning?
31933When the cry of"Down with the Tsar"takes the place of the humbly spoken"Little Father"what becomes of the Tsardom?
31933When the terms"Liberty"and"Equality"become the jest of the workshop, upon what basis can a modern democratic state depend?
31933Where does this surplus value come from?
31933Where was the unchangeable mechanical force then, Herr Duehring, and what was it busy about?
31933Wherein does the social character of these private products consist?
31933Which is the true one?
31933Who are we?
31933Who deepens and who sharpens?
31933Why should we seek further since Herr Duehring has brought his own edifice of equality which he so laboriously constructed tumbling to the ground?
31108( 2) How would you act in order to take possession of the machinery pertaining to your industry? 31108 ( 3) How do you conceive the functions of the organized shops and factories in the future?
31108( 5) What will be your relations to your federation of trade or of industry after your reorganization? 31108 ( 6) On what principle would the distribution of products take place, and how would the productive groups procure the raw material for themselves?
31108At bottom, in what did the charm of Bakounin consist? 31108 At what price does one succeed in leading the people to the ballot boxes?"
31108Have we any objections to the enlarging of the State forests and thereby the employment of workers and officials? 31108 Otherwise, indeed, what would become of them and their newspapers?
31108What shall one think of Ravachol?
31108What, then, are the means of execution that democracy will have to employ in order to realize its ideas? 31108 Whether what I think and do is Christian,"he writes,"what do I care?
31108[ 27] With knowledge such as this, is it possible that a sane mind can encourage the despairing to undertake riots and insurrections? 31108 [ 29] Has this been the chief motive in helping to keep terrorism alive?
31108[ 2] What was this mire? 31108 [ 45] How, then, shall the State be destroyed?
31108[ 6] When such a tortured spirit is driven to homicide, how is it possible for society to demand and take that life? 31108 ''But can they hire men?'' 31108 ''From other private detective agencies?'' 31108 ( A deputy called out:''The German Monarchy?'') 31108 And in Germany at this time there were a number who argued that, as they were in fact outlaws, why should they not adopt the tactics of outlaws? 31108 And in so far as this is our sole attitude toward these rebels, wherein are we superior? 31108 And ought we not to consider it necessary to say that to the workers over and over again? 31108 And why? 31108 Are not our methods in truth the same, and can any man doubt that both are equally futile and senseless? 31108 Ask all political economists what is the greatest misfortune for a nation? 31108 But did Marx actually advocate State socialism? 31108 But do you not see, then, that, in spite of this difference in what we believe, our endeavors go hand in hand? 31108 But how often did the capitalist press express the idea that, were it not for Bismarck, we would not, to this day, have a united Germany? 31108 Can one hope to triumph with an anarchist organization? 31108 Can you, I do not say lend me, but give me 500 or 400, or 300 or 200, or even 100 francs, for my voyage? 31108 FOOTNOTES:[ W] His words are:What is the General Confederation of Labor, if not the continuation of the International?"
31108How are the workers to obtain possession of industry?
31108If Bismarck and his police forces have the power to outlaw us, have we not the right to exercise the tactics of outlaws?
31108If by direct legislation they can not even vote laws in their own interest, how, then, will it be possible for them ever to improve their condition?
31108Is it of good alloy?
31108Is it possible that the likelihood of the workers achieving an eight- hour day-- which was all that was wanted in Colorado-- could lead to civil war?
31108Is it then less necessary for you to occupy yourselves with methods of execution by which you may accomplish these reforms?
31108Must even this fail?
31108Ought I to regret what I have done?
31108Ought we to allow them to take a path that leads nowhere?...
31108Shall we admit that there is a duel between society and these souls deranged by the wrongs of society?
31108The anarchists, who are now carrying on their work in Austria, have no footing in Germany-- and why?
31108To whose advantage was it to have disreputable''deputies''do these things?
31108Was it the teachings of Bakounin, of Nechayeff, and of Most?
31108Was this demand not remarkable in the highest degree?
31108We can hang them, but can we forget them?
31108Well, what has happened to Germany since then?
31108What else than the teachings of anarchism and of socialism can explain this difference?
31108What end do the governments of Europe seek?
31108What had historical, geographical, political, or industrial conditions to do with the matter?
31108What indeed else was there to do?
31108What is it that leads the corrupt, vicious, and reactionary elements in the official world to turn thus to its use even anarchy and terrorism?
31108What is syndicalism?
31108What position should the International take?
31108What shall these hordes of the illiterate and miserable do?
31108What was it that drove these men to violence?
31108What were the weapons employed by the warriors of this period?
31108What, then, is to be done?
31108What, you will say, is this, then, a virtue?
31108Whence came it and why?
31108Whether it is human, liberal, humane, whether unhuman, illiberal, inhuman, what do I ask about that?
31108Why have the railroads not yet recovered damages from Cook County, Illinois, for failing to protect their property?...
31108Why is the Russian Cossack so backward in civilization?
31108Why should that which assumes to stand for law and order work to the destruction of law and order?
31108Why should the governments of Europe subsidize anarchy?
31108Why then does not the socialist movement produce terrorists?
31108Why were only freight cars, largely hospital wrecks, set on fire?
31108Why, therefore, ignore economic foundations and waste effort remodeling the parasitical superstructure?
31108Yet is there any escape to the conclusion that all this was utter waste of life and devotion?
17416ABLE MEN AS A CORPORATION OF STATE OFFICIALS How are the men fittest for posts of industrial power to be selected from the less fit?
17416Ability, then, being the faculty which directs labour, by what means does it give effect to its directions?
17416And an escape from the wage- system-- and one not theoretically impracticable-- it no doubt is; but an escape into what?
17416And how would it accomplish this end?
17416And to what is the difference between these two values due?
17416And what does the labour of these men produce?
17416And what has Mr. Hillquit-- the intellectual Ajax of the socialists-- got to say about this?
17416And what is the explanation of this?
17416And what is the next step?
17416And what would be the result?
17416And why should they be less formidable?
17416As such, then, let us accept it; and what will our conclusion be?
17416But if such enactments were made by the so- called all- powerful majority, through a governor of their own way of thinking, what would be the result?
17416But limited by what means?
17416But what is this ability itself?
17416But what, he asks, becomes of this surplus?
17416But why?
17416Can it be said that any of it is attributable to labour?
17416Do they do this?
17416Do they make an attempt to do this?
17416Does human nature, as history, as psychology, and as physiology reveal it to us, give us any grounds, in fact, for taking such an assertion seriously?
17416Does it go to the labourers who have produced it?
17416Does it produce, then, sixty, or sixty- five, or seventy, or eighty- three, or what?
17416For what is the bait with which, from its first beginnings till to- day, socialism has sought to secure the support of the general multitude?
17416For what, he goes on to ask, was the cause of such wide- spread horrors?
17416For what, he says, as a fact do we find the inventors doing?
17416How are we to explain the presence of the additional twenty- six?
17416How could a man do anything unless he had some environment?
17416How would America be helped in the construction of the Panama Canal by learning from sociologists that man could remove mountains?
17416How would a mother, whose child was hovering between life and death, be comforted by the information that man was a great physician?
17416How, we might ask, is it to acquire this latter character by being turned into a desire for what is produced by other people?
17416In a word, does ordinary labour, or the industrial effort of the majority, contain in itself any principle of advance at all?
17416Is human nature in general, and the nature of the monopolists in particular, sufficiently adaptable to admit of such a change as this?
17416Is it defensible on grounds of abstract justice?
17416Is it due to such labour as that of the"untirable human animals,"to which Mill refers as an example of labour in its intensest form?
17416Is the proposal practicable?
17416Now, how would Christian socialism alter a state of things like this?
17416Now, what does all this talk about the emancipation of labour mean?
17416Now, why is this?
17416Or what will happen if we take two girders away?
17416Such being the case, then, asks the writer, what does Christian socialism aim at?
17416The fact on which it bases itself is no doubt true enough; but what is the utmost that it proves?
17416The first economic"lesson"in it begins thus:"Who creates all wealth?
17416The remotest of these ancestors-- why were they horses at all?
17416The successful development of the automobile did not take place till yesterday-- and why?
17416To what is this development of knowledge, of methods, and of machinery due?
17416To what, then, was this increase in industrial productivity due?
17416Two problems with which modern socialism is confronted: How would it test its able men so as to select the best of them for places of power?
17416Unless he had some past, how could he exist at all?
17416What kind of equal opportunity can be possibly provided for them now?
17416What rewards could it offer them which would induce them systematically to develop, and be willing to exercise, their exceptional faculties?
17416What to the astronomer are all the dykes of Holland?
17416What will happen if they do not?
17416What will happen without an additional girder?
17416What would be the result if all who inherited capital spent it as income, instead of living on the interest of it?
17416What, then, as a theory, are the distinctive features of socialism?
17416What, then, is the common measure, in accordance with which, as a fact, one kind of commodity will exchange for any other, or any others?
17416What, then, is the explanation of his indulging in a performance of this degrading kind?
17416When the capital is provided, how will it first be used?
17416Where has this addition to the income of labour come from?
17416Who are the workers?
17416Why does the speed of this horse exceed that of the others?
17416Why must the permissible amounts of income and of bequeathable property be of proportions such as those which he contemplates?
17416Why should they be considered?
17416Why, then, speak of ability?"
17416Why, they say in effect, should you listen to the agitator in the street, when we can give you something just as good from the pulpit?
17416Will the stone fall or not?
17416Yes-- but for what reason?
17416Yes; but how much more?
35572Shall we permit it? 35572 Who would benefit by cheap municipal gas?"
35572Why should I toy with words when I have this?
35572A redistribution of seats in accordance with population?
35572A statutory minimum wage, as in Victoria, especially for sweated trades?
35572All Parliamentary elections to be held on the same day?
35572An Eight- Hours''Bill, without an option clause, for miners; and, for railway servants, a forty- eight- hours''week?
35572An amendment of the registration laws, with the aim of giving every adult man a vote, and no one more than one vote?
35572An increase of the scale of graduation of the death duties, so as to fall more heavily on large inheritances?
35572And how win the state?
35572Are these conditions necessary concomitants of the modern class- state( Klassenstaat)?
35572As to the second question: How long will the coalition hang together?
35572But are their feet upon the earth?
35572But what laboring man needs gas?
35572But why mark shore- lines?
35572CONCLUSION 250 APPENDIX 273 INDEX 347 SOCIALISM AND DEMOCRACY IN EUROPE CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION-- WHY DOES SOCIALISM EXIST?
35572Compulsory arbitration, as in New Zealand, to prevent strikes and lockouts?
35572Do you wish your County Council to attempt nothing more for London than the old Metropolitan Board of Works?
35572He said:"Now, my lords, what is the character of all this legislation?
35572He wrote as the motto for his most influential book,_ What Is Property?_,"Destruam et aedificabo"( I will destroy and I will build again).
35572How did it come about that society was so organized as to permit this wholesale wrong upon the largest and most defenseless of its classes?
35572How is this great change to come about, and what is to be the exact organization of society under this regime of work and co- operation?
35572How will be accomplished the supreme transformation of the capitalist régime into the collectivist or communist?
35572II And what is the present organization of the Social Democratic Party?
35572In 1840 he brought out his notable work,_ Qu''est- ce que la Propriété?_( What Is Property?
35572In 1840 he brought out his notable work,_ Qu''est- ce que la Propriété?_( What Is Property?
35572Is it a crude theory, an earnest protest, a powerful propaganda?
35572Is it not possible to modify police administration, and the legislative conditions that profane Prussia to- day?
35572Is it not possible, through parliamentary action, to take high tariffs and business speculations from the necks of the workingmen?
35572Is there a rational trend in Socialism?
35572Must there always be industrial war?
35572One hundred years ago it was, What sort of a state shall we have?
35572Or is it a current of human conviction so strong, so deep- flowing that it will be resistless?
35572Or is it only a passing whim of the masses?
35572Private property, the stronghold of the individualist, is then to be abolished and a universal communism established?
35572Second, how long will the Labor Party hold together and prompt the action of the Liberals and Radicals in social legislation?
35572State pensions for the support of the aged or chronically infirm?
35572The Socialists have precipitated a serious problem in this relation of the government employee to the state: Can the state employees form a union?
35572The abolition of all duties on tea, cocoa, coffee, currants, and other dried fruits?
35572The admission of women to seats in the House of Commons and on borough and county councils?
35572The appropriation of the unearned increment by the taxation and rating of ground values?
35572The compulsory provision by every local authority of adequate hospital accommodation for all diseases and accidents?
35572The creation of a complete system of public secondary education genuinely available to the children of the poor?
35572The extension of the Workmen''s Compensation Act to seamen, and to all other classes of wage earners?
35572The fixing of"an eight- hours''day"as the maximum for all public servants; and the abolition, wherever possible, of overtime?
35572The further equalization of the rates in London?
35572The further taxation of unearned incomes by means of a graduated and differentiated income- tax?
35572The grant of the franchise to women on the same terms as to men?
35572The majority of the workingmen are already in the party, where will the increase come from?
35572The nationalization of mining rents and royalties?
35572The payment of all members of Parliament and of Parliamentary election expenses, out of public funds?
35572The prohibition of the industrial or wage- earning employment of children during school terms prior to the age of 14?
35572The provision of meals, out of public funds, for necessitous children in public elementary schools?
35572The question is now being seriously asked: Can there be a social co- operation?
35572The real question at issue was this: Is striking an act of mutiny?
35572The second ballot at Parliamentary and other elections?
35572The training of teachers under public control and free from sectarian influences?
35572Transfer of the railways to the State under the Act of 1844?
35572Triennial Parliaments?
35572WHY DOES SOCIALISM EXIST?
35572What right has a capitalist to charge me eight per cent.?
35572What shall the state do?
35572What, then, becomes of the"surplus value,"the value over and above wages?
35572When has he time to read?
35572Where is this encroachment of the state on private"rights"going to end?
35572Who would intrust the running of a railroad to our Federal or State governments?
35572Why should the Deptford ratepayer have to pay nearly two shillings in the pound more than the inhabitant of St. George''s, Hanover Square?
35572[ 13]_ What Is Property?_ Collected Works, Vol.
35572[ 15]"Do you enjoy freedom from political interference?"
35572[ 19] V Who were these revolutionary labor leaders, this small handful of plotters to whom Briand constantly alluded?
35572[ 39] Two questions naturally arise: First, how far will this movement toward Social Democracy go?
35572[ 4] But who is a Socialist?
35572[ 4] What are the ideals of Socialism?
35572[_ Great commotion and disturbance._] But what would be the meaning of this admission that small concessions can be secured?
35572_ Q._"Are you not a man?"
35572_ Q._"Is this true?"
35572_ Q._"What is the 25th article of the Constitution?"
35572_ Q._"Why?"
35572_ Question._"Who are you?"
35572on the capital value,(_ d_) securing special contributions by way of"betterment"from the owners of property benefited by public improvements?
34979Then you would keep the trusts we have and welcome others?
34979Well, but how would you deal with the harm?
34979Would you pay for or just take them?
34979''"[ 37] But these few words beg the whole question: Need we abolish the competitive stimulus in the adoption of the Socialist cure?
34979And how do these exceptions use their leisure?
34979And of the 9,000,000 that remain, how many are economically free?
34979And so we are led insensibly to a question of still wider importance: Is wealth money or is it happiness?
34979Answering the question,"Do you believe in a State constabulary to coöperate with the railway police in prosecuting vagrants?"
34979Are these the saints of the latter day?
34979As bearing on the question of, literally,"Who pays the freight?"
34979As to the rest, it is the dream of a young doctor to get a large practice; and when his dream is realized, how much leisure does he enjoy?
34979But how is it when the law becomes the kidnapper, when the officers of the law, using its forms and exerting its power, become abductors?
34979But how?
34979But is the experience of the entire race during its entire history to be treated as of no importance in this connection?
34979But to what does this freedom of contract between employee and employee lead?
34979But what is the worst consequence that can result from failure?
34979But why does he do this?
34979But_ who had gold with which to buy these bills?
34979CAN HUMAN NATURE BE CHANGED BY LAW?
34979CHAPTER VII CAN THE EVILS OF CAPITALISM BE ELIMINATED BY COÖPERATION?
34979Can anyone who knows the family life of Socialists assert that the divorce rate among them is greater than that of the community in which they live?
34979Can our system of production be so modified as to assure this to him?
34979Can we not confine ourselves to eliminating the gambling element in it?
34979Can we not diminish the stakes without abandoning them altogether?
34979Can we not take our arsenic in tonic instead of in fatal doses?
34979Does this seem Utopian?
34979Has he ever thought of the tyranny of the trust, or the tyranny of the market from which both inevitably spring?
34979He then asks:"How then can the police execute the law, when there seems to be so much doubt as to what the law really is?"
34979Here again we come up against the morality of man; will he continue to poison himself with absinthe or will he abstain?
34979How long are we going to allow our opinions to be manufactured for us by water companies in London and gas companies in New York?
34979How long can this last?"
34979How otherwise is it possible for prizefights to be held in New York city, in spite of the earnest efforts of the police to prevent them?
34979How, then, will they explain the extraordinary haste with which ships sought to reach this port before the new tariff came into effect?
34979If, then, it turns out that both these assumptions are false, is it not time for him to revise his philosophy?
34979In other words, is coöperation a practical cure for competition?
34979Is it possible that with the record of these men before us, we can maintain the theory that gain is the only stimulus to invention?
34979Is it, then, so fantastic to suppose that modern machinery, under a socialized system of production, could cut this day in two?
34979Is the assumption that economic science is uninfluenced by morality true or false?
34979Is there not a little loose thinking about this confusion of Socialism and Communism?
34979Is this exaggeration?
34979Now what is the difference between games and gambling?
34979Or can they be enjoyed equally by all?
34979Or is it that Mr. Roosevelt is just a century behindhand?
34979Or is it that he has never read the works of Proudhon and Karl Marx, whom he groups together as propounding the same kind of Socialism?
34979Science says:"Man is born with passions, but are these passions sinful?
34979What are the facts in the case at bar as alleged in the petition, and which it is conceded must be assumed to be true?
34979What avails it to a drunkard to know that drink is the cause of his misery, if he has not the power to refuse it?
34979What is exactly the meaning of this sentence?
34979What is the difference between reform and revolution?
34979What restraint would you put upon yourselves?
34979What stake have the majority of New York citizens in the government of the city?
34979What then are they interested in?
34979What under these circumstances would be the special functions of Congress?
34979What would be your restraint?"
34979What, then, would be the consequence if the suggestion were minimized by the absence of prostitution altogether?
34979Who had been hoarding gold?_ What do these facts disclose?
34979Who had been hoarding gold?_ What do these facts disclose?
34979Who knows the name of the inventor of the slot machine so much in vogue to- day?
34979Why should it not animate them all?
34979Would such a system at the same time attain justice?
34979[ 105] How far has experience justified these anticipations?
34979[ 18] Or the lumber camps to which these men are driven where there is no employment for women?
34979[ 190] Were these ships hurrying to port in order to escape the payment of a low tariff?
34979[ 71] Is or is not the contention with which this chapter started, justified?
34979_ Q._"And if it results in crushing him out?"
34979_ Q._"Not the affair of the American Sugar Refining Company?"
34979_ Q._"Then, if you had the power to charge or impose prices on the public, what would be your idea of the limit that the public could possibly stand?"
34979_ Q._"Would it not be the utmost limit that the consumer would bear?"
38982But why,asks Kautsky,"did you not summon a new Constituent Assembly?"
38982But, in that case, in what do your tactics differ from the tactics of Tsarism?
38982Wherein, then, does your Socialism,Abramovich cries,"differ from Egyptian slavery?
38982(_ What are the Bolshevists doing?_ Published by Dr. Nath.
38982All this is splendid-- only why do not the Mensheviks offer us several hundred boards?
38982And after all, how should he think of them?
38982And at what moment?
38982And why?
38982And, first of all, whence does this come?
38982And, if the collegiate principle is not a sacred gospel for the workshops, why is it compulsory for the factories?
38982Are we depriving ourselves of Cadet and Menshevik criticisms of the corruption of the working class?
38982Are we not dealing here with"shades of opinion"in the proletarian or the Socialist movement?
38982But did we not hear exactly the same criticism, at bottom, when we had recourse to extensive mobilizations for military problems?
38982But does this mean that Trotsky had to be rash enough to continue the war against Germany?
38982But how are we to get at it?
38982But in that case, what happens to the class struggle altogether?
38982But in this connection there was always less thought"( amongst whom?
38982But it is quite justifiable to ask: Did the latter correspond to the balance of power?
38982But then, why have Soviets sprung up in Germany?
38982But what does the art of exegesis exist for?
38982But what then becomes of the sacredness of human life?
38982But where is your guarantee, certain wise men ask us, that it is just your party that expresses the interests of historical development?
38982But will the partners agree?
38982But with what did we begin?
38982But, perhaps, we are expected to consider them"intolerable"?
38982By what other path then can it be attained?
38982By whose decision?
38982Can it be otherwise?
38982Can it, without a fight, abandon its booty altogether?
38982Did we, by our conduct, give the European workers even the shadow of a ground to place us in the same category as German imperialism?
38982Do you grasp this... distinction?
38982Does Kautsky desire to insist that we should allow the parties which support Denikin to come out into the open?
38982Economic pressure or legal compulsion?
38982Firstly: Why did we summon the Constituent Assembly when we had in view the dictatorship of the proletariat?
38982How are we practically to begin the utilization of labor- power on the basis of compulsory military service?
38982How are we productively to organize it?
38982How are we to apply it?
38982However, even here it is permissible to ask: Does the policy of Clemenceau himself really correspond to the balance of power?
38982If collegiate administration is a"school,"why do we not require an elementary school?
38982In what way?
38982In what, however, lies the difference between them?
38982Is an insurrection of oppressed slaves against their masters permissible?
38982Is it permissible to purchase one''s freedom at the cost of the life of one''s jailers?
38982Is it permissible to suppress newspapers?
38982Is it still necessary to confute Kautsky theoretically?
38982Is there still theoretical necessity to justify revolutionary terrorism?
38982Is this true?
38982It is true that compulsory labor is always unproductive?
38982May one kill the murderer to save oneself?
38982Or does he reduce the whole question to the_ degree_ of repression, and recommend in all circumstances imprisonment instead of execution?
38982Ought one not absolutely to repudiate them in the Ebert Republic?
38982Perhaps Kautsky has invented other methods?
38982Since what time has this been admitted by our Kautskians?
38982The whole question is, did we allow ourselves to be utilized?
38982The whole question is: who applies the principle of compulsion, over whom, and for what purpose?
38982The working class or the landlord class, Pharaohs or peasants, White Guards or the Petrograd proletariat?
38982There is a difference, gentlemen, and it is defined by a fundamental test: who is in power?
38982To dismiss them to the four corners of the earth, saying"seek for better conditions where you can find them, comrades"?
38982We ask what does compulsory labor mean here, that is, to what kind of labor is it opposed?
38982What State, what class, in what conditions, by what methods?
38982What are the conclusions to be drawn from that experience?
38982What are we to understand, in that case, by free labor?
38982What did I say in reality?
38982What does this mean?
38982What happened in reality?
38982What methods have we, then, for the re- education of the workers?
38982What tasks?
38982What thoughts have they in common with us?
38982What would Kautsky say to this rank betrayal, Kautsky, the foremost disciple of Marx, Kautsky, the foremost theoretician of the Second International?
38982What, however, will be the"constitutional"position of the Soviets in the republic of Zeiz, Renner and company?
38982When a murderer raises his knife over a child, may one kill the murderer to save the child?
38982When it came to a real struggle, and to the creation of a real army against the real enemies of the working class, what did you do then?
38982When suggesting to us the election of a Constituent Assembly, does Kautsky propose the stopping of the civil war for the purpose of the elections?
38982Whence have they appeared?
38982Where is the difference?
38982Why do we speak of_ militarization_?
38982Why should we not introduce boards into the workshops?
38982Why?
38982Will he at least speak up?
38982Will it come, the seeming inevitable?
38982Will not thereby the principle of the"sacredness of human life"be infringed?
38982Will there be any need of it then?
38982Would it pay for itself?
38982Would not the fate of the Russian Revolution long ago have been sealed?
38982Would the Red soldiers work?
38982Would their work be sufficiently productive?
38982Yes?
38982You do not understand this, holy men?
38982_ How could their lives be spared any longer_ after the blood- bath with which MacMahon''s Pretorians celebrated their entry into Paris?"
31903To what purpose is it to re- enact natural laws and to wish to confirm their powerful commands by the ridiculous sanctions of men? 31903 [ 2][ 2]_ Qu''est- ce que la Propriété?_ p. 102.
31903[ 3][ 3]_ Qu''est- ce que la Propriété?_ p. 202. 31903 ***** Are we, then, to take Anarchism seriously, or shall we pass it by merely with a smile of superiority and a deprecating wave of our hand? 31903 ***** Proudhon in his book upon property did not answer the question put in its title,_ What is Property?_ as he had promised in the introduction. 31903 And do you demand that they should annihilate themselves, create freedom, and make revolutions? 31903 And what is the opposite-- the hindrance of these principles? 31903 And what, as a matter of fact, would be the consequences of Anarchy? 31903 And, it may be asked, On what day or by what act was so fortunate a chance offered to Anarchism? 31903 But how can we shake off this Camarilla that shelters itself behind a forest of bayonets? 31903 But how does he mean to bring about this moral order? 31903 But must we now conceive its operations as altogether distinct from those of physiological life? 31903 But what becomes then of the equality to which work was said to lead? 31903 But what is the use of an expropriation, which only means one thing, if a division to all is to follow it? 31903 But what they have placed in their heads, how can it be called other than''a fixed idea''(_ idée fixe_)? 31903 But whether he admits it or not, what is Stirner''sindividual"but an idea, something absolute?
31903But why should revolution from above be impossible?
31903CHAPTER I PRECURSORS AND EARLY HISTORY Forerunners and Early History Definitions-- Is Anarchism a Pathological Phenomenon?
31903Can anyone take this question seriously who is accustomed to look at the life and development of society in the light of facts?
31903Can there be a stronger refutation of Anarchist morality?
31903Does this mean that society is helpless in face of Anarchism?
31903For what purpose are we to overthrow the present order of society, and make any other form of society resting upon authority impossible?
31903Further, what about the impossibility of proving the right of property through work?
31903Have not some already done so with the idea of God, because they thought it merely a product of their own mind?
31903He ought to have gone still farther and said:"If anyone will not do any work, what happens then?
31903How can this be changed?
31903How can we free the country from it?
31903How many became Anarchists because they were outlawed by society on account of free and liberal views?
31903How many children would perish?
31903How many"weaker ones"would fall victims to the brutality of the stronger in the valuation of their individuality?
31903I. PRECURSORS AND EARLY HISTORY 3 Forerunners and Early History-- Definitions-- Is Anarchism a Pathological Phenomenon?
31903If progress leads us to that, of what use is it?"
31903If there was a paradise for the first primitive man, why should there not be one for civilised man of to- day?
31903If we turn back to the question, What is property?
31903Indeed I must ask, How was this possible?
31903Is Anarchy in Europe only ten years old?
31903It was the first time Schlöffel had heard these paradoxes, and he replied:''Nonsense; who can emancipate us from the State?''
31903It will be asked: But what will happen then, when those who have nothing take courage and rise?
31903On this round earth that revolves so rapidly in space, a grain of sand amid infinity, is it worth while for us to hate one another?"
31903Or am I free from despots when I no longer fear a personal tyrant, but am afraid of every outrage upon the loyalty which I owe to him?"
31903Reverse the case: are you so anxious about lack of production?
31903Schlöffel stroked his long beard proudly, and replied,''Do you say that to_ me_?''
31903Supposing both are not disputed, what follows, then?
31903That these ideas, now that they have lost their absolute character, are no longer to be reckoned as factors in the organisation of life?
31903The only question is, who exercises government over us, and who wields the rod of discipline: whether it is others or we ourselves?"
31903The question has not unnaturally been raised, What had Bakunin the cosmopolitan to do at such an institution of national Chauvinism as the Congress?
31903These, at least, are no proofs that the author of_ What is Property?_ allowed himself to be brought over by the man on the 2d December.
31903To what does this lead?
31903We say carelessly, for the concluding answer which Proudhon gives to the question,"What is property?"
31903What are, then, the organs of labour, that is, the forms in which human labour produces and fixes values and keeps off want?
31903What distinction is to disappear?
31903What forms is action to take?
31903What has he to complain of if he is rewarded according to the work which he has performed?
31903What if I simply refuse to recognise the limits made by the Commission of Distribution or to obey their decisions?
31903What is this mission?
31903What kind of equalisation will be made?
31903What, then, is economic freedom?
31903Where is the line to be drawn between the superfluous and the non- superfluous?
31903Where was I to get these writings?
31903Which is the more ancient and more sacred, the unfettered rights of the individual or the welfare of the community?
31903Who can fail to recognise here the exact opposite to the real facts of the case?
31903Who can help laughing at this?
31903Who does not know the arguments which even to- day are used by politicians and savants in the still undecided controversy for and against it?
31903Who is to draw it, and still more, who would recognise it?
31903Who of us would care to be judge and executioner at once in one''s own person?
31903Who will undertake the distribution, and who will respect it?
31903Who would wish to exercise Lynch law?
31903Why not rather,''self- discipline, self- government''?
31903Why say,''without government''?
31903Will anyone compel me?
31903[ 8] What is to be gained thereby?
31903and what does it matter to others?
31903e._, such as represent equal times of labour, must be accepted at any time in place of payment, just as money is accepted to- day?
31903he says;"and do we not thereby declare that we ourselves wish to rule no one?
30506But what is this propaganda except the preaching of well- doing and love of humanity by example? 30506 Condemn the propaganda of deed?"
30506What matters the death of vague human beings--continues the Anarchist logician Tailhade--"if thereby the individual affirms himself?"
30506What more have we to do with State legislation, with State justice, with State police, and with State administration than with State religion? 30506 What was the result?
30506[ 59] Question: How will the new society satisfy the needs of its members? 30506 [ 67] Could the best geometrician in the world ever produce anything more exact than this demonstration?
30506According to Proudhon, before Kant, the believer and the philosopher moved"by an irresistible impulse,"asked themselves,"What is God?"
30506According to what laws?"
30506And after, when they have conquered these?
30506And how can the workers, morally enslaved, rise against the bourgeoisie?
30506And if they are bad what is the good of magistrates to apply them?"
30506And this is the position of every impartial person to- day; for how are you going to divine where the"companion"ends and the bandit begins?
30506Are we not coming back to the standpoint of Morelly who said that humanity in the course of its history has always been"outside nature?"
30506Because the bourgeoisie are not a minority?
30506But abstraction made of the history of humanity, what is there left to guide us in our"legislative"investigations?
30506But again we ask, what is left of the Anarchist when once he rejects the"propaganda of deed"?
30506But do you prefer to hand over France to the Prussians?...
30506But how organise exchange?
30506But how to emancipate the peasants before overthrowing Tzarism?
30506But if this is so, in the name of what moral principle do the Anarchists revolt against the bourgeoisie?
30506But is the_ price_ of commodities always determined by their value?
30506But since this is so, how can the_ individual_, the reality, sacrifice himself for the happiness of man, an abstract being?
30506But what Utopian has not tried to prove this equally with himself?
30506But what in its turn did these"conditions of property"depend on?
30506But what is the impetus, the motive power that sets in motion the human species, that makes it pass from one phase of its evolution to another?
30506But what is the outcome of their fear of parliamentary corruption?
30506But what is this humanity the love of which you prescribe to me?
30506But what is to be done if,"the State having fallen into decay,"it should continue to exist?
30506But what will, what can be the true basis of any given combination of their interests?
30506But, then, what is the cause of the historical transformation of the"human Being?"
30506But,"the State having fallen into decay,"who is to abolish it?
30506But_ what_ individual does he take for his starting- point?
30506By what means is circulation carried out in society?
30506Do not prices continually vary according to the rarity or abundance of these commodities?
30506Do you know how he"invents"the constitution of value?
30506Does this not prove that the human Being is not immutable, but changes in the process of the historical evolution of societies?
30506Following the example of Kant we stated the question thus:"How is it that man possesses?
30506For if laws are beneficent what is the good of deputies and senators to change them?
30506From time immemorial men have asked themselves, What is authority?
30506Having heard that Divinity was but a fiction, he concluded that the State is also a figment: since God does not exist, how can the State exist?
30506How is property acquired?
30506How is the comparison of products instituted?
30506How lost?
30506How shall this absolute liberty, synonymous with order, be brought about?
30506How to explain this historical fact?
30506How to get out of this conflict, how resolve the dilemma without offending the holy laws of Anarchy?
30506How will it make them certain of the morrow?
30506If, as it did in March, 1871, it gave itself a revolutionary Government?
30506In order to set free and to realise all these terms, until now hidden beneath the old symbols of property, what must be done?
30506Indeed, suppose the signatory of a contract freely made does not wish to fulfil his duty?
30506Is it necessary to point out that this"Marxism"is a little too_ sui generis_?
30506Is it political liberty which ought in the nature of things to be the main object of his attention?
30506Is not the political constitution in its turn rooted-- as even Guizot admitted-- in the social constitution of a country?
30506Is not this also a spook, an abstract thing, a creature of the imagination?
30506Is not this an entirely Utopian conception of human nature, and of the social organisation peculiar to it?
30506Is not this sufficiently unjust?
30506Is not this sufficiently"materialist?"
30506Is there any way of putting an end to this interminable and barren controversy?
30506Is this really so?
30506Is this the work of the State?
30506Is this wisdom so difficult of attainment?
30506It is only himself, it is liberty that the citizen seeks in Government.... Then the very essence of the citizen is liberty?
30506Let us now ask, what is this"free agreement"which according to Kropotkine, exists even in capitalist society?
30506May not we also, in the name of freedom, ask the"companions"to leave us alone?
30506Now what is this social struggle?
30506Now, what is the formula of this political and liberal guarantee?
30506Now, what sort of a figure does the property of the"Individual"cut?
30506Of what does this impetus consist?
30506Or again: Which is the better, property or the community?
30506Or because they do not do what they"will"to do?
30506Question: Will production be possible if it depends solely upon the free agreement of individuals?
30506Religious faith would have prevented such theories from being propagated; but has it not almost disappeared to- day?
30506Should I not to- day and in the future be bound by my will of yesterday?
30506Should I only be the holder of property( an allusion to Proudhon)?
30506Suppose we have to do with justice and the penal law, for example?
30506The best organisation of property?
30506The system of Louis Blanc or that of Cabet?
30506The theory of St. Simon or that of Fourier?
30506Then how is it that man labours?
30506They then asked themselves"Which, of all religions, is the best?"
30506This hunt after the best ideal of the society of the future, is not this the Utopian method_ par excellence_?
30506This"most complete autonomy,"is it not also a"metaphysical conception?"
30506Tom, Dick, or Harry?
30506Under what conditions?
30506We did not ask, as our precursors and colleagues had done, Which is the best system of community?
30506We have only to ask ourselves whence comes this idea of authority, of government?
30506What answer can you make them?
30506What are, what can be the basis of their union?
30506What could be easier, what more pleasant?
30506What does it want?
30506What form of legislation therefore can harmonise public good and that of individuals?
30506What is Kropotkine''s conception of Anarchist society?
30506What is the law of its evolution and transformation?
30506What is the standpoint of this new species of Communism?
30506What is this hidden force that causes the historic movement of humanity?
30506What is this liberty which we are assuming to be the essence of the citizen?
30506What then is this system?
30506What, in fine, does it represent?...
30506Where are we to seek it?
30506Where does it exist but in the minds of men, in the minds of individuals?
30506Where is this humanity of yours?
30506Which is the best form of government?
30506Whither does it tend?
30506Who will give us a new ideal?"
30506Why not the Panama Canal?
30506You think my own concerns must at least be''good ones?''
30506[ 20] What did we say in these two publications, one after the other of which fell beneath the blows of the reaction and the state of siege?
30506[ 52] But if the Great Misunderstood had the stupidity to create the"bureaux"so detested of Kropotkine?
30506[ By whom?]
8116''Then why will you, O why will you, yet fear to obey? 8116 All of a sudden they stopped, and the following questions and answers were uttered through their vocal organism:_ Question_--''What city is this?''
8116Are you not troubled sometimes with disagreeable members?
8116But are you not often imposed upon?
8116Can you into union flow, and have your will subdu''d? 8116 Can you part with all you''ve got, and give up all concern, And be faithful in your lot, the way of God to learn?
8116Dare you, in the sight of heaven, Show your foul and filthy pranks? 8116 Do you believe the celibate life to be healthful?"
8116Do you favor marriage?
8116Do you have no grumblers?
8116Do you have no scandal?
8116Do you like to take children?
8116Do you, then, claim to live sinless lives?
8116Does memory never roam To ties that, grown with years, ye idly sever, To the old haunts that ye have left forever-- Your early homes? 8116 How do you manage with the lazy people?"
8116Inebriation, we allow, First paved the way for am''rous deeds; Then why should poisonous spirits now Be ranked among our common needs? 8116 Is there any monument to Father Rapp?"
8116Is this, then, a constant occurrence?
8116Suppose a woman wanted, in your family, to be a blacksmith, would you consent?
8116Why did you partition the property?
8116Why do you separate men from women at table?
8116Why should we let our youth study? 8116 Why, then, should any soul insist On such pernicious, pois''nous stuff?
8116Yea, my heavenly Father hath se- ve''-ned to you That power which is holy and that faith which is true; O then, my beloved, why will ye delay? 8116 _ Question_--''What city is this?''
8116''Man owns its powers?''
8116A Shaker''s Answer to the oft- repeated Question"What would become of the World if all should become Shakers?"
8116All that must have sprung, And quicken''d into life, when ye were young?
8116And can you this pursue,''nor own your shame?''
8116And do n''t you see that if they are so headstrong and full of vanity they would not stay with us anyhow?
8116And what is now the greatest foe with which you mean to war?
8116And what is the use of pictures?"
8116And what of dignity or meaning could be said?
8116And what will not man own To gain his end-- to captivate-- dethrone?
8116And, brethren, may I with you live, And be the least of all?"
8116At times I was asked by the elders if I could not unite and take upon me an Indian, a Norwegian, or an Arabian spirit?
8116But could you find no other way, that would have done as well?
8116But did you not keep something back, or did you tell the whole?
8116But suppose such a warning as you speak of were not taken?
8116Can a place to you be given In the bright angelic ranks?
8116Can you sacrifice your ease, And take your share of toil and pain?
8116Can you swallow such a pill-- To count old Adam''s loss your gain?
8116Do ye not rue The drone- like course of life ye now pursue?
8116Do you expect to persevere, and ev''ry evil shun?
8116Dr. Keil replied,"Dear me!--in the beginning we had nothing, now we have a good deal: where did it all come from?
8116First Father Adam, where art thou?
8116Good ministry, can you forgive, And elders one and all?
8116Has sorrow scored your brows with demon hand, Or o''er your hopes passed treachery''s burning brand?
8116Have you none of its sly deceit now lurking in your breast?
8116How do you manage with such cases?
8116How must these''instruments''be constituted?
8116How were these''instruments''or messengers called?
8116I asked,"What, then, if you have divided all the property, will you do for the young people as they grow up?"
8116In one, called"Gospel- virtues illustrated,"an old man is made the speaker, in these words:"Now eighteen hundred seventeen-- Where am I now?
8116Is it not remarkable that they should have originated and found their chief adherents among peasants and poor weavers?
8116Is it therefore the Spirit or the witness of Jesus which speaks and bears witness through the truly inspired persons?
8116Is thine heart also prepared to be searched with the candles of him from whom no unclean thing is hidden?''
8116Is this your end and aim?
8116Let none be offended At what we here say; We candidly ask you, Is that the best way?
8116Let your time and talents go, to serve the gen''ral good?
8116Now can you think of this,''nor own your shame?''
8116Now, why these successes in the face of so many failures?
8116On what terms, if at all, could a carefully selected and homogeneous company of men and women hope to establish themselves as a commune?
8116Suppose a young man wanted to go to college?
8116Suppose one of your young men has the curiosity to see the world, as young men often have?
8116The only question the society asks and seeks to be satisfied upon is,"Are you sick of sin, and do you want salvation from it?"
8116The praise of mortals!--what can it avail, When all their boasted language has to fail?
8116Through or by whom are the divine ordinances carried out in the congregations?
8116Through whom is the Spirit thus poured out?
8116W. U._--Was Mrs. M. conscious of any precise moment when the pain left her in the night?
8116Was it before the Son of man you brought your deeds to light?
8116Wast thou in nature made upright-- Fashion''d and plac''d in open light?
8116Well, is it now your full intent all damage to restore?
8116Well, tell me how did you begin to purge away your dross?
8116What are the duties of the members of the Inspiration Congregations?
8116What are their duties?
8116What canst thou be after here?
8116What early blight Has withered your fond hopes, that ye thus stand, A group of sisters,''mong this monkish band?
8116What is the use?
8116What is the word of inspiration?
8116What now might the members of such a community expect to gain by their experiment?
8116What properties and marks of divine origin has this inspiration?
8116What were these principles?
8116What would you that your God would do in your presence, that you might fear his power rather than that of mortal man?''
8116When did the work of inspiration begin in the later times?
8116When they enter the apartment of their own sex, they may open the door and ask,''May I come in?''
8116Where the gift of God you see, Can you consent that it should reign?
8116Why are_ all_ communists remarkably cleanly?
8116Why did you choose this way you''re in, which all mankind despise?
8116Would they improve their lives and condition?
8116Would they, to answer the second question above, improve their lives and condition?
8116Your ancient creed, once faith''s sustaining lever, The loved who erst prayed with you-- now may never?
8116_ Question_--''Can we go in and see them?''
8116_ Question_--''What Indians?''
8116_ Question_--''What are they doing here?''
8116_ Question_--''What were the conditions?''
8116_ Question_--''What will be done with them?''
8116_ Question_--''Who are all these?''
8116_ Question_--''Who are those behind them?''
8116_ Question_--''Who are those in the corner?''
8116_ Question_--''Who live here?''
8116_ Question_--''Who lives here?''
8116_ Question_--''Why are they the first city we come to in the spirit- land, on the plane, and most accessible?''
8116where have I been?
30646And your father?
30646But if there should be any?
30646But what becomes of the difference between the lazy and the industrious? 30646 Yes,"interjects at this point a capitalist- minded reader,"that is all very well, but by what''legal principle''can society justify such a change?"
30646And Jacob''s anger was kindled against Rachel; and he said, Am I in God''s stead, who hath withheld from thee the fruit of the womb?
30646And is it not similarly with the modern Labor Movement?
30646And murder?
30646And what is the picture presented by these?
30646And who is it that thus raises his hand against the peasant''s property and independence?
30646Are our women unfitter than the far lower negroes, to whom full political equality was conceded in North America?
30646Are the efforts in these directions justified?
30646Are they practical?
30646Are we not counted of him strangers?
30646Are we not in an age that rushes forward, so to speak, with seven- mile boots, and therefore causes all the foes of a new and better world to tremble?
30646Arson?
30646But are we to wonder at that?
30646But how apply such a cure?
30646But how if the deluge were to come before their departure from life?
30646But how is it to- day in this bourgeois society?
30646But who constituted the Roman Commonwealth?
30646But why and wherefor?
30646But why should that be the privilege of the"great souls"only, and not of the others also, who are no"great souls,"and can be none?
30646By what right can woman be refused equality with man?
30646By what right does any claim precedence over another?
30646Called upon to cast her ballot, she will ask, What for?
30646Can Germany perform the same feat alone, unaided?
30646Can a private kitchen be imagined even approximately equipped like that?
30646Contempt for religion?
30646Counterfeiting?
30646Did it consist of the subjugated peoples, the millions of slaves?
30646Did not the Protestant Reformers and modern bourgeoisdom once face overpowering adversaries?
30646Do events point in that direction?
30646Does not the industrialist proceed on that plan?
30646Erinnyes-- Else, thou accursed one, How nourished she thy life within her womb?
30646Erinnyes-- How?
30646He calls out to the rich:"Wretches that you are, what answer will you make to the divine Judge?
30646How can justice be done to- day, when private interests dominate and the interests of the commonweal are made subservient?
30646How could there be any"over- production"when there is no lack of capacity to consume, i. e., of wants that crave satisfaction?
30646How could they discover any, with their short visits and without drawing upon medical advice?
30646How do matters stand in Socialist society?
30646How else can the youth be that is brought up in such an atmosphere?
30646How many of those who live among these semi- savage races, do as much?
30646How many parents are able to follow the course of their children''s education at school, and to take them under the arm in their schoolwork at home?
30646How many workingmen do not allow themselves to be influenced and led without a will of their own?
30646If both questions must be answered in the negative, then this third arises: How can these demands be met?
30646If the question is answered in the negative, this other rises: Can modern society meet the demands?
30646Is it not obvious that our social system suffers of serious ailments?
30646Is not mankind properly divided?
30646Is that right towards a man like me?"
30646Many contrivances are, under the existing system of private enterprise, first of all, a question of money: can the business bear the expenditure?
30646On the one hand the question, What was the former position of woman, what is it to- day, and what will it be in the future?
30646Orestes-- And while she lived, why did you not pursue her?
30646Orestes-- But I was tied by blood- affinity To her who bare me?
30646Perjury, false testimony, cheating, thefts of inheritance, fraudulent failures?
30646She says among other things: With what slanderous dirt does not he( Euripides) besmirch us?
30646That, however, even in the German language the word has a varying meaning may be gathered from the epigram of Schiller:"To what religion I belong?
30646The Prytaneum put the question to the popular assembly of the Athenian citizens:"How is the State to be saved?"
30646The ever- recurring question, what shall be cooked to- day?
30646The question that does rise is, How high will the aspirations of society mount?
30646The question then rises: Has modern society met the demands for a natural life, especially as concerns the female sex?
30646The two hostile principles come here into dramatic vividness of expression: Erinnyes-- The prophet bade thee be a matricide?
30646Unwise women, why wish you to become men?
30646Upon the startled question, put by the stranger,"How can an ox be so large?"
30646Was it not a saying of a celebrated statesman:"The marriage of a Christian stallion with a Jewish mare is to be highly recommended"?
30646Was the Social Democracy crippled because gagged and pinioned by exclusion laws, so that it could not budge?
30646We ask again, Can this be called a rational state of things?
30646We ask, Is such a marriage-- and their number is infinite-- not worse than prostitution?
30646We consider the whole affair strictly confidential and as a matter of honor(?
30646We now come to the other side of the question: Do people multiply indefinitely, and is that a necessity of their being?
30646Were not one time the believers in Christianity a small minority?
30646What becomes of the victims of our social conditions?
30646What cares he about the commonwealth and its well- being?
30646What does it?
30646What more can you want?
30646What of it?
30646What say our agrarians to this opinion of their former political co- religionist?
30646What say the adversaries of the theory of descent in the female line to this sketch drawn from the immediate present?
30646What then?
30646What was it that the Emperor Vespasian said at a somewhat similar juncture?
30646What would become of the world?
30646When does the slanderer''s tongue hold its peace?
30646Whence came that other people?
30646Whence comes it that the children of peasants differ from city children?
30646Whence proceed all these scourges?
30646Whence shall the means come for all that?
30646Where are the private individuals, where the States, able to operate upon the requisite scale?
30646Where is the spot at which could be said:"So far and no farther?"
30646Which of those good old women dared think of occupying her mind with public affairs, as is now done by many women?
30646Who can say where the line is to be drawn to our chemical, physical, physiologic knowledge?
30646Who can tell how general conditions will then be, and what the demands of public interest will be?
30646Who could blame her if, there also, as happens frequently in France, women are seen to waive formal matrimonial contracts?
30646Who is to derive pleasure or satisfaction therefrom, seeing that society removes from him all sources of hatred?
30646Who, to- day, would dare uphold such a position of woman as"natural"without exposing himself to the charge of belittling her?
30646Whom for?
30646Why exert themselves, if the wealth of their parents makes all effort seem superfluous?
30646Why should not in future society the youth of the land, without distinction of sex, be enlisted for such necessary work?
30646Why?
30646Why?
30646Will it pay?
30646Would they mend matters?
30646Wouldst thou renounce the holiest bond of all?
30646[ 122] And how stands it in Paris?
30646[ 180] What does Herr Eugene Richter say to this calculation?
30646between the intelligent and the stupid?"
30646sprechet, herre, wurre ez iht?
30646the Spartan answered laughing:"How is it possible that there could be an adulterer in Sparta?"
20816And as for taking such property from the owners,asks Mr. H. G. Wells,"why should n''t we?
20816And does the honest and capable business man stand to lose or gain by the coming of such a Socialist government?
20816And what Socialist made himself ridiculous by such a foolish utterance? 20816 But,"he said,"do you believe that there ever exists a situation in the world which is exactly like another?
20816Have the reforms secured blurred the main issue, have we lost sight of the goal? 20816 How are you going to compel men to work when they do not wish to work under the conditions you provide?
20816How are you going to compel men to work? 20816 How much money,"asks the_ Appeal_,"did Morgan need in order to buy up all the independent steel companies for the steel trust?"
20816Is there,Mr. Morley had asked,"any approach to such a body of systematic political thought in our own day?"
20816McCarthy declares himself a friend of capital,says Sladden, but, he asks defiantly,"Does any sane capitalist believe him?"
20816Sounds like home, does n''t it? 20816 War-- What For?"
20816What is it,he said,"that enabled the fortunate possessors of these incomes and these fortunes to amass the wealth they enjoy or bequeath?
20816What, further, is accountable for this growth of wealth? 20816 When we come to reason of it calmly, what can be gained by electing any human being to any office beneath the skies?
20816Who is the people? 20816 [ 175] But if the Socialists can not educate the masses to know what they want concretely, how much less will they understand general principles?
20816[ 1] What was this movement that the great theorist put above theory and his leading disciple valued above his master? 20816 [ 229] But how shall Socialists aid small farmers without increasing the number of small farms?
20816And, finally, is not unemployment costing a billion a year to the"nation, considered as a business firm"?
20816Are the great majority of farmers, then, rather small capitalists or laborers?
20816But how is such a reorganization to be worked out?
20816But in what circumstances do the Socialists expect to be able to make use of this weapon?
20816But suppose the labor unions should try to evade the law by withdrawing from registry under the act?
20816But what now is the attitude of laborers, tenants, etc., towards Socialism, and what program do the Socialists offer to attract them?
20816But where will the money come from even for the payment of such limited compensation as the Socialists decide upon?
20816By what means?
20816By whom?
20816Certainly the fundamental social questions in any country at any time are: Who gets the increment of wealth?
20816Did we mean what we said?
20816Do you believe that a budget vote to- day must absolutely be like a budget vote two years from now?"
20816Does he expect the exploiters to look on good- naturedly while we take one position after another and make ready for their expropriation?
20816E.''from moving all its belongings to Erie?
20816Especially, what principles have been applied by the judges?
20816For State Socialism?"
20816Has not Mr. Brisbane hinted repeatedly at a possible revolution in the future?
20816How far shall existing vested rights be compensated?
20816How say you to that?
20816How shall it profit the working class to have Mr. Smith made sheriff or Mr. Jones become the coroner?
20816I say again, within a generation?
20816If both are striving after the"immediately attainable,"how indeed could there be any lasting conflict, or serious difference of opinion?
20816If people tend to be satisfied with reform, what difference does it make as to the ultimate political or social ideals of those who bring it about?
20816If the present tendencies continue, why may not the Radicals go farther?
20816If the steps taken by reformers and"reformists"are the same, by what alchemy can the latter transform them into parts of a revolutionary program?
20816If they do, will they get much benefit?
20816In distributing the new taxes in the House of Commons, the question to be asked of each class of wealth is, he says,"By what process was it got?"
20816Is it not even more common, we may ask, that one manual worker is set over another than that a brain worker is set over a manual laborer?
20816It is true that Lagardelle''s"direct action"tends towards revolution, but does it tend towards Socialism?
20816Leaders and guides of the people, is that what you think just and safe?
20816May it not be that it is strong and getting stronger?
20816May there not be as many landless agricultural workers forty years hence as there are now?
20816Must it not, then, also be known that at a certain point the government will intervene on the other side and compel payment of adequate wages?
20816No Socialist has expressed this view more clearly or forcefully than Mr. George R. Kirkpatrick, in his recent book,"War-- What For?"
20816Now, what provision is made for generating the motor power of progress in Collectivism?
20816People of the United States, is that what you desire and intend?"
20816Preach revolutionary thoughts?
20816Shall we send the regiments of Hanover and Mecklenburg against Hamburg?
20816Should he be surprised if Milwaukee aldermen, like himself, interpret Socialism as they see fit, and forget that they are a part of a Socialist Party?
20816That problem has always been: How can we frame conditions in which individuals can realize the best that is in them?"
20816The chief possibility for a difference of opinion among most practical persons, whether Socialists or not, must come from the questions: How soon?
20816The_ citizen owes it to society_ to ask of every proposed program of change,"Will it, within a reasonable period, bring equality of opportunity?"
20816We are not seeking a catastrophe,--what use would it be to us?
20816Wells, H. G.:"Is Socialism a movement or an idea?"
20816What about that?
20816What are these stages?
20816What are you going to do about that?
20816What do they expect to do when they have obtained that power?
20816What gain will that be for Labor?"
20816What has resulted?
20816What is it that drives Kautsky into the position that I have described?
20816What is the meaning, then, of the victory of a"Labour Party"in Australia?
20816What is the people?"
20816What now if these troops should refuse to shoot their fathers and brothers as the Kaiser has demanded?
20816What then?
20816What would happen?
20816What, then, is the leading principle by which the two groups are to be made up and distinguished?
20816Where did the table of that law come from?
20816Who controls industry?
20816Who is their trustee, their guardian, their man of business, their manager, their secretary, even their stockholder?
20816Whose fingers inscribed it?
20816Why is the sinister rôle of the upper classes not universally grasped?
20816Why not have a court for business questions, on which no man could sit who has not had a business training with an honorable record?
20816Why not have a similar goal for our business men?
20816Why should those who happen to be landless in one generation instead of the next receive superior rights?
20816Will it come of its own accord?
20816Will it take the capitalists longer to learn to use the government for their purposes rather than to abuse it?
20816Will these employees come in under the compulsory arbitration law?
20816Yet what is the essential difference?
20816[ 278] Tolstoi''s Essay entitled,"Where is the Way Out?"
20816[ 281] George R. Kirkpatrick,"War-- What For?"
20816[ 282] George R. Kirkpatrick,"War-- What For?"
20816but,''Are you a Socialist?''
20816concentrate their attention exclusively on"thunder"which the enemy will not and can not steal_?
37351Does not that come to the same thing?
37351For,said Liebknecht,"who could say what the_ Zukunft Staat_--the socialist State of the future-- is to be?
37351What is the State?
37351What is the reason,he asked himself,"that the paradise before my eyes conceals so much misery?
37351''Supposing you were a young man now,''said I,''could you walk into Manchester and do that again?''
37351And how do the Russian peasants settle the periodical repartition of the communal lands?
37351And if it fail anywhere, how can he argue that it must succeed everywhere?
37351And what, after all, was the latest dream of philosophical socialism but a world of communities like these?
37351And why are not all dexterous, or, at least, why are they not much more dexterous than they now are?
37351And why is the labour not socially useful?
37351And why?
37351And without such liberal management how is he to promote the spread of cultivation better than the present owners?
37351And would it be greater or less than would remain after a like process applied, say, to a sovereign or to a nugget of gold?
37351Are poverty and the various symptoms of poverty more acute in England than in more backward countries?
37351Are the poor really getting poorer?
37351Baboeuf saw no difficulty in working the scheme; was it not practised every day in the army, with 1,200,000 men?
37351But do socializing bishops believe it to be just?
37351But if Mr. George''s principle is true, could such a result have taken place at all?
37351But if density of population is such a sure improver of production as Mr. George represents it to be elsewhere, why should it fail here?
37351But the question is, does it imply any increase in the productive power of the soil?
37351But what is equality?
37351But what is of man''s creation?
37351But will any one work such land for less than he can make in other industries?
37351Can it be believed that the democracy which has overthrown the feudal system and vanquished kings will retreat before tradesmen and capitalists?
37351Deduct from the rent of these reclaimed acres the value contributed by human labour, and how much would remain to represent the gift of God?
37351Does he mean, because more things are now reckoned among the necessaries of life?
37351Does he not promise us a new heaven and a new earth?
37351Does it first raise wages at the expense of profits, and then raise profits at the expense of wages?
37351Does it then at the same time strengthen the employer in his battle with the labourer?
37351Does socialism offer a better guarantee for the realization of that ideal than the existing economy?
37351Economists would solve his problem,"why in spite of increased productive power wages tend to a minimum that will give but a bare living?"
37351For is not the soil of a small island or an inconsiderable country as eternal as the soil of a continent?
37351For what, after all, is value?
37351He refuses to take it, and why?
37351He says of the fourth estate what Sieyès said of the third, What is the fourth estate?
37351He was intensely disappointed, and asked,"When will this foolish people cast aside their lethargy?"
37351He was not a citizen, and why should he have the feelings of one?
37351How do you define socialism?
37351How is it to be ascertained?
37351Idolatry is a mistaken view of Divine things-- a distortion of the religious sentiment; but who would on that account call it Christian?
37351If a rise of rent depends on a rise in the price of bread, what does a rise in the price of bread depend on?
37351If crowding on the superior soils can make those soils indefinitely productive, why go farther and fare worse?
37351In other words, by what is value and difference in value determined?
37351In the matter of protection, for instance, how many policemen are we required to detail to a district?
37351Is English pauperism greater now than it was before the"new productive forces"entered the country?
37351Is Marx''s definition of it in the least correct?
37351Is free education to go beyond the primary branches?
37351Is it because he exerts more labour, more socially necessary time of labour?
37351Is it because more time of labour has been expended in the preparation and apprenticeship of the higher paid functionaries?
37351Is it equality when each man gets a coat of the same size, or is it not rather when each man gets a coat that fits him?
37351Is nature the source of all this suffering, or is it man that is to blame for it?
37351Is socialism, as Stahl and others represent, an inevitable corollary of democracy?
37351Is that so?
37351Is the average duration of life less?
37351Is the general standard of living among the labouring classes lower?
37351It advances money on easy terms to railway schemes; why should it not offer working men cheap loans for sound co- operative enterprises?
37351It is a plain question of fact-- is poverty really increasing?
37351It is a pure utopia, and why?
37351Nothing?
37351Now to all this there is one simple answer: why then resort to inferior soils at all?
37351Now, have we such a power in electricity?
37351Now, on what does this social estimate of the relative importance of commodities turn?
37351Now, what is the least productive land in use?
37351Or how great an army and navy are we to maintain?
37351Or why has the judge a better salary than the policeman?
37351The effect of the previous argument was to raise the question, What is the labourer entitled to get?
37351The next question is, What, then, does the labourer actually get?
37351Up to a certain point they may yield the same return at the same cost year after year in_ sæcula sæculorum_, but will they yield more?
37351Value, then, is quantity of abstract labour, and now what is quantity of labour?
37351We gather the quantity from the duration of exertion, but how is average productive power to be ascertained?
37351What are the wounds a knife inflicts compared with the slow murder dispensed with refined cruelty throughout a being''s whole existence?
37351What do we find?
37351What is law, what is right, but a protection of the weak?
37351What is the ideal of the working class?
37351What is the sharp death- agony of an hour compared with the pangs of death protracted over twenty years?
37351What length are you to go?
37351What ought the fourth estate to be?
37351What sensations must it cause in those poor men who, with all they hold dear, are day after day at the mercy of the accidents of market price?
37351What would be the effect upon wages in England?''
37351What, then, he asked, was the Social Democracy to do?
37351What, then, is to be the business of this formidable Social Democratic party?
37351What, then, is value in exchange?
37351What, then, is value?
37351When San Francisco reaches the point where New York now is, who can doubt that there will also be ragged and barefooted children in her streets?"
37351Where does this lent money come from?
37351Who advances them?
37351Who could foresee so much as the development of the existing German State for a single year?"
37351Who is there among you that would not have gone to the death to defend her?
37351Why are we now free from the old scourges of famine and famine prices?
37351Why is an organizer of manual labour better paid than the manual labourer himself?
37351Why is one kind of labour paid dearer than another?
37351Why is the railway chairman better paid than the railway porter?
37351Why should not the law stand at the labourer''s back, as it does at the capitalist''s, in enforcing what is right and just?
37351Why?
37351Will it stop now that it has grown so strong, and its adversaries so weak?"
37351Will the social system, which will result from the process, be socialism?
37351Would it be wise to imagine that a social movement, the causes of which lie so far back, can be checked by the efforts of one generation?
37351Would then the word now be revolution?
37351_ State Socialism and State Management._ What are the conditions of efficient State administration?
37351and what need for any mission to the States to preach the socialist message to the Americans for the first time in their own tongue?
37351but Shall we be any the worse for it?
37351by the use of force?
37351or do they believe it wrong for a man to live on interest, or rents, or profits?
37351then where is the man who is not a pure and unadulterated socialist?
17881''Ivery day makes its own throuble?''
17881''Shiver my timbers,''he said,''ye must have an anchorage in some of these parts? 17881 ''Where d''ye live, then?''
17881''Where''s yer folks?'' 17881 ''Would you give up, then?''
17881A volume?
17881Ah,I said,"you know me then?"
17881And you?
17881Are you a reporter?
17881Are you going to do the decent thing?
17881Aye,Mary said,"but how do ye know she is n''t jist around here somewhere, anyway?"
17881D''ye believe I''ll know her whin I go? 17881 D''ye know what became ov''i m?"
17881Did yer ever''ave a chum''oose name was Creedan?
17881Did you learn anything else?
17881Did you see that big fellow in a gray suit?
17881Do you believe in the right of the workers to organize? 17881 Do you do that often?"
17881Do you get tired?
17881Do you know him?
17881Do you know where she has gone?
17881Do you remember the farm at Moylena?
17881Does Mrs. G---- live here?
17881Have you got the dough?
17881He wudn''t be so d----d niggardly, wud He?
17881How can one invent anything in this slave age?
17881I mean-- tired of life?
17881In Heaven''s name,I said,"what are you doing here?"
17881Is it possible,I asked a policeman,"to get a clean bed for a night in this town for fifty cents?"
17881Is there a view of the Hudson River from any of these hills?
17881Look here, Franz,I said,"I want to know what you''ve been up to?"
17881Maan, yer changed,he said,"are n''t you?"
17881Maan,he said,"ye talk like quality-- d''ye live among thim?"
17881Me too, hey?
17881Now, will you wait for one moment till we talk it over?
17881Now,he said,"you do n''t care how we raise your salary, do you?"
17881Oh, yis, that''s thrue enough,my father said,"but Alec minds th''time whin it was blessin''enough to hev th''murphies-- don''t ye, boy?"
17881Pardon me, sir,I said,"is n''t there a law in Georgia on the separation of the races?"
17881Right here?
17881Say, bub,said Gar, the bouncer, to me one day,"what ungodly hour of the mornin''d''ye git up?"
17881Shure that''s what''s cracking m''own skull,he said;"where th''divil will ye sleep, anyway, at all, at all?"
17881Social, I suppose, eh?
17881Splendid,replied C----; and in the same breath he said,"say, you do n''t come around to the association; do you want your name kept on the roll?"
17881Suppose the Lord should come now and find you reading that; what would you say to Him?
17881Sure thing,he said,"do n''t you know me?"
17881Sure-- aint you glad?
17881The Holy Virgin?
17881The Socialist?
17881The man whose name is on your letterhead?
17881Tired? 17881 Vell, you shut your---- maut or I smash your---- head, see?"
17881Was I in a dream? 17881 Well, what are you going to do about it?"
17881Well, what is it?
17881What are your qualifications?
17881What cheer, Condor?
17881What d''ye mind best about her?
17881What did you do with the loot?
17881What have you been doing?
17881What idea?
17881What in''ell did''e mean by th''anchor''oldin''?
17881What is it Dave?
17881What is it, Pat?
17881What is it?
17881What is it?
17881What kind of a Socialist are you?
17881What kind of work do you want done?
17881What shall I tell those workingmen you stand for?
17881What you guff about?
17881What''s his topic?
17881What''s up?
17881Where are you from?
17881Where are you from?
17881Where is he going?
17881Where was it published?
17881Where?
17881Who is he?
17881Who is that fellow at your bench?
17881Who is that man?
17881Who owns these pigs?
17881Who will be the muckers under Socialism?
17881Why a nickle for this one and a dime for the other?
17881Why did I get a red card while most of the others got a green card?
17881Why did you bring them to me?
17881Why do n''t you ask him to talk?
17881Why do n''t you get a move on you---- hey?
17881Why do n''t you invent one?
17881Why have n''t they?
17881Why?
17881Why?
17881Will you introduce him, Doctor?
17881Ye are, eh?
17881Ye could n''t stay at home awhile? 17881 Ye do, hey?
17881Yes, what about him?
17881Yes-- but----"Say, have a cup of hot coffee, wo n''t you?
17881Yes; do n''t you think you need it?
17881You heard me''phone?
17881''Can this be true?''
17881''What are you doing here?''
17881''What is Revolution?''
17881''Why does n''t he give you a place to sleep, then?''
17881A few months afterward this man, with tears in his eyes, said:"Mr. Irvine, whatever happens you will be my friend-- won''t you?"
17881A man with a square paper hat on looked at me, and said:"''What''s up, little''un?''
17881And what wealth then shall be left us when none shall gather gold To buy his friend in the market and pinch and pine the sold?
17881As I sat beside Father McGlyn in the pulpit, I said,"Father, how do you stand with the Pope, these days?
17881But for whom shall we gather the gain?
17881Come now, is n''t that so?"
17881Could I influence and move him to a better life?
17881Could I reach him?
17881Could you afford me one cent to get some bread?"
17881Do you fellows ever notice the church ads in the Sunday papers?
17881Have they?
17881He laughed and said:"''Whom do you know there?''
17881He looked at me for a moment as if in astonishment, and then he said:"Hello, bub, what''s de game?"
17881He said of it:"Say, bub, if you ever strike an old gazabo as soft as dat one, lemme know, will ye?"
17881His intuition was keen enough to perceive that the trouble was mental and as I took the coffee he said:"Discouraged a bit, hey?"
17881I got my coat and hat, went over to the janitor''s door, but before I could open my mouth, his wife said:"What''s up?"
17881I made a motion; he gripped me tightly, whispering in my ear:"Ask God onct in a while to let me be with yer mother-- will ye, boy?"
17881I served the lunch and overheard the following conversation:"Have you a signal man by the name of Hicks-- Billy Hicks-- on board?"
17881I''ve bin skinnin''a dead hoss an brot ye d''skin for a birfday present, see?"
17881If Capital has forty- nine suckers, why not let Labour have one?"
17881If not, what was the use of trying my theological programme on others?
17881Irvine?"
17881Is that so?"
17881It was a Monday morning, and his first words were:"Well, what did you do yesterday?"
17881Occasionally he would turn around and say:"How''s it goin'', yer riverence?"
17881One day Dowling was walking along the Bowery when a hand was laid roughly on his shoulder and a voice said:"Ai n''t you Dowling?"
17881One evening I asked him what he knew about Jesus and he replied,"Ai n''t''ee th''bloke as they swears about?"
17881Part of my address was a series of serious questions:"Will this movement raise the tone of society?
17881So I did an''I''ve been on de dead level ever since-- ain''t I, boss?"
17881Splendid weather we''re having, is n''t it?"
17881There was a loud laugh, then a miner asked:"Air ye posin''for yer photo, mister?"
17881To what mysterious doings am I to become an eye- witness to- night?
17881Well, I hain''t, see?
17881What I want to suggest is this: A dozen of you get together; write a note to your masters and ask them if that belief applies to_ you_?"
17881What are you coming for?"
17881What can it mean?
17881What does it matter who brings it to pass or how it comes?
17881What is the status of the case?"
17881What matters it about Canon, Chapter, Dean and Prebend?
17881What means this panther- like vigilance?
17881What more can men do?
17881What''s the matter with the water?"
17881When all was quiet, the bouncer said to me:"What did ye tink of it, boss, hey?"
17881Where d''ye sleep nights?''
17881Who will give the world a novel or a book dealing with this terrific problem?
17881Who will tell millions of young men around the age of twenty that they can not burn their candle at both ends?
17881Who would expect them?
17881Why all this secrecy?
17881Will it diminish intemperance?
17881Will it divide or unite the world?
17881Will it find the people uneducated and leave them educated?
17881Will it increase mutual confidence?
17881Will it increase the love of truth or the power of superstition or self- deception?
17881Will it leave the minds of men clearer and more enlightened, or will it add another element of confusion to the chaos?
17881Will it tend after all to elevate or lower the moral sentiments of mankind?
17881Will the voice of its leader be lifted in the cause of justice and humanity?
17881Would I take lessons in healing?
17881Ye look skeered, too, do n''t yer-- hey?"
17881You is jest Dagoes, ai n''t you?"
17881You remember that funeral business?"
17881_ Alexandra_, Ashore at Cattaro]"Hey, Sandy, shoot off one of them things to Mary, will ye?"
17881he laughed,"d''ye tink I kilt some ol''sucker for''is money-- hey?
3568717. Who managed the receipts and expenditures, and were they honestly managed? 35687 And here comes in the question, What is a life in accordance with Christ''s commandments?
35687And the_ breeches_ sometimes, I suppose?
35687But these functions of reason, do they carry within themselves the pledge of their own continued health and harmonious action? 35687 Can we make any approximation to axiomatical truth for ourselves?
35687Do you hold to marriage?
35687Have you any schools?
35687How about women?
35687Is there some secret leaven in this conjugal mixture, which declares all other union to be out of the possible affinities? 35687 It is often asked, What are the peculiarities, and what the advantages of the Hopedale Community?
35687Now what do we gather from this? 35687 Schools?
35687Then you go back to nearly the first principles of government, and acknowledge the necessity of some controlling power other than individual will?
35687_ What are its Advantages?_1.
35687''***"There may be some persons at a distance, who will ask, To what degree has this Community gone into operation?
35687''If you love not man, whom you have seen, how can you love God whom you have not seen?''
35687''It was taken for a debt,''said he,''and what else was I to do to get rid of it?''
35687(?)
35687(?)
35687***"There_ are_ men and women, who have dared to say to one another, Why not have our daily life organized on Christ''s own idea?
35687***** Shall we then turn back in despair, and give it up that Association on the large scale is impossible?
35687After supper I was standing near some men in the sitting- room, when one said to another,''How high is your God?''
35687After this luminous introduction, Mr. Dana, the editor of the_ Sun_, followed with the article ensuing:"WILL IT SUCCEED?
35687Again:''If ye love not one another, how can ye be my disciples?''
35687Am I to be astonished by hearing sensible men declare, because mankind have been the victims of false relations, that these things are impracticable?
35687And all for the benefit of whom?
35687And are we all at once to abandon, to deny, to destroy this supposed stronghold of virtue?
35687Any kind of government?
35687Any particular trades?
35687Are men forever to be such consummate fools as to neglect even the colossal profits of Association?
35687Are you a man?
35687As these two principles are thus expanding side by side, the question arises, Which on the whole is prevailing and destined to prevail?
35687At what season did they go to examine the country?
35687But about the committee which you say consisted of an artist, mechanic and a doctor; what report did they make concerning the land?
35687But might it not be enforced that the two family ideas really neutralize each other?
35687But must not, therefore, individual( or dual) union cease?
35687But the question returns after all, Which is primary and which is secondary?
35687But with this theory how shall we account for the failure of Brook Farm and Hopedale?
35687Can any example of success be found where this second condition is not present?
35687Can it be, we ask ourselves, that Owen had such conflicts with whiskey- tippling, but never a fight with the love- mania?
35687Can persons take their earnings away with them when they leave?
35687Could not such a sum be raised?
35687Did the associates agree or disagree, and in what?
35687Did they obtain aid from without?
35687Do I censure their want of foresight?
35687Do I regret this trial?
35687Do you assist runaway slaves?
35687Do you call dis Community?
35687Do you express opinions and principles as a body?
35687Do you know any persons in your neighborhood who will for one year, three years, five years, contribute for this end?
35687Do you object to religionists?
35687Does it contain within itself the elements of success?
35687Does the majority govern the minority?
35687For before the judgment- seat of his sayings, how do our governments, our trades, our etiquettes, even our benevolent institutions and churches look?
35687For instance, I require such information as the following questions would call forth, viz:"1. Who originated it, or how was it originated?
35687Had you any capitalists among you?
35687Have the Brocton people enough of it to carry them safely through?
35687Have you any delegated power?
35687Have you any form of society or test for admission of members?
35687He very rapidly asked me the object of my book: what good would it do?
35687Here is a specimen of our dialogue:"Do you make laws?
35687His own opinion of the cause of the catastrophe, he gives in the following words:"What were the causes of these failures?
35687How could it be otherwise?
35687How does it appear that he"combined the enunciation of general principles of social organization with actual experiments?"
35687How long did they keep together?
35687How was the land obtained?
35687How were members admitted?
35687How, then, can it be hoped that there is universal affection sufficient to unite many such families in one body for the common good?
35687I hope we do not disturb you?
35687If God be for us, of which we have sufficient evidence, who can prevail against us?
35687If successful, what were the causes of success?
35687In our societies, with their constantly recurring revulsions and ruin, would they not be wise in so doing?"
35687In the name of history we ask, Why has not George William Curtis himself made the permanent record?
35687Is dis common property?
35687Is it founded upon notions that promise any considerable advance upon the present form of society?
35687Is it not quite certain that the human heart can not be set in two places?
35687Is it questioned whether the family arrangement of mankind is to be preserved?
35687Is this mixture of male and female so very potent, as to hinder universal or even general union?
35687Is this the right way?
35687Must you be Grahamites?
35687Now how is this to be done?
35687Of course it was necessary, before they could be admitted, to decide the question,''Can they be useful to the Association?''
35687Or is their religion of too transcendental a character to form a sure and tenacious cement for their social structure?
35687Or will a combination of both keep its place in the world hereafter, as it has done hitherto?
35687Pray, sir, how and where did the Sylvania Association originate?
35687Religion is their first principle; what is their second?
35687Shall we clear the generals, and leave the poor soldiers to be called volunteer fools, without the comfort even of being in good company?
35687The question for the future is, Will the Revivalists go forward into Socialism; or will the Socialists go forward into Revivalism?
35687The reader will perhaps expect us to say something from our stand- point, in answer to Mr. Dana''s question,"Will it succeed?"
35687Their education, natural intelligence and morality?
35687They were never asked when applying for membership,''Do you believe so and so?''
35687Was all the property put into common stock?
35687Was it free or mortgaged?
35687Was there a written or printed constitution or laws?
35687Were pledges, fines, oaths, or any coercive means used?
35687Were the new circumstances of the associates superior or inferior to the circumstances they enjoyed previous to their associating?
35687What are the terms of admission?
35687What have you to say of them?
35687What if Napoleon had written out a programme for the battle of Austerlitz, and then left one of his aids- de- camp to superintend the actual fighting?
35687What is there in all this that entitles St. Simon to a place among the theoretico- practicals?
35687What kind of a theory of chemistry can a man write without a laboratory?
35687What more could be asked from nature?
35687What particular person or persons took the lead?
35687What religious belief, and if any, how preached and practised?
35687What then has been Fourier''s function?
35687What then shall we say of the rank- and- file that formed themselves into Phalanxes and marched into the wilderness to the music of Fourierism?
35687What was the difficulty?
35687What was the number of persons in the Association?
35687What were its means in land and money?
35687What were its principles and objects?
35687What were their trades, occupations and amount of skill?
35687What were they, and who got them when the society left?
35687What will the next ten years bring forth?"
35687When and where did the Association commence its experiment?
35687When and why did they break up?
35687When he had concluded I asked if those who wished to join the society were expected to acknowledge a belief in all the articles of their faith?
35687Where shall we end?
35687Where was the mistake?
35687Who after this can be so cold as not to bid them good speed?
35687Who ever had such motive for action?
35687Who owned it?
35687Who so niggardly as to withhold from them their mite?
35687Who so ungenerous as to speak to their disparagement?
35687Why did they fail?
35687Why has not George Ripley taken the story out of the mouths of the sneerers?
35687Why not begin to move the mountain of custom and convention?
35687Will you not aid?
35687Would Mr. Brisbane repeat such a farce?"
35687_ C._--But you encouraged capitalists to join your society?
35687_ C._--Does this not result from ignorance of the principles, or a want of faith in them?
35687_ C._--How long did the Association remain on the place?
35687_ C._--How much stock did the members take?
35687_ C._--Was his theory the society''s practice?
35687_ C._--What improvements were upon it, and what were the conditions of sale?
35687_ C._--What were the qualifications of the men who were appointed to select the location?
35687_ C._--When did the members proceed to the domain, and how did they progress there?
35687_ E.H.H._--How did your company succeed in their new movement?
35687_ E.H.H._--Would it not have been better if your company of thirty had been patient, and gone on quietly till the others were converted to your views?
35687_ Requiescat in pace!_ Where is the Phoenix Association that is to arise from its ashes?
35687and if so which will be primary and which secondary, and how will they be harmonized?
35687and that means, which is primary in the order of truth, and which is secondary?
35687if so can you send me a copy?
35687in Owenism or Fourierism?
35687that man can not worship at two altars?
35687was there any standard by which to judge them, or any property qualification necessary?
35687what was it for?
36690''What form of government shall we prefer?'' 36690 And where do they get their power?
36690How is it to be decided whether an object that may be used for the benefit of man shall be my property or yours? 36690 Those who are in the unfavorable position take courage to ask the question,''By what, then, is your property secure, you favored ones?''
36690What I Believe= GRAF LEO TOLSTOJ,_ Worin besteht mein Glaube?
36690What Shall We Do= GRAF LEO TOLSTOJ,_ Was sollen wir also thun?
36690What does this monstrous engine serve for, that we call''State''? 36690 What is the ballot?
36690When Louis the Sixteenth, Robespierre, Napoleon, came to power, who ruled then, the better or the worse? 36690 Who can ask about''right''if he is not occupying the religious standpoint just like other people?
36690Would you then make this invisible unity perceptible by a special organ, preserve the image of the old government? 36690 [ 1061] But what disquiets men in their imagining of the future is"less the question''What will be?''
36690[ 1090]Now, honestly, of what sort is my money, and how have I come by it?
36690[ 113] In what way may the change of our conditions take place? 36690 [ 136]"But what am I saying?
36690[ 241]Let the individual man claim ever so many rights; what do I care for his right and his claim?
36690[ 26] 2.--BASIS_ According to Godwin, our supreme law is the general welfare._ What is the general welfare? 36690 [ 277] But what is to keep men together in the union?
36690[ 290]To what property am I entitled?
36690[ 300] Why was the founder of Christianitynot a revolutionist, not a demagogue as the Jews would have liked to see him; why was he not a Liberal?
36690[ 424]What keeps the salvation- bringing thought from going through the laboring masses with a rush?
36690[ 458]What has not the engineer''s art dared, and what do not literature, painting, music, the drama dare to- day?
36690[ 508]Are they made for those who alone need them?
36690[ 580] What form will production take? 36690 [ 593] How will distribution take place?
36690[ 60] But what is to hold men together insociety without government"?
36690[ 644]--But how are men''s minds to be prepared for the revolution? 36690 [ 648]"What forms is the propaganda to take?
36690[ 660] What does self- interest mean? 36690 [ 749] But, if invader and invaded belong to different defensive associations, will not a conflict of associations result?
36690[ 823]--But what if the freedom of speech and of the press be suppressed? 36690 [ 830]--In what form is violence to be used?
36690[ 85] But what would be the authority of these national assemblies and those juries? 36690 [ 996] But has the power, when it has passed from some men to some others in the State, really always come to the better men?
36690''"[ 126] 2.--BASIS_ According to Proudhon the supreme law for us is justice._ What is justice?
36690''"[ 598] However, what if the stock should in fact not suffice for all wants?
36690''A Constitutionalist?''
36690''Can you ask?''
36690''The inviolability of the home?
36690''The secrecy of letters?
36690''What are you then?''
36690''What?
36690''Why should we not grant full right of association?''
36690''You are an Aristocrat then?''
36690''You want a mixed government, then?''
36690--But here arises the question, Can we speak of such a thing as a"teaching"of Stirner''s?
36690174- 6?
3669073[ 132?
36690? 42].
36690Amidst the clamorous din of civil war, who shall tell whether the event will be prosperous or adverse?
36690And thus I have piled up a quantity of such money, and what do I do with it?
36690And what can they be?
36690And what do you give us for it?
36690And what does the peasant introduce when there is a prospect that firewood will give out?
36690And who is not?
36690Are we not obliged perpetually to revise and remodel this misnamed wisdom of our ancestors?
36690Are you capable of resisting its demand?
36690Are you willing to join their league?
36690But are not many of his"arbitrary commands"law and State by his definitions?
36690But how are the functions that the State performs at present to be performed in the future societies?
36690But how could such a distribution of commodities be effected in a particular case?
36690But in the future societary condition how shall the functions which the State at present performs be performed?
36690But what form can such a distribution of goods take in detail?
36690But what form may such a social life take in detail?
36690But what form will men''s life together in the future societary condition take in detail?
36690But what is to be the nature of the voluntary association in detail?
36690But what is to hold them together in these societies?
36690Can he be judicially constrained to use his property well?
36690Can one conceive of a property whose use the police power should determine, whose abuse it should repress?
36690Do I desire to raise him to the energy of which he is capable?
36690Do they have to give him their best thanks for his''self- sacrifice''or do they know that for an hour they formed an''egoistic union''together?
36690Do you believe that the populace, or the government itself, can keep its sanity in this labyrinth?
36690Do you promise never to appropriate to yourself, neither by violence, by fraud, by usury, nor by speculation, another''s product or possession?
36690Do you promise never to lie and deceive, neither in court, in trade, nor in any of your dealings?
36690Do you promise to respect the honor, the liberty, the goods, of your brothers?
36690For preventing the exploitation of the laborer by the capitalist, of the peasant by the landlord?
36690For the rulers it is an excellent means of deciding their disputes; but of what use is it to the ruled?
36690For there rises first the question, what shall be the starting- point of our study?
36690He who would blame the people for this should be asked,''Have you suffered with them and like them?
36690How can the forms in which truth appears be brought to naught by an approach to the truth?
36690How does this prospect taste to you, you''law- abiding''people?
36690How should they not find appropriate work for old and young, and bring up human beings who will in turn work for them?
36690How will the future society shape itself in detail?
36690How, then, should they not support the sick man who is necessary to them?
36690If so, how about college property?]
36690In consideration of his strength, his talent, his wealth?
36690In consideration of the respect which he in turn pays to me?
36690In consideration of what do I owe him this respect?
36690Is it to be inferred that this oppression is inseparably connected with the existence of human society?
36690Is not property, precisely because it is full of abuse, the most sacred thing in the world for the legislator?
36690Is this law to be more to me than an order?
36690Lastly rises the question, what is the way to this goal?
36690Must not government adjust all interests, decide all disputes?
36690Or do you suppose the oysters do not belong to us as much as to you?
36690PROUDHON,_ Qu''est- ce que la proprià © tà ©?
36690Romanow, Pugatschew oder Pestel?"
36690Shall I therefore not blaspheme?
36690Then by what right can any one appropriate to himself the smallest fraction of this vast total and say''this belongs to me and not to you''?
36690Then rises the further question, what is the goal of the study?
36690To the mind of the_ bourgeoisie_, what is the best thing that has been alleged in its favor?
36690To which shall I give the preference?
36690Was sollen wir denn thun?
36690What am I saying?
36690What are the effects of private property to- day?
36690What are they to do?
36690What commune thinks of limiting the use of the meadows so long as there are enough of them?
36690What good, what bad?
36690What have you then?
36690What is love?
36690What is there left for the representatives of handwork, these numberless millions of proletarians or of small farmers?
36690What should they be?
36690Where is the justice in this?
36690Whether it is human, humane, liberal, or unhuman, inhumane, illiberal, what do I ask about that?
36690Who is the somebody?
36690Who shall estimate the power for propagandism of a few cases of this kind, backed by a well- organized force of agitators outside the prison walls?
36690Will he be thrown on the street?
36690Will not the competence of one individual to instruct his neighbors be a matter of sufficient notoriety, without the formality of an election?
36690Will not the reasonings of one wise man be as effectual as those of twelve?
36690Will there be many vices to correct and much obstinacy to conquer?
36690With what do you pay us for chewing potatoes and looking quietly on while you swallow oysters?
36690With what, indeed, does the general in time of peace pay for the many thousands of his yearly income?
36690You long for freedom?
36690You think at least the''good cause''must be my business?
36690[ 1050]"But who are the bad men among us?
36690[ 1059]"Men say,''What will the new orders be like, that are to take the place of the present ones?
36690[ 222] 2.--BASIS_ According to Stirner the supreme law for each one of us is his own welfare._ What does one''s own welfare mean?
36690[ 226]"Whether what I think and do is Christian, what do I care?
36690[ 238]"What does the priest who admonishes the criminal do?
36690[ 975] But what form will outward life take in the Kingdom of God?
36690[ Has Tolstoi compared in a Greek concordance the other occurrences of the word translated"resist"?]
36690_ Justice requires that only one legal norm be in force: to wit, the norm that contracts must be lived up to._"What do we mean by a_ contract_?
36690can he be disturbed in the abuse of it?
36690can you be a Monarchist?''
36690e._ something sacred?
36690for providing us food when the mother has nothing but water left for her child?
36690how can the best law escape soon being detestable?
36690how can they be simple?
36690or Another for the sheer hundred- thousands and millions?
36690or do you not hold out to it, as a mother, your breast,--as a father, so much of your belongings as it needs?
36690or for assuring us of work?
36690or the argument from the evil of separating people by the boundary lines which the State involves?
36690to correct it by a detection of their ignorance, and a censure of their intolerance?
36690to form a part of their society?
36690what commune, so long as there are chestnuts and brushwood enough, hinders those who belong to it from taking as much as they please?
43543And do you imagine that you, a composition of dust, will be able to comprehend the conceptions of a pure spirit?
43543And how,said the other,"does he effect a likeness?"
43543And pray what advantages have you gained by being shut out?
43543And why all this anxiety?
43543And why not?
43543And why were you in a hermitage?
43543Are you a married man?
43543But is she not acting contrary to her own happiness in refusing such an opportunity?
43543But why could not you think in your body? 43543 But,"I asked,"will it not interfere with the strict temperance and virtue which you are to practise for the rest of your life?"
43543But,said he,"how am I to distinguish the qualities of my mind by the eye?
43543Didst thou imagine,said Mahomet with a frown,"that these resolutions would have a power in my scales, which they had not in thy own heart?"
43543Do you believe, then, that my body is here in concealment?
43543Do you sincerely wish to relinquish your body?
43543Have I not already explained to you that my body is no longer a part of me? 43543 Have I not often explained to you that the mind by being disengaged from the limbs is able to think with all its natural vigour?"
43543How so?
43543Is my friend then still alive?
43543My dearest wife, can not you believe me? 43543 Now,"said the old man,"let me know whether he would have sent me this wish had he thought that I should live the longer by virtue of it?"
43543What advantage,said he,"do you hope from the trial?
43543What can you mean? 43543 What do you mean by coming to myself?"
43543What is that?
43543Where are they? 43543 Where are you?"
43543Why do not you speak,said Cleopatra, addressing herself to the air,"and explain this mystery?"
43543Why, making visible the body that you now contrive to hide?
43543Why,continued the image,"are you so much astonished?
43543Yes, certainly; do not you know my voice?
43543Am I a spider now?
43543Am I to blame for proving the more attractive of the two?
43543And are you the founder of religion?
43543And do you pretend to be the author of that love?
43543And how can they be compelled to destroy each other so plentifully?
43543And how then is it possible that we should partake of the same nature?
43543And pray, except vice and debauchery, which of the pleasures of life are supplied by you?
43543And what are you doing now?
43543Are good intentions so abundant here?
43543Are these intentions then very durable?
43543Are you acquainted with your parentage?
43543Are you already weary of your mission?
43543Are you going back into your web?
43543Are you opening your bag to let out the blessing that you told me of?
43543Are your proceedings limited to a particular spot?
43543But are they also looking for Babylon in the sand?
43543But can I see it?
43543But do men ever pray for what they do not wish to have?
43543But do not you see a glimmering of light before us?
43543But has there lately been any disaffection amongst my limbs?
43543But how am I to see you?
43543But how can he draw a town that is not there?
43543But how happens it that I am in two parts, and that one half of me sleeps while the other half looks at it?
43543But how is the bird to enforce execution of the parchment?
43543But how long do you mean to stand projecting through the roof?
43543But if you really disapprove of intemperance, why do not you positively forbid it?
43543But pray what quarter of the globe are we now flying over?
43543But pray, how do you obtain these good intentions?
43543But there is evil in the world; whence does it come?
43543But upon what grounds is he vain?
43543But was that beautiful creature a disease?
43543But what advantage is there in the change?
43543But what do I see?
43543But whence proceed our dreams, if the sleeping body has no mind in it?
43543But which is upwards?
43543But with all this care, how happens it that the advantages of life are so unequally dispensed?
43543But, since you hardly allow me any possession upon the earth, what have I usurped?
43543By what contrivance can you weigh such things as blessings and calamities?
43543Can that be the famous thing that I have heard of?
43543Can you deny that you spring from the earth?
43543Can you in any intelligible language relate who and what you are?
43543Did I not beat my wife yesterday?
43543Did men wish to be dead?
43543Do hopes pass for real blessings?
43543Do men usually design to do a thing so often without doing it?
43543Do not you see inscriptions upon them?
43543Do you mean to take part of this man''s vanity away, since it is too heavy for his present disadvantages?
43543For what purpose do those crowds of people continually hasten backwards and forwards?
43543Had he not the use of his limbs?
43543Has a leg or an arm refused to obey you, or have any of my fingers declared themselves independent?
43543Have any of the senses then been remiss in their duties?
43543Have not I taught my children to steal?"
43543Have you bestowed many such presents upon the world?
43543Have you obtained permission for me?
43543Have you the arrogance to suppose that my being is vested in you?
43543Have you the confidence to deny that you ought to bear your own gout?
43543Here are two birds in the net: how shall we settle their claims to the parchment?
43543How can a noise be entitled to a wife and children?
43543How can a virtue have shape or colour?"
43543How could that be, when the word was applied to many different kinds of government?
43543How do you know her present circumstances?
43543How is it possible that a human being should contain a devil?
43543How shall we find our way?
43543How shall we persuade them that we are not what we appear?
43543How, then, can we have any communication with men?
43543How, then, can you have the confidence to require payment for goodness which he has never received from you?"
43543I believe it is so; then why should I scruple to assist in the conspiracy?
43543I confess my error; but how is this loss to be repaired?
43543I may add, that if all courtesy were discontinued the world would not be much improved,--and what is courtesy but falsehood?
43543I see some creatures intent upon the pavement; are they men?
43543I see the figure of a man in it now; has her resolution failed already?
43543I should like to know by what art?
43543If he wished to go, what prevented him?
43543If we except the few solitary men of remarkable genius, who in the vast crowd that is left obtains any real admiration?
43543Is he a man of genius, or what endowments has he to justify this pretence?
43543Is it I who plot and deceive?
43543Is it not a great folly that we, who know we are immortal beings, should always perplex ourselves about the hurry and use of time?
43543Is it possible that such should be the hatred of men towards each other?
43543Is it wonderful that a god should be able to speak?"
43543Is she not likely to do more good to men than to the stars?
43543Is that one of the modern laws of writing?"
43543Is that the vocation of heavenly beings?
43543Is there, indeed, any thing in which I surpass you?
43543Is this the sea that quivers in the sun below us?
43543Is your native place heaven or earth?
43543It is ingeniously contrived: but how does a man discover his own intentions in this great space?
43543It must be something of extraordinary value: is it philosophy, or religion?
43543Johnson says,"Who does not wish that the author of the''Iliad''had gratified succeeding ages with a little knowledge of himself?"
43543May I venture then to ask why I do not remember to have conversed with any heavenly being before?
43543Now what do you see in the mirror?
43543Now what do you see?
43543Oh God, restore to me my property, or who will praise thy justice upon earth?
43543Or what is the particular excellence of such a pavement?
43543Pray answer me, was it the body that invented wine?
43543Pray go on: what other good have you done?
43543Pray how should I interfere with human happiness?
43543Pray why is it that none wish to live again that part of their lives which is gone, and yet all set a high value upon the remainder?
43543Quis nisi Callimachus?
43543Since, then, mathematics are the only kind of human learning which you can ascribe to yourself alone, what would the world be without my inventions?
43543Take care, Belphegor; do you see what is coming?
43543That reason, imagination, memory, and all my great endowments, are derived from your muscles and arteries?
43543Then have I not reason to complain of a vassal so turbulent and seditious as I have always found you?
43543Then if we are to go abroad, is it advisable that you should travel in the disguise of a spider, or will you not take a more convenient shape?
43543This invention is exactly described by Horace:--"Discedo Alcæus puncto illius, ille meo quis?
43543This it is that troubles me: if God is good, why does he not grant to every man his desire?
43543To what purpose or benefit, then, should I enjoin prayer in the Koran, and how can I recommend it?
43543To which of my limbs did it first occur that the grape might become a delicious liquor?
43543Was I not intoxicated last night?
43543Was it the foot, the hand, or the shoulder, that conceived the happy thought?
43543Well, Recab, are you ready to set out?
43543Well, do not you fly with more ease now?
43543What are those heaps that I see near the gates?
43543What can it be?
43543What can they be?
43543What does this inscription mean,"Never to see my friend''s wife again?"
43543What have you been doubting about?
43543What have you in that bag?
43543What is a star?
43543What is the matter with you?
43543What is the matter?
43543What is to come next?
43543What is your employment, and what are you?
43543What noise is it that I hear?
43543What would become of all the unhappy if they listened only to you for comfort?
43543What would man be without hope?
43543What wrong can you accuse me of?
43543Where are you going?
43543Who is it that speaks?
43543Who is to decide what kind of happiness is pretended, and what real?
43543Why are they opening the gates?
43543Why have we taken this long flight to destroy the happiness of mankind?
43543Why not?
43543Will God create a new race?
43543Will they not take the opportunity to seize upon me?
43543Will you tell me what behaviour I ought to assume in your presence?
43543Your task is to bring all those nations to the same belief?
43543are all schemes of fraud contrived by my muscles?
43543can a prayer be caught in a net, like a fish?
43543do you presume to question my immortality?
43543inquired his friend:"what cause have you for suspicion?"
43543is this matter unknown even to the angels?
43543or is it in the same condition as Babylon?
43543said he;"is all that I have lost collected there?"
43543shall I never see you again, and shall I only reason about you in future?"
43543she exclaimed;"what can this mean?
43543the city of the murderer, Constantine, whom we have below?
43543what do I hear?
43543what has happened to me?
43543what have you done?"
43543where have you been during all these ages?
23428And the blast- furnaces? 23428 But how?
23428Again, to whom do we owe the transatlantic cable?
23428And has not Marx asserted that the same distinction is equally logical between two branches of manual labour?
23428And if he can not, what is it that hinders him?"
23428And those others-- the average workers who are sent away by the better- class factories as soon as business is slackened?
23428And to- day is it not still the same thing?
23428And what need to know them?
23428And why should India not manufacture?
23428And why should not small households send their crockery to an establishment as well as their boots?
23428And, moreover, Is the coal they have extracted entirely_ their_ work?
23428But during our own lifetime, have we not heard the same fears expressed twice?
23428But even this well- being, which is the exclusive right of a few, is it secure?
23428But have we not said and repeated over and over again, that as long as there are capitalists, these abuses of power will be perpetuated?
23428But how can the painter express the poetry of work in the fields if he has only contemplated it, imagined it, if he has never delighted in it himself?
23428But how can we appraise the work of each one of them?
23428But if Lyons manufactured imported silk, why should not Switzerland, Germany, Russia, do as much?
23428But if water were actually scarce, what would be done?
23428But is there no other cause?
23428But the exploiters of labour, how many are they?
23428But upon what basis must society be organized in order that all may have their due share of food produce?
23428But what are we to do to alter the conditions that everybody is convinced are bad?
23428But what is this to an authoritarian?
23428But what was offered to the husbandman in exchange for his hard toil?
23428But, before producing anything, must you not feel the need of it?
23428By what right then can any one whatever appropriate the least morsel of this immense whole and say-- This is mine, not yours?
23428Can there be two answers to these questions?
23428Can they produce all this?
23428Can this be a relic of religious metaphysics?
23428Could we endure them in a society that began by proclaiming equality?
23428Do n''t you think that there is some fundamental error in your understanding of human nature and its needs?"
23428Each time we speak of revolution, the face of the worker who has seen children wanting food darkens and he asks--"What of bread?
23428Has it not created concessions, guarantees?
23428Has it not sent its soldiers against railwaymen on strike?
23428Have we ever known them demand the impossible?
23428How are the necessary provisions to be obtained if the nation as a whole has not accepted Communism?
23428How are you to prevent a person from amassing millions in China, and then settling amongst you?
23428How can it be done?"
23428How could he find dock labourers willing to load and unload his ships for"starvation wages"?
23428How do they continue to convey millions of travellers and mountains of luggage across a continent?
23428How then can food, without which the human machine could do no work, be excluded from the list of things indispensable to the producer?
23428How then, shall we estimate the share of each in the riches which ALL contribute to amass?
23428How?
23428II How many hours a day will man have to work to produce nourishing food, a comfortable home, and necessary clothing for his family?
23428If companies owning railways have been able to agree, why should railway workers, who would take possession of railways, not agree likewise?
23428If he only knows it as a bird of passage knows the country he soars over in his migrations?
23428If the answer is in the affirmative,--What hinders them going ahead?
23428If the most imperious needs of man remain unsatisfied now,--What must we do to increase the productivity of our work?
23428In order to avoid an accidental and transitory inequality, shall we stay our hand from righting an ancient wrong?
23428In the streets wander scores of thousands of men, and in the evening they crowd into improvised clubs, asking:"What shall we do?"
23428Is it he who is the most necessary man in the mine?
23428Is it not also the work of the men who have built the railway leading to the mine and the roads that radiate from all the railway stations?
23428Is it not the study of the needs that should govern production?
23428Is it the doctor who has found out the illness, or the nurse who has brought about recovery by her hygienic care?
23428Is it the engineer on the locomotive?
23428Is it the miner at the bottom of the shaft, who risks his life every instant, and who will some day be killed by fire- damp?
23428Is it time that is needed to achieve such a result?
23428Is it to Maury, the learned physical geographer, who advised that thick cables should be set aside for others as thin as a walking cane?
23428Is not the Paris Commune an instance in point?
23428Knowledge?
23428Must they on his account dissolve the group, elect a president to impose fines, and work out a code of penalties?
23428Must we wait till the Communist Revolution is ripe in all civilized countries?
23428Now, how much do twenty million work- days of five hours make per inhabitant?
23428Or is it the engineer, who would lose the layer of coal, and would cause the miners to dig on rock by a simple mistake in his calculations?
23428Or, is it perhaps the boy who signals to him from below to raise the cage?
23428Shall we be inferior to our grandfathers, who hardly lisped the first words of science?
23428Shall we, then, return to our starting- point, and go through the same evolution again?
23428The fatherland does not exist.... What fatherland can the international banker and the rag- picker have in common?
23428The people will suffer and say:"How is a way out of these difficulties to be found?"
23428The question is, then: whether, taking the present capacity of men for production, every man can have a house of his own?
23428The revolted city will be compelled to do without these"foreigners,"and why not?
23428The signalman who stops the trains, or lets them pass by?
23428The switchman who transfers a train from one line to another?
23428They gave to the work the full measure of their strength, and what more could they give?
23428V And what about art?
23428V By what means could a city in a state of revolution be supplied with food?
23428Was it not necessity that first drove man to hunt, to raise cattle, to cultivate land, to make implements, and later on to invent machinery?
23428Well, then,--What are we going to do when the thunderbolt has fallen?
23428What can be more stupid than rubbing a boot twenty or thirty times with a brush?
23428What difference could a thousand corpses more or less make to him?
23428What does our baron do to enrich himself?
23428What have you gained by your Revolution?"
23428What if the peasants, ignorant tools of reaction, starve our towns as the black bands did in France in 1793--what shall we do?"
23428What is to be done to provide these multitudes with bread?
23428What means has the scientist of to- day to make researches that interest him?
23428What must they do to remove the obstacles?
23428What need to rack our brains when we have the time- honoured method of the Pharaohs at our disposal?
23428What progeny will these trembling and rickety bodies bequeath to their country?
23428What should be the hindrance?
23428What then is to be done?
23428What would a London dockyard or a great Paris warehouse be if they were not situated in these great centres of international commerce?
23428What, too, shall we say to the price which is paid for the relative well- being of certain categories of workmen?
23428Whence will the revolution come?
23428Where, indeed, should it come from?
23428Which one of us can claim the higher remuneration for his work?
23428Who can say that it will not call coercion to its aid again, and set the police pack upon the tenant to hound him out of his hovels?
23428Who does not know what sufferings nearly all great inventions have cost?
23428Who of us has not heard men hold forth in this strain?
23428Who will have a right to the food of the commune?
23428Who, then, can appropriate to himself the tiniest plot of ground, or the meanest building in such a city, without committing a flagrant injustice?
23428Who, then, has the right to sell to any bidder the smallest portion of the common heritage?
23428Who, then, would regulate the traffic if not the Government?"
23428Why fifty fires, when two people and one single fire would suffice to cook all these pieces of meat and all these vegetables?
23428Why has woman''s work never been of any account?
23428Why in every family are the mother and three or four servants obliged to spend so much time at what pertains to cooking?
23428Why roast the founders, when heat lost by radiation represents tons of coal?
23428Why should not a social genius come forward, carry Europe with him and translate the new Gospel into life?
23428Why should we not apply, then, the same principle to the other extremity?
23428Why should we use a machine?
23428Why then are the many poor?
23428Why this painful drudgery for the masses?
23428Will literature lose by it?
23428Will the poet be less a poet after having worked out of doors or helped with his hands to multiply his work?
23428Will there be sufficient, if everyone eats according to his appetite?
23428Will they continue to shut themselves up in factories after the Revolution?
23428Would he burden himself with a lease which absorbed a third of the produce?
23428Would he-- on the_ métayer_ system-- consent to give half of his harvest to the landowner?
23428Would it not be better to start fresh by turning everybody out of doors and redistributing the houses by lot?"
23428You would work like the wife of our good comrade Paul or the wife of John the carpenter?"
23428and have we not constant evidence of this fact in every village commune?
23428and the great dockers''strike?
23428and what is hindering him from having it?
23428how will it announce its coming?
2162''Well, is n''t this enough?'' 2162 Why do you not say how things will be operated under Anarchism?"
2162Why should I join a union? 2162 Why?"
2162[ 1] Could brother Comstock do more? 2162 ''What made you lie so to those poor, misled people? 2162 A Milanese thief said to Lombroso:I do not rob, I merely take from the rich their superfluities; besides, do not advocates and merchants rob?"
2162A gruesome subject, is it not?
2162A wonderful thing to remember, is it not?
2162Add to this horrible aspect the drudgery of housework, and what remains of the protection and glory of the home?
2162After all, has he not sacrificed his life always, so that others may have light and air?
2162After all, is not that the most important consideration?
2162All these busybodies, moral detectives, jailers of the human spirit, what will they say?
2162And are we, who ourselves are not in this horrible predicament, to stand by and coldly condemn these piteous victims of the Furies and Fates?
2162And do they not squander with cosmopolitan grace fortunes coined by American factory children and cotton slaves?
2162And how could the latter be acquired without numbers?
2162And how is he to do it with ten, fifteen, or twenty years''imprisonment before him?
2162And if not, will it endure under Anarchism?
2162And is it not more likely that if he would have taken part, he, the experienced ENTREPRENEUR, would have thoroughly organized the attempt?
2162And what are these pillars?
2162And what is the result of such crusades?
2162And when did she ever enjoy such opportunities as are hers, the politician''s?
2162And where is the superior sense of justice that woman was to bring into the political field?
2162Anything more, my lord?
2162Are not our rich Americans Frenchmen in France, Germans in Germany, or Englishmen in England?
2162Are the labor conditions better there than they are in England, where the suffragettes are making such a heroic struggle?
2162Are they not the masters, the absolute kings of the situation?
2162Are we to assume that the poison already inherent in politics will be decreased, if women were to enter the political arena?
2162Are we, then, to believe that two errors will make a right?
2162As to the knowledge of the woman-- what is there to know except that she has a pleasing appearance?
2162At any rate, woman has no soul-- what is there to know about her?
2162Bewildered, the few asked how could the majority betray the traditions of American liberty?
2162But how can we attain our end?
2162But is it in reality a true organization?
2162But the child, how is it to be protected, if not for marriage?
2162But then, has not authority from time immemorial stamped every step of progress as treasonable?
2162But what about human nature?
2162But what are normal demands to an abnormal institution?
2162But, it is often asked, have not acknowledged Anarchists committed acts of violence?
2162But, then, have not his fetters been forged so deeply into his flesh, that he would not, even if he could, break them?
2162Can anyone assume for a moment that a man like Ferrer would affiliate himself with such a spontaneous, unorganized effort?
2162Can it be changed?
2162Can there be anything more humiliating, more degrading than a life- long proximity between two strangers?
2162Comes it in sunshine?
2162Could all the Puritan fathers have done more?
2162Could anyone assume that these men had advised violence, or even approved of the acts?
2162Did Francisco Ferrer participate in the anti- military uprising?
2162Did they all three even hold the same political opinions?
2162Did you not know it?
2162Discipline and restraint-- are they not back of all the evils in the world?
2162Do n''t you know that you and the authorities of the State are my representatives on earth?
2162Do n''t you know they are already suffering the tortures of hell in their earthly lives?
2162Do n''t you know this?
2162Does it not condemn her to the block, does it not degrade and shame her if she refuses to buy her right to motherhood by selling herself?
2162Does it not say to woman, Only when you follow me shall you bring forth life?
2162Does not marriage only sanction motherhood, even though conceived in hatred, in compulsion?
2162Does there exist a greater motherhood, happier and freer children than in England?
2162Equality, who ever heard of such a thing?
2162Free love?
2162Had the writer forgotten that?
2162Has not some American ancestor said, many years ago, that resistance to tyranny is obedience to God?
2162Has she emancipated herself from the Puritanical double standard of morality for men and women?
2162Has she not been taught from infancy to look upon that as her ultimate calling?
2162Has that helped to develop a greater heroism, an intenser zeal than that of the women of Russia?
2162Has that purified our political life, as many well- meaning advocates predicted?
2162Have I not built up my career step by step, like thousands of my kind?
2162Have I not worked early and late for ten long years?
2162Have I not woven this dress with sleepless nights?
2162Have not the few accumulated the wealth of the world?
2162Have the Catholic priests ever looked upon woman as anything but a sex commodity?
2162He, the savior of his country, the protector of his nation,--what has patriotism in store for him?
2162How can it, when it knows that all suffering, all misery, all ills, result from the evil of submission?
2162How can such an arrangement end except in failure?
2162How could a society machine- sewn, fathom the seething depths whence issued the great masterpiece of Henrik Ibsen?
2162How is it that an institution, known almost to every child, should have been discovered so suddenly?
2162How is it that this evil, known to all sociologists, should now be made such an important issue?
2162How is such a thing possible when ideas, culture, literature, when the deepest and finest emotions groan under the iron yoke?
2162How would America ever retain her virtue if Europe did not help her out?
2162How, then, are they to understand the co- operation of a man and a woman, except on a sex basis?
2162How, then, can any one assume to map out a line of conduct for those to come?
2162If her body can be bought in return for material consideration, why not her vote?
2162If motherhood is the highest fulfillment of woman''s nature, what other protection does it need, save love and freedom?
2162If the mind of the child is to be poisoned with such memories, what hope is there for a true realization of human brotherhood?
2162If the parent has no work, or if he hides his identity, what does marriage do then?
2162If, however, the soil is sterile, how can marriage make it bear fruit?
2162If, then, she can not improve on man''s mistakes, why perpetuate the latter?
2162In short, is it love for the spot, every inch representing dear and precious recollections of a happy, joyous, and playful childhood?
2162In the tempest''s thrill?
2162In view of these economic horrors, is it to be wondered at that prostitution and the white slave trade have become such dominant factors?
2162Indeed?
2162Is he to become a member of the luckless crews that man those dark, ill- starred ships called prisons?...
2162Is it love of one''s birthplace, the place of childhood''s recollections and hopes, dreams and aspirations?
2162Is it not a fact that during industrial depressions there is a tremendous increase in the number of enlistments?
2162Is it not more likely that he prepared them to succor the poor?
2162Is it not rather an arbitrary institution, cunningly imposed upon the masses?
2162Is it not significant that the railroad should lead to the very seat of Federal authority?
2162Is it not strange, then, that we still believe in fetich worship?
2162Is it not the best and most effective way of bringing into the proper light the absolute uselessness and injury of parasitism?
2162Is it of any avail that a former president of a republic pays homage at Osawatomie to the memory of John Brown?
2162Is it psychologically possible that Ferrer should have participated?
2162Is it that they are absolutely ignorant of the history of religion, and especially of the Christian religion?
2162Is it the place where we would listen to the music of the birds, and long to have wings to fly, even as they, to distant lands?
2162Is it the place where, in childlike naivety, we would watch the fleeting clouds, and wonder why we, too, could not run so swiftly?
2162Is it their fault if they see clearly and suffer at seeing others suffer?
2162Is she not a practiced henchman, whose trials of her enemies are the worst mockery of justice?
2162Is woman there no longer considered a mere sex commodity?
2162Marriage may have the power to bring the horse to water, but has it ever made him drink?
2162Need I say that in art we are confronted with the same sad facts?
2162Now that it is no longer a beautiful vision, but a"practical, workable scheme,"resting on the will of the majority, why not?
2162Now, what did this"terrible crime"really consist of?
2162Of what avail is all this when, at the same time, the LIVING John Browns and Proudhons are being crucified?
2162Or is it not the most brutal imposition for one set of people to make laws that another set is coerced by force to obey?
2162Or is it that they hope to blind the present generation to the part played in the past by the Church in relation to prostitution?
2162Or the place where we would sit at mother''s knee, enraptured by wonderful tales of great deeds and conquests?
2162PATRIOTISM: A MENACE TO LIBERTY What is patriotism?
2162Poor America, of what avail is all her wealth, if the individuals comprising the nation are wretchedly poor?
2162Poverty in all its horrors and ugliness to be dished out as an after- dinner amusement?
2162Prison, a social protection?
2162Strange, is n''t it, that a woman who has a kept a"house"should be able to feel that way?
2162The awe of authority, of law, of private property, hundredfold burned into his soul,--how is he to throw it off unprepared, unexpectedly?
2162The colleges and other institutions of learning, are they not models of organization, offering the people fine opportunities for instruction?
2162The economic, political, moral, and physical factors being the microbes of crime, how does society meet the situation?
2162The important and only God of practical American life: Can the man make a living?
2162The law will place the father under arrest, and put him in convict''s clothes; but has that ever stilled the hunger of the child?
2162The moral lesson instilled in the girl is not whether the man has aroused her love, but rather is it,"How much?"
2162To be sure, has she not incited violence even before her birth, and will she not continue to do so beyond death?
2162To entertain the fleet, did I say?
2162Was Averbuch an Anarchist?
2162Was not his mind singularly clear, analytic?
2162Were these people Anarchists?
2162What about the glory of woman suffrage, since it has failed utterly in the most important social issue, the child?
2162What could not have been accomplished with such an enormous sum?
2162What does the history of parliamentarism show?
2162What has she achieved through her emancipation?
2162What is really the cause of the trade in women?
2162What is the cause that compels a vast army of the human family to take to crime, to prefer the hideous life within prison walls to the life outside?
2162What is the real basis of punishment, however?
2162What led to his act?
2162What might have been her future development had she remained in this milieu?
2162What monstrous mind ever conceived such an idea?
2162What tortures of hell did you depict?
2162What would become of the rich, if not for the poor?
2162What you call crime is nothing; a murder here, a theft there, a blow now and a curse there: what do they matter?
2162What, then, are the objections?
2162What, then, is patriotism?
2162Where are the Finnish Perovskaias, Spiridonovas, Figners, Breshkovskaias?
2162Where are the countless numbers of Finnish young girls who cheerfully go to Siberia for their cause?
2162Where are the women in any suffrage country or State that can lay claim to such a victory?
2162Where was its judgment, its reasoning capacity?
2162Where were the women politicians then, and why did they not exercise the power of their vote?
2162Wherein, then, are the advantages to woman and society from woman suffrage?
2162Who but the most ignorant dare speak of woman as a mere domestic drudge?
2162Who dare suggest that this or that profession should not be open to her?
2162Who does not know this never- varying refrain of all politicians?
2162Who has not heard this litany before?
2162Who shall ever do justice or adequately portray her heroism and self- sacrifice, her loyalty and devotion?
2162Who would create wealth?
2162Who would fight wars?
2162Who would make the policeman, the jailer, if woman were to refuse the indiscriminate breeding of children?
2162Whom in the world should I ask but you?
2162Why do they not deter?
2162Why does the public tolerate such an outrage on its liberties?
2162Why has the ballot not created them?
2162Why not?
2162Why should I blush before anyone?
2162Why should they punish me for taking by somewhat similar means from those who have taken more than they had a right to?"
2162Why should this gold upon my body, and the lustre which surrounds my name, only increase my infamy?
2162Why teach the child to hate something which does not exist?
2162Why then expect perseverance or energy of Laura?
2162Why, then, are prisons a social crime and a failure?
2162Why, why these foul murders?
2162Will anyone say that Vaillant was an ignorant, vicious man, or a lunatic?
2162Will it ever?
2162Will it not lead to a revolution?
2162With Mrs. Warren these girls feel,"Why waste your life working for a few shillings a week in a scullery, eighteen hours a day?"
2162With human nature caged in a narrow space, whipped daily into submission, how can we speak of its potentialities?
2162Wonderfully inspiring atmosphere for the bearing of life, is it not?
2162Would he not have known that it would result in a defeat, a disastrous defeat for the people?
2162Yet who can deny that the same applies with equal force to the present time, even to American prisons?
2162Yet who dare say his death was in vain?
2162Yet, how can any one speak of it today, with every soul in a prison, with every heart fettered, wounded, and maimed?
2162can he support a wife?
31373Are these girls really Americans at heart? 31373 Are you quite sure,"said Fillmore Flagg,"that her father is dead?"
31373At this point, it is pertinent to propound the following questions: If this is a Republic? 31373 But, says the objector, are not these mostly alkali lands?
31373Can a Josiah Strong answer these questions? 31373 Can we teach politics to school children, as a part of our religious duties?
31373Did I understand you to say that these immense discs, these mammoth, weed- scorching mirrors, were made here at Solaris? 31373 Does this exhibit appeal to you as a reasonable basis for the accumulated savings named in your questions?"
31373First, I wish you would tell me just what is represented by the one thousand shares of capital stock, of the Solaris Farm Company?
31373How can this happen? 31373 How do you do, Mr. Flagg?
31373How is it possible, you ask, to keep perfect control of such a large issue of scrip, with a certainty that all in use is genuine? 31373 How much land do you devote to cotton growing?
31373In this connection, let me ask: Have you ever had a seance with a medium? 31373 My dear Fillmore,"said Fern,"How are you impressed by my scheme for carrying out the chosen plans?
31373Now Fillmore,said Fern,"I wish to ask, what have you been doing in the department of experimental farming?"
31373Speaking of wages,said George Gaylord,"did I understand you to say, that all of the co- operators at Solaris receive the same pay?"
31373Tell me, George,said Fillmore Flagg,"how have you fared since we parted, and what are your ambitions and plans for the future?"
31373Tell me, Mr. Flagg, why are you so much interested in that advertisement which came to me so unceremoniously yesterday? 31373 What are the best conditions for mind unfoldment?
31373What is a trust? 31373 What is that question, which so completely absorbs the attention of these people?
31373What think you, Mr. Gaylord? 31373 Where can these conditions be found?
31373Why can these land monopolists afford to wait so long? 31373 Will it pay?"
31373You ask how can this coming disaster be averted? 31373 You ask what disposition has been made of this money?
31373You ask, what disposition is made of the salaries of such co- operators as are elected to fill town and county offices? 31373 ''How to keep the farm lands of America in the hands of the native farmers of this and the coming generations? 31373 A last word to my readers: Do you wish to join forces with the humanitarians? 31373 Am I worthy of such a blessing? 31373 An overwhelming answer in the affirmative, from every point of view, to the question, does it pay to be unselfish? 31373 And again, tell me why you are so moved and determined to better the conditions of farm life? 31373 And if the consolidating business, is so good and so profitable for the trusts? 31373 And now, my dear Fillmore, since I have, so to speak, brought myself up to date for your benefit, may I ask for a similar service on your part?
31373Are we waking or dreaming?
31373Are you satisfied, my dear girl?
31373Aside from my speculative fancies, I do wonder what the future has in store for him?
31373At what age do you propose to retire the active workers?"
31373But are you quite sure the facts will fully warrant your conclusions?
31373But tell me, if I may be permitted to ask, who was the wonderful genius who first conceived and planned the building of this imposing line of arches?
31373But what about the father?
31373By the measure of immortality, who shall attempt to describe or limit the destiny of a human soul?
31373By what remarkable process had she, in so short a time, achieved such commanding heights of intellectual and spiritual greatness?
31373Can I add anything more convincing?"
31373Can it be possible that I am to feel and know this by direct communication with them?"
31373Can it be possible, that the pulsing energy of the protoplasmic life of the tree, is identical with that of man, and all other forms of cosmic life?
31373Can it be possible, that they are farm laborers?"
31373Can such a rotten society ever become a safe foundation for the government of a true republic?
31373Can they be made to grow wheat, and thus increase the bread supply?
31373Can we agree to accept new definitions, for the disputed religious terms, which we have been discussing?"
31373Can you accept my proposal?"
31373Can you evolve anything from your inner consciousness in answer to these questions?"
31373Can you suggest anything that may be of assistance to me?"
31373Can you suggest anything towards its solution?"
31373Did she seem to blame you so very much, for not answering her mother''s letter?"
31373Do the poor people, the farmers, the country land owners, and the working men, join in these shoutings?
31373Do these arrangements suit your convenience?
31373Do they meet your entire approval?"
31373Do they represent the women of our land?
31373Do you find homesickness among the colonists, a frequent cause of discontent?"
31373Do you find it so?"
31373Do you know anything about the laws that control and govern mediumship?
31373Do you really consider it so very important?"
31373Do you remember the promise I made to you, on the night of my transition?
31373Do you think I am likely to prove a pupil worthy of his teacher?"
31373Do you think a general introduction of co- operative farming, will produce equally successful results elsewhere?"
31373Do you think she is really in love with Mr. Flagg?
31373Do you think this road- building fever, will continue to spread with the growth of the movement?"
31373Do you think you are strong enough to- day, for another mobile excursion over the farm?"
31373Does each great throb of the planetary heart, re- energize and move in unison, the protoplasmic centers of all forms of life?
31373Does the plan proposed meet your approval by offering satisfactory answers to your questions?"
31373Has anything happened to her?
31373Have I faithfully kept my promise?"
31373Have you been interested to any extent in reading the all- comprehensive philosophy which mediumship demonstrates?"
31373Have your objections, been satisfactorily answered?
31373He heard these words:"Fern, my daughter, will you tell this gentleman who I am?"
31373How can I ever properly thank you, my noble benefactor, for your great goodness to me; for your supreme confidence in my integrity?
31373How can our people be saved from such a hopeless future?
31373How can such expensive things be made, for a price that would allow so many to be used?"
31373How can the Fairy Queen explain?
31373How can this be accomplished?
31373How can you answer that argument, from the co- operative standpoint?"
31373How could he have an interview with her father, if Mrs. Bainbridge was correct in saying that Mr. Fenwick had been dead for several years?
31373How did you manage to make it possible?"
31373How do you manage to make it profitable to grow such a quantity of perishable things?"
31373How has co- operative methods, affected its culture as a paying crop?"
31373How has the example of Solaris farm, affected the industrial, social, and political situation in this town and county?"
31373How is it, that the fields and cultivated grounds at Solaris, are so free from weeds?"
31373How many arms, have the number fives?
31373How many bodies, have the number nines?
31373How many ears, have the number sevens?
31373How many eyes, have the number eights?
31373How many feet, have the number twos?
31373How many fingers and toes, has number one?"
31373How many hands, have the number fours?
31373How many legs, have the number threes?
31373How many mouths, have the number sixes?
31373How many noses, have the number tens?
31373How much longer do you propose to remain here?"
31373How to help them to help themselves?''
31373How will you dispose of it?
31373How, and when shall we commence the plan making?"
31373How, can you ever forgive me?
31373I cried,''How can I do this work alone?
31373I do wonder in what peculiar capacity you are to act, and who your real employer is to be?
31373I see our friends returning from the lake, will you help me to spread the lunch?"
31373I trust that you feel encouraged to go forward hopefully with the work?"
31373If so, what are your plans and what have you been doing towards working out this puzzling question?"
31373If so, what name shall I choose for it?
31373If the people are the government, and the government is the people?
31373In its formation what method shall I use?
31373Is it a matter of wonder, that he unhesitatingly accorded to them, the distinction of being sacred?
31373Is it not a most beautiful illustration, of the power of spirits to co- operate with mortals?"
31373Is it not almost like a miracle?"
31373Is it not one affecting the vital interests of humanity to a marvelous extent?"
31373Is it then, under the circumstances, any wonder that the farmers''sons should become dissatisfied with the occupation of their birth?
31373Is it wise, to devote so much time to teaching politics; and to commence this teaching with children so young?
31373Is she here?"
31373Is that to be postponed until we have finished the preliminary work, which you have outlined?"
31373It is then that I ask of my soul: What am I?
31373May I also congratulate you, on having so wisely chosen a husband, who is in every way worthy?
31373May I hope, Miss Fenwick, that you will kindly consent to become my teacher in this new school of wonderful phenomena and spiritual law?
31373May we hope that you both can come with us?"
31373May we not make that co- operation more effective, by a closer study of the conditions that prevail, and of the laws which govern spirit life?"
31373Must the sons and daughters of the farms of this republic come to the bitter heritage of such a life?
31373Now that her studies were finished and her plans perfected, why not send for him to come to Fenwick Hall for a week''s vacation?
31373Premising that my theory is true, how can you manage this matter at Solaris, in order to avoid trouble?"
31373Question: Shall this society take the form of a club?
31373Shall we not do well, if we devote a generous share of our honeymoon to the making, development and perfection of these plans?"
31373Shall we walk through now?"
31373Tell me, Fillmore, does the acceptance and advocacy of this view of the relations existing between labor and society, make one a socialist?"
31373Tell me, is this the beginning of some reign of enchantment?
31373Tell me; how is it possible for so large a sum to be saved in such a short time?"
31373That he had been swallowed up by the sea?
31373That the shipwreck had really occurred?"
31373The culmination of love''s dream?
31373To government of both state and nation?
31373To what piece of good fortune, do I owe this unexpected visit?
31373Was it possible that spiritual unfoldment alone, could confer such marvelous power?
31373Were the desires, the ideas and the methods in conjunctive harmony with planetary evolution?
31373Were you there, Fillmore?"
31373What additional results, do you claim for the system?"
31373What additional work, has Gertrude Gerrish planned for the club members?"
31373What are these buildings, and for what purpose are they used?"
31373What are those insects, and how did you manage to destroy them?"
31373What atonement can I ever make, for the shame, the humiliation, the suffering, which I have brought into your life?''
31373What can I do?
31373What do you think of it so far?"
31373What does it mean?
31373What has become of these values?
31373What has she been doing with her magical wand to produce such delicious perfume; such entrancing music?"
31373What have I done?
31373What have you to tell me about stirpiculture, as a part of the co- operative farm movement?"
31373What is the result?
31373What miracle have you wrought for me, my precious one, that I am so happy?
31373What of our coming conference with your father, Fennimore Fenwick?
31373What problem in life so knotty that she could not solve?
31373What shall I do?
31373What sweet guardian spirit guides my life, that I should be made so exceedingly happy by the priceless love of such a beautiful woman?
31373What then will happen to society?
31373What then would have happened to our workers, the basic units of our government?
31373What think you of these results?"
31373What think you, Fillmore?"
31373What think you, friend Gaylord?"
31373What treatment may unorganized, unprotected labor, expect from this system?
31373When you heard the voice from the trumpet, how could you feel so sure it was your father speaking?
31373Where now is the injustice of equal wages?
31373Where then, in the economy of nature, is there room or use for the doctrine of total depravity?
31373Who shall say?
31373Who so capable and so desirable as Fillmore Flagg?
31373Why is it that these things have not been done before?"
31373Why must this prove true?
31373Why not change it for the co- operative system?
31373Why not?
31373Why not?
31373Why should the business of the United States, support such an army of banks?
31373Why should they live only to suffer?
31373Why should they?
31373Why, should it not own and operate the railroads, the canals, the shipping, the mines, the forests, and all other industries?
31373Why, should not the government, own and run this giant central bank?
31373Why?
31373Will he ever reach that room?
31373Will the lovely face of Fern Fenwick be the first to greet him?
31373Will you be seated in the smaller chair near it?
31373Will you do me the favor of considering yourself as pledged from this moment to take up my work?
31373Will you not?"
31373With the aid of such a matchless woman, how could he fail in the work before him?
31373With this lesson before us, how can we hesitate or falter in our efforts to successfully carry forward this important work?
31373Would he ever again experience another week so full of unalloyed happiness?
31373Would it not be infinitely better, than to allow the government to be swallowed by one monster trust?"
31373Would they dare to do such a thing?"
31373You are perfectly satisfied with the arrangement, are you not?"
31373You ask to what extent will the work affect the destiny of woman?
31373and how were its smooth, worn sides so systematically engraved?"
31373how formed?
31373imagine for them, a purpose in life more noble or more worthy?"
31373whence came this stranger rock?
7932All blood and thunder, eh?
7932And these fields-- what would they be without the art of cultivation? 7932 Can you expect anything from this life?"
7932Have you seen my umbrella?
7932Hired,say you?
7932How can we raise the capital necessary to do something effectual? 7932 If the capital can be had, where shall we organize, you will ask?
7932Indeed,said Mr. Parker,"and what did he say of me?"
7932Is Mr.---- much of a carpenter?
7932Well, how was Drew''s play?
7932What are you living here for?
7932What boots? 7932 What sort of a man is that long- haired fellow opposite?"
7932What sort of an umbrella was it?
7932What would it be without its walks, flower- beds and arrangement?
7932Where do you expect to go when you die,said she to him,"if you are so cruel to animals?"
7932Why,queried one,"are those children like native Africans?"
7932Yes,she replied, struck by his traits,"honey without a_ comb!_""Do you not think Miss B. is beautiful?
7932( How would Little John do for California?)
7932A man in the ordinary chances of life has to meet all sorts of persons, does he not?
7932And are we all at once to abandon, to deny, to destroy this supposed stronghold of virtue?
7932And did the"producers of wealth"think that there were those who danced in their company as a favor to them?
7932And did they actually agree with the laws of music, color and mathematics?
7932And he has no excuse but the cowardly question,"Am I my brother''s keeper?"
7932And how could any one do differently when the great Archon himself was first and foremost in the fray, poking fun at all?
7932And if he had"popped"the robber would there have been any_ pop- bier_( beer) there?
7932And if his happiness depends on it, surely that of the rest must, for what happiness does a woman desire but that of those connected with her?
7932And if so, upon what terms would they be received?
7932And lastly, if all these things were true, why not say so and adopt them?
7932And what could set off this face better than that soft, light, blonde hair, that wound into full, large ringlets, looped up in Grecian style?
7932And what is that?
7932And while we were there we would be happy, and when the Association broke up, if it ever did, would we not unite somewhere again?
7932And who was this Fourier?
7932And yet, my friends, where is that kingdom of peace and love; where, where in the whole wide world is the will of God done as it is in heaven?
7932Are there meetings for_ us to attend?_ Do you have singing schools?
7932Are there meetings for_ us to attend?_ Do you have singing schools?
7932Are you ready from an interest in the cause of Association to endure the sacrifices which all persons must suffer?
7932Are you single or married?
7932Are you so full that it will be impossible for you to take one more in the course of a few weeks?
7932Besides, what young man could leave the young ladies to set the tables alone, after having danced with them all the evening?
7932But how is this possible in a competitive society, where the interests of all are hostile?
7932But how is this to be done?
7932But might it not be enforced that the two family ideas really neutralize one another?
7932But what was to be developed next among all the things desirable?
7932But what would be the use in sketching the characters that throng around me by the hundreds, who were associated with this new life?
7932But why continue the list?
7932But, says one, how can I engage practically in realizing Association?
7932Can I keep a cow?
7932Can our industry and economy clothe us for the year?
7932Can words be more simple or more modest?
7932Can you shoe horses and oxen?
7932Can you think I would do better elsewhere?
7932Commend me to the young for unselfish work, or was it that the life awoke in them a devoted spirit?
7932Could it be possible?
7932Could you by yourself, or your friends, command a few hundred dollars sufficient to start your business?
7932Cowhides or patent leathers?"
7932Did I and we not have the example of great minds and greater hearts?
7932Did I know it?
7932Did any of these accomplished men and women deem that they lowered themselves by dancing with those who did manual labor?
7932Did he have the thousandth part of an idea that he was going to put a bullet into a man''s body?
7932Did he not hear reverberating in his soul the sublime passage,"If I be lifted up, I will lift all others up to me"?
7932Did he then think of the little church in Purchase Street, and of what he had solemnly said to the listening congregation?
7932Did he think to"put new wine into old bottles"?
7932Did he_ bear- ill_ against any man?
7932Did she make excuses?
7932Do the people( generally speaking) appear happy?
7932Do you carry out Mr. Fourier''s idea of diversity of employment?
7932Do you feel that your works ought to justify and fortify your words?
7932Does not a sceptical smile steal over the faces of men, when an earnest and enthusiastic person speaks of it as a thing yet actually to be?
7932Does the system work well with the children?
7932For what is property?
7932Had he not been lifted up, not in crucifixion, but by myriads of silent blessings, and was it not Christ- like to aid in lifting all others up also?
7932Had he not been lifted up?
7932Had it not also taken from our parents the dread anxieties that fall to most of common lot?
7932Has it added strength to the lives of individuals, and has it done something for society?
7932Has it been only a failure and a dream that I have chronicled, or has it resulted in something worthy of the aspiration that preceded it?
7932Has she to_ you?_""Who are those girls out in the boat with the old man?"
7932Has she to_ you?_""Who are those girls out in the boat with the old man?"
7932Have not six thousand years taught thee yet, that self- love is always a suicide?
7932Have parties opportunities of enjoying any other religion?
7932Have you more than one church, and if so what are its tenets?
7932Have you room in your association to admit the above family?
7932He had been travelling that morning through Muddy Pond woods, in a thick part of which he had seen-- what?
7932He wanted a little more_ stock_ in hand, eh?
7932His friend William Henry Channing urged him to write the story of Brook Farm, saying,"When_ will_ you tell it?"
7932Hollow- eyed women and children point the finger of scorn at him, and phantoms in his dreams shriek out at him,"Where is thy brother?"
7932How are the ultimate forms of my life to be brought into correspondence with its central impulse?
7932How can I describe the dinner?
7932How can vital and true love operate between me and my neighbor, when his misfortune is my advantage, and my loss is his gain?
7932How could they grow otherwise than great?
7932How many members have you at this time?
7932How shall I do it in the country?
7932If I should wish to leave in two or three or five years, could I and mine, if I paid my way whilst there?
7932If it was a dog, they would ask,"What kind of a_ bark_ he had on him?"
7932If it was a pump,"Is it_ well_ with it?"
7932If it was a shepherd, they would like to inquire"if he was not a_ baa_-keeper?"
7932If not, what must be done?
7932If one must die, must surrender life, oh, where can it be done better than under such circumstances?
7932If so will you do me the favor to_ supply the deficiency?_ Please to answer my questions by number, as they are put.
7932In a version of Watts''Hymns this verse is found:--"And are we wretches still alive, And do we yet rebel?
7932In fine, have you confidence that by your manual labor in the branches you have mentioned, you could do more than earn your living in Association?
7932Is it even thought of as anything but a dream, an impossibility?
7932Is it possible for me to do so under satisfactory circumstances?
7932Is it questioned whether the family arrangement of mankind is to be preserved?
7932Is not the work of sufficient importance to incite you to embark heartily in its furtherance?
7932Is this definite enough for a hasty answer?
7932It is not quite certain that the human heart can not be set in two places; that man can not worship at two altars?
7932It was easy to adopt"_ attractive industry_,"another of Fourier''s mottoes, for were they not trying mind and body to make it so?
7932It was three miles to the robbers''rendezvous, but what cared we?
7932Many visitors asked the question of him,"Mr. Ryckman, do the Brook Farmers hold all their property in common?"
7932Must not the spirit of Christianity create unto itself a_ body_?
7932Need I say that at times I was one of those boys?
7932Now if you should presume to let me come, where can I live?
7932Number one is, What were my first impressions of the idea of associative life; that is, did the idea strike me pleasantly or not?
7932Ought it to do so?
7932Preaching was good, but more than preaching was wanted-- the Christian life; could it not be commenced?
7932Should the Community moor itself where it was, or be borne on with the flood?
7932Surely is it not better for me to begin life this way than with doubt and distrust of my fellows?
7932The great work of disseminating and defending the principles of social science needs pecuniary aid; who will offer it?
7932The next question is, How did my mind change on this subject?
7932There was a burden of care taken from us, for was not the Association our god- father?
7932Thou wilt give the kingdoms of the world as thou always hast, first by stealing them for thy slaves, and then stealing them from thy slaves?
7932Was Glover_ half cocked_ when he borrowed them?
7932Was I working for any other man or person?
7932Was I working for myself?
7932Was he going to_ brace_ up his courage?
7932Was it any one of the grumblers or the known discontented or disconcerted ones?
7932Was it because our lives were more in harmony with nature than is usual?
7932Was it paying?
7932Was it the"Archon"or the"Professor"?
7932Was it true that the actual laws applicable to social life had been discovered?
7932Was there to be science applied to society?
7932Were Thermopylae and Bunker Hill considered successes in their day and generation?"
7932Were these the robbers, and was this the bloody raiment?
7932Were they immutable as the laws of earthly bodies-- of the sun, the stars and the universe?
7932Were they surrendered without a pang?
7932What chance for study?
7932What could it mean?
7932What had he done?
7932What number of hours generally employed in labor?
7932What star, what sun is bursting on the bay?"
7932What would he do?
7932What, then, was there beside these occupations to support and increase the organization?
7932Where can it be had?
7932Where could all the people be?
7932Which was best?
7932Which was the supremest ideal?
7932Who could tell?
7932Who was Cyclops?
7932Who would dare to propose to break into the charmed circle by such discordant words?
7932Who?
7932Why could we not be as before?
7932Why did it ever come?
7932Why doubt?
7932Why should he spend his life in singing praises of them?
7932Why should he worship them?
7932Why was it not delayed?
7932Will you allow a young lady to wash faster than two can wipe?
7932Will you do me the kindness, sir, to answer the inquiry I have made of you as soon as convenient?
7932Would a piano- forte, which two years ago cost three hundred and fifty dollars, be taken at its present value in payment for shares?
7932Would a young man( mechanic of unexceptionable character) be received having no capital?
7932Would any household furniture be taken in the same way?
7932Would any one invest in a second one, and was there prospect enough for the success of the industry on the place to secure a livelihood?
7932Would it not be cold?
7932Would it not slowly freeze my heart to the warm love of human beings, with every one of whom I had now something in common?
7932Would n''t it infuse so much spirit into your poor, weak life that your words would sparkle with cheeriness, frolic and wit?
7932Would n''t your heart flow over with ever so much love and gratitude?
7932You might have made him whine but--"_Wine butt_,"did you say?
7932do you realize this?
7932do you think I was indolent?
7932why distrust?
7932why not push on?
27118Are you not a little impertinent?
27118But what do you want here?
27118Oh, you have, have you? 27118 One thing more,"cried the prisoner;"is it still the case that the American people enjoy their freedom best when they are enslaved in some way?"
27118What are you going to do?
27118What do you mean by still responding?
27118What for?
27118What is jail?
27118What shall I do with them?
27118Who are you and what do you want?
27118Why are you here?
27118Why impossible? 27118 ( Did not the fate of Cyrano de Bergerac lie in his gigantic nose?) 27118 (_ Bertha takes off Rita''s wraps._) RITA(_ turns around merrily_): Tell me, Bertha, why does not the electric bell ring? 27118 (_ Flattering_) Why did you kiss me before? 27118 (_ He also sits down._) But-- you are not well to- day? 27118 (_ He kisses her hands wildly._) RITA(_ stoops down to him, softly and merrily_): Why run away? 27118 (_ He pushes her with gentle force_) You cry? 27118 (_ Laughs._) Have you lost all sense of shame? 27118 (_ Rita looks at him with an ironical smile and remains silent._) FRIEDRICH: You remember me? 27118 (_ Rita''s singing has grown louder_) Do n''t you hear how she sings? 27118 (_ She holds them toward Friedrich and asks_) Did he say anything? 27118 (_ She leaves._) RITA(_ calls after her_): And where is the coffee? 27118 (_ She sits down, with a gesture of the hand_) Please, what have you to say to me? 27118 (_ She steps up closer to him._) Do you know, Fred, that during the years after my escape I often went hungry, brutally hungry? 27118 (_ Stepping in front of him_) Or what did you take me for when I kissed you? 27118 (_ harshly_) But if you do not come in the name of my father, what do you want here? 27118 Ability personified, and he had grown to be fifty- two years of age and was still, still-- how shall I say? 27118 Anarchists within the walls of Syracuse? 27118 And I beg of you, Miss Erna---- RITA: Erna? 27118 And do you understand, Fred, that it would be base on my part were I to follow you to the Philistine? 27118 And does he expect to come again to- day? 27118 And does it not tower mountain high over other nations? 27118 And if the man possess her, does she not equally possess him? 27118 And is it not pathetic to hear the women, dimly conscious of their backbones, declaring that they will not promise to obey? 27118 And why? 27118 And yet, how in this world can a woman do a finer, wiser, braver, truer thing than to bear a child in freedom by a carefully chosen father? 27118 And your father? 27118 Are you going to-- are you going to be good? 27118 BERTHA(_ enters_): My lady? 27118 BERTHA(_ walks through the middle_): My lady, your pleasure? 27118 BERTHA: What? 27118 Baron von Schlippenbach or an American representative of law and disorder,--where is the difference? 27118 Besides, is the mother not to be considered? 27118 But how could I ever have thought that you were meant by it? 27118 But how could there be separate ways so long as the slavery of marriage remained? 27118 But is not the tragedy greater, the suffering of the individual increased, by influences he can not control, the existing social and moral conditions? 27118 But why spoil it by bad example of applying for protection from the city authorities? 27118 Can it be that marriage, as an institution, has indeed proved itself in experience such a terrible failure? 27118 Can it be that the secret, serious voice of mankind proclaims the jest truth in masquerade? 27118 Can you ask me that? 27118 Did I impress you? 27118 Do n''t you understand me? 27118 Do n''t you? 27118 Do we not all know of women who in widowhood take care of their families? 27118 Do we not know of women who take care of their husbands as well as of their children? 27118 Do you call that happiness, this being alone? 27118 Do you expect all the blessings of civilization for nothing?
27118Do you hear me, Erna?
27118Do you know that I ran about in the most frightful dives, with rattling plate, collecting pennies and insults?
27118Do you know what it means to humiliate oneself for dry bread?
27118Do you really not know it?
27118Do you still remember that time, Erna?
27118Do you suppose one could get an electric bell repaired here?
27118Do you understand that I had to become an entirely different person or go to ruin?
27118Do you want to murder me?"
27118Economic necessity?
27118Erna, Erna, how could you do that?
27118FRIEDRICH(_ after a silence, hesitatingly_): Well, are you going to allow me to call you Erna again, as of yore?
27118FRIEDRICH(_ happy_): Yes?
27118FRIEDRICH(_ looks at her calmly_): Well, is there anything wrong about it?
27118FRIEDRICH(_ returns, confused_): Pardon me, I---- RITA: Poor Fred, did you stray into my bedroom?
27118FRIEDRICH(_ surprised_): Is that possible?
27118FRIEDRICH: And I?
27118FRIEDRICH: How is that?
27118FRIEDRICH: How so?
27118FRIEDRICH: How?
27118FRIEDRICH: How?
27118FRIEDRICH: I thought----(_ Bertha comes with the coffee and serves._) RITA: Will you take a cup with me?
27118FRIEDRICH: No-- why?
27118FRIEDRICH: Oh, Erna---- RITA: But now you''ll call me Rita-- do you understand?
27118FRIEDRICH: The-- the Count-- did you say?
27118FRIEDRICH: Then?
27118FRIEDRICH: What do you mean?
27118FRIEDRICH: What is the matter?
27118FRIEDRICH: Why not?
27118Fine-- is it not?
27118For what purpose?
27118Has anybody called?
27118Have you still so much to say to me?
27118He has---- RITA: Well, yes; I mean anyone else?
27118His answer was peculiar only in that he put into words a description of the attitude of the average parent:"Talked to him about that?
27118Hm!--but then, what then?
27118How did you find me, anyway?
27118How is that for our law- abiding citizens?
27118How long ago is it?
27118How many hard and cold stone cliffs meet its large wondering gaze?
27118I hoped that I might expect, after these four or five years, that you would receive me differently than with this-- with this-- how shall I say?
27118I know very well, and I can not ask it of you, that you, in a career like yours, you---- RITA: Hm?
27118I shall never be anything to you any more?
27118If I would care to, if I really would return-- what then?
27118If that be so, how can there be any more immorality in the exercise of it than in the process of digestion?
27118If you still love me, can you run off-- you mule?
27118Is it not heavenly irony that God pressed the headman''s sword of morals into the hands of the newspaper writers?
27118Is it not incomparably virtuous, ideal and brave?
27118Is it not so?
27118Is it not the gem of the ocean?
27118Is not God to be thanked that he has given us light to see the horrors of polygamy?
27118Is not monogamy the mainstay of our morals?
27118Is not the existence of government considered as a necessity on the grounds that it is here to maintain peace, law and order?
27118Is that your last word?
27118Is the child to be considered as an individuality, or as an object to be moulded according to the whims and fancies of those about it?
27118It sounds more natural, eh?
27118Life?
27118May I?
27118Must not one suppose that parents should be united to children by the most tender and delicate chords?
27118Must we not always and forever consider others-- and our surroundings?
27118One who owes everything to himself, who is proud of himself, but who no longer respects anything, above all, no conventional measures and weights?
27118Or that the Social Democratic father can point to his little girl of six and say,"Who wrote the Capital, dearie?"
27118Or will you not spread your wings over mediocrity, or will you not shield indifference, and protect the gray and uniformly fleeced herd?
27118RITA(_ after a pause, awakens from her meditation, harshly_): Perhaps you were sent by my father?
27118RITA(_ after a pause, hostile_): You wish to be taken seriously?
27118RITA(_ from within_): Well?
27118RITA(_ in the door_): Well?
27118RITA(_ interrupts him sharply_): Demand?
27118RITA(_ jovially_): Who knows?
27118RITA(_ laughs_): What business is that of yours?
27118RITA(_ laughs_): Why did you not go to the"Winter Garden"when you were in Berlin?
27118RITA(_ looks at him searchingly_): Sooner than I and all the world?
27118RITA(_ proudly_): How I could?
27118RITA(_ without noticing him, to Bertha_): Well?
27118RITA: A man, who ventured to pay his debts with me---- FRIEDRICH: How so; what do you mean?
27118RITA: But how did it happen that, regardless of this, of this disappointment, you, nevertheless, continued to search for me?
27118RITA: Certainly---- FRIEDRICH: Do you see?
27118RITA: Did he ask-- anything else?
27118RITA: Do I look as though I hesitated?
27118RITA: From England?
27118RITA: His card?
27118RITA: How?
27118RITA: Is it possible?
27118RITA: Must?
27118RITA: Not well?
27118RITA: O, Bertholina,_ why_ has the man not yet repaired it?
27118RITA: Torment?
27118RITA: Well?
27118RITA: What will stop?
27118RITA: Which tone?
27118RITA: Yes-- now, please, what would I have to do in order to fulfill your demand?
27118Shall I start a cooking school?
27118Shall I tell you what was your ideal-- how you would have liked to find me again?
27118So that is still going on?"
27118Society still believes in them?"
27118Some will ask, what about weak natures, must they not be protected?
27118Terrible thing, is n''t it?
27118That''s better, is n''t it?
27118The city?
27118Then why not have motherhood without its immoral, artificial adjunct, marriage?
27118Then you certainly speak English?
27118Was it not chosen by Providence to become the leading nation on earth?
27118Well, then, you would be in the midst of the family and society again-- and then---- RITA: And then?
27118Well-- I could come back?
27118Well?
27118What are the results of such methods of biasing the mind?
27118What can be clearer than that a woman has the inherent right to bear children if she wish?
27118What do you do for a living?"
27118What do you suppose that costs?
27118What do you want of me?
27118What else is the meaning of the hush and blush that go to any reference to sex, sign or manifestation of sex?
27118What has become of your good training?
27118What has monogamy or polygamy or polyandry to do with this matter?
27118What is his title to the love or gratitude or self- abnegation of his child?
27118What makes you say so?
27118What prompted you to leave so suddenly?
27118What relationship existed between you and the Count?
27118What right has any father to make a sacrifice of his child?
27118What was I to do?
27118What''s the matter?
27118When she finishes, he puts his stiff hat on the table and walks toward her with a blissful smile._) RITA: Now?
27118Whence come the mulattoes and the half- breeds of all sorts?
27118Where are they?"
27118Where?
27118Who is it?
27118Who so credulous as to believe the fable of monogamy?
27118Why do you come?
27118Why not buy me also?
27118Why not economic stupidity?
27118Why should I be here?
27118Why should I have looked you up otherwise?
27118Why, the great political parties are responding to the cry of the downtrodden masses, and--""Oh,"he said dreamily,"they are still responding?"
27118Why?
27118Why?
27118Why?
27118Will you deny that you have imagined it thus and even wished for it?
27118With what can you serve me?
27118Yes?
27118Yes?
27118You can not be so cold and heartless towards me?
27118You certainly expect to stay here some time, do you not?
27118You certainly know that, do n''t you?
27118You demand something of me?
27118You did not expect to eat them, did you?
27118You even smile?
27118You know that pretty part in the Walküre?
27118You know that, yes?
27118You still hesitate?
27118You want-- to remain what you are?
27118You-- come to see me?
27118how could I have forgotten the ballot box?"
27118what of her?
6424About that woman?
6424All your population?
6424Am I so like you?
6424And exactly the same thing happened to both of you?
6424And it has succeeded?
6424And it''s going on?
6424And now, what is forbidden?
6424And now,I said,"have n''t we got very nearly to the end of your prohibitions?
6424And the Chinaman?
6424And the Rule?
6424And the women do this?
6424And then?
6424And then?
6424And you do n''t want to know how I got here?
6424And you found yourselves suddenly on a mountain side? 6424 And you want to talk to me about it instead of listening to me?"
6424Another world-- eh? 6424 Beauty?
6424Both lost?
6424But are n''t they a power?
6424But how could I go back to my laboratory, mixed classes with young ladies, you know, after a thing like that? 6424 But what has this,"he asks,"to do with her?"
6424But you spoke?
6424But you would not like,he cried in horror,"your daughter to marry a Chinaman or a negro?"
6424But, then-- where is the incentive----?
6424By the Oberalp?
6424Climbers, I presume?
6424Do n''t you think that rather more beautiful than-- say-- our National Gallery?
6424Do n''t you worry about losing your way?
6424Do you mean elope with her?
6424Do you mean to say neither of you know your own numbers?
6424Do you mind,I say to this official,"telling us some more about ourselves?"
6424Do you realise quite,I ask,"that within a week we shall face our Utopian selves and measure something of what we might have been?"
6424Do you recall the Zermatt valley?
6424Free?
6424Have you ever found anyone seriously ill without doctors and medicine about? 6424 How do you know?
6424How?
6424I expect there was fighting?
6424I say,I plunge,"what do you think of me?
6424I suppose you''ve got your thumbs?
6424Is the Woman''s Rule a sumptuary law as well as a regimen? 6424 It is good?"
6424It''s queer, is n''t it? 6424 Need it go on?"
6424No money?
6424Not up from the lake?
6424Nothing better to do?
6424Saw her?
6424Suppose she breaks the Rule afterwards?
6424That is the Rule for your earthly orders?
6424The Furka?
6424The mountains?
6424Then what are they after?
6424There''s no chance of anyone overtaking you?
6424Twenty- one? 6424 Well?"
6424Well?
6424Well?
6424Were n''t you listening to me?
6424What are your numbers?
6424What do we know of the beauty they replace? 6424 What do you mean?"
6424What else can we do?
6424What else may not the samurai do?
6424What is the good of reckoning... might have beens?
6424What is the matter, madam?
6424What is the matter?
6424What is the matter?
6424What is yours?
6424What would you advise me to do?
6424What?
6424What?
6424What?
6424When shall we start?
6424Where am I?
6424Where are your papers?
6424Where is the train for London?
6424Where?
6424Which building?
6424Who in the name of Galton and Bertillon,one fancies Utopia exclaiming,"are_ you_?"
6424Who is in this world?
6424Who knows what will come in sight round the bend of the valley there? 6424 Why ca n''t they get away?
6424Why should n''t it do?
6424Why should they be?
6424Wot does Cham''lain_ si_?
6424Yes,said my double;"in Utopia we who are samurai die better than that.... Is that how your great men die?"
6424Yes?
6424You came up out of the Ticino valley?
6424You do n''t believe that?
6424You have come far?
6424You have n''t any doubt left?
6424You have no changing fashions?
6424You live at times in a house?
6424You mean?
6424You say_ We_,said I, with the first glimmering of a new idea,"but_ you_ do n''t participate?"
6424You think of death?
6424... incitements to disarrange?
6424... the balance of population?"
6424A few hints----?"
6424A natural death is better than an artificial life, surely?
6424And my friend?"
6424And the clerk''s face----?
6424And then, am I to be accused of poverty?
6424And this?
6424And why?"
6424Are they an hereditary caste, a specially educated order, an elected class?
6424Are they not very like the people one knows?
6424At the sight of him she asks with a note of relief,"What am I to do, sir, here?"
6424B.,"he says, slowly,"little a, nine four seven, I_ think_----""Do n''t you know?"
6424Beyond that, what conditions should a marriage contract in Utopia involve?
6424But are n''t there people who can not pass examinations?"
6424But are you sure you have n''t your papers or numbers?
6424But he''s---- How did I know he was the sort of man a disciplined world has a use for?"
6424But is n''t there a vow of Chastity?"
6424But now you think better of a modern Utopia?
6424But suppose that in no district in the world is there work within the capacity of this particular man?
6424But the others; what would a saner world do with them?
6424But what else is there to do, unless you kill?
6424But what is your_ definition_( stress) of artificial?
6424But what sort of language would we have the world speak, if we were told the miracle of Babel was presently to be reversed?
6424But where are we drifting?
6424But why was he intruded?
6424But with regard to a certain petting of myself----?
6424But wrinkled age?
6424CHAPTER THE SECOND Concerning Freedoms Section 1 Now what sort of question would first occur to two men descending upon the planet of a Modern Utopia?
6424Do I mean we are never to view the promised land again except through a foreground of fellow- travellers?
6424Do you realise just where the propositions necessary to a modern Utopia are taking us?
6424Does he realise this is indeed Utopia?
6424Does my friend look like hopping from India to the Saint Gotthard at one hop?
6424Does that render their association upon terms of equality in a World State impossible?
6424Eh?
6424Eh?"
6424For all that, are not our dresses as beautiful as yours?"
6424Have I yet in Utopia set eyes on a bald head?
6424He has gone wrong on earth, no doubt, has failed and degenerated, but what was it sent him wrong?
6424He was a great red- faced man, with fiery hair, a noisy, intolerant maker of enemies, with a tender heart-- and he was one of the samurai?"
6424How are they made so?
6424How can one think of him as bad?
6424How could we live and where could we live?
6424How did I get from Norway hither?
6424How far will such conditions be prescribed?
6424How will the work of this planet be done?
6424I had a thought, and added,"Do n''t they sometimes, well-- take a good deal of care, dressing their hair?"
6424I mean-- may she dress as she pleases?"
6424I say, cheerfully,"have you heard?"
6424I should ask, and"where?"
6424I should see desirable men approaching me, and I should think;"Now, if I were to speak to_ you_?"
6424I suppose no samurai may bet?"
6424I wonder why it is that to lie securely in bed, with the light out, seems ever the same place, wherever in space one may chance to be?
6424If that is so, what of my Utopia?
6424If they seemed distressed, or if they seemed to think a course right----"... Have I come to Utopia to hear this sort of thing?
6424If you drink no port, then what are walnuts for?
6424In the past ingenious men have speculated on the inquiry,"Which language will survive?"
6424Indeed, should we be in Utopia at all, if we could not talk to everyone?
6424Is he----"he hesitated,"mad?"
6424Is not the suppression of these notes my perpetual effort, my undying despair?
6424Is that any reason why we should propose to preserve it for ever in a condition of tutelage?
6424Is there, however, an all- round inferior race in the world?
6424It''s a scar from the earth-- the sore scar of your past----""And what are we all but scars?
6424It''s so strange to have seen them so recently, and now not to see them at all.... Where have they gone?"
6424Meaning----?"
6424No animal substance inside, no vegetable without;--what could be simpler or more logical?
6424Now did I say anything of the sort?
6424Now what will be the nature of the Utopian contract of matrimony?
6424Now where shall we put this most excellent man?
6424Now, had I come upon a hopeless incompatibility?
6424Or, again, where is the sin in a glass of tawny port three or four times, or it may be five, a year, when the walnuts come round in their season?
6424Our position is so entirely exceptional, so difficult to explain----""What have you been doing?"
6424Perhaps then you will understand----"He shakes his head, and then bursts out with,"What do I want with a double?
6424Section 2 How would things be"different"in the Modern Utopia?
6424Section 2 What prohibitions should we be under, we two Uitlanders in this Utopian world?
6424Section 3 Will a Utopian be free to be idle?
6424Section 4"Is n''t_ that_ reality?"
6424Section 7 How will a great city of Utopia strike us?
6424She was n''t by any chance one of the samurai?"
6424The question of all others of importance to us at present is what do they do with their tramps?
6424The sound birth being assured, does there exist any valid reason for the persistence of the Utopian marriage union?
6424There are scenes and insults----""She told you?"
6424There will be no masking of the lesson;"which do you value most, the wide world of humanity, or this evil trend in you?"
6424Utopia has sound sanitary laws, sound social laws, sound economic laws; what harm are these people going to do?
6424Was his failure inherent, or did some net of cross purposes tangle about his feet?
6424Was the lady looking well?"
6424Was this the reductio ad absurdum of my vision, and must it even as I sat there fade, dissolve, and vanish before my eyes?
6424We are really, you know, explorers, strangers----""But what world do you mean?"
6424We follow the vein, we mine and accumulate our treasure, but who can tell which way the vein may trend?
6424We might have a house in London, but who would call upon us?
6424We prescribe a regimen of food, forbid tobacco, wine, or any alcoholic drink, all narcotic drugs----""Meat?"
6424What are they?
6424What differences from terrestrial conditions will ensue?
6424What do I care if things have been different here?
6424What good was it to trot along the pavement through this noise and tumult of life, pleading Utopia to that botanist?
6424What good would it be to recommend Utopia in this driver''s preoccupied ear?
6424What if instead of that Utopia of vacant ovals we meet relinquished loves here, and opportunities lost and faces as they might have looked to us?
6424What is all my world after?"
6424What is life but a scarring?
6424What is there to keep them together?
6424What is there to prevent a parallel movement of all the civilised Powers in the world towards a common ideal and assimilation?
6424What other device will give a man so great a freedom with so strong an inducement to effort?
6424What reason is there for us to remain casual workmen here, when you allege we are men of position in the world, if there is n''t something wrong?
6424What sorrows?
6424What sort of road would that be?
6424What will be the economics of a modern Utopia?
6424What will their range be, their prohibitions?
6424What, for instance, will Utopia do with Mr. Roosevelt?
6424Where falls the balance of freedoms here?
6424Where in your world have you seen papers like this?"
6424Where, then, is the power of your wealthy man?"
6424Who knows what may happen to us anywhere?
6424Who will these men be?
6424Who, in a really civilised community, would grudge that measure of invasion?
6424Why are you standing up?"
6424Why could not a modern Utopia be discussed without this impersonation-- impersonally?
6424Why do I think of her as dressed in green?
6424Why not stop this dismal grizzling and carry her off?"
6424Why should they not aim at a common literature, and bring their various common laws, their marriage laws, and so on, into uniformity?
6424Why should they not work for a uniform minimum of labour conditions through all their communities?
6424Why should they?
6424Why should we men play the part of bacteria upon the face of our Mother?"
6424Why, once you are rid of them, should you pester criminals to respect an uncongenial standard of conduct?
6424Will they be a caste?
6424Would this new sort of Utopian State, spread to the dimensions of a world, be any less forbidding?
6424Yet still I have my uses, uses that vanish in monotony, and still I must ask why should we bury the talent of these bright sensations altogether?
6424Yet, after all, why should two men be smiled into apathy by the Infinite?
6424You do n''t think I''m an impostor?"
6424You in this decent world have no means of understanding----""No?"
6424You knew him in your world?"
6424You may have to condemn most, but why_ all_?
6424You must have a class of rich, powerful outsiders----""_ Have_ we?"
6424You must seclude, but why should you torment?
6424a race?
6424an organisation in the nature of a Church?
6424he says,"and you scorn these trams of theirs?
6424how far can they be prescribed in a Modern Utopia?
6424says my friend,"and how on earth it reeks and stinks with smoke?"
6424what jars to our preconceptions will he and I receive here?
6424what_ are_ they critical about on earth?
9866And if he ca n''t work?
9866And if he wo n''t work?
9866So far, so good,thought I; but I asked further what the Hotel Association would do if a guest_ could_ not pay?
9866Yes, but what are my people and I to live upon in the mean time, until our factory begins to work?
9866''And are you not afraid,''I interposed,''that this absence of care will eventually put an end to that upon which you rely-- that is, to progress?
9866''And do not foreign crises sometimes disturb the calm course of your Freeland production?
9866''And is not this last- mentioned fact a disadvantage to the Freeland saver?''
9866''And what has been your experience of these illiterate immigrants?''
9866''Are there no horses here?''
9866''But how would you defend yourselves against the artillery of European armies?''
9866''But how,''asked my father--''how do you arrive at a knowledge of the mental condition of your ignorant fellow- countrymen?
9866''But, in heaven''s name, what becomes of the productive power among us which thus remains unemployed?''
9866''But,''I asked,''what will prompt men to struggle in the cause of progress when want has lost its sting?''
9866''But,''I interposed,''suppose a child is or becomes incapable of work?''
9866''If it is really so, why have you not said so before; for you must have seen what good use can be made of elephants here?''
9866''Is this your country,''was the rejoinder,''that you demand tribute?
9866''May I, in this connection, ask how you deal with the right of inheritance in general, and of inheritance of real property in particular?
9866''Or do you really believe that perfectly uneducated persons possess the power of disciplining themselves?
9866''Perhaps you will ask what right we have in this way to burden future generations to the profit of their ancestors?
9866''The last would be scarcely possible among us,''answered Mr. Ney, smiling;''for who would be willing to act as groom in Freeland?
9866''Then you do not admit that ornaments have any real adorning power?
9866''Then you think,''I said,''that equality of actual income has nothing to do with equality_ of rights_?
9866''Then,''said my father,''your boasted equality of rights exists only for educated persons?''
9866''What can you do to protect the wretched remnant of our proud allied fleet?''
9866''What do you find remarkable in that, my worthy guests?
9866''What have you done?''
9866''What was to be done?
9866''Whence do you get all this reflected splendour of sunny joyousness?''
9866''Why not?''
9866''Why,''I asked,''do these ladies forsake the parental houses, which must be highly respectable ones?''
9866''Why,''asked my father,''is there comparatively less use of the service in your house than elsewhere?''
9866''You mean harshness, love of domination, wrangling?
9866And can he use any such information when communicated to him, except to the injury of others?
9866And in the war with the Kavirondo and Nangi were not the Masai in the wrong?
9866And in what consists the change in the struggle for existence, in such a case as that indicated above?
9866And what if it is not so?
9866And what is the utility of human labour?
9866And what is this?
9866And what was it but want that drove them to both of these courses?
9866And when the inevitable limit is reached, what then?
9866And who will undertake to say that such a turn of affairs is altogether impossible?
9866Are economic justice and freedom the ultimate outcome of human evolution; and what will probably be the condition of mankind under such a_ régime_?
9866Are not your markets flooded, through foreign over- production, with goods for which there is no corresponding demand?''
9866Are you not yet able to measure the height of absurdity to which your doctrine leads?''
9866Because there was not yet enough human material for the organisation of all the branches of industry?
9866But I perceive that your associations are by no means lacking in push and enterprise: how is this?
9866But I think we are getting away from the main point, which is: is such a turn of affairs possible?
9866But are the advantages of the individual undertaker over the joint- stock company really so great?
9866But are we shut up to these modern kinds of luxury?
9866But because this is the fact at present,_ must_ it necessarily be so?
9866But can we conceive the condition possible in which our race should cover the surface of the earth like a plague of locusts?
9866But have the masters really only this_ one_ way of disposing of the surplus-- can they really make no other use of it?
9866But have we a right to infer that it will permanently assert itself?
9866But how are armies, equal to the reorganised Abyssinian forces, to be maintained on those inhospitable coasts?
9866But how could any political discretion on the part of the ruling classes have prevented this?
9866But how is it with those who are orphaned in infancy?
9866But how will it be when what you are striving after has happened, when the whole human race shall have been converted to your principles?
9866But is that which Christ understands by justice really identical with what we mean by it?
9866But perhaps a difficulty is found in the possibility that this small capitalist might no longer be capable of work?
9866But self- interest?
9866But there are outside of Freeland hundreds of thousands, nay millions, who are free from oppressive care: why do they not feel real cheerfulness?
9866But was my fate so certain and inevitable?
9866But what are such figures in comparison with the gigantic amounts of our savings and capital?
9866But what good would it do us to spend money upon useless things?
9866But what right have they to this so- called property?
9866But where are its results?
9866But who made them, and for what purpose were they originally made?
9866But why not?
9866But why should I spend time in surmises about questions which the immediate future must bring to a decision?
9866But you will ask whether, in this placing of the savings of the community at the disposal of those who need capital, there does not lie an injustice?
9866But, I hear it asked, does political economy possess such a problem-- one whose solution it has merely attempted but not arrived at?
9866Can those others make any use of the knowledge they would thus acquire, except to do him injury?
9866Can we really depend upon nature spontaneously to guarantee us this?
9866Could we do so, even if we were willing?
9866Did not_ unreasonable_ party agitations create difficulties in Freeland?
9866Did they think that we should continue to be friends with thieves and robbers?
9866Did they-- the Duruma-- imagine that we needed their help, or the help of anyone, to slay the Masai if we wished to slay them?
9866Do men commit murder from religious motives_ merely_?
9866Do the men of Freeland think that they are able to defend their creation from these dangers?
9866Do they need none over them to organise, discipline, guide, and overlook the process of production?
9866Do you believe that want can completely disappear from off the face of the earth without taking progress with it?''
9866Do you see that little apparatus yonder in the corridor?
9866Does it really never happen that some of you drink a little more than enough to quench your thirst?''
9866Does man prevent them?
9866Does not the most superficial glance show you that nowhere on the earth are there nearly so many elephants as would find nourishment in abundance?
9866Does not the same apply to private property?
9866Does not this thrift prove that anxiety for the morrow is not after all quite unknown here?''
9866Does the human labour- force which carries on their undertakings belong to them?
9866Does the meeting approve of this choice?''
9866Does this constitute a just claim to exceptional treatment?
9866Everywhere I see heavy carpets-- who keeps these clean?
9866For is everything which is necessary to the progress of civilisation consequently also possible?
9866Granted; but what right has the borrower, who at any rate derives advantage from the service rendered, to retain all the advantage himself?
9866Had he not told them that the swords which we had given to their_ leitunus_ would snap asunder like glass if drawn in an unrighteous cause?
9866Has anyone a remark to make upon our proposal?
9866Have they cultivated the ground to which they lay claim?
9866Have you a special board for this purpose; and do no unpleasantnesses spring from such an inquisition?''
9866Have your institutions such a strong ameliorating power over hardened criminals?''
9866He asked himself why did the Irish peasant and the Egyptian fellah suffer hunger?
9866How are we to understand that this is not forbidden in Freeland?''
9866How could our thin line withstand the onset of fifteen times as many veteran warriors?
9866How could we, without communistic coercion, transfer capital from the hands of the saver into those of the capital- needing producer?
9866How do you reconcile these things?''
9866How were we to get this 130,000 £, or the greater part of it, into our pockets?
9866I could go on with the thread of the narrative, and depict the work of human emancipation as it appears to my mental eye, but of what use would it be?
9866If he acts in good faith he is not obnoxious to punishment-- but entitled to compensation?
9866If they anticipated overthrow, why did they not withdraw in time?
9866In a word, what if mankind could not permanently, and as a whole, participate in that progress the necessary condition of which is economic justice?
9866In a word, who does the coarser work in this comfortably furnished house, which one can see at a glance is kept most carefully in order?''
9866In the name of heaven, do not your workers need such a man?
9866Is it not evident that the previous speaker would, under their_ régime_, set self- interest upon the throne as the inciter to work?
9866Is it so?''
9866Is no provision made for such?
9866Is not, then, an appeal to this noblest of all minds calculated to discourage rather than to encourage us in the pursuit of our aims?
9866Is the capital which they use the fruit of_ their_ labour?
9866Is the new law to have a retrospective force?
9866Is the story of the Golden Age something more than a pious fable; and are we upon the point of conjuring up another Golden Age?
9866Is there no inconsistency here?''
9866Is there, nevertheless, no ground to fear that they will exhibit serious defects in comparison with undertakings conducted by individual employers?
9866It can not possibly accord with the sentiments of Freeland parents who live in luxury to hand over their children to public orphanages?''
9866Merely the associations and workers who actually make use of the new waterways for transport?
9866Mrs. Ney, however, asked what further preliminaries were necessary?
9866Now, in spite of all this, how is it possible to satisfy everyone''s claim not merely to land, but to produce- bearing land?
9866On the other hand, what reason has the producer in the world outside to communicate his experiences to others?
9866Or are you in Freeland of opinion that it is unjust to give to the saver a share of the fruits of his saving?''
9866Or did its results once exist though we know nothing of them?
9866Or do such servants receive exceptionally low wages here?''
9866Or have we yet to learn of some provisions made to defend you from such guests?
9866Or will the arguer fall back upon the assertion that self- interest refers merely to the acquisition of material goods?
9866Shall I be privileged to live until these men are found?
9866Should we, in possession of the stronger form of civilisation, yield to the weaker and more backward one?
9866Take the property from its owners?
9866The correct answer to the question,''Why are we not richer in proportion to the increase in our productive capacity?''
9866The directors have no means of_ compelling_ obedience?
9866The masses of the people, the serfs, where were these ever asked?
9866The possessor may have produced it by his own labour and saved it: is he not in that case entitled to compensation?
9866The question now is, what part of the earth shall we choose for such a purpose?
9866The word''robbery''does not please the previous speaker?
9866The workers were''free,''nothing compelled them to produce for other men''s advantage?
9866Then are those who have been exploiters to retain undiminished the fruit of their''economic robbery''?
9866This leaves unexplained the principal question, whence comes this difference in wealth?
9866Was it at all conceivable that Ellen-- this Ellen-- such as I had known her for months, would love such a wretched fellow?
9866We were also compelled to moot the question, what would happen if Freelanders wore to settle in any district belonging to a Western nation?
9866What I now wish to know is, what were your reasons for forbidding the payment of interest?
9866What advantage do we offer to the former for their compulsory thrift?
9866What does our amiable hostess think upon this point?''
9866What does the production of labour cost?
9866What does this mean when applied to the labour market?
9866What foe prevents lions and tigers, sperm- whales, and sharks from multiplying until they reach the limit of their food supply?
9866What has been the result?
9866What has brought us to the country of social liberty?
9866What if economic justice, though an extraordinary vehicle of civilisation, were for some reason unfortunately impracticable?
9866What is the reason of this?''
9866What more could the most affectionate care of parents do for them?
9866What of the criminals, against whose immigration you are not protected?
9866What prompts your producers to run risks-- small though they may be-- when the profit to be gained thereby must so quickly be shared by everybody?''
9866What properly belongs to_ me_?
9866What sense would there be in attempting to assimilate our several needs?
9866What was to be done under such circumstances?
9866What would happen then?
9866What would have become of economic justice if any one of these possibilities had occurred?
9866What would her friends in Paris have said to that?
9866Where then, I repeat, lies the immense difference between the utilisation of our powers of production and of yours?''
9866Whether it is not Communism?
9866Who can say?
9866Who gains by the lowering of freights?
9866Who would have hindered it from handing its milliards over to us?
9866Who would not be glad to discover that a dreadful figure which filled him with terror and alarm was nothing but a scarecrow?
9866Why did it delay so long, and why does it now make its assistance conditional on our accepting its economic institutions?
9866Why does not this happen?
9866Why is the existing exploiting society not able to call forth all this capacity?
9866Why should not such a course answer in modern times?
9866Why was this?
9866Why?
9866Will it not be humane, and therefore also prudent, to make some compensation to those who will be deprived of their possessions?
9866Will not the new order work better if this small sacrifice is made, and embittered foes are thereby converted into grateful friends?
9866Will this continue permanently: in particular, will the whole human race feel and act thus?
9866Will you do this, and will you honourably keep your word?''
9866With what right, then, does exploitation dare to plume itself upon making use of_ self_-interest as a motive to labour?
9866Would we pay tribute?
9866Would you not think anyone a dotard who would try to convince you of the contrary?
9866You are astonished?
9866You deny that pearls or diamonds add materially to the charms of a beautiful person?''
9866You hold it to be impossible to become rich by lending gratuitously or by absolutely giving away a part of one''s property?
9866You look at each other and at me with an inquiring astonishment?
9866You think I hold that to be unnatural because it is immoral?
9866[ A Voice: Then why was Christ crucified?]
9866cried I, with dissembled anger;"but if more should come in than are needed?"
19150''And you made those bricks he sold?'' 19150 ''And your propaganda programme,''I ventured,''is as strong and far- reaching as ever?''
19150''Are the members of your local prepared to take over and conduct wisely and well the affairs of your town and county? 19150 ''Are you trying to get me a little conviction, also, Judge?''
19150''But I say, how much will the boss sell those bricks for?'' 19150 ''But did n''t you make them?''
19150''But where does he get the money to pay you with?'' 19150 ''But why do you make them, if you do n''t intend to use them for anything?''
19150''But why does n''t the Socialist administration take control of industry and commerce, and put the interests out of power?'' 19150 ''But wo n''t the Third Internationale send its Russian agitators abroad then, thus making it unnecessary for you to come here?''
19150''Did he dig the clay hole?'' 19150 ''Do n''t know what you are going to do with your own bricks?''
19150''Do n''t you think you''d better come inside?... 19150 ''How long will it take you to make them?''
19150''How much does the boss pay you for working so hard?'' 19150 ''How should I know?
19150''If Mr. Debs were elected in 1920, how would you proceed to inaugurate[12] him, as he is serving a twenty- year sentence?'' 19150 ''Is it part of the Socialist Party plans to use the general strike to back up political action?''
19150''Oh, did n''t he make the kiln?'' 19150 ''Then how comes it that the boss owns them?''
19150''What are the bricks for?'' 19150 ''Why do they dig clay holes?''
19150''Why? 19150 And what happened?
19150Do you know that a regular secret service system is being employed by these''bosses''to hunt down the undesirables? 19150 Shall we honor the Massachusetts militiamen who, without the slightest provocation, murdered a young worker?
19150Shall we pray to a power not human For guidance miraculous When the nearest man or woman Will give help, and without that fuss? 19150 The fear that weighs upon the world of Capitalism and the diplomats in Paris is: Who next?
19150What does he trust in? 19150 What flag?
19150What will Russia do if this be so? 19150 Which of these, think you, Mr. Wage- Slave, is your friend and the friend of your class?....
19150Why do you not go away from here?
19150Why the sudden change of front? 19150 Why, then, hesitate to affiliate with them?"
19150You are still alive?
19150''What for?''
19150..."''Do you uphold and approve of, as a leader of the Socialist Party, the words that Mr. Debs pronounced, and for which he was convicted?''
19150..."''Have you any respect at all for the decision of the tribunal to the contrary?''
19150And for what?
19150And was this to give Soviet Russia a chance to put through a temporary peace or truce with Europe to stave off"economic catastrophe?"
19150And what is it that Noske and his''Socialist''colleagues are defending?
19150And what shall we say of such evidence?
19150Are bakery workers planning to go on strike?
19150Are n''t we taking a long excursion into the domain of the future and into the domain of speculation?
19150Are we to take it at its own word?
19150Are you going to present something to them that you know is not contained in the Socialist program?
19150Are you prepared to meet the militia when the powers of the State and courts are against you?
19150Are you training your members in scientific Socialism?''
19150Arson?
19150At$ 1,000,000,$ 10,000,$ 1,000, or$ 100?
19150Blasphemy?
19150But does American labor think such an experiment_ here_ would be worth what it costs?
19150But how?
19150But if this public profession of lawfulness meant nothing to 70,000 of them, why think it means more to the rest?
19150But what of the Russian workers?
19150But why not strike against this slavery?
19150CHAPTER XV PATRIOTISM RIDICULED AND DESPISED 207 Socialists Against Patriotism, 207; American Flag Scouted, 207;"Honor the Uniform?
19150CHAPTER XXIV EXPERTS IN THE ART OF DECEPTION 363 Must Socialism Be Good Because Something Else Is Bad?
19150Can anything be sacred which is based on a lie or on impurity, or on ignorance?
19150Can they give any convincing argument?
19150Can you afford, as representatives of this great revolutionary party, to do that which in a few years you will be ashamed of?
19150Could idiocy be more abject?
19150Counterfeiting?
19150Did Christ ascend into heaven?
19150Did Christ rise from the dead as Christianity teaches?
19150Did he allude to some pink tea party?
19150Do not the Marxians know that poverty, rather than wealth, fosters religion and piety, the greatest of all factors in keeping persons pure?
19150Do not the"workmen"produce the food?
19150Do the Reds deny that millions and millions of the very poorest are chaste?
19150Do the Socialists claim that the average poor woman is less moral than the average rich one?
19150Do we exaggerate the humbuggery of leadership uncloaked in this Emergency Convention of the Socialist Party of America?
19150Do you hope to deceive some one as to the actual, real program of scientific Socialism?
19150Do you think that is nice?
19150Does he work?
19150Does the wireless operator know who may intercept his call?
19150Even if at last they are able to produce and distribute enough to clothe and feed themselves, can human beings be happy in such a state?
19150Has it changed since the break with the Communists?
19150Has man an immortal soul as Christianity teaches?
19150Has the Socialist Party of America contributed its Executive Committeeman to this revolutionary machine?
19150Has your manhood rotted into cowardice?
19150Have the Socialist peoples the world over become truly"divine"by their attacks on God and all religions?
19150Have they become"omnipotent"wherever they are in power-- so omnipotent that law, order and decency are no longer needed?
19150He continued:"What is the charge here?
19150Hillquit''s letter in the"Call"raised the question,"What shall be the attitude of the Socialist Party toward the newly formed Communist organization?"
19150Hillquit, do you wish to be understood as saying that you approve of the words spoken by Mr. Debs for which he was convicted?''
19150Honor that which gives a free license to kill, if the victim happens to be a worker?
19150Honor that which stands for oppression, for the loafer against the worker, for the master against the slave?
19150Honor the Judases, the Benedict Arnolds of the working class?
19150Honor the uniform?
19150How can the power be cut off?
19150How could insurance companies, in which the American people have invested so much, and which depend on interest, exist under Socialism?
19150How did man originate?
19150How do we know whether the co- operative commonwealth will infer and arrange it in that way?
19150How long, O poor and exhausted workingmen of the world, will the shameful comedy continue?
19150If Moscow''s"programs and methods"are only the minor reason for supporting Moscow, what is the major reason for this"support?"
19150If a man can control a few votes, they reason, why should n''t he have a job?
19150If a man wanted ten pairs of sandals or shoes he could have them, but why would he want them?
19150If a wage slave is paid only enough to live on, anyhow, what difference to him does it make whether his boss is a Britisher or a Chinaman?"
19150If not, would state officials or politicians decide the cases?
19150If so, how many thousands of such courts would be required?
19150If so, where is their proof?
19150If the fuel reaches its destination what is simpler than to set the pockets on fire and have the coal burn in the yards instead of the furnaces?
19150If this is not treason-- wickedness using"political party"methods both as a mask and a blackjack to destroy the State-- what is it?
19150If you are a joiner or woodworker, what is simpler than to ruin furniture without your boss noticing it, and thereby drive his customers away?
19150If you do n''t use the bricks, who will?''
19150If, indeed, workers want only reforms, why take the longest way around?"
19150In July 2, 1901,"The Haverhill Social Democrat,"apparently without fear of offending its subscribers, asked:"What is there sacred in the modern home?
19150In the May, 1917, issue of the"International Socialist Review,""God and My Neighbor,"by Blatchford, is thus advertised:"Is the Bible true?
19150In"The Revolutionary Age,"Boston, January 11, 1919, page 4, we read:"What is Socialism?
19150Indeed, if the"workers"take everything, what will become of the drones-- the Socialist political hacks?
19150Is Christianity desirable?
19150Is Hillquit Lenine''s pupil or Lenine''s teacher?
19150Is a strike in sight in steel mills?
19150Is civil war worth while-- for such a barren result?
19150Is he the God who inspireth Buddha and Shakespeare and Beethoven and Darwin and Plato?
19150Is he the son of God?
19150Is it in irony that Eyre speaks of these"workers"as"the ruling class"?
19150Is it nice to shoot men?
19150Is it not time for the American people to awake?
19150Is it possible that such an organization is not engaged in a conspiracy against our country?
19150Is it to secure votes?
19150Is it true that God has never been revealed?
19150Is it true that after Christ''s death the Apostles received the Holy Ghost?
19150Is it worth while?
19150Is it worth while?
19150Is it worth while?
19150Is not one mind, one aim, one intent, one purpose and hatred consistently evident in all these utterances?
19150Is not such mental, moral and spiritual death a greater calamity than physical death?
19150Is that what you want us to do, you capitalists, you cardinals and presidents?
19150Is there communion of saints?
19150Is this definition an alibi for Hillquit and Berger?
19150Is this right?
19150Is this the dream of the dreamer come true?
19150It is interesting to know what professors will lecture in this new university, and who will form their audience?"
19150Moreover, where would the Socialists draw the line of lawful possession?
19150Murder?
19150Now the things of which we''re talking we are mighty sure about.-- So what''s the use to strike the way you ca n''t win out?
19150Now, you can not blame me if I do not care for more for some time to come...."''Could you give any information?
19150Of what use are higher wages won by strikes, if the cost of living ascends still more rapidly?
19150One of the foremost opponents of the proposition was Delegate Morris Hillquit, who asked:"What does the amendment mean?
19150Or are you, in other words, going to lie to the farmers of this country in order to secure their suffrage?
19150Perjury, false testimony, fraud, theft of inheritance, fraudulent failures?
19150Presently a lunatic looked over the fence and asked:"''What are you doing?''
19150Quotations from this base free- love book will end with the following:"If it be asked''is marriage a failure?''
19150Russia passed through three revolutions and is that the kind of result we want in order to overthrow what he calls this robber nation?''
19150Shall not the tomb Yield heavy harvest where such seed is sown?"
19150Shall we hasten such a conflict by continuing to preach the sacredness of fecundity and of war?
19150Should he survive this, must he begin the same round over again?
19150Should we take the name of God in vain?
19150Socialism having ruined the insurance companies, would the millions of policyholders just sit down and have a good, hearty laugh over their losses?
19150The American flag?
19150The Stars and Stripes?
19150The flag which floats over every hellhole of mine and mill and prison?
19150The question may now be asked, What means is the Russian Bolshevist government using to incite revolution in America?
19150The"New York Times,"April 28, 1919, commented in part on the debate as follows:"''Who wants war?''
19150Then why do they not take it and cut the throats of these drones?
19150They must capture and establish a sort of dictatorship of the proletariat(?)
19150This is the Creator of the Milky Way?
19150This is the Father of Christ?
19150Up to the moment of separation were not all alike under the same"pledge"to use"lawful and rightful means?"
19150Was this denied by the Socialist defense at Albany?
19150Was this record questioned by the Socialist defense at Albany?
19150We do n''t mind taking their capitalistic locomotives and farming machinery, so why should they mind taking our Socialistic wheat, flax and platinum?"
19150What are the real workmen in Russia but victims of this cruel experiment of tyrannizing Socialist"intellectuals"?
19150What are they?
19150What can they do there?
19150What does it matter to me?''
19150What does this mean?
19150What flag?
19150What hypocrisies, shams and illusions are referred to?
19150What is God?
19150What is heaven?
19150What is our duty when we have learned that there is no God?
19150What is the Holy Spirit?
19150What is the object of it?
19150What is the purpose of it?
19150What will bring on strikes more readily than to teach rebellion against all conservative labor leaders who would oppose uncalled- for walk- outs?
19150What''s the railroad for, if not to provide jobs?
19150When the two Wings of the Convention raised the question,"Who called the cops?"
19150When will you open your eyes to the truth of Socialism, and realize that finally upon you alone depends your salvation?"
19150Whence will the impulse for the revolutionary struggle come?
19150Where do Socialists fit into the State?
19150Who but the long- suffering Russians would endure the hopeless fate imposed by Socialism on Russian labor?
19150Who can turn a deaf ear to the call?
19150Who gets shot with the gun?
19150Who gets the bad clothes?
19150Who is Jesus Christ?
19150Who makes the gun?
19150Who makes the nice suit?
19150Who should find satisfaction in committing arson when society has removed all cause for hatred?
19150Who were their authors?
19150Whom am I calling?
19150Why did it either openly favor the war or adopt a policy of petty- bourgeois pacifism?"
19150Why did the Socialist leaders in the parliaments of the belligerents vote the war credits?
19150Why disfranchise the revolutionary Socialists?
19150Why do you make agreements that divide you when you fight And let the bosses bluff you with the contract''s"sacred right?"
19150Why is this resolution here?
19150Why rob themselves?
19150Why should there be on a free earth?
19150Why should there be peace as long as any manhood is left in Russia to lift up its hand out of its despair against its Bolshevist oppressors?
19150Why steal votes away from the Left Wing candidates?
19150Why, then, should the Socialists not engage in an open aggressive campaign against the church?
19150Why?
19150Will Christ come to this earth?
19150Will Christ return on judgment day?
19150Will not this be"militarism?"
19150Will the people be forced to labor at repugnant tasks?
19150Will there be anything left for the rump N. E. C. to expel by August 30th?"
19150Will they presently be offering arguments to prove that the Bolshevists were not Socialists at all, but traitors to the whole Marxian movement?
19150Workers?
19150Would not this result in widespread discontent?
19150Would the American working- man think this worth while in America?
19150Would the Socialist Party of America accept its inclusion among those in"America"thus designated, or refuse?
19150Would the decision be reached peaceably?
19150Would the use and possession of government bonds be allowed?
19150Would these things happen in our country if the Reds gained control?
19150Would wage courts decide the value of their services?
19150Would you like to shoot a man?
19150does he pay you, too, to make these bricks?''
3261And am I not?
3261And can you tell me in what kind of way the war was carried on?
3261And history?
3261And how much arithmetic and mathematics do you know now?
3261And how old are you now?
3261And lesser outbreaks of violence,said I,"how do you deal with them?
3261And people put up with this?
3261And the older languages?
3261And then?
3261And they put up with that?
3261Are you? 3261 Besides the villages, are there any scattered country houses?"
3261But as to these days,I said;"you do n''t mean to tell me that no one ever transgresses this habit of good fellowship?"
3261But do you think,said I,"that there is any fear of a work- famine amongst you?"
3261But how did the people, the revolutionists, carry on the war? 3261 But please tell me,"said I,"how can they afford it?"
3261But what did you mean by easy- hard work?
3261But what happened? 3261 But why not for you?"
3261But would the soldiers have acted against the people in this way?
3261But you have n''t weighed it,said I,"and-- and how much am I to take?"
3261But you will take me along, wo n''t you, Dick?
3261Can you now tell me how you have come to this happy condition? 3261 Certainly,"said he;"how else could we settle them?
3261Clara here?
3261Come now,said Dick,"am I likely to?
3261Could you tell me rather more closely what actually took place?
3261Dear neighbour,said the girl, with the most solemn countenance of a child playing at keeping shop,"what tobacco is it you would like?"
3261Did the change, the''revolution''it used to be called, come peacefully?
3261Did they even try to?
3261Do n''t you drink a glass to us, dear little neighbours?
3261Do the women work at it in silk dresses?
3261Do you mean actual fighting with weapons?
3261Do you?
3261Does it?
3261Does not that make the world duller?
3261Education?
3261For instance, what can you make of this, neighbours? 3261 Have they any children?"
3261Heaven?
3261How about those ameliorations,said I;"what were they?
3261How could we have them,said he,"since there is no rich class to breed enemies against the state by means of the injustice of the state?"
3261How do you mean?
3261How is that managed?
3261How old should you say that neighbour will be?
3261How so?
3261I have heard that it was so,said I"but what followed?"
3261I suppose,said I,"power of some sort is used there?"
3261I think I do understand,said I:"but now, as it seems, you have reversed all this?"
3261I was expecting Dick and Clara to make their appearance any moment: but is there time to ask just one or two questions before they come?
3261Is it strange to sympathise with the year and its gains and losses?
3261Is it?
3261Is the house in question empty?
3261Is this what you have had in your mind, guest?
3261Let us go and see them,said Clara;"that is, if you are not in a hurry to get to Streatley, Walter?"
3261Look, guest,said Dick;"does n''t it all look like one of those very stories out of Grimm that we were talking about up in Bloomsbury?
3261Lose me?
3261My friend here wants tobacco and a pipe; can you help him?
3261No offence, guest-- no offence,said he;"but let me ask you; you like that, do you?"
3261No reward of labour?
3261Now may I ask you about the position of women in your society?
3261O, you do, do you?
3261O,said Dick,"so you know my old kinsman Hammond?"
3261O,said I, somewhat startled,"so the civil war went on, in spite of all that had happened?"
3261Of course it is,said he,"but do you care so much for that?"
3261Of course,said he;"what was I thinking of, not asking you before?
3261Peacefully?
3261People?
3261Phalangsteries, eh?
3261Question two,said the carle:"Are you not on the whole much freer, more energetic-- in a word, healthier and happier-- for it?"
3261Really?
3261School?
3261Smoke?
3261So,said I,"you consider crime a mere spasmodic disease, which requires no body of criminal law to deal with it?"
3261Still?
3261Strangely?
3261Tell me in detail,said I,"what lies east of Bloomsbury now?"
3261Tell me, then,said I,"how is it towards the east?"
3261There''s no dog; or have you trodden on a thorn and hurt your foot?
3261Very good,said I;"but what happens if the divisions are still narrow?"
3261Very well,I said;"but about this woman question?
3261Well,said I,"about the children; when they know how to read and write, do n''t they learn something else-- languages, for instance?"
3261Well,said I,"that is understood, and I agree with it; but how about crimes of violence?
3261Well,said I,"what else do they learn?
3261Well,said he,"were you forced to learn arithmetic and mathematics?"
3261Well?
3261Well?
3261Were they?
3261What building is that?
3261What could the Government have done? 3261 What have_ we_ done with it?"
3261What is it used for now?
3261What question?
3261What stood in the way of this?
3261What''s that you are saying? 3261 What''s that?"
3261What''s the matter?
3261What, of the bludgeoners?
3261What, old Greylocks?
3261When did this new revolution gather head?
3261While they were alive?
3261Who do you mean by''they,''dear child?
3261Why do you sigh?
3261Why is it meaningless to you?
3261Why not old people also?
3261Why, what have you done with it?
3261Why?
3261Why?
3261Will I not?
3261Yes,I said,"but consider, must not the safety of society be safeguarded by some punishment?"
3261Yes,said Dick,"and I am rather surprised at this time of the year; why are they not haymaking with you?"
3261Yes,said Ellen,"I thought you would do that, so I have brought a rudder for my boat: will you help me to ship it, please?"
3261Yes,said the old man,"the world was being brought to its second birth; how could that take place without a tragedy?
3261Yes,she said, looking very much astonished,"Do n''t you?"
3261Yes-- and then?
3261You seem to think that it will not last?
3261You think that enough?
3261_ Would_ you like it?
3261( H.) Anything else?
3261( H.) But if the French had conquered, would they not have taken more still from the English workmen?
3261( H.) If Parliament was not the government then, nor the people either, what was the government?
3261( H.) If the government habitually destroyed wealth, the country must have been poor?
3261( H.) It was said; but was anyone expected to believe this?
3261( H.) Then if the French had invaded England and conquered it, they would not have allowed the English workmen to live well?
3261( H.) Therefore the government really existed for the destruction of wealth?
3261( H.) To what extent did the people manage their own affairs?
3261( H.) What must happen if in a poor country some people insist on being rich at the expense of the others?
3261( H.) Yet amidst this poverty the persons for the sake of whom the government existed insisted on being rich whatever might happen?
3261( H.) You see the consequences of that fact?
3261( Hammond) What was the government of those days?
3261( I) Can you tell me?
3261A terrible tyranny our Communism, is it not?
3261After a pause, I said:"Your big towns, now; how about them?
3261All this misery, then, was caused by the destructive government of which we have been speaking?
3261Am I not the most tolerant man in the world?
3261Am I not to go up to the North with you?
3261Am I to have my work, or rather your work?
3261And I suppose that this massacre put an end to the whole revolution for that time?"
3261And have n''t you specially called me to notice that the people about the roads and streets look happy?
3261And is it really true that nothing came of it?"
3261And so on we went up the Thames still-- or whither?
3261And the girl?"
3261And what is the glorious hall there, and what is the building on the south side?"
3261And yet--( H.) Yet what?
3261Are we not good enough to paint ourselves?
3261Are you going to take your guest to Oxford?"
3261Are you shocked now?"
3261As we got out of the boat, I said to Dick--"Is it the old house we are going to?"
3261As why should he not if he likes?
3261But again, think if the destruction or serious injury of a man momentarily overcome by wrath or folly can be any atonement to the commonwealth?
3261But did not the government defend its rich men against other nations?
3261But for what other purpose than the protection of the rich from the poor, the strong from the weak, did this Government exist?
3261But have you no laws of the market, so to say-- no regulation for the exchange of wares?
3261But he had, and turned to me smiling, and said:"Yes, why not?
3261But in the meantime, what do you positively mean to assert about the pleasurableness of work amongst you?"
3261But now had n''t we better make haste to see your great- grandfather?"
3261But tell me, how do you manage, and how have you come to this state of things?"
3261But what is to be done?
3261But what share have you got with the Refusers, pretty neighbour?"
3261But what then?
3261CHAPTER XIII: CONCERNING POLITICS Said I:"How do you manage with politics?"
3261CHAPTER XIV: HOW MATTERS ARE MANAGED Said I:"How about your relations with foreign nations?"
3261Can you now tell me anything of your progress after the years of the struggle?"
3261Clara sat in her place and did not look round, but presently she said, with just the least stiffness in her tone:"How shall we divide?
3261Come, does n''t it all look very pretty?
3261Come, what is wrong with you?"
3261Dick looked thoughtful, and said:"Strange, neighbour?
3261Dick seemed grown a little absent, but he could not forbear giving me an architectural note, and said:"It is rather an ugly old building, is n''t it?
3261Did not their cleverness and facility in production master this chaos of misery at last?
3261Do n''t you remember, Clara?"
3261Do n''t you see that she is dressed deliciously for this beautiful weather?
3261Do n''t you see what it means?
3261Do n''t you think he will look younger after a little time with us?"
3261Do n''t you think so, neighbour?"
3261Do you assert that there are none?"
3261Do you follow me?"
3261Do you mean the tide?
3261Do you mind?"
3261Do you still like, it, eh?"
3261Do you still use them?"
3261Do you understand this now?
3261Do you want further explanation?"
3261Do you wonder at it?
3261Does it seem to you as if we starved ourselves of food in order to make ourselves fine clothes?
3261For instance, did the English Government defend the English citizen against the French?
3261Had a poor man a good chance of defending his property and person in them?
3261Had you any inkling of all this?"
3261Has republicanism finally triumphed?
3261Have I not told you that we know what a prison means by the undoubted evidence of really trustworthy books, helped out by our own imaginations?
3261Have you not read any of the medical books on the subject?"
3261He gave me good- day very civilly, and greeting his friend joyously, said:"Well, Dick, what is it this morning?
3261He looked at me thoughtfully, almost anxiously, as he said in a changed voice,"Might I ask you where you come from, as you are so clearly a stranger?"
3261He looked puzzled, and said,"How much?
3261He said:"I suppose you know pretty well what the process of government was in the bad old times?"
3261He sat musing for a little, and then started and said:"Are there any more questions, dear guest?
3261His estimate of the life of the nineteenth century made me catch my breath a little; and I said feebly,"But the labour- saving machines?"
3261How could it possibly be but that maternity should be highly honoured amongst us?
3261How could people be so cruel to themselves?"
3261How do you feel about your first visit to these waters?"
3261How is it that we find the dreadful times of the past so interesting to us-- in pictures and poetry?"
3261I blushed, and said, stammering,"Please do n''t take it amiss if I ask you; I mean no offence: but what ought I to pay you?
3261I found myself saying, almost against my will,"How old is it?"
3261I laughed, and said:"So that you now withdraw your admission, and say that there is no violence amongst you?"
3261I mused silently; but at last I said--"What is to come after this?"
3261I played the innocent and said:"In what direction could they improve, if not in livelihood?"
3261I said aloud, though more to myself than to Hammond,"Well, how could they be better than the age that made them?"
3261I said falteringly:"I was saying to myself, The past, the present?
3261I said,"I need not ask if this is a market, for I see clearly that it is; but what market is it that it is so splendid?
3261I said,"O; and legislation?
3261I said,"Yes, that is so; but how can everybody afford such costly garments?
3261I said--"go back again?
3261I said:"We have heard about London and the manufacturing districts and the ordinary towns: how about the villages?"
3261I saw at the Guest House that the women were waiting on the men: that seems a little like reaction does n''t it?"
3261I suppose they do n''t all learn history?"
3261I suppose you came into the Guest House after I had gone to bed last night?"
3261I suppose you have swept those away entirely?"
3261I suppose you like it?"
3261I suppose you will sleep in the old city?"
3261I thanked him, and said:"Are these the regular country people?
3261I took it out of her hand to look at it, and while I did so, forgot my caution, and said,"But however am I to pay for such a thing as this?"
3261I was going to say,"But is this the Thames?"
3261Is any of that left?"
3261Is it a wasp?"
3261Is it not so?"
3261Is it not so?"
3261Is it so, dear guest?"
3261Is n''t it a jewel of a house after its kind?
3261Is n''t that what politics used to mean?"
3261Is that not enough?"
3261Is that so, Dick?"
3261Is that so, literally?"
3261Is there any need to enforce that commandment by violence?"
3261It is not a mere matter of strength getting on quickly with such work; is it, guest?"
3261It looks fine from here, does n''t it?
3261Let me change the subject, and ask you what the stately building is on our left just showing at the end of that grove of plane- trees?"
3261Look there,"and she pointed northwest,"do n''t you see building going on there?"
3261May I?"
3261My friend, ca n''t you see that such a proceeding means ignoring the fact of_ growth_, bodily and mental?
3261Now really, do n''t you_ find_ it( apart from all theory, you know) much changed for the worse?"
3261Only, what were you thinking of just now?"
3261Or indeed_ was_ it a dream?
3261Or where do you house your present Parliament?"
3261Or will the death of the slayer bring the slain man to life again and cure the unhappiness his loss has caused?"
3261Or,"she said quickly,"are you thinking that you must soon go back again?
3261Perhaps you, guest, would like a swim before we sit down to what I fancy will be a pretty long feast?"
3261Queer names, ai n''t they?"
3261Quoth I:"But have you no prisons at all now?"
3261Revolution having brought its foredoomed change about, how can you prevent the counter- revolution from setting in except by making people happy?
3261Said Clara demurely, but not stiffly:"Is she a good fairy, Dick?"
3261Said I:"And you settle these differences, great and small, by the will of the majority, I suppose?"
3261Said I:"But suppose the man has a habit of violence,--kills a man a year, for instance?"
3261Said I:"But you do n''t mean that children learn all these things?"
3261Said I:"Could I get some tobacco and a pipe?"
3261Said I:"How about the smaller towns?
3261Said I:"In passing, may I ask if it is still a place of learning?"
3261Said I:"That beautiful girl, is he going to be married to her?"
3261Said I:"The regular soldiers?
3261Said I:"Was there not a serious danger of such moneys being misused-- of jobbery, in fact?"
3261Said he:"First of all( excuse my catechising), is there competition in life, after the old kind, in the country whence you come?"
3261Shall I put you ashore at once, or would you like to go down to Putney before breakfast?"
3261Shall we commit such a folly, then?
3261Shall we have out Greylocks and trot back to Hammersmith?
3261Shall we the neighbours make it worse still?
3261She blushed and said:"How old am I, do you think?"
3261She laughed out musically, and we followed suit in our gruffer voices; and then she said:"Of course I do, neighbour; do n''t you?"
3261She seemed rather surprised, and even slightly indignant, and said:"Well, well, what''s the matter?
3261She welcomed us and said, smiling:"So you are come up from the water to see the Obstinate Refusers: where are you going haymaking, neighbours?"
3261Should she not have said the contrast of the present with the future: of blind despair with hope?"
3261So I put my hand into my waistcoat- pocket, and said,"How much?"
3261So I said:"And south of the river, what is it like?"
3261So you see,"said he, looking at Dick and me,"we really could n''t go haymaking, could we, neighbours?
3261Such follies would make an agreeable market, would n''t they?"
3261That''s what these pictures and poems do; and why should n''t they?"
3261That''s what you mean, is n''t it, by giving me the negative side of your good conditions?"
3261That_ punishment_ of which men used to talk so wisely and act so foolishly, what was it but the expression of their fear?
3261The child seemed rather dashed, and said,"Do n''t you like it, neighbour?"
3261The human nature of paupers, of slaves, of slave- holders, or the human nature of wealthy freemen?
3261The morning is waning fast amidst my garrulity?"
3261The old man sat silent for a little, but presently recovered himself and took comfort in his old phrase of"Well, you like it so, do you?"
3261The old man smiled, and said nothing; but Dick turned rather red, and broke out:"What_ do_ you mean, guest?
3261The old man stopped short, and looked at her and said:"You really like it then?"
3261The sculler noted my eager astonished look, and said, as if in answer to my thoughts--"Yes, it_ is_ a pretty bridge, is n''t it?
3261Then he turned to me, and said:"Do you remember anything like that, guest, in the country from which you come?"
3261Then said Hammond:"Does anything especially puzzle you about our way of living, now you have heard a good deal and seen a little of it?"
3261Then there were other combatants against the people?"
3261To her quoth Dick:"Maiden, would you kindly hold our horse while we go in for a little?"
3261Was it really the Parliament or any part of it?
3261Was that what you would say, my friend?"
3261Well, what are you going to ask me next?"
3261Were people satisfied with the new order of things when it came?"
3261Were they not always careful about this little stream which now adds so much pleasantness to the country side?
3261Were they places of fair dealing according to the ideas of the day?
3261What could I say?
3261What did you think of the looks of the people whom you have come across to- day?"
3261What do we think of it now?
3261What do you mean?"
3261What do you say to that, eh?"
3261What do you think of those two expedients?"
3261What do you think?"
3261What do you think?"
3261What excuse have you to make for your slavish punctuality?
3261What has all that got to do with us?"
3261What is it used for now?"
3261What is the object of Revolution?
3261What is to be done?"
3261What kind of a government have you?
3261What more can we ask of life?"
3261What were the elements of success on their side?"
3261What will it matter if you do?
3261What would you like to do?
3261When he was well gone, I said:"Is it wrong to ask what Mr. Boffin is?
3261When she was gone, Dick said"Now guest, wo n''t you ask a question or two of our friend here?
3261Where do we meet, then?
3261Where is your bag?"
3261Which?
3261Who knows but I may not have been talking to many people?
3261Who knows?
3261Why did n''t you take us by surprise, and come yesterday?"
3261Why do n''t you write books like that now?
3261Why do you find fault with us?
3261Why do you keep such things in a garden?
3261Why should a man brood over a mere accident for ever?
3261Why should you expect to see poorly people on the road?"
3261Will you come a turn with us, neighbour?
3261Wo n''t you go into Ellen''s boat, Dick, since, without offence to our guest, you are the better sculler?"
3261Yes?"
3261You feel that, do n''t you?"
3261You see-- What do think could be done about them?"
3261and how could they look happy if they knew that their neighbours were shut up in prison, while they bore such things quietly?
3261and is n''t it very wasteful to do so?"
3261are we still civilised?"
3261cried the old boy, impetuously;"what human nature?
3261did they make nothing well?"
3261do they take any part in that?"
3261for hitherto we have been talking of great tragedies, I suppose?"
3261had men any time or opportunity for cultivating the fine arts amidst the desperate struggle for life and freedom that you have told me of?"
3261he said;"yes, what do you mean by that word?
3261how can you ask such a question?
3261or have you come to a mere dictatorship, which some persons in the nineteenth century used to prophesy as the ultimate outcome of democracy?
3261or rather of what nature?"
3261or will you come with us and hear some Welsh folk sing in a hall close by here?
3261or would you like presently to come with me into the City and see some really fine building?
3261or-- what shall it be?"
3261said Dick;"why should you see smoke?"
3261said I,"or the strikes and lock- outs and starvation of which we have heard?"
3261said I. Quoth Dick:"Did I say that?
3261said I;"how do you teach history?"
3261said he, hailing the scaffold,"are you coming down for a glass?"
3261said he:"you like heaven, do you?"
3261said he;"so you know the Thames, do you?"
3261said he;"what peace was there amongst those poor confused wretches of the nineteenth century?
3261said the old man,"you are pleased, are you, Ellen?"
3261shall we expect peace and stability from unhappiness?
3261the labour- saving machines?
3261what''s the matter now?
3261would not their occurrence( and you admit that they occur) make criminal law necessary?"
3261you like that, do you?"
34534And how did your great, great, great, etc., grandfather get it?
34534But if they were like father, they could do what he has done?
34534Funny?
34534Funny?
34534How did_ he_ get it?
34534If another man was as clever, and as industrious and thrifty as father,said Bob,"could he get on as well?"
34534Then the poor are not like that?
34534What do you mean, dear?
34534What''s droll?
34534_ Does_ Municipal management pay? 34534 2. Who produces wealth? 34534 2d.? 34534 6d., and_ Does Municipal Management Pay_? 34534 6d.? 34534 Am I to persuade you to join a Labour Party? 34534 And as for the amiability of your family, or your own personal merits, what have they to do with business? 34534 And do n''t you know that some successful men are rascals, and that some very wealthy men are fools? 34534 And do they not tell you that foreign traders are stealing the trade from the English traders? 34534 And do they not tell you that the foreign traders can undersell us in the world''s markets because their labour is cheaper? 34534 And do you still think that poverty is a mark of unworthiness, and wealth the sure proof of merit? 34534 And even at a cost of twopence a week do you not think the result would be worth the cost? 34534 And how much honour, culture, pleasure, rest, or love falls to the lot of the wives and children of the poor? 34534 And is it not odd to say that we will increase the wealth by reducing the number of the wealth makers? 34534 And is it not true that the Chinese and the Hindoos, who are the most temperate and the most thrifty people in the world, are always the worst paid? 34534 And is not your wife as much to you as the duchess to the duke? 34534 And the commercial travellers and the canvassers and the agents who get their living by telling lies,--as some of them do,--do you call those_ men_? 34534 And what has Labour got from the Home Rule Liberals it has elected? 34534 And what have they told you? 34534 And when did you last hear agentleman"say"sir"to a train- guard, to a railway porter, or to the"man"who has come to mend the drawing- room stove?
34534And where is Home Rule to- day?
34534And who would reap the benefit?
34534And why does he succeed where she fails?
34534And will it_ pay_ to produce these things if we are able to produce them at all?
34534And would not the labourer speak sense if he said to the duke,"Why should I employ you to wear out breeches which I pay for?"
34534Are they adding to the wealth of the nation?
34534Are they not doing work that is unnecessary to the nation?
34534Are they not now being paid wages?
34534Are we quite sure that it pays us as well as that_ now_?
34534Are we to pay a guinea each for dukes if we can get them three a penny?
34534Because the question,"Where does wealth come from?"
34534But are either of them superfluous?
34534But are there no bare feet and ill- clothed backs?
34534But do n''t you know that there are stupid and drunken mechanics, and steady and intelligent labourers?
34534But do n''t you see that if all the others were as good as he, he would_ not_ be worth more?
34534But do voters find this money?
34534But does not non- Socialism displace labour?
34534But does their fineness help you to pay your rent, or your wife to mend the clothes?
34534But how could such a piece of wealth be distributed?
34534But is it true that we can not grow wheat as cheaply as we can buy it?
34534But of what avail is our vaunted silver shield of the sea if we depend upon other nations for our food?
34534But the duke confers a benefit on the men he employs as huntsmen and servants, and without the duke they would starve?
34534But what about the colliers and the carriers''labourers, such as railway men, dischargers, and carters?
34534But what about the meat?
34534But what are we to call the delicate and refined ladies who wear satin and pearls, while the people who earn them lack bread?
34534But what can they do?
34534But what is a fair price?
34534But what is the result of the abstinence of these poor sisters of ours?
34534But who_ pays_ the persons employed?
34534But why is he better off?
34534But will any one of the boys I should select become Prime Minister of England?
34534But will the Trusts do that?
34534But you may say,"What then would become of the huntsmen, jockeys, servants, and others who now live on hunting and on racing?"
34534But, will it_ pay_?
34534But_ do_ they?
34534But_ why_?
34534By what means do the landlords and the capitalists get the meat and leave the workers the bones?
34534CAN BRITAIN FEED HERSELF?
34534CHAPTER II WHAT IS WEALTH?
34534CHAPTER XII CAN BRITAIN FEED HERSELF?
34534CHAPTER XVI IS SOCIALISM POSSIBLE, AND WILL IT PAY?
34534Can any man say, in the face of these figures, that we are incapable of growing our own wheat?
34534Can any reasonable, practical, hard- headed man hesitate for one moment over his choice?
34534Can he produce more cheaply?
34534Can we grow 29,000,000 quarters in our own country?
34534Can we grow our own wheat?
34534Can we produce all, or nearly all, our butter, milk, eggs, cheese, and fruit?
34534Can we produce our own bread, meat, and vegetables?
34534Could not that sixpence have been saved from the rents, or interest, or profits, or royalties paid at the cost of the production of other goods?
34534Could we not set the men to work?
34534DOES MUNICIPAL MANAGEMENT PAY?
34534Did anybody help them?
34534Did each get what he deserved?
34534Did each get what he deserved?
34534Did the colliers get any of the spoil in wages?
34534Did the wealth of Gould and the poverty of Christ indicate the intellectual and moral merits of those two sons of men?
34534Do I blame the landlord?
34534Do evils exist in this country to- day?
34534Do n''t you know that the noble and brave man stands a poor chance of escape, and that the selfish, brutal man stands a good chance of escape?
34534Do not the men of the"better class"address each other as"sir"?
34534Do not the silk hats and the black coats and the white collars treat the caps and the overalls and the smocks as inferiors?
34534Do not the workers_ make_ the wealth?
34534Do not the"better classes,"as they call themselves, allude to the workers as"the lower orders,"and"the great unwashed"?
34534Do the spinners get all the money the yarn is sold for?
34534Do the workers in the town get it?
34534Do the workers receive their full due?
34534Do these inventors get the increased rent?
34534Do they not tell you that England depends upon her foreign trade for her food?
34534Do they produce any wealth?
34534Do we not pay for our imported food in exported goods?
34534Do we not remember how, when the colliers were struggling for a"living wage,"the Press scolded them for their"selfishness"?
34534Do you doubt this?
34534Do you doubt this?
34534Do you elect your employers as officials of your Trade Unions?
34534Do you see the idea?
34534Do you send employers as delegates to your Trade Union Congress?
34534Do you think the employer is likely to be more useful or more disinterested in Parliament or the County Council than in the Trade Union?
34534Does Jones spin any of the yarn?
34534Does it not seem likely that then the share of the poor would be bigger?
34534Does not the employer commonly speak of the workers as"hands"?
34534Does that silence the commercial school?
34534Does the fine gentleman, who raises his hat and airs his nicest manners for a"lady,"extend his chivalry and politeness to a"woman"?
34534First, then, what_ is_ wealth?
34534For do n''t you see that this race which the lucky or successful men tell us we can_ all_ win is not a fair race?
34534For if the nation can build warships, why can they not build cargo ships?
34534For, having sold your love for permission to work, how long will you be before you sell your honour?
34534Had he been born the son of a crossing- sweeper do you think he would have been Prime Minister?
34534Has the landlord increased the value?
34534Have you not witnessed, perhaps suffered, many of these evils?
34534He says the French can produce their food more cheaply than they can buy it; and if the French can do this, why can not we?
34534How are the people to get the land?
34534How are the workers to form a Labour Party?
34534How can capital produce wealth?
34534How can he pay rent?
34534How can it be maintained, then, that_ Socialism_ is impossible?
34534How is it some who are able and willing to work can get no work to do?
34534How is it that middle class and even wealthy people often accept_ Socialism_ more readily than do the workers?
34534How is it that others who do not work at all have more money than they need?
34534How is it that some who work very hard are so poorly paid?
34534How is it that the Press never chides these men for their folly in trying to keep up profits, royalties, and interest in a"falling market"?
34534How is the money divided?
34534How long will you allow these insolent market- men to insult you?
34534How long?
34534How long?
34534How many working men are there on the County Councils, the Boards of Guardians, the School Boards, and the Town Councils?
34534How many years is it since the Newcastle programme was issued?
34534How much cake does a working mechanic get?
34534How much more?
34534How much would that mean to 2,000,000 of Unionists?
34534How, then, can_ Socialism_ be called impossible?
34534How, then, do the Americans contrive so often to beat us?
34534How, then, will a reduction of the population prevent poverty?
34534How?
34534I am bread; thou art the eater: how can harmony exist between us?
34534IS SOCIALISM POSSIBLE, AND WILL IT PAY?
34534If Bradford can manage more than one hotel, why can not London, Glasgow, Leeds, and Portsmouth do the same?
34534If Bradford can manage one hotel, why not more than one?
34534If a Corporation can manage trams, gas, and water, why can it not manage bread, milk, meat, and beer supplies?
34534If a Liberal or a Tory can be trusted as a parliamentary representative, why can not he be trusted as an employer?
34534If it can manage its telegraphs, why not its railways, its trams, its cabs, its factories?
34534If it displaces labour, as the machine does, should that prevent us from adopting Socialism?
34534If not, why not?
34534If not, why not?
34534If the Government can manage a fleet of war vessels, why not fleets of liners and traders?
34534If the Government can manage post and telegraph services, why not telephones and coalmines?
34534If the cigar maker needs work, why should I not employ him myself, and smoke the cigars myself, since I am to pay for them?"
34534If the nation can carry its own letters, why not its own coals?
34534If they can build forts, why not houses?
34534If they can make policemen''s boots and soldiers''coats, why not make ladies''hats and mechanics''trousers?
34534If they can make rifles, why not sewing machines or ploughs?
34534If they can pickle beef for the navy, why should they not make jam for the household?
34534If they can run a railway across the African desert, why should they not run one from London to York?
34534If you oppose a man as an employer, why do you vote for him as a Member of Parliament?
34534If, then, Lord de Canter owns all the land, and Tommy Tumbler owns none, how is Tommy Tumbler to get his living?
34534Impossible?
34534Is America, therefore, so much better off as to justify us in accepting the seven- branched programme as salvation?
34534Is it any wonder, then, that laws are made and administered in the interests of the capitalist?
34534Is it because there are too many of them?
34534Is it impossible for this nation to produce food for 40,000,000 of people?
34534Is it likely, then, that we can keep all our foreign trade, or that what we keep will be as profitable as it is at present?
34534Is it needful to tell you more, Mr. Smith, you who are yourself a worker?
34534Is it not marvellous?
34534Is it not so?
34534Is it the man who owns the patent, or the man who invented the machine?
34534Is it true to say that not the ploughman but the plough makes the furrow?
34534Is it true to say that the loom makes the cloth?
34534Is it true, then, to say that it is not the navvy but the spade that makes the trench?
34534Is not self- interest the ruling passion in the human heart?
34534Is not that all quite clear and plain?
34534Is that a very high price to pay for security against defeat by starvation in time of war?
34534Is that practical?
34534Is there any law of equity which says it is unjust to take by force from a robber what the robber took by force from another robber?
34534Is there any logic in you workers?
34534Is there any perception in you?
34534Is there any_ sense_ in you?
34534Nay, is it not true that many of you have sold it already?
34534Now comes our second question: Where does wealth come from?
34534Now, I ask you, as sensible men, is there"nothing to prevent"that boy from getting through that door?
34534Now, how did he make his way?"
34534Now, how does the law act towards these men?
34534Now, how is it that the inventor does_ not_ get it, and how is it that the landlord and the capitalist_ do_ get it?
34534Now, is n''t that a precious piece of nonsense?
34534Now, my practical friends, how many working- class members sit for Manchester to- day?
34534Now, of that crowd of people, who are most likely to escape?
34534Now, suppose our white man works for wages-- works for the black man-- what is going to regulate the wages?
34534Now, what is it we have to find out?
34534Now, where do the stores come from?
34534Now, why are the rest of the workers too poor to buy boots and clothing?
34534Now, will he be likely to be strong?
34534Or why should the duke mutter about class hatred if I suggest that we can get a colliery director at a lower salary than his Grace?
34534Our third question asks,"What becomes of the wealth?"
34534Poverty is due to over- production-- of_ what_?
34534Pretty reasoning, is n''t it?
34534Say, rather, where are they not?
34534Should I accuse him of class hatred?
34534Should I be offended with the duke for refusing to pay me more than I am worth?
34534Some of us would get whipped if all of us got our deserts; but who would deserve applause and wealth and a crown?
34534Suppose men_ can_ earn more in the big towns than they_ could_ earn in the fields, is the difference_ all_ gain?
34534That is clear, is it not?
34534The question is, Are the British workers as well off as they ought to be and might be?
34534The question is, Are the workers as well off now as they ought to be and might be?
34534The question is, Do evils exist at all to- day, and if so, is no remedy available?
34534The question is, Might you be better off than you are now?
34534The tramp asks him how came the land to be his?
34534Then how should_ any_ party be so true to Labour and so diligent in Labour''s service as a Labour Party would be?
34534Then if the duke did not take the labourer''s money the labourer could buy clothes?
34534Then if the duke did not take the labourer''s money the tailor_ would_ have work?
34534Then in this case the duke is no use?
34534Then it is not the duke''s money, but the labourer''s money, which keeps the tailor from starving?
34534Then the strong have a better chance than the weak, have they not?
34534Then why should I be blamed for suggesting that it is folly to pay a duke more than he is worth?
34534Then why should I not persuade you to join a Trade Union?
34534They could carry the day at every poll?
34534They why should they demand that you shall stay with them out of gratitude now they have halted?
34534This brings us to the second part of our question:"Who produces wealth?"
34534Those nearest to the door have a better chance than those farthest, have they not?
34534To the man who creates it?
34534To whom, then, should the extra wealth belong?
34534WHAT IS WEALTH?
34534WHERE DOES IT COME FROM?
34534WHERE DOES IT COME FROM?
34534WHO CREATES IT?
34534WHO CREATES IT?
34534Was Jacob the better man?
34534We are told that poverty is due to under- consumption-- under- consumption of_ what_?
34534Well, do you still think that single life, a crust of bread, and rags, will alone enable you to hold your own and to keep your foreign trade?
34534Well, since we left the land in the hope that the factories would feed us better, why not go back to the land if the factories fail to feed us at all?
34534Well, what does that mean?
34534What are the Government doing in this way?
34534What are the chief diseases almost wholly due to the surroundings of poverty?
34534What are the qualities needed in a race for the Chancellorship?
34534What are the"practical"reforms about which we hear so much?
34534What are these men now doing?
34534What are they willing to do for him now, or when they get office?
34534What are they?
34534What became of the compositors?
34534What could be more just?
34534What did it_ promise_ that the poor workers of America and France have not already obtained?
34534What did these children know or care for the civilisation or the wealth of their native land?
34534What do the police, the thief, and the gaoler produce?
34534What do these growls portend?
34534What does that mean, but that thrift would enable our people to live on less, and so to accept less wages?
34534What does that mean?
34534What does that mean?
34534What does the duke do with the rent?
34534What good did that do the workers?
34534What good would it do you if you got it?
34534What happens?
34534What happens?
34534What have Lady Dedlock''s amiability and beauty to do with the practical questions of gas rates and wages?
34534What have they done for him during the last ten years?
34534What is Protection?
34534What is a Trade Union?
34534What is a capitalist?
34534What is he to do?
34534What is that tale the masters so often tell you?
34534What is the effect of this?
34534What is the principle which these eminent men teach?
34534What is the result?
34534What is wealth?
34534What is"capital"?
34534What of that?
34534What will happen?
34534What would be the result of Protection?
34534What would the farmer say?
34534What, then, do we propose to do?
34534What_ can_ come of it?
34534Where are the tenements of to- day?
34534Where does my lady get her money?
34534Where does wealth come from?
34534Where does wealth come from?
34534Where does wealth go to?
34534Where is the impossibility of that?
34534Where?
34534Which of these men is the cause of the calico output being multiplied by three?
34534Who buys all these expensive luxuries?
34534Who earns the rent?
34534Who is to refuse?
34534Who made the law?
34534Who pays the rent?
34534Who pays the taxes?
34534Why are they low?
34534Why are wages of women in the shirt trade low?
34534Why do n''t you get out?
34534Why is it more valuable?
34534Why is one man born to pay rent and another to spend it?
34534Why not limit the private possession of land to the same term?
34534Why should Labour have a Labour Party?
34534Why should he?
34534Why should the many be poor, be ignorant, despised?
34534Why should the rich monopolise the knowledge and the culture, the graces and elegancies of life, as well as the wealth?
34534Why was the linotype machine adopted?
34534Why, indeed, should we not be able to raise 29,000,000 quarters of wheat?
34534Why, then, should there be any such thing as poverty?
34534Why?
34534Why?
34534Why?
34534Why?
34534Why?
34534Why?
34534Why?
34534Will it be any nearer ten years hence than it is now if you wait for the practical politicians of the old parties to give it to you?
34534Will it be better for the two slaves if the master takes half the bread left to them, and eats that as well as the bread he has already taken?
34534Will it mend matters here if the rich man"consumes more"?
34534Will not the French and Russian Governments try to corner the American wheat?
34534Will not the Russians stop the export of corn from their ports?
34534Will not the corn dealers in America put up the price?
34534Will the black man raise the wages of the remaining 50?
34534Will the duke give it to you because your wife is pretty and your daughter thinks you are a great man?
34534Will the fact that there is only one beggar make that beggar any richer?
34534Will you be one to help us--_now_?
34534Will you not hear him?
34534Would he not say,"Why should I employ you to smoke cigars which I pay for?
34534Would it not be more practical and hard- headed to hear first what the bringer of such good news had to tell?
34534Would it pay?
34534Would not the farmer speak sense?
34534Would those yacht builders have starved without the rich man?
34534Would you call him a Christian?
34534Would you call him a gentleman?
34534Would you call him a sensible man?
34534Yet, how often have you been told that Socialists want to have the wealth equally divided amongst all?
34534You do n''t think_ that_ is going to save you, men, do you?
34534_ And when do you think you are likely to get it?_ Is it any nearer now than it was seven years ago?
34534_ And when do you think you are likely to get it?_ Is it any nearer now than it was seven years ago?
34534_ Now_ comes the important question, What is the extent of these slums?
34534_ There is nothing to prevent any one of you from getting out._"Suppose a man talked like that, what would you say of him?
34534_ What is labour?_ Labour is work.
34534_ Why?_ The agricultural labourer is badly in want of clothes; can not_ he_ find the tailor work?
34534_ Why?_ The agricultural labourer is badly in want of clothes; can not_ he_ find the tailor work?
34534_ Why_ has he no money?
34534_ Will_ it pay?
34534a quarter?
34534and if so, is there a remedy?
34534and if there is a remedy, what is it?
34534done for Home Rule, and what has he done for Labour?
34534or does it give you more wages, or her more rest?
34534or does it in any way help to educate, and feed, and make happy your children?
34534or to the man who does not create it?
34534or"How is wealth produced?"
34534really means,"How is wealth produced?"
28361An anti- Socialist will say,''How will you sail a ship in a Socialist condition?'' 28361 Are we then to understand that the whole of history, so far, has been written from the point of view of the dominant class of every age?
28361CASEY:_ Who are the Bloodsuckers?_ Independent Labour Party.
28361Did you ever consider what it involved, this ruin of British agriculture? 28361 Do you ever consider the lives of the people who make these marvellously cheap things?
28361Does he himself want to work: to do something useful? 28361 Does not Socialist society presuppose extraordinary human beings, real angels, as regards unselfishness and gentleness, joy of work and intelligence?
28361Is it possible that this degrading monarchical superstition can survive in England much longer? 28361 What is the use of the suffrage?
28361Why pay in usury at all? 28361 [ 1048] The assertion,"We know"( who are we?)
28361[ 1052] Will there be no Ananiases in the Socialist Commonwealth? 28361 [ 1054] Have they?
28361[ 1080] Another influential Socialist writer exclaims:What is freedom but the unfettered use of all the powers which God for use has given?
28361[ 1108] What was the Paris Commune, and what did it do? 28361 [ 1203]"Who is more ready to tilt against society than the average Socialist?
28361[ 1227] How, then, is the amount of the unequal wages to be calculated? 28361 [ 1231] The question now arises how is the"fair equivalent for services rendered"to be determined?
28361[ 1232] Should the labourer be given an equivalent to the product of his labour_ minus_ various necessary expenditures? 28361 [ 1243] And what consequences would refusal to do the allotted work at the allotted pay entail?
28361[ 1271] TheSocialist Catechism"asks:"How may Socialists reply to the taunt that their scheme is impracticable?
28361[ 129]What is successful business but cheating?
28361[ 171] Does Councillor Glyde really believe that women''s wages would rise as soon as they took to smoking and drinking? 28361 [ 183] The question now arises:"How does the capitalist secure this surplus- value of labour without paying for it?
28361[ 208]Why are men-- men that is who are able and willing, nay, eager and anxious, to work-- unemployed?
28361[ 251] The question now arises:On what ground do capitalists defend the principle of competition?
28361[ 263] Do the fundamental doctrines of British Socialism bear out the claims of its champions? 28361 [ 273]"What is property?
28361[ 298]Do any say we attack private property?
28361[ 337]What has hitherto prevented the workers from combining for the overthrow of the capitalist system?
28361[ 345] The Independent Labour Party has issued a leaflet entitledAre you a Socialist?"
28361[ 367] But why should a working man have to wait till he is fifty- five before receiving a pension? 28361 [ 404] Another writer urged:"Is it not time that we combined and strove for something higher, wider, and more far- reaching?
28361[ 472]Supposing those who have the money were to threaten to leave the country and to take their money with them, would not that upset your plans?
28361[ 476]Is it possible for a self- governing people to rule a subject race, and yet keep its own love for liberty?
28361[ 480]What is the attitude of Socialism towards backward races, savage and barbaric peoples who are to- day outside the civilised world?
28361[ 510] These words contain assurances, not a plan, and therefore we must inquire, What is the foreign policy of Socialism? 28361 [ 526] And what are the"signs and portents"upon which the belief is based that war will be abolished?
28361[ 530] Under the headingWill it come to barricades?"
28361[ 551] Why do the Socialists demand the abolition of military law? 28361 [ 565]( Has ever anybody in Great Britain, or in any other country, been imprisoned"for being hungry"?)
28361[ 636]The question is frequently put:''Why are Socialists so much opposed to Liberalism?''
28361[ 717]Would Socialists take away the land from the landlords and let it out in little plots?
28361[ 753]How will exchange then be carried on?
28361[ 754] And how will international exchange be carried on? 28361 [ 806] The founder of modern Socialism had stated already in 1847:"What is Free Trade under the present conditions of society?
28361[ 87]Did Jesus Christ teach Socialism?
28361[ 918] A very influential Socialist writer asks:Is chastity a virtue, and is there such a vice as unchastity?"
28361[ 956] What is the Socialistic conception offreedom for women"?
28361''Tis said that the labourer is worthy of his hire; But of whom does he get it?
28361-enterprise, will it be more efficient than private enterprise?
28361:_"Killed by High Rates"--Or Rent?_ Clarion Press.
28361A prominent Socialist writer has asked:"Is not honesty-- the sense of right of possession in the fruits of our labour-- the very basis of Socialism?
28361A very violent Socialist organ recently wrote:"Our trade union leaders are not so corrupt as those of America?
28361Again I ask: Who are_ we_?
28361An employer who engages a workman does not ask,"How much do you eat?"
28361And do n''t you think that is rather a stiff price to pay to get a farthing off the loaf?
28361And if competition became keener, what would the champions of Free Trade do to meet it?
28361And if the turnpike gate was an odious obstruction to the traveller, how much more obnoxious to him, or her, is the railway ticket- box?
28361And may not the destruction of the capitalists reduce Great Britain to the level of Turkey and Servia?
28361And when they do get a fresh job, is it always as good as the one lost?
28361And will it then console him that he is the"owner and manager of the gasworks and of the gas supply"?
28361Another prolific Socialist writer, under the title"Was Jesus a Socialist?"
28361Are Shackleton, Bell, and Barnes honester men than Gompers, Mitchell, and Tobin?
28361Are its teachings such as make it seem likely that a Socialistic revolution will prove an exception?
28361Are the Socialists or the Anti- Socialists right in their conception of Socialism?
28361Are the private middleman''s profits not distributed to a host of corporation officials in the shape of substantial salaries?
28361Are the rich class able to work?
28361Are these claims justified or not?
28361Are these things that are so good for the nation good for me?
28361Are they going to allow themselves to be voted out?
28361Are they not?
28361Are twelve million underfed, a million starving children, a million paupers, an infantile death- rate of 150 per 1,000--are these signs of wealth?
28361Are we never to have a Government that can hear the bitter cry of the outcast, and, hearing, act?
28361Bebel puts the question,"What becomes of the difference between the industrious and the idle, the intelligent and the stupid?"
28361But has not this law been discarded even by some Socialists?
28361But has the middleman really disappeared when a city corporation takes his place?
28361But how can the electors express their desires on this vital matter under our present electoral system?
28361But if the promised doubling of wages should not take place, what will happen?
28361But of what avail is our vaunted silver shield of the sea if we depend upon other nations for our food?
28361But what is its effect under the changed conditions of the present time, and how will these changes affect her industries and her workers?
28361CHAPTER XXVI THE SOCIALIST ATTITUDE TOWARDS CHRISTIANITY AND RELIGION What is the attitude of Socialism towards Christianity and religion?
28361CHAPTER XXXV HOW THE PROGRESS OF SOCIALISM MAY BE CHECKED What can be done to check the growth of Socialism?
28361COMPENSATION has no place in Socialist ethics, 100 f. or no compensation in expropriating private property?
28361Can any argument be more foolish than the foregoing one?
28361Can it drop its fundamental idea of individualism and take up the idea of co- operation?
28361Can the party adopt a new ideal?
28361Can you say how much the landlord takes from the wages of father, generally for rent?
28361Chapter v.[ 897] Blatchford,_ What is this Socialism?_ p. 2.
28361Commenting on this statement Mr. Blatchford says:"Why, indeed, should we not be able to raise 29,000,000 quarters of wheat?
28361Compete with us with the ratepayers''money?
28361Could a simpler and more ingenious system for making money be devised?
28361Could the value of the labour of an individual be calculated at all in the complicated processes of modern industry?
28361Did Sir Henry Campbell- Bannerman wish to satisfy the Socialists by rather creating small leaseholders than small freehold farmers?
28361Did not Mr. John Bright once say that adulteration is only another form of competition?
28361Did not Plato found his ideal commonwealth upon perfectly wise and virtuous men?
28361Do n''t you see that if we lose our power to feed ourselves we destroy the advantages of our insular position?
28361Do not the working class pay the rates and taxes?
28361Do the rich and their children live at the expense of those who work?
28361Do the rich trouble about the poor children of London who are ill- fed and clothed?
28361Do the workers benefit by machinery?
28361Do they not often lose all their belongings, and get into debt, while looking for that new employment which the Free Traders talk about so glibly?
28361Do they send their sons and daughters, To the workshop or the mill?
28361Do they work?
28361Do we''own''nothing?
28361Do you call this industrial warfare?
28361Do you never think, oh, tell Of the hideous crime and shame That has made this earth a hell Of commercial fraud and shame?
28361Do you not see that those your capitalists find it convenient and profitable to employ may live; and that those they do not choose to employ must die?
28361Do you work when you like and idle when you like?
28361Does anyone mean to assert that that credit which is eagerly purchased by a banker would be refused by a bricklayer or stonemason?
28361Does it effect this?
28361Does not that fit your case exactly?
28361Does the corporation- middleman supply gas gratis?
28361Give an instance of this?
28361Good; but what is his own?
28361HARDIE, KEIR:_ Can a Man be a Christian on a Pound a Week?_ Independent Labour Party.
28361HOW WILL LABOUR BE ORGANISED AND DIRECTED?
28361HOW WILL THE SOCIALIST STATE BE GOVERNED?
28361HYNDMAN, H.M.:_ Will Socialism Benefit the English People?_ Twentieth Century Press.
28361Has he anything to fall back upon?
28361Has the schoolmaster now been abroad so long in vain?
28361He is quite touched with his own generosity and magnanimity, for might he not demand at once_ 17s._ or_ 20s._ in the pound?
28361He makes this surrender of humanity and honour for what?
28361He says:"What is vital in Socialism?
28361How are all these wonderful and almost miraculous changes to be financed?
28361How can these cheap wares do me any good, who have no money at all?
28361How do Socialists, then, propose to meet the difficulty?
28361How does the capitalist act?
28361How is it that the labourers can not see for themselves that they are legally robbed?
28361How is that?
28361How is the nationalisation of the land to be effected?
28361How many children are there in London who go to school insufficiently fed and clothed?
28361How then could God blame man for anything man did?
28361How?
28361INTRODUCTION-- WHAT IS SOCIALISM?
28361If You wish me to act otherwise, why did You not make me different?
28361If it has a job to do, why does it stand day after day, week after week, year after year, cackling, cackling, cackling about it?
28361If not, how can they consistently support the system which inevitably produces that state of things upon earth?
28361If the London County Council decided to open 1,000 bread- shops, how would they raise the capital required?
28361In what sense is it free?
28361Is a larger number of voters likely to pick out abler administrators than a small one?
28361Is all the necessary work of the world, then, already finished, so that there is nothing more remaining for anyone to do?
28361Is it a question of profit or inequitable exchange?
28361Is it a question of rent?
28361Is it a question of usury or interest?
28361Is it alive in us as a nation?
28361Is it likely, then, that we can keep all our foreign trade, or that what we keep will be as profitable as it is at present?
28361Is it my fault that You fore- ordained me to be and to do thus?''
28361Is it not more logical, more coherent, more likely to succeed than any''citizen army scheme''?
28361Is it not the working class which creates all wealth?
28361Is that a very high price to pay for security against defeat by starvation in time of war?
28361Is the home worth preserving?
28361Is there any difference in the teachings at Socialist Sunday schools and other Sunday schools?
28361Is there any question as to their being acceptable?
28361Know ye not, boobies, that all is your own?
28361LEATHAM, JAMES:_ Was Jesus a Socialist?_ Twentieth Century Press.
28361Let us, for instance, inquire: HOW WILL LABOUR BE REMUNERATED?
28361Local, will it be repudiated?
28361May not proportionately as large a Socialist party arise in Great Britain, especially as no political party can outbid the Socialists?
28361May, then, owners of property keep at least that part of their property which is not invested in land?
28361Mr. Bax very sensibly argues:"What does each man produce of himself as an individual?
28361Nothing for them to do?
28361Now the question arises: How do Socialists propose to fill the void?
28361Now when we consider the question of municipal trading in gas, tramways, and electricity, is the principle involved any different?
28361Now, I ask, can we conceive a more abjectly contemptible character than that which acts thus?
28361OVER- PRODUCTION, complaints as to, 66 f. are not justified, 70 f. can it be prevented by Socialists?
28361Of what service is the State?
28361Of what use can it ever be to the mass of the common people?
28361On what terms does the capitalist allow the labourers to work?
28361Or, if that is too much, why not offer her special rates?
28361Our own money?
28361PROUDHON:_ What is Property?_ William Reeves.
28361Party of Great Britain, details regarding, 428 programme of, 487 f. spirit in Parliament, 437 f. State, how will it be governed?
28361Prosperity?
28361Shall you complain who are the world Of what the world may do?
28361Shall you complain who feed the world-- Who clothe the world, who house the world?
28361Show me how much cotton any given factory operative has produced in the course of a year?
28361Suppose men can earn more in the big towns than they could earn in the fields, is the difference all gain?
28361Suppose_ 100,000l._ were required?
28361THE LATEST DECALOGUE Thou shalt have one God only, who Would be at the expense of two?
28361That is sheer robbery, is it not?
28361The manner in which the simple question,"How do you propose to fit actual human nature into your scheme?"
28361The only question remaining is, How?
28361The question is not''Is the nation wealthy?''
28361The question now arises: How do the Socialists propose to deal with the land and the owners of land?
28361The question now arises: How is this transference of all private property to the State to be effected?
28361The question now arises:"What does the manufacturer do with his earnings?"
28361The question now suggests itself:"How is it that the British Socialists base their demands on pseudo- scientific doctrines of obvious absurdity?"
28361The question, therefore,''How can we become richer?''
28361The real question is: Can you produce men fit for the new social State?
28361Then ask yourselves: Of what use is Parliament?
28361Then they are paupers?
28361Then why does n''t it do it?
28361There are no slaves in this country?
28361This world will be a garden, An Eden full of bliss; Oh, brother-- sister-- won''t you strive For such a state as this?
28361To prevent dawdling, could it be ascertained how long it should take to repair a machine, paint a picture, amputate a leg, plough an acre?
28361To what class do these poor starving children belong?
28361Using not brain or hand, Thankful, like dogs, when they throw ye a bone?
28361VERITAS:_ Did Jesus Christ teach Socialism?_ P. Lindley.
28361WARD, W.:_ Are All Men Brothers?_ E. Dalton.
28361WASHINGTON, S.:_ Whose Dog Art Thou?_ Independent Labour Party.
28361Was there ever greater lunacy in public affairs?
28361Well, why not abolish them?
28361What account have they been given of the system which oppresses them?
28361What are its privileges and its advantages?
28361What can the engineers show for their money to- day?
28361What class of men get into Parliament?
28361What constitutes the chief difference between capitalism and slave- owning?
28361What constitutes the value of metal money?
28361What do they intend to put into the place of that religion which they wish to destroy?
28361What do we lose?
28361What do we pay in rent?
28361What does machinery enable the workers to do?
28361What does thy religion order thee to do with thy savings?
28361What duties does thy religion lay upon thee with regard to society?
28361What evidence is there that the workers earn a great amount and get very little?
28361What has left them in ignorance?
28361What have the trade unionists to say to it?
28361What is Carnot to us or we to Carnot, that we should weep for him?
28361What is Communism?
28361What is Socialism?
28361What is a pauper?
28361What is a slave?
28361What is a wage- slave?
28361What is cheapness to me, who have no money at all?
28361What is meant by the term''employing men for profit''?
28361What is taught in Christian schools?
28361What is the remedy for wage- slavery?
28361What is the value produced by a day''s labour of a ploughman, a railway porter, a postman, a book- keeper, a policeman, a machine- minder?
28361What is this farce called?
28361What is this system called?
28361What is thy name?
28361What is thy religion?
28361What is to be done with such a museum?
28361What is to take its place?
28361What proportion does a wage- slave receive of what he earns?
28361What right have they to take Things that ye toil to make?
28361What right have we to assume, therefore, that the future does not hold a nobler ideal than our present one?
28361What should be the object of municipalisation and nationalisation?
28361When, and where?]
28361Where should we get our food?
28361Where wast thou born?
28361Where, then, is the gain to the labouring class?
28361Where, then, is the immorality in demanding a further consideration?
28361Who amongst us is so pure and exalted that he has never been conscious of the bestial taint?
28361Who are the workers?
28361Who are thy parents?
28361Who creates all poverty?
28361Who creates all wealth?
28361Who demands the rent?
28361Who pays the rent?
28361Who would not be a Socialist?
28361Who, then, is responsible for good and evil?
28361Why is it that those who do not produce are the richest?
28361Why is that?
28361Why is that?
28361Why is this Bread Sacred?
28361Why not give her the use of the mercantile marine for nothing instead of taxing bread to give her a preference?
28361Why should London''s million families waste their million fires every time hot water is needed?
28361Why should anybody work in such a"free"country?
28361Why should it be an exception?
28361Why, then, do you ask us about the future society?
28361Why, then?
28361Why?
28361Why?
28361Why?
28361Will equal labour- time pay for all not lead to universal dawdling, shrinkage in production, and consequent starvation?
28361Will highly skilled workers be satisfied to receive the same wages as the most unskilled labourers?
28361Will it prove equally attractive to surgeons and painters?
28361Will it succeed in capturing them?
28361Will men be induced by their sense of duty to clean the sewers?
28361Will not amateur government prove an absolute failure?
28361Will the English people never take their destinies into their own hands and close the long era of monarchical and aristocratic robbery?
28361Will the elected administrators no longer place personal and party interests above national ones?
28361Will the highly skilled British trade unionist agree to work side by side with unskilled Chinamen and for equal wages?
28361Will the hunter exchange his deer for the sprat, on the principle of equal labour- time?
28361Will the present holders of property be fully compensated, partly compensated, or not compensated at all?
28361Will they respect a franchise and ballot- box which will vote that they shall get off the backs of the workers?
28361Will they respect existing rights, or are they bent upon open or more or less disguised spoliation?
28361Will you accept them?
28361Woman( to His mother), what have I to do with thee?
28361Would the writer give to the Chinese a share of Great Britain''s wealth since"the earth and its fruits belong without distinction to all?"
28361Would there also be imprisonment for workers working undertime?
28361Would workers not strive to get the maximum pay for the minimum work?
28361You are a free man and not a slave?
28361[ 1020] Leatham,_ Was Jesus a Socialist?_ p. 16.
28361[ 1050] Ward,_ Are All Men Brothers?_ p. 19.
28361[ 1054] Leatham,_ Was Jesus a Socialist?_ p. 5.
28361[ 106] Keir Hardie,_ Can a Man be a Christian on a Pound a Week?_ p. 12.
28361[ 111] Hyndman in Debate,_ Will Socialism Benefit the English People?_ p. 5.
28361[ 1264] Are the people''s votes never won by any other means than the testimony of results?
28361[ 1280] What can be done to improve the position of the British workers?
28361[ 13]"Veritas,"_ Did Jesus Christ teach Socialism?_ p. 1.
28361[ 148] Keir Hardie,_ Can a Man be a Christian on a Pound a Week?_ p. 7.
28361[ 17]_ Will Socialism benefit the British People?_ p. 4.
28361[ 233] Leatham,_ Was Jesus a Socialist?_ p. 4.
28361[ 257] Leatham,_ Was Jesus a Socialist?_ p. 4.
28361[ 26] Blatchford,_ What is this Socialism?_ p. 2.
28361[ 273] Proudhon,_ What is Property?_ pp.
28361[ 278] Blatchford,_ What is this Socialism?_ p. 11.
28361[ 285] Blatchford,_ What is this Socialism?_ p. 1.
28361[ 298] Blatchford,_ What is this Socialism?_ p. 2.
28361[ 323]"Veritas,"_ Did Jesus Christ teach Socialism?_ p. 2.
28361[ 345]_ Fabian Essays in Socialism_, p. 145,[ 346]_ Are you a Socialist?_ p. 1.
28361[ 404]_ Socialism and Trade Unionism: Wherein do they Differ?_ pp.
28361[ 421] Ward,_ Are All Men Brothers?_ pp.
28361[ 514] Debate, Hyndman,_ Will Socialism Benefit the English People?_ Introduction.
28361[ 522]"Veritas,"_ Did Jesus Christ teach Socialism?_ p. 2.
28361[ 52] Blatchford,_ What is this Socialism?_ p. 7.
28361[ 54] Blatchford,_ What is this Socialism?_ pp.
28361[ 573] Washington,_ Whose Dog art Thou?_ p. 14.
28361[ 59]"Veritas,"_ Did Jesus Christ teach Socialism?_ p. 1.
28361[ 605]_ What Use is a Vote?_ p. 1.
28361[ 622] Casey,_ Who are the Bloodsuckers?_ p. 16.
28361[ 629]_ Should the Working- class Support the Liberal Party?_ p. 10.
28361[ 632]_ Should the Working- class Support the Liberal Party?_ p. 19.
28361[ 635]_ Should the Working- class Support the Liberal Party?_ p. 13.
28361[ 68]"Veritas,"_ Did Jesus Christ teach Socialism?_ p. 1.
28361[ 853] See p. 53 ff,_ ante._[ 854] Keir Hardie,_ Can a Man be a Christian on a Pound a Week?_ p. 13.
28361[ 865] Leatham,_ Was Jesus a Socialist?_ p. 11.
28361[ 86]"Veritas,"_ Did Jesus Christ teach Socialism?_ p. 15.
28361[ 88]"Veritas,"_ Did Jesus Christ teach Socialism?_ p. 16.
28361[ 919]"If it be asked, Is marriage a failure?
28361[ 92]"Veritas,"_ Did Jesus Christ teach Socialism?_ p. 4.
28361[ 946] Blatchford,_ What is this Socialism?_ p. 7.
28361[ 985] Keir Hardie,_ Can a Man be a Christian on a Pound a Week?_ p. 18.
28361[ 989] Leatham,_ Was Jesus a Socialist?_ p. 14.
28361[ 991] Leatham,_ Was Jesus a Socialist?_ p. 14.
28361[ 994] Leatham,_ Was Jesus a Socialist?_ p. 6.
28361[ 995] Leatham,_ Was Jesus a Socialist?_ p. 16.
28361[ Has it?
28361_ Are You a Socialist?_( Leaflet.)
28361_ Debate, April 17, 1884_:_ Will Socialism Benefit the English People?_ Twentieth Century Press.
28361_ Should the Working Class Support the Liberal Party?_ Twentieth Century Press.
28361_ Socialism and Trade Unionism: Wherein do they Differ?_ Issued by Socialistic Group of the London Society of Compositors.
28361_ What Use is a Vote?_( Leaflet.)
28361_ Who are the Bloodsuckers?_ Independent Labour Party.
28361_ Will Socialism Benefit the English People?_( Debate.)
28361and agriculture, 266 UNEMPLOYMENT benefits employers, 69 f. could it be prevented by Socialists?
28361and do not capitalists often lose a good deal of capital before they give up the fight for the trade?
28361but"What can you do?"
28361but''Are the people wealthy?''
28361cheaper?
28361could they be prevented by Socialists?
28361disproved, 79 CLASSES of society, are there only two?
28361how will it be governed?
28361in the following words:"Cade: Is not this a lamentable thing, that of the skin of an innocent lamb should be made parchment?
28361is it possible?
28361is reduced to this one,''How can we increase the produce of labour and at the same time maintain an equivalent demand for that produce?
28361that parchment, being scribbled o''er, should undo a man?...
28361what are their practical aims as regards Parliamentary Representation, Foreign Policy, Agriculture, Taxation, Old- age Pensions, Fiscal Policy?
28361what are their relations with the Parliamentary Parties, the Trade- Unions, the Co- operators, etc?
28361what is their attitude towards International Communism and Anarchism?
49842A detective''s memory gets better as the time goes on, does it?
49842After you came out of the alley what did you see?
49842After you got them together, what did you do?
49842And he had no revolver?
49842And the pole was gone?
49842And was it not stated as a general expression that such a man ought to be shot?
49842And when did you get these czar bombs?
49842And yet you expected to be arrested?
49842And you can remember that a lamp post stood at the southeast corner of the alley after the lapse of seven years?
49842And you did not see them there?
49842And you never saw him before or since?
49842And you saw him just as he closed his speech?
49842And you say you did not see those boxes?
49842And you, having no money, had your mail sent to Justus Schwab because you had no home, eh?
49842Any other group of them that you attended?
49842Any other of the defendants?
49842Anything else?
49842Are they prepared for the worst?
49842Are you a graduate of any college?
49842Are you an Anarchist?
49842Are you an Anarchist?
49842Are you not the agent here for the Nihilists in Russia?
49842Are you sure you did not stop on the Haymarket?
49842Are you, or were you, a member of the International Working Men''s Society?
49842As a matter of fact you woke up Engel in his cell after midnight to interrogate him, did n''t you?
49842At that time did you know there was any import attached to the word?
49842At that time were you still laboring under the excitement incident to the riot?
49842At that time what was the size of the meeting?
49842At what place?
49842At whose instance did you go to their meetings?
49842Before the police came, did you see anything disorderly?
49842But did you not contribute money?
49842But you did not know it at that time?
49842But you have made Socialistic and Anarchistic speeches?
49842Can you give me the substance or purport of what was said at any time?
49842Can you tell how that word happened to be put in the circular?
49842Could anybody pass into the alley without your knowing it?
49842Did Schwab say to you that evening:''Now, if they come, we are prepared for them''?
49842Did any of the defendants march with you?
49842Did any of the defendants speak there?
49842Did any other of the defendants speak there?
49842Did he hold any office, or was he simply a private in the armed section?
49842Did n''t you write in your report[ reading from it] that Keegan said that after Spies got through with his remarks?
49842Did not Officer Foley say he would be able to identify this man if he ever saw him again?
49842Did the firing proceed from the crowd, or the police?
49842Did the officers not say the man who jumped up from behind the wagon was a heavy man, with long whiskers( Fielden)?
49842Did the police indict you?
49842Did they belong to the American group?
49842Did they belong to the armed section?
49842Did they meet more than once there?
49842Did you ascertain from any of the defendants if they drilled after that?
49842Did you at any time that night get down from the wagon and go into an alley and light a bomb in the hands of Rudolph Schnaubelt?
49842Did you ever attend any meeting of any English- speaking group other than the American group in this city of that kind?
49842Did you ever have dynamite and a fuse in your desk?
49842Did you ever meet with any of the others at any of the meetings?
49842Did you ever see a book by Most called''The Modern Science of Revolutionary Warfare?'' 49842 Did you ever see anybody excluded by the doorkeeper?"
49842Did you ever see anybody excluded?
49842Did you ever write any articles for the_ Alarm_?
49842Did you feel of it?
49842Did you find any marks of bullets in the walls around there?
49842Did you from time to time make reports of what you heard and saw at their meetings?
49842Did you go at once to the alley?
49842Did you go to Crane''s alley with Schwab?
49842Did you have a revolver that night?
49842Did you have any business before you came to the United States?
49842Did you have any conversation with Engel?
49842Did you have any talk with any of these defendants about the purposes and objects of the social revolution, so- called?
49842Did you have your boots off when you were washing your feet?
49842Did you hear the command given to disperse?
49842Did you hear the speeches at the Haymarket?
49842Did you keep your eye on him all the time?
49842Did you know then of Pinkerton''s agency having any other men employed in the same line that you were employed in?
49842Did you live with him in New York?
49842Did you march in the procession, too?
49842Did you not tell Mr. Hardy you were the agent for a Nihilistic society?
49842Did you notice the approach of the police?
49842Did you see Fielden again?
49842Did you see Fielden all the time he was speaking?
49842Did you see Schnaubelt in the alley that night while Fischer was there?
49842Did you see Schwab?
49842Did you see Spies go into the alley?
49842Did you see any circular?
49842Did you see him with a revolver?
49842Did you see or hear of any pistol shots from the crowd?
49842Did you see the bomb?
49842Did you see the notice of that meeting in the_ Arbeiter Zeitung_?
49842Did you see the police come upon the working men?
49842Did you stand that way all the time?
49842Did you stand there all the time?
49842Did you talk with Schwab on the east side of Desplaines street, about twelve feet south of the alley that evening?
49842Did you talk with any one about this bomb- throwing?
49842Did you visit the place a second time?
49842Did you write the''Revenge Circular''?
49842Do you believe in an oath?
49842Do you know a man named Schneider and one Thomas Brown?
49842Do you know anything about a package of dynamite found on the shelf in the closet of the_ Arbeiter Zeitung_?
49842Do you know of a fellow named Bodendecke speaking at those meetings?
49842Do you know of two detectives at your station who went to Lingg''s cell late at night and exhibited a rope saying they were going to hang him?
49842Do you know what the hall is called?
49842Do you know what the question was?
49842Do you know whether or not any steps were taken to distribute the_ Alarm_?
49842Do you play the violin since you have been in Chicago?
49842Do you remember the speech of the first speaker?
49842Do your reports contain references to speeches made by others?
49842Doctor, are you a Socialist?
49842During that twenty minutes where were you?
49842Find him where?
49842For how long?
49842For the purpose of examining this telegraph pole?
49842Have you a report of any other of the defendants speaking at that meeting?
49842Have you been in the habit of attending meetings in the street?
49842Have you ever made speeches on the Lake front and other Socialistic meetings?
49842Have you ever met any of them at the_ Arbeiter Zeitung_ office?
49842Have you ever seen any of the defendants before?
49842Have you got any information from any other members of the organization? 49842 Have you had any other talk with Parsons outside of these utterances?"
49842Have you had any talk with Spies, Fielden, Parsons, and other defendants as to the purposes of their organization?
49842Have you lately, within the last few days, ascertained, and do you know the fact, that you have seen any Pinkerton men in these meetings?
49842Have you what was said and done at that meeting?
49842How about those other meetings you have mentioned, aside from the armed sections?
49842How did this man come to give you those bombs?
49842How did you come to attend the meeting, then?
49842How did you come to do that?
49842How did you come to get that letter?
49842How did you come to go there?
49842How did you come to go to Salomon& Zeisler''s office?
49842How did you expect to meet him then, if you did not know where he lived or where he worked?
49842How did you stand in the alley when the speaking was going on?
49842How do you know this?
49842How long ago was that?
49842How long ago was that?
49842How long did you do detective service there?
49842How long did you occupy that position?
49842How long did you wait?
49842How long had you been in Chicago at that time?
49842How long have you been a Socialist?
49842How long have you been a Socialist?
49842How long have you been a member of the American group?
49842How long have you been a physician?
49842How long have you been a revolutionist?
49842How long have you been conducting that business?
49842How long have you been of the belief that the existing order of things should be overthrown by force?
49842How long have you been with Pinkerton?
49842How long have you believed in Anarchy?
49842How long have you preached Anarchy?
49842How long was that?
49842How many bombs did you have in the_ Arbeiter Zeitung_ office?
49842How many bombs in all did you find?
49842How many of those circulars were distributed?
49842How much?
49842How much?
49842How near to the west edge of the sidewalk?
49842How often did they drill?
49842How often did you drill with the armed section?
49842How often did you pay the contributions?
49842How often have you met Parsons and Fielden?
49842How was that conversation carried on?
49842In uniform?
49842Is his story true?
49842Is not that your experience, that anybody who could pay 10 cents could be received?
49842Is that J. H. Schwab, Justus Schwab?
49842Is that all that was said there? 49842 January of this year?"
49842Look at that letter; is that your signature at the bottom?
49842March 1 you became a member?
49842May I be allowed to speak? 49842 Now who made the bomb?
49842Now, how close to the alley near Crane Brothers did you stand?
49842Now, taking them in their order, will you state what you heard them say, either on the Lake front or at any hall, regarding the use of force?
49842Now, where did you see the bomb?
49842Now,asked Mr. Ingham,"I''ll ask you if you did not use the term proletariat in the sense in which Socialists always employ that term?"
49842Of the respective meetings?
49842On the evening of May 4 you attended the Haymarket meeting?
49842One of the defendants?
49842Prior to that where did it meet?
49842So he gave you the idea that he could be found out of doors, did he?
49842Tell what happened?
49842That is, the girl had had her day in court and it was no use passing resolutions?
49842That was a revolutionary novel?
49842That was about the time Herr Most came here and delivered some speeches?
49842That was before you came to Chicago?
49842That was where?
49842That you understood to be the French national hymn?
49842The first speaker was Spies, was n''t it?
49842Then how could you see these men if you had your backs to the wall?
49842Then the meeting was opened?
49842Then your memory is better now than it was immediately after the meeting?
49842There then was some boxes on the sidewalk, and you could n''t see?
49842They had seats for them and a table?
49842They were preparing for a revolution by force of arms and by means of dynamite-- but what has that to do with the case? 49842 This is the test: Was the bomb thrown in furtherance of the common design?
49842Those experiments you made were made for your own satisfaction?
49842Was that a liquid?
49842Was that meeting at Baum''s hall a public one?
49842Was that mixture a liquid?
49842Was that selection made by yourself, or upon consultation?
49842Was there any English- speaking group in the city that you know of?
49842Was there any torch on the wagon?
49842Was there anything around that glass tube?
49842Well, how long before the police came did you miss Schnaubelt?
49842Well, how long did you remain there?
49842Were any of the defendants present at that meeting?
49842Were any speeches made by any of the defendants there?
49842Were not reporters generally freely admitted?
49842Were other speeches made at that meeting?
49842Were the arms found there guns and bayonets, or any of them, belonging to you?
49842Were the bullets thick?
49842Were there any perforations on the north side of the pole?
49842Were they sold or given away?
49842Were you a member of any armed section of the socialists of this city?
49842Were you a member of the armed section?
49842Were you at any time connected with any group of the International Workingmen''s Association?
49842Were your antecedents inquired into?
49842What 1st of May?
49842What conversation did you have?
49842What course did you take, doctor, in going out of the alley?
49842What did Fielden say?
49842What did Fielden, Spies and Parsons say there?
49842What did Parsons say in his speech?
49842What did Parsons say?
49842What did Spies say about the police being so many feet away?
49842What did Spies say?
49842What did Spies say?
49842What did he say?
49842What did he say?
49842What did he say?
49842What did you do before you became a detective here? 49842 What did you do next, after leaving the alley?"
49842What did you go into the alley for?
49842What did you hear when the command to disperse was given?
49842What did you say about the price?
49842What did you say?
49842What do you remember of Fielden''s speech?
49842What does he work at?
49842What else did you see?
49842What else happened?
49842What else?
49842What else?
49842What group were you a member of?
49842What group?
49842What happened after it exploded?
49842What is it?
49842What is the next memorandum that you have?
49842What other conversation did you have?
49842What paper are you now working for?
49842What place?
49842What time did you get there?
49842What time did you reach there?
49842What was Fielden''s office in the group of the armed section?
49842What was Parsons''relation to the_ Alarm_?
49842What was it he said?
49842What was said at any time as to when this revolution was to take place-- when was to be the culmination of the conflict?
49842What was said at this meeting?
49842What was the next meeting at which any of the defendants attended?
49842What was the next meeting you had?
49842What was the next meeting?
49842What was the next meeting?
49842What was the next meeting?
49842What was the object of the armed section as was expressed by the members?
49842What was the price?
49842What was the size of the crowd then?
49842What was the tone of voice?
49842What were the conditions of membership? 49842 What were you talking about?"
49842When and where was that?
49842When did the shooting commence?
49842When did they leave?
49842When did you begin attendance at their meetings?
49842When did you cease your connection with them?
49842When did you converse with Engel last, before May 4?
49842When did you first converse with Lingg about this case?
49842When did you learn there was to be a meeting?
49842When did you leave Russia?
49842When did you next hear of it?
49842When did you quit this branch of your business?
49842When did you see Parsons relative to your business, and tell what it was?
49842When did you see him at all for the last time that day?
49842When did you see him last?
49842When did you see this notice?
49842When was the memorandum made that you have of that meeting?
49842When was the next meeting you attended?
49842When was the next meeting?
49842When was the next meeting?
49842When was the next meeting?
49842When was the next meeting?
49842When was the next meeting?
49842When was the next meeting?
49842When was the next meeting?
49842When were you at the Haymarket?
49842When you joined the armed section did that require any special contribution?
49842When you joined this organization did it cost you anything?
49842When?
49842Where did he go after the bomb exploded?
49842Where did it come from?
49842Where did you attend meetings?
49842Where did you dodge?
49842Where did you go after finishing your speech?
49842Where did you go to?
49842Where did you go when you left the meeting?
49842Where did you go?
49842Where did you live before you went to Rau''s house?
49842Where did you meet Albright?
49842Where does he live?
49842Where does he work?
49842Where is your house in Portage City?
49842Where is your wife now?
49842Where usually did the American group meet before the time you ceased your connection with it?
49842Where was Spies then?
49842Where was that?
49842Where were you in that line of march?
49842Where were you on May 4, in the evening?
49842Where?
49842Where?
49842Whereabouts?
49842Which man is Spies?
49842Who did he mean by''they''?
49842Who did he say was at his place May 4?
49842Who drilled you?
49842Who had charge of the distribution of it?
49842Who is he?
49842Who spoke?
49842Who was present at that meeting?
49842Who was speaking then?
49842Who was this man that brought the circulars?
49842Who was with you at the time?
49842Who were present?
49842Whom did you see on the speaker''s wagon at the Haymarket?
49842Whom of the defendants do you know that were in that association or society before you left it?
49842Why, then, did you go in the alley?
49842Will you show me the place in your report where this is said?
49842Yet you did n''t run?
49842Yet you saw the bomb in the air and heard the explosion but you did not talk to any one about what you saw?
49842You are a stockholder in the_ Alarm_ company?
49842You are only picking out speeches made by the defendants?
49842You are sure Spies said that?
49842You are sure of that?
49842You are welcome, Dr. Bolton,he said;"pray, what can I do for you?"
49842You came here with a letter of introduction to Spies?
49842You contributed money to that organization?
49842You did not know of the presence of a dynamite bomb or anything of that kind in the crowd?
49842You did not take your eye off him for a single minute?
49842You expected that you would be arrested?
49842You have for the last two or three years been making speeches of Socialistic and Anarchistic character?
49842You heard Fielden say:''While we march toward the Board of Trade we will sing the Marseillaise hymn?''
49842You just paid your ten cents and were received?
49842You know Justus Schwab? 49842 You lived with Balthazar Rau here, though, on May 4?"
49842You lived with Schwab in New York?
49842You looked over your head all the time?
49842You were a Nihilist in Russia?
49842You were asked to speak there?
49842You were speaking when the police came up, and were making no inflammatory speech?
49842You were young enough then to want to live?
49842You wrote the word''Ruhe''for insertion in the_ Arbeiter Zeitung_ May 4?
49842Your bedroom was searched, was n''t it?
49842''Now, a word more boys, and we will go home''?"
49842*** Is life worth living?
49842*** What is Anarchy?
49842--"The question was:''Would the destruction of private property assist universal co- operation?''
49842--"Was that an open meeting?"
49842--"Was there any precaution taken?"
49842106 Randolph street--""What is the name of that, Jung''s hall?"
49842107 Fifth avenue?"
49842And if they had satisfied you of that, was it not still thrown by one of the Anarchists-- one of the conspirators?
49842And what are the causes that have preceded it, and have brought me into this court?
49842And what are the reasons for it?
49842And what does this history teach us?
49842And would not the rabble as if by magic be inflamed with revolutionary passion?"
49842Are you an Anarchist as you understand that term?"
49842Are you an Anarchist?"
49842As a fitting climax to this damnable conspiracy against our lives and liberty, what follows?
49842As to the Haymarket meeting, was it not a lawful assemblage?
49842Black--"Does your Honor overrule the motion?"
49842Black--"Which matter was put off?"
49842But did he encourage the men at McCormick''s to violence?
49842But how?
49842But who called this meeting?
49842Can anything be more diabolical?
49842Can you roll back the incoming tide or angry waves of old ocean by forbidding it to dash upon the shore?
49842Cross- examined by Mr. Foster:--"Where were you before you came here?"
49842Did Fielden shoot that night?
49842Did Lingg say anything about the use of those bombs?"
49842Did the law protect you when McCormick closed the doors of his factory and left you and your wives and children to starve?
49842Did the law protect you when the police shot down your brothers at McCormick''s?
49842Did they kill Matthias J. Degan, for which act they were specifically indicted?
49842Did you make any examination of the neighborhood?"
49842Did you see one?"
49842Do I not live where you have tried to pierce in vain?
49842Do n''t you know that the militia are under arms and a Gatling gun is ready to mow you down?
49842Do not the circumstances,"continued Captain Black,"prove that August Spies was not aware of the meeting held May 3?
49842Do you not see that the clouds on the social firmament are thickening?
49842H. E. O. Heineman, formerly a reporter on the_ Arbeiter Zeitung_, was asked:"Mr. Heineman, you were formerly an Internationalist?"
49842Have I had a fair trial?
49842Have you all prepared yourselves with knives, pistols, guns and dynamite for the unavoidable conflict between labor and capital?"
49842He got excited, and cried:''What good are those flowers to me?
49842He was asked:"Do you know any of the defendants in this case?"
49842How long after the cloud came up and the crowd thinned out did you see him?"
49842I also said:''There has been found other weapons like this sharpened dagger; how is it you come to carry this?''
49842I have never read Herr Most''s book simply because I do n''t find time to read it; and if I had read it, what of it?
49842I said:''Why do n''t you use guns instead of dynamite?''
49842I think he knew me and said:''What kind of---- business is this?
49842If a sacrifice of life there must be, will not my life suffice?
49842If they drilled after that?"
49842In a low voice the Judge asked:"Gentlemen, have you agreed?"
49842In conclusion, General Butler said:"May I, in closing, make one observation?
49842Is it any the less treason because seven men are killed and sixty wounded?
49842Is it credible?
49842Is that credible?
49842Is that credible?
49842Is that fact proved?
49842Is that improbable?
49842Is that true?"
49842Is there an express line to the place?
49842Is this justice?
49842Is this law?
49842It was n''t an organization where you drilled, was it?"
49842Mr. Grinnell asked:"Do you know any of the defendants?"
49842Mr. Grinnell passed over to witness a bundle of papers and asked:"Have you in your hand a report of the meeting of the 22d of February, 1885?"
49842Mr. Grinnell--"In any_ other_ legitimate business?"
49842Mr. Grinnell--"What is your business?"
49842Mr. Grinnell--"When was the next meeting?"
49842Mr. Grinnell--"Who drilled that company that night?"
49842Mr. Ingham then took up the cross- examination:"How did you come to go to the Haymarket, doctor?"
49842Mr. Salomon--"A meeting of what?"
49842Mr. Zeisler continued:"Who are their principal witnesses?
49842My friends, the labor agitators, and the marshals of a demonstration-- was it a crime to be marshal of a demonstration?
49842Now, if the law is on trial, and the government is on trial, who has placed it upon trial?
49842Now, you did n''t have any passwords, did you?
49842Now, your Honor, can you deny that there is such a thing in the world as the labor question?
49842Now, your Honor, what is passion?
49842Oh, you people who speak thus,_ can_ you not, or_ will_ you not, read the signs of the time?
49842On January 22, 1886, an editorial asked:"How can the eight- hour day be brought about?
49842On the direct examination, Captain Black asked:"How old are you?"
49842Or is there another way possible?
49842Or maybe you think the people do not understand your motives?
49842Parsons said:''Look here, boys, why ca n''t we make a raid some night on the militia armory?
49842Perhaps you think I do not know what for?
49842Remember, Spies, a man of brains, of more than average brains; would he light the match that fired that bomb, and the police almost upon him?
49842Rests not a nook for me to dwell, in every heart, and every brain?"
49842Reynolds,"says Mr. Grinnell,"was Parsons pointed out to you, or did you not point out the man you had seen before?"
49842She is a woman; why should I not suffer?
49842Some one asked:''What does the landlord do with the money?''
49842Spies at all that night?"
49842Spies introduced resolutions in sympathy with a girl?"
49842Spies said:''What is the use of passing resolutions?
49842Spies that night?"
49842Spies two blocks, then return with him?"
49842Spies?"
49842Such order as represented by police and detectives?
49842Taking somebody else''s property?
49842The German portion differed from the above mainly in the following passage:"_ Why?
49842The only question was,"Are these things testimony?"
49842The police were called, but why?
49842Their methods were dangerous, but why were they not stopped at inception?
49842Then his wife said:''Papa, see what trouble you''ve got yourself into; why have n''t you stopped this nonsense?''
49842Then, if that were true, would he run the risk of lighting the bomb?
49842Think you the people are blind, are asleep, are indifferent?
49842This man with his revolver a foot long and his file dagger with a groove?
49842Was Luther Payne or Mrs. Surratt held guilty when in the execution of a conspiracy President Lincoln was killed?
49842Was it a lie, or was it the truth that we stated?
49842Was that one of these ordinary opening meetings?"
49842Was there anybody who would throw a bomb except a Socialist?
49842Was this Germany, or Russia, or Spain?
49842Was this courageous, or was it cowardly?
49842Was this man in the conspiracy?"
49842Was this man[ pointing to Fischer] in this conspiracy for murder?
49842Were you ever in any legitimate business?"
49842Were you ever there?"
49842What are the real facts of that Haymarket tragedy?
49842What are their purposes in thus murdering these men?
49842What do the people say to this verdict?
49842What do you mean by that term?"
49842What editor?"
49842What have you to say?''
49842What if they did?"
49842What is Socialism, briefly stated?
49842What is Socialism?
49842What is anarchy?
49842What is crime, anyhow?
49842What is the answer to all this?
49842What is this groove for?
49842What is this order?
49842What proofs have been brought in support of it?
49842What were your words in reference to snails and worms, and the idea that you now remember?"
49842When he asked:"Shall we be revenged on Bonfield, Grinnell, Gary, and Oglesby?"
49842When were they in possession of any of the defendants?
49842When were they prepared and filled at the house of any of the defendants, or any of their associates?
49842Where did you find them?"
49842Where, then, is the connection between these speeches and the murder of Degan?
49842Who did you want to see?"
49842Who first broke the laws?
49842Who is the man that has the cheek to tell us that human development has already reached its culminating point?
49842Who was Schnaubelt?
49842Why did n''t we bring him on the stand?
49842Why did n''t you use more bombs?"
49842Why is the education of the working classes to- day looked upon by a certain class as treason against the State?
49842Why?
49842Why?
49842Why?
49842Will this do any good?
49842With reference to that terrible night who will not with me adopt the following language:"When can their glory fade?"
49842Would not society be wild with fright?
49842Would we not stand up and say that this man must be tried by a fair and impartial jury?
49842Yes?
49842You had letters sent to his address?"
49842You know Herr Most?"
49842[ Illustration]"What was your state of mind?"
49842he cried,"may I be allowed the privilege of speech even at the last moment?
49842he wrote;"the monster has been executed,"etc., and yet this"monster"(?)
49842to arms!''?"
7303''And the people answered,How shall we go about to do this thing, for it seemeth good to us?"
7303''And when the capitalists saw that the water overflowed, they said to the people:''"See ye not the tank, which is the Market, doth overflow?
7303''But the people answered, saying:How can we buy unless ye hire us, for how else shall we have wherewithal to buy?
7303Am I to understand that maternity now is unattended with risk or suffering?
7303Am I to understand that there was actually no violent doings in connection with this great transformation?
7303Am I to understand,I asked,"that this is a fair sample of your youth, and not a picked assembly of the more athletic?"
7303Am I to understand,I finally inquired,"that handwriting, and the reading of it, like lock- making, is a lost art?"
7303And are there really cases,I said,"of individuals who thus voluntarily abandon society in preference to fulfilling their social duty?"
7303And can you take your vacation when you please?
7303And did interest represent any economic service to the community on the part of the interest taker in lending his money?
7303And did the European nations fare as well when they passed through the same crisis?
7303And did the people elect the capitalists?
7303And do I understand that there was no compulsion upon anybody to join the public service?
7303And do not these shoes leak in winter?
7303And do you mean to say that there are actually no locksmiths to- day who could open this safe?
7303And has it not occurred to you to wonder why our dress was not like theirs-- why we wear skirts and they do not?
7303And how about other things besides land?
7303And how was it with the men?
7303And so you thought I was shirking? 7303 And the majority, I understand, were the poor, not the rich-- the ones who had the wrong side of the inequalities that prevailed?"
7303And there was no war?
7303And was it only among the wage- earners and the small producers that this glut of men existed?
7303And was this a very large cause of waste?
7303And were they then, at last, enlisted by force?
7303And were you the only person whose property came to him by descent without effort of his own?
7303And what is that?
7303And what was that?
7303And what was that?
7303And what was that?
7303And why would they have lacked employment? 7303 And would you call that voluntary service?
7303And you say this amazing depopulation took place at once after the Revolution?
7303Are there any public baths open so late as this?
7303Are these stuffy- looking papers what you used to call wealth?
7303Are you, then, a magician?
7303At about what date,I asked,"do you consider that the revolutionary movement began to pass from the incoherent into the logical phase?"
7303Beyond protecting the capitalist system from its own effects, did the political government do absolutely nothing?
7303But does not the reputation of particular teachers attract students to special universities?
7303But how about the care of children, of the home, etc.?
7303But how about the children?
7303But how about the elaborate statistics on which you base the calculations that guide production? 7303 But how about the married women?"
7303But how about the workmen employed by the capitalists in ministering to their luxuries? 7303 But how do you get it up to this level?"
7303But how is the duty of society to safeguard the lives of its members interfered with when one person, has more capital than another?
7303But is it possible that Edith has not shown you the electroscope?
7303But the citizen also has relations with the public stores from which he supplies his needs?
7303But to the diminution, I suspect, of the picturesqueness of the social panorama?
7303But was he as well off? 7303 But what became of the churches and the clergy when the people found out what blind guides they had been?"
7303But what do you do with such persons?
7303But what has become of all the diamonds and rubies and emeralds, and gold and silver jewels?
7303But what is this that he has been telling you?
7303But what was there,I said,"about 1873 which has led historians to take it as the date from which to reckon the beginning of the Revolution?"
7303But when was the use of animals for food discontinued?
7303But where are the cripples, the deformed, the feeble, the consumptive?
7303But who paid for the votes?
7303But why did not the people elect officials and representatives of their own class, who would look out for the interests of the masses?
7303But why do you attribute this miracle,I exclaimed,"for miracle it seems, to the effect of economic equality on the relation of men and women?"
7303But why not?
7303But would not the rate of profits have been much reduced in the case supposed?
7303But you certainly do not use paper kettles? 7303 But, after all, who was it who started and kept up the quarreling over religion in former days?"
7303But-- but,I exclaimed,"what if it should come on to rain on these paper clothes?
7303By what is the possible production of wealth limited?
7303By whom, then, were they appointed?
7303CAN A MAID FORGET HER ORNAMENTS?
7303Certainly, if you say so,said I, with a shiver,"but are you sure that it is not a trifle cool?
7303Come, doctor,I protested,"do n''t you think a man in my position has enough riddles to guess, without making them up for him?"
7303Did it buy them of the owners, or as to the plants did it build them?
7303Did not men who owned property in a country-- a millionaire, for instance, like myself-- have a stake in it?
7303Did the new order get into full running condition so quickly as that?
7303Did this rent represent any economic service of any sort rendered to the community by the rent receiver?
7303Did you think we were going to give you your death?
7303Do not the histories say so?
7303Do you know, Mr. West,said the former,"it strikes us as very odd that you should have that idea?
7303Do you know, my boy,he said,"it is not often that the whirligig of Time brings round his revenges in quite so dramatic a way as this?"
7303Do you know,I said presently,"that one feature which is missing from the landscape impresses me quite as much as any that it presents?"
7303Do you mean my dress?
7303Do you mean that a form of government which seems to have been the most irresponsible and despotic possible was defended in the name of liberty?
7303Do you mean that the whole United States is laid out in this way?
7303Do you mean that they also are made of paper?
7303Do you mean that you really are afraid you will dream of the old times again?
7303Do you mean that you take regular exercise in a gymnasium?
7303Do you see that snakelike cord trailing away over the broken ground behind each machine? 7303 Do you see that young man yonder in the chair with so many of the others about him?"
7303Does that list exhaust the number of women''s occupations in your day?
7303Evidently,I said,"these are plows, but what drives them?"
7303For example?
7303From what source?
7303HOW COULD WE INDEED?
7303Has this belief,I asked,"been thus far practically confirmed by any progress actually made in the assurance of what is true as to these things?
7303Have n''t you some real money to show us,said Edith,"something besides these papers-- some gold and silver such as they have at the museum?"
7303Have we had enough of economics for the day?
7303Have you any idea,I asked,"how much this credit of$ 4,000 would have been equal to in purchasing power in 1887?"
7303Have you ever looked over any of the treatises which our forefathers called political economies, at the Historical Library?
7303How about public holidays; have you abandoned them?
7303How about the condition of the masses in a country thus reduced to commercial vassalage to the capitalists of another country? 7303 How about the women?"
7303How could it have been true?
7303How did the Government acquire the lands and manufacturing plants it needed?
7303How did the capitalists resist inventions?
7303How did they make that out?
7303How do you make that out?
7303How does our banking system strike you as compared with that of your day?
7303How does the integrated character of the economic system affect our attitude toward improvements or inventions of any sort in economic processes?
7303How far does this park extend?
7303How long does this public gymnastic education last?
7303How long is it since people ceased to call themselves Catholics, Protestants, Baptists, Methodists, and so on?
7303How near was the world-- that is, of course, the nations whose industrial evolution had gone farthest-- to this condition when the Revolution came?
7303How so, precisely?
7303How so?
7303How too late?
7303How was it in the United States?
7303How?
7303I beg your pardon,she said, raising her eyebrows a little,"what did I understand you to ask for?"
7303I should suppose so, but why, then, did the poor so eagerly seek to serve the rich when the rich refused with scorn to serve one another? 7303 I suppose you refer to competition?"
7303I understand that in your day hay was the main crop of New England?
7303If all the landlords and money lenders had died over night, would it have made any difference to the world?
7303If men go on,I said,"growing at this rate in the knowledge of divine things and the sharing of the divine life, what will they yet come to?"
7303If, then, the majority did not like any existing arrangement, or think it to their advantage, they could change it as radically as they wished?
7303In just what way,I asked,"did the new order tend to decrease exchanges with foreign countries?"
7303In short,said I,"while under our system we conformed men to things, you think it more reasonable to conform things to men?"
7303In such a race, which crew was likely to fare worse, that of the winning or the losing galley?
7303In what respect, then, were the rich and poor equal?
7303In what way did this law operate?
7303Is it possible that Dr. Leete has not told you of our universal language?
7303Is it possible that the improvement had been so small that there could be a question raised whether there had been any at all?
7303Is it possible you have not guessed that? 7303 Is it possible,"I exclaimed,"that you mean to say people no longer quarrel over religion?
7303Is she to compete in anything?
7303Is this Arlington the same town that was a suburb of the city in my time?
7303It sounds like a riddle, does n''t it? 7303 It sounds so, does n''t it?
7303May I ask what kind of rings, for what sort of use?
7303May not production fall short of possible consumption? 7303 Meanwhile, you see that great building with the dome just across the square?
7303No doubt,I said,"since you preserve our churches as curiosities, you must have better ones of your own for use?"
7303Not wash them!--why not?
7303Now tell us about interest; what was that?
7303Now, what is the explanation? 7303 Of course,"replied the superintendent,"but did it not have the same in your day?
7303Of what use indeed was it that coal had been discovered, when there were still as many fireless homes as ever? 7303 On the other hand, what were the theory and practice pursued by the capitalists in carrying on the economic machinery which were under their control?
7303Opportunities for what?
7303Said not the serpent in the old story,''If you eat of the fruit of the tree of knowledge you shall be as gods''? 7303 Should you have supposed that it would so operate?"
7303Since you furnish so much on public or common account, why not furnish everything in that way? 7303 So much for the intellectual qualities that marked the victors in the race for wealth under the miscalled competitive system; what of the moral?
7303Talking about housework,I said,"how did they manage about houses?
7303Talking of paper,said Edith, extending a very trim foot by way of attracting attention to its gear,"what do you think of our modern shoes?"
7303Tell us, Julian,said the doctor,"did the rich go to one another and ask the privilege of being one another''s servants or employees?"
7303Tell us, Robert, did not our ancestors recognize the facts of the situation you have described? 7303 That is to say, one sex paid too much attention to dress and the other too little?"
7303That means, I suppose, that rubbers too as articles of wear have been sent to the museum?
7303The Greater Self-- what does that mean?
7303The least progressive of arts? 7303 Then anybody can set the fashion?"
7303Then if not, and if the examination is to begin in five minutes, are we not likely to be late?
7303Then, on the whole, competition was not a palliative of the profit system?
7303This, you say, is what the nineteenth- century economists themselves taught concerning the outcome of the profit system?
7303To what cause did they ascribe the crises?
7303To what has the struggle of the nations for foreign markets in the nineteenth century been aptly compared?
7303To what have our historians been wo nt to compare the condition of the community under the profit system?
7303Very good,said the doctor;"it will doubtless be very short, and what do you say to attending it this time in person?
7303Was it meant by this expression that there had been actually more food, clothing, and other good things produced than the people could use?
7303Was this so before the great Revolution?
7303Well, and has not such a collection a value to the student of history?
7303Well, to begin with,I said, as the dome of the Statehouse caught my eye,"what on earth have you stuck up there?
7303Were adulteration and scamped work the only devices by which sham reductions of prices was effected?
7303Were farmers the only class of small capitalists who were injured rather than helped by labor- saving machinery?
7303What are the other things that would not be equal?
7303What are you thinking about?
7303What caused the change? 7303 What did that mean?"
7303What do you do?
7303What do you mean by the great bonfire?
7303What do you mean?
7303What do you mean?
7303What do you suppose it is made of?
7303What have you to say of the moral aspect of this expenditure for luxury?
7303What is Edith''s specialty?
7303What is in the safe?
7303What is it that is missing?
7303What is it?
7303What is that about Masters of the Bread?
7303What is that building which we are just passing over that has so much glass about it?
7303What is that you say?
7303What is that?
7303What is that?
7303What is the ranking?
7303What is the topic they discuss?
7303What is the use of going further?
7303What is this mystery? 7303 What is this?"
7303What name did our ancestors give to the various economic disturbances which they ascribed to overproduction?
7303What sort of a feeling?
7303What was rent?
7303What was the excuse?
7303What was the general economic effect of competition?
7303What was the general effect of rent and interest upon the consumption and consequently the production of wealth by the community?
7303What was the idea of it?
7303What was the market?
7303What was the reforesting?
7303What was the term by which they most commonly described the presence in the market of more products than could be sold?
7303What were some of the modes of luxurious expenditure indulged in by the capitalists?
7303What were the methods which the capitalists engaged in production and exchange made use of to bring trade their way, as they used to say?
7303What, on the other hand, will happen if I run through my credit before the year is out?
7303What, on the other hand, would be the effect on consumption of an unequal division of consumable products?
7303Where had the progress been?
7303Who are these?
7303Who is to be the new teacher?
7303Who were they?
7303Why any more than a woman''s?
7303Why could not the world receive earlier the revelation it seems to find so easy of comprehension now?
7303Why did the peace require such a great amount of keeping? 7303 Why not?"
7303Why not?
7303Why should I not? 7303 Why so?"
7303Why then?
7303Why, yes; it is a man''s dress I suppose, is it not?
7303Would not the judges even ask me by what right or title of ownership I claimed my wealth?
7303Would such a thing be possible nowadays as full storehouses and a hungry and naked people existing at the same time?
7303Yes,I said,"it is indeed all there, but why were we so long in seeing it?"
7303You are easily the mistress of my waking thoughts,I said;"but can you rule my sleeping mind as well?"
7303You mean garments made of sheep''s hair? 7303 You mean that it was only the pressure of want or the fear of it that drove the poor to the point of becoming the servants of the rich?"
7303''If a man love not his brother whom he hath seen, how shall he love God whom he hath not seen?''
7303--Now, Frank, will you tell us exactly what this proposition means?"
7303Am I saying too much, Julian?"
7303And they said:"''"Behold, what need have ye at all of these capitalists, that ye should yield them profits upon your labor?
7303And were the rich and poor equal in the courts?
7303And why have ye no money?
7303Are they the faces of philosophers?
7303Are ye not our men to do our embassies?"
7303Besides, what is the need?
7303But am I wrong in assuming that ill health was a general condition among your women?
7303But how about the economic operation of this plan?"
7303But the capitalists said to the people:"Shall we hire you to bring water when the tank, which is the Market, doth already overflow?
7303But the capitalists, you say, did not even pretend to feel any responsibility for the welfare of their subjects?"
7303But was it true that all had equal opportunities for getting rich and bettering themselves?"
7303But what assumption could have been more regardless of facts than this?
7303But what is the use of lengthening a list which might be made interminable?
7303But who, think you, were the true friends and champions of private property?
7303But, for that matter, how do you prepare soles of paper that will last?"
7303Ca n''t you tell us,"I added, turning to the superintendent--"how do you moderns diagnose the fashion mania that made our lives such a burden to us?"
7303Can it be that God sends sweeter souls to earth now that the world is so much fitter for them?
7303Can you forgive us, Julian, for taking such an advantage of your ignorance?"
7303Can you reassure us on this point?"
7303Could there conceivably be but one answer to that question?
7303Curious, is n''t it, when one comes to think of it, that the riper civilization has grown, the more perishable its records have become?
7303Did it never occur to you why the families of the well- to- do and cultured in your day were not larger?"
7303Did our great- grandfathers recognize in this excess of goods over buyers a cause of economic disturbance?"
7303Did the individual pursuit of riches under your system necessarily tend to increase the aggregate wealth of the community?
7303Did they not see that this glut of men indicated something out of order in the social arrangements?"
7303Did they receive the same treatment?"
7303Did this first and essential condition of any true competitive struggle characterize the competitive system of your day?"
7303Do I understand that this modern religion is considered by you to be the same doctrine Christ taught?"
7303Do n''t tell me that they have been given up, like wool?"
7303Do tell us what the secret was, Julian?"
7303Do you consider that you really know more about them than we did, or that you know more positively the things which we merely tried to believe?"
7303Do you know that this new social order of which I have so strangely become a witness has hitherto had something of this mirage effect?
7303Do you mean to say that the competition of capitalists for trade never operated to reduce profits?"
7303Do you remember his name?"
7303Do you see the inference?"
7303Do you see the point?"
7303Do you suppose we want to be shut up here forever?"
7303Do you think you would ever have guessed that?"
7303Does not that imply, practically, a governmental control or initiative in fashions of dress?"
7303Doth nothing come out of much?"
7303Doth plenty breed famine?
7303Doubtless I am overlooking some important fact, but did you not say that all the people, at least all the men, had a voice in the government?"
7303Finally, what is implied in the equal right of all to the pursuit of happiness?
7303Fine- looking young people, are they not?
7303HOW ABOUT THE WOMEN?
7303Had you not noticed that you were offered no such food?"
7303Has that process gone on, or has it possibly been reversed?"
7303Has the sculptor idealized them?
7303Have I erred in describing the working of your system in this particular, Julian?"
7303Have we not painted too black a picture?
7303Have you anything to say on that point beyond what has been said?"
7303Have you reflected that if I had dreamed it all you would have had no existence save as a figment in the brain of a sleeping man a hundred years ago?"
7303How can men be free who must ask the right to labor and to live from their fellow- men and seek their bread from the hands of others?
7303How cometh it that ye may not come by the water in the tank?
7303How could we ever bring ourselves to eat you?''
7303How do you manage that now?"
7303How does this theory agree with the facts stated in the histories?"
7303How else could it have assessed and collected taxes or exacted a dozen other duties from citizens?
7303How is it about that?"
7303How is it that our profits are become unprofitable to us, and our gains do make us poor?
7303How many of the great fortunes heaped up by the self- made men of your day, Julian, would have stood that test?"
7303How was he going to go about it?
7303How was it in this respect under the rule of the rich?
7303How was it settled who should have the good houses and who the poor?"
7303How was that managed?
7303How was that?"
7303How were they able to make so much trouble?"
7303I asked,"that the workers in each trade regulate for themselves the conditions of their particular occupation?"
7303I sincerely hope you will forgive me, in consideration of my motive, and not----""Not what?"
7303I whispered-- for, in spite of his assurance, I could not realize that they did not hear me--"are we here or there?"
7303If she ever was his equal, why did she cease to become so, and by a rule so universal?
7303If such a person should flatly refuse to render any sort of industrial or useful service on any terms, what would be done with him?
7303In that case what was the result?"
7303Is it not because ye have no money?
7303Is it not so?"
7303Is not that what we have been talking about?"
7303Is that too much to say?
7303Is that what you mean?"
7303Just when was it discontinued?''
7303May not the demand for consumption exceed the resources of production?"
7303Most of the farmers of the West were pulling in it toward the end of the nineteenth century.--Was it not so, Julian?
7303No doubt there is a compulsory side to your system for dealing with such persons?"
7303Now can the English workman live on less wages than before?
7303Now tell us, Julian, was your million dollars the result of your economic ability, the fruit of your industry?"
7303Now what could an apologist of private capitalism and the profit system possibly have to say about the science of wealth?
7303Now, Emily, what would be the natural effect of such a lack of correspondence between the inlet and the outlet capacity of the cistern?"
7303Now, did the capital wasted in these two ways represent all that the profit system cost the people?"
7303Now, how do you account for that?
7303Now, is it not possible that we have done it injustice?
7303Now, the making of garments is carried on, I suppose, like all your other industries, as public business, under collective management, is it not?"
7303Now, were not our clergymen justified in counting on the continued support of women, whatever the men might do?"
7303Now, what notable characteristic and main feature of the business system of our forefathers resulted from the glut thus produced?"
7303Now, what will compel the people to exercise vigilance as to the public administration?
7303On what ground would you refuse to return me my million, for I assume that you would refuse?"
7303Presently she said:"What were we talking about?
7303See ye not how by this means the tank must overflow, being filled by that ye lack and made to abound out of your emptiness?
7303Shall you consider it impertinent if I try to make the matter a little clearer to them?"
7303Tell me, were the families of the well- to- do and cultured class in the America of your day, as a whole, large?"
7303That would have made a more difficult problem to deal with, would it not?"
7303The prospect of rising as a motive to reconcile the wage- earner or the poor man in general to his subjection, what did it amount to?
7303The question first suggested by this statement is: To whom, to what class did these contrasts tend to make life more amusing?
7303To their question, Who was to pay them for what the people had taken from them?
7303To what was this outburst of inventive genius due?"
7303To whom, then, properly belongs that two hundredfold enhancement of the value of every one''s labor which is owing to the social organism?"
7303Was it a conviction that health would be favored by avoiding flesh?"
7303Was it because the poor so loved the rich?"
7303Was it necessarily worse than the condition of the masses of the superior country?"
7303Was it not so?"
7303Was it your statesmen, perchance your economists, your scholars, or any other of your so- called wise men?
7303Was the old system of property distribution, by which the few held the many in servitude through fear of starvation, an exception to this rule?
7303Was this claim well based?"
7303Was this of the same nature?"
7303Well might Americans say to themselves''If such things are done in the green tree, what shall be done in the dry?''
7303Were not the odds against him far greater in the latter struggle than they could have been, if he were a tolerably good shot, in the former?
7303Were they bigoted also?
7303Were they tools of the ecclesiastics?"
7303What are you turning so red for?"
7303What chattel- slave system ever made a record of such wastefulness of human life, as that?
7303What could be expected save what resulted-- a dwarfed and enfeebled physique and a semi- invalid existence?
7303What did I say to the theater for that evening?
7303What did the new order do with them?
7303What did the world, as a rule, think of the great fortune- makers of your time?
7303What do you see down there to suggest a question?"
7303What do you suppose, now, this costume of mine cost?"
7303What great thing do they wherefore ye render them this tribute?
7303What has Julian been telling you?"
7303What have you to say as to the merits of this controversy?"
7303What is liberty?
7303What is life without its material basis, and what is an equal right to life but a right to an equal material basis for it?
7303What is that ground?"
7303What is the difficulty?"
7303What need for excuses or defenders had a system so deeply based in usage and antiquity as this?
7303What sort of human types did they represent?
7303What useful work could have been got out of such people as we were, however well disposed we might have become to render service?
7303What was competition and what caused it, referring especially to the competition between capitalists?"
7303What was his plan?"
7303What was luxury?"
7303What was that?"
7303What was the basis of final settlement?"
7303What was there about the old system of private capitalism to account for a_ fiasco_ so tremendous?"
7303What was to be left even to the next generation?"
7303What were the facts?"
7303What were the other two?"
7303What were the qualities and practices which the successful seeker after great wealth must systematically cultivate and follow?
7303What wonder that their riches became a badge of ignominy and their victory their shame?
7303Where could we have been fitted into any sort of industrial service without being more hindrance than help?"
7303Who indeed would not have been impatient in their place, and cried as they did,''How long, O Lord, how long?''
7303Who settles the question what you shall wear?"
7303Who was there to fight on the other side?
7303Why add reproach to the burden of such a failure as that?
7303Why are they not mine now, and why should they not be returned to me?''
7303Why did n''t I feel that way about the duty of working in the nineteenth century?
7303Why did n''t it keep itself, as it does now?"
7303Why did not the farmer, as a sort of capitalist, pile up his profits on labor- saving machinery like the other capitalists?"
7303Why did their censures effect no change?"
7303Why do you laugh?
7303Why not?
7303Why should we not?
7303Why so?"
7303Why was this?"
7303Will it be said that at least the later theory of inheritance was more humane, although one- sided?
7303Will ye mock us?
7303Will you tell me who or what sets the fashions?"
7303Wo n''t you please tell me, then, what they meant by calling themselves free and equal?"
7303Would they not have been thrown out of work if luxury had been given up?"
7303Would they not melt, and at a little strain would they not part?"
7303You are Julian West?"
7303exclaimed Mr. Barton, when I told him this;"who would have expected it?
7303he asked as we left the house,"or would you like to attend the afternoon session the teacher spoke of?"
7303how can you possibly warm such great bodies of water, which are so constantly renewed, especially in winter?"
7303no, why should they?
7303said I,"do n''t you write letters any more?"
7303said the doctor,"what has so suddenly dried up the fountains of your pity?
7303there is then at least one invalid?"
7303why not?"
7303why should we give you of the water which we have gathered, for then we should become even as ye are, and perish with you?
34406A Bible? 34406 A jigger?
34406A pickpocket? 34406 A what?"
34406About what, George?
34406Against the ethics of the trade, I suppose?
34406Ai n''t been out long, have you?
34406Ai n''t you got no shoes?
34406Alexander Ossipovitch,he addresses me in his courtly manner,"your mother is very ill. Are you alone with her?"
34406Alive?
34406Am I in your thoughts, dear?
34406An''why do n''t you believe it?
34406And what?
34406And you are an agent of a New York employment firm?
34406And you gave the name''Alexander Berkman''to gain access?
34406And you prefer that to being honest?
34406And your father?
34406Any chance here, Wingie?
34406Are there no women on the road?
34406Are you a Homestead striker?
34406Are you crooning Sasha to sleep, Philo?
34406Are you going to refuse work?
34406Are you hurt, Madge?
34406Are you locked up''for cause''?
34406Are you really so dumb? 34406 Are you thieves?"
34406Awake, Sasha?
34406Bad shot, ai n''t you?
34406Been kickin''?
34406Billy, have you ever read anything about Nihilists?
34406But ca n''t I have something to read now?
34406But on what ground did they dismiss your application? 34406 But the letter, Chaplain?"
34406Ca n''t be a prisoner?
34406Ca n''t talk, eh? 34406 Can you read?"
34406Can you show credentials or a union card?
34406Catholic?
34406Coffee you call it? 34406 D''ye mean t''tell me you work?"
34406Damn your soul t''hell,the officer rages,"do n''t you know better than to bother me when I''m counting, eh?
34406Dead?
34406Did any one see the man fall?
34406Did n''t like it outside, Red?
34406Did n''t the branch break?
34406Did n''t they write that I tried to jump over the wall-- it''s about thirty feet high-- and that the guard shot me in the leg?
34406Did n''t you tell Cosson you were in Sing Sing, not in Columbus?
34406Did the lady from New York have a permit?
34406Do I? 34406 Do I?
34406Do n''t you know it''s wrong to fight, my little man?
34406Do n''t you know me, Mr. Berkman? 34406 Do you care much for me, Felipe?"
34406Do you know where you are?
34406Do you mean there are no honest men?
34406Do you plead guilty or not guilty?
34406Do you think, Mr. Hopkins, Jasper could eat the apple in two bites?
34406Do you think-- mine nice?
34406Do you wish to say something, Colonel?
34406Doctor, I seem to be gettin''worser, and I''m afraid--"What''s the trouble?
34406Economic necessity--has Socialism pierced the prison walls?
34406Ever had syphilis?
34406Feelin''better to- day, Charley?
34406Forgotten? 34406 Foxy, ai n''t you?
34406From Pittsburgh?
34406Gallagher?
34406Get you pard''n, in two, three years may be, see? 34406 Go an''take a-- thump to yourself, will you?"
34406Good job, Doc?
34406Got your answer ready?
34406Has anything happened? 34406 Have you anything to say why sentence should not be passed upon you?"
34406Have you heard Most?
34406Have you read it?
34406Have you the essay?
34406Hello, Berk, ai n''t you glad t''see an old pal?
34406Hey, you, Wilson, what are you after?
34406Hm, what''s this?
34406Ho, ho, playing the old game, are you? 34406 Honest?
34406How are you, Reddie?
34406How are your eyes?
34406How big is the stump?
34406How can you love a boy?
34406How dare you leave it without permission?
34406How did Johnny take it?
34406How did he do it?
34406How did he manage to get away in stripes? 34406 How do you happen here, Dan?
34406How do_ you_ happen to be here?
34406How long are you doing?
34406How long did you serve there?
34406How long have you been locked up this time?
34406How much time have you yet?
34406How old were you then?
34406How so?
34406How so?
34406How''re you, Aleck?
34406How''s he doing?
34406How''try me,''Wingie?
34406How, good luck?
34406How, your kid?
34406How? 34406 I am sorry,"he continues,"they gave you such a long sentence, Mr. Berkman, but--""How do you know my name?"
34406I understand you asked for some water?
34406I was, was I? 34406 I''ll jimmy you damn carcass for you,"the old man bellows, angrily,"Where th''hell are you?"
34406In free America?
34406In the old prison, then?
34406Is he as bad as all that, Red?
34406Is he? 34406 Is it serious, Philo?"
34406Is it true, Bob? 34406 Is n''t there a Bible in your cell?"
34406Is that all?
34406Is that right, Billy?
34406Is that true, Doctor?
34406Is that you, Aleck? 34406 Is there any chance now through the roof?"
34406Is there any hope later on, Aleck?
34406Is this the celebrated prisoner?
34406Is yo sick, Ahlick?
34406Is your mother here?
34406It ai n''t, eh? 34406 It ai n''t, eh?
34406Like''i m, do n''t you? 34406 Look at this, will you?"
34406Make''em sick? 34406 Mamma, what happened to Uncle Maxim?"
34406Manage? 34406 Me?
34406Me? 34406 More letters from Homestead?"
34406Mother? 34406 Mr. Cosson,"I said, with simulated respectfulness,"may I ask you a question?"
34406Mr. Frick, do you identify this man as your assailant?
34406Nev''r knew_ that_, did yer? 34406 Nihilists?"
34406No? 34406 Not feeling well, m''boy?"
34406Now tell me, Mr. Berkman, what is your name? 34406 Number?"
34406Of what? 34406 Oh, an infidel, are you?
34406Oh, got me name, have you? 34406 Oh, lay down, Slim, will you?
34406Oh, let her be, Charley, wo n''t you?
34406Oh, what''s the matter with you,he drawls,"get a move on, wo n''t you, Burk?"
34406Oh, you ai n''t next? 34406 Oh, you mean Ivan Strogov, do n''t you?"
34406Oh, you suspect me of this?
34406On that rotten grub they feed us?
34406On what charge?
34406Papa Mitchell, be good now, wo n''t you?
34406Perhaps in the family?
34406Pie, Wingie?
34406Poor boy, did you never go to school?
34406Quiet as me grandmother at church, ai n''t ye? 34406 Read?
34406Really, Aleck? 34406 Really?
34406Really?
34406Refuse? 34406 Russell--?"
34406Sasha, what is it?
34406Say, Mister,a voice calls behind the door,"are you all right?"
34406See who''s rapping there, will you?
34406Shall I ask her?
34406Shall I call you Felipe?
34406Shall I come along, Chaplain?
34406Smell the pot- pie, do you?
34406Stand treat on this festive occasion?
34406Sure it''s you? 34406 That sho?"
34406That you thar, Berkman? 34406 The informer, who denounced Dempsey and Beatty?"
34406The man who shot Frick?
34406The officers locked me up--"Who said you''re locked up?
34406The screw?
34406The weaving department?
34406The women are in the South Block?
34406Then why do you ask me?
34406To Buffalo?
34406Two years?
34406Up here, 18 C."Is that you, Ed?
34406Want coffee? 34406 Want to be smart, do n''t you?
34406Warden, what for?
34406Was he in stripes, Wingie?
34406Wat am yo doin''heah? 34406 Wat_ he_ wan''teh work foh?
34406Well, Red, how did you manage to keep away from work in Columbus?
34406Well, d''ye know a moon when you see''t?
34406Well, if you do n''t want the damned scabs, keep out the soldiers, you understand? 34406 Well, what have you got to say?"
34406Well, what of it?
34406Were you very lonesome in New York?
34406Wha- a- t? 34406 What Inspector?"
34406What Johnny?
34406What Russell?
34406What Smithy, Bob?
34406What are you after?
34406What are you always telling the men?
34406What are you driving at, Red?
34406What are you men doing here?
34406What are you really talking about? 34406 What are your plans?"
34406What business have you at that man''s door?
34406What could I do? 34406 What d''ye think of_ that_, eh?"
34406What d''you say? 34406 What did I tell you, eh, Scot?
34406What did I tell you?
34406What did he do? 34406 What did you do?"
34406What did you mean by''trying''me, Wingie?
34406What did you say?
34406What did you say?
34406What did you wish to see me about?
34406What do you call the second?
34406What do you call your line? 34406 What do you care about work or a place?
34406What do you mean by that?
34406What do you want to know?
34406What do you want to make the kid feel bad for?
34406What do you want to see the Warden about?
34406What do you want, Berkman?
34406What do you want, Deputy?
34406What for?
34406What has he done, Officer?
34406What have they done with the boys?
34406What have you done?
34406What have you got on you?
34406What have you, Bob?
34406What in th''name of Jesus Christ do you want, Slim?
34406What is an Anarchist?
34406What is it you wish?
34406What is it, Maximotchka?
34406What is it?
34406What is it?
34406What is the charge, Officer?
34406What is your name?
34406What mail?
34406What meeting?
34406What province is that?
34406What t''hell do you want, Butch?
34406What t''hell''s the matter with you, eh? 34406 What was the name?"
34406What would he do to you if he saw you talking to me?
34406What yo wan''teh shoot Frick foah?
34406What you pryin''out for?
34406What''pards''?
34406What''s a yegg, Red?
34406What''s corn dodger?
34406What''s the difference between a yegg and a bum?
34406What''s the matter here?
34406What''s the matter with you?
34406What''s the matter, Sashenka? 34406 What''s the matter, boys?"
34406What''s the trouble?
34406What''s this, eh?
34406What''s this?
34406What''s this?
34406What''s your hurry, Aleck? 34406 What''s your hurry?
34406What''s your name?
34406What''s''putting a jigger on''?
34406What, Felipe?
34406What, Luba?
34406What? 34406 What?"
34406What?
34406Whatcher in for?
34406When did you have your last visit?
34406When did you write it?
34406When was that?
34406When was the jury picked?
34406Where are the others?
34406Where do you come from?
34406Where do you get such luxuries?
34406Where is he?
34406Where is that man who-- er-- we read in the papers yesterday? 34406 Where is the hammer?
34406Where th''devil d''you think you''re going, anyhow? 34406 Where was I before I came here?"
34406Where''s he working?
34406Where''s my dinner?
34406Where''s the difference?
34406Where?
34406Where?
34406Who are you?
34406Who are you?
34406Who gave you the note, Coz?
34406Who is he?
34406Who is he?
34406Who is it?
34406Who is that man?
34406Who is that, Officer?
34406Who is there?
34406Who is this?
34406Who sends clandestine mail for you?
34406Who shaid I want to hear''t?
34406Who trained them?
34406Who was that?
34406Who was, then?
34406Who went with you to Mr. Frick''s office?
34406Who''s calling?
34406Who''s talkin''here?
34406Who''s the kid?
34406Who, then?
34406Who-- told-- you? 34406 Who?
34406Who?
34406Who?
34406Whom do you mean, Red?
34406Why ca n''t you make it here?
34406Why did n''t you say so at once? 34406 Why do n''t you keep that tongue of yours in check?"
34406Why do n''t you let them go? 34406 Why do n''t you sit down, Aleck?"
34406Why do you use so much slang? 34406 Why not?"
34406Why not?
34406Why should I be afraid of you?
34406Why so?
34406Why so?
34406Why so?
34406Why was_ I_ picked out? 34406 Why, Mr. Cosson, what''s th''trouble?"
34406Why, why, m''boy, do you understand Latin or Greek?
34406Why? 34406 Why?"
34406Will you come with me?
34406Will you get out of that chair?
34406Will you have a bite, or something?
34406Will you have a drink with me?
34406Will you please excuse me from the shop for a few days?
34406Will you promise not to laugh at me, Sashenka?
34406Will you tell me the reason, Warden?
34406Wingie?
34406Wo n''t you issue me a special visit? 34406 Worse?
34406Wotcher doin''?
34406Would I dare it now?
34406Ye- e- s?
34406Yo am strikeh? 34406 You actually confess to such terrible practices?
34406You are not working, m''boy?
34406You bloke, long here?
34406You call it work?
34406You did n''t? 34406 You do n''t be- lie- ve?
34406You do, do you? 34406 You don''min''it, Aleck, do you?"
34406You got a personal grievance against him?
34406You have just come out?
34406You have not changed your views?
34406You have not refused to work, have you?
34406You hear what the officer says? 34406 You know about it, Wingie?"
34406You know what they are?
34406You know who this man is, Jasper? 34406 You like the change?"
34406You mind your own business, you hear?
34406You want him here?
34406You want to know who the young lady is?
34406You wo n''t make the task, eh? 34406 You would go back to your Anarchist friends?"
34406You would protect the Federal Government, then?
34406You would protect the people from being cheated by counterfeit money?
34406You would return to New York, if released?
34406You, Davis?
34406You-- like them, really, Sasha?
34406Young man, when, permit me to ask, did you reach so profound a conclusion?
34406Your case is up for revision?
34406_ That_ bother you, Aleck? 34406 _ What_ is n''t possible?"
34406''Fraid you wo n''t get''nough in yer twenty- two spot, eh?
34406''Why,''says I to him, kind of suddenly,''see the house there right across the street?
34406''you mean a whore- house, do n''t you?''
34406***** Two days, and still alive?
34406*****"Do you mean that the poet is less to you than the revolutionist?"
34406A coward?
34406A smile of timid joy suffuses the sightless face, as Bill Nye slaps him on the shoulder, crying jovially,"What did I tell you, eh?
34406A young man in civilian dress, who is accompanying the police, inquires, not unkindly:"Are you hurt?
34406A. DEAR TONY: Why do you insist on the hole in the ground?
34406After such a tremendous effort, can we jeopardize it all so lightly?
34406Ai n''t much to lose, is there, Burk?"
34406Alive?
34406Alive?...
34406Always acquitted himself with flying colors, sir, merely by being wise and preserving a stiff upper lip; see th''point?"
34406Always that way?"
34406Am I forgotten?
34406Am I not dead?
34406An''say, kid, how long are you here?"
34406And Fedya, also?
34406And Most?
34406And even if you leave the upper crust intact for a foot or two, how am I to dive into the hole in the presence of so many?
34406And is it for this I have yearned and suffered, for this spectre that haunts my steps, and turns day into a nightmare-- this distortion, Life?
34406And now comes Tarass Bulba-- is it our own Tarass, the fearless warrior, the scourge of Turk and Tartar?
34406And now he lives, the vampire.... And Homestead?
34406And the poor Sailor?
34406And then to die for it,--ah, could there be a more glorious fate for a man, a real man?
34406And they, our accusers?
34406And what could be higher in life than to be a true revolutionist?
34406And what d''you think, Aleck?
34406And what is their attitude toward my deed?
34406And what kind of a boy is he, do you know?
34406And what"screws"must I watch?
34406And who is this innocent Johnny, hm, Davis?"
34406And who is to enlighten him?
34406And who?
34406And why, hm, hm, did you see it, my good man?
34406And you want to welcome the murderers, do you?
34406And you, dear friend?
34406And you?"
34406And, Aleck-- you remember when I was down in the dungeon six days?
34406Answer my questions, d''ye hear?"
34406Any one here?"
34406Are n''t you glad?"
34406Are they making propaganda out of it?
34406Are they permitted?
34406Are they suspecting the tunnel?
34406Are you angry with me?"
34406Are you deaf?
34406Are you next, me bye?
34406Are you next?
34406Are you on?
34406Are you sure you sent one?"
34406Are you there, Aleck?
34406As I was about to say when you interrupted-- eh, what?
34406As he turns to leave, my can crashes against the door-- one, two, three--"What t''hell do you want, eh?"
34406Assured I''ll keep his confidence, he begins to talk quickly, excitedly:"Nobody dere, Alick?
34406B. DEAR, DEAR COMRADE: Can you realize how your words,"I am socialistically inclined,"warmed my heart?
34406Berkman?"
34406Blind to his own slavery and degradation, can I expect him to perceive the wrong suffered by others?
34406Broke now?
34406But I am indifferent to consequences: what matter what happens?
34406But do n''t you see that you must also examine society, to determine to what extent social conditions are responsible for criminal actions?
34406But does this lightning really illumine the social horizon, or merely confuse minds with the succeeding darkness?
34406But how can that make any difference?
34406But how did he procure these things?
34406But how did he smuggle in this note?
34406But how proceed in the matter?
34406But if you did, what the devil could have become of it?
34406But is it really great and noble to be slaves and remain content?
34406But perhaps you have not found it so, Aleck, after your many years of absence?"
34406But supposing he has, what has become of it?
34406But what can I expect of a lawyer, when even the steel- worker could not understand my act?
34406But what can he do?
34406But what can it be?
34406But what can it be?
34406But what could they do for me?"
34406But what did I want to kill the man for?
34406But what does it matter?
34406But what has all this to do with the question I asked you?"
34406But what has become of the Chaplain?
34406But what is he afraid of?
34406But what is that red- headed Misha from Odessa saying?
34406But what matter who are the men to judge me?
34406But what shall I turn to?
34406But when, when will the dullard realize things?
34406But where is the X- ray of social insight that will discover in human understanding and mutual aid the elements of true progress?
34406But wherein is the improvement that augments misery and crowds the prisons?
34406But who am I, to presume to teach?
34406But who knows?
34406But why do you need them?
34406But why sadden you?
34406But why should they want to trap me?
34406But why should_ I_ lie for his sake?
34406By an''by I return to the house, and mother and sisters are kind of excited, and I says innocent- like,''What''s up, girls?''
34406By the way, what is the matter with your eyes?
34406By what right?
34406CHAPTER XXV HOW SHALL THE DEPTHS CRY?
34406Ca n''t you say''sir''?
34406Can any one understanding my motives, doubt the justification of the_ Attentat_?
34406Can it be?
34406Can it be?...
34406Can this be Tuesday, only Tuesday?
34406Can this great criminal determine Right?
34406Can you hear me?
34406Can you tell me_ that_?"
34406Carl Nold?
34406Casting a glance at my assistant, the Warden inquires:"Your time must be up soon, Red?"
34406Catch on, eh?
34406Catch on?
34406Cell 6 K.""What is it, my boy?"
34406Christ, d''you think I''d ever turn another trick?
34406Cold and cruel must be the world, my little Dick; or is it friendship, that is stronger than even love of liberty?
34406Cosson?"
34406Could I have overlooked him in the closely walking ranks?
34406Could anything be nobler than to die for a grand, a sublime Cause?
34406Could you get no work at home, in Oil City?"
34406Could you sit up with her to- night?"
34406Did I notice the dark glasses he wears?
34406Did he not issue a secret circular letter to aid my plans concerning Russia?
34406Did he not say it was her poor husband''s own carelessness?
34406Did n''t I come from New York?
34406Did n''t he look mad, though?
34406Did n''t you hear th''bell?"
34406Did she remember that terrible scene when mother struck her?
34406Did the turnkey call"six"?
34406Did you hear about the kid born here?
34406Did you see him?"
34406Did you see how the fight started?"
34406Do I think the judge will have pity on him?
34406Do n''t use the weed?
34406Do n''t you be leanin''on th''door, d''ye hear?"
34406Do n''t you know the rules, eh?
34406Do n''t you know?"
34406Do n''t you really recognize me?"
34406Do n''t you remember?
34406Do n''t you remember?"
34406Do n''t you think it showed a noble trait in the boy?
34406Do n''t you, Frenchy?"
34406Do you consider him a true, active revolutionist?
34406Do you follow the argument, me bye?"
34406Do you know her?"
34406Do you know what Johnny did?
34406Do you prefer whiskey or beer?"
34406Do you remember that glorious face, so strong and tender, on the wall of our little Houston Street hallroom?
34406Do you remember the last time I was in the dungeon?
34406Do you see things like in a fog, Charley?"
34406Do you want to see them?"
34406Does a real revolutionist need to prepare himself, to steel his nerves and harden his body?
34406Does he know about the Nihilists, I wonder?
34406Does he only pretend?
34406Does he realize that I am just out of prison?
34406Does not the Pinkerton janizary represent organized authority, forever crushing the toiler in the interest of the exploiters?
34406Does she, too, think I''ve failed?
34406Does that strike you in th''right spot, sonny?"
34406Doing all right?"
34406Enough time; why has n''t he done something?
34406Ever had dealings with him?
34406Ever hear such a thing?
34406Ever read Billy Shakespeare?
34406Every time he passed my bed, he''d say:"You still alive?
34406Failed?...
34406Feeling good to- day?"
34406Flushing slightly, and frowning, he asks:"But you would protect the poor?"
34406For days I debate in my mind the momentous question: shall I confide the project to Tony?
34406For what purpose?
34406Free?
34406Frick?"
34406Frick?"
34406From whom can it be?
34406Good manager, ai n''t he?
34406Got it, Sasha?"
34406Got me sized up all right, eh?
34406Got no chance t''choo, so I turns an''biffs him on de jaw, see?"
34406Got shoes?"
34406Green?
34406HOW SHALL THE DEPTHS CRY?
34406Has that prison experience influenced his present attitude?
34406Has the unexpected revelation of my magnanimous generosity deprived you of articulate utterance, sir?"
34406Have I been here only since yesterday?
34406Have I been there?
34406Have I failed?
34406Have I gone blind?
34406Have I got a chew of tobacco about me?
34406Have I grown morbid, or do they actually presume to reproach me with my failure to suicide?
34406Have they forgotten me?...
34406Have we no such in our ranks?
34406Have you a copy of the rules in the cell, my man?"
34406Have you money on you?"
34406He ca n''t come out now, Officer?"
34406He had been unjust to me; but who is free from moments of weakness?
34406He is counting nineteen, twenty, ten pair; twenty- one, twenty- two.... What was that?
34406He speaks to- morrow; will you come with me?"
34406Help the strikers?
34406Hey, Aleck, you there?"
34406His hands folded, eyes turned upwards, lips slightly parted in silent prayer, he inquires of the rangeman:"Whose cell is this?"
34406His mouth between the bars, he whispers very low:"Principles opposed to a get- a- way, Aleck?"
34406Hm, what is your number?"
34406How about those revolvers, though?
34406How can I broach the subject to the Twin?
34406How can a self- respecting gentleman explain himself to you?
34406How can it be possible?
34406How can that be?
34406How could you_ think_ that of me?"
34406How d''you like the grub, anyhow?"
34406How dare you demand?"
34406How dare you?"
34406How did he manage to"get his man"?
34406How did he try to, hm, hm, to commit suicide?"
34406How do you know?"
34406How explain such a change in Most?
34406How helped amid the injustice and brutality of a society whose chief monuments are prisons?
34406How his mother would suffer if she knew that her carefully reared boy passes the nights in the.... What is that pain I feel?
34406How is he going to do it, to keep the soldiers out?
34406How is he?"
34406How is his conduct, Superintendent?"
34406How old are you now?"
34406How shall they be helped?
34406How will it affect conditions there?
34406How''re you feeling to- day?"
34406How''s that for classic style, eh?
34406How?
34406How?
34406I have done nothing for the agonized men in the dungeon darkness-- have I forgotten them?
34406I have the opportunity; why am I idle?
34406I have visited the Carnegie offices only--"Do you plead guilty or not guilty?"
34406I hear a suppressed, hollow voice:"That you, Aleck?"
34406I just heard him say,"Aleck, work a little faster, ca n''t you?
34406I keep wondering, can such a world of misery and torture be compressed into one short month?...
34406I recognize the mumbling speech of Deputy Greaves, as he calls out to the silent prisoner:"Want a drink?"
34406I shall, so to speak, assume benevolent guardianship over you; over you and your morals, yes, sir, for you''re my kid now, see?"
34406I shtands in, see?
34406I take pride in being a thief, and what''s more, I_ am_ an A number one gun, you see the point?
34406I tried to do the square thing, Aleck, but where''s a fellow to turn?
34406I was thinking-- how shall I tell you?
34406I''ll first peep in through the window-- I wonder what she''ll be doing-- and who will be at home?
34406I''m a free man; I can live on my wits, see?
34406I''m no damn murderer like you, see?
34406I''ve got to eat, have n''t I?
34406If I had not found it, I vaguely wonder, were the thing mere fancy?
34406If I happened to appear anywhere alone, they would inquire, anxiously,"What is the matter?
34406If I only knew about"them"in New York-- the Girl and Fedya-- it would be easier to die then.... What are they doing in the case?
34406If he''d only come-- why is he so long?
34406If"Papa"Mitchell is about, he thunders at the chief cook, his bosom swelling with packages:"Wotch''er got there, eh?
34406Impulsively I blurt out:"Was the story inspired, perhaps?"
34406In Parsons and Lum, this country has produced her Zheliabovs; is the genius of America not equal to a Hartman?
34406In reference to French leave, have you read about the Biddle affair?
34406Innocent?
34406Inspector?"
34406Is Nold up there on your gallery?"
34406Is a revolutionist to respect such a travesty?
34406Is he done already?
34406Is he not prepared to take the responsibility for his terrorist propaganda, the work of his whole life?
34406Is it because of greater maturity?
34406Is it consequent in me to decline liberty, apparently within reach?
34406Is it fancy, or did I hear my name?
34406Is it night?
34406Is it safe to trust him?
34406Is it sheer apathy and languor that hold the weak thread of life, or nature''s law and the inherent spirit of resistance?
34406Is it the death watch?
34406Is liberty sweet only in the anticipation, and life a bitter awakening?
34406Is not the terrorizing of scabbery, and ultimately of the capitalist exploiters, an effective means of aiding the struggle?
34406Is that you, Aleck?"
34406Is there another?
34406Is there no Nemesis in Spain?
34406Is this the fruit of progress?
34406Is your chum sick?"
34406It ai n''t no two years, though, see?"
34406It represents Undine, rising from the water, the spray glistening in the sun...."Are you tired, Aleck?"
34406It was in connection with Homestead, is it not so, m''boy?"
34406It''s a little tunn''l, connectin''th''cellar with th''females, see?
34406It''s you, Aleck?"
34406Jest leave that to th''Horsethief, an''write till you bust th''paper works, see?"
34406Jest wanted t''try you, see?"
34406Jim is silent for a while, then he demands, abruptly:"Wat dey put you here for?"
34406Just tell me, where do you stay in New York?"
34406Keep it up?
34406Keep quiet now, will you?
34406Know any one here?"
34406Know how''t''s made?"
34406Know what punk is?
34406Know who''s Shorty?"
34406Know_ him_, do n''t you?"
34406Labor can never be unjust in its demands: is it not the creator of all the wealth in the world?
34406Let me see; what is to- day?
34406Let''s see, what you call''em again?"
34406Makes your mouth water, eh, kid?
34406May he not, then, voice a favorable sentiment?
34406May not a similar purpose be served by my application for a pardon?
34406McIlvaine?"
34406Me ask a favor o''the damn swine?
34406Me?
34406Milligan?"
34406Moreover, sir, neither you nor me will live to see a change, so why should I worry me nut about''t?
34406Mr. McPane, what is the sentence for the possession of a dangerous weapon?"
34406Must the oppressed forever submit?
34406My teacher-- the author of the_ Kriegswissenschaft_--the ideal revolutionist-- he to denounce me, to repudiate propaganda by deed?
34406My tomb will open-- oh, to see the light, and breathe the air again...."Officer, is n''t my time up yet?"
34406Need I enlarge?
34406No scroo?
34406No- o- o?
34406No- o- o?
34406No?
34406No?
34406Not a steel- woikeh?"
34406Not dead?...
34406Not long on lingo, are you?
34406Now explain, what do you mean by it?"
34406Now what did the judge and jury know about him?
34406Now, tell me, where did you stop in Pittsburgh?"
34406Numb''r?
34406Of what use are all these preliminaries?
34406Of what value is it without a high purpose, uninspired by revolutionary ideals?
34406Officers, take him directly to the South Wing, you understand?
34406Often I am assailed by doubts: is it advisable to mention the matter to the Deputy?
34406Often I have wondered in the years gone by, was not wisdom dear at the price of enthusiasm?
34406Oh, what has happened to him?
34406Oh, what''s the matter with you?
34406Oh, you do n''t believe me, do you?
34406On whom did you mean to use it?"
34406Only a month?
34406Only three hours since my arrest?
34406Overheard a plot to kill th''king by them fellows-- er-- what''s you call''em?"
34406Passionately she showers kisses upon my face and hands, entreating:"_ Golubchik_, what is it?"
34406Perhaps better to fall against the blade?
34406Perhaps my little candle with its bold defiance has shortened the reign of darkness,--who knows?
34406Perhaps the underground passage does not extend to the penitentiary?
34406Perhaps they did not take me through the yard-- Is it the Block Captain''s voice?
34406Perhaps you have one with Greek or Latin annotations?"
34406Perhaps-- is it possible?
34406Personal dislike?
34406Pipe''is lamps, kid?"
34406Presently he surprises me by asking:"Friend Aleck, what do they call you in Russian?"
34406Presently he whispers, hoarsely:"Fresh fish?"
34406Presently he whispers:"See me hand it to''i m, Aleck?
34406Pretending to wash his hands, he asks:"Can I use your towel, Aleck?
34406Pretty desp''rate, eh?"
34406Pretty stiff, eh?
34406Pretty stiff, eh?"
34406Products?
34406Remember the stiff[25] you got in them things, tow''l an''soap?"
34406Rotten, ai n''t he?"
34406S''pose you have oriented yourself, sir, concerning the developments in the culinary experiment?"
34406Savvy now, Innocent Abroad?"
34406Say, Berk, d''ye think they''ll hang me?
34406Say, I''ve got somethin''for you from Shorty, I mean Carl, you savvy?"
34406Say, how old are you, Alex?"
34406Say, that kid is all to the good, ai n''t he?
34406Say, what''s that you said, you do n''t believe what I endeavored so conscientiously, sir, to drive into your noodle?
34406Says it''s artistic, see?
34406Scrap, Dep''ty?"
34406See dis?"
34406See him jump on me?"
34406See where Sandy gets his slice, eh?
34406See?
34406Several days?
34406Shall one seal his emotions, or barricade his heart?
34406Shall we diagnoze the peculiar mental menstruation as, er-- er-- what''s your learned opinion, my illustrious colleague, eh?
34406She asks abruptly:"You like poetry?"
34406She''ll tell me about Most,--but what is the use?
34406Should I refuse the opportunity which would offer such a splendid field for agitation?
34406Some business misunderstanding, eh?"
34406Some guard?
34406Some one shouts to a distant friend,"Hey, Bill, are you there?
34406Stealing nickels off passengers on the street cars, and--""Me?
34406Suicide?
34406Suppose they obey their own rules?
34406Suppose you remember, do n''t you?
34406Sure you''re not afraid?"
34406Sure?
34406Take me for such small fry, do you?
34406Talk, did they?
34406Talkin''there, was n''t you?"
34406That boy on the whitewash gang?"
34406That you, Aleck?"
34406That''s me talkin'', Big Bob, see?
34406That''s what you mean?"
34406That''s when you first came here, eh, Jasper?"
34406That''s_ me_ talkin'', understand?"
34406The Assistant Deputy smiles, produces a large apple from his pocket, and, holding it up to view, asks:"How does this strike you, Jasper?"
34406The Block Captain retraces his steps, and, facing the boy, storms at him:"What did you say?
34406The Board promised a rehearing at the previous application,--why this refusal?
34406The Deputy looks uneasy and fidgets in his chair, but catching the severe eye of Hopkins, he shouts vehemently:"What do you want in the block?"
34406The Warden and several officers accompanied him to court, on the way coaching the poor idiot to answer"yes"to the question,"Do you plead guilty?"
34406The brutal mockery of it-- had I anything to say why sentence should not be passed?
34406The croaker here is giving you some applications, ai n''t he?"
34406The danger, the heroic self- sacrifice-- what money could buy such devotion?
34406The drawn face, the look of horror, your whole being the cry of torture-- were_ you_ not the real prisoner?
34406The fancy lures me with its warming embrace, when suddenly the assistant startles me:"Say, pard, slept bad last night?
34406The future is dark; but, then, who knows?...
34406The legal aspect aside, can the morality of the act be questioned?
34406The new arrivals grow uneasy; perhaps they are still too expensive?
34406The officer turns to my assistant:"Has he been talkin'', Reddie?"
34406The quiet grows unbearable, and Johnny calls again:"What are you doing, Sashenka?"
34406The road to death is so short, why suffer?
34406The strong disapproval of my sentiments I met with this challenge:"Do you mean to help Edelstadt, the poet and man, or Edelstadt the revolutionist?
34406The tall stranger puts his hand familiarly on my shoulder, exclaiming:"Do n''t you recognize me, Mr. Berkman?
34406The_ how_?
34406Them''s empty pipes, no standin''water, see?
34406Then, changing his tone, he vociferates,"Do n''t stand there like a fool, d''ye hear?
34406There are none in the cell; where am I to get them?
34406There is no more striking example in the annals of the Russian movement than that peerless Nihilist-- what was his name?
34406There you go and shove your damn neck into th''noose for the strikers, but what did them fellows ever done for you, eh?
34406They ca n''t fool me so easy, can they, Burk?"
34406Think I can walk off all right with a team of horses, but ai n''t got brains enough to get away with a bit of scribbling, eh?
34406Think I''d get off as easy if he was n''t chuck full of th''stuff?
34406Think I''d open my guts to my Lord Bighead?
34406Think I''m a cur, do you?"
34406Think I''m a nigger, eh?
34406Think I''m so dumb I have to slave all week for a few dollars?"
34406Think this a barroom, do you?
34406Think you''re on th''platform haranguing the long- haired crowd?
34406This is no playhouse, you understand?"
34406This soldier-- what is his name?
34406To a ball?"
34406To what purpose, with my impossible sentence?
34406Trying to steady his voice, he demanded:"What do you mean?
34406Twenty- one, ai n''t you?
34406Understand now?"
34406Want a piece of pie?
34406Want coffee?
34406Want coffee?
34406Want to get out o''here?"
34406Want to go to th''hole again, eh?"
34406Want to see them?
34406Was it I that spoke?
34406Was it all a dream?
34406Was it last night?
34406Was it really necessary to halt operations so long?
34406Was it suicide or accident?
34406Was it the extreme self- consciousness of the idealist, the power of revolutionary traditions, or simply the persistent will to be?
34406Was my vision of the_ palátch_ a presentiment, or the echo of an accomplished tragedy?
34406Was not"he"alone, my beloved,"unknown"Grinevitzky, isolated, scorned by his comrades?
34406Was the Spanish Inquisition ever guilty of such organized child murder?
34406Wat d''_you_ know''bout it?
34406We''ll all club together to get your case up for a pardon, wo n''t we, boys?"
34406We, criminals?
34406We, who are ever ready to give our lives for liberty, criminals?
34406Well, me saintly bye, I''m Johnny- on- the- spot to serve the cause, all right, all right, and the cause is Me, with a big M, see?
34406Well, then, how could the strike concern me?
34406Well, what did they do?"
34406Well, your friends are all right, ai n''t they?"
34406Wha- at?
34406What am I in for?
34406What are you here for?"
34406What beauties of his rich mind are hidden to- day in the quaint German type?
34406What can be the matter with my friend?
34406What can it be?
34406What cell?"
34406What cheering message does Reitzel bring me now?
34406What could have prompted his denunciation of my act?
34406What could he have meant by"trying"me?
34406What could they do, Wingie?"
34406What d''I want to work for, eh?
34406What d''you stay in for?"
34406What did I want to kill him for, anyhow?
34406What did I want to"nose in"for?
34406What did the Warden mean?
34406What did you notice, Aleck?"
34406What do they want, anyhow?"
34406What do you know about the piping, eh?
34406What does she think of it all?
34406What good can my continued survival do?
34406What has become of your caution, your judgment?
34406What has the_ palátch_ done?
34406What horrors await me at the new prison?
34406What if it is lost?
34406What is all indignation and lamenting, in the face of the revival of the Inquisition?
34406What is he to do but commit another crime and be returned to prison?
34406What is it?"
34406What is the matter,_ golubchik_?"
34406What is the misery of the People to_ them?_ Probably they are laughing at me.
34406What is the third about, Red?"
34406What is the use of all this misery and torture?
34406What is the use?
34406What is the use?...
34406What is this?
34406What is your request?"
34406What lamps?
34406What matter the immediate outcome of the revolution in Russia?
34406What matter the personal consequences to Frick?
34406What of it?
34406What purpose could it serve?
34406What right had a revolutionist to such self- indulgence?
34406What shall I do, what shall I do?
34406What th''devil-- damn me soul t''hell, what d''you mean, you do n''t b''lieve?
34406What then?
34406What they call you, Narchist?
34406What time are you through with it?"
34406What was I thinking about?
34406What was it?
34406What was it?
34406What would it not offer me after this experience?
34406What you grinnin''for, Four Eyes?
34406What you talkin''''bout?
34406What''s his name, Johnny Davis?
34406What''s principle got t''do with''t?
34406What''s the matter with you, anyhow?"
34406What''s the pen?
34406What''s the use talkin''to you, anyhow?
34406What''s your number?"
34406What''s''is game, anyhow?
34406What_ is_ it, Bob?"
34406Whatcher hehawin''about?"
34406Whatcher in for?"
34406Whatcher sighin''for?"
34406When did I come here?"
34406When did I come?
34406When did you have your last visitor?"
34406When will he open his eyes?
34406When will they stop?
34406Where are they?"
34406Where do you live?"
34406Where is Rosa now?
34406Where is it?
34406Where shall I begin now?
34406Where the hell did you get your cramp mixture, when you was spilling around in a freight car, eh?"
34406Where''s me wife?"
34406Where''s my husband?"
34406Where, where is it all?
34406Who are you?
34406Who are your friends?"
34406Who are your friends?"
34406Who cares for a heifer when you can get a kid?
34406Who is in cell six?
34406Who is it?"
34406Who knows what shall be the amalgam, some day to be recast by the master hand of a new Turgenev?...
34406Who knows?
34406Who said you was crazy?
34406Who would have expected it?
34406Who''s stealing your socks, eh?
34406Who''s there?"
34406Whose fault is it; mine?"
34406Whose voice is it I hear?
34406Why am I deprived of visits?"
34406Why are the prisoners given qualitatively and quantitatively inadequate food?
34406Why are they dead?
34406Why ca n''t they understand the motives that prompted my act?
34406Why continue the unprofitable torture?
34406Why could n''t they agree?
34406Why did Wingie leave me?
34406Why did n''t I go?
34406Why did n''t it break?...
34406Why did n''t they write before?
34406Why did n''t_ you_ ask him?"
34406Why did she not write before?
34406Why did you take that direction at all?
34406Why do my friends regard the matter so indifferently?
34406Why do n''t you say something?
34406Why do n''t you take it over to th''loopers, Burk?"
34406Why do n''t you talk sensibly?"
34406Why do you delay?
34406Why do you speak of failure?
34406Why does he insist I should plead guilty?
34406Why has he suddenly been stricken with fear?
34406Why has the route been changed?
34406Why have my friends ignored the detailed plan I had submitted to them through Carl?
34406Why have n''t I thought of it before?
34406Why in America?
34406Why in hell did n''t he get his own men to do th''job?
34406Why is he laughing?
34406Why not give the unemployed men air and exercise, since the management is determined to keep them idle?
34406Why not in America?
34406Why not try to understand an honest man even if he feels called on to kill?
34406Why should Alice be anxious to see me?
34406Why should I live?
34406Why should I watch it?
34406Why should I, the revolutionist, be moved by such remarks?
34406Why should he be so much interested in my seeing a stranger?
34406Why should it not be?
34406Why should the bird starve as long as I have bread?
34406Why should they concern themselves with misery and want?
34406Why so much misery and strife?
34406Why that note of disappointment, almost of resentment, as to Tolstogub''s relation to the Darwinian theory?
34406Why this torture?
34406Why were the talesmen not examined in my presence?
34406Why will we not abstain from sin and evil, for just"the twinkling of an eye- lash"?
34406Why, do n''t I know?
34406Why, it is terrible to think of Most-- a coward?
34406Why, then, prolong the agony?
34406Why, then, these regrets?
34406Why, you know, pard, or perhaps you do n''t, greenie, Columbus is a pretty tough dump; but d''ye think I worked the four- spot there?
34406Why?
34406Why?
34406Why?"
34406Will they ever pass?...
34406Will you come?"
34406Will you kindly communicate with her at once?
34406Will you permit me to give them an airing in the yard?"
34406With torpid brain I wonder,"Is it possible, is it really possible?"
34406With unconcealed annoyance, he demands:"What did you want?"
34406Wo n''t hang a blind man, will they?"
34406Wo n''t the judge sympathize with a blind man?
34406Wo n''t you please take off a bit?
34406Woods?"
34406Would I accept his services?
34406Would I have a cigarette?
34406Would I pay?
34406Would I"take lunch with the Chief"?
34406Would he really stoop to such an outrage?
34406Would it not be folly to afford the enemy the triumph of my gradual annihilation?
34406Would it not be more in conformity with his reputation as a skilled"gun,"I argue, to"do the job"in a"smoother"manner?
34406Would my skull break with one blow?
34406Would n''t believe it, eh, would you?
34406Would n''t he be recognized as an escaped prisoner?"
34406Would n''t that jar you, eh?
34406Would you believe it?
34406Would you like to see him?"
34406Ye- es?
34406Yes, she will be glad-- they could n''t torture me here-- she''ll know I cheated them-- yes, she.... Where is she now?
34406Yes?
34406Yes?
34406Yet who knows?
34406Yet why?
34406Yet, who can tell?
34406Yo am deep all right, Ahlick-- dat am yuh name?
34406You all know who I am, do n''t you?"
34406You are one of the Homestead strikers, are you not?"
34406You did n''t?
34406You do n''t believe it possible, you do n''t, eh?
34406You go to work now, and you''d better make the task, understand?"
34406You have never seen me before?"
34406You hear?"
34406You know Flem, the night nurse?
34406You know watta for ma fader an''Gianni come outa da grave?
34406You know what he done yesterday?"
34406You know what that woman did?"
34406You know what''moon''is, do n''t you?"
34406You know what''s about?"
34406You know who I am?"
34406You listen t''me, Aleck, that''s your friend talkin'', see?
34406You love a boy as you love the poet- sung heifer, see?
34406You no tell nobody, yes?"
34406You not know wat it mean?
34406You remember when we were celling together on that upper range, on R; you were in the stocking shop then, were n''t you?
34406You remember, Aleck?"
34406You see, I would n''t apply for a pardon, because it would be asking favors from the government, and I am against it, you understand?
34406You see, Mr. Berkman,--may I call you Aleck?
34406You see, pipe''s runnin''up an''down, an''you can talk to any range you want, but always to th''same cell as you''re in, Cell 6, understand?
34406You seen old Henry?
34406You want''em?"
34406You was only kiddin''me, was n''t you?"
34406You was there, Jasper, when''Shoe- box''Miller got out, was n''t you?"
34406You would like the position?"
34406You''Snakes''there, what business you got here, eh?"
34406You''d better say nothing about it, see?
34406You''ve been very sick, but you feel better now, do n''t you, dear?"
34406You''ve got money; what more do you want?
34406You-- know?"
34406You-- you''re laughing?"
34406Your principle''s''gainst get- tin''out?"
34406_ That''s_ your point?
34406_ This_ world?
34406_ You_ never worked, did you?"
34406he bristles up,"think I''m such a dummy?"
34406he drawls sarcastically; then, turning to the keeper, he says:"How is that, Officer?
34406that''s what you said, eh?
34406the merely physical results of my_ Attentat_?
34406this the spirit of our Christian civilization?
34406whither?