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
37141Is not this so evidently reasonable that the system should command the approval of every fair mind?
49854Will you never, O Socrates, have done with this?
5624Will you never, O Socrates, have done with this?
35232Is not this imperialistic war the cause of all our misfortune?
35232Its servants charge us with the use of terroristic methods.--Have the English forgotten their 1649, the French their 1793?
35232Who is it that makes these accusations?
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?
4776Are the Irish a nation?
4776Are the Ulstermen a nation?
4776Do they embody or promote a spirit of reverence between human beings?
4776Do they encourage creativeness rather than possessiveness?
4776Do they preserve self- respect?
4776How ought both parties to act in such a case?
4776Is it surprising that men become increasingly docile, increasingly ready to submit to dictation and to forego the right of thinking for themselves?
4776Should Christian Scientists be compelled to call in doctors in case of serious illness?
4776Should Welsh children be allowed the use of the Welsh language in schools?
4776Should gipsies be compelled to abandon their nomadic life at the bidding of the education authorities?
4776Should miners have an eight- hour day?
4776The Gospel says:"Take no thought, saying, What shall we eat?
4776Why, for example, should a hansom- cab driver be allowed to suffer on account of the introduction of taxies?
4776or What shall we drink?
4776or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed?"
14058And who can procure unity more fittingly than he who is himself one?
14058Have the gods of Liberalism slaked their blood- thirst?
14058I ask myself always: Who can these elements be who will have no peace, who incite continually, who must so distrust, and want no understanding?
14058Is Fascism therefore"anti- intellectual,"as has been so often charged?
14058Of MacCulloch who, in the second half of the past century, proclaimed that the State must abstain from ruling?
14058Or the German Humboldt according to whom an"idle"State was the best kind of State?
14058The_ Duce_ of Fascism once chose to discuss the theme of"Force or consent?
14058What were the creative forces of the_ Risorgimento_?
14058Who are they?
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?
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?
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?
27814And are we better off as regards mental means of happiness-- means of education?
27814Are matters any better with the equal right of another to the pursuit of happiness?
27814Are not compassion, love and enthusiasm for truth and justice ideal forces?"
27814But how came these classes into existence?
27814But since when has it been true?
27814But what was the good?
27814Can we, in our ideas and notion of the real world, produce a correct reflection of the reality?
27814Is not the schoolmaster of Sadowa a mythical person?
27814Is our thought in a position to recognize the real world?
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?
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?
48446But what is to ensure the continuance of that high social productivity which will be necessary to the maintenance of general wellbeing?
48446Do we seem to imply that there is no place in our movement for middle- class intellectuals?
48446Does it not almost seem as if Marx, by 1875, had, for a moment at least, glimpsed the real difficulty?
48446Does this sound alarming?
48446May not socialism tend to promote an_ absolute_ excess of population?
48446We have now to ask, what does Loria consider the most important elements of Marxist teaching?
48446What is this foundation?
48446Will not the inhabitants of each area have to specify some limit beyond which it is undesirable that the population of that area should increase?
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"?
37290--("What is Property?"
37290Already in his first work,"What is Property?"
37290Does this mean that after the collapse of the old order of society there will be a new class domination culminating in a new political power?
37290His first work,"What is Property?"
37290How can a class which does not work produce more marvellous works than the whole ancient and mediæval world?
37290How has this complicated variety of human thought and action come about?
37290How is this explained, according to Marx?
37290How is this to be explained?
37290How, then, can the equal rate of profit in the case of capitals of different organic composition be harmonised with the theory of surplus value?
37290I begin,''What is Communism?''
37290In this book("What is Property?"
37290In what measure will commodities exchange with one another?
37290Is that just?"
37290Labour or Capital?
37290Of critical social writers outside Germany it was Proudhon, in particular, who, in his works"What is Property?"
37290Surplus value or profit?
37290The question he put was no longer"What is the substance of wealth and how is it measured?"
37290The question is: How is that to be done?
37290What happens to them?
37290What happens when the capitalist observes that the extraction of absolute surplus value comes up against an insurmountable obstacle?
37290Whence comes this gain, this increase?
37290but"How is its growth and continual accretions to be explained?"
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?
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?
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?"
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?
1187Let England''s trade go to pot,he says;"what have I to lose?"
1187Accidents?
1187And how do they fare, these creatures born mediocre, whose heritage is neither brains nor brawn nor endurance?
1187And if so, what is it?
1187And when these things have come to pass, what then?
1187Can sufficient capital be accumulated?
1187Can the common man pause long enough from his undermining labors to answer?
1187Can the common man, or the uncommon men who are allied with him, devise such a law?
1187Divers queries arise: What is the maximum of commercial development the world can sustain?
1187For instance, what would happen tomorrow if one hundred thousand tramps should become suddenly inspired with an overmastering desire for work?
1187How far can it be exploited?
1187How much capital is necessary?
1187How, then, does this process of discouragement operate?
1187If there were constant work at good wages for every man, who would harvest the crops?
1187Or have they already devised one?
1187Since to give least for most, and to give most for least, are universally bad, what remains?
1187So what would happen tomorrow if one hundred thousand tramps acted upon this advice and strenuously and indomitably sought work?
1187The inexorable query arises:_ What is the West to do when it has furnished this machinery_?
1187The question arises:_ Whence came this second army of workers to replace the first army_?
1187The question now is, what will be the outcome of the class struggle?
1187The trust?
1187The trust?
1187What do they do?
1187What if my brother be not so strong as I?
1187What men form it?
1187What when my strength failed?
1187What will be the nature of this new and most necessary law of development?
1187Wherefore should he hunger-- he and his sinless little ones?
1187Why are they there?
1187Why should there be one empty belly in all the world, when the work of ten men can feed a hundred?
1187when I should be unable to work shoulder to shoulder with the strong men who were as yet babes unborn?
22651And how short could the hours of the universal united workers be made?
22651And what of the future?
22651And what part of my wages ought I to pay in return for the part of the fish that I buy?
22651At what price will he now sell?
22651But is the allotment correct and the reward proportioned by his efforts?
22651But suppose that the consumer, for the things which he himself makes and sells, or for the work which he performs, receives more?
22651But suppose they all do?
22651But what about the purple citizens?
22651But what if I catch the fish by using a hired boat and a hired net, or by buying worms as bait from some one who has dug them?
22651But what of that?
22651But what?
22651But why not sell the produce at a higher price?
22651By what means and in what stages can social progress be further accelerated?
22651Can such a thing, or anything conceived in its likeness, possibly work?
22651Granted that it is impossible for the state to take over the whole industry of the nation, does that mean that the present inequalities must continue?
22651How could one face a rà © gime in which the everlasting taskmaster held control?
22651How much of the fish is"produced"by each of the people concerned?
22651How much will this be?
22651How, then, are we to explain this extraordinary discrepancy between human power and resulting human happiness?
22651Idleness and slovenly, careless work will be forbidden?
22651If we shelter_ one_ what is that?
22651Is it fair or unfair, and does it stand for the true measure of social justice?
22651Is it wealth or is it poverty?
22651It is not in itself fallacious; how could it be?
22651Now let me ask in the name of sanity where are such officials to be found?
22651Of the poor what is there to say?
22651One naturally asks, then, To what extent can social reform penetrate into the ordinary operation of industry itself?
22651Or what if I do not fish at all, but get my roast fish by paying for it a part of the wages I receive for working in a saw mill?
22651The point is,_ can_ we make a better one or must we be content with patching up the old one?
22651What else can we do?
22651What is the meaning of it?
22651What is_ quantity_ of labor and how is it measured?
22651What then?
22651What then?
22651What, for example, will be the absolute maximum to which wages in general could be forced?
22651Why should one factory owner not pay ten dollars a day to his hands?
22651Why should they not dawdle at their labor sitting upon the fence in endless colloquy while the harvest rots upon the stalk?
22651Why should they turn up on time for their task?
22651Why should they work, their pay is there"fresh and fresh"?
22651Will they work, or will they lie round in their purple garments and loaf?
22651Work?
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?
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?''
20936But supposing one does not wish? 20936 One had it to spend"and"what business was it of theirs?"
20936[ 16] But is it hell? 20936 And now a timid and troubled puritanism makes itself heard: Is there no middle way? 20936 And what does Democracy mean? 20936 And who talked of altering things at one stroke? 20936 Are not all the four quarters of the world to- day talking about Democracy? 20936 Are we to be the labour- serfs and the serfage stud- farm of the world? 20936 Are you so wicked as that, and know it? 20936 At this point we may hear a voice from the average heart of Socialism exclaim:How is this?
20936But have we not been the classic land of social democracy, and have we not become that of Radicalism?
20936But is the spiritual condition of an epoch to be determined by material arrangements?
20936But on what, you may ask with scorn, is this thinking nation to live?
20936But was this frivolity?
20936Can we find our way back to its application and significance?
20936Do we take it in the merely negative sense, that one is no longer obliged to put up with things?
20936Do you call that having no castes?
20936For the next decade the question will be, not where is the demand but where is the supply?
20936For what do these qualities, as a whole, betoken?
20936Has the reader followed me through five- and- thirty of these difficult folios in order to arrive in the end at that very everyday term, Spirit?
20936How can there be poor people when there are no more rich?"
20936How far will a new system of education tend to simplify the needs of men and women and to purify their taste?
20936How otherwise shall the outlay of culture be met?
20936In the harbour of the nations is our ship to drift aimlessly while every other knows its course, whether to a near or distant port?
20936Is it possible so to organize the interchange of work that every one who desires intellectual employment can find it?
20936Is that penurious Paradise which we have described, the goal of Germany''s hopes and struggles?
20936Is the voice from the average heart answered?
20936Is this not a confession of faith in materialism?
20936It is ignorant, it is insincere, to put on a frown of offended virtue and to say: For shame, what are you thronging into the towns for?
20936It replies:"Heritable or not, what do we care?
20936It was not always so?
20936May not he be the very one who is most capable of achievement?
20936One man must have many at his disposal; but how can he, if they are all his equals?
20936Or in the meagre sense, that responsibility goes by favour, and that the majority must decide?
20936Or the dubious sense, that we are yearning to make our way through a sham Socialism to the Dollar Republic?
20936Or-- is there then an"or"?
20936Revolution against revolution-- how is this possible?
20936Similarly he is incapable of civilizing, for he can not take forms seriously; he violates them himself-- how can he impose them upon others?
20936THE NEW SOCIETY I Is there any sign or criterion by which we can tell that a human society has been completely socialized?
20936The outlay will be large, but it must be feasible; how can it, if the labour of thousands is not cheap?
20936Was all this a delusion?
20936We have just begun to shake off the yoke of the capitalists and now are we expected to put the cultured in command?
20936What is romance in history?
20936What was the meaning of your everlasting talk about the ladder for the rise of capacity?
20936Where is the thought of Germany?
20936Where is your thought?
20936Where was this heaven- nurtured priestly virtue sleeping when Wrong straddled the land and the great crime was wrought?
20936Who will then care for far- off deductions, for wide arcs of thought?
20936Why did not envy destroy America and England?
20936Why is not the negro republic of Liberia ahead of all of us?
20936Will not half- measures suffice?
20936With all its wisdom, will it not be reduced to beggary and starvation?
20936You are not pleased with this interpretation?
20936You imagine, do you not, that in a land where there are no more rich people there will also be no more poor?
20936[ 25] Is there any term in commoner use, and what are we to think about it?
20936or so stupid, and know it not?
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?
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?
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?
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?
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?
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?"
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?]
44800How is that possible,says he,"since these arts were invented by Trismegistus?"
44800Amongst good laws, one of the best things was, that everybody was taught to observe them( by whom?).
44800And have I not experience on my side?
44800And if mankind is not competent to judge for itself, why do they talk so much about universal suffrage?
44800And is it not clear, that the interest of all being one and the same, some would act without much inconvenience to the others?
44800And what are these two questions?
44800And what does this prove?
44800And what has resulted from it?
44800And what is liberty?
44800And what is the remedy proposed?
44800And what part have men to act in all this?
44800And who is to give the impulse to power?
44800And why is incapacity a reason for exclusion?
44800And, in all sincerity, can anything more be required at the hands of the law?
44800And, in fact, what is the political work that we are endeavoring to promote?
44800Are age, sex, and judicial condemnations the only conditions to which incapacity is to be attached?
44800Are not our persons and property in fact, at its disposal?
44800Are not rights equal?
44800Are political rights under discussion?
44800Are the people to be forever led about by the nose?
44800Are they not arrived at maturity?
44800Are they not in a state to judge for themselves?
44800Are we not living in an age of enlightenment?
44800Are we not told that liberty is competition?
44800But are we not assured by Mr. Considerant that liberty leads fatally to monopoly?
44800But how is it that Mr. Montalembert does not see that he is placing himself in a vicious circle?
44800But how is it to be distinguished?
44800But what does it do?
44800But what is this incline?
44800But what plunder did he mean?
44800By whose intervention is society to give tools of labor to those who do not possess them?
44800Can the law, whose necessary sanction is force, be reasonably employed upon anything beyond securing to every one his right?
44800Can the people be mistaken?
44800Do not the legislators and their agents form a part of the human race?
44800Do they consider that they are composed of different materials from the rest of mankind?
44800Do they not know their own interest?
44800Does it follow that if the law confines itself to securing to us the free exercise of our faculties, our faculties will be paralyzed?
44800Does it follow that if we are free, we shall cease to act?
44800Does it follow that if we do not receive an impulse from the law, we shall receive no impulse at all?
44800Does it not lead to an abyss?
44800Does not Mr. Louis Blanc tell us again that competition{ 45} leads to monopoly, and that, for the same reason, cheapness leads to exorbitant prices?
44800For what are our faculties, but the extension of our personality?
44800For who will dare to say that force has been given to us, not to defend our rights, but to annihilate the equal rights of our brethren?
44800From whom is the State to obtain them?
44800Have they not acquired their rights at the cost of effort and sacrifice?
44800Have they not given sufficient proof of intelligence and wisdom?
44800How has this perversion of law been accomplished?
44800How is this argument to be answered?
44800How will you place it under the power of your tribunals, your gendarmes, and of your prisons?
44800How, in fact, can we imagine force encroaching upon the liberty of citizens without infringing upon justice, and so acting against its proper aim?
44800In point of fact, who are the capable?
44800In the one it was wished( by whom?)
44800In what does the impulse that power gives to society consist?
44800In what does this power consist?
44800Is a legislator to be chosen?
44800Is it any wonder that every failure threatens to cause a revolution?
44800Is it for the law to make choice of one amongst so many fancies, and to make use of the public force in its service?
44800Is it likely that it would compromise that greatest of advantages, the public peace?
44800Is it likely that the enfranchised classes would be very jealous of their privilege?
44800Is it likely that the excluded classes would not quietly wait for their turn?
44800Is it to be supposed that Nature has not bestowed upon me sufficient imagination to invent a Utopia too?
44800Is not justice right?
44800Is not the law omnipotent?
44800Is there a man or a class who would dare to claim the right of putting himself in the place of the people, of deciding and of acting for them?
44800It is the following: What is law?
44800Liberty of association?
44800Liberty of labor?
44800Moreover, every profession had a district assigned to it( by whom?)....
44800Now socialism, thus defined, and forming a doctrinal body, what other war would you make against it than a{ 15} war of doctrine?
44800Once on this incline, will society enjoy something like liberty?
44800That competition tends to drain the sources of consumption, and diverts production to a destructive activity?
44800That of the machine, which is set in motion; or rather, are they not the brute matter of which the machine is made?
44800The Socialists say, since the law organizes justice, why should it not organize labor, instruction, and religion?
44800The liberty of exchange?
44800Upon what principle is this exclusion founded?
44800We will give a quotation from Bossuet: One of the things which was the most strongly impressed( by whom?)
44800What are its limits?
44800What is its domain?
44800What is to give it this impulse?
44800What ought it to be?
44800What sort of liberty should be allowed to men?
44800What then?
44800What will you do then?
44800What would be the consequences of such a perversion?
44800What would become of its dignity if it were entrusted to the disciples of Rousseau?
44800What, then, is law?
44800When does plunder cease, then?
44800Where is the law to stop?
44800Where will you stop?
44800Where, in fact, does the prerogative of the legislator stop?
44800Which are the happiest, the most moral, and the most peaceable nations?
44800Who is to give education and tools of labor?
44800Why are they prevented?
44800Why is this?
44800Why, then, does not society go there of itself?
44800Why?
44800You have the gall to call that fine?
44800and that competition, according to Mr. Louis Blanc, is a system of extermination for the people, and of ruination for trade?
44800and what is property, but an extension of our faculties?
44800is more than probable, there will be a no less inevitable revolution?
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_?
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?"
60222And he-- this Paul himself?
60222And the best motive power?
60222And there were many in the ship?
60222And this Paul-- tell me-- what teacheth he concerning women?
60222And while they were away the men would have a quiet time, eh?
60222And you are helping-- you are one of them?
60222By the way,said Sir Robert, casually, as they resumed their seats,"is Wardlaw with us?"
60222Can we last as long?
60222Do you believe in the theory of pre- existence?
60222Dog of a Christian, are thy head and heart of stone?
60222Eh, what d''ye mean?
60222Father,cried the girl passionately, as she closed the Book,"Why did you keep it from me?
60222How can a man love''em when he sees the mischief they''ve done by their ambitions and pertinacity?
60222I''ll ask you one question,she exclaimed, in tones so shrill that here and there a laugh broke out:"Are we inferior to poor Tommy Atkins?"
60222In whom thou dost believe?
60222Is Mr. Renshaw still living-- is it_ really_ true that he is still alive?
60222Is it your pleasure that this lady be heard further?
60222Is not Paul the Apostle of Him who blessed the marriage feast of Cana?
60222Is there danger?
60222Is there no more to tell?
60222Is this the first time you have felt like this?
60222It is your advice?
60222Must I, to- night?
60222Once,she went on, hesitatingly,"the first time we went up in the_ Bladud_, you remember that night...?"
60222See that, sir? 60222 See that?"
60222So you''ve made the young lady''s acquaintance on the river?
60222The storm had lasted long?
60222Then he forbiddeth not to marry?
60222Then why, O Lucius Flaccus, hast thou built here an altar to our Goddess Sul?
60222We ca n''t get down?
60222What about the Corps of Commissionaires?
60222What about the old Household troops?
60222What age would Renshaw be by this time?
60222What do you mean?
60222What does it mean?
60222What would you do? 60222 What''s that?"
60222What, I wonder, is the true philosophy of life?
60222Where is he now-- is he ill, is he safe?
60222Why do n''t you answer? 60222 Why not?"
60222Why the devil do n''t you speak? 60222 Will the speaker favour us with the authority for her quotations?"
60222Will you not cry out?
60222Will you trust yourself to me?
60222Would anyone like a sail?
60222Yes, yes?
60222You can steer?
60222You mean your father?
60222***** How and why had this dastardly combined attack on England come to pass?
60222And everywhere the question was asked:"Where is he?
60222And if by any chance it should come to fighting at close quarters, had woman shown herself lacking in courage, or even in ferocity in such encounters?
60222And now that the lifeless hand of the President had dropped the real sceptre, whose hand was to take it up?
60222And what should she give in exchange for that submissive tender love of wife for husband which the Sacred Book declared to be the law of God?
60222And, worse still, what might not she dare and do, as the champion and inciter of woman, if the head of the Government should die?
60222But how''s the worm going to manage it?"
60222But now?
60222But what can we do without a leader in Parliament?
60222But where was the leader of men?
60222Call these creatures men?
60222Come, man, what the deuce are you driving at?"
60222Could these things be reconciled in the light of the revelation that had come to her?
60222Did not a certain abbot of Iona go to Ireland to organise a movement against the custom of summoning women to join the standard and fight the enemy?
60222Did not the crime of which she was convicted strike at the root of the religion of the people?
60222Did you ever read how Balmerino faced the headsman after Culloden?
60222Do you suppose we want an army of Amazons armed with lethal weapons to keep in order?"
60222Does n''t that suggest an opportunity?"
60222God in heaven, could it be truly that?
60222Great God in heaven!--men call upon the name of God even when they profess to be agnostics-- could she be going to die?
60222Had any confidential information been received from certain oriental visitors who, from time to time, had come to this country?
60222Had he not sought by magical aid to soar aloft like the eagle, only to fall and be dashed to pieces on Minerva''s altar?
60222He glanced at Wilton:"Ready?"
60222He swore irritably, and then roared an inquiry:"Are you there?
60222History has illustrated that over and over again?"
60222How are we going to regulate international commerce?
60222How shall he face the unfathomable whirlpool that yawns for the frail boat in which he is compelled to trust?
60222I have read it, or did I dream it?"
60222If he did not look out he would go there and get killed himself presently, and that would be a nice thing to happen, would n''t it?
60222If one had repeated to most of these globe- trotters Gloster''s question in King Lear:"Dost thou know Dover?"
60222In love with whom?
60222Is it true he is still alive?"
60222Is n''t nearly every man, in both services?
60222It was her own voice that died away, and what was this mysterious sound-- rising from the valley with the mists that melted at the break of day?
60222Linton, raising his own cap, turned towards the illustrious passenger:"Shall we start, sir?"
60222Or could it be that they were running short of ammunition?
60222She sighed and looked at him wistfully, then said appealingly:"You will come upstairs?"
60222THE COUP D''ÉTAT?
60222The voice that spake to the woman in the garden seemed to be speaking still:"What is this that thou hast done?"
60222Then came another problem-- what was the right sort of motor?
60222Then once more the Vice- President vehemently appealed to the audience:"Who will join the Amazons of England?"
60222Then the Vice- President, in tones now piercing and tremulous, cried out:"Who will join the First Regiment of the Amazons of England?"
60222There is something I can do for you in your trouble?"
60222To what purpose do we expose our lives in war?
60222To- morrow we''ll be just the same as ever, wo n''t we?
60222Was it not an American, not an English, Admiral who had come to the rescue of the British colony?
60222Was it the word"Forgive?"
60222Was not blood thicker than water?
60222Was the reign of woman to be inaugurated on new and bolder lines; or would man, in the nick of time, re- assert himself?
60222Were not the American people our own kith and kin?
60222Were they in for a lecture on geography?
60222What about imports and exports?
60222What could it mean?
60222What did Wilton want?
60222What did he say?
60222What did these things betoken?
60222What do you think?
60222What is his good, and what is his evil?
60222What is man in presence of the waterspout that towers from the ocean to the clouds?
60222What is your advice?"
60222What mad idea was this?
60222What might not Lady Cat accomplish in the temporary absence of the President?
60222What more natural than that most of the passengers should land and fill up the time by the inspection of the points of interest in the town?
60222What of the Empire?
60222What part of the coast is that down there?"
60222What was he doing now?
60222What was he trying to do?
60222What was that silent log- like thing the waves were rolling yonder in the semi- darkness?
60222What was there to be afraid of?
60222What was this?
60222What would it profit a woman to force herself out of her ordained place in the plan of creation?
60222What''s the best air- ship that ever was built against a wind like this?"
60222What''s this I hear about the Fort?"
60222What, he vaguely wondered, was Wilton doing now?
60222What, then, would be likely to limit her revenge or curb her ambition if an opportunity like the present could be made to serve her purpose?
60222What?
60222Where''s my book?"
60222Which mine would be exploded first?
60222Which shall it be?"
60222Who are you?"
60222Who can limit the life of the ego-- fix its beginning, or appoint its end?"
60222Who could possibly credit such a tale?
60222Who is it?"
60222Who wants an air- ship calling for his parlour- maid at the attic window?
60222Who wants thieves sailing up to his balcony?
60222Who would dare to deny that women were as brave as men?
60222Why did you do it?"
60222Why do we defend our wives and sisters from a foreign enemy if Rome has tyrants who incite the people to violent and vindictive acts?
60222Why had he not used it before?
60222Why not?"
60222Why not?"
60222Why should you help me, unless I tell you all, everything-- everything, fully and frankly?
60222Why was he sawing frantically, convulsively, at that tightened cord?
60222Will you read this?"
60222Would it be his turn next?
60222You shall be very nice, and I shall forgive you, because, after all, I do love you, do n''t I?"
60222and suppose, after all, poor Renshaw is dead?"
60222exclaimed Herrick, springing to his feet,"do n''t you see one over yonder?"
60222exclaimed the General,"were Thackeray and Dickens prejudiced?
60222is that the_ Bladud_?"
60222she asked, abruptly,"do you think it possible that in some former state of being you and I or others can have met before?"
60222still the gods?"
60222what was the matter?
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?
41405''Does not this prove that capitalist production creates a surplus product for which there is no room on the internal market?
41405''How can the entire capitalist class accumulate money under such circumstances?
41405''Is n''t there a chance to make a little profit?
41405''Would saving be able to produce this stick?''
41405''[ 173] If this is true, how can there be any accumulation of capital?
41405''[ 190] What would MacCulloch have to advise in view of such an agrarian crisis in Southern Europe?
41405''[ 393] Where could the ruined American farmer turn?
41405( 2) Q.: Where do the capitalists get the money for the realisation of capitalised surplus value?
41405( 3) Q.: How did the money come into the country in the first place?
41405And of what does this surplus- product consist?
41405And of what does this surplus- value consist?
41405And who requires these additional means of production?
41405And why?
41405And why?
41405Aside from this, where does the money come from?
41405But could anyone increase his consumption as rapidly and indefinitely as the progress of labour productivity makes the surplus value increase?
41405But does this diagram show a surplus product to come into being?
41405But how large a family?
41405But if this great public is essentially characterised as consuming the surplus value, whence does it obtain the means to buy?
41405But if we ask:''What are these wages for the workers who have received them?''
41405But now the question arises: who is to get these indigestible items in the course of general distribution?
41405But what about the consumption of society?
41405But what is the position in real life?
41405But what of the remaining surplus value, the part that is accumulated?
41405But who can buy the products incorporating the other, the capitalised part of the surplus value?
41405But who could have bought their surplus product?
41405But who else could provide the demand for the commodities incorporating the capitalised surplus value?
41405Can one actually talk of total social capital of society as an entity, and if so, what is the real meaning of this concept?
41405Could it be that there is too much of one kind of produce and too little of another, as Say and Ricardo would have it?
41405First and foremost where do the B''s get the cash to buy an additional product from the A''s?
41405For whom can it be destined?
41405Has it any real bearing on the problems of actual life?
41405Has not England, by forgetting men for things, sacrificed the end to the means?
41405Have they had any other effect than to make every class partake of care, privation and the danger of complete ruin?
41405He exclaims:''Whose demand?
41405Here we must ask first of all: what is the starting point of accumulation?
41405How can it be assured that every one of these factors increases in the right proportion?
41405How can it be possible under these circumstances to construct anything in the nature of a total capital of society?
41405How can this take place, leaving cycles and crises out of consideration?
41405How can we overcome this blatant contradiction?
41405How could production-- so divided and yet so powerful-- conceivably estimate in good time what will be enough?
41405How could the entrepreneurs of the world recognise the limits beyond which the market would cease to be healthy?
41405How does he himself monetise this surplus- portion of his product?
41405How does this affect the process of reproduction?
41405How is it done?
41405How then is it that capitalist expansion had not yet( in 1912) shown any sign of slackening?
41405How will the material relations of reproduction be adjusted?
41405How, in terms of capitalism, does society create out of its annual labour a_ greater_ amount of capital than it formerly possessed?
41405How, then, could their labour power provide them with a living?
41405I ask: Do the capitalists perhaps give away their products to foreigners for nothing, throw it into the sea, maybe?
41405If Sismondi exclaims in the face of Ricardo''s doctrine:''What, is wealth to be all, and man a mere nothing?
41405If accumulation does take place, demand will absorb output, as the model shows, but what is it that makes accumulation take place?
41405If we ask a capitalist:''What are the wages you pay your workers?''
41405Is it explained just because we can put the mathematical proportions of accumulation on paper?
41405May not this sum suffice to monetise the surplus- value?
41405On this new conception[ of Mac''s] there is a surplus of products, an advantage from labour-- to whom will it accrue?
41405Rodbertus is ready with this answer:''What were the workers to do after their emancipation other than to agree to these regulations?
41405So the surplus product of Departments I and II must be bought-- by whom?
41405The masters or the workers in town or country?
41405The production of what products?
41405The question is: How does he maintain his surplus- value, not, how does he divide the money later after he has secured it?
41405The question still remains: Where does the money come from, which the various B''s( I) withdrew from the circulation and accumulated?
41405This brings us back to the old question: How, and by whom, is the accumulated surplus value to be realised?
41405Ultimately, the exorbitant interest had to be paid somehow, but how-- where were the means to come from?
41405We should not ask, accordingly: Where does the money required for realising the surplus value come from?
41405Well then, who requires these additional consumer goods?
41405Were they simply to grab some of the capital existing in the society for their maintenance?
41405What buyers, then, does he advance for this new luxury production?
41405What does he think about, then?
41405What does this mean?
41405What had provided the capital for these enterprises?
41405What happens to the products of Department II which are then left over?
41405What has gone wrong?
41405What is income, and what is capital?
41405What is it precisely that constitutes this problem of the reproduction of total capital?
41405What is the fruit of this immense accumulation of wealth?
41405What is the nature of the total capital of a society?
41405What kind of people are we thinking of when we speak of an increase in the population?
41405What motive have the capitalists for enlarging their stock of real capital?
41405What will become of the capitalised surplus value?
41405What, then, could the workers have done?
41405What, then, has thrown a spanner into the works, why the crisis?
41405What, then, is this surplus value that it should interest the capitalist for its own sake?
41405Whence the demand for the accumulated surplus value?
41405Where can this additional labour be found?
41405Where does II get the money for this?
41405Where does the additional money come from, by which the additional surplus- value now contained in the form of commodities is to be realised?
41405Where does the demand come from which keeps accumulation going?
41405Where does the money for this purpose come from?
41405Where is this continually increasing demand to come from, which in Marx''s diagram forms the basis of reproduction on an ever rising scale?
41405Where, for instance, are the organisations, the up- to- date statistical bureaux and the like to help them in this task?
41405Where, then, could we find this new capital which may perhaps be much more considerable than that required by agriculture?...
41405Where, then, does the accumulation of wealth make itself felt as a public benefit?
41405Where, then, does the additional money come from?--the £ 100 the capitalists need to realise their own surplus value?
41405Who will buy the commodities in which it is hidden?
41405Who, then, realises the permanently increasing surplus value?
41405Whose satisfaction?
41405Why is this?
41405Why, come to that, does England require an external market?
41405Why?
41405Will the others be able to keep it from them?
41405Will what they want be the grave of modern civilisation?
41405With what object?
41405Yet Bulgakov overlooks the principal problem: who exactly is to profit by an expansion such as that whose mechanism he examines?
41405Yet would it not be very easy to make good this loss in means of production which results from our example?
41405[ 294] But then, is it not beyond any doubt that some such''third persons''exist in every capitalist society?
41405[ 90] Two questions now arise:( 1) by whom should the money be owned, and( 2) how much of it should there be?
41405_ Suum cuique_--had this not been the motto of Rodbertus?
41405accumulate, for whose sake do they produce?
41405and what does he want to exchange his hops for?
41405but: Where are the consumers for this surplus value?
41405can we trace income, wholly or in part, back to the stick as its_ cause_, may we consider it, wholly or in parts, as a_ product_ of the stick?
41405into it?
41405into it?
41405not consumption but capitalisation of part of the surplus value?
41405or, as Marx would have it: Whence the money to pay for the accumulated surplus value?
41405the workers as wages, or the capitalists as profits of enterprise?
41405to expand production, instead of squandering it altogether?
16897(_ Aside_, I say, old fellow, what game are you up to now?)
16897(_ Aside_: I wonder what all that row is about?
16897(_ Aside_: Let''s see, what did we agree was the likeliest way?)
16897(_ Aside_: Then why the devil did he say from one shop when his evidence was taken before?)
16897(_ Aside_: True for you, old Benson, or else how could I have subpoenaed you?)
16897(_ To_ ST.) You were an eye- witness of that?
16897(_ aside_: Oh, what terrible revenge is he devising for me?)
16897(_ looking at him_) But I say, what''s the matter with you?
16897All of them?
16897And did you believe it?
16897And did you see the second loaf tumble down?
16897And was it exciting?
16897And_ why_?
16897Anything else?
16897Are we justified in thinking that the prisoner was speaking metaphorically?
16897Are you pleading, or are you not pleading?
16897Armed?
16897But how can I behave decently when I''m dead?
16897But how_ am_ I to live?
16897But what are you going to do with me, then?
16897But what at, since you object to lawyers?
16897But who is going to shoot you?
16897But you do now?
16897Can I do anything to help you?
16897Can you remember any other words he said?
16897Can you remember the exact words he used?
16897Can you repeat anything he said?
16897Citizen, what''s the matter?
16897Constable Potlegoff, at how many do you estimate the dense crowd at Beadon Road, when I obstructed?
16897Constable, did you see this robbery?
16897Could you get near him?
16897Could you hear what he said?
16897Did she go into the shop to take them?
16897Did they oppose your search?
16897Did they plot anything dreadful?
16897Did you arrest them?
16897Did you find any documents or papers on him when he was arrested?
16897Did you find out where?
16897Did you find them?
16897Did you gather whose head it was that they were speaking of?
16897Did you hear what the prisoner was saying to the policeman-- who, by the way, was, I suspect, only shamming drunkenness?
16897Did you know what that meant?
16897Did you search for them there?
16897Do you call any other witnesses, Mr. Hungary?
16897Do you call witnesses?
16897Do you find the prisoner at the bar"Guilty"or"Not Guilty"?
16897Do you remember the words I used?
16897Do you see the policeman in Court?
16897Do you want to ask the witness anything?
16897Do?
16897Doing?
16897Enough, woman?
16897From different shops, or from one?
16897Have you heard him suggest any means of doing all this?
16897Have you heard the prisoner speaking?
16897Have you no sense of decency, sir?
16897Have you seen the prisoner before?
16897Have you the heart to say such things to a man whom you are going to shoot in a few minutes?
16897Have you witnesses to call?
16897How are you going to punish me?
16897How can I help you?
16897How could we have one?
16897How did she take them?
16897How do you like it, old fellow?
16897How many were present at that meeting of the Socialist League where we were plotting to make the Queen take in washing?
16897How many were present?
16897How_ can_ you talk such nonsense?
16897I must write my self down a smoutch-- smoutch?
16897I say, do n''t you remember me, citizen?
16897I''ve said enough: I did n''t steal the loaves-- and if I had a done, where was the harm?
16897In which he took part?
16897Is Beadon Road a frequented thoroughfare?
16897Is that agreed to, neighbours?
16897Is the prisoner defended?
16897Is there anything else?
16897Is this unpleasant business agreed to?
16897It was in the street that you saw the three loaves fall down?
16897Lastly, when I told you in the public- house that we were two millions strong, were you drunk or sober?
16897Like this?
16897Londoner, eh?
16897Meaning, doubtless, that they had had an inkling of your search and had sold the arms?
16897My lord, have you been present, in disguise, at a meeting of the Socialist League in 13 Farringdon Road?
16897My lord, you said that you were shocked at what the prisoner said: what was the nature of his discourse?
16897Need I point out to you at any length, then, the danger of allowing criminals, offenders against the sacred rights of property, to go at large?
16897No?
16897Not fancy work?
16897Now let me ask you, if that matters, is Beadon Road a thronged thoroughfare?
16897One after another?
16897Plain washing?
16897Prisoner at the bar, what have you to say?
16897Prisoner, do you want to re- examine the witnesses?
16897Prisoner, do you wish to ask the Constable any questions?
16897Prisoner, what is the matter with you?
16897Prisoner, why do n''t you answer?
16897Professor Tyndall, have you seen me before?
16897Punish you?
16897Rabbits and hares some of them, as why should he not?
16897Should we hurt his feelings by being a little merry in his presence now?
16897Spare you, citizen?
16897Stop a bit, though; where''s the Clerk of the Court?
16897They''re good to fasten up boats with, and for carts, and such like; so why should we waste them by ornamenting you with them?
16897Those who live in this metropolis must have their bowels drawn out-- is that right?
16897Was I drunk?
16897Was I sober?
16897Was he drunk or sober?
16897Was that the only occasion on which you heard him speaking?
16897Well, can you tell me what he was saying?
16897Well, constable, did you see the woman take the loaves?
16897Well, did I say anything about bowels?
16897Well, do you wish to question the witnesses?
16897Well, does n''t that mean the same thing?
16897Well, my good woman, what have you to say to this?
16897Well, my lord, were you pleased with what you saw and heard?
16897Well, neighbours, what''s the business to- day?
16897Well, neighbours, what''s to be said?
16897Well, sergeant, you saw this woman steal the loaves?
16897Well, what did I say?
16897Well, what do you think of a judge, old fellow?
16897Well?
16897Were there a thousand persons present?
16897What am I to do?
16897What am I to do?
16897What am I to do?)
16897What can I do to help you?
16897What did they do?
16897What do they do with you, you blooming old idiot, when you goes abroad and waddles through the Loover?
16897What do you want to know for?
16897What does it all mean, Bill?
16897What does the fellow mean?
16897What else?
16897What is that you said, sir?
16897What is the use of your denying it, when your own witness gives evidence of it?
16897What is to be done with him?
16897What matter are they to take into their hands?
16897What the deuce could I do with a servant?
16897What was he doing there?
16897What was he doing?
16897What''s that noise outside?
16897What''s that to you?
16897What''s the matter?
16897What''s the odds?
16897What''s the use of_ saying_ anything to it?
16897What''s this, citizen?
16897What''s_ he_ been doing, I wonder?
16897What, now?
16897What, now?
16897What?
16897What_ can_ you be afraid of?
16897What_ is_ the matter?
16897When do we begin wheat harvest?
16897When was that?
16897Where?
16897Where?
16897Who brought you there?
16897Who was I with?
16897Who''s hurting you, old gentleman?
16897Why Nupkins, what''s this?
16897Why, my lord?
16897Why, on earth, should I murder you?
16897Why, what ails the man?
16897Why, what has he been doing?
16897Why, what next?
16897Wo n''t you save all further trouble by hanging me, my lord?
16897Woman, woman, have you anything more to say?
16897Would it have been easy for any one to pass through the crowd?
16897Would it, indeed?
16897Would you listen to me if I did?
16897Yes, so it was in the street that you saw the loaves fall down?
16897Yes,_ after_ she took it off the counter, in the street?
16897Yes; speaking: to how many people?
16897You heard him arranging with others for a rising of the lower orders?
16897You heard what I said, my lord?
16897You noticed her take all three loaves?
16897You say it was a dense crowd: how dense?
16897You say that the audience was very small; that was at first; but did it not increase as time went on?
16897You say that you could n''t understand their jokes: but could you understand them when they were in earnest?
16897Your Grace, were you present at the meeting at Beadon Road where I was arrested?
16897_ And what''s the craft whereby ye live_?
16897_ How crown ye excellence of worth_?
16897_ How deal ye, then, with pleasure and pain_?
16897_ How fares it, then, with high and low_?
16897_ Jugged_?
16897_ To_ FREEMAN) But who is to employ me?
16897_ What gain that lordship''s past and done_?
16897_ You_ can bear_ her_ troubles well enough, ca n''t you, old fat guts?
16897anybody against it?
16897did it surprise you?
16897have they got hold of that story, then?)
16897have you no punishment but death, then?
16897how can I call witnesses to swear that I did n''t steal the loaves?
16897how can we punish you?
16897is it?
16897there is, is there?
16897what am I to do?
16897what am I to do?
16897what do you mean?
16897what''s that?
16897what_ is_ going on?
16897who would be the jailer?
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?''
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?
35447A lark?
35447A murder?
35447A serenade?
35447Absurd?
35447Ah, who''s afraid? 35447 Ai n''t I a- doin''it now?"
35447An enemy?
35447An''ye''re goin''ter help me bear mine?
35447And I distinctly said no jumping or screaming, did n''t I?
35447And how did you get all these costly and beautiful things, my dear?
35447And if I do not see you often while your palace is building, you may know at least I have not forgotten-- and you will understand?
35447And if she never calls?
35447And suppose they all choose one job?
35447And the man who refuses to work?
35447And this is the ideal you came here to build?
35447And what are the foundations on which you propose to build this heaven on earth?
35447And what brought you to this decision?
35447And what did he say?
35447And what happened?
35447And who will decide how much each one needs-- the man who feels the need or the state?
35447And why not? 35447 And why not?
35447And would you risk this enormous sum on one experiment? 35447 And yet you place yourself absolutely in my power?"
35447And you accepted these rich and costly things in perfect innocence of the evil meaning others might put on them?
35447And you could get no hint of the identity of the men who gave the money?
35447And you did n''t like it?
35447And you do n''t object?
35447And you got the incentive in your defeat?
35447And you think I''ll submit to this?
35447And you think that I will accept such shame?
35447And you think your father will stand for it?
35447And you will abolish private property?
35447And you''re my chum that never flunked when she gave her word?
35447And you''ve fully weighed the cost?
35447Are women to receive the same allowance as men, and married women the same as spinsters? 35447 Are ye willin''to learn them things?"
35447Are you mad? 35447 Are you mixed up in any way personally with the young woman who spoke here that day?"
35447Are you ready to descend with me to the depths, my princess in disguise?
35447Are you sure it would be perfectly safe, Norman?
35447As our society grows-- and thousands are now clamouring for admission-- how is wealth to be distributed? 35447 Awkward?"
35447Because I''m laughing?
35447Bigger news?
35447But do n''t we begin to weaken the moment we do a thing like that? 35447 But how did it happen twice the same day, sonny?"
35447But how?
35447But if he does something rash?
35447But if they propose to give you a better flag, Governor?
35447But is it a success? 35447 But my dear Blanche,"pleaded Barbara,"ca n''t you see that you are bringing scandal and disgrace into the colony?"
35447But over you?
35447But what did you tell him?
35447But what on earth do you want a lightning- rod for, John?
35447But where''s the calf I''m supposed to be watching?
35447But you believe in free speech?
35447But you have not accepted his love?
35447But your incentive-- I do n''t understand-- in such an hour?
35447Can I git de captain er de football team two seats? 35447 Can a farmer be allowed vacations?
35447Can he earn a wife, or make one for himself?
35447Can you blame him after the way you acted?
35447Congratulate me?
35447Dare?
35447Deliberately set out to make him love me?
35447Did you ever know me to flunk when I gave my word?
35447Do n''t you think, comrades,Norman began, in persuasive tones,"that your demands are rather high?"
35447Do what, Guardie? 35447 Do ye love me?"
35447Do you call this the Brotherhood of Man?
35447Do you know,smilingly inquired the superintendent,"how much it will cost to plant and harvest such a crop?"
35447Do you really doubt it?
35447Even at the risk of your life?
35447Even in spite of the Socialists?
35447Even so,the young leader responded,"is it fair that an assistant cook should receive equal wages with the chef?"
35447Ever milk a cow?
35447Ever swing a hod?
35447For heaven''s sake, what do I do?
35447Good heavens,cried the girl, her big blue eyes opening wide with injured innocence,"how could I help it?
35447Had n''t you better part them now?
35447Has he returned from that woman yet?
35447Has n''t your imagination been caught by beautiful phrases, my boy?
35447Have you gone mad?
35447Have you gone mad?
35447He told you he had whipped all the others who had taken that walk with him?
35447He will deliver the deeds to- morrow?
35447Honestly, I''m afraid I disgraced myself, did n''t I?
35447Honestly, now, Governor, just between us, do n''t you think you were a little bit absurd to- day?
35447Honestly?
35447How are the thousand and one matters pertaining to private life and habits to be settled without continually augmenting the power of government? 35447 How are we to prevent speculation, wages being unequal?
35447How can I know him?
35447How can we prevent a man from losing his wages playing poker with his neighbour if he does so joyfully? 35447 How can we punish the jobbery and waste and corruption which may enter from experiments which are not made in good faith?
35447How can we,the questioner went on,"retain our democratic liberties as law makers as we grow in numbers?
35447How could I dream that he would commit such an act of insane treason before my very eyes?
35447How do you like the picture?
35447How long have you loved me?
35447How long, O Lord, how long, will Thy servant wait for deliverance?
35447How many hours shall constitute a day on the farm? 35447 How?"
35447How?
35447I can not see Norman, to- day?
35447I did n''t feel it, sir-- why?
35447I hope you did n''t threaten him, Tom?
35447I suppose he has no people living who are interested in him?
35447I tried to eat and something choked me-- what was it? 35447 I''d like to know,"the cook shouted,"how I''m to do my work if every fool in creation can butt into my business?"
35447I''ve got to have some fun, have n''t I? 35447 If a man chooses to be a writer, how many years shall he be allowed to work at his occupation if in the opinion of the judges he shows no talent?
35447If churches are built, who shall determine their cost and their style of architecture if the State erects them? 35447 If labour is the creator of all wealth can one man ever earn a million dollars?"
35447If religion is allowed, who shall determine how many preachers each denomination can have? 35447 If the State will not make exchanges, what is one to do who has taken a piece of property and finds later he has no use for it?
35447If we are ever to attain a condition of equality must we not forbid gifts and exchanges? 35447 In heaven''s name, Norman, what''s the matter?"
35447In your new State of Ventura you will give to each man according to his needs?
35447Is it a world worth living in?
35447Is it becoming?
35447Is it possible,Norman inquired,"that there is a human being among us who eats sauerkraut for breakfast?"
35447Is n''t it thrilling?
35447Is not such pressure desirable?
35447Is there goin''ter be any trouble?
35447It makes your heart leap, does n''t it?
35447Just a little childish about a piece of red, white, and blue cloth?
35447Kin ye cook?
35447Kin ye scrub?
35447Kin ye wash?
35447Look here, Elena, I hope you do n''t believe that I have been disloyal to you in my association with Barbara Bozenta?
35447Look here, what are ye drivin''at?
35447Married?
35447Merely for a difference of opinion, Governor?
35447Must a doctor always come when he''s called-- even for imaginary, hysterical, and foolish causes? 35447 Name er God, man, what de matter wid you?
35447Nonsense-- who''s afraid?
35447Not coming?
35447Not old Tom and Joe?
35447Now that you are just making it a marvellous success?
35447Now, you_ are_ afraid of me?
35447Of course not-- what woman ever does?
35447Of me?
35447Oh-- after the disarming?
35447On the other hand, if the State alone can make exchanges, how can we prevent a shrewd man from getting rich by dealing with the State itself? 35447 Or will the State force him to spend all, thus encouraging reckless habits?
35447Over Norman''s meeting?
35447Promise to put all anger out of your heart and talk to Norman as a father, not as an enemy-- won''t you?
35447Put the question solemnly to ourselves-- we do n''t want the job at any price, do we?
35447Said that he had been appointed by the council to whip you?
35447Say, Elena, for heaven''s sake, who are you in love with anyhow-- with me or the Governor?
35447Say, ai n''t you worked your jaw overtime now?
35447Shall Protestants be allowed a sum equal to the amount used in support of religious orders? 35447 Shall men and women be required to marry or be allowed to remain single?
35447Shall one general manager decide what kind of crops to raise on each piece of land or each manager decide for himself? 35447 Shall we repeat it until you are used to it?"
35447She ca n''t live, can she?
35447So who''s afraid?
35447Still dreaming of the New Joan of Arc, Norman?
35447Suppose I can convince you that you have entered on a mistaken mission-- that your programme is foolish, impossible, and dangerous?
35447Suppose a poor manager spoils the crop on an immense tract of land, how can any adequate penalty be enforced? 35447 Suppose after all, Guardie, he should succeed?"
35447That''s my secret, sir,the old man answered,"but I must have one-- won''t you get it for me?"
35447Then I ca n''t persuade you to give up this madness?
35447Then I must speak softly, must I not? 35447 Then I''d like to know who did?"
35447Then I''m wasting breath to plead with you?
35447Then from to- day we are comrades in the cause of humanity?
35447Then we''re both in the right mind now, to begin all over again, are we not?
35447Then what''s a better way?
35447Then what''s the use? 35447 Then you are going to import a new breed of men and women?"
35447Then you''ll join us to- day?
35447Then, what t''''ell ye kickin''about?
35447This is your father, Norman----"Get off the wire or quit your kiddin''--what do you want?
35447Unfair? 35447 Wall, ef you try any more capers in that dinin''-room, your health''s goin''ter break clean down-- yer hear me?"
35447Was the old world of family life, of starvation and misery, worth living in?
35447Was there an earthquake this morning, Norman?
35447We shall be just two children to- day-- shall we not?
35447Well, does n''t that jar you? 35447 Well, is n''t the joke on me?
35447Well, sir,the father said, at length,"have you nothing to say to me after what has occurred to- day?"
35447Well, what do ye think er that?
35447Were you not partners and friends before you joined the Brotherhood?
35447What are you tryin''ter do anyhow?
35447What compensation can we give to those who hate theatres? 35447 What did ye ruin them horses''shoulders fer?"
35447What did you mean by saying that you were afraid of coming trouble?
35447What did you say to him?
35447What do you mean by that?
35447What do you mean, Catherine?
35447What do you mean, sir?
35447What do you mean?
35447What do you say, Tom?
35447What have you heard? 35447 What have you to say?"
35447What is it, Guardie? 35447 What is it-- what is it?
35447What is it?
35447What is it?
35447What is to be done with a strong minority who are bitterly opposed to the action of the majority when we assume our permanent democratic form? 35447 What kind of a surprise?"
35447What news?
35447What on earth is that they are singing, Norman?
35447What on earth is the matter?
35447What on earth''s the matter?
35447What shall be done with a man who works outside regular hours and accumulates a vast private fortune?
35447What shall be done with the Negro, the Chinaman, and the Indian when their numbers largely increase? 35447 What were the conditions?"
35447What''s happened?
35447What''s that you say?
35447What''s the matter, child?
35447What''s the matter? 35447 What''s the matter?"
35447What? 35447 What?"
35447What?
35447What?
35447What?
35447When our theatre is opened, shall admission be free? 35447 Where are you going?"
35447Where is it?
35447Which means for me?
35447Who can decide whether ideas proposed are useless or impossible? 35447 Who lowered that flag?
35447Who lowered that flag?
35447Who shall not inherit the kingdom of God?
35447Who shall say when a doctor is not fit to practise? 35447 Who will join us now?
35447Who''s afraid?
35447Why afraid?
35447Why do strong men go forth to war?
35447Why do you trust me with the greatest question of your life with such perfect faith?
35447Why not consider?
35447Why of me? 35447 Why should we rejoice to- day in the death of our fellow man?
35447Why should you continue to repeat that foolish assertion? 35447 Why should you fight one another?
35447Why stand by? 35447 Why this insult?"
35447Why?
35447Will the State permit freedom of opinion in the columns of its papers and the books printed? 35447 Will the State publish all books by all authors, or will selections be made?
35447Will you do it?
35447Will you promise me one thing, Guardie?
35447Without a frown or a hostile look?
35447Wo n''t this soil grow cantaloups?
35447Would such a fate be intolerable?
35447Would you be sorry if the dream should be realized?
35447Yer believe it now?
35447Yes, but how kin ye git any law inside a man ef he''s always chuck full er licker?
35447Yes, what is it?
35447Yes, yes, I know; but man must work-- all men must work in your new state?
35447Yet is n''t man greater than all these worlds?
35447You are not tired?
35447You are still daring me?
35447You are sure he ca n''t raise the money?
35447You are sure you do this because I asked you?
35447You are worried?
35447You believe me now?
35447You believe this?
35447You can not believe that I willingly betrayed you?
35447You dare thus to defy my wishes?
35447You deny the accusations they bring against your good name?
35447You did not sleep well?
35447You doubt it?
35447You doubt my power?
35447You grant these chumps-- these idiots-- wages equal to mine? 35447 You have n''t asked me if I love you?"
35447You have not made love to her?
35447You knew I would?
35447You know that if he did succeed in raising the money, and establishing his brotherhood of man, the scheme would end in failure?
35447You know that you will be forced to spend most of your time in my office?
35447You like it?
35447You mean Saka?
35447You mean it?
35447You mean the half million was subscribed?
35447You mean this?
35447You mean to stop all progress by stopping inventions?
35447You promise?
35447You say this to me after all that Catherine has been to you and your life?
35447You talk this twaddle about romantic love? 35447 You think I can do anything to help you?"
35447You think I do n''t mean it?
35447You think such drastic measures to prevent communication with the outside world will be needed?
35447You trust me so far?
35447You understand?
35447You were interested?
35447You will help and cheer me in the work I''ve planned?
35447You will not grant me the labour to complete the dredge?
35447You will not try to avoid me?
35447You wish me to decide the momentous question of our colony? 35447 You''ll report to me the moment you return?"
35447You''re sure that it is not her personal influence over you that has made you a Socialist?
35447You''ve heard about it?
35447You, Guardie?
35447You, too, side with these fanatics then?
35447You?
35447Your invention will succeed?
35447All I have done for your sake?
35447And then his short, sharp words came quick and curt and stinging:"Are you done now with this fool performance?"
35447And who shall call them to account if they publish treason against the State?
35447And who will determine how large the service required of each man?
35447Another suicide?"
35447Are n''t they glorious?
35447Are we Socialists not struggling merely with what is outside?
35447Are we not in reality struggling back into the primitive savage herd out of which individual manhood has slowly emerged?
35447Are you content with a system which produces three million paupers in a land flowing with milk and honey?
35447Are you satisfied with a system which drives hundreds of thousands of such girls into a life of shame?
35447As they grow up, who shall decide at what age each child shall begin to work?
35447At what period, or after how long a trial, shall it be decided that a man is a failure and must quit his chosen or assigned work?
35447Barbara started at his tone of anger and whispered:"How could you be so rude-- what is wrong?"
35447Barbara turned suddenly, looked into Norman''s eyes, and asked in anxious tones:"What do you mean?"
35447But your treatment of the brave and daring young spirit who conceived this colony and created its wealth and influence----""Am I responsible?"
35447But-- but if I_ do_--you promise to hold my hand every minute, Norman?"
35447CHAPTER X SON AND FATHER When the Colonel had greeted Elena at breakfast next morning he quietly asked:"You met Norman?"
35447Can I depend on you to execute my orders and mine alone?"
35447Can we allow individuals to work small farms?
35447Can we do it?
35447Can we mend matters by destroying them all?"
35447Can you kick me from your presence now as though I were a dog?"
35447Come, be honest with me now-- you''re not in love with this man?"
35447Confronting him a moment, Tom inquired:"Kin I ax ye a few questions?"
35447Could it be possible he was in love with her in the helpless, heroic, boy fashion of his age?
35447Did the sun ever shine on anything more beautiful?
35447Did they not find my death- song?"
35447Did you hear me?"
35447Do n''t you say so, miss?"
35447Do you like a system which drives thousands to the madness of drink and suicide every year?"
35447Do you propose thus to stop the progress of the world?"
35447Do you think I''d make a fool of myself trying before all these kids if I had n''t?"
35447Do you think it perfect?
35447Do you understand me?"
35447Do you want it at any price?"
35447Do you want to fight or work?"
35447For how can this cause of the herd be one with the heart- cry of the man for the one woman on earth his mate?
35447For, if men are not to be allowed to grow rich by trading, must not the State forbid private exchanges of every nature?
35447Free speech has been suppressed-- in God''s name, what next?"
35447Had Wolf discovered the boy''s absence from his post?
35447Had Wolf suspected and played with her?
35447Had the jailer recognized the trick and arrested the boy?
35447Have I, too, offended?"
35447Have they souls at all?
35447Have you any choice as to the kind of work to which you wish to be assigned?"
35447Have you forgotten all I have done in this work?
35447Have you no faith in your fellow man?
35447He scarcely recognized the short, sharp business accent of Norman''s voice:"Well, well, what is it?"
35447He tiptoed to Wolf''s side and whispered:"Any danger?"
35447How are sculptors, artists, musicians, or architects to be apportioned among different communities?
35447How are we to meet them?
35447How can I keep their tongues from wagging?
35447How can men who are not artists, poets, or musicians determine the value of such work?
35447How could you offend?
35447How determine which line of goods each community shall make?
35447How do you like our boasted civilization?
35447How is it to be known whether the parents misappropriate the fund of a child, or favour one more than another?
35447How is one community to exchange products with another?
35447How many sisters shall be allowed the Catholics and how many monks, and how shall they be distributed?
35447How much land will a man be required to work?
35447How shall this great industry be conducted ultimately?
35447How?"
35447I ca n''t help it that a dozen boys come to see me and nobody ever sees the old tabbies who lie about me, can I?
35447I ca n''t help it that they are foolish, can I?
35447I ca n''t help it that they are old and ugly, can I?"
35447I can do them, too----""But we''ve fixed the salary of the general manager at only seventy- five dollars a month, and you demand a hundred?"
35447I determined to put the work to the test first----""And I was the inspiration behind your faith and daring leadership?"
35447I do n''t like to press you for the secrets of your inner life, old man, but I''ve immense curiosity to know what you want with that lightning- rod?
35447I must wade and carry you across this place if you''re not afraid?"
35447I thought you were supremely happy this morning over the news that Dewey has smashed the Spanish fleet?"
35447I want to know if she''s in command of this colony?
35447If I no longer love, should I be chained?"
35447If a small majority want a dance- hall and musical extravaganza, and a minority want only the serious drama, which shall it be?
35447If a youth is forced to abandon a work on which he has set his heart, how can he be made of service to the community in a work he loathes?
35447If all books are published will not vast sums be wasted in printing worthless trash?
35447If he does n''t spend all his allowance by the end of the year can he save it and thus accumulate a private fortune?
35447If it continues to cost more to support a single woman than a married one, how can equality of rights be maintained?
35447If modern civilization is rotten, it ought to be destroyed, and who cares if it is?"
35447If not, suppose he goes at seedtime or harvest, gets drunk, stays two weeks or two months, and destroys a year''s crop?
35447If not, what shall be done when the receipts fall below expenses?
35447If opinions are to be edited by the State, how can the freedom of the press be maintained?
35447If selections are made, what unprejudiced, infallible board can be found competent to decide?
35447If so, can the new mongrel race maintain itself against the progress and power of the great high- bred races of men?
35447If so, must he ask permission where to go?
35447If so, what shall hinder a treasonable conspiracy from destroying respect for its authority?
35447If so, where is the justice and equality of such an arrangement?
35447If so, who determines the kind of crop each farm shall raise?
35447If so, who shall determine how it shall be expended?
35447If so, who shall do it?
35447If such an abuse of power should be made, would not the effect be to end forever all experiments and stop the progress of the world?
35447If the doctor proves a failure, how will they get rid of him?
35447If their souls are in subjection to his, has he not degraded them?
35447If they get rid of him, how can he be saddled on another community?
35447If we did n''t make the wealth, who did?"
35447In my heart of hearts I''ve always been afraid of men----""You''re not afraid of me?"
35447Into whose hands can this enormous power be entrusted, and how shall he be called to account?"
35447Is it worth the while of those who have to fret and fuss and fume trying to make something out of nothing?"
35447Is life inside or outside?
35447Is n''t that the only power worth having?
35447Is this an idle dream?
35447Is you gone clean crazy?
35447Joe repeated,"No drunkard-- shall-- what?"
35447Joe seconded the motion, and the chairman asked:"Are there any remarks on the motion?"
35447Marry her without even giving me the usual two weeks''notice?"
35447Merciful God, would he never return?
35447Nelson?"
35447Nobody will haul them down here, will they?"
35447Norman leaned close and whispered:"My boy, can you possibly get us two seats?"
35447Or how can one poet be just to his rival if he be made the judge?
35447Or shall we remain here, and hand in hand fight this battle to a finish?
35447Or shall we tax the believer to pay for lighting this hall for a weekly ball?
35447Or will they tell me what to do?
35447Perhaps the future of humanity?"
35447Secure from our young dreamer the title to this island and you will achieve an immortal deed-- you will not hesitate or fail?"
35447Shall I call at your office?"
35447Shall I do it?"
35447Shall I go back to the faith of my fathers in the old world, and will you come with me-- my wife, my mate, my life?
35447Shall a farmhand get only a dollar a day and a bricklayer two?
35447Shall all women be made to work?
35447Shall he be punished?
35447Shall one community suffer at the hands of an incompetent man, while a physician of genius ministers to the one next door?
35447Shall the resources of the colony be used thus against the bitter protest of those who do not believe in racing?
35447Shall we tax the unbeliever to support a church?
35447Suppose a majority demand a race- course?
35447Suppose a man offends the judge?
35447Suppose they all demand the right to live in one place?
35447Suppose your melons would not be sweet?"
35447Surely they''ll give you enough to get me a thirty- foot lightning- rod?"
35447That leaves a profit of more than a hundred thousand, does n''t it?"
35447That settles it, does n''t it?"
35447The Colonel paused as he turned to leave the room:"You will keep up your newspaper grind, my boy?"
35447The Colonel stroked her hair slowly, and asked with a smile:"What time is he coming?"
35447The boy darted up on the platform, and Norman turned to Elena:"Shall we please the boy?"
35447The entire colony is being disarmed this morning?"
35447The herd of cattle we call men, whose souls have never spoken that divine word of character and of action-- are they men?
35447The one man of all men on earth-- the man who loves you?"
35447The tireless zeal with which I''ve fought your battles?
35447The young poet- athlete looked at her in a dazed sort of way and stammered:"Did you ever see anything like it?"
35447There must be rulers, but how shall we choose our rulers, and with what powers shall we clothe them?
35447This is our compact?"
35447To whom shall they answer, the State, or their superior church dignitary?
35447Tom spoke vigorously:"Now will ye leave him to me?"
35447We do all the work, do n''t we?"
35447What are you going to do-- play the hero and rescue her from their clutches?"
35447What can I do for you?"
35447What can I do, for heaven''s sake?"
35447What can_ you_ do for me?
35447What do you say to it?"
35447What do you suspect?"
35447What does she say to- day if she knows what I''ve done?"
35447What is the good of achievement for any community if that achievement springs from the will of one man?
35447What matter if her appeal was to the emotions and not to the intellect?
35447What shall be done with an actor, for example, who should spit in the face of a judge deciding adversely?
35447What shall be done with the ever- increasing number of the lazy, dishonest, and criminal members of the community?
35447What should he do?
35447What sort of work would you like to have assigned you?"
35447What will be my lot?
35447What you doin''monkeyin''wid dat lightnin''-rod?"
35447What''s the difference?
35447What''s the trouble here?
35447What''s the use?
35447When our theatre is opened, who shall select the actors?
35447When the cost of experiments is greater than the total income of a citizen, how can the inventor bear the expense?
35447When they reached the pasture where the cows were herded, Norman asked Barbara, with some misgivings:"Honestly, did you ever milk a cow?"
35447When they reached the street, Norman asked:"You knew her before she fell into evil ways?"
35447Where will I find him?"
35447Which should it be?
35447Who asks if Humboldt was German or English, whether Spinoza was Jew or Gentile, Darwin English or French?
35447Who cares to know nationalities?
35447Who shall appoint editors?
35447Who shall decide on the selection of the star?
35447Who shall decide whether they are incompetent?
35447Who shall decide which to continue and which to stop?
35447Who shall determine, in this larger society, who shall be common labourers, who poets, artists, musicians, preachers, managers?
35447Who shall pay for this enormous damage, and how shall the penalty be enforced?
35447Who shall say when an editor is competent?
35447Who will be the first heroine to fill this breach in the walls of our defence?"
35447Who will decide the question of ability?"
35447Why did you do it?"
35447Why should n''t they?
35447Why should you desire me, knowing that I thus love another?"
35447Will I be allowed to choose my work?
35447Will any man sacrifice his own funds and his own time on an uncertain experiment when he can receive no benefit from the work?
35447Will it be dirty and disagreeable, or pleasant and inspiring?
35447Will the State make good his recklessness, force him to buy his own leg, or make him hop through the year on one leg?"
35447Will the new State of Ventura take direct charge of all children?
35447Will the people vote for and elect their own doctor, or will he be assigned?
35447Will these inferior races be placed on an absolute equality with the Aryan and will they be allowed to freely intermarry?
35447Will you come----?"
35447Will you come?
35447Wo n''t you come?"
35447Wo n''t you, dear?"
35447Would n''t you?"
35447You believe me?"
35447You know we licked England twice----""And we kin do it again, b''gosh, ca n''t we?"
35447You say you''re not afraid of lightning?"
35447You understand?"
35447You will raise this money?"
35447You wo n''t do this any more will you?
35447You''ll talk to him lovingly and tenderly as a father, wo n''t you?"
35447You''re not afraid?
35447You-- you will not allow me to be degraded thus-- will you?"
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?
11217A hot day''s just nothing but a hot day to you, is it?
11217A little harder to make a map this time, is n''t it? 11217 A-- quest?"
11217Ai n''t you getting awful hungry, Aunt Kate?
11217Am I''moored''any place?
11217And I presume it never occurred to you, Katie, that neither Ann nor I was fairly surfeited with opportunities for conversational initiative? 11217 And Italy?
11217And do they never try to rescue others from fires?
11217And do you mean to say you would want me-- anyhow?
11217And have you-- you are so good as to confide in me, so I presume to ask questions-- have you said anything to Ann?
11217And how did you happen to be so unkind as to call me up, Ann?
11217And how much,pressed Katie,"did the least experienced and skillful make?"
11217And is_ that_ all that matters? 11217 And it''s trying to be waked out of a sound sleep, is n''t it, uncle?"
11217And knowing nothing, you took her in?
11217And look here, Katie, what''s this about Prescott? 11217 And never tried to stop her?"
11217And the explanation? 11217 And then after a while you left this town?"
11217And what are you talking about? 11217 And what do you suppose he was prying around the Island for?"
11217And what does she mean to you, Katie?
11217And what would you say, Worthie,she asked after they had gone a little way in silence,"was the difference between thinking and wondering?"
11217And who, pray, is the man that mends the boats?
11217And why not?
11217And why, if I may venture still another blundering question, was poor Nora held responsible for a cough she never coughed?
11217And yet,she turned to him, after following his glance to a girl''s tense, white face,"what can they do?
11217And you call_ that_ not vulgar? 11217 And you feel, do you, Katie, that the need of your life just now is for danger?"
11217And you''ll be down there-- mending boats?
11217And you''ll be good to Ann?
11217And you''ll be there a little while, wo n''t you,he asked wistfully,"before you go-- you do n''t know where?"
11217And you''ll-- come and see me?
11217And you,he said softly,"do n''t know anything about the''underlying principles of life''?
11217And your mother, dear? 11217 Ann,"he asked gently,"have n''t you a''right to''--if we want you to?"
11217Ann--_who?_ Ann--_what?_"Ann_ who!_ Ann_ what!_ That''s a nice way to speak of my friends! 11217 Ann--_who?_ Ann--_what?_""Ann_ who!_ Ann_ what!_ That''s a nice way to speak of my friends!
11217Ann?
11217Are n''t you coming with us?
11217Are they sorry they''re not as old as somebody else?
11217Are you a socialist?
11217Are you sure-- you know?
11217Are you thanking God for yourself or for Watts, sonny?
11217As a favor to me, Watts, will you be good to the little dog?
11217As a favor to_ you_, Miss Jones,said Watts, making it clear that for his part--"Watts,"she asked,"how long have you been in the service?"
11217Aunt Kate,he asked,"when''s Miss Ann coming back?"
11217Aunt Kate?
11217Aunt Kate?
11217Aunt Kate?
11217But I suppose,she began again,"he would n''t be very likely to be there mending boats now?"
11217But could n''t you be court- martialed for doing that?
11217But how could you think that?
11217But how do you know he''ll rail?
11217But how do you know, Aunt Kate? 11217 But is any-- individual-- worth it?"
11217But of course,she added,"you paid it back just as soon as you could?"
11217But she knows?
11217But she''s coming back? 11217 But to keep the other country from getting a corner of it?"
11217But was n''t there_ any_ fun, dear?
11217But what did you tell him I wanted to see him_ for_?
11217But what else is there? 11217 But where is your future then, Wayne?"
11217But why hate me?
11217But why not, Aunt Kate?
11217But why not?
11217But why, Worthie?
11217But why, uncle? 11217 But why?
11217But wo n''t I have_ any_ gun''tall, Aunt Kate?
11217But wo n''t she be back?
11217But you like Ann, do n''t you, Wayne?
11217But you never feel that way, so you are contented and like the service, Watts?
11217But, Aunt Kate,he pursued after another silence,"what''s father making guns for-- if there are n''t going to be any?"
11217But, Aunt Kate-- won''t there be anybody''tall to kill?
11217But, Worth,she asked, when she had blinked the gnat away,"what did you tell this other man?"
11217But, dearie, what will you do when we land?
11217But_ she_ knows?
11217Ca n''t they come back, Katie? 11217 Called where?"
11217Called_ away_?
11217Can you always do what you want to do?
11217Dear little chappie, and Aunt Kate''s a cross mean old thing, is n''t she?
11217Dear me-- is he a public speaker?
11217Did he--_die_?
11217Did n''t I think it might be--_nice?_ Oh Katie-- you''d have to know what that day had been-- what so many days-- all days-- had been. 11217 Did n''t know I could do that, did you?"
11217Did n''t you get him?
11217Did n''t you tell me, Nora, that your cousin''s wife was very clever at sewing-- at fixing things over?
11217Did n''t you_ never_ have a dog?
11217Did n''t your papa get you''nother one?
11217Did you ever wonder,she asked, with real curiosity,"how in the world you happened to have such a daughter?"
11217Did you find out all you wanted to know from him, Aunt Kate?
11217Did you see it, Katie?
11217Did you see''Daisey- Maisey''?
11217Do all those people belong here?
11217Do many of these men go to church?
11217Do n''t Papa know''bout them?
11217Do n''t they-- don''t they have to-- work?
11217Do n''t you see that it is? 11217 Do n''t you want me to enjoy my place any more?
11217Do n''t you want them to know what you think, Aunt Kate?
11217Do n''t you want to tell me what you know? 11217 Do n''t_ go?_ Kate, what''s the matter with you?
11217Do n''t_ go?_ Kate, what''s the matter with you? 11217 Do n''t_ you_ know?"
11217Do they let them burn-- just because they know fire for a dangerous thing?
11217Do you always say what you mean, Aunt Kate?
11217Do you disapprove of this affair between Nora and Watts?
11217Do you ever hear a call, dear heart? 11217 Do you know-- do you know,"choked Katie--"that she may kill herself?"
11217Do you think I''d leave a sick girl sitting out here all alone?
11217Do you think I''d let them come back? 11217 Do you think socialism''s going to remove all the suffering from the world?
11217Do you want to know the honest truth?
11217Do you-- know?
11217Does n''t it occur to you, Katie, that as a matter of fact the other country might like a chance to develop its resources? 11217 Does n''t it seem to you,"she asked gently of the Reverend Saunders,"that it''s just an awful pity?"
11217Does n''t that ever seem to you a beautiful thing?
11217Does she_ look_ tired?
11217Does-- must one always''gain''something?
11217Elizabeth Barrett Browning is your favorite poet, is n''t she, Ann?
11217Envied him? 11217 Escape-- what?"
11217For what?
11217Fred,she asked, moved by her never slumbering impulse to find out about things,"just what is it you care for in Helen?
11217Frighten_ who?_"Ann,she repeated demurely.
11217From_ you_?
11217Get who?
11217Goin'', Aunt Kate?
11217Harry,she asked, in rather metallic voice,"how about that affair of yours down in Cuba?"
11217Harry,she asked,"have you said anything to your mother?"
11217Have you any reason,she asked,"to think Ann cares for you?"
11217Have you had them before? 11217 Have you made many excursions into the great outer world?"
11217He goes-- with you and Ann?
11217He likes his work?
11217Hello there,he said;"it''s been a long time since we saw you, ai n''t it?"
11217Her dream or your dream, Wayne?
11217Home? 11217 Honestly now, do you get that?"
11217Honey, will you play with him sometimes? 11217 How could you know each other?
11217How do you know there''ll be another?
11217How do you know,she asked, still demurely,"that I would like to marry any?"
11217How long you been here?
11217How long you goin''to stay?
11217How old are you, Katie?
11217How old is Miss Ann?
11217How should I know?
11217I s''pose you''ve seen the chickens?
11217I think you have had a hard time,Katie murmured, thinking to herself that one must have had hard time--"And what''s that to you?
11217I wonder, Nora, would she come and help us?
11217I wonder,he voiced it,"where it''s going to lead you?
11217In a world of homeless dogs, why should n''t I feel badly?
11217In for what?
11217In one of those?
11217In what way is he a queer genius?
11217Is her mother living?
11217Is it a wicked world?
11217Is it coming back?
11217Is it--?
11217Is n''t it scandalous?
11217Is n''t it the limit the way they''do you''at those girls''schools?
11217Is n''t it?
11217Is n''t poor Nora permitted to cough, if she is disposed to cough? 11217 Is n''t that what life is?
11217Is n''t there ever something makes you do things you know are n''t the things to do?
11217Is n''t this heat distressing?
11217Is this-- Captain Jones?
11217Isn''t-- what a pity?
11217It does look nice this way, does n''t it?
11217It hurts when applied to dogs, does it?
11217It seems we ought to be able to tell father whether they''re taking good care of it, does n''t it, Worth?
11217It shows what sort of hostess I am, does n''t it? 11217 It would seem rather inconsiderate, would n''t it?
11217It''s great about your friend coming; Miss--?
11217It''s lovely, is n''t it?
11217It''s not so simple a matter for you, is it-- this''being free''? 11217 Joke?
11217Just what kind of man would you like to marry?
11217Just what kind of man,asked Katie demurely,"would you say I had better marry?"
11217Katie, do you know how I''d like to pay you back? 11217 Katie, where did you learn it was very fetching to say outrageous things so demurely?"
11217Katie, why do you think it''s so funny? 11217 Katie, would you think a man a brute to propose to a girl on the day she was giving an important dinner?"
11217Katie, you do n''t mean to marry Prescott, do you?
11217Katie,he asked abruptly,"has she no people?
11217Katie,he asked passionately,"you mean that if walking together we ca n''t always be all in the sunshine--?"
11217Katie,he asked pleadingly,"where has Ann gone?"
11217Katie,he asked,"how much do you really care for the army?"
11217Katie,he besought,"wo n''t you help me?
11217Katie,he demanded sharply,"have you been disagreeable to Ann?"
11217Katie,he demanded,"how much did you ever talk to this fellow?
11217Katie,he said-- he never spoke her name save in that timid, lingering way--"don''t you think you''re rather over- emphasizing the sadness?"
11217Katie,he suddenly demanded,"what were you up to?
11217Katie,he was asking,"where did you first meet her?
11217Katie,it made him ask,"do n''t you think you''d better-- quit?"
11217Katie,she approached it, in Zelda''s own delicate fashion,"what would you think of Major Darrett and me joy- riding through life together?"
11217Lady or chorus girl?
11217Like her?
11217Look here,she said to the Major,"what is this?
11217Love her?
11217May I ask to whom I am indebted for this kindness?
11217Miss Kate,said Nora,"can you come and look at the table a minute?
11217No slam on either party?
11217No? 11217 Nora,"asked Katie, standing with her back to her,"what is it about Miss Forrest?"
11217Nora,she said, and Katie''s face was white and pleading,"did n''t Miss Ann say anything about leaving me a note?"
11217Not like what?
11217Not the Major Forrest family?
11217Now do you_ see_?
11217Now look here, Katie, surely you-- a girl of the world-- the good sort-- aren''t going to be so melodramatic as to dig up a''past''for me, are you?
11217Now was n''t that just sweet of father?
11217Now wo n''t you tell me what I can do?
11217Oh Worthie,she whispered,"is n''t it_ lovely_ to be getting home?"
11217Oh do n''t you think we''re a good deal of a joke, uncle?
11217Oh yes, help them get higher wages, I suppose?
11217Oh yes--_yes_--what is it?
11217Oh you are, are you? 11217 Oh, I say, jolly night, is n''t it?"
11217Oh, am I? 11217 Oh, do they?"
11217Oh, he-- then he is here?
11217Oh, is that so? 11217 Oh, that so?
11217Oh, will it?
11217Oh, would he?
11217Oh-- so he''s a guide, is he? 11217 Oh--"gasped Katie, and lost all color--"Oh--""Katie--?"
11217Oh--_yes_?
11217Oh_ yes_, Wayne?
11217On the Island? 11217 Over roads where there might be no sunshine?
11217Poor little doggie, does he want a pat?
11217Prescott, did n''t you hear something?
11217Remember your telling me about visiting at Fort Riley when you were quite a youngster? 11217 Rescue them for what?
11217See what-- dear Katie? 11217 Shall we walk on?"
11217She arrived this afternoon?
11217She goes back?
11217She the girl that''s sick?
11217Showing up the full- blowness of the bride? 11217 Some joy- ride, do n''t you think?"
11217Something is the matter?
11217Tell me,said Katie, more seriously,"why do you want to marry?"
11217Tell me,said Katie,"what''s in the great outer world?"
11217That you may invest it in dangerous literature?
11217The day who came? 11217 The what, Aunt Kate?"
11217The-- now what is it, Aunt Kate?
11217Then do n''t you see? 11217 Then each of those girls made a dollar today?"
11217Then may I ask, mysterious one, what you''re laughing at?
11217Then pray why have you any business here?
11217Then where will you go, Katie?
11217Then, how dare I? 11217 There are lots of silly people in the world, are n''t there?"
11217There are so many ways in which automobiles make life more bearable, do n''t you find it so, Miss Jones?
11217They''re out and out materialists, are n''t they? 11217 Think not?"
11217Think not?
11217This is not a bad looking suit, is it? 11217 This is what I mean-- it''s not the end, is it?"
11217Though a man''s past is not a woman''s business?
11217Through sleeping?
11217Uncle, does it ever come home to you that life''s a pretty serious business?
11217Uncle, how can you? 11217 Uncle,"Katie asked quietly,"do you ever think much about Christ?"
11217Up where?
11217Want me to get the man that mends the boats?
11217Was it the day_ she_ came?
11217Was it? 11217 Was there ever anybody in the world so wonderful-- so funny-- as Katie?
11217Watts say anything about whether he was still mending boats?
11217Wayne,she asked slowly,"what do you mean?"
11217Wayne,she asked,"have you felt this way a long time?
11217Wayne?
11217We know, do n''t we, how hard it is for army men to find futures as civilians?
11217Well I suppose--this she ventured tremulously, imploringly--"you went to West Point-- and were-- did n''t finish?"
11217Well sir, what do you think? 11217 Well then what did you do?"
11217Well where_ is_ she?
11217Well, Ann,she began, her voice high pitched and unsteady,"this is about the limit, is n''t it?"
11217Well, Katie, you-- you do n''t mean to take it up, do you?
11217Well, Wayne,she laughed,"are n''t you getting a little-- cryptic?
11217Well, did n''t you know,he demanded passionately,"that you could_ live_ with_ us_?"
11217Well, uncle, dear uncle,she laughed,"hast forgotten the days when nothing mattered so much as having the leaves the right shade of yellow?"
11217Well, what did she do it for?
11217Well, what of it?
11217Well, what people? 11217 Well, what would you think,"he suggested,"of''asking''for a system more interested in conserving nervous systems than in producing millionaires?
11217Well, what_ does_ get you there?
11217Well, where did I leave myself? 11217 Well, who is she?
11217Well,he said defiantly,"and what if she was?
11217Well?
11217Well?
11217What Forrest?
11217What are those men doing?
11217What are you doing it for?
11217What are you doing this for? 11217 What being, Aunt Kate?"
11217What can I do?
11217What did it? 11217 What do I care about sunny paths, if I must walk them alone?"
11217What do you know about me?
11217What do you mean? 11217 What do you mean?"
11217What do you mean?
11217What do you want to show me, dear?
11217What do you_ think_ about me?
11217What for? 11217 What indeed?"
11217What is it about Katie?
11217What is there about me to pity?
11217What made you think I was a socialist?
11217What rules?
11217What shall I do? 11217 What thinking about, Worthie dear?"
11217What will you do?
11217What will you have? 11217 What would you say they look upon as the most important thing in life?"
11217What''ll I tell him, Aunt Kate?
11217What''s a different matter?
11217What''s his name?
11217What''s your theory?
11217When did you begin to want to know about the''underlying principles of life''?
11217When doctors or lawyers do n''t do things right ca n''t you sue them and get your money back? 11217 Where do you live?"
11217Where have you been?
11217Where would you have to go, Aunt Kate? 11217 Where?"
11217Which is Aunt_ Kate? 11217 Which of what?"
11217Who are her people, Fred?
11217Who do you suppose the scoundrel_ is_?
11217Who is she, Katie?
11217Who is your stunning friend, Katie?
11217Who?
11217Whom do you think I could do good to?
11217Why a blow?
11217Why are n''t there?
11217Why are you sorry for me?
11217Why ca n''t you take as well as I can take?
11217Why do n''t you know all the world''s like that? 11217 Why do you need her?
11217Why is it? 11217 Why not?"
11217Why not?
11217Why not?
11217Why really, it''s quite as good as a play, is n''t it? 11217 Why should n''t I let myself feel badly?"
11217Why would it--?
11217Why, Ann, ca n''t you guess what it is about Katie? 11217 Why, Aunt Kate, do n''t you know him?
11217Why, Katie,Ann began,"does it make so much difference-- just because you know him?"
11217Why, Katie,he cried,"_ does_ it matter so?
11217Why, Katie,laughed her brother,"what do you mean by coming over here and interviewing men on their politics?"
11217Why, Wayne, you can scarcely expect me to be-- wholly pleased, can you?
11217Why, honey,she laughed,"does it really seem to you such a gloomy world-- world in which there will be nobody to kill?
11217Why-- why, Wayne?
11217Why? 11217 Why?"
11217Will you take Worth?
11217With the man that mends the boats?
11217Wo n''t you--_fight_ for it?
11217Work what wonder?
11217Worth dear, will you do something for your Aunt Kate?
11217Worth, was this one of the men?
11217Worth,she asked, grotesquely overdoing unconcern,"where''s Miss Ann?
11217Worth,she asked,"what is there on the_ other_ side of that little island?"
11217Worthie, is that why you like him? 11217 Would I be able to_ help_ being myself?"
11217Would Miss Ann be sorry she''s not as old as you?
11217Would he annihilate me?
11217Would you be so kind as to tell her I am here? 11217 Would you like to hear my favorite quotation from Scripture?"
11217Would you rather I came there? 11217 Would you say that''fine and virtuous women''have succeeded in keeping the world a perfectly safe place for women?"
11217Would you say, Katie,she asked anxiously,"that she is the sort of girl to make my boy a good wife?"
11217Y-- es; but why would n''t he, Aunt Kate? 11217 Yes, and when I''ve finished telling you, you''ll go back to your sunny paths, wo n''t you?
11217Yes, are n''t they lovely?
11217Yes, but if you get in the habit of looking at it as an end, will there be anything left for it to be a means to?
11217Yes, but, father, is n''t a good gun a gun that kills folks? 11217 Yes, do n''t we?
11217Yes, is n''t it? 11217 Yes, it is really terrible, is n''t it?
11217Yes,agreed her companion,"pleasant weather, is n''t it?"
11217Yes,said Kate grimly,"pleasant weather, is n''t it?"
11217Yes? 11217 Yes?"
11217Yes?
11217You are thinking,she ventured,"that your feeling for it is going to be-- hard for me?"
11217You call that a good place to work?
11217You can breathe better this way, ca n''t you?
11217You do n''t mean, do you,--looking away, as if with scarcely the courage to say it--"that I''m to''stop''--everything?"
11217You do not approve of these things?
11217You do wonder, do n''t you, Aunt Kate? 11217 You going out in it?"
11217You going to take it, Aunt Kate?
11217You got a dog at home?
11217You hear me, Katie?
11217You heard anything about him, Worth?
11217You know her?
11217You know, Katie-- what I told you-- what I must tell you--"Oh yes,said Katie,"there was something, was n''t there?"
11217You mean she is not coming back?
11217You mean,she asked, in slow, hushed voice,"that I should stay here-- here?--as a friend of yours?"
11217You seen the new cow?
11217You sick?
11217You think you could? 11217 You think_ weather_ makes any difference?
11217You too?
11217You want to hear about it?
11217You wanted me? 11217 You were--?"
11217You will wait for that, wo n''t you? 11217 You''ll try to do that for me, wo n''t you, dear fair- minded, loving- spirited Katie?
11217You''re not pleased?
11217You''re very fond of her?
11217You''ve walked sunny paths, have n''t you? 11217 You_ struck_--an officer?"
11217You_ will_ laugh, Katie, wo n''t you?
11217Your Miss Osborne and the fifty cents a day girls-- all one world? 11217 _ Do_ they know?
11217_ God_?
11217_ Katie? 11217 _ Struck_--your superior officer?"
11217_ Try_?
11217_ Was_ it so common, Katie? 11217 _ You_--needed_ her_?"
11217''Cause he knows everything?
11217''Sent_ away_?''
11217''What do you mean?''
11217''What right had you to dispose of him?''
11217A call to a freer country than any country you have known?
11217A fine thing?
11217A little red light would flash-- sometimes it would flash straight into my brain-- and I''d say''Number, please?''
11217After all, the department might throw him down-- who knew what it might not do?--and then what would have been the use?
11217After all, what would one have?
11217Am-- am I keeping you from anything you should be doing?"
11217And I suppose,"she laughed scornfully,"you''re going into the ranks?
11217And as it is to be something of an army wedding, may I not have you, whom Harry calls the''most bully army girl''he ever knew?"
11217And do n''t you see that it would be the most fascinating-- altogether jolliest sort of thing for us to try?
11217And do you not see, Katie, that that makes her about the biggest thing in life to me?"
11217And even if she had-- how find her there if she did not wish to be found?
11217And here a life-- Why what kind of people are we?"
11217And how dared you bring your lawyer here to me?
11217And how many would be let stay in the places where they had been put?
11217And if in fancy you sometimes let yourself drift into that other country, am I with you there?
11217And if you_ do_ know each other,"--turning upon him furiously--"need we all act like thieves?"
11217And it interested her the way people said:"Prescott?
11217And now the spirit''s dead and the form''s left-- and what''s so absurd as a form that rattles dead bones?"
11217And now?
11217And on the heels of the whirlwind knocking down the country of make- believe would come the girl from a vast unknown rushing wildly from-- what?
11217And that other thing there was to tell her--?
11217And was all hating to go when all men saw?
11217And what was there left?
11217And what would happen now?
11217And when one is tired of exursions-- I suppose one is at perfect liberty to abandon them--?"
11217And when within the world of May that robins love one was finding a whole undiscovered country to explore?
11217And why did one worm go one way and in a lot of million years be a little boy and another worm go another way and just never be anything but a worm?
11217And why should we?"
11217And why this mad passion of mine for destruction?
11217And why--?
11217And why?
11217And why?
11217And with such an adorable shy little way?
11217And yet did the things the years had made one ever really abdicate?
11217And you ca n''t help that either, can you?
11217And your brother, Katie, have you told him?
11217And, Katie,_ is n''t_ there something else?
11217And, taking no thought for the morrow, is there any reason in the world why you should n''t go out now and have a beautiful drive?
11217And_ N''est- ce- pas_--well, Watts would say_ N''est- ce- pas_ meant''ai n''t it''?
11217Are n''t they a little too precious, too hardly won, too freighted with memories to be lightly cast aside?"
11217Are n''t you idealizing this forest service?
11217Are outlived things to push us apart?
11217Are we going to make no efforts to set ourselves free?
11217Are you listening?"
11217At last she asked:"And Wayne, which would you say I was?"
11217At least that''s what we''re told by our superiors, and are you the kind of young woman to question what you''re told by your superiors?
11217At luncheon Katie suddenly demanded:"Wayne, where do you get dangerous literature?"
11217At peace in the beauty of form, might Ann not find an inner beauty?
11217Because Ann could not dream her way to realities did it mean that Katie must fight her way to them?
11217Because Ann could not find joy was it to be that Katie could not have peace?
11217Believe in me enough to feel I will put through anything I begin?
11217But did that make the distances less vast?
11217But did you ever eat the eggs that were triumphantly announced by the darlingest bantam--?"
11217But do n''t you ever hear them, uncle?
11217But do you care much about plumbing when looking at"--her pause before it might have been one of reverence--"The Madonna of the Chair?"
11217But do you know what I think of the''game''you play?"
11217But have you really no notion of why she went away?"
11217But instead of alluding to them he asked abruptly:"How is she today?"
11217But is n''t it bigger than that thing of being members of the same family-- hurting each other''s feelings?
11217But it was not five minutes later she asked, with studied indifference:"Pray what does this absurd being look like?"
11217But just what were those things that mattered?
11217But may n''t desertion be a brave thing?
11217But one who suggested dreams of Tuscany when taking observations on the use of the salad fork-- was there not hope unbounded for such a one?
11217But she came back to him to say, and this with the oddest smile of all,"Would n''t it be a queer sensation for us?
11217But what good are they?
11217But why should it be"too much"for the daughter of a minister to hear anything about God?
11217But you were the beginning, were n''t you?"
11217But you''re leaving the army, are n''t you?
11217But, Katie, if you get_ very_ tired waiting for it-- don''t you believe you might take it-- most any way it came?"
11217But, dear Katie-- the old things?
11217But-- go home to what?
11217CHAPTER III"Kate,"demanded Captain Jones,"what''s that noise?"
11217Ca n''t they?"
11217Ca n''t we always just leave it unsaid?
11217Ca n''t you see what a curse it is to mix times that way?"
11217Ca n''t you tell me all about it?"
11217Call to a country where the things which bind you could bind no more?
11217Call to her?
11217Can it?
11217Clever?
11217Could Ann keep within hailing distance of one''s imagination?
11217Could it be--?
11217Could you bring yourself to stay just long enough to see that I am not trying to do you good?
11217Could you get word for him to come here-- here, to my house-- right away?
11217Could you go in a boat?"
11217Could you send for your cousin''s wife to help us, Nora?"
11217Did Ann have it in her to live up to the things one wished to believe about her?
11217Did he have it in him remotely, unavowedly, to suspect?
11217Did it also mean an impossible one?
11217Did it know it was going to do it?
11217Did it perhaps love to take them in, knowing that upon the sands of this once upon a time the other could keep no foothold?
11217Did knowing-- seeing-- spoil hating?
11217Did life thwarted in one place take it out in another?
11217Did n''t I think that might be nice?
11217Did n''t I?"
11217Did n''t Katie agree that a girl who could make her own way distanced the girls who could do nothing but spend their fathers''money?
11217Did n''t it ever occur to you that God had more to do with your Something Somewhere than He did with things done in His name in Centralia?"
11217Did n''t she love you-- and help?"
11217Did n''t she want poor Ann to have a good time-- and feel at home-- and be admired?
11217Did n''t you know what Katie must suffer in your leaving like that?"
11217Did people lose the power to hold themselves in the one that made you_ you_?
11217Did she belong to anybody?
11217Did she care for her when she was somber and shy, and resent her when happy and confident?
11217Did she think he had any chance?
11217Did she think in another hundred million years that little bird up there would be something else?
11217Did she think those little ants knew that they were alive?
11217Did_ chairs_ count?
11217Did_ he_ think she was not there?
11217Do I know her?"
11217Do n''t you know we all can be fine and free until it comes up against_ our_ lives?"
11217Do n''t you know, Aunt Kate-- the man that mends the boats?"
11217Do n''t you love me''t all any more, Aunt Kate?"
11217Do n''t you see how that must appeal to the sense of humor of the one about to go down?"
11217Do n''t you see, even Zelda thinks it stunty?"
11217Do n''t you think, Katie, it would be fun to look in on the dance up here at the club house?"
11217Do you ever have a picture of our venturing together into the unknown ways-- daring-- suffering-- rejoicing--_growing_?
11217Do you really get_ at_ her, Katie?"
11217Do you suppose Miss Ann knows, Aunt Kate, that she used to be a frog?"
11217Do you suppose it will ever be any different?"
11217Do you suppose, Aunt Kate, we''ll ever know as much as Watts?"
11217Do you think Mike and Pat are pretty names, Aunt Kate?"
11217Do you think you could bear it with Christian fortitude if I were to tell you I''m beginning now to try and figure out what I was smiling at?"
11217Do you understand anything except things that nobody else wants to understand?
11217Does n''t he mean to come over?"
11217Does n''t it make you think of those sturdy forefathers of yours who came to it long ago, when it was an unknown land, and braved dangers for it?
11217Does she care for golf?"
11217Does that mean it must kill for us what we have said is the biggest emotion-- experience-- the greatest joy and brightest hope life has brought us?
11217Does the absurdity of it never strike them?"
11217Even their vocabularies ca n''t disguise them, and if that can''t-- what could?
11217For heaven''s sake, what did you mean?"
11217For what?
11217From what other world?--and why?
11217From whence?
11217Funny?
11217Get right into the inner things that are the matter and bring peace and good will and loving kindness everywhere?"
11217Going for a drive does n''t commit one to any philosophy of life, or line of action, does it?
11217Had Ann''s yearning for love been the breath blowing to flame Katie''s yearning for understanding?
11217Had Katie ever heard her say anything about him?
11217Had Katie ever seen any one so beautiful?
11217Had Katie ever seen such eyes?
11217Had it killed it in her?
11217Handy, ai n''t it?"
11217Has Ann another name?
11217Has she gone for a walk?"
11217Have so much?
11217Have you no soul?"
11217Have you thought of that?
11217He did not know the voice, it was too faint, too far- away, but a suggestion in it made his own voice and hand unsteady as he said:"Yes?
11217He had halted beside them and Katie was saying, with her usual cool gaiety:"You care for this day, too, do you?
11217He looked at her meditatively, and then asked, humorously but gently:"Well Katie, what were you expecting me to do?
11217He looked at his niece and smiled as he asked:"Katie dear, are you becoming world weary?"
11217He said to her at the last, with that direct boyish smile it seemed could not frighten even a startled bird:"You think you are going to like it here?"
11217He took a step backward for the weighty, crushing:"Well, you''ve seen the_ horses_, have n''t you?"
11217He walked right into it with the never- failing"Why?"
11217He yearns for a christening?"
11217Hear whom moaning and sobbing?"
11217Here in a place like this-- what do you know about it?
11217His silence led Katie to gasp:"Wayne, are you becoming-- anti- militarist?"
11217How about the case of Miss Katherine Wayneworth Jones?
11217How can I be a half- breed if I''m a thoroughbred?"
11217How can I tell whether I would or not?
11217How can you expect me to stick to a subject when paths open out on all sides of you like that?
11217How charming your host was?
11217How could one combat with words, or in action, that rooted so much deeper than mere words or action?
11217How could she be resting in an hour which had just been tacked on to her life?
11217How could she help it?
11217How could she hope to go laughing through a world which sobbed?
11217How could she outrage the army as long as Wayne had done so?
11217How dare you-- standing for the You of the world-- dampen the splendid ardor of my hate?"
11217How did it happen that things you made up were things I had dreamed about without really knowing what I was dreaming?
11217How did she get there?
11217How did she go?
11217How did you come to know her?
11217How do you need her?"
11217How get out of the sand?
11217How many people would create for themselves the background it was assumed they belonged in just because they had been put in it?
11217How might Ann''s soul not flower when she at last saw God as a God of beauty?
11217How much of life''s ground all unknown to her had these poor little slippers trodden?
11217How turn from life when she saw life suffering?
11217How_ do_ you know?
11217I did n''t say what kind, did I?"
11217I do n''t care if you do, only if you tell him anything, wo n''t you try and make him understand everything?
11217I do n''t make the crazed crowds, do I?"
11217I had my suspicions, and that night I asked,''Uncle, did you preach the sermon you meant to preach this morning?''
11217I hope she is fond of the water?"
11217I presume I go on record as the worst sort of bounder in asking if you really care greatly about living there?"
11217I take it, however, that she was one of those''excursions''into the great outer world?"
11217I thought-- oh you''ll find her for me-- won''t you?
11217I trust it was satisfactory?"
11217I was so upset about them champagne glasses--""Well, where is it?
11217I wonder if I may ask one thing more?
11217I wonder if you would do this?
11217I wonder if you''re prepared to go where it may lead you?
11217I wonder-- why?"
11217I wonder-- would you be willing to come up to my room with me-- help make a cup of tea for us and-- stay with me a little while?"
11217I''m going to try sleeping in there-- isn''t insomnia a fearful thing?
11217I--"She paused, coloring slightly as she said with a little laugh:"We all like to be liked, do n''t we, Katie?
11217If I thought that-- You do n''t think, do you, Katie, that that was what he was trying to work you for?"
11217If even they were to be gently grouped with the wicked as more to be pitied than hated, then whom would one hate?
11217If he were to come there--?
11217If he were to kiss her in the way he hungered to kiss her would it wake nothing more than that sick terror in her wonderful eyes?
11217If he''s charming to them-- to you-- what do you suppose he seemed to me as he stood there smiling at me-- looking so sorry for me--?
11217If it ever seems I can be of any use-- in any way-- will you come where you know you can find me?"
11217If making a place for you here is going to make one for me there-- on the inside, I mean-- you''re not going to refuse to take me in, are you?"
11217If she had had a chance, when things were going badly, to sit in such a chair and rest, might the river have seemed a less desirable place?
11217If so,"--he went boldly to the edge of it, then halted, and concluded with a boyishly bashful humor--"will you keep my application on file?"
11217If you ca n''t offer a safe place, why rescue at all?
11217If you''re going to pity me, why do n''t you do it sincerely instead of scoffingly?
11217In the letter she received that night he wrote:"Katie, is it going to spoil it for us?
11217Is he a spiritual or an economic guide?"
11217Is it my fault that I do n''t know anything about life?
11217Is it so strange I_ loathed_ the Bible?
11217Is n''t it only square to give me a chance to demonstrate the honor of my worthlessness?"
11217Is n''t it queer how we do-- know without knowing?
11217Is n''t it rather-- oh, unthrifty, to let pasts and futures spoil presents?
11217Is n''t she-- moored any place?"
11217Is n''t there a popular notion that our pasts have something to do with our futures?"
11217Is she pretty?
11217Is something wrong?"
11217Is that prohibitive?"
11217It forced him to an unwilling, uneasy:"What more could a girl want?"
11217It gives me a sort of--''Oh I am on to you, uncle old boy''feeling that is most--""Disconcerting?"
11217It lets_ us_ out so beautifully, does n''t it?"
11217It seemed indeed that this life was in her hands-- for was it not her hands had kept it a life?
11217It was only-- what shall I say-- would there be such a thing as usurping beauty?
11217It was that gnawed at the heart of it.... How go to bed that night without knowing that Ann had a bed?
11217It was the suggestion in the motto led her to ask:"Tell me, have you really no idea, have you never had so much as a suspicion of why Ann went away?"
11217It would be droll, would n''t it, to have some one on a far hill call--''But why do n''t you come over here?''
11217It''s been a fine sleep, has n''t it?
11217It''s hard not to squeeze''em though, ai n''t it?"
11217Just drop me a hint sometime when you are not going to be at home, will you?
11217Just how bad is it, anyhow?"
11217Just one long thing of trying and failing?
11217Just what brand of boredom are you planning to inflict?"
11217Just what did it make Katie think of?
11217Just what is it she means to you?"
11217Just what is it the army does?"
11217Just what were her plans?
11217Katie knew her?
11217Katie, what is it?
11217Less to be desired?
11217Lord, do n''t they have it easy though?"
11217Loving a thing because you do n''t know it is n''t a very high way of loving it, is it?
11217Loving you-- laughing, splendid you-- how can I?
11217Mann?
11217Masculine dotes on discovering feminine-- but have you ever noticed what the rest of the feminine dote on doing to that discovery?
11217May I tell you what it is I want to do?"
11217Might it not be that some of the most genuine Florentines had never been to Florence?
11217Might it not be--?
11217Might not Ann be her gun?
11217Might not Mrs. Prescott find the reality in the possibilities?
11217More fires?
11217Motives are slippery things, do n''t you think so?
11217Moved by an impulse half serious, half mischievous she asked:"You would say then, Wayne, that Ann seems to you more of a lady than Zelda Fraser?"
11217Need I add that it means''why''?
11217No ties?
11217None of the rest of us seem to be inquiring into our sources of revenue, so why should you?"
11217Not the words but the sob behind them moved him to ask gently:"Katie dear, what is it?
11217Nothing is to be gained-- But for God''s sake, Katie, what is she doing here?
11217Now did he perhaps hold back in timidity from that world of the trivial things?
11217Now how can I throw it away?"
11217Now how did I start?
11217Now what do you think of that?
11217Now what in the world had he meant by that?
11217Now when you ask her if she likes Benedictine, do n''t be at all surprised to have her dreamily murmur:''But why should oranges always be yellow?''"
11217Now will you telephone Prescott, or shall I?
11217Of all the unheard of-- outrageous-- unpardonable-- What did you_ mean_"--turning savagely upon her--"by selling false hair?"
11217Of course there are sometimes a few little things--""Why did you enter the army, Watts?"
11217Of course there must have been lots of other fellows in love with her-- a girl like that-- but had she cared for any of them?
11217Oh Katie-- how did you know?
11217Oh yes-- he was in Cuba, was n''t he?"
11217One''s own kind and the other kind just one kind, after all?
11217Or do you like him-- just because you like him?"
11217Or rather I meet you down town?
11217Order her out of the house?"
11217Out of sympathy with the army?"
11217Perhaps it did make her think of hard things, but was that any reason for failing in the things that made all this possible?
11217Perhaps the heat was enervating, but was that sufficient reason for embarrassing one''s hostess?
11217Perhaps you know that she came on the Island from the south bridge?"
11217Question is-- not what did you do yesterday-- but what good are you to- day-- what are you worth to- morrow?
11217Rangers?
11217Reach all the aches and fill all the empty places?
11217Really?
11217Resistance made her face the more stern as she went on:"Do you think I''m going to impose on you-- just because you know so little?
11217Rough, steep roads, perhaps?"
11217Run after her?
11217Saved her by making her save you?"
11217See how it works-- not altogether for the good of the works, you see?
11217Shall I ask him again?"
11217Shall I call some one?"
11217Shall I see if we can get Watts?"
11217Shall I tell you what life is like?"
11217She ca n''t reach far enough to count, so why make herself unhappy?"
11217She is lovely, is n''t she?"
11217She rides?"
11217She sought refuge in a frigid:"I beg pardon?"
11217She turned around to ask oddly:"Why, Wayne, why all this heat?
11217She was silent, then asked:"Why?"
11217She will be with you for the summer?"
11217Should a man walking on a tight- rope yield to every playful little desire to chase butterflies?"
11217Smiling, but eyes speaking for the depth of the meaning, she said:"I''d rather be only half in the sunshine than be--""Be what, Katie?"
11217So it''s the man that mends the boats says these hateful things about me, is it?"
11217So low?
11217So of course"--with his little shrug Katie loved--"what''s my having a month on my hands?"
11217So you''re going to be very festive in this house to- night?"
11217So you''re not going away leaving it in any such distressing state, are you?"
11217So-- what''s that nervous word?
11217Something moved her to ask:"Wayne, do you think you would have done it, if it had not been for Ann?"
11217Sometimes they heard her stir; as one day soon after Ann''s coming Katie had said:"Ann, just what is it is the matter with your vocal chords?"
11217Starting in at your age-- with your training-- to''work from the bottom up''--is that it?"
11217Startled, peculiarly gratified, impishly delighted, she yet replied lightly:"A lady, is she?
11217Sympathetic?
11217Taken it?
11217That call?
11217That fellow-- what''s his name?
11217That one was indeed bound hand and foot and brain and heart and spirit?
11217That thing of really''helping''some one?"
11217That thing that makes us keep on even when our Something Somewhere wo n''t have anything to do with us?"
11217The good time you had?--how gay it was?
11217The man who mended the boats knowing about Ann?
11217The things that are n''t nice about him are n''t his fault, Worthie, so we must n''t be hard on him for them, must we?
11217The two different worlds had sent Ann away; was it, in a way she was unable to cope with, likewise to send him away?
11217Then how could one step from that place without leaving a conspicuous looking vacancy?
11217Then in the distance she heard a mocking voice insinuatingly inquiring:"But why not, if it''s all one world?"
11217Then the once upon a time of the sandpile did not shut them out-- they who had known another once upon a time?
11217Then what?
11217Then what?
11217Then why should it be mine now-- any more than yours?"
11217Then why this air of discovery?"
11217Then wo n''t you take me in?
11217Then, desperately resolved to break through, she asked boldly:"Am I keeping you from anything important?"
11217Then-- what to do?
11217There''s more to wonder about than there is to think about, do n''t you think so, Aunt Kate?"
11217Things fought for, tested, mellowed by our fathers and mothers, and their fathers and mothers?
11217Things was as they_ was_, held Watts, and how could anybody but a fool expect them to be any way but the way they_ was_?
11217Think of them, not in the old grooves, but just as it comes in to you as the story of a life?
11217Those beautiful_ old_ things which the generations have left us?
11217Though could she?
11217Though pray why should one wish to be anything so terrifying as indispensable?"
11217Though visioning be child of desiring-- was the vision less splendid, and was not the desire ennobled?
11217Though what''s the good working a morning like this?
11217To be followed with:"Important?
11217To desert a thing we''ve gone beyond-- to have the courage to desert it and walk right off from the dead thing to the live thing--?
11217To do less and get more is not what you''d call a spiritual aspiration, is it?"
11217To have vague association with the mysterious things of life, and yet not to have"made a mess of things"--what more could one ask?
11217To my uncle''s?
11217To whom?"
11217Was Watts the real philosopher when he said"things was as they was"?
11217Was he happy, or had the unhappiness of his marriage gone too deep?
11217Was he meaning to deliver that lecture on the army?
11217Was he young or old?
11217Was he-- a wizard?
11217Was he-- would she say he was one to be kind of easy on a fellow, or did she think he took his religion pretty hard?
11217Was it because she could not get things together it seemed to her she must make them all stop?
11217Was it because the girl of the years was too worn for assertiveness that the girl of fancy could seem the all?
11217Was it irritating to have people for whom hot days were but hot days call heat distressing?
11217Was it often like that?--that the things created for the fun and the joy found the paths of tragedy?
11217Was it only that she slumbered-- and sometimes stirred a little in her sleep?--And when_ she_ awoke?
11217Was it something of that same force which bounded boisterously up in boy and dogs which was stealing over Ann-- softening, healing, claiming?
11217Was it the day you took her in?
11217Was it true-- as the man who mended the boats would hold-- that the one made the other possible-- only to be excluded from it?
11217Was it_ gone_?
11217Was n''t he quite given to falling in love with pretty girls?
11217Was n''t that funny?"
11217Was she a school friend?
11217Was she capable of taking unto herself the past and temperament with which one would graciously endow her?
11217Was she heading for a general?
11217Was some one looking for Ann?
11217Was that it?
11217Was that what came of violating the canons?
11217Was that why he could be moved to no sense of responsibility about stray dogs?
11217Was that why he was a good man for the service and had no ambitions as civilian?
11217Was that, too, something that would have hurt them?
11217Was the hurt to one''s friends the punishment one got for it?
11217Was the whole world losing its mind just because it had been such a hot day?
11217Was there any other fellow?
11217We know''em-- don''t we, old Queen?"
11217We may come to the garden party?"
11217We who have come so close?
11217We''re all in the grip of dead things, are n''t we?
11217Well, what of him?
11217Were the things which"mattered"forging a religion of their own?
11217Were you ever in a little town in Indiana?"
11217What about Miss Forrest?
11217What are you doing it for?"
11217What are your puny little problems of the church compared with people''s lives?
11217What boats does he mend, Aunt Kate wanted to know, and what business has he landing them on our Island?
11217What can I do about it?"
11217What can you know of the real sorrows and hardships of life?"
11217What chance did I ever have to know anything real?
11217What could be farther from serving one''s own day than rendering to it the dead forms of what had been the real service to a day gone by?
11217What could do that?
11217What did it matter whether the universe was wonderful or not if the wonderful thing in one''s own heart was to be denied life?
11217What did she mean?
11217What did that matter, the wise gardener would scornfully demand, when there were growing things underneath pushing their way to the light?
11217What did you do?"
11217What did you say her name was?"
11217What did you want?"
11217What do I know about you?"
11217What do you know about_ me_?"
11217What do you know?
11217What do you mean by leaving her all alone?"
11217What do you think, Katie?
11217What does this all mean?"
11217What good thing can come of hate?"
11217What had become of that girl?
11217What had happened?
11217What had she been through?
11217What had she done save prove that she could do nothing?
11217What have you done?
11217What have you to_ gain_ by it?"
11217What in the world did she mean by saying she''d like to be a deserter herself?
11217What is it they call them?
11217What is it, Katie?
11217What is it?
11217What is it?"
11217What is the world coming to?
11217What is this all about?
11217What more can we ask?"
11217What of that union?
11217What other method is there?"
11217What right had you to assume I''d do this?"
11217What was it had closed the door and shut in those things that were killing Ann?
11217What was that thing less fleeting than fancy, more imperative than sympathy, made Ann mean more than things which had all her life meant most?
11217What was there left for her?
11217What was there to talk about so important as talking of nothing?
11217What were those things that had filled up and choked Ann''s poor soul?
11217What will you_ have_?"
11217What would be the use?
11217What would you think of our trying to do that?"
11217What''s the good living in a dangerous age if you do n''t get hold of any of the danger?
11217What''s the trouble?"
11217What''s the use making a gun at all if it is n''t going to kill folks?"
11217What''s the use?
11217What?"
11217What_ did he mean?"
11217What_ shall_ I do?"
11217What_ was_ a hot day-- save a hot day?
11217When did she go?"
11217When did she say, dear,"she pleaded,"that she would be back?"
11217Where did you meet him?
11217Where did_ you_ know her?"
11217Where had she come from?
11217Where was she all this time?
11217Where would he take it?"
11217Where would you know each other?
11217Where''s Ann gone?"
11217Where?
11217Where?
11217Where_ had_ Ann come from?
11217Whether either the hard blighting religion of Ann''s father, or the aesthetic comfortable religion of her uncle"mattered"much to them?
11217Who is it, please?"
11217Who was Ann?
11217Who would get the nice corners it had been taken for granted certain people should have just because they had been fixed up for them in advance?
11217Who?--Why?"
11217Why are n''t you?"
11217Why ca n''t you do the same thing with educators?
11217Why could they not reach then?
11217Why did you come home?
11217Why do n''t you adopt it for your favorite, too?
11217Why do n''t you assert your right?"
11217Why do n''t you give them jobs?"
11217Why do n''t you go and see?
11217Why does it make you want to grin?"
11217Why does one go anywhere?
11217Why had Ann been dressed that way?
11217Why had she done it?
11217Why had she not had the courage to press it?
11217Why had she wanted to kill herself?
11217Why how under the sun,"she asked, laughing wildly,"did you ever meet Major Darrett?"
11217Why not let people_ be_ what they were?
11217Why not let them be themselves, instead of what one thought they would be from what one knew of their lives?
11217Why not ride with me instead?
11217Why not spend next season in Washington with him?
11217Why should I stop her?
11217Why should you have to stay here-- if you do n''t want to?
11217Why this haughty aloofness?
11217Why was I born like that?"
11217Why was it given the Anns-- and not the Vernas?
11217Why were you born with your brain cells screwed into question marks?--and_ why_ do I have to go through life getting them unscrewed?"
11217Why what do you think I''m made of?
11217Why would it be so much worse for Captain Prescott to marry Ann than it would be for Ann to marry Captain Prescott?
11217Why would n''t I want you?
11217Why''s that your affair?"
11217Why, why not?
11217Why-- why, Wayne?
11217Will it do any good for me to get in the crowd?
11217Will it go away?
11217Will it make you thrill?"
11217Will you do that?
11217With the emotion of the world surging in and out like that how could any one claim to have a solution for the whole question of living?
11217Wo n''t you run along and play?"
11217Wo n''t you tell me where I can find her?
11217Wo n''t you trust me enough to know that you will not be asked to do anything that would be too hard?
11217Women can even look at wondrous soft brown eyes and lovely tender mouths through those''Who was your father?''
11217Would Katie tell him of her life and her people?
11217Would Katie tell him something about her?
11217Would he go so far as to say the first use for the rifles--?
11217Would n''t it be better to forget?"
11217Would n''t you rather do without the gun and know that nobody was going hungry?"
11217Would she be ranked out of quarters?
11217Would she ever know?
11217Would she hear from_ her_ again?
11217Would there be things in the paper about her?
11217Would they ever be anything else?
11217Would you call that a very intelligent gang of kids?
11217Would_ they_ be anything else?
11217You care a little something for Katie, do n''t you, Ann?"
11217You do n''t think, do you, that he was trying to get you for his''army girl''--or some such rot?
11217You hear what I say?
11217You know anything about it, Katie?"
11217You say Ann went in the machine?"
11217You see one who had never been in the crowd would say--''Why do n''t you get out?''
11217You see what I mean?
11217You see?
11217You sent for me?"
11217You were n''t sick at all-- were you, Katie?
11217You''ll come?
11217You''ll come?"
11217You''re of the bound, too, are n''t you?
11217You''re waiting for a car?
11217You''ve demanded nothing?"
11217You-- the devoted daughter you always were-- not able to''help''hurting your mother?"
11217You_ will_ find her-- won''t you?"
11217You_?"
11217_ Does_ it make a difference?"
11217_ How_ did a worm become something that was n''t a worm?
11217_ Need_ it?
11217_ Were_ the big and the little things so close?
11217and why thither?
11217he murmured,"what is it?"
11217she burst forth, no longer able to hold back,"as you stand sometimes at the altar do n''t you hear them moaning and sobbing down underneath?"