•K o ci* * ^Vii-^ • yj. r o •- -iff ■» _ ••/ ^o^-^-^*/ V^v \.*^-'/ \-..T.. A" ^ ' • • * ' V^ <^ * m ff^r V \^ A n^^ o " o , '♦^ ."i t ' » 2,. ^ V ^°-n. -J.^ '^^-.v^ >. 't^c'i Ttie Divine Comedy of Patriotism: BY •/ MORTIMER THOA^SON. "Now Barabbas was a publisher." LORD BYRON. I am mine own Barabbas ! M. T. NEW YORK: PRESS or DUANE PRINTING COMPANY, 56 & 55 rULTON STRCIzT. 1900. L- SECOND COPY, TWO COPIES RECEIVED, Library of Cangrat^ Offjoo f thd API? 10 1900 Begrttdr af Copyrtjfht^ 75 ^^^1 T4 61525 Copyrighled a. D. i900Du GIlOPOC MOPTinCP THO^iSON. This worif is also Copyrig-hted in Great Britain. TO POBERT GIBSON, OF THE New YOPK STOCK EXCHANGE, The Author InscriDes THIS BOOK With High Recognizance and Regard. THE DIViNE COMEDY OE PATRIOIISM. "The one voice in Europe." "Let your reforms for a moment go; Loo., to your butts, and take good aims; Better a rotten borough or so Than a rotten fleet or a city in flames." "Britons, guard your own!" LORD TENNYSON. The "open door"; let no one shut it! MERCATOR MUNDL Non odium ahrorum sed amor justitiae hie ducit. EGO. Colon, descubridor de sitios para aduanas! ESTE POETA. ECCLESIASTES XIL— 12-13— 14. L KINGS XXL and XXIL in toto. (Naboth's Klondike.) Isaiah I. — 25. (Temescal.) The Georgica of VERGIL had for their object "to make men proud of their country on better grounds than the mere glory of its arms or extent of its con- quests." PROF. MERIVALE. "The British Empire is the greatest secular agency for good now known to mankind." EARL OF ROSEBERY, N'ber, 1892. "Cultivate peace and narmony with all." — "Give to mankind the magnanimous and too novel example of a people always guided by an exalted justice and benevo- lence." PRESIDENT WASHINGTON. "With the existing colonies or dependencies of any European power we have not interfered, and shall not interfere." PRESIDENT MONROE. '"They who take the sword shall perish by the sword." ' PRESIDENT LINCOLN. "In our code of morality, conquest would be a crime not to be thought of." PRESIDENT M'KINLEY. "La diritta via era smarrita." LA DIVINA COMMEDIA DI DANTE. Lo e quasi sempre. "The rise and long roll of the hexameter." LA MIA. LORD TENNYSON. "Name is but shroud and smoke clouding the glow of Heaven." GOETHE. "The world belongs to him that wins." SCHILLER. "Fear, that reigns with the tyrant, and Envy, the vice of republics." LONGFELLOW. "So that, according to Longfellow, one is not free from weakness, nor the other from sin." BUNCOMBE. Concerning the Diplomacy of Intrusiveness, of which more than one nation is guilty, and in rebuke of it, the Hon. George Gray, Senator of the United States for Delaware, and one of the negotiators at Paris of the latest treaty between his country and Spain, wrote in the North American Review, April, 1895: "It is med- dlesome and aggressive; it is envious and suspicious; it is covetous and not very scrupulous; it exemplifies the evil of power without self-control, and of susceptibility to insult without a due proportion of self-respect. Its spirit is that of conquest; its first reason, as well as its last, is force It has claimed the right, in disregard of our own most cherished traditions, to visit and search the ships of friendly powers on the high seas in time of peace, only to be condemned by an impartial tribunal of arbitration. It overthrows by force a Queen in Hawaii in the name of liberty and annexation, and maintains by force a King in Samoa in the name of independence and autonomy." "In the deep heart of man care builds her nest." GOETHE. "Care comes in and with all serious duties, but cheerfulness neutralizes its in- fluence; therefore, let us be jovial with the Comedian." ANCIEN CHEVAL. The Divine Comedy of Patriotism. Life being too short for long story, I write several brief ones Tn guise of Court Fool and address them to you: though impersonal, If you find yourself in them the fun will be just so much larger, I mean with you in them as citizen, statesman or people. The court of the jester being wider than that of Our Lady. This is written for any year that resembles the present, And as such must recur, why, my tales must return with the period. In their progress a humor peculiar may frequently touch you; One of interest when satire or ridicule mainly is needed; Immortal by fits, as a thing of a value revolving. From the easy coil and the limber trip of the metre Infer not a poem: I vow this is comedy merely; Spread over a vast lot of life, but still strictly comedy; Presenting new views of the worth and the sport of stump speeches. Too little known in the lands at once speechful and stumpless. As a fact I am trembling to think of the wrath of the poets. Dear Douglases tender and true of the bardic afflatus, Who will damn my misuse of the verse of the first of all poets. Chronological foredad of those who must chant or die panting. 'Tis the spring of the stanza that carries the leap of the meaning; No rhetorical prose has an equal arc of significance. That is why I select the most rolling and flowing of measures; Not heroics on wooden-leg march, but the cadence of ballad. My narratives move without plot cf the old stagey species. Without being classic of frame or of classified tableaux. Although fluent to read; full of dashes at follies and failings. 7 Not a page but has something for some one, from bishop to nihiHst, From Lazarus to Dives and those who are variously graded, With the wealthy duly abused, and from all sorts of standoffs. They include many subjects and phases for ending euphonious, And are crowded with patriots galore in the latest of motley, The specimen-actors, I think, being more than three hundred. From emperors, admirals and popes down to Tammany stabbers. Mere congruity is not the chief aim of my Opus, Nor Greek order, much as I love it, nor syllabic visions; But those great and small things which invite of themselves, and surprises Like will-o'-the-wisps that freshen the mind as they lure it. My purpose is manifold: rather my objects are many, Yet never astray from a theme of some fellow's diversion. Not a moralist is the jester unless for the satire. Not desultory this book that its topics are varied. Hexametric tribunal of hits on some shams patriotic, It is writ from the points of view of all parties and nations By one who has paid for his data in purse and experience. Are you prone to condemn? Then think first of this explication. Are you in for some fun? Then you may forego explanation. And what though the themes of our sport be a week or a month old, Or a year? I cannot illustrate by what has not happened, And if I could rig up the future you would not accept it. No censure herewith is intended, but simply correction Of exaggerated love of political systems. Which too frequently is confounded with true love of country. Washington says, in his farewell address, that this is an error, And Washington still is a man who commands some attention. I stand for the patriotism of judgment distinguished from passion And for the assertion of judgment when passion is raving. Statesmen serious need not this hint; but political foghorns In all the senates and forums on earth, do require it, And the balloteers misled by the din of their signals. 1 insist that the mass be instructed, whoever may do it, That campaigns of education, in fact, be augmented, Until every integral man be his own politician. For to see comes far short of enough: to foresee is the duty; Therefore choose with more care the chiefs whose profession is foresight. The partisan pure is a heedless forerunner of mischief Unless when he meet two less heedless who vote to suppress him. In my great age I do not expect to avoid the young teacher; In fact, 'tis because I am old he will surely assail me; Yet, I pray, comprehend v/hat I say, or say nothing about it. This is due to the critic as much as it is to the author. Do not set yourself up in my place and then knock yourself over; That trick is played out alike for the sharps and the imbeciles. Be a new fool of fresh style, if at all, just as I am. Or, better, be wiser and trace me the sweep of my folly. You might do that with simplicity and no venom. Virtues and faults are my themes, and in singular medley. Not the Don of Lord Byron, I take it, was half so fantastic As the patriots and others of gifts who shall pass in my purview. I am equally far from subserviency and defiance. To him bent on satire approval is merely an incident. Whether it be approval of friend or of commonwealth. I apologize in advance if I hurt any feelings, And hope you may find yourself happy to sit in my circus. Assumption of role and espousal of cause with your conscience Are two things of sorts wide apart, it is well to remember. This is meant for the politician philogeneric Whose program is love of all men for the love of an ofiice, As in footlight aside of low voice he will tell you with laughter. State-quack, moth of freedom; 'tis hard to denounce him too strongly: Magniloquent in expounding the cause of disruption; The Brunelleschi not of a dome but a nadir, He sets us aghast at the chasm he constructs for the glories Described by old John of Gaunt, son of Edward Successful, And bullies the world to mistake mere bull will for high morals, Destroying time-honored Lancaster's time-honored prophecy, This Proteus of error of those who grew great by Poseidon. Let us pray our Poseidon he never repeat us our Proteus, For I am the bard of the freedom and rights of the oceans. And shall canto them up in high form ere I come to my colophon. He who fails in perceiving the things he prefers to be blind to Is not of the days of advance, neither friend of his country. There are too many such ; and I am the foe of the fetich Which consists of a man as the pope of his little non possum; His ad vincula is simply by private volition. Praying God through himself and belaying the worship in transit.. Let us shift the base and the goal for the pace of true issues While the space is left us ashore or afloat for the duty. None of these matters can drift or run slipshod forever, And this is a very fair morning for sailing or sprinting. Nombreuses les activites et etranges les destins d'un peuplel Grandeur is not in vicissitude: look at French history. France is great in her ways because France, not by reason of system. She was equally great for the epochs as kingdom or empire On hnes w^hich appear close and dear to the present republic. And would be again in this epoch if kingdom or empire; Bui. I am not forcing this proposition, nor any; Our purpose is to consider these themes, not to quarrel. The ethnic renown of the French was not built on the ballot. And some of it was acquired by the chop automatic. France is lesser, not grander, by reason of debt due to tumult, And in morals were better developed uncurst by the cost of it. Let Time have his way to undo as he had in the doing; The debacle is cheaper than cutting ofif heads by the hundred. Race-temperament may be cremative of judgment. Five hundred million pounds are too much for a guillotine. 10 To stop interest one begins by paying- the principal. Few contribuables gain by a war, but all pay for it. Fourteen hundred million pounds of a debt bearing interest Inspire no just hope to recoup through the sons'of the boucans; They rather suggest a chance of repeating the assignats. Be not deceived by the looks of the things simply lucky. Neither monarchy nor democracy solveth tough problems Alone; each depends on conditions not governmental, As well as on politics sound ; and yet both are imperfect. But an Atlantic of land should support any system With an old and great nation's experiences merely transplanted. Climatic limitations are rigorous in Canada ; A fact which bestows on the States a decided advantage, They being largely free from these, as from some others kindred. Fortune and newness may put upon morals false aspects : That is an item which clearly might stimulate thinking. Anarchy cannot decide economical problems. And an anarchical problem cannot be conjured Unless as a contradiction in terms : it is social, But not as belonging to tribe, or to sect, or to faction. Yet problems sicken and droop 'mid the flowers of rhetoric, Which peculiarly seem to flourish in zephyrs unsweetened. Or are riddled by bomb survived from the French revolution. Before setting out to copy a prosperous new nation, Be sure that the old one can build on the new one's conditions. Add as much as you can to your acres, but not to your people. The replenishing of the earth is a practice too easy; Moreover, the need of it is not just now self-assertive. Neither commune nor czar can raise wheat on the Prairie of Cobi. I am simply inviting your wider thought on this topic. If already correct, you will issue the stronger for thinking. Chance is dead in some new lands of chance : it died of a discount,. A species of fever that burns up the blood of the future ; 11 At least so their newspapers say in effect ; I condense it. So long as machine runs itself, engineer is superfluous ; But the day of repair is as sure as the day of creation. Politics provide only fun for the politicians And pay for the sons of starvation at earning a living; This refers not to men of the civil and civilized service, But to those who, outside it, contrive to draw high pay as patriots. There are purities, too, in all parties as well as all nations ; Give them welcome ; they trouble the politicians with principles. There are others asserting the average as highest of standards. Shall simian chatter shatter the dome of a conclave While the world is invited to take it for wisdom of freemen? Noblesse oblige : so do the commandments of Moses, And the golden rule, in kingdom, republic or poorhouse. In honor prefer one another : a Paulic suggestion Commending itself to religious men high up on state-stilts, Presbyterians or those of less rigid denominations Outside of the narrow sweetness and light of John Calvin. Better the rule of the honest agnostic outspoken Who confesses he knows it not all and hopes you may aid him, Than that of the sanctimonious, cant-laden puritan Reeking with hatred and bloodshed and sermons and envy. Such as Charles Rex polished off in October, Sixteen-'Sixty, And who to-day would cavort the same in conventicle, Whipping Quakers and making witches to order, and slaying. Would you be a Paul at the feet of such a Gamaliel And for statesmanship take his bad temper after election? Is any new step in religion or politics possible Without an imposing hypocrisy to begin with, One intense enough to displace and replace common conscience? I ask this of every known people, not of one only. Beg not the question by babbling of zealotries minor. But select the most nasal of all David's psalms for your answer. Greatness consists not in territory fortuitous. Neither does it consist in expansion gratuitous. Although manifest destiny sometimes appears to impel it ; 12 Nor in overrunning of land as by cohorts of bison; » Nor by citizen-squatters-at-ravage who kill for pre-emption ; Neither in threats at a weaker fictitiously equal, Foisted by treaty up to unnatural level ; Yet some little men oversized find it hard to believe this. A thousand-mile-long of a railway from nowhere to nowhere Which builds up the wilderness intervening with townships And welcomes a convoy of palace-cars laden with Pograms, Provides rich new fields for the brigands : you build up ; they hold up. My Lothair says if Bonaparte Founder had broken Great Britain Instead of succumbing to British attrition ubiquitous, There would have been two big republics less among nations. Thus the date is past due, and long past, for their thanks to Old England;, For deep gratitude long overdue for autonomy and freedom. My Lothair is a Yankee Marquis, with Lowell his 'Quisate. Because her defence 'mid some aliens may not be quite popular, Shall Britain the builder of states and the leader in commerce, Whose genius has dotted a globe with the posts of her empire. Who governs the world by the drum-beat of Senator W^ebster ; England, giver of speech with free speech and trade, letters and statutes. Providing complete the outfit of civilization, A highly-dressed system constructed on somebody else's Whether the outfit may fit you, or swaddle or smother ; Like Japan, smashing other men's wares and then making them pay for it ; England, founding free states for polyglot foreign Arcadians Who create not themselves, but absorb her results like a maelstrom, The three-decker island of argosies, flagship of freedom, Shall Britain be gibed and no son dare to speak for his mother? Not while I live, though I die for the duty I live for. But my pride is abated, as likewise my strength of conviction. When I think that my ancestors slept with the pigs in the parlor For fear some free Anglo might pass in the night and escort them, 13 I stare with surprise at my section of civilization, As at that which some joint friendly powers keep a-pressing on China. The man of big talent wins wonderfully by chances, Which means he is safe till a bigger has found his occasion ; Since that one is more smart than another will never be other In the sordid and sharp competition of scopes wholly selfish : Whereas he of character gains by the force that is lofty United in form which makes talent proud to be servant. You will stay at the front if you do not surrender your character For the fascinating and shifty possession of talent, Imitating the superficial deficient in ethics. This piece is quite trite, but will do to be spoke at a meeting Of those who are given to patting themselves and each other On the back ; a practice prevailing with favor in England. Every great nation is built on absorption or conquest, And notably a republic which sabred a dissidence Born of opinions renascent from previous rebellion. If this were not true and justified, how could a nation Cohere, not alone for expansion, but simple existence? If you do it by loyalty your petition finds audience In time ; by the time you are dead ; but you fractured no principle ; You suffered and left for your son what was due to his father. If you do it by revolution, revolute always. If good to begin, revolution is good to continue. You are loyal, too: why not? Loyal to revolution. But you are not yet quite through with the game, and must do some more thinking. Revolution begets revolution, despite your finalities. Reflect on this fact when the socialist asks you for something. Or the communist, or the anarchist; we did not start him 14 In the progress that takes what it can, like Japan, when 'tis ready. "We have done nothing more clever than call back King Charley. 'True, he was wicked; but that did not fracture our principle, Which was that our surfeit of revolution was permanent; That stability is the primal condition for empire. And that revolution as permanent hope of the restless Weakens all moral law in ratio precise with its prevalence. You should think up some way to achieve without revolution. Conquest of equal by equal was law in past eras: To please you shall we lose its effects? You just set the example! We cannot undo deeds we wish the past never had thought of, As you cannot blow back into life the old ashes of witches, And, in their descendants, cannot unwhip the old Quakers; T am not trying to make it that we are the better; And we will not add suicide to the wrongs of the ages. Nor will puritan statesmen have brow enough to suggest it, Since the gents of that kidney are very tenacious of oneness. Other policies work through disintegration to chaos. If I can comprehensively crystallize interests Of nations 'round bases of sense, I shall do some good service. Let agitators remember with us it is union, And that our right to punish is equal with theirs to do treason. I feel certain that President Lincoln would so have expressed it, Had that great man been called on for counsel in foreign rebellion. No state propagates the terms of its own dissolution. Even though its foundations were laid in political tenebrae, And a state is an empire, whether republic or other; Nor will friendly state expect that another permit it That the friendly state may thereby pluck political profit. The first and last duty is that of imperial integrity. With academic debates to amuse us betweentimes When no one is trying to shut treaty ports more or less solemn In the treaty-guarantee of an openness general. IS There is a point where we fire ofi the gun: why not tell it? Do we live by our rights in the world, or by somebody's favor? '\fter more than a thousand years, no step toward heptarchy! loo quick the foreign nudge if we hint about abdication. Too much are we called to resign if we show the least weakness. If universal disruption were waiting all nations We ought to be strongest of all to proclaim extreme doctrines i^nd to put ourselves at the head of the world's fair of equity. We should swing a bright blade of far reach in the conflict of empires. Four hundred and twenty millions are loyal, if organized. Let there be a formula for converging their loyalty And the millions themselves irresistibly at a menace. With a faraway giant friend near us only if needed; One whose unctious rectitude in the dealings of peoples Resembles that which adds other's dominions to Britain. I can fancy a vast British fleet that need never see Albion, And it cannot be that I am alone in a vision So prepotent and vivid, so worthy Lord Chatham's successor; Yet I marveled on many a sea that no great man proposed it. No Guy Nevil, no Strafford, u.p to the size of his empire, Till at length I seized Cecil Rhodes to replace Warren Hastings. I felicitate you on your East and West Indies, moreover, States! and 'tis for their good, just as our rule is everywhere. The tyranny of superiors is better for freedom Than the liberty of inferiors who don't comprehend it. Never mind constitutions which about this new subject are silent! How could they speak out when they could not foresee the conditions? We are all very strong in the doctrine of President Lincoln: Union first: then whatever you choose so you touch not the union. 1 am not stunned by the splendid blare of Our Empire, Nor dazed by display of its banners and count of its races, But I wish that we make it a unit against all aggression Or confess that we hold it by grace of some little wedge-driver, Be he native statesman of severance or buffer in Asia, Or nine Frenchmen at Fashoda in a Nile-game of ninepins. Or bluffer or duffer in Europe or elsewhere: I care not. 56 lO. Love of country comes of gooa feeding and love of the acres That furnish it, more than of institutions poHtical, Though sometimes the two 'come confused at the end of grand dinners, A freak of nature escaped from a tuppeny sideshow, Or a foreign fugitive swift from the stigma of murder, Is not the material whereof may be moulded a statesman. Affect to consider the agitator a statesman If you choose; we know that you know him and have your own purpose. But we discount the game; so it does you no good to palaver, And you know what this means if the humorist say nothing further. No man is political criminal; all crime is by statute. Not for loving freedom too well are you stepping the treadmill; .'Twas the breach of her laws, or some others, that brought you in convict. Think of that when for reasons of freedom you carve up a gentleman. There is truly no politics, as such, in carving a gentleman, Though there might be some in keeping one untried in prison For crime, not for politics, till his foes buy his freedom By bail, while outsiders try him by writing and shouting. A big case was his, with a funnybone shock for denouement. We should have offered him naturalization and embassy. Je suis L'Homme Qui Rit: will some President contradict me? Remember this is a comedy based on stump speeches, Though not of new style, but of genuine, old-fashioned order With the hits that wake partisans up and inspire their responses. A stump speech from the tail of a palace-train is a humbug Which ought to shame Mr. Depew and some other pow-wow men. I insist on the woods and the stump and the citizens shouting, Such as I walked many miles to applaud in my boyhood. I do not fear to make free with the humbug of dignity, Th'e war-joss of nations that violate civilization In its own name, the mask of the egoist purpose. Let all governments use comic editors as ambassadors! I should be proud were I comic enough for such ofifice. 17 II. The finishing- stroke diplomatic would be one appointment Whereby you were sure of success in offending- two nations Both of which like to be friendly but will not be pranced on; Transforming the art of avoiding to that of entangling; Let us keep our minds what Friend Washington told us about it; Or inviting forgiveness because you are dull and unmannered And have wakened the world to new notions of foreign relations. What should we say if the Queen should invite some great strangers And conspicuously quit the town at their moment of coming? Better to pitch the key of diplomacy higher, Not in fury, but concord, tuning your horns of dilemma To hexameters chanted in lucrative cadence spondulic, Least stilted of measures and bounding with profit euphonious. Either that, or paint on your 'scutcheon a goad with the motto Applicatio posterior betulae mores emendat. The foreign lines are not for my countrymen needful, But intended for aliens thoughtful of me and these topics, And are classical just as I choose to conform to nine standards, More or less; perchance fewer; I intend not to fight on that issue. Several things herein were approved by state men of three races, In officio, too, not by pessimist, second-chop exes. Audire alterem partem pars est bonorum mororum. Maybe statesmanship has not a vital connection with morals, Yet surely 'twould err in any attempt to subvert them. Beware tlie magnetic man! He wins not by intelligence, But by just enough cunning to substitute something inferior. If you win by a keel why should you defend by a leeboard ? For reciprocity let us substitute philophocity, Or the love of the seal as distinguishd from love of the sealskin. And with that philoprocity, law of the love of the peoples; Thus renouncing the system of mulcting the nations not servile. Discrimination and fines have a queer look in commerce. 18 12. If you seek as fixt object a hegemony with neighbors I'Jext door or at many thousands of doors from your owl-key, Persuade not with ultimata which violate treaties Unless you arrange them for fun or to smash by devices. Mas valable es el asiento si no arrancado. In forcing the growth of ex-colonies, skip the fool's paradise; Leave that to the old mother-countries that found it by founding you, Such as Britain, Spain, France; on your accounts proud, poor and sorry. Let the chiefs of fresh nations line up against phrenic inflation. The signs of the zodiac are futile for trumps at draw-poker So long as the game is a bluff among figments of planets. You must jackpot the stars ere you trump with the signs of the zodiac. 13- Surely great politicians are men of a mission peculiar. Their best measures are stepping-stones only to measures tentative, And they always teach rivals how to despoil them of office. And their speeches precede even themselves to the shelves of back numbers Unless they be men like Lord Bea, or my friend Daniel Webster: Whereby they are victims, methinks, of distinction sardonic. Be you, then, sardonic on fate and let pass the distinction. The true, real patriot of every nation is tory. Strange as this sounds in the ears of the tongues that curse tories. I apply this remark not alone to the lands of the Britons. Be not laggard, O Britons, in taking a tip from new poet! And insist on reforming reform and reformers; their premises Are radical errors, and a will-o'-the-wisp is their logic. Symposists had led us to isolation and menace. Now be lastingly Tory and arm, and burn the symposium. The policy that sacrificed Gordon would sacrifice anything. ■Or that which led up to loading the Boer States with cannon, Foreign officers, rifles, whatever could injure Our Empire. 19 14- The masses swing first to one doctrine and then to another, And even when wrong they are right because they are the people. One man may be damned, but a milHon are saved though they follow hira,. Numbers substituting themselves for the law and for conscience. The moral law is a fiction of human intelligence AVhereby intellectual men govern those who are less such. Not wrong the effusive buffalo marching by thousands And at double-quick stride and long pace eft'acing a county ; This is nothing against the Augustus of long horns and goring; He had not been properly trained in respect for the county. They will none of a leader, but push up a dummy to follow, And on changing their cue knock him out and set up another. If a minister make himself loved where he speaks for his country He is wrong, and must win respect out of fear of his nation. In no sense may he substitute himself for his country, Though he be gentleman finished like Pauncefote or Lowell. All levelers are jealous of level more lofty ; A fact in nature, not a political incident Peculiar to institutions in any man's country. If plain Grant or Lincoln be greater than either accomplished. Why not abolish your schools, O ye paradox-hummers ? Your colleges, lavishly copied from old world examples? Have you no use at all for the men who are highly instructed ? If not, wherefore teach to your boys what your manhood makes fun of?" Aha ! yet 1 see for your conduct some justification. Education makes what the bases give it the chance for, "While the bases sometimes evolve by inherent vigor; Which makes me think nature may not intend education For those who can come to the front by direct evolution : Commodore Vanderbilt and John Churchill illustrate my meaning. In both church and state let us quit self-felicitation ; Let us shut off the wind of self-praise from the brass band and organ,. And out of mere shame take up some creative duty In beneficence free from conceit and denominations. 20 15- !lvIothing ripens a cause like the blood of the man who has shed it. Ere the last drop be run the cause is already immortal. You sustain his cause by mere mention of name of the martyr, In a double sanctification the two thus uniting. Think of this when about to murder another Lord Cavendish, And remember that murder is always murder, not politics. And that you were convicted of crime, not imprisoned for shouting. i6. We justify change to experimient v/ith a principle, But your purposes should not be laid on political fun lines. Nor on euphemisms, nor with too much philanthropy mingled. Difit'erentiate the love of man from political objects, Because, if devoted to both, one or other will trip you. If inclined to joke, respect those who can see no joke in it. Fun in foreign affairs is demoralizing and costly. And likely to lead to no fun in your treaty relations. Do not love your country so much : try to do something for it. Love is blind ; you are not ; use your eyes for the patria's errors. Preserve the distinction between a right and a privilege. Which seems much too apt to become confused in some newlands. Free and equals in rights should not be unequal in privilege. Be not fooled by substitution : if it be economic Keep the theme on that base and let it not drift into politics Unless you have ballots enough to compel its acceptance. Compel the politician to be an economist, Or slay him, of course in the sense of his trade, if he will not. This requires education alone, and decision, to do it. Put your faith in consecutive growth, in continuous purpose. Who discovers it all at once saves the future the trouble And is not a genius so much as a lusus naturae ; Pie lacks the deft ways of experience whereby to adapt it. You may take up the theme where he left it and nrove him a charlatan. 21 The heir of a self-made pedigree born into boredom Has nothing for you but self-praise to explain his existence. This is very hard on the sons of successful fathers, While 'tis hard to be the successful son of such father. Great head needs not God: a greater or lesser accepts him. 17- Is the alien aegis a shield or a shackle for peoples ? Is the previous panoply-doctrine transmuted to menace ? Some Presidents told me they deemed it a threat with long shadow.. Would you rather develop your own, or a stranger's ideal? Would you rather be forced to be free, or be free without forcing? Quien se habria independizado solo para caer vencido Por el vecino mas fuerte, extranjero de sangre, El caudillo mismo de falsas palabras fatidicas, Sugetiendo de proteger, obligando a aceptar? Loor a la libertad ! Veneracion sublime A la independencia que existe en la naturaleza, Y no en las teorias de los egoistas. If Colombia be independent by grace of another Is Colombia free, or a simple bondwoman of nations? Independence by one guarantee is not independence; It insures the control of one nation over another. That will do for a maxim new in the law between nations, And the world will wonder, five years hence, it ever was questioned.. Aliancia forzada con Mexico para defenderlo Pareceria a los del pais un paso del conquistador. I continue some obvious truths in the style of stump speeches. Pretension to any control outside your dominion Will not be accepted; annex it, or touch not a tropic, Asia for Asiatics; Europe for Europeans, And so forth: the sea is a wall; and if ocean be lacking, Or other divisional, make up the want with a doctrine. If pride of race be true among Spaniards or others, 22 If it be real, why not resume old allegiance, Dropping the gloriole glinted from foreign assistance? This is academic discussion without living interest; An allegory illustrates a theme without passion. And no point of offense can be taken where no one is mentioned. Genuine independence means cutting adrift from the language, In your new high tone quite away from the tongue of your seniors And the laws, letters, ways of those you broke suddenly loose from. Any other conception involves a mere fight with your parents, Which requires your apology both in politeness and morals. When the other fellow is arming precisely as you are, Does patriotism mean you prefer to be killed for your country. And that both would be happier to die than to live for the patriae? Or is it the riant mask of the thoughtful and sorrowful Who behind it are biting the file of their bitter dischantment? Is no regret blufifed away in the flaunt of your standard, Nor absorbed in the roll of your drums and the blare of your trumpctsi I am neither advising nor hinting, but simply inquiring. Remember the joke is on me when 'tis not on my topic. Let nobody answer these questions by easily begging them. The small politician high up always begs or denies it. His business is not to be fit for a place, but to get one, The smallest man to the largest position aspiring. Homage to President Diaz, who is not of this order; The Monroe of Latin-American independence. Not of the independence thrust on a protege. Castelar intends to be truthful, but flatters no Saxon. If rhetoric could uplift Spain he had made her a giant. They who bet on orators forfeit the stakes among nations, As the rule, and the short-worded Saxon seems to absorb them. We overesteem the wrong gifts: that is why we are losers; That is, those who have not yet learned to esteem the irue science. We began far too wise in our own conceit with the Transvaal, And atoned at a cost which seems to be British exclusively. And everlastingly, in life, prestige, criticism, treasure. 23 But let us dispute of these topics like Sunday-school children: Torn paper may litter the floor at the end, but no blood there. If our genius be that of the monk, yours is that of the layman The instant the hymns have been sung- that express your religion. Secular excess runneth not into ultimate profit; It produceth the tramp and the quack, who bring not the true empire. We shall grope, on our side, to a paradise much less abnormal. Your feints and shifts work not out your emancipation. You do not successfully sneer yourselves free of our worship, As we never try to sneer ourselves loose of your friendship. Is the era of truth and of dead affectations upon us? It is much to the kingdom of God and of men if it be so! Be patriot as hot and swift as a star space-pervading. Yet permit a like orbit to those who have much of your likeness. 'Tis enough that my country is quietly great among nations ; Quietly great without reference to buncombe or bunting. If she make not a noise periodic I shall not forget her; Nor need she give editors chances to whoop up the people. If I see not my flag every day, still my love shall not weaken; If I see it not daily afloat, I shall shiver no timbers. This is excursive, invasive, incisive, melodious; An impartial refrain of a turpial vocal in ethnics; Prize songbird that from the equator chants of equation As a political rule for lifting equality. 19. No hacer el primero paso, porque es aquello que cuesta. Are you tied to a foreign leader or bound by your judgment? Is it even whether you follow by will or compulsion? Shall the world be open, or all be dragooned to one system By the gentry of chance in political conclave fortuitous, 24 And forego Asiatic commerce to placate exclusives? I refer to the rights of all states, not of any one solus. Nor is Asia the only continent in my vision. Canje leal debe ser el mote de todos. Mr. Canning's doctrine, which Mr. Monroe put his name to, Does not mean, and it cannot, the circumscription of commerce, Nor of the right to alter political formulas. Nor of organic rights in all sovereign peoples: So told me some Presidents of some southern republics Who deplored the political overreaching of Canning, Rut who take either side, according to whence come the menace. However, freedom with Europe, as well as from Europe, Independent autonomy, sovereign in choosing relations With continents ocean-united, I found was the preference Of Presidents Lerdo, Canal, Paez, Nuiiez, Soteldo. I made several trips to examine these things with devotion. Britain is, after all, alone among nations consistent. By avowal imperial, commercial and free, what is lacking? Her premises vast, her logic is true to them strictly, Till her moral command renders all explanation superfluous. Not one nation antagonized at any point anywhere, Except those who object to both open doors and free commerce, Insisting on spheres of influence as a substitute. This example cann.ot be crushed while the moral law governs. And asks not your imitation, but that you surpass it. She will never be slow to follow a lead for the better. And is waiting, I guess, for her best friend to show her the way to it. Before taking arms to defend either one or more nations Against no attack, one might well ask a few minor peoples Si quieren la aliancia de un amigo forzoso Que no reconoce derechos porque poderoso. Overbearing friend is the most insidious of foemen. Acquiring by trespass that which the honest foe fights for: Often done ir the name oi the Cross for the profits of Cortez. Lei us establish a tribune ol secular honor F or material aftairs, with religion put by for salvation. 2b Study secular honor before you object to this program. Let a court of honor be formed to decide for all nations Not only the law but the equity of all causes, Holding war on a level no higher than that of mere murder, As a strictly preventible crime, and therefore more heinous. Impractical? So was all order till some one achieved it. Proverbially, Muscovite policy never was open As to doors or the ways of shutting them; but the Emperor Nicholas Second may set my court of honor in practice As soon as he quits arming Russia more largely than ever. At the present date or for any time in the future, And guarantees to respect present holdings of empires. Sine qua non, no advantage while waiting the congress, nor working it. The congress of 'Ninety-Nine or of any near decade, 20. Remember the challenge of Baumanoir to Bemborough; Thirty a side; it was promptly and proudly accepted. The Sixty swang glaives at Oak Midway of Josselin-Ploermel And thirty fell prone round its roots and were vanquished in honor. Those winners conquered by fighting, not overrushing. No small party was stung to defiance by insults and blunders. 'Twas when civilization was dawning, or maybe just previous. No cowardly threat of twenty to one stained that battle. 'Twas in times mediaeval, when a soldier throve by his daring, When man against man in a quarrel was all that was manly. Not smeared with the ink of the bully the page of that story. To the true warrior the blood of such field would look beautiful. 21. Advise yourself not to disturb the order existent. Scarcely any other ofifence has so much of pure blunder. Were redemption required again, the returning redeemer Would be more than denied in the house of the Pontian successor, 26 With emphasis more than of words might be ordered to quit it. Would the sons and the daughters of broadcloth and silk change their rain Would they see the need of a sermon enforcing new fashion? Would a pontifex ride on an ass as a choice from a chariot? Treason has many forms, innovation being one of them, And is punished in many ways between hemp and starvation. This is the tragical act of the patria-comedy. 22. As a class-leader, or otherwise doing the paragon, Ee not overmuch righteous for fear of surpassing thy parson Or the big local man whom thy borough has lately elected, And of setting example up in the place of a sermon. The world is not yet wholly ready for dutiful action; What would suddenly 'come of the fellows who live by advising, Alert in the counsel of all save themselves, and paid for it? Make not thyself overwise: why shouldst thou destroy thyself? More, profit in being behind than in front of thine epoch; Thou canst clip the king's coin of the nobles who squandered for progress. More honor in being in front; but what profits the martyr? For services rendered to art thou mayst freeze on a corner. Let the lights of philosophy drift to the locker of learning And then sink the ship at a hundred miles south of Bermuda, Seek ease of mind, but not so that the search become effort. Read editorials by men at six guineas per fortnight; Therefrom thou wilt gather a conflict of many opinions, And will deem ease of mind best promoted by ceasing from reading. 23- Republics exist for liberty as a principle When it willingly taketh the impress of fixt institutions. Bear this in mind when the genius of turbulence prompts you, And bear it in mind that in this the republics are justified. Though self-contradictions crop out as to some other issues. 27 The republican view of freedom is fixt, not expansive, Though your true devotee will swear fixity is expansive If his politicians may only fix rigs on the people. When these get their republic established, it stays there forever, Going on like a wheel in the air on a permanent axis For the sons of rotation in ofifice who prate of the progress Of the wheel in the air that insures them rotation in office. Dare suggest that the wheel might roll on to an equalized fortune. And the sons of rotation in office are sharp to shout treason. Foreign war puts a stress unexpected on fixt constitutions; The obstacular clauses require an immense explanation, But manifest destiny helps the defects in the logic. And may even furnish them forth with a hundred amendments; And Senator Hoar may earn place with the fathers in story Of what was to be at the founding, but not for the future. But our nature cannot be changed by political raving. Flumanitarian fixt bayonets frequently fix it all. Ethnic conditions are strong in upheaval of theories When the same are not built on the evolution of principles. They neutralize the ideals of Theodore Parker, Of Channing, and others the half-gods of inexperience. Those lofty conceptions of half-gods who should have been full-gods, Round-shouldered, they, by the weight of reforming the universe. But who missed the correct conception of democrat mission, Immortal in splendid isolation of error. Yet some stumpers pretend to eliminate the discrepancies Between the philosophers and the facts of the decade, As: We see things exactly alike unless where we differ; Yet the difference is merely in name, though it strenuously sunders. I am on your side in the argument, but can't see it Unless as a Jesuit point, like Lothair at Mentana. Thaumaturgical metamorphosis has its value In reversing conditions when no other means can explain them. Are kings better? No; but their banners bear different devices; They have never been starred with the claims and the aims of republics. Kings pretend to lick savages for the good of all nations 28 And to take the chances of Hcking from them and their allies, Their civilized allies envious of us, for example Of fortune, and who damn us for w^inning the things they are seeking. Inherited status, not wider life economic. Was a commonwealth's pride; all it knew was known to the foredads, Their long heads lucky at length in the luck that seems judgment; That is, they were helped to success by the chance that makes merit, Good men and great for their time, and I honor them deeply, But it was not their mission to tether a state to an epoch. In our "Ninety-Three Dupuy quotes the French revolution. Which seems to be still on tap for both sides of all questions. The inventor of figures of speech is the patriot and statesman. Though, like sons of a pope, all questions for such have been answered. A few phrases carry a measure, and thinking comes later. If the ins seek aggression, the outs double quick to outmarch them In gross rivalry ; > do wrong for the good of the country. The wrong party on top dragoons the good sense of the people And their morals, and makes them do wrong for the patria-gloria. And pay for the splendor through ten generations of taxes In total and limited monarchies as in republics. No people more sensitive to the bomb of the anarch Than democrats, nor quicker to quake at his dogma; A deeply significant fact, and much in their favor. Yet questions are economic, no longer political. Indeed, it is time to economize on the politics. Even if economics should wrestle with no other symptom. If mere massive voting may cure this, why does the cufe lag? Men have met death there in proof of their dissatisfaction. Is the plutocrat using democracy as an autocrat. As a vision of freedom materialized for the despot. The multiplied citizen tyrant, not the king single? Any sort of system could promise or chat of the future. If it do not build for itself, can it build for the future? You are held to the boast of the past, not the vaunt of intention. Political detachment is not independence In inimical sense; noblesse oblige outside of politics, 29 And from this the mere cut of political bond cannot free you. Good faith cannot die Avhere noblesse oblige is the touchstone. As it cannot exist where one flaunts the pride-tiag- of its absence. Who could imagine the step from Mount Vernon to Tammany? Who can foretell the volte-face the fresh era may order? A league for the preservation of free institutions Might be met by a counter-league for their pontiiication. And a nation within one might set up its church for its politics; Other tribe tlian the ]\Iormon may swell in an amplified Utah. Let nobody wind himself up for debate automobile Nor otherwise tire himself out; I am only suggesting. My assertions are merely affirmative forms of the query, Wliile my interrogatives offer occasion to crush me. Whether you know this or not, take occasion to ponder. Any nation gp-ows weary in time of the noise of a people In chronic complaint, unwilling to take the world's chances 'Mid denominations of one or in many religions; Following, not leading; struggling ever for special favors, Favors not asked by the others and due to no section. Something weak and wrong in a race always crying for sympathy Alike in the prosperous hills and the desolate valleys. And forever encroaching on government fovmded by others. An unpioneer yet may win by devotion to winning. In liberty there is more than the mere tu dixisti. Because we must labor to keep as we travailed to earn it. If you use the past as a platft)rm to boast of the future, jMaking also tlie present a stump speech of that which is coming, If you keep on intending forever, where will it land you? All my questions are hypothetical; no concrete purpose. Irrterrogation amuses, and I know but few things. Yet from what I might foretell am deterred by the stones of Saint Stephen. 24. Washington did not labor to found a tramp's paradise. The foreign bondmen of fate who are otherwise freemen 30 Mistake in prescribing the duty of Washington's country As that of predestined absorber of every crank-theory Uneasily radiated by prophets of failure. Yet we with that land would associate intenser persistence In scopes more ambitious, in truths more far-reaching and clearer. The jealous rage of the democrat spurned foreign comment Till the democrat swelled, like the monarchist, into expansion. Then it came to pass that a criticism was not an insult. We are all on an equal level now, each being superior In his own esteem to all others, for which I esteem him. I am seeking not to hurt feelings, and ask your opinion. Recall the instance of Lowell, the gifted, lamented. Britain gave him cold credit for doing his manifest duty. Thereat he fell foul of the Fenii, who called him a poet. When his party adopted their stigma and left him an outcast. He Vvas right for the chosen few; but too few chose to vote for him. What a pity plain life and high thought went under with Emerson! But this is a verity whose point pricks all systems. Constitutional innovation came hard and tardy Till a world-wide event broke the tyranny of script-limits. A stump speech is this, but not specially fierce against monarchy. A demagogue's epigram w^as a platform for statesmen Until somebody said that the great needed not be the narrow. He W'ho opposed the shut door and the feudalist finance Was bid stand on his head as a sign that his feet were the wiser. Inimical premises seemed to serve friendly conclusions In the latest twist of the logic of fresh politicians. Who twisted the lion's tail as part of the premises. A cheap hit on cheap coats w^as prolonged for the blessings of dearness. John Bull's horns became locked with those of the favorite dilemma Of how not to grow lesser himself while another grew bigger. But Thaumas, as agent of Neptune, whispered the President And enchanted isles in two oceans dazzled the people. Manifest destiny supplying the constitutional warrant. Avalanche voting is either majestic or nothing, Since it proves satisfaction both ways, as well as the avalanche; 31 The majority happy to win; the others at voting. Successes of statesmen run not with their efforts in ratio, Even among easy equals; yet am I not pessimistic. The world is not lacking in genius; 'tis rather too full of it. But that which is wanted is not a relapse into dullness, But one big enough to employ all the others at profit; A genius Promethean not only in range but in drive-power. With him we should tumble over one another in paradise. On our planet transformed into paradise by this genius. I here reaffirm the most sacred rights of all equals From the North Pole to Cape Horn and from Athens to Stockholm, And that no one is wrong because each prefers his own system. 25- I am some things out of office; among them an editor. Civilization is not editorial per se, but by incident; Whether the civilization be normal or crazy Depends on the fellows who shovel the type in the columns. If you wish him to win, put civilization forward As the ace of trumps, and glorify him for high playing. Augmenting your ethical bet as his vis-a-vis loses. On the enemy's losses the ethics depend, and your winnings. If you cannot trade with his foe, spoil the trade of the others; Make it seem baser than once was your share in the slave-dhows. Fight not for the open door unless you may be porter. Though his trade may not drip to your bucket, another has lost it. And that is your gain in the opportune ethics of nations. Mere passive selfishness goes for success in our epoch. Why? Because you may find what I lose, though it roll down a culvert. I have lost; bide your time; you do not know w^here you may seek yet; (This is not a proud age; and industria has no superbia. That Japan should be lucky proves nothing of civilization; Nothing for nor against the system Japan is upholding, But that Japan is ahead for the time in equipment. And knew how to do at her own cost the business of Russia. 32 I respect Japan, and her industry, history and people; But, playfully speaking, she furnished the world a grave lesson: Which is, that an ancient race with new luck is a schoolboy, Wild in vacation days and missing his master, And offering new proof of the need of Great Britain in India. Lord Rosebery said that the war should be stopped ere it started ; No single instance I find of more statesmanlike foresight, For no nation ever defeated itself as Japan did. It was exactly the same with the Roman and Briton. Superior warlike equipment explains the old Roman. In our era not even Julius the puffed could invade us. Superior equipment will keep us the Roman advantage; The lack of it will put some new Roman on top of us. Strange that this fact appears not to the literary liberals. Foreign rivalry always confronts and sometimes afifronts us; Yet the penmen in Parliament always taboo this condition. If Japan had the cannon-ball mission to civilize China, Why has not Britain the same over any inferior, Or the States to teach law of all kinds to the vicious and sunken. To transplant into Asia the carpetbag system and statesmen? Let us praise wisely all 'round, not in status of stultus. The great future victor will be the disclaimant of conquest; The States may not know this to-day, though they yet will give proof of it In the moral, not physical, bigness of manifest destiny. All other conditions being equal, numbers are winners; But a far greater victory than theirs is the triumph of causes. On that base have I fought all my wars, by the pen or the sabre. And I proudly fell back on my cause when the hordes were too pushing. China might have wiped out Japan in a new generation If a Japanese act had not given naval chances to Russia To look on Japan as a toy or a sarcasm in empire. Yet that again would prove nothing of civilization; Rather the other, all militarism being savage And of itself proving civilization a forgery. I am strong on the moral bigness of manifest destiny; Soldiers are needed now on the physical side of it, 33 I admit; but even Jesus used force in persuading the usurers. Japan attacked China simply because she was ready And China was not, and that you call civilization; In its moral side manifest destiny did not appear there. Chauncey says that God always keeps some man in training for purpose. And I deem the same God quite as oft keeps a rod in the pickle For the nations that praise themselves more than their Bibles may warrant. Solid virtues still survive in the sons of Confucius, Despite prejudice, falsehood, antagonism and, 'verting. The moral is, 'mid the din of competitive war-whoops, Clarify the newspaper mind, and do not confound things. A stump speech upon editors, Japanese and Mongolians Is just as legitimate as critique editorial. If too many cooks spoil the broth, too many colossi Of hostile intelligence ruin the public conception Not alone of Asian afifairs, but among all the nations. Wiser the fool than the King when he called down the great Macedonian. 26. Remember these problems are waiting the ethnic solution, Not one of gas optimistic nor partisan trickery. Nor by blasts recurrent of fun at the ways of your neighbor, And that trying to force it by war should invoke your extinction, Since in ethnics and ethics it proves that the lesser is beaten. That the strong party wins irrespective of other conditions; A horde 'gainst a few, or a few with the arms of precision, Grave moral reasons being later evolved for the triumph. Mais la politique du frellon est toujours detestable. La France, to be truly at ease, needs an object of hatred; Britain, Germany, Italy, each has in turn been this object; It is in the blood of the race, and must always be reckoned with. And some day will be likely to lead to an isolation not splendid. This will be when Russia shall cease to be idol in irony. 34 27. Let no nation seek a menagerie in arbitration. This book is composed for the thinker, not for the partisan, Unless for the partisan of the element comic, Which inheres in all purposes artificially serious. But any new thought is better than ossification Of morals and mind in the temple of patriot-fetich Preaching fixity, ne plus ultra of those who are lucky. Ponder hereby, and later explain me some causes. Why should despotism produce heroes and liberty squabblers Till tyranny seems less disgraceful and easier than freedom? Is freedom another guise of the substance of tyranny, A name, an incitement, a hope to cajole the unlucky, To make minority acquiesce in the sovereignty Of majority taking the place of the personal monarch? Some hordes are the threat of the civilization that feeds them, Reconcentrados of freedom living on charity, And may need a new breed of heroes to cut short their squabbling. God pardon the heroes who founded the chance for their purpose! No others so rasp up the ages with egoist graspings. I call you again: why is this? Because the beneficiaries Are always unworthy the martyrs, and lapse from their standards. Despotism develops the man, and freedom the loiterer; The more shouty the freedom, the more numerous he, and offensive, Till degraded enough to need saving, and then comes the hero To lift him; the martyr, a wasted political Jesus. The sword carves out virtue ; the plow turns the furrows of fatwit ; Even fixt institutions should try to accept some new premises. But I fill not with wind either horn of this giant dilemma Lest my sound-swell of satire inundate a nation's tympanies. While my aim is to tickle, not to derange its acoustics. Verbum sap : either civilization is wrong or the menace. Learn the purpose of those whom you patronize ere you sympathize. For partisan vote-gain you egg them to do in our household What you seek to prevent them doing in yours. Is that wisdom? 35 Are you not thus facilitating their purpose to beat you By misuse of your forms in politics and religion? 28. The country that takes automatic care of its statesmen Finds all of them equals in chronic political picnic, Senators Hoar and Raines with Webster, Clay, Pitt or Gladstone In a national ball, a political spree, a fun-circle Where the unexpected bob up to be merry with greatness, Where a Prescott is elbowed aside by a Mig or embezzler. The nation that guards its great heads with a care automatic Deems them political wards, and so they are funmen. Do you object to my terms ? They were taught by your gentry. Call them whatever you please, they were learned from your tories, 29. When a public work must cost more than a few thousand guineas There is always a fund, if you know it or not, for corruption. The unredeemed are corrupt wheresoever you find them. But are strongest, of course, in the nations least prone to redemption: A platitude this, both self-evident and Pecksniffian, Worthy peregrine parson rather than secular poet. My terms are general, I vow; no particular reference. But as Her Majesty's Fool on the stump of a hickory, Into this brief speech I infuse a dash of the puritan. The most serious of men, yet who taketh himself much too seriously. And giveth a species of comic psalm tone unto patriotism. The moral is: Better the world is without such improvement. Since the phrase modern methods atones not for principles fractured. The Panama scandal almost baffled conception As it trailed with a smirch and smear over certain republics, And it poisons true hope of the citizen in his country; Though the heroism of the peasants who cast in their hoardings At Panama is the glory of Frenchmen forever. 36 O patriotism planetary, unique as resplendent! Frenchmen courting renown, not counting the cost of the waterway. Vast conception of duty was theirs, howso venal the leaders, With no Frenchman posing thereat as obstructive behemoth. But if you insist on assuming the contrary view of it, The foreign-born tribesmen who ruin or rule Manahatta Are right about boodle; they merely foresaw the new era. 30. Forepops are good for their time, but not up to the future. Every nation has had them; take any for illustration; Romulus, Brennus, Caractacus, Horsa and Washington; Each a producer as well as a product of epoch, And more or less heir and transmitter of civilization. No one sets fire to my stump; I am still in good humor. All things are outgrown excepting your god and his empire. No scheme can be worked for combining progress and fixity. The great wall of China surrounded that question forever, And the recent joint faith of two nations in manifest destiny Finds in China a large object-lesson of justification. If the past and your fathers were greater than you and the future, You cannot sustain the much nor the little bequeathed you. Great fathers build not for degenerate children great futures; The futures fail as the children fall in the contrast. Or in the duties for which destiny had not trained them. Magna Charta was great because previously nothing existed, A cornerstone to be carefully set by the builder; Yet if new cut to-day all England would sneer at its smallness. We are proud and glad in this era we have not to lay it; That our temple founded thereon has lost none of its beauty. That the strength of its age is greater than that of some new ones, The political Mecca of aliens as well as of natives, A fact due not alone to the cornerstone but the builder. Forepops are like Magna Charta, good in their period, •But unluckily difficult to transfer to the forward; 37 Towers of light in the past wherefrom you may lay your course onward. Not dawdle at anchor around them Hke pocketbook sailors. They are not to be sworn by at present for founding a czardom Unless you endow them with purposes not in their records. Rather go back and work up like the antique beforemen. Freedom means freedom to judge of the fabric of freedom, And not that you force upon equals your notions about it. If equality be the just law, to aspire would be selfish. Gladstone said inequality is the law of Great Britain, But his God created superior and inferior; I prefer the work of his God to his phrase of misleading. And manifest destiny cannot exist among equals. Unless as forbidding divergence of scopes with inferiors. Can you hear on the outer circle the truths I am shouting? For patriotism pufifed, what private lines reek with your meanness ? Can you earn a bowl of pea-soup at some other profession? When will your fellows evolve beyond need of your ranting? Why should we not be matriots instead of patriots ? Civilization would perish unless for the women, And motherland would seem much less gory and gentler. 31- Let us now freely speak to some state in imagination. You begin your political system with no propaganda; You disclaim the idea as antagonistic to freedom. Chance makes it successful, and then you are all propagandists Where chance took you one way and evolution the other. Feigning faith perfect as means of ignoring its failures. The rights which at first were inherent lapse into prescription. Where two, three or five are gathered together in freename, The major number debate of the meaning of freedom Till the minor come in, when they force upon them their conclusion. These freemen, you see, are persuaded to faith by compulsion. Their fellows presenting a garland of peace on a bayonet. Adorning liberty thus while appeasing the despot. 38 Propaganda involves all dominion: are you a democrat, Scientist, socialist, communist, anarchist, monarchist. Altruist, egotist, shopkeeper. Christian, or heathen? It makes you no difference according to propaganda Unless whether you lose your own head or cut off another's: Therefore stay strong if you be, or get strength if you lack it; For if the loser turn winner, your head pays your crusade ; The Danubian Stambuloff being a striking example. It is nothing but preach, if you think; no such thing as a principle, But compromise, a sort of burglar on principle. Whosoe'er is on top, all politics end in orations, And each best propagandist sets up in his turn his own system. As Pontifex, Artifex, Anarch, Freethinker, Don'tknowit, And freeman who finds a free lunch with five cents' worth of lager. Will you ever arise to the right irrespective of jargon Dexterously used with the sinister scope of defeating. I am waiting the plan of John Him who sneered at finality. He would work a great empire by shifty anticipations Until it should drift into colonies through orations. God send us once more a great man to reorganize chaos And give freedom a chance with the men who are up in its ethics. In the reciprocal duties of freemen and empire. Or my States will run manifest destiny counting us out of it. All this is inspired by the ghosts of Will Somers and Gwynplaine. 32. There is no such thing as merit per se; what is called such Is the figment illusive of euphemistic persuasion. And to stuff the imagination you simply keep talking. If you can afford to parlar for a few generations, Providing relays as the talkmen expire on the platforms. Mankind, muddled and wearied, at last will believe in your forepops. Because faith costs less effort than ever recurrent denial. This applies to the men known as big, whether local or national, Who may be republicans, dromios, nihilists, autocrats. Yet will I admit the true virtue of some of your forepops, But why did you bunch without sorting the true and the bogus? The man at your door of Walhalla is much too indulgent, And his lack of discrimination discourages gravely, For he seateth a hippodrome clown in the chair meant for Bismarck. If a man had one virtue it does not imply he had twenty; Self-denial frequently means you care nothing about it. And your victory was due to the rain in your enemy's powder; Not the less you are hero, and vulgar enough to accept it. 1 am wary of him of one virtue and no seeming vices; And a foredad in chief may be distanced by greater successor If you tie not the present and future to fetich pasado. 33- A fashion-free woman being loftier than man and less sordid, Some good mother should destine her boy to great age and experience. That he write a new testament simply of secular honor, Not to supplant but to supplement that of salvation, Teaching nations professedly Christian to keep the plain promise, And. that spreaders of faith shall not flourish the secular sabre. As not long ago some of them did in the Saccharine Islands, Where a sweeter belief is attached to one easier than Jesus. 34- Take oflf your hat and quit wagging the member unruly! This is a man who annihilates western conception, And probably all European, of what is a patriot. A son of Japan) is my theme, one of honors peculiar. I am sad that his name was too humble to come by the cable And his deed too heroic for newspaper comment by aliens. No love of his flag with a vote of supply to sustain it, No beak for a subsidy, marked out this son of the Orient. He published a pamphlet illustrating Russian aggression And died by his hand in the act of proclaiming the peril, 40 With his blood to the letter sealing his love and his mission, Destroying himself to dissipate bummer ideals. I can almost hear the ghost of Demosthenes praise him In paean of patriot, in fiercer philippic of despot. Must he glide to the shades with the pietistic Ephesian Who builded the dome, and not live with the demon who burned it. This tawny Titan who dared to eclipse Cincinnatus, This reborn Asiatic outshining the glory of Europe, Farther Orient projecting the glow of more radiant Eothen? 35. Fill in as you go, and file out when your space becomes crowded. They who square the square miles to the people find no serious trouble; Proof again economics settle political problems. Unless where some fool not a courtier reverses the order. Hundreds of prairies are things full of luck for their owners, But not necessarily section of any pan-system, Or system of panning out praise in behalf of some theory, And while the system is lucky in having the prairies, They do not contribute a cubic inch to its greatness Which they would not give any other founded on prairies. No system better than Britain's on prairies Canadian; No prairies are richer, irrespective of system; Richer per caput of population in figures Applied to five millions of people, or two hundred millions. And the prairies of water, the seas, they are part of pan-system Quite as important in politics as in commerce. And which some day will overflow, undertow tarifif-jcybbers. Let us deem government wholly a matter of science Dissociated forever from lucky conditions; As adapted to race, and as circumstances require it; As a thing not perforce related to any condition Good, bad or indifferent, excepting as needs may determine. This is the larger acceptance of manifest destiny, -And will save us from errors serious, foolish and costly, 41 WRile substituting the economic best for all politics, WTiile ceasing to mingle the means with the end in our purpose.. These platitudes are the axioms of free constitutions; I air them to-day as a pleasant and timely reminder To those who in making pan-systems set Pan up for nothing. 36. A thousand millions in foreign wilderness railways Have raised many millionaires up out of syndicate plunder Who otherwise would have staid in the sphere they were born to. The roads cannot pay four per cent, on one-half of the money. Independence is best when the rest is not somebody else's. Let him who would boast think whence came his original pride-stock And remember the aid of the friends without whom he could boast not. Independence deceives us; the law should be interdependence. Are we the children of light or the children of lightness? Genii compete when at best; keep that in conspectu, The genii of races as well as of individuals, But not, when at best, in a rage to the point of efifacement. Sell to Britain steel rails lower priced than the British can roll for, But charge not your countrymen triple to help set this deal up; They should not be taxed to stop Britishers earning a living. If trusts in a nation be good, why not between nations. With none of them left in the cold of mere freedom of commerce? Why not uniformly tariff the globe to raise prices And keep them where every man shall be worth just a million Till the millionaire willing to work shall absorb his who idles. Instead of maintaining armies and navies for spoiling The goods whereupon we have just raised the values by tariff? I confess that I wish to be rich, and would like to see you so. My enjoyment is more when I know you will not need a favor. Beni le genie de chaque peuple au bien de tout peuple! Shoot the maxim around the planet by cable in Gallic! Romulus grew to Ouirinus for founding an empire. Shall nations be bred, or forever ignore private breeding? 42 Idolater Romulus opened some doors as a builder, Or indirectly created some ports as a founder; Quirinus the idol eternized has never shut either. Is commonwealth merely another name for the customs? Your duty is first to yourself, but so very absorbing That you find neither morals nor time for the same to your neighbor;. Wherein I see not that it differs from that of rhinoceros. In the end, however, the moral law may be practicable And the individual genii of peoples respected In spite of inspectors of customs and tinkers of tariffs, Thus revivifying the fame of the Boston reformers. The captains of statesmanship always detest revolution, As the rebel who wins is the quickest to shout against treason; It is mutiny, and breaks up the trick of their steering. Therefore they keep on good terms, so to speak, with the chaplains, Who govern by moral law with a physical supplements You see, the mass of all peoples belong to some churches, To denominations in name, howso easy their morals. Thus the captains get aid from the chaplains in ruling the 'tweendecks^ Whose fighting-men are a section drawn from the masses. The church-and-tax-paying majority call for placation; To appease them state-villains sometimes appear faithful to Jesus, Chiefs or ministers who must rule, but would keep down the taxes. Obedience of subjects goes not with defiance political; So that these captains try to deal gently with subjects As being the less costly means of attaining their purpose. They are willing to take any perch in the coop of consistency. Which frequently gives them a roost inconsistent and awkward. It was my court-observation that taught me these secrets. 38. Would you abolish the merchant to set up the mill-lord? The merchant, the man who takes risks of both courage and judgment,. 43 The pioneer at his own expense of new markets, The Lord High Admiral of capital used between peoples, And fill the land with corporations and salary chasers, Every man cutting and pinching to live somewhat lower. Seeking recommendation of cheapness rather than talents. Individual enterprise dead; men liars, hypocrites, flunkies. And all tO' support what you dub modern methods in business? Modern is nothing per se, more than mere antiquation; The best is not sure till experience hath sat on its value. When the consumer buyeth direct from the maker The latter man addeth on more than the middle man's profit; He knoweth his game, and would be a darn fool not to play it. Thus he knocketh a class out of living and payeth more for it, Class and mass thereby castellating the few more securely. This is one of the sharpest points in the system of Dingley, Though his henchmen would swear that the prosperous were never so numerous, Thus ignoring by general averment a charge made specific, Very much in the style of a speech by professional exile. With the customs-tax to the working capital added. And the interest on that, what is saved by destroying the merchant? And women? Are they to be jostled like men 'round a prizering In the competition of earning enough for starvation Because another is waiting the shoes of the starveling, Or, refusing to starve, make a break for high life without conscience ? No, not all of them yet; they are still very faithful to morals, And since they cannot escape having men for their fathers, The fact that they have so much virtue is somewhat surprising. Would you drive your inhabitants into the mill by the million, Leaving them free, but to be either serfs or shareholders ? 'T would be good for the Pluti; that is, till the social upheaval That would make the French revolution look like a picnic; For the next will be economic without politicians. They rejected as being for such festival unfit companions. AH this is not serious at all; merely serio-comic, Like municipal government according to Tammany. 44 39- Now let us investigate the trick of discovery As related to novel experiments sound or defiant. Would you open a show for the sale of prohibited articles? Columbus was Latin, a tough enough man in his purpose, And illumined when forethought and far-sight were swaddled in mourning^ A worker well worthy his hire in a sour-grape vineyard. Court-fool of an outraged volition with menials and dunces, And I know not how little, or much, friend of Latin and Vandal, Since the net result of his cruises enlarged double chances; But if living be good, let us thank him in spite of the offsets. The West of one nation said much of him: what did it do for him. For Columbus, rewarded with chains and blood-poisoned with sorrow? Did Chicago send him On High as Ouirinus of Commerce, Columbus, surpassing Romulus far as a founder. Demigod as ambassador to the gods of progression, Or pose him as Cock of High Winds in a new destination, Borrowed genius of giant bazaar and ironic of statute? Columbus, who not only gave to old Spain a new empire. But homes they would otherwise lack to the sons of all races; Seeking room for new Romans in spite of pontifical dicta; Regent of Hope and bestower of millions of homesteads; Whose expanded heart beat for room for the heart of the future ; Poet whose genius prefigured a sphere and then found it, But whose theme was too vast for expression in short or long metre; The bard who delivered two continents from his vision; Who discovered the lot for the church where a parson condemned him; Old sailor whose inspiration was due to his calling: In formulated ideal no other can touch him Who foresaw the dorado of fact in a luminous frenzy; Transparent and pained where the prophets were opaque and happy. Where the statesmen were safe who say no to all new pro^positions, Where the priest, who knows heaven, smiled a doubt for his faith in a hemisphere. Thus offering a lustrous example of dogma infallible; 45 'Where the fool was the woman who bought with her jewels the honor Against the advice of king, noble, priest, statesman and pilot Who all knew like a pope, but could not imagine beyond him. 40. I love thee well, Isabel of the middle ages In the midst whereof centred thy radius of spheric expansion, De la iglesia hija real y reyna excelsa. Thy sweet genius unstifled by genius of double negation; Whose intuition outpeered a whole realm of intelligence And cathedral full of cardinals shaking their noddles, Averring that if God had made it the church must have known it : Not sharing the cost, but singly thou tookest the venture For thine own crown. Queen regnant and radiant of Castile; The one human being with faith in the man and his mission, Who by pawning a crown won a continental Golconda And a fame like no man's ; a renown which even Julius might envy. Sole friend of the greatest secular son of the centuries. By thy side are vague dreamers all others from Homer to Bryant, Almirante Colon, with thy measureless gifts to the future As discoverer, sailor and poet of giant conception. Manacled victim of ingrates enriched by thy science. 41. Colon! campeon de geografia ignota, Incluyendo mismo el sitio de dicha Chicago, No excluyendo tampoco al de su aduana. 42. Nelle lingue Latine dovute. Latino, t'invoco, Colombo, per bene compiangerti I'ultima sorte. Come quella che termino a Valladolid. e indegna. Genio di barriera di sponde li sarai sempre. 46 I benemeriti che muojono senza compenso, Di principio anelando la cognizione morale, Dovrebbero trovar da' benefiziarii loro i'apoteosi del diritto se non della gloria; Ma si tarda puranche quella che ti fara la giustizia, Tu mondano prediletto, erede degli ingrati, Sommo unico per la pazienza e per lo slancio, Padre emisferico d'una pesante posterita nordica Che ti bilancia fra '1 destin di Quirino e di girantola, O che t'istalla al lago doganiere canonizzato! Tu santo della dogana! sei orgoglioso del range, Deir onor continental nel quinto secolo tuo? Cercator d'altri posti e scopertitor incidentale D'isole ben ricche inalzandosi dal mare, Di tesor miaggiori e non lontano araldi ! Caro Nume di lungo raggio e penetrante, Oggi '1 piu splendido fra quegli ch' han sorvissuto la morte; Intrepid' ammiraglio d'una flotta fragile come gloriosa, Assai poco stimato fra le lodi di stolti millioni! 43. Hay unos que dicen hoy que Colon era hombre pequeno ; Concepcion salvaje y envidiosa del Norte! Y los que lo dicen son encabezados de un clerigO'. Son bien menester los pequefios para decirlo, Siempre como baldon de Colon la iglesia parece. Si Colon era hombre pequefio, quien era grande? Quieren siempre aprovecharse sin palabra de gracia? No solo es glorioso su descubrimiento, Sino, y mas, su tino antes de su hazafia. Puede ser que la raza Latina no es la mas grande; Pero el hombre que sea el mas importante del mundo Era Latino, com.o tambien el ayuda indispensable De la poderosa amiga la buena reyna Isabel. Y yo que lo digo no soy de nada Latino. 47 44- Slow paupers by hoard, swift and rich in the passion of avarice. To the earher craving for gold adding new rage for silver Were the people that peopled the land of thy find, O Columbus, And the children improve on the will-force and brains of the fathers.. Honest refugee, outcast and outlaw are honied on one level, On a bet that all things will adjust themselves in the ultimate, Regardful of only such law as the process develops. Where is God in this matter? He simply produced its Columbus. O Latin friend of white Indians supplanting the red ones, True dreamer on strand and on quarter-deck, where had their homes been. Hadst thou remained Mediterranean son of the boucans? Some honors befell with thy landfall ; yet wast thou discoverer Of new proof that the nature of man is unequal to fortune, That prosperity makes him invent on the side of the demons, This son of vicissitude coldly denying his mother, In his luck coldly shaking his brothers as bastards of destiny. What obligated thy followers to steal their possessions? Do civilized morals thrive on a theft continental? The grandees of thine epoch were thinkers of desperation Who tried to dissuade thee from seeking out homes for the desperate. Who should be shipped to new spheres, not reformed in the old ones. Could Europe have carried them all hadst thou missed their last paradise? 'Twas an easy preach in those days for the church-fed and court-fed, While the unfed were waiting a church and a court that would feed them^ Will the sons of proud parents be fair with the fame of their fathers. Or smash me. the jester, for smashing their fraudulent saintdom Amid the- rush of pretense and pretensions for thee named. Thou Admiral of theLandfall of Homes, O Columbus? Thou sport of a hope seeking one thing and finding another, But nevertheless in ideas a son of high science. 45. Almirante Colon, thy seven years of solicitation. The tolerated schemer of corridors royal 48 Who could tolerate for thy purpose the laugh parasitic; Eating the heart of rebuff with the smile of the patient, The smile of the virtue that lives with the slave and the titan, Had made thee great man hadst thou died of a seven-years' fever. And had spared from the human renown the indelible scandal Which led into Cadiz and V'alladolid and thy sorrow; To that grief which seems ever proportioned to greatness of service And ever corroding his spirit whose service is greatest, Whereof thine was in magnitude up to thy prize hemispheric, Adding land to the knowledge of fire, thou Prometheus of Waters! 46. Guanahani is Watling now ; three times sailed I thither ; A British islet of seven hundred people and pineapples Where Britain should build thee a tower which should dAvarf that of Paris^ With a radius of light one segment whereof should touch Cuba, A star of utility crowning the fane of thy grandeur. From thy point of discovery Anglia hailing Hispania, The colonial nations joining with light their dominions And into manifest destiny putting new radiance. Bremner and I on the spot where they grew ate two pineapples On the spot where with sword, cross and flag thou annexed'st the natives^ Or was it Atwood Cay, which I passed in the Alps, Captain Williams, Lost in a hurricane later commanding the Alvo; Brave David and skillful, well worthy the pride of the Welshmen! Forty decades are still on the ocean reseeking thy landfall. What now say those Indios of Guanahani to thy landing? In the sphere where ye dwell, in some isle of pineapples immortal, Do they bow to thy right of proclaiming thy sovereigns and Saviour? Or with Charley the Second's freelooter Knight do they rank thee, Don Cristobal de Colon alongside of Sir Henry Morgan, Titled by Charles, persiflagitous King of the Britons? Siendo igual la sed del botin a Guanahani y a Jamaica. 49 47. Cristoforo Colombo, who followed the sea for a living; Cristobal Colon, butt of courtiers and churchmen Castilian; Almirante, Don, tither of all of his realized visions ; Then felonized by heads dazed in the blaze of his glory, Beating from Hayti to Spain to the windward of envy. Chained for long tropic voyage by Bobadilla the minion. Having made of the Spaniard the Don of all Western Sea Plunder, Thus giving him four hundred years of progressive decadence: In these phases of work, shame and splendor his life was included. The practical man is God's idiot outside his own practice, Narrow chief of conceit that one mastery includes all the others. What practical man was ever so' rich as this dreamer, O ye millions lacking in metals and meals had his dreams failed? Criticism is dyspepsia of the brain, but mine is anhungered, For the cocktail of hope or the mince pie of thought always ready; Cynicism is perverted enthusiasm; my mind is not twisted; Blasphemy is eloquence abnormal, yet am I normal: But so mighty a deed bred up not only glory, but satire. Since the fun of the sons of Belial plasters the godly In the land where analysis seems to fight shy of the problem. Much varied truth is all 'round thy career, Italiano! And I love thee too well to get left on an inch of the cube of it. What was the Trojan treasure to that of Columbus? The petty tale of ten years, a square mile, some talenta. Caravel and freight-car could carry the lot to Chicago, Where the sons of the hustlers would laugh at its value intrinsic And marvel at such funny fleshpots and other utensils, The unclassic and even irreverend sons of Chicago, Who would doubt of their power to attract in the world's exhibition, Columbus, terraqueous magician who conjured two continents, Trovator incantato di siti per nuove dogane. Those Thaumas of wonderlands realized from two oceans! 50 48. The men who write books praising foreign political systems Write for large sales in the countries praised, to make money; A legitimate trick, tho' the praised people kindly ignore it. And buy up the book which astutely ignores their shortcomings, Made for sale among them by James Casuist greedy of money. I am often amused at such books and at those whom they flatter, As at the Mephisto author serene with his profits. The men who write pamphlets which mainly find fun in all systems Write for their fun and their readers', and they, too, make money. This is a pleasanter trick and perchance a more useful. But to write a great book and get nothing would simply be rueful. War breaks treaties and copyrights: let us be sure to keep treaties! 49. Does civilization owe most to Columbus or Caxton? Between the discoverer and those who made Caxton a printer The typos set type for his claims as against the old sailor. That is printer's ink on his continents with a vengeance! The Caxton-men could not set type there unless for Columbus, Who was father of chances for transfer of loyalty also, Giving comfort to subjects and kings who delight in the transfer; Mutual delight; you would flee, the King would not follow: And some of the subjects transferred became fathers of printers, Wild with the freedom to print which inspires so much wildness; Youth with gold pen dipt in dew, and maturity nowhere. For even the old men stay boys in the empires of Eos: Those lands of political dawn with the sun ever rising, Not noon-seeking; fixt in eternal morning horizon, Hadiant of promise and hope too cajoling to ripen; Where Judge Goldenrod lays down the golden rule as the statute, And every one tries to get every one else to obey it. Let the inkmen distribute the type which promotes this discussion, That is, after setting for me the type up which prolongs it. SI Inventors are commonly fathers of neutralized benefits. Here I reproduce from the middle ages some pages So preserved as to offer the fragrance of foliage autumnal. The avalanche daily and weekly of trash from the steampress Is more than an offset for all that we get of good reading. This is due to deplorable absence of just circumscription, To a vicious taste and false judgment inviting such matter; A reciprocally reacting vile taste and misjudgment Producing low morals, deserving the curb of the statutes. Parchment and pen were enough in the grasp of high thinkers, Or mere voice, with the character of Demosthenes impelhng, Till the low ones should be estopped from debauching the peoples. I do not object to free print, but to those fit for no print. I am appealing that judgment be founded, not despotism, Anil that tyranny flagrant be burned in its typescreeds to ashes. Words then would be pondered by prophet and thinker and listener; And 'tis time; for the point-of-view view leaves salvation unsettled. Salvation saintly or secular, as you prefer it. Shout not that this scheme is too slow; the world is too rapid. And I wish to recall it from speed back to sense if it may be. The speed of express is to me not the highest expression. What we look for is life, not the fever of following up chances. As we get further away from reform, some reformed things Seem much less reformed than we deemed, and reformers less mighty And their tasks less important, in view of the substitute evils And those which your seer forgot to foresee and provide for. Enthusiasm widens a narrow thing to a wonder, And the cranks continue to press us into their purpose. My attention having been strained by these guns of opinion, Shot from star to star as for star-fun, I make this suggestion: Invent an inventor whose good may be never perverted: That were a famous and useful Utopia for parents And a most undeniable chance to be new and original. Fine cliildren's mothers and those of great men are my idols. And I hope some fine mother's great son will achieve my ideal; I should not be held to adore these fine mothers for nothing. 52 so. Let me distribute some more of the gnosis mediaeval. A little trip to the past may round off your angles And widen the line of your thought through the present and future. Be not proud to take share in false politics or rebellion, Since experiment may be unwise and rebellion not needed. Accidental successes may sanctify moral misjudgments, And that invites punishment, besides later undoing. Yet no other mishap quite so dazzles us out of the gospel. New worlds would be peopled, no matter what nation might govern, With successful preference, of course, for the States or Great Britain; Separation adds neither an acre, a bale, nor a gallon. And may, indeed, cut you off from a big market centre. Nothing of origin Spanish was happier than Cuba Till patriot self-seekers roused insurrections repeated; But nothing of origin Spanish. can always be happy. Since content invites always the Spaniard to new perpetrations: It was thus he condemned himself to front chronic rebellion. Too perfect to learn, too national to hail a good equal. Thus freedom is not in, mere form, but in ethnical fitness. And my anthropological States will drum duly the Cubans, And sad for that people the day when the States shall let gO' of them! Forget not your faults while remembering your virtues as patriot; So leave me to deplore my defects and applaud your self-censure. Ecoutez au nouveau chanteur, qui vous dechante des anciennes concep tions. In this song I am bidding for universal approval. And would sing like nine muses in one, and da basso profondo, For the spread of the forms bearing newest and latest advantage; But I have seen too much tO' mix systems with chances. Or to theory tO' attribute success due to resource; Nor can I see sense in the jumps for exchanging despoilers. You will get used to me later on, and agree with me. Theocracy superposed on rigid democracy Is a double autocracy instead of a single. 53 Yet there are millions who chant of such system as freedom, And one Senator at least is its champion fantastic. All governments are alike in regard to new freedom. Slow is the farmer to graft, yet swift to the politician. If you try to establish new liberty, it is treason. Preservation of prior forms, not fresh essence, inspires them. This stuff is harmless, you know; academic discussion; What might be if something had been something else, or such could be.. We could live without print, but not without standing-room only, After the boxes and stalls had been sold to the sitters, In a show where spectators must gladiate for a living. And a fighting-rink Europe had been if Columbus had foundered. In fact it is time we should pray for another Columbus Seeking new space for expansion of passions ungoverned. To which the old states should pay people to carrv their passions; New theatres to play over the played out old dramas; Since the rise of mankind by new chances to rise is now hopeless Unless upon social conditions to death-grasp resisted. 51- Yea, the crowded hours seem to call for another Columbus. There is a clamor for space from each new generation. The clamor for work is a sham; it means space to do nothing; One expects to have earned his full pay in mere setting the claim up.. The percentage of increase from each requires a new area; And if continents may not be found, neither islands invented, Let a two-fold Columbus sail forth and discover a planet Whereto we may go through the air with the new almirante. Work yields only necessaries too few for necessities, Food, clothing and shelter and worry, and most of the latter, Some journeymen finding that only, while families famish. Now, as your plan cannot be worked, let me make a suggestion. I purpose abolishing this by accessible planet With Elysian attachments where labor shall never be mentioned, 54 IWhere free bread, milk and honey and chops put us all on one level. So I summon the admiral-aeronaut up to his duty. If he fail on the scheme of the nourishment that costs nothing, He still must find spheres for new railways and new speculations, For the corporations people-created as feudalists, And these spheres must provide new careers for recurring Napoleons, The brigands of finance and commerce as v^ell as of warfare. The world will be never at peace till the gam'blers control it In recognized fact as they do it in present appearance. And therefore all interests are waiting another Columbus. 52. Must immigrants be looked on as mere penal colonists. As slaves not less bond because slaves in a system of vices Wherefrom they escape very much as the cottonfield bondmen? One state seems to think so with force of a growing conviction. What shall we do? Not for room, but for fixing the principle, Though room we must have, of course, for expounding the principle. Let Britain and Holland give Borneo blank to the nations, Of course having previously seized it away from the natives; It is larger than Austria, an empire that feeds many people. Let all nations own it for emigrants in fee simple. But not for return under penalty of the pirate. This scheme is intended for operation reciprocal, And it might postpone the demand for another Columbus. If you go by good will, or take money to go, you must stay there. We seek in both cases the benefit of your absence. If you quit your old home, 'tis for Borneo once and forever. So be it for two hundred years, or for six generations; And if at the end of that period the tollmen and others Shall have founded another big state and shall stop immigration, Thus showing ungrateful contempt for the source of their being, It will prove that they and not we are the great and the virtuous; That they have dared grasp the idea to cut ofif the steerage; SS That socialism was put off and not settled by merit, And the law of the lawless still governs material successes; That to the unwinning the moral law is a rainbow With a pot of gold to be graspd at the Christmas-box end of it. Rewarding only the chasers of maxim celerity; That altruism is an affectation by egoism; That liberty is not a right but a privilege, A grant by the mass to the man, not inherent in manhood, A political childplay subject to act of skuptchina; And that family ties between states are the shackles of tariff, ^Waiting fool to explain them with pen or to cut them with hatchet. 53- We understand immigration by regulation, But if you permit that the outlaw partake of your freedom You must not expect that the honest man will uplift him, Will carry him on as a body-politic equal. That would be irony on honesty and on labor. Since the honest life is too short and too hard for such sequence. Reflect on the old Roman statute which founded Roumania. The law of the useless mouths was its business-like title. You are precisely defying the Roman experience In receiving the sort which the Romans sent to Roumania. Put your bright mind to-day on the progeny of those outcasts: Wliat character would you decree to the peoples Danubian, After twenty centuries or so, were you the Reichskanzler? They may found a new state, but cannot do good in an old one, As the devil might found a new state, did he need m.ore dominion. You may be stronger than Rome, but Rome had no equal, The lone-star, invincible kingdom, republic and empire. Full of all lusts, irrespective of system or epoch, State worthy to die, as it finally died, from their surfeit. You have several equals and cannot afford to defy it, For space to be filled was the largest of Roman possessions; But since then the generations have multiplied vastly. While not one of all the religions have conquered their evils. You know your own business? Lucifer thought he knew his, too; But a fallen-star life would not suit you, more than a falling. 56 54- It would be well that all foreign press readers remember Britain suffers from renegade Englishmen writing as aliens, Fate's fugitives, automobile with all men's Penates. Whenever I make an assertion, you put a question-point; I cheerfully offer you all the honors dogmatic, For I am not writing to hurt or to 'vert any human. They employ the spites of their home-disappointments as judgments Of those among whom they are stranded, who knows not this swindle; Your anonyms in more senses than one being anonymous; Thus fomenting dissention with hatred all artificial, And they often are aided by agitators not English. Kindly drop on this trick, O my foreign newspaper reader! It does not express your opinion, nor that of your country, And we must not let renegades manufacture opinion. Great Britain displeases sometimes in the conflict of interests; Do not forget that your country is apt to do likewise. Nothing in it which arbitration cannot dispose of. But whenever you read a gratuitous insult to England, Think of runaway dragon and pal, and pursue them with logic, Those who bite at the conquering spear since they cannot be sainted. But let us agree about arbitration, I pray you. If we fail to unite on its meaning, of course it means nothing. If you cannot in any case lose, and must always be winner, And need not to pay when condemned, wherefore trouble the nations To constitute a tribunal whose verdict exempts you From all obligation, no matter what it may call for? James Kent of the States, of the luminous Chancellor grandson. The grandfather being of counsel toward that "more perfect Union," And illustrious otherwise in the tomes of his country; This grandson, I say, esteemed author of novels historic, My friend, urged that patriotism might be purged of some humbug By satire, and urged me to try; and thence comes this pamphlet. So that it is, after all, of suggestion American. 57 55. Here follows a narrative from a land of Columbus Explaining relations of patriotism to a laundry. Years many agone I was seeking at Barranquilla A spot whereon to construct for the Cauca a steamer. The Magdalena was very high in the lowlands, And its rage had driven the serpents to squirm on the hillocks, To dispute with each other the chance of salvation from drowning As I sprang from one knoll to another pursuing my duty, Trying to skip -dispute and pursuit with those reptiles; For Captain Diaz warned me loudly not to get bitten, To which I have quite an aversion, regardless of poison; So I took his remark as superfluous and facetious. Like that of John Piatt, who said he would rather not miss me. And I spied not afar an old woman by rivulet running; The great-great grandmother truly she was of my laundress, Who also was there in my interest efficient that moment. Two Indian women they were, spanning five generations, And proud of their blood which was wholly unmingled with alien. And one you might take for the other had age not prevented; A fact you may frequently note in a race homogeneous As to mother and daughter and other descent in the stirpes. Tis when half a dozen races combine in one person Or nation, you know not what either will do; and the races Know not which of themselves will come out atop in the struggle,. Nor whose face nor figure will rise in the next generation; Which requires me to pray your more study of ethnics as science. Well, my elder was tall, straight and beautiful; scarcely a wrinkle^ Though forever she lived with the wrinkling sun of the tropics. And almost as agile of step as a girl in a ballet; A venerable marvel of women, believe me. For the city that year guaranteed her years at a hundred. She stood by the trunk of a tree fallen half in the cano. Hard tree of a thousand rings from core to circumference; It was part in the water, sloping, and forming a washboard. 58 The age of the woman and that of the tree were imposing With a deeper sensation of awe in a new situation Than is given to one man to experience twice in a lifetime Amid snakes of all sizes and colors hissing and wriggling. A thousand years and a hundred useful together: In my long, varied life no other scene so impressive. With a touch of great age in her voice, but in clear and stout Spanish, She called as I dodged the ophidians: Sefior del Progreso, And Captain Diaz, with a heart for the good of the people. Are both of you sure you are heading the march of improvement ? You have slowly improved us along down the creek from the city Here to the very last tree that can serve as a washboard. For seldom the rivers drift logs to the places that need them, And now you propose to invade our last workplace with steamboat. I do not consider that this is the march of improvement. The boat may be needed, but so are clean shirts, cufifs and collars. Without them how can you decently go on a trial trip. Or sail on the Cavca, or anywhere else like Senores? You shall not come here: find another place for your building! Now, other people's affairs are important, as mine are; So I stepped to the front, still in mortal dread of the serpents, And I said : Aged dame of a country to me wholly foreign. In more than one sense I am master, and Diaz is friendly. And Piatt likewise, though Piatt is not very high up in the Spanish; But these writhing tangles of dragons seem to oppose us In protest united with yours against local progreso. Ancient daughter of race which we do not connect with advancement, You have improved my ideas of the march of improvement, And the same by these slim twisting demons are elsewhere deflected. I am always a man of fresh shirts in a climate less torrid. And you and this junior beauty I thank for your service Here in plight more surprisirg than any descried by Don Quixote, And assure you I also take to my heart your suggestions. Between steamboat and shirt I am all on the side of the linen, With preference for climate where three shirts per diem suffice me. But why do you pound with a stone till a hole in the front comes ? 59 Do you think that a hole in the bosom makes it look cleaner? Or that elegance is related to holes in fine textiles? I am very certain it makes them look very much older. Mine are new, and I cannot afford your strange methods al fresco. Mend the shirts and your ways, and then I will do you this favor: The city has offered this lot at a very low figure; Neither my boat nor another shall ever be built here, For construction I scorn amid threats of a million erpidians. I will buy it and give it to you and your children forever Because you have taught me new steps in the march of improvement And because you seem blandly defiant of these local genii. Moreover, the laundress has rights as well as the builder. Then this aged dame who might have been queen of the Toltecs, And would be if nature, not politics, should make sovereigns, The handsomest woman alive at the end of ten decades, Rushed on me regardless of snakes and kissed and embraced me, Confusing me with the terms which are born of effusion. I could not help wishing the great-great grand beauty would follow; Her, too, I admired, but with very much less veneration. Then they asked me to visit their home. I accepted with pleasure: A very neat place; not the slightest suspicion of laundry. Because in the tropics all laundryfolk work at the brookside. That presenting the largest area for gathering and gossip, And they do not invite to their homes till all business is finished. There together I saw the whole of the five generations. I asked of their husbands; my laundress had never been married. And thereon I learned something new of the march of improvement: Of the four none was living for one of those beautiful women; They had all been slain in the revoluciones, she told me; In the revolutions peculiar vvhich govern those countries. Intolerant of repose and contentions adjusted. Being free myself I insist on the freedom of others As they think it best for themselves, and not as I deem it, Unless that some universal professor of freedom Absorb or annex and protect the importing of freedom Until Liberty shriek^herself hoarse in a gladness pretended. 60 But we all have the right to be critical in our wonder; And the liberty to be killed amid chronic rebellions Is not that for which I should flourish my foil-covered foilstick, While it seems to invite the professor of freedom to council. Am I a library-chatterer, unmingled with worldlings? I have dodged bombs behind trees a few feet in diameter, And have graphic sense of the loss of both widows and shooters; Though experience induces a doubt that the death of a husband Is really a loss: some are drunkards, some fighters, some wealthists, And some are wife-beaters for more or less tangible causes. And in none of these cases does death to the widow seem grievous. She who cutteth her dead helper's coupons alone knows true freedom From the numerous mischances possible to a husband; And in a large meaning, at Moscow or Barranquilla, She who washeth liberty's clothes is the rich woman's sister. Always willing to change her estate with her opulent kin-wench. 56. Is representation without taxation a tyrannx' ? If you were not taxed would you know you were represented ? Suppose government on a long spree and the nation still prospering- With no taxes at alF; would you sober it up to restore them ? Order with minimum of rule and of tax; that is my order; But a high grade of people alone can adopt or adapt it. Why should stump speeches be often turned on against monarchy Unless where some monarchist catches the hosepipe a moment? Will you drink with me deeply to Boscawen and his sailors Of England at Louisbo'urg, and to Pepperell's Yankees, To Sir Edward afloat and Sir William ashore, and all British, On the Seventeenth of June, this next year, at the Cecil in London? An advantage of nature is wholly apart from jrian's wisdom Except the rare chance that man gets it from mater natura. This paragraph is not of mine own proposition. But of debate overheard in a great western tavern; In a roaring cross-roads forum where rum goes with politics. 6( I have simply slipped into metre some prose from the prairies Under two flags, and where one is as rich as the other. The careers of republics prove both how much and how little Mere politics can do for the good of the peoples, And that they may give the explosive touch to the cornerstone, And without change of form may transform the free life of a nation. There still morals grope in the early political tenebrse. Because democrats, like monarchists, have gone daft on expediency. But praise God they have proven political limitations, And that man must at last begin a career economic! O those days when politics seemed pancreatic emulsion, Elixir of life, the one single cure of all evils! When to talk about politics seemed to absolve us from labor, Where all men were free, and all talkers, and all lived by talking, As though no ass could bray about freedom outside our pasture. Dear old politics for the sake of politics only! The means to the end was transformed, for the means was the end then, And he who suggested science an imbecile dismal. Great was the sport, but we could not feed on it forever. Now it is different and grim, says the man from the northside, Who steameth from Winnipeg southward to read us a lecture. You have twisted your natures by speculative excesses, He says, while cold industries flourish alone in his section, And that we thought about industries only for markets, Sir Giles Overreach as a merchant, not as a father, And the sellers who hoard for themselves by glutting those markets; But first to think of the first right of men to earn livings Irrespective of fortunes, why, that never entered our noddles. No doubt this is true, as 'tis wicked; but if he would change it, Let him bring us the twice-golden age of morals and money. The economist has lost caste who is merely a critic, And the lecturer on morals alone finds an audience of doubters. 57. Yet a higher system is richer, once you discover it. If you could lift all intelligence up to one level 62 And keep ii at work there, all nature would gather more profit. Ethics and ethnics should be our political studies. And the effects of institutions and climates on races, Which would raise the significance of expedient science. Thoro' breeding in manners may induce the same status in ethics If we closely follow them both in their points of relation. This would be exquisite means to a beautiful ending, For the highest ambition is that of the ethic supremacy. Be proud of the breeding that lifts you to level superior, But prouder of that which shall raise to your level your fellow. The lower orders are higher in this age, but also more bumptious; Yet bumptiousness is merely a matter of manner, Which the little intent of this paragraph is to make better By the process of setting both parties to manners a-thinking. All classes are one in the classification of nature, Who simply intended the classes as part of her order. I humbly have faith and am strenuous on this basis. It may be that faith is a modified superstition, But it finds a big use sometimes where intelligence flounders. Agnostic and gnostic together can build no new deity Till they shall know how to harmonize knowledge with ignorance ; 'Tis only grotesque combination of paring and putty. Let each one have faith in his country and do some high homework. If that be a superstition it still will not hurt us, And will keep away irritation mutual and menace. Keep your mind on your homework, not on that of your neighbors. If some of your countrymen seem to have grasped the wrong godhead. Some others may bet on the wrong agnostic as teacher. The professor of no god with no head, who is worse than no godhead. The common man is a prouder man than the noble Because he is proud that he does not need to be noble, Just as the noble feels not the need of being common. There is a saddening waste of force in these prideflings. The struggle is upward, not downward ; and Citizen Tiptop Never tries to descend, while you try to get up alongside him. 63 The weight of the argument, therefore, is not on your level, And you stultify yourself by affected contentment Mixt with abuse and envy of Citizen Lucky, While you struggle to reach that distinguished denizen's platform. Why not cease to be proud of the state which you try to escape from ? You will deem as I deem when you sit beside Tiptop and Lucky, That the air is o'erladen with pride of the boomers ambitious Who would be something more, but who are what they are, and can't help it. Human nature tends of itself toward aristocracy ; Political systems differ on bases, but stop there. Have you heard of a self-made man who tried to unmake'himself? The Greeks discovered this fact; no new race has outgrown it, .And some new folk are suddenly, steadily strong in it. Any system that seeks to ignore it is founded in mockery, And Mephisto himself would deny it only in irony. The poor love to wallow in comfort and grovel in riches Quite as well as the wealthy, and seek them with artifice equal. Are you betting only on smartness and luck? Then look backward. I propose a new toast to the sons of the first and third cabins: The smartness and luck of the forepops who needed no cabin, Those first-class old men and their sons who could stay in their country. And needed not go to the Philippines nor to Cuba, Whether as settlers or heroes by land or by water. I was not one who could stay in my country, and did not, But I wish to prove how it tastes to toast those who could stay. This health may drink hard, but your pluck should be able to swallow it. Unless I deemed yours the stronger, I should not propose it. We shall thereby be holp to remember our equals as races. But I ridicule not, nor take sides; I invite your attention. Half-tried schemes are the ones which most favor the jumps at conclusions,. The pirouettes of the mind on the peel of banana. A fact is a fact, no matter what side of what ocean. Nor are you and I bound to drain bumpers to loud self-assertion, Though we both quit our lands, if not for their good, for our own good, I, the exile of numerous skies, drink to him of but one sky; 64 Tawny in foreign wrinkles and years, I salute him Who paid not with heart torn from home for the wisdom nomadic;. For whom the high Cross at the South is a void constellation And Argo Navis sails vainly through islands in ether, But on whom happier galaxies glowed in the flames of his fireside,. If you give me the new when the old is played out, I am happy. But I wish to examine the new before I accept it. Let us avoid a break with our story and legends, And eschew political pastry in times economic. If you deem me severe on the hypocrites of fresh countries, Simply wait till I offer my comments to those of Great Britain. 59- A tory trade-free or a democrat tied to high tariff, Which is freer? Do dear things charm most when you least can procure them? Where money earns nothing, neither does labor; thus interest Is legitimate as labor; this does not mean usury, Neither half pay for work; which are knavish and artificial. The rate of interest gauges a sort of prosperity. When high in the banks it means profit to money and muscle. But three per cent, means a country used up as England, Where new enterprise cannot arise because Britain is perfect At home, and must tabor abroad for others and Britian. Thus philanthropy obligates itself to earn interest Abroad, whether foreign anthropos like it or fight it. But let us not thirst for gore if we cannot agree on things; All savages will seek Britons as soon as they know them. Or the States, with us jointly working on manifest destiny; By coincidence working with us in alliance predestined. Informal, by chance, unsought; therefore so much the stronger. Therefore let nobody shriek again in diplomacy. Shrieks excite doubt of fair cause, and lose others in ridicule. A steamwhistle answer wins not the neutral's opinion. And you may regret, after verdict, your chasmic activities. 65 William the German was far too prompt in the Transvaal; He fomid the chance later for biting- the file at Samoa. Be not proud of your Dorian, but sorry you are not Ionian. Herakles was stronger than Theseus, but also much coarser. With Theseus sufficiently strong, and Herakles not wanted ; Although Theseus, I morally scorn for his conduct at Naxos, Notwithstanding its frequent imitation by moderns ; JSFotwithstanding that new Ariadnes are sometimes deserted, Ariadnes of records which had not been learned before marriage. Each was typical of the people for which he wrought legends. And no race desires always immunity from refinement, Andy Boner as permanent substitute for Phil Stanhope. A great editor left a great legend concerning the tribe he left: A mystery of Providence is a genius on paper. There are others who bet without knowing comparative values. Many shouters bet on the ignorance of their hearers Of the special historic facts they are fond of perverting. Self-government should begin with the individual For political as well as for moral salvation; Not till he masters it should it go to the people, When the units are ready to flourish as aggregate prosperous ; The fifth and sixth chapters of Matthew will give you the bases. I am not finding fault with what is ; merely telling what might be. They who have done nothing are those who deem everything easy; They who have wrestled with publishers only are weary. In public procession, on holiday of the nation, Some natives were shot for carrying the little red schoolhouse On a banner, the sign of their sturdy early instruction. What ahens for freedom fitted could thus murder natives? Is the Yankee no longer master and free in his capital? Anything that sounds like a sermon is part of the comedy. Next to the devil the common foe is the lecturer, But a mightily different fellow is he who asks questions. Why not admit that some other forms may be equal, Forms not of delirium political locally conjured? .A thing good for the time may not mean the best thing for all ages. 66 Imagination embraces the stars and the mountains And all that in them exists for the empire of letters, iWhile political ocean level flattens all topics. Praise of Demos alone is surely a very dry duty; Praise of God is difTerent because it relates to salvation. Monotony is the natural forerunner of mania; Take not its high-priest as evangelist of your statecraft. The wit of man, sages say, is his richest possession. Since man only can laugh at intellectual emanations, And in politics very brief time is required to exhaust them. Excess of politics lands you in idiosyncrasy; But, if wilful in this, you must be responsible also; Responsible for your errors of will and its lapses. The true patriot is he who condemns the defects of his country And urges his fellow-citizens to reform them. On this there will be some pertinent hints for the Britons. 60. No people grows fat on wind-pudding nor shriek of a wildfowl; I still wait for the Mexican Eagle to swallow the cascabel. Labor and wealth are far off from political dogma. Albeit either would like to create for the other a czarism. Look hov/ opulence everywhere scorn eth the systems of statists ! Beware of a sunflower success as the pride of a Summer; I have seen that it withers at frost of political autumn, And that parchments immortal shrivel at heat of a quarrel. Look how labor antagonizeth the systems of opulence! Nature connects not with any political formula. Be thanked every god that we cannot appeal to our mother To justify any mere statecraft from czarism to anarchy, Though we know that the god of the universe is not elective. Or at least we participate not in his nomination. Free she left us to choose; we will die in defence of that freedom, Die of metaphor, perhaps, if we may not die fighting; Since Liberty cannot let herself alone, nor let others. 67 A people gorged with its average cares nothing for genius. Which is a disturbing force on the level of envy, Where it finds the mass of inertia more widespread and denser, Where as victim it lives till it finds the release of the martyr. By genius is meant the hent or the bent independent, The high assonance of a people laboring together. This genius may dififer from yours, yet you ought to respect it, And not force an average on what has outflown or outgrown you. I wish Freedom knew how to keep still and not nag at her sisters. I mean Freedom as she lives with us, and not with some other people. Though whether as mistress or guest she brings lots of trouble. Adhere to our own, the sole basis of lasting progression. Do not revolt ; if you do you will smash your traditions, Not of government only, but those which are higher and ethnic. A race that has lost its traditions begins the world over, The Adam of tribes; it is almost as bad as being conquered. Remember, ye dreamers whose starting-point is destruction, Not an inch can you lift up your lowly by smashing traditions. I mean the traditions of race, not of sins nor of errors. I could call up some shining examples, but leave you to guess them. Since my mission is not to ofTend noi exhaust, but suggest things. He who-settles things commonly settles them for an upset. He is generally serious, too; which sets other men laughing, And that is the trait most commendable in his labor. 6i. Poise not on its apex the pyramid ! So said Dan Webster, Not only as statesman colossus, but mighty as thinker, Who" at one time was head of the state, while a figurehead seemed such. There is ia a man something greater than man, said George Bancroft. These were 'great men forever; your >safety depends on their maxims And on th(j practice of others from sources scarce lesser, Though Saint John of apocalyptic imagination Figured nothing so strange as some of Dan Webster's successors. Yet, as the age is not smaller, but bigger, the men should be bigger; 68 Perhaps they are, but proportion makes them look pigmies, And comparing them seems Hke remanding a nation to chaos. Where the leaders follow the tumult they dare not discriminate. No people should force its government to break treaties Indirectly, nor by assuming that others have broken them. No worse faith than gratuitous- imputation of motive Or act to cover your own, and contemptibly transparent. It is already broken, says he who would break it. That is a subterfuge because you dare not be honest, And does more to debase mankind than could ten thousand prizefights. Some things ought to perish, but be not a simple iconoclast. No breakers of faith are more curst than those governed by bluster. With your votes make the law ; then move onward from that as your basis. This is the theory on wine-nights by statesmen of taprooms, Intoned with intention to tickle the Tammany tympanum. Let us set up progressive anthropological order; Progressive euchre affords fewer chances for betting On results, and is much more limited in conditions. Let us freely cincture the globe with harmonic conditions, And m.ake them integral parts of self-evident destiny! The States will be with us in this, working part of that destiny, Self-promotive for opening all doors and uplifting all races. If a national election pend ever from that of a province. And that from a town, and that from the boodle of ginmills, From what pends your freedom unless from forbearance of masters? They own a vote that may make either party the winner, The hydra of liberty's franchise free to destroy it, Mr. Croker, perhaps, being the principal head in the hundred. Acquaint yourself first with your theme; then expound or assault it. This maxim so oft hath been violate in court circles. That I as a fool was ashamed of my betters in folly. My duty is to aid great men to great destination. Having learned mine own incapacity for such station; In this way I find the pleasure and they find the trouble. I accept a great man, not forgetting that greatness is relative; Exaggerate him, and you sting me to flinder a fetich. 69 Evolution is hindered, not aided, by radical changes, Which are wrong till you find something better than evolution. It is galvanized ignorance masquerading as wisdom Which decrees as successes the measures that waddle as failures; But with waterfall voice and a freshet of iteration 'Tis safe to presume vice and dullness enough for election. Francis Parkman decides universal suffrage a failure. He was not the son of a monarchy dreading its advent, But a democrat sage who lived in its midst and deplored it. I do not say I agree with the late Mr. Parkman ; I simply note his conviction and courage in speaking, While I equally note my conviction and courage in silence. One may be a great fool or a great man, and as neither be popular. Advocates of continent union are incontinental Of wisdom; they mean the division of continents surely, But care not, cherishing only themselves and their moment. You cannot unite the land by ignoring the water In any scheme attaching a profit to any one, Unless you diminish the genius of man in its essence. Assail not with separant plots the creative idea Of Him who united all continents by His Oceans! The union of continents on a globe disunited And tariffed like stars inimical to each other, Would be irony of the creature against the Creator. Learn rather to use them both jointly to highest advantage! 62. Now, by Saint Parkman and others, here is sound maxim, No matter how few nor how many may vote to sustain it! The power of the purse, exercised by the people's assembly. Whether the parish assembly or that of the kingdom. Is all that a nation should ever admit as elective; Since all things elective give too many things to take care of. Filling the platforms with demagogues of all dogma. Confusing the mind and wasting the time of the citizen. Growth is a plant that grows slowly, but confidence comes of it, And confidence equals a Himalaya of swagger. But it does not result from mere spread of the mind over everything. 62^. British freedom is quite imperfect, and so is American. My advocacy of dual convergence of destiny Applies not to any special event, or decade, or epoch, But is pressed for all time; because, howsoever imperfect Either development of liberty may be, there is really no other. Sad, but other freedom, even embryonic, exists not. Talk of it there is, and science, and arts, and civilization; but not freedom. Any man, briefly, who elsewhere, putting it plainly. Has tried to enforce a right as a right, without favor. Simply to maintain the principle solely, has found such enforcement im- possible Outside the States and Britain, and not always there possible. Neither alone can maintain freedom, nor ally with another To maintain it; this also is true and final; for such other Would strictly not know what freedom means; any other. Herein is on slur; other valuable things other peoples Comprehend much more finely than do Britons or Americans; but liberty As the absolute right, not the privilege, of free being. These peoples, otherwise variously estimable, know not, And are thus fundamentally, if innocently, antagonistic. This paragraph is not exhaustive, but brief and suggestive. I know what it means out of travel and study and money. Neither alone can do everything; both, and no other two, can do anything. Neither alone is even safe for a wholly free existence, A knowledge ignored in the States, but accepted in Britain. Let the prejudiced partisans who vote and vote in both countries Think this out to a finish prior to allying or denying. Of this canto the hexametrical part is omitted That you better might heed the matter than manner of singing. 71 63- Rich men are almightily smart. I praise no one's acumen In saying this, since their vanity looks for such flattery. A nation in silver so rich as to beggar its value, So wealthy in one precious metal it ceased to be precious, Made a law to pay premium by way of enriching the people, Taxed the people a premium in order to help them grow richer, And it kept making money by law till its coflfers were bursting. When half the banks suddenly failed and trade came to a standstill; And with money by thousands of tons men went hard up for 'bus fare. I mean the rich men made this law for the whole of the people By dicker with politicians who needed their influence. Bear in mind that I do not say this; I quote those who do say it. Is that part of success as it swells in triumphant republics? If this be the wisdom of dems, what is that of the anarchs? If this be the true love of one's country, what is ironic? Give us credit and gold, though we touch little gold, and stability. While silver destroys its coin-worth by excessive production, 64. vRich men are not always so bright. I hurt nobody's feelings In saying this, because no one admits he is wealthy. In cathedral, steam-heated, their gospel is that of privation To the men of Paul's walk, not his church, in the rain, snow, or hailstorm. And their satellites twinkle it out as the lamps of the tenebrae. Cardinal Hfred once so preached when I could not preach back at him The ironic sermon of clown to the prelate of finance. Here I paint his cathedral red ; 'tis the tint the most striking, And is worse for his cause than it would be to tatter his sermon, Red being not only the color suggestive of warning, But likewise suggesting equally doctrinal warming. 65- 'But Cardinal Hfred will preach on with the world to him kneeling. And my carmine will make his cathedral all the more famous, 72 So long as by day and by decade the press spreads his doctrine, While to me it gives not even space enough to condemn me, Afraid of the mass of mankind to allow me one audience, Or even to remind me such topic is not for a jester. Slowly these victims of hornet celestial get money. As that cataplasms the sting, rights become incidental. Then the million-men buy, as they once bought a tribune I know of, And the clientage made of the poor buy the praises of rich men In the advocate which was founded to damn them in morals. When virtue gets strong enough to be dangerous, you buy it. Must all purposes gravitate to the purpose of money? Is gold ore the loadstone of morals as well as of interest? The dawn-rising toiler who goeth to bed when the moon goes Would win against him of short hours even in socialist system, If we had it established, says Gibson. I should not deny it, Were it not for the fact that socialism subjugates selfism And substitutes altruism; do you see this, O Senator? It eliminates the porcine part of the dawn-worrier's nature. I tell you what socialists tell me, and guarantee nothing. Establish a press of your own and support it, ye pencemen, And let never the note of a guineaman ring in its columns. Maintain this a full generation; thereon the cathedral, Not needing retouch of my carmine, for you will be ready, V/hile Cardinal Hfred takes his turn at a street-preacher's meeting. High-priest of the sons of bare head and the heirs of the shoeless. 66. We are free to sneer at and blow up what is aristocratic. But must speak with affection and awe of the things democratic On pain of being publicly hissed as proud, brutal and caddish; That is, the achievements that go by the name democratic. As though born of themselves, without aid, contribution, suggestion. There is no reason why these should not have their innings. The Most High is the patron of such in his large declaration, And when He permits them to win, the scale is colossal, 73 Full of chromatical blare, and oration, and dazzle. The diagnosis of this situation is easy. The Lord made the poor, and the rich have improved the material As the Lord intended, I deem, or he would not permit it. Yet so much is allowed that is not of celestial beginning, That perchance I am wrong in ascribing to fortune such origin. The fortunate seek to evade the eye of the needle, Or, rather, the destiny involved in the parable. They brought nothing into this w^orld, any more than the fellow Whose giant mind never gets hit by the lightning of Plutus. And they do not appear to take any more hence when they leave it. Yet some plutocs so-deemed leave so little, I think they must take some, ]\Iany incidents in the plot of the comedy human! The rich ought not to be rich, nor the poor be unwealthy, If we judge by the deadlock where both parties flounder by cycles. There is no affectation in taking this view ; rather courage. To rave at superior like parson at sin tasks no bravery. The right of abuse is proportioned to absence of money. The right to be critic, if rich, should be never admitted. 'Tis the ill-favored land makes the people industrious and honest. The clime that creates of itself all the needs of the human, \Miile the well-favored land makes them careless, ungrateful and slothfuL I am one of the connnon herd by both birth and misfortune. Or a whole common herd in myself, or I dared not have writ this. To be varied of topic is not to be careless or aimless. As you will confess by tlie time I get through with the patriots, Including the Wellington type and the Tammany heelman. Faust and Don Juan are not cut like Electra and Iliad, Yet either is equally classical and immortal. 67. Men continent burdened are short of imagination. Those lovers of acres as acres, no matter who owns them. Italy, to the square mile, is surcharged with population; But, while fertile as beautiful, the attraction of beauty 74 Is first on the tongues of her sons as on those of the strangers, The bountifulness of the arts being the primal impression; Forty times larger country is forty times as deficient. Pinion-weary the spirit too long on the wing of dominion! Too much real estate is alert to exclude the ideal. The hopes and the forms of the mind and the eye lose their outlines In the dull content and the narrow passion of owning; So that a novel idea creates a disturbance, Even a joke interjected for lightening the land-burdened spirit. All ideas must favor the objects of seizing and holding. Some approvable ways I am hinting of getting and keeping Without regard to the wishes or feelings of others. The safest way to get rich is by unearned accretion On the unimproved by the earning improvements of neighbors. And greater than Warren Hastings is he who first grasps it. Who first locates the lot and then waits for his friends to build 'round it. But for this you must locate the lot, and then pay nothing for it, In a spot where your neighbors are crazy to put up big buildings. This suggests that sudden riches are not always easy. Cut if we discuss it at all, let us grasp it like Hastings, Who first grasped, then discussed, and then owned more securely than ever.' Rich men continent-crammed are grasping in ratio to riches; From which 'tis inferred some new men will adjust the relations. But that is a prompting of envy; when a man goes to greatness, What matters it whether he went there by chance or by merit? Who shall say chance is not part of the means providential. And therefore integrally part of the greatness arrived at? If I deem myself big and my partner but little and lucky, Why did I lack the desert that discovered his chances? I cannot be great for another, unless through his fortune, Yet both would be poor and unknown were it not for such fortune. Let us give this conundrum up and go on with the story. There are a few millions like Midas to one like George Peabody. You would deem that vast space would aggrandize their minds, but it does- not. If one owned a mile wide of town lots from one sea to another, His mind would be narrow in geometric proportion. Ye whom I hit, strike me back, and thereon I will name you 1 I should like to "name names" as Parliament never dared do it. The satiric buffoon full of detail is vastly more dangerous Than inimical editor hedging in fear of a lawsuit, Or a member afraid of expulsion if lacking proof technic. 68. Stuffed with all riches, these gentry are satiate, vae nobis! Nothing is as it ought not to be, but all as it should be In this little pamphlet; art sure thou art reading it rightly? Nothing else is more curst, neither poorer nor coarser than pursepride, Yet could I tell of the men loud and proud in its praises. Why have they talents? To win them the purse of superbia, The means to be showy in one of the capital vices By the capital talent to stumble on treasure-trove chances. Therefore let them be proud of their fortune, not of what won it. Nature denied them the gift of being modest when lucky. As to most she refuses the gift of being lucky when modest. When my lines contradict each other, the truth lies between them. 69. What good do you find in the tales of the millions you touch not? Does it warm you, half frozen and homeless, to pass a bright window At night, where music comes through, whereon flame-figures flicker? I tell how things are; if you do not like them, reform them. There is little of moral sense now; everything is called business. There are parsons who preach that the moral sense never was higher. The argument is that charity is abundant. This signifies mainly that business never was better. So are the means; they abound in a larger proportion. Which is proof of the need of a system not needing charity. •Organized charity is a system of salaries That pays clerks for pitying the fellows who need what they ask for; 76 The more pressing the need, the larger the wonder they need it. This is the parson's delight, but his mind is not worldly In the sharp knowledge required for distributing agent. His heart right and his system wrong, he dares not denounce it For fear of rich vestrymen, richer and stronger than ever, And would preach the same doctrine in Hades, if parson could go there. , Parsons, like hotellians, must work for the men who support them. Morals are not yet quite dead, but business absorbs them. But let me be just: With a better life, parsons were better. You may not be great man of afifairs because of large business, Or you m'ay; or may dazzle the world as an accident lucky Till the ratio inverse of ability unto duty Shall enable you to ruin yourself and your partners. Perhaps this is what the capitalist is afraid of When you seek his approval and wealth in your venture colossal. Praise him who earned fortune and kept it and died and bequeathed it, That is, if you set up the egoist as your model. 70. Ihe distinction of the poor is their poverty; no one denies it. Though some parties call it destruction: this is misnomer. They survive, as we see. Their distinction is due to the Pluti, Who discover them apt for and fill them with doctrinal wadding. To our land of the overpeopled their own Pluti drive them. Their poor men seeking to syndicate a bonanza Whence a newspaper legend of mine wealth was chipped from the matrix. They hoping our public might not yet have learned of the legend. It seems a reporter had previously printed a notice About this bonanza and had not been paid for his praises; So he went with the party to witness the process of salting, And combining with vengeance the glee of a devil defeated, He slyly slipped into the salting his clip of description. Where it formed a geological part of the value. Our pubHc, I know, take but little of heavy reflection, 77 But of irony, epigram, satire, they never find surfeit; And a journalist-tale in a matrix is good for all ages; It would put an hilarious new theme in the temple Olympian, If I mav judge by the mirth of the court when I told it. The best seasoned god finds new joke in such ingenuity, And nothing ingenuous in reporter or salters. Those bonanza-boys come to our land where intelligent friction, Or too many heads to the acre, compel a solution. Where enterprise lives unforbidden by corporate saintdom. From the lands where enterprise lies in the morgue of the Pluti. Lies dead because it had lied to their mass of investors. Do they come to lay pipe for the small hoards of widows and orphans As slyh' as he of the story laid in his description. Thus destruction is not the port of the poor, but distinction In landing with us to land schemes their home-Plutocs had scuttled. Ever narrow and cold will the world be, devoted to hoarding. You must gTeatly expend to be great, and be quick to perceive it If you be tired of repeating the past and its failures. Better man of business the altruist than the miser, Since he is, in one sense or another, a master of movement. I repeat, as a mere man of business he is superior. But that does not make it his duty to help foreign salters. 'Tis an old platitude to refer to the "Earner, But the system should be so arranged as to leave all men earners; Or all men witli chances to earn; not some willing and victims, Whose needs are as large and intense as are his with ten incomes. That is the trend of the giant minds fin-de-siecle. For they trend, when they start, like a coast to make inlets for commerce, ^Meeting the minds that trend to stay commerce by tariff. The gambler and idler and clipper of coupons enrich not. Though as mere occupation that of the clipper quite clips me. But where money earns interest, that is not a man earning money, Though the money, not doing this if it could, would be silly. I am straddling here to keep friends w-ith both labor and capital. Yet he who begins with capital as an earner Is a fellow who has an advantage over his fellow, 78 Having not only labor but ialjor's results to begin with. Do not seek on this theme to bluff me, or yourself, or another; But whatever you deem or desire, the winner is winner. 71- The worst portent seems as deep as the marrow in nature: 'Tis the worship of thorax in oratorical action. Or of pen-bent intelligence wrestling to free some new notion. Man loves his own voice, and is vain of the popular plaudits. And when boy I missed never a chance to applaud a stump speaker, Precisely as you whoop up your great man in this epoch When he solves problems by airing them to the public, That is, when he solves them by airing the need of solution. When he shall put off this pride and rate talk as a razzle And airing a process that simply invites further airing. At twenty guineas per night and first-class hotel paid; When he works for results to a plan with mechanic precision, He v/ill touch in the end what the puffers have dreamed for the masses. Till that day he will attitudinize on a platform. The uneasy mind getting paid for reform by the evening, Or stips literary for writing of what we attain not. Let us cheer till he cannot hear his own voice, this professor Of good times inconveniently distant dangled before us; Let us applaud him to death, this perennial reformer. 72. The promoter never works for his own disadvantage. Appeal not to lavish expenditure to disprove me, Xor to hospitalit}', favorite fad of the selfish; Mere interest advanced to get hold of another man's principal By some plotter seeking to pawn geological figment; A blind chance at possible wealth in the fury of avarice. These are part of the splurge, of the dazzle and bluff of the racket. Hospitality is a fetich long needing the tomahawk, 79 And if it were not for some friends, I believe I should wield it. Yet why ought private regard to prevent public duty? Be there not those who sacrifice friends to the public; And commit, as a part of their patriotism, private high treason? Meanwhile I think about dinners, postponing my duty. 73. A trainboy may rise up in riches to buy a Velasquez, But a palace-car decoration were more to his gusto If he did not covet the fame of owning a masterpiece. Is he not justified? Surely. I hasten to prove it. Good taste should be spread, and ex-trainboys should help to distribute it- Praxiteles was a rich man as well as a sculptor, And Sir Francis Chantrey was wealthy outside his profession: Both gifted by fortune, you see, as well as by nature. A rich man like either would starve himself for the beautiful, While the lucky trainboy would merely buy it with money, Proud with a quid of tobacco to own a Velasquez. Mere capacity to buy is no proof of his judgment, Nor of lack of it; neither of taste, but of simply his money; But the dictum of ages imposes itself on his innings, Though he cannot ascend to the stature of Praxi nor Chantrey. I could not congratulate him on a dozen Velasquez Unless for the purpose of making them gifts to the pujblic. Since the gods of Hellas retired or expired, no successors Have inspired equal forms, equal lovers of form for its own sake, And in passion for color and form burns the genius artistic; Therefore may we be grateful meanwhile even for such patron As the self-lover self-made, who desires you to know it, This man good to himself in grand gou', and deserving acknowledgment,. Who bought a Velasquez in order to help you to know him In the exercise of his right as a man with the money. And in sublimate passion to aid in good taste distribution By acquiring the fame of having it locked in his parlor. The artist must live, and one's money is good as another's, 80 Though Velasquez is dead in the glor_v of art and its sorrow, And neither he nor new compeer is helped by the purchase. The fresh millionaire faints when you call for the courage of critic. I do not refer to the pluck of the bull, but the critic. Let him boast of the ownership, also the guineas it cost him. Half a loaf or no bread? I will take half the loaf and Velasquez, Trusting him to find his way to a gallery later And to educate there many trainboys in canvas of value, While I pray the dead gods to revive and remodel the self-made. Not necessarily he who growls rich grows beneficent; He may or may not, but examples discourage us greatly. And the few who have conquered themselves are remembered as titans. The millionaire gives you the chance to display your fine raiment At his ball, my fine lady; but what is that for beneficence? You have looked down on those too poor to be thither invited; You have saturated your soul and your garments with egoism And gone home tired out; and live only for chance to repeat it; And some of you defend this as the new Revelation. Have I not heard you defend it, soaked in court-lustre? 74. Better the average of comfort than isolate splendors. No democrat can go further than that, nor speak warmlier; Few democrats dare go so far, since the socialist pillory Awaits him who has courage to dream of all men free and happy, All equal, all happy, all free in the genuine meaning. Such an one was a bard in old times, but is now a disturber r Plutus replaces the bard; not the god of equality. As general beneficence seems to get nearer the masses The few quake, though these dreams, if concreted, would make them the richer. Carnot asked if liberty be a perennial illusion. Is the real popular good a perennial false vision, I would ask of Lazare, whose career is the pride of all patriotism. Now let the hirelings of millions combine for their vengeance! 81 Let the starvelings on other men's riches proclaim every Plutus A Pericles of talent as well as of money; A Servius Tullius of kingly consideration, Or a wit like tired President Lincoln announcing the folly Of saving the constitution and losing the country. There are great and good others with whom a comparison flatters. Have I not committed the crime of lampooning the upstart And so started up those who prosper by flattering that fellow? If the starvelings fail to exinguish me, sack them, O Pluti! And hire a new gang to distribute the doctrinal wadding, One more hungry, more thirsty, more transmissive as well as receptive. 75- Long vogue as a prophet may come to a demon of irony In arts and politics, though he be whole unbeliever. Not to believe greatly aids in constructing abstractions. The builder being unhampered by faith or enthusiasm. Such an one may persuade generations to deem him sincere in them; He may influence nations to bloodshed in support of his theories, While, bloodless and soulless himself, he laughs at his triumph In conducting a race to a destiny tragico-comico. The States, France and Britain possess each a shining example. Mephistos of men, three nations mistake them for prophet? Of ultimate social truth and political wisdom. 75h To aver that a difificulty is an opportunity Hath a lofty sound, and is worthy the late Earl of Derby. In verifying the dictum luck was not always with me. Suppose socialism should possess by avowal a Beaconsfield, Quite sincere, and illustrious as he was in ofifice and letters, But without independent fortune; he would be failure. Since he would not take money of poor men for doing his duty. While with wind alone he could not. Then figure a poor man, 82 Socialist till rich, unexpectedly rich from source sudden, And turning his back on the record. These two suppositions. Which regarding big advocacy present the case fully, Show where the cause of the poor becomes jammed, and I know it, Because in many a nation I watched its development As spectator too diffident and too slight for supporter. And not knowing how to win if disposed to be champion, Which I did not incline to be. Now, what is the remedy? Lord Beaconsfield and I being "dished," I recur to a Moses For moral command, and a Burke for impressive unfolding, Combined with the technical skill of some modern trust magnate Of big millions, to establish this cause; and for him I still whistle. He deems wealth a chance, sees in poverty a condition, And in its extinction a theory to tickle philosophers And to drive economists mad, while he remains magnate. 76. Increase of knowledge is increase of borrow, said Solomon; Increase of borrow of trouble; he called it sorrow; Which is merely the borrowing of bad, not good, from the future, If you can only harden your heart to believe it. I pity not him of worry, but him who is proof against it. With him sympathy is pure chance; a moral result a mere accident. Sometimes I make mine own texts; sometimes I take others. Solomon learned it as man; as king could transmit it to history. It might not have lived had a person of low degree said so, P'or surely 'tis one of the things we would rather believe not, Whether you read as he wrote or as I have transposed it; Which clearly shows that high sayings should come from high fellows. A certain degree of authority goes with an office Which the man who held it lacks when he goes with the exes. Are we snobs to exaggerate first and then to depreciate? But whence comes this solemn relation of knowledge to sorrow? Knowledge binds not a friend, because, by so much as you swell it. You attenuate the bonds that hold you to equals. 83 When Harvey discovered, did medicoes seek to sustain him? So long as he li^-ed they denied hke an aggregate Peter, This is neither deep nor dry, and it ought to be obvious. As knowledge augments, the sphere of its use is diminished Until you have drummed up the learners slow and resistive. I mean strictly the stuff which the king and the world have called knowl- edge, But not my ideal; make no charge of self-contradiction! To be czar of intelligence is to be dreadfully gifted. Since that makes it impossible to have fun with an equal. And between unequals gravity only can flourish; And this, carried too far and maintained too long, becomes madness. Isolate height was the source of King Solomon's sorrow; Whose court more than Henry the Eighth's might have needed Will Somers, Had he not been comedian and songster as well as the monarch ; And he was, I infer from his poems, exempt from all mascotry, From respect for the practice whereby women keep in that order. But false doctrine that leads to the true, in itself is true doctrine, Though the chance of the truth shall not make the false prophet a true one. The majority trusts not until it can climb to your level. All this is a paradox seeming of mental expansion When serious enough to quit contemplation of Columbine, And the cause of lone pride to the intellectual leader, Who is fortunate in not going so high up as Solomon. They come to his posture at last with a kicking surrender. Helpless, ungrateful, unworthy of having been lifted; And the contemplation of dullness saddens enlightenment; So that, after all, the pantomime gives us more comfort. 77- Take out from the past its conceits and so value it truly. The poor past, full of signs for blind guides and of texts for false preachers. True history is to be found in the public records only; 84 All else is but others' opinion of what should have made it, Confounding virtue and making even patriotism pernicious. The man of business is he who knows his own business, Not he who dabbles in all men's, not knowing any. Tell this to Bill Tip who would make you his next traviato. Be he gifted of Wall Street or sequent of Colonel Jack Battleship. Most seers see too much; their visions obscure one another, Though glory glows to a flame from the spark of conception. To touch too many topics might even confuse an Isaiah, The loftiest and most oratorical of the prophets. Or make him confute himself by excess of description, Since the noble art of stopping is no part of frenzy. This paragraph shows up the up-to-date style of non sequitur. 78. Give me the man who can seize an idea from the future And train the present to quicker and firmer grasp of it; He is the patriot deserving well of his country And worth a whole pantheon full of the priests of dead issues, The wandering minstrels of ages known as historians After the ages are past; any fellow could be one; Or a capitol full of the statesmen of Naboth's vineyard, Those of Ahab and Jezebel in a Christian century Seeking filibustero pretexts for robbing the weaker; The factors of Antichrist in things other than Christian; Great men sometimes, whom experiment grinds into demagogues Or flings out of public life, thus annulling their uses, To accept in their stead the sublimate sons of a theory Whose practice and pride is the opportunism of a forum. You are too sure of the doubtful: take public opinion; One never knows when it will jump on its last previous whimsy, Take tariff and silver abroad as a clearly mixt instance. Take them abroad and anchor them out of the country; Henceforth the world sails with trade free and appreciative money. Now, my philosophic friend, let us question a little. 85 Does democracy make men more gracious, one with another, Any democracy — not that of a country particular? The self-principle of democratic equality, The assertion of self over others which always goes with it In private, as irony upon public profession? Dodge not the issue here, nor answer something not asked you. Does democracy tend to develop the graces of living. Or to smother them and develop the sneer that ignores them. Or insist on new substitutes? That is the point of importance As suggesting what governs democratic social life ad interim. Does it lessen the conflict of lusts and the fury of interests? Strike, but hear me! I am the fool pothook-laden with questions Which boil whenever the fires of thought are stirred under them And on interrogation-points try to catch answers. Take not yourself too seriously, nor let me so take you. I desire to project some new schemes for the popular amusement,. Reserving a number more as to premise and logic. May I not entertain, if I cannot mstruct, ere the axe fall? Since democracy has condemned us all in the ultimate Unless some plan more adjustable come to displace it. Why should the chief of the state be the foe of the nation In the estimation of those who abstained from electing him? Will the ultimate perfect come out of such a tentative, The attempt to belittle because the majority beat you? I appeal to the thinker outside of political bondage, Not to Tammany heelman with grammar enough to be editor!: What was worse than Cromwellian abuse of President Cleveland. Who finally lapsed to a Canning Professor of Jingo? The fate-banished sons of the feudal who dwell in republics Become the most eager and sordid of all who love millions. Not the halcyon voters of equal-free-fortune system. Inherited craving, not system political, governs them. Nothing else incites so grave doubts of political formulas, Neither suscitates so deep grief for the heirs of redemption,. A naphtha-monopoly stinks the east wind for Manhattan And no district or other attorney dares sue to suppress it;, 86 I appeal to the noses that dwell on a fourth of that island. Yet monarchy is effete and republic is glorious. What private monopoly stinks any free wind for London? By preliminary means of the corporate principle Has democracy taken the route to the sphere of autocracy? Is it destined to grow to one head in the name of too many? Despite himself, shall the democrat glide into autocrat To preserve intact the system of wagemen and millionaires, With free scheme of ten milHons to nothing, not million to million? If he shall, what then will become of the plum-pudding populist? Will autocracy, as political cannibal, eat him? Now, whether autocracy, socialism or democracy Bring the greatest good to my ninety-and-nine who most need it, Or monarchy British, this pamphlet will injure no interests, But will focalize thought on the various archies and systems And will strengthen that in the end which is most meritorious. F'or I love the race, not as one by celestial appointment, Nor as prophet, nor poet, nor doctrinaire, with such purpose As goes with professional lover; but as simple believer In acceptance of moral law at the end of experience. In the pace to that goal let us take what we may of amusement. Next to my passion for ridiculing the bogus Comes my pleasure in asking approval for that which deserves it; And, wholly free of conceit, I leave you to select it, 79- In the day of the condemnation of seizures piratic And the spiking of maritime guns by tribunal elective, With lustrums of universal peace in the offing. What more imposing than warfleets with dummy-guns loaded And commanded by men like me, deep in first cabin knowledge? We should admire them like kings in the glare of the footlights. Or the ground-spry and lofty magicians of sawdust and tinsel. As new pantomime for old boys who require a new laughter. The arbiter sails in the fore with bow and stern-chasers ashore left. 87 The new admiral is he whose gun hath a bang more melodious, A range of more definite blank, a more slow-burning powder. 80. Mephistopheles on the ocean seems doomed to inaction; He lacks principle still, while not daring to set up a pretext, And his navy is not yet quite up to the mark in proportion. A party created by war must continue by bloodshed, No matter what is the party nor whose is the patria; They hug tlie«old issues and whoop up the people on victory. In the creed of Ben-Politisham all things are holy, As holy things likewise are sham for the ends of his faction. The seeking of quarrels may be a professional duty. If the king can do no wrong, even less can the party. Here I digress for old man's new advice to all nations. I have lived in them all, thus acquiring some rights to opinion, To opinion that is not the froth of conceit patriotic. And I love a side-issue or show, and my forte is digression. When your next war is finished, refuse to consider a treaty. Self-respect, if war be the native condition of nations, Requires that they shall not lie themselves into peace-treaties Only to suffer the useless disgrace of their fracture. The superfluous neutralization of glory by falsehood. Moreover, a bond never binds where an interest is greater; This is a technical reason for not making treaties. Here your statesman fifes up his war and drums in his patriots. Sign a certificate simply that you have stopped fighting, So that the neutrals may know how to act on the ocean. At some point a party to treaty begins to interpret, As on that of Eighteen-'Eighteen or of Clayton-Bulwer, No offence to John M., or Sir Henry, or either great nation; Some one wishes to have his own way, so he calls it interpret, Law being the only place where plain words have two meanings. The other politely rejects the interpretation, Which leaves the defeated sore and disposed to denounce it ; 88 .All in friendly part, of course; though it seems not quite pleasant When cosignatory shows you were wrong in the signing. The joke is on him till he shows he was right in the signing, Or if neither was right, 'tis colossal, ironic and solemn. Full of chances for new Secretaries to make reputations. Then one will outgrow, in the course of nature, the treaty; This is merely a question of time, and nothing can change it; So obvious that even a fool is superfluous in saying it. Then comes quid pro quo; but each wishes the quid without quo, And quid and quo both are hung up in the status quo ante. It m.atters not who are the parties, nor what is the compact, The outgrowing country will certainly strive for its freedom. Just as, in compounding the treaty, it tried overreaching. At length faith and the treaty 'come broken, some heads being included, While no treaty had meant no diplomacy and no fighting. Or if we decline your proposition for treaty. Attack us; no reason for war in itself is a reason. For why should a reasonless thing look about for a reason? If you hurry your ally into retaliation. Assault him and make your own terms, unless he should lick you. And swear that he did not retaliate, but simply provoked you. On putting the foe in the wrong hangs your whole moral fortune. And to do that, spare not millions of cubes of oration. Yet your moral fortune imports not, provided you lick him. Stand on your readiness; never mind the morals; lick him! Be brave with material reasons; not coward with pretexts. The satirist and the satyr alone defy humbug. 8i. Strange that a man just verging fivescore should need say it, But your ally will rob you the instant he thinks it will pay him; King Richard the First and King Philippe Auguste set the pace yet; Mediaeval robbers sparing each other while allied, Shaking hands and swearing to loyalty during alliance. If I tell who he is he may use my remark as a pretext. 89 You may look in vain, alas! for true ethics in statecraft. If you think there is more than the dregs, quit the state and turn church^ man; It is nobler to try to save souls than to lie to immortals. Better leave yourselves free for new deal or fresh grab any moment. 82. This is seriously worthy a trifle more of attention From triflers, the serious men having already got through with it. If blufif work well at home, why not on the foreigners try it? If it fail, you have only humiliated your country, Though not in a way that may hurt your particular feelings. Particularity differs in men as in nations. And sometimes the nations grow gay at burlesque of punctilio. The errors and crimes of a country must not be admitted; The motives were high, or what is the use of state^papers? Confession is good in a man, but not in a people; The collective rule, in such case, would outrage its dignity. Double-bank and misbank, on your bluster and foreign poltroonery^ And still worship the statesman whose genius procured the affliction.. Never distant a block is a fisticuff if you wish one. If you really mean war, one pretext is good as another; And the editor is the General of musses gratuitous. You meet in guise godly the enemy's declaration If he make it first; but if his be too slow in the coming. You call God to witness the outrage invoking your vengeance, The God who said vengeance is mine: I will requite him. And if you be blasphemous, also his aid in your gore-game. And then pitch in first; you know it was war you were seeking^ And not only war is a game, but the ways to get into it. The best being patriotism snivelled in phrase of the Psalmist. But, as I said, if you want it, tog out your own motive. Equal are virtue and virus if only you get it. Not one right has your enemy if you know you can lick him. If he claim the natural right to existence and freedom, 90 Shrink not that the world call you arrogant, cowardly, voracious;. The new moral law is included in opportunism, And logic is strong with the party who was not a winner. For I never knew winner who troubled himself about logic, Whereas the defeated never get tired of explaining. Fear not to use your God's name to cover the covetous. Let both prate of natural rights ; the more potent will take them. You are not in his way; but whether or not is no matter. You are always right in your own opinion; and others Have no right to be right in theirs; it is merely assumption In them; but you cannot err; there is no other difference. Manifest destiny is only one part of God's order. And not less it belongs to one nation than to another, Since contingent it is upon how its professor shall work it. And must seriously count with the chances of being successful. With the chances against it destiny is a boomerang, Howso manifest it might be in a miscalculation. But I will not now lengthen this dictum out with a lesson. An executive gave me his mind, but that was in confidence. A small war had a bigger result than many a bigger one; A compliment, spite of such war, to the size of the principle. Manifest destiny was not big enough to escape it. Dual possibilities suddenly loomed from a vision Which had been single and narrow, spasmodic and selfish, Irresistible morally if you know how to work them; Which would march of themselves without military commander. Already empires defiant have halted to ponder it. But if you dare not affirm what they dread in negation, Your manifest destiny is the dream of an oyster. 83. If you will have war, no matter what punches your animus. Sarcasm, subterfuge, paradox, parody, caricature, Irony, falsehood, convenience or love of the bogus Will adorn your pretext as gay as the flutter of ribbons 91 In the battle of battledores giant and shuttlecocks bloody. Qui s'explique se complique; but I name no particular nation. If you be in doubt, preach a little while still getting ready; Then whack him with odds in your favor; and if a Cromwellian, Put the Puritan twang and tone in your justification, And bear bonos mores in mind if they turn you in money. All nations pay tribute to that which is leader in commerce, Adding the banker's commission to all other profits; Thus each struggles for primacy in its distribution, For that commission of banking is much to be coveted. A pirate has written of wresting it; let him rest there, Too old to fight, or to write for the reading of sailors, This admiral of a quill in a double sense furtive. A colossal mine and unique, trade cannot skip dividend Even if it would; this Golconda of needs and of labor May be neither shut nor exhausted: thou who art leader, See that thy powers match the policies of the covetous. Seize Exeter Hall as recruiting tent for the Navy! 84. Seek not too much experience, either as man or as nation; Assimilate that of to-day ere you bite at to-morrow. Were I young man I should hope to see arbitration Supplanting the crime and the fuss and feathers of armies;' Yet should it come to be merely high formule for trickery, I should wish to see it replaced by armies and navies. Try not superfluous experiments just for the fun of it. If you trouble the tribune of nations merely for claiming, Self-respect laid aside on the chances of winning or losing, The high court of peoples may rule you unfit for a plaintiff. 85. Political things should be those of expediency only; It ought to be therefore expedient to lessen their number, 92 To substitute principles fixt for the makeshifts of moments. But who has the moral power to enforce such expediency? Let the nations appoint a court of honor to do it, A permanent court of equity for such purpose If Nicholas Second should fail in his scheme of disarmament. This would put upon honor a premium very much needed In the sordid era of pubHc and private transactions. My friend, you have traits duly pondered and valued by others, But parts of your system were better not copied by Britain, Model and hope of the strenuous, fear of the wrongster, Individual freedom upholding and therefore collective, Survivor of fangles and gerent by force of example, And justifying the balance of human dominion Like a satellite of the sun among comet-tail orders; A regent of wisdom and light direct from their permanence To extend and establish for them a sway wider and juster. Manifest opener of door in the destiny of all nations. This is the way a man sets forth to talk of his country When smit with a fit of the sentiment called patriotic. One fellow can do this about as well as another When you excite him by contrasts and prick him with failures. This does not last long. I put it in just to amuse myself. To set myself up as the butt of my private ironies. Such seemed to be part of your duty and story, O Britain! Till you thought of the golden rule as an army and navy, Leaving others to covet your ownings and praise your new morals. Be leader and centre and friend of all independents, Of whom the world now has enough to make you independent Of any possible combination of cormorants By tariff or annexation of alien dominion. This is simply another phase of manifest destiny In asserting which my States will be first in supporting you. If any alien dislike this advice to Great Britain, Let him cut it out and post it straight ofif to his country. It will fit one nation or patriot as well as another. Cut out Britain and me, and put in your name and your country. 93 Even the open door is not so impartial as I am. Whosoever as god made the globe, made all equal partakers By commerce of local advantages outside their borders ; The more freely they trade with each other the richer their poorest; To enrich whom is the purpose of states, not to multiply Pluti. Guarantee their possessions ; then look on their ports as your harbors And those of all nations resenting commercial dictation. The champion of rights universal is always supported: That is an indefeasible law of existence And a source to the champion of moral and physical courage. Keep all ports open and free for all peoples in principle, And present recalcitrant states will reluctantly join you, But with a force standing forth in their very reluctance. International relations must henceforth be judged from this basis. Let such an alliance be felt, for it need not be wind-blown. And the coveter's wrath would pause aghast at its stature. The statesmen of bumpkindom cannot be right on all questions, And may not be wholly correct on any whatever. Let their major countrymen hold them as permanent minors! I take nothing for granted, whether you like or dislike it. These themes are too great to be sacrificed to politeness In discussion, although I do not intend to lack manners. Ever}lhing that God made I respect, when I deem that He made it. Everything that man made may be criticized as to motive As freely as to results, or to process or structure, Since best man, in the last analysis, is a devil In the buff, that is, stripped of the holiness donned for a winner. 86. Swear not by the sanctimony of secular typo. Which by secular art is more winning than sacerdote polish. News is bought at the cost of money, or what is called probity, Singly or grouped, as the terms may be put of the holder. This is news to you if you chance to be new to the business. Sorry to let it out, but the popular mind needs some purging, 94 .And he who can purge it by telHng- a story is welcome. General Grant once threatened with death of the spy a great editor. His guest, whom he caught in the act of steaHng dispatches, Intending to risk them by wire, though the wires might be tapt there In the battle region of luka, where Grant's greatest fame is. Without pay, I give this as news to the public of nations, I could tell, should I choose, why the General pardoned the editor. But since Grant was transformed and transferred to invisible temple, -Let another name, if he will, the dehnquent. I will not. 87. The world will outgrow admiration of chance choosing firstmen. Were they chosen because they are first the because would be different. But Chance has the merit of bringing out merit by chances, A distinction shared by no other power on its merits. Were the honors offered as guerdon of splendid achievement To leaders in action or thought up to higher attainment, Scoring some paces in forestep by genius or struggle, The choice would inspire the shout of a just acclamation, The irrepressible voice of complete satisfaction That Carl Schurz was elected instead of A. Tuff from the Tenderloin. But when it results from low chance in a factional fury, The firstman, soon as it reaches him, ought to decline it As protest on system so frequently vicious in turmoil, Kot the local turmoil of hustings, but national upsettings Of the industrial welfare which is really the life of a people. The force of example is felt not till after you setiit, O proud that no reasoning makes any impression upon you. Best man is the best, but too rare; next to him comes best system. But no system is equal to Oscar the Second of Sweden, A scheme complete in himself, all the equities humanized, Wholly fit to be trusted if no limitations existed. Diaz of Mexico, too, is surprisingly fit for his duties; He, like Augustus, is greater than consul or system. The nursery-delight in a firstman selected-by scramble 95 The world will outgrow, thus exhausting some seed of its folly,. And the systems of rage to the systems of sense will surrender. This pious event may seem far, but so once was salvation. As it is to-day for the gay-minded sinner light-hearted Who prefers the religion of pleasure to that of privation. New ideals become platitudes almost before they are printed, And your country may pass your defence of it ere you quit shouting.. 88. .When an average amalgam is forced upon higher or lower By an agency seeming a trifle askew from God's order. You realize the ideal of unequal condition And will pay by revolt to restore the celestial intention. A generality this in a glittering uniform. I desire to say something solemn and not be ungraceful. Though far hence or near by, you will pay by a deep revolution Whereto causes you cannot descry at the first will impel you. Free will misdirected is always in search of punition. Or if it be not, fumbling chance seems directed against it. And free will with freedom to play it runs into sensation Till sermons themselves grow antagonistic as battleships. 89. The least politics consistent with freedom the better. The tollmen on whom the world leans for prevention of anarchy Are tired of way-stations that slowly anticipate chaos. A deal gives the trumps to the tramps and they call it a triumph. Of course they dispraise not themselves nor depreciate their winnings. But how was their party equipt for political triumph? Suppose in the gamble the trumps had been dealt to the statesmen? Give us chance with a fact and the devil may cherish the reason. Lead us astray for a while; we can wait and forgive you, Because Christ so taught us, because of the worth of experience. Be great m-an if you choose; common sense is the popular genius, 96 And it smashes the shrine of New Heptarchy on the hustings, Thus asserting the import of earning as greater than talking. As seen in the sunbeam of safety the truth is most lustrous, Date-point of the waning light of some commonwealth's lunar, Which not only resist economic suggestion from monarchy But in democratic nam.e seek to ruin democracy, Setting up the man in the moon as their premier of finance. Or the toys of astrologers more than the products of state-chiefs. There we find warning quite sharply defined from example; The bayonet foreshadows sometimes between sections and races, Or duet of the white and black swans at the burial of hatred, As electorate may fumble with tenets and jargon of parties. While we wait for the hymn let us hold to our own as we know it, In the way we have lived, in the way we intend to maintain it, And then cast a glance of the pain we survive at the other. 90. Not a pessimist litany, mine, but truth told as I find it. If that make you sad in advance of the epoch of sadness, Deem it a touch of experience by anticipation, Something luckily grasped from the future to ballast the present; Something to think on just now, and later to smile at. Overwise in the dark is the first to go blind when the light comes. Avoid sureness like his who, not having passed electro'thany, Wrote up that particular death as easy, and settled it. By the instant transformation of blood into charcoal. Let him be thrilled into thanatos for his irony, Into his grave for his sarcasm on euthanasia! Not upward the levels of gravitation, remember. Would to several god's that the mind senatorial could see this! Did your wisdom stop short, and your country's, when you were elected? Are you there for reward of the past, or for hope of the future? Did your election portend the tip end of advancement, Or was it rather a step of enlightened progression? Virtuous, gifted, expansive up to the day you were chosen, 97 t>o you selfishly fossilize in the seat of your honors, Debating good laws to death in a mausoleum of emeriti? 91. The cranks of the state abound, and they love their symposium. Their sequents haunt the front door with a fine sense of mystery, Mistaking the noodles within for the gods of Walhalla, Preferring a peerage with them to an Outhalla dukedom. The philosophy is so simple of such an elysium That I wonder that any Briton gives ear to their speeches. Because they are content, the rest of the world should be happy. Or be made so by pow-wow of egoistic idealogue. But the sudden breath of a menace blows over some ocean And the pasteboard paradise falls on gods, nobles and noodles. I would not alarm if I could, but I tell you be ready ! I have nothing but wide observation ; no theory to bolster, And am political partisan only of winners Of office for keeping to Britons their commerce and empire. Hypocrites watch the maturity of your errors Just as one of them looked for mine, and caught me a-napping. Do not err in delay, nor in failing to face a word-hurricane. All schemes will be tried for lessening your naval activity. The enforcer of manifest destiny, and the spectre Of every tyrant enthroned and commercial monopolist. If what you possess were worth nothing, none would desire it. Your hour will be part of the day that shall find you unready, With a tricky friend turned into foe for a trickster's advantage. Waste not a dream of appealing to morals or honor. Take a semi-official denial of moral intentions And a wholly official assertion of nothing but business. Doubt not, I pray. I have talked with the enemy's sachems And find you not envied alone, but your properties coveted. Pretence is debated, but motives are learned in the cabinet. Economics instead of politics, freedom of commerce JBecause it is largest when freest; memorize the motto. 9S There will be no more wars unless in strict order of business, Plowsoever hypocrisy may asphyxiate the motive. Japan's speculation on China sets the example, And that of France on the African island gigantic, With the ready nations only too ready to follow them; In this sense ready means relatively more ready. Does Britain wish this result at the price it will cost her? If not, be forever deaf to the statesmen symposian! Did you note that my States, as they dealt with the island of Cuba, Copied nothing from France v^'ith the island of Madagascar? 92. Ye who find in my long limpid line neither frolic nor flattery, But rather offence to hypocrisy of the unready. Let yourselves soar and think down from the empyrean. The argonaut, even with the fleece, would seem small to the aeronaut. Who sees nothing in Jason except the stiff purpose of fleecing. And best equalizes the focus on wool, gold and politiGS. The common good is the thing; only one empire proclaims it. If the others accept, they uncover their share of the profits; If they refuse, they must cut up each other for selfishness, Augmenting the debts to be paid from the waste of their efforts, From the deserts left by the arid rage of their egoism. Is manifest destiny, then, with the despot or freeman? Long war between nations means civil wars at the end of it. For the ratepayers may no longer be taxed in the thousands of millions. Wealth does not augment in proportion to means of destroying it, And if deputies lose their heads, contribuables will correct them. This will help to eliminate youth as the factor of folly. For if all men were fifty years old there would be no fixt armies, If all men were fifty to vote and to fight and pay pensions. In what respect was St. Petersburg worse than Chicago? I am simply trying to circumvent the destroyer, Whose very best demonstration was made in Chicago, Because there the circumstances seemed least to suggest it. 99 Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he falleth. No hope in repubhc, the restless being freely admitted; It thus holds the same elements of unrest as a czardom, With more chances to crystallize restlessness into dynamite; Not to-day; when the people are elbowed out of their elbow-room, I mean: when the syndicates cannot employ half the hungry. The unequal distribution of what comes from freedom Leaves freedom half tyrant, irrespective of politics. A close corporation of lawyers governing Britain Not by the law, but their twist of it, measures our freedom. And the same prevails where Liberty shouts even loudiier And forever spells herself with a capital letter. Is this better than czar? Yes, so long as the lawyers are quiet. But woe to the kingdom and subject when they spread the law out. The tarantula web of the law with the lawyer to bite us. And our cousin far off with perhaps more of web and tarantula. The mass cares nothing for system, but yearns for sufficient. Political attachment is a matter of accident At first, then of pride, and later we deem it of principle. And of thrusting on those whose sole principle is a sufiEiciency. What is freedom? The right to prate of your slavery to money? That is a vacuum conception; rather a despot Who can smash an illusive negation even though he starve me! Surplus for those who kill time or do nothing works envy In those who furnish the surplus; and those who enjoy it Are morally bound to do nothing excitant of envy. In the land of the equal wealth sharpens the inequality Until the unequal win over again their first triumph. The justified scheme in the end is the monarchy graded. Compact in economics, non-debatable subjects Being augmented in number as Britons grow clearer, while fury Of discussion and scandal political be left with the boastful. All this is the dilettante-screed of a courtier. I have no plan, but am out for a little excursion. As a change, to the realm of the discontented; an empire Bigger even than Britain's, and not to be conquered nor governed 100 By any system yet worked in political science. My love of court-life makes me friend of the order established. The change I desire is personal and brief; am discussing- Like any know-it-all between fool and philosopher. 93- Wrinkled thinker undying, thou linker of generations For all that upholds and expands and extends outside chaos, Flinging the searchlight into the gloom of inertia, Do not despair in the wear of a duty unending. Since every tangible value begins with the thinker. If I think topics through to defeats, you may think to successes. The titan is not a god, neither wholly a mortal. The pioneer mind is midway heroic-titanic; Its views belong half to its epoch, half to a future. The blood of the martyrs is ever the seed of opinion That germinates, and then of conviction that fashions. The leader's idea is likewise the seed of the fortune Which in the Autumn of Fate comes another to garner. But these truths augment not the funds, nor dimm.ish the labor Of him who soweth new fields and reapeth after the gleaners. The hope of reward grows intense in proportion to vagueness, And the Hall of the Gods is not full ; always room on Olympus. Those who cannot die are as generous as immortal. While with us you have only to win to turn foes into flunkeys. The achievers of deeds of renown, by the dictum of Schiller, May ascend to the seat of the gods and be sure of proud welcome. And so full of the South and the North is the genius of Schiller That his immiortality as a guest is divided Between the hosts of Olympus and those of Walhalla, 94- Revolutions never go back, says the thinker thoracic. I wish they would always go back to the cause of the evils 101 And stay there on permanent guard to prevent their recurrence. What other trip could they take and be half so successful? If revolution would do the work of policemen, Preventing disorder instead of inflaming disturbance, We should all recommend it as outlet for popular passions. If numbers be right because numbers, set fire to your Oxfords, Or to any schools newer and wiser productive of thinkers Whose inspiration is not derived from pulmonics, Or from baffled rage, like that of Coqcourt at new friendship; He whose race seeks the place of the Englishman as the tyrant; Belting the earth with ecclesiastical dogma And secular, and its ethnical sway; whose affiliation With others is mere affectation, a wile of its genius. The class, like the mass, is perfect in natural sequence, Howsoever the gog of an epoch may seek to mislead you. Why not tell the truth that the masses exist to make classes Outside the fictions and fustian of doctrinaire-stumpers? V/hat else gives the chance to ascend? If born in a cellar, Would yon live there forever by virtue of loving the masses? I ask this because weary of epigrammatic tomfooling. Even the demagogue seeks the apostolate of ascension. No matter how small he may be, when he gets a majority His minority may go to the devil if he but stay winner. Is this loving your race? It is; with yourself as the head of it. Do you know any statesman who seeks to go back to the cellar? The lover of his race loves to see it make fortunes In individual instances, he being the foremost; Mr. Croker of Manhattan explained this with glory. Since it cannot do differently, what is the use of professing? Any institutions inductive of false economics Ought to be modified; monarchic or democratic. Populist, socialist, millionist; names frighten cowards, And suggest to brave minds in our day the prompt need of analysis. Any free system is far from its logical issue. Mere Canute of politics staying the tide of opinion; For, though I define not his purpose, Canute is there always. 102 The class which shall perfectly govern by free constitution Will be the best gift of all movements, forward or sideways, And I leave your great mind to the office of calling that class up. And of framing a constitution uniting all great minds. But such must be new constitution, ignoring all prior. Manifest destiny lays out the land; ruling parchments come later. 95- Minorities mine, if you think of invading their strongholds.' The Spaniard could do it in theory, but had not the money To practice with; let us say a good word for the vanquished. I do not wish to hurt of my States the tall feelings. But the Spaniard's capacity to die for his standards. Overmatched though he knew that he was, has no equal in history. And will be lustrous there when his weaknesses all are forgotten! The only Swiss pass is mined between Gallia and Germany, And the Swiss has declared he will spring it if enemies step there- It prevents not invasion, but tends to discourage the project. Whether you undertake it by land or by water. The men on the ground can make the best use of torpedoes, Whether on surface of land or sea, or below it. While the men in the air can most easily drop devastation. And veterans cannot be bred against annihilation. Thus dynamite disheartens the heartiest seaman or landman. The overwhelming of freemen will never be picnic, And extermination by science has no moral limit, Science having absorbed no soft functions while floating some hard ones. Europe does not desire that Britain be stronger in Europe. Some great continental ministers gave me the reasons. It would need a very fresh diplom.at to contest them; One of genius much greater than he who last lost by his genius All that he sought to attain in the Northern Pacific ; And Canrobert and Macmahon later approved them; Not seriatim, although full of force were their judgments. To overreach is the act of small men, not of great ones; 103 He who wins not thereat 'comes political bummer and blufifer. You love your country no better for roaring about it. Popularity without principle will justify anything. The strait-jacket is the true fit for the patriot-ranter. Let us stop war by making it so that no man can live in it ; That of all the millions who go to it, every man shall perish. In the States opinion favored annihilation In Cuba, but, of course, as applied to the enemy only ; To exterminate the foe is to shorten the conflict, But the foe has no right to annihilate the philanthropist. This is true morals and mercy, and would render superfluous Armies, navies, peace-congress, and the childish sort of patriotism. 96. A statesman is a contractor who does for his country Something new in an enterprise not yet attempted by others, Or a great man of public aiifairs in routine; perchance brilliant; Not a superfluous speaker nor wind-cloudy egotist. But brilliant in measures when state combinations demand it. Let the rising generation evolve a new prophet If the mass is to be released from its slavery to formules! Present human intelligence is enough for its purpose When it works as machine, but too small for the larger conceptions, Too narrow and low for our sovereign immortal pretension. Life, liberty and the pursuit or the shoot of the happy Will be realized as soon as you shoot your false premises. No declaration is needed, but simply true premises. Declare independence on all prior such declarations. Each man then could argue himself nito all the beatitudes Without aid of saints, comic editors, patriots or heroes. Each would be some of these in himself, with each woman a columbine. But, lo my defect as a prophet, I cannot establish them ! 97- May a hero be vile in all else save performance heroic, A fellow who makes us regret that such fellov/ is hero 104 By the chance that mantled the prior parts of his record? Some affirmative instances speak and they sadden me deeply As Cincinnatus, a hero at eighty, rebukes them; pincinnatus, a farmer Italian and hero at eighty. Born curly his name means, although we have deemed him born titan; Latin sounds not always suggest corresponding significance. The sublime of consuls; as soldier the victor of Volsci When no other could be either trusted or tried for the duty; A lover of his race with nothing to sell to it; As dictator the friend of such race without class, and the idol, Yet more glorified for resigning than taking the office; Never professor of duty, but ever a doer; The best man in Rome who became of its worst law the victim, And in beauty of person quite up to his stature in morals; Who for fault of his son paid his riches in base confiscation, And still vanquished disgust in its strife with his strict love of country; Who retired without pension to follow the plow for a living; I was told that instead of seeking a pension he spurned it; And, recalled, saved the state after twenty-one days' saturnalia. And resumed at four score the opening of furrows of freedom; Aged son of a land of more heroes and martyrs than Europe, And father forever of shining and standard example Who sought nothing of fame, yet the model most famous of heroes, Ancient fiamen and lumen of ray still of longest projection! Wert thou living to-day as plow-hero near big Manahatta, Not a Tammanimig would vote thee a pension or office. Though there office requires not equipment nor pension a duty. While thou wast equipt for all duty and worth any pension. Yet Coqcourt would explain thee away as afifecting poor virtue And patronize thee with his unction personal and ethnic. Another appears who might have repeated the Roman; His station was equal; we hoped that the man was not lower; Yet he went to his grave m a glamour of glorified sorrow With a biographic stain which no splendors obfuscate. Let us thank private gods we are not thus heroic and public. Lazare Carnot on Napoleon fills my conception 105 Of duty really heroic: yet Carnot died in exiles Are the Roman and Frenchman the objects of pity and sarcasm? I could make some comparisons not very flattering to moderns Unless we admit that patriotism oug:ht to be .paid for, But I forbear because I dislike to be personal' 9& Call the test-captain of Marcus \'ipsanius Agrippa At Actium; he hints at no claims, but we are all proud to see him. There were too many ships on both sides for neglect in that battle. He could not be signalled, he knew what to do, and he did it; In a crisis unlooked-for was quick and correct in his action. Had he been elsewhere the day had belonged to Antonius. This was a hero who deemed his heroism mere duty. The man could not beg. and Augustus did not promote him, Augustus, great in procuring great service from others. Some peoples breed delicacy as to mention of service, And their proceres* smell not a pension in warsmoke at lecNvard; Nor did Mpsanius, sea-pride of the Roman dominion, Who, had he not won, had been some sort of victim Tarpeian, And who for his Cfesar did more than that Caesar in empire ; Augustus, fame-swollen when poets, not critics, were published, The purple king of the lofty minions of letters. The fav.Tiing penmen of multiform splendor imperial,. Flaccus and Maro and those who imposed him on history. The captain died and left to his children the sideknife \Miich in an immodest hand had carved them a fortune ^ But in their father's had car\-ed for their country a triumph. Had Antonius and he fought together and won. he was admiral, Since Antonius was greater in nothing than fervor of friendship. Unless in unfriendly pursuit of inimical gentry. I am the worthless friend of the fame of that captain. And I think maybe patriotism ought to have a cash value * Spanish : signifying heroic characters. 106 As I ask myself: Is that a dominion worth saving Wliich leaves unrewarded the winning shipmaster of Actium Who could not frame a request for promotion nor pension? 99. Let me give you for contrast a little sea-story not Roman; Modern, unique, monumental, unknown, and immortal. What is called nerve is called for by stress, and is useful, As at Actium we saw, and are now about to see elsewhere; But whenever you praise it remember the test of its glory And praise God when he keeps you away from the stress that requires it. I once knew a pirate who 'scaped his deserts on the gallows, In contumaciam condemned and a big reward offered. By staying awake from Manhattan down to Havana And threatening the captain with death if he 'bouted the steamer, Prescribing for Sundberg, my friend, navigation by pistol. He knew the course, and he day and night guarded the compass. He was nervy indeed, this man doomed to be hanged for his record. The Thermopylae man was a thrippenny fellow to Bowen, Who alone beat a government and a crew of three hundred. This slaver, who later became a mail agent and shootist And represented his country's worst side on an isthmus. Many Britons remember him well and his pistol too ready. I met him at Panama; he returnd to Manhattan Years later, a famine-clipt corsair ignored by detectives. Where I blew him off several times, for which he was grateful, And repaid me with sea-yarns fit to raise hair on bronze Julius. I love to give credit for gameness even to a pirate, Though deeply regretting that Bowen could jump the republic. While avowing my fascination with quarter-deck dragon. Xerve is useful, I say; but God grant me more honest conditions; Conditions more in accord with sea-conduct at Actium. 100. The Augustan age: of what? Of glory and meanness. Long forgotten were nephew Marcellus excepting for Maro. 107 •Great poets find great virtues easy for nephews of greatness. At twenty married and dead, his achievement was promise In a period conspicuous even till this day for performance. However, in the .Eneid he makes a sweet story, For which I am paganly grateful, the bard was made richer; ^lore paganly thankful since Christians are treated less justly. But whv was my Captain of Actium so meanly omitted? If I knew his name I would make him a bigger jMarcellus Hian either of those who loom and shine high for the Romans. Could Marcus Mpsanius Agrippa descend to be envious? Could Octavianus Augustus deign to be whimsical? Although old, I was not in politics at that period. And would rather not speculate now on those royal hob-nobbers. lOI. Prom these instances tell me what think you of thanks? Who is grateful, And who is requited of those who deal with the patria? He who builds on past favors and luck the ideal of his merits, And, as the proverb explains it, his hopes of the future? I incline to electoral veterans who vote themselves pensions As the best requited and most successful of patriots. Had I seen somewhat less than I have, I should be less suspicious. Though suspicion is far from best proof of the largeness of knowledge. And then I prefer to put queries ; less aggressive the form is. And the object more easily won, than by statement dogmatic. I once saw a man washed over the rail in a seaway. A thousand pounds to the sailor who saves me from drowning, He shouted; Bob Halfyard jumped into the sea swift to rescue, Ignoring reward, and hauled him on deck by the collar, Wliere this thousand-pound man straightway thanked himself free with a fiver. Thus gratitude goes by dry measure, and prom/se by fluid. But Bob was well pleased, and, indeed, would have been with no measure; Tliough the distance from five to a thousand is out of all measure. But if gratitude show between nations, the same will surprise me. lOS Coqcourt says that Great Britain patronized somebody lately. This will call, of course, not for gratitude, but resentment. Though 'tis merely a wile of his race and his personal genius. Obligation is hard to admit, but resentment comes easy. And is the most dignified thing in the dealings of nations. I admire natural bigness; it saves us the trouble which smallness Inflicts in compelling the undersized self-assertion. Resources more than readiness set the world thinking. The German Empire is ready; my States are unready; Although General Shafter would probably say to the Germans That they had no right to fight, as he said to Toral at Santiago ; With no lack of respect for Shafter, this was Falstaffian. But in the long tug the States would be ready and richer. The last man conscripted, last cartridge in breech of last rifle. The last franc expended, how do you stand as to resource? But the sword of Cassius Marcellus, the fist of Fitzsimmons Need not be swung; you take it all back when you see them. Taxability more than big guns is the fear of the nations; The power to impose and collect is the theme of reflection. 102. A chump and a hero when dead are the same to their country, But the hero did something deemed a distinctive example. Though he may have been ten times a chump outside his example,. As a has-been he is embalmed to inspire future whoopers. All countries produce them and play them off one 'gainst another, And that, with the sacred flag buncombe, breeds up other heroes, As Eagleshriek, Katkofif, Deroulede, Lionroar, Novisto, And debt, death and taxes and pensions to pay for the triumph. And thus labor pays to make heroes and wealthy contractors. Commissions, investigations, courts-martial and glory. Better be taxed for court-royal with jester attachment. Or set the clown up as the king with a fun-constitution. How long, O Lord, how long shall thy children charge bayonets? Must they ride through another old testament of dull vices, 109 Thereon to arrive at a new testamentary promise? Is patriotism even a greater satire than conscience? Not necessarily that which is aged is sacred; Those under its rule may have been too weak to renounce it, The weak millions oppressing the single strong wills through the cycles, The strong wills deficient in nothing but numbers and muscles, While the cardinal bandmasters fascinated the faithful; Or rich vestrymen giving the heads of discourse to the parson. These things are all right; but something more right might replace them. I believe in emancipation, but first in a substitute For the good as well as the bad of the system discarded, Be the same pagan or not. The chief good of religion Is that some men and more women are able to draw from it A negative beauty and benefit, whereof the absence Would leave th^cn less happy, less brave, and less fit to be trusted. This alone would sufficiently justify any religion; But God send us another whose life shall be wholy affirmative In the activities as well as the prayers of professors. 103. The Cambrian, Caledonian, Hibernian have done noble service Around the globe; but others are not less in service; And all, for defence and offence and mistakes, the Queen's subjects. But you men not of Wales, nor of Scotland, nor Ireland, but England, Do not forget that your basis of empire is English ; Not that England is better, but larger, more suited to centre; More homogeneous as to both centre and numbers ; That the others helped grandly to build on the basis of England, Adopting the tongue, its pervasiveness, usefulness, glories; And that if you should set one not English up as its Premier, Perfectly loyal, let it be granted him, only not English, Who might gamble England as well as the others to smash it. In loyalty all, but still in gigantic niisjudgment. In hatred unaffected of possible bloodguilt. And in access of that sort of conscience which let Gordon perish, 110 The fault would be not of the Scol, nor the Welsh, nor the Celto, But of you, ye goad-kicking EngUshmen, mulish and fatuous. Some names are ballooned, and stay up by the gas of orations. Let not high name blow you low to the system of wigwam! Even Manhattan absorbs, sloughing tribesmen and wigwam. The big town whose imported statesmen preach our disunion Consolidates over the heads of these freaks of disruption. In the three kingdoms the English alone are non-tribal. Let nobody tear his hair at this fact; nature willed it. As among Italian tribes she willed Romans non-tribal. Larger, more homogeneous, more central, more numerous. Like Japan, better fitted for sabre-glint civilization. Do not get red in the face, neither sprain your thoracics; Perchance civilization has failed, and tribe-life shall supplant it With some Sitting Bull as a later leader of progress. Silver Bryan, or Brian Boru, around pot-au-feu dancing With shillelagh as primitive symbol of ruling uncomplex Resurrected, with friends in cotilion; so showing example Of life democratic by royal decree for the faithful. Freedom-shouting, while seeking the Englishman's place in dominion. But without open door in trade, politics and religion. 104. Keep your flag as a symbol imperial; not as a gewgaw To decorate up to significance things low and trivial. Let it be never a ribbon, but always an emblem Denoting a purpose inflexible, sacred, invincible, Not to be idly affirmed, and still less idly yielded. Among many things of God's meaning, one is authority, In which he seems not to design that the Briton be second. Plant the flag with care, but keep it there with solicitude. Suspend not him who shall hold to the law of the neutral. Extol not him whose folly demands his dismissal. Veteran statesmen rave not about turpitude among nations; They define it in other terms, but rather expect it. Ill Old freshmen new to state dignities are the fellows Who put up the rigs and pretend to be shocked at resentment. Leave a point to suggestion; what else is so flat as exha-ustion? The world loveth only to laugh at Columbus of mare's nest. Trip luckily on a silver spur in the underbrush And then suddenly loom as the finance brain of a forum, By ironic nerve of aiiinity intellectual. If there be sermons in stones there are yarns in stone silver. And the legislative mine-owners know how to spin them. I put this fact into the history of this period. There are schemes which would not be heard of unless for the affinity Whereby the toe suggests to the mind of the finder That the foot as well as the head may touch off an idea. The poor man's interest consists in electing the millionaire, Whether the choice be the poor man's or that of his Plutus. He who has not made his pile is not fit to make statutes; So told me my private Lothair, who could not imagine The man of the pile making laws against him of no pile. Riches soften the heart in the estimation of Pluti; Do not exceptions like Salt, Alills and Peabody prove it? Poor men legislating for poor men have failed to enrich them. The centuries are overladen with proofs of this verity. Xow let rich men make laws for all men, and see who will go winners! 104^. Conformably with both union and manifest destiny, And as prepotent sign of political zodiac Among continents, oceans and nations, let the republic Constellate into one giant star those stars individual Which in tlie uniting field of the flag denote empire Of many sovereign commonwealths whose sovereignty Was absorbed to make a monarchy of democracy So far as its foreign relations go. which go everywhere. This would give to the flag greater beauty, and much more significance As to the inescapable dominance of manifest destiny, 112 And more pointed, of course, because every star is five-pointed. Multiply the points, Mighty Congress, and lawniake to fit them For this greater beauty of banner, and the strength of intention To swing out from the prepaternal impositions of purpose Which were very good to begin with, but are no good to end with. 105. I wish to ask something concerning the palate and ethics, Yet not to hurt any man's taste nor to injure his commerce. Vv'hy should we hold the wine-merchant a species of fetich. The sphynx of the bottle, the artifex of potation? Is it due to inherited dream of the glory of drinking The fluescent fun of some regions more sunny than Britain? Imagination is active in ratio to absence Of the things imagined and wanted; and as to the cave-dwellers The sunbeams are, so to us 4s the juice of the sun-grape. Since the sun puts both flavor and force in the fruit of his favor, And we thus get some sun which is otherwise partly denied us. A roundabout way to account for our love of the stimulant! But the sun's side of wine is not that of the gentry who sell it. Xative men in sun-regions are sparing in use of the best of it. There is nothing in wine, any wine, excepting the alcohol. The juice unfermented I know; there is nothing more funless. Take the alcohol out, no one cares for bouquet nor for savor, And alcohol grows in the cactus as well as the grapevine; So I found by liquescent run of the cactus in Mexico; And he who goes short of Yquem may go long yet of pulque. Do we thus worship wine for its gout and intoxication, Flavored, colored and labeled to suit with mere alcohol basis? Then your fetich is, after all, but a limited chemist. Now who will wax eloquent in defence of this chemist Who alcoholizes the tongue and the pen which defend him, The father of gout, the long pride and the joy of old statesmen. U3 io6. The music of nature is minor, but I like it major, Or did, till a Chinaman gave me some novel ideas. Why is it minor? Is sadness organic in nature, And is art by the devil forced to be gleeful and major? Maybe yet we do not correctly interpret the devil. Love of music is weakness expressive of slow evolution, Mere worship of sound, of the power which is most evanescent, The mock-joss of a moment, expired ere its worship is ended. Gliding even unseen from the faithful kneeling to nothing; Leaving them, thus to say, as adorers posing in ridicule. So told me Mandarin, Pynq Bhuttun, a Prince of Manchuria. Wu-Ying-Ding do I sing ; hard to bring in the ring of my verse-fling. We took a world's fair and two weeks for our little diversion. Discussing battleships, arts, ballots, bullets and ballets, Science, biography, lies, legends, music and silence, And the prince deemed the last most becoming the larger number, Sarcastic and cynical he as a peer of the Occident, No Frenchman could reach him in persiflage upon Europe. The richest man I have known: forty millions of guineas. And more free in expending than even the author of Vathek. Beyond all men a scion of luck was this scion of Asia, And as gentleman not the inferior of any in England. He was happy and young; death seemed not created to touch him. My regal Manchurian; as classic of type as Apollo, But not of Greek mold; there is beauty by eastward of Hellas; Nor was he born to grow old, and his smile was organic, An Eos of pensiveness sequent on every emotion Of mine orient Tithonus of the gift unforgotten. His sleep was as deep as the absence of care in his being, Yet no depth of repose could eliminate it from his features, And his words were of worlds full of everything but the painful Unless when he spoke of the spooks that fill this with displeasures. I might not have doubted, though recently only I learned it. That the fool is a finer buffoon in the halls of Manchuria 114 While my practice has been so to lean as to themes beatific, Still his joy was so absolute that it made me quite serious; And my monograph on the mirthful refilled him with wonder As he strove to descend to the level of what I deemed cheerful; Which filled me with pride in my friend as new wit and new critic. His inheritance came from a period prior to Confucius And from collateral millionaires all over China. He was easy in wealth as distinguished from Midas in metal, High mind and high fate being naturally part of each other. Not of one in a million with million can this be said justly, But no trait of Occident corporate president seared him, No terror supplying from bank-note the mandates of Moses, Nor by wealth-written statutes making of wealth a new Bible. Why does no gifted Chinaman deign to explain us his country? Is it due to his scorn of our hypocritic pretensions. Or to a pride that might set an example to Satan? Or does he, like Li Hung Chang, praise all faiths, having no faith? A book by my prince would sell by the hundred thousand. But he loftily sneered as I tried to persuade him to write one, Commenting that books in his country are not things ephemeral. But let me resume his petit resume about music. I am sorry I never evolved at the pace of his highness. Not far from my window in Summerhouse Circus in London A great-granddaughter lives who is learning to thrum the piano. I love the sweet girl with the pride of a fanciful dotard. Though 'tis but in mine eye and mine age that I find the relation, Since I merely bow as we meet to her father and mother. She is always in town for the season, and then takes her lessons, And her lesson-days are those when all windows are open. Her voice is seraphic; why does she not sing and stop thrumming? If her father were not so clever and quick I should ask him. And yet any process of sound-study maddens a region, Transforms a popular girl, makes a guy of a goddess. China is large, but not large enough for Dick Wagner. So it saddens my soul to confess that the outside barbarians Do not rise to the ethnical level of him of Manchuria. lis 107- Wherefore fight against orient open door, Mr. Coqcourt? Indeed, one might ask why a people permits you to fight there? My Manchu noble bespoke it ere Britain proposed it. He was tariff-for-revenue-only, all doors being open; That was his deep, wide and wise economic conviction. If you do not care to go in, is it selfish that I go? Or if others would go, is your wish to stand still a sound reason Why they should stay out to their loss and let somebody shut it? Rebellion within the Three Kingdoms is not in this question, Nor shall it be raised in One by an open-door issue. All free peoples with livings to earn are aboard with Great Britain,, First among them the people with whom you took citizen-ticket; But of course not the few whose fortunes depend on misleading. Do not labor to make a gratuitous case as a lawyer, Since lav/ is not here involved, but a principle mighty Evolving new law, wheretD you may adjust your grand genius, Grand as practician political outside the verities. To v.-in, you attribute false motives; but you will be beaten, And your faction, although with fine feelings none of you quiver. I simply note that you fly in the face of two peoples. Besides, in your country you are but alien as patriot. Solidarity of one race against all is your principle; Solidarity of one race 'gainst the rest in your country. Are you vain enough to presume that the rest will surrender? But open door will lapse into spheres of in-flooence. io8. There is too much esteem in the world for the stuff merely literary. Other sinner is not quite so sinful as author professional. Books merely as books are less useful than trousers as trousers^ His principal good is in setting up jobs for the typos, Who would gladly set up superior stuff could they find it, 116 Though they must earn pay, if only by waiting for copy. An author should write as a populist speaks, when moved to it; When he must speak or die; die as martyr to inspiration, Or of apoplexy resulting from bottled emotion. Besides, books so written, like speeches so spouted, take better. So that sincerity, or more properly bluntness, is higher • In strict market price than indifference or diplomacy Well dressed as to literary form and in binding luxurious. Although I am moved to these stanzas for human approval, I do not in all instances expect to attain it. But he whose first element is largeness of purpose And who can see sarcasm sanctified to ideals. Will give me the slap of approval and hope for me others. If by incidence money come too, I shall gather that likewise. Do not hurry in reading this book ; I did not in printing it. 109. To catch comprehension, the first need of statement is clearness, Unless you be genius enough to substitute mystery, And best liked of all the clear forms is that of the epigram. Either science or whatever else might attack the tympanies, Could I have my way, should be stated in epigram simple, Or in series of sentences every one epigrammatic. If it cannot be sprung on the mind in that form, it is no gram. Yet produce not a Frankenstein book, for that eats up the author. You are literate enough when you write with ease and precision And devote your spare time to the few works not areas of mind-waste. The milliner of words is a poor feeble fellow Who should have been girl and written society novels. The book of industrial success is the manual for nations, The material Bible whereon to build up the moral ; But all the prophets alive seem unable to write it, The book which should make us irremovably equal And happy, abolishing millionaires, strikers and paupers, Walking delegates. Sitting Bulls, and mock and moth chieftains, 117 All classes and persons who could object to each other; Thus reaching the thousandth year by suppressing cross purposes. So eliminating the cause and the curse of transgression. Not always are natural powers brought forth by high grammars. Your college-man's greatness is commonly lost in the learning That in him takes the place of the evolution of nature Which curricula are only designed to develop. Inspiration i's affectation and genius is humbug When author and publisher grovel in greed of the guinea. My publisher and I are both free from small vices. Yet such parties make literature thus, and the world is made wiser From a horn of plenty of words for a few dozen shillings. They supply a demand without raising the grade of the market; That is the very worst mare's nest I ever discovered. If the men who make history could write it, the lessons were clearer And stronger, but life is too brief for the two occupations. The insular and Peninsular Napier confirms me, And Julius the commentator; but they are exceptions. Thus, though the exemplars are strong, the teachers are feeble Till the chronicler shall be as strong as the doer. If you cannot win Austerlitz, overrate him who did win it: Omit estimating inferior foe's drill and commanders Unless to count these defects part of his genius who beat them. Write as though you were making him great, like Thiers in his Consulate, And later, like Thiers, you may sit in the seat of the Consul. Use blind admiration for library-points in his greatness Whom you have not understood, and make no allowance For the vogue into which he slipped from three thousand conditions. And be careful to see nothing great in the man who subdued him. If you cannot win battles, you may jabber of him who won many. Till a moth's reputation expand with the fame of the giant. The size and sweep of the thought are the matters impressive And compel their own symmetry and sufficiency of expression. Bear in mind that your mind must be big enough for the subject. You may not be partial at first to the thought or its treatment, But improve your gifts, though there be little joy in the labor. 118 Michael Angelo lacked the polish he put in his art-works, Yet they shine with the merits as dear to the small as the great minds. Vast and lucid conceptions force into form their own character. IIO. I may not decide Allighieri greater than MicLael, Though to write the Commedia was harder than cutting out Moses. I am not seeking to get up a fight about greatness, Though I care not if such succeed; we shall each have our partisans. To formulate thought is a finer process than sculping, Involving less of the chance mixt with impulse called genius, While we do not forget that of thought sculpture also is formful. If expression be larger with words, so the task of achieving. Language exacts more than stone, the pen more than the chisel. This settles nothing, but suggests settling something by fighting. If it be not clear, perchance it is chiaro oscuro. And so may procure me some little repute as a critic. He who settles anything is not deemed a critic. But rather Columbus of Guanahani for the doubtful. Let Italia say, if she can, whose renown is the dearer. Ill Your strict man of letters is mainly a puffer of letters, Seedily crazed with his craft and with print-panaceas, A secular priest of the inspiration sympo'sian. Like the sacerdote, wholly in favor of keeping his church up; Each man his own church, yet an aggregate church on the people By all of them quartered in monthlies and weeklies and dailies. For the making of all men happy, and always by letters. No two sacerdotes, no two worldly-wise Cadmi agreeing. One writes a book that finds a big vogue, though its merits Might justify either a bigger vogue or a lesser. 'Tis the luck of the vogue wherewith I de'sire to impress you. Then he finds the great head and makes introspection a study, 119 After which he devotes his career to developing ego, And all literature is straightway enriched by this product. Yet with thousands of tons of books and millions of flysheels Whirring widi practical wisdom, the curse of transgression Seems no lighter nor likeher to fly nor be flown than it once was. Yea. this age. most belettered of all, is the age of the Anarch, Of the dynamite-keg rolled into the Sundayschool circle, Or into the operahouse, talkinghouse or cathedral. And no other age. I proclaim, so infected with wisdom, No era since Plato so thickly infested with letters By sacerdotes and by secular priests of symposium Who prate of our sorrows, suggesting no means that relieves them, Precisely as I prate to-day of the lack of suggestion. These lines refer to some men who 'came statesmen from letters, And the argT.mient is to revert to those not men of letters, Xot essayists of symposium to carry Our Empire, Not rhetoricians who foster a hostile alliance. \Miose piety seems to invoke our commercial destruction, But to revert to those who see ^i^•als and pass them, Xo matter what be the cause, so they grasp not our profit. The Briton is forced to be Tory by site geographic And by appetites which Exeter Hall cannot satisfy; Pantheon of theists gone blind with the rage of reforming, ^^"alhalla of bards who foresee the redemption intangible, \\'ho would wreck empire to save up a phrase from Utopia. These lofty abstractions result in despair at the concrete. The bard is a lovely boy with the gift of delusion. As, since I began this book, Tolstoi calls the patriot; Dear and deep old Tolstoi; so delighted to find you are with me! \\"ithout naming these poets I love them, vet pray you beware of them, These vagarists of printsheets who flatter themselves they are statesmen. But scarce to be blamed, since what else is so sweet as illusion! 112. The Golden Age? A sweet snare; but what age would dismiss it? An ancient dream older than Golden Fleece is the title, 120 With the era itself best described in Torquato's Aminta, It seems; and it seems further ofif than when Tasso described it; An Age Tra-la-la full of sweetness and light and no evil. Where the will was the law and no will was inspired by the devil. They might do all they chose, and they did all they pleased, and no trouble. But should it arrive in my time 1 should burn up this cadence, Exhorting impersonal egoists to do likewise, And sing anew of the vision of Tasso and talkmills. To magnify speeches eternal in councils and vestries, To facilitate preparation of Premiers by thousands, And to poise the age of gold on the pillars of rhetoric Till Torquato's bright dream should seem merely pavilion of thunder. But till science shall set us free of imported food-products, From apparent nothing evolved like the motor of Keely, I insist on alliance of Exeter Hall with the sailors. Which will insure our whole people enough food to live on, To defend the ideal although we may never attain it, La bella eta dell' oro ancora lontano. Mr. Butler of Rome called Tiziano a shover of putty And in the same breath ranked him up with the greatest of painters. George at Rome shoved the putty himself and was not disrespectful; A gifted man may not be judged by the common conditions. Yet some, second only to Titian, are tramps to their trousers. Why is this thus? I am weary of digging for reasons. Art, as a fact, is the mistress of tramps mtellectual. But not of the kindred of George and Vernet and Giorgione, I do not aver she is false, nor her followers unfaithful. But she does not insure the result that should tally with effort; Yet in freak she might rate a Lebrun by the side of Murillo And leave George to distribute his time between painting and cheese-vats. This is not right, though my friend does not need any favors. If a canvas go slow, a few tons of cheese bring an income. But some fellow not gifted like George should attend to the cheese-vats. 121 Thus whether a whim or a fraud on the sons of devotion, Or sarcastic priestess of chisel, brush, marble and putty, Art ought to average better reward to her votaries. 114. Employ not the language of Mars as the phrases of Hermes; It is apt to defeat the presumpiive end of your statesman, Unless between lines he may wish }ou to look for his meaning. Permit not tribunal sublime to evade a decision With a compliment that is irony on its courage. Unless it be duty judicial to save politicians. Everything must be held by right and nothing by privilege. If you will be so generous as to allow it. Britain is where she is for the good of all peoples. If you will belay your trumpets and drums while I say so, And request your drum-major to let you reflect in due silence, Not to flourish his wind-wand gigantic till you be through thinkings Yet peace is besotted with thought and to no satisfaction. Nevertheless, what I first see in war is more taxes. And dead heroes who failed to run oflf do not pay these with glory, While some who succeeded in running away may draw pensions. On the basis of things as they are in this day of peace dominant Except where it does not prevail, I meekly propose you The reciprocal guarantee of all national possessions. And the observance obligatory of treaties, Save such as some of you may find profit in breaking. Let the Czar warrant China intact for the good of all nations, While all empires warrant his warrant and his and their empires!. This would surpass a peace-congress and leave it superfluous. And would blockade in their caverns the sons of the boucans, Or offer their patriotism a chance at renewing The commercial acquisitions which used to distinguish them, Provided all congresses fail to agree about empire. What are Cabinets if not organized sons of the boucans, But lacking the fascination and dash of the protos? 122 Distinct from encroacher, there must be an easy leader. I am warbling now of a sphere among civilized races. There must be among nations an open-door leader with followers. This duty is natural to Britain, though France may deny it. Yet France will at last see no trustworthy ally but Britain. You have only one chance to be great: 'tis to rescue the epochs From the childish dirt, debt, crime and suffering that go to make glory. To sustain them would be to saturate the future with sadness. Wherefrom half a dozen redemptions could not redeem it. 115- I propose incorporating the Twentieth Century With everything that the earth can produce in that period, Too numerous to catalogue, surely, but nothing omitted. This is a blanket company of largest dimension For administering all that is corporate or inchoate, No matter what nor where, with theatres and churches Annexed to relieve the strain with amusement and solace. I annex a condition: I must be Pope of the Total With fifty-one per cent, of the capital issued. My price is small in view of my size of idea. As well as the brass it contains, though this last is no greater Than that of some men to-day paid in annual millions. Feudal millionaires in Columbia; feudal barons in Europe; Free people and peoples unfree, each equal in genuflexion; Call each other hard names if you like; this is all there is in it. But may be the Twentieth Century will throw out my project. Undividended Columbians perhaps will first turn on it. ii6. Present statesmanship should anticipate that of the future. Whose wealth can easily pay to the present a discount. Since true statesmanship would employ it to double the interest, Not misuse it so as to make future borrow from future 123 Ami thus niorti;"ago the cycles to come to the day of the dooincrack. But however you liuance this plan, keep this side of the doonicrack, So to give my Company its chance on the Twentieth Century. Trade is free with us. and we air no presumptive protection. We do not transfer Mr. Canning's doctrine to Asia. There is room enough in Asia for every one, said Beaconsfield. The Philippine capture illustrates this to perfection And is one of the providential strokes of the era. Any nation may hire a coaling station in Asia, Or annex a port, if it can, like Japan, there or elsewhere. Manifest destiny, like freedom, must take out a license, Or become licentious and so give offence universal. Fresh fields and pastures new were the luck of democracy; They gave it a vogue; but wait till those fields be short-nibbled! I would rather perceive the things of to-day than to-morrow, Since they profit me more. I care naught for the honors of seerage, But would like to remark not to Britain alone, but to Europe, That my States' foreign politics grow fat on short commons For other nations ; not fat upon other conditions. That which can grow fat by itself will not be molestea. In this there is no offence to the States, for they know it ; And the sooner Europe quit fooling with primal conditions And stop minuet diplomatic on premise affected, The earlier each side will correctly construe independence. Refusal of supply works the same result everywhere. Whether in Parliament or in the beef and wheat markets, And Britons would rather not volunteer by the million To fight for raw food if they can annex other sources ; The sole people that must so volunteer if they cannot^ Whether annexation shall be commercial or other. Politician would not admit this, I make it a crusade In order that politicians be forced to adopt it. And let the results take care of themselves, my Lord Marquis! \ on have done some very great things ; but no man can win always. Kaiser William and President Cleveland illustrate my principle, Simultaneously striking in British Guiana and Africa. 124 1 1/. I am a very strong navy-man for two reasons, So long as foreign cordial intent shows in arming. The more numerous our ships, the less likely our friend to attack us. Then, if he assault, we shall be the more likely to lick him. Moreover, if once we get down, we shall not be let up again. That is perhaps the least comic remark of my comedy. And the .States would be circumscribed, too, with Great Britain in limbo. The two can do anything; neither alone can do everything. Not even the things best in common mterest of nations. The torpedo-boat game is a very deep game; we have seen it, Though shallov/ the waters may be that promote its successes. And water-m.ines; these might be very effective against us. But an earthquake would ruin the gain? Will you bet on the earthquake? All Britons see this; but the moral grandeur of England, Which contracts m.e the diaphragm, makes asses of some o' them. This moral grandeur is just what our enemies bet on; They pretend to none, but are very efficient with armies. Tyndal was no politician; a statesman was Tyndal Who foresaw the menace and dared to be true to conviction Derived from those instants of light vv'hereby one sees more clearly Than another, yet cannot tell why, neither why you deny it. May it not be too late when we come to believe in his wisdom ! Plenty of army and navy and money will save us Promptly and fearlessly used in proportion to danger. Without these vn/c are beaten with dignity am.id laughter. We carried ourselves with the highest caste, the foe tells us, The foe being any alert political foreigner. But as winner he smiles, bows us out, and opens a bottle. ii8. Some one recently patronized Britons by putting persistence And pluck in advance of the militant grasp of positions. The grasp and activity which make soldierly genius, 125 As the British winning quahties. Let us examine this : In five centuries or so, we gifted to fame as great Generals Edward the First, and the Third, the Black Prince, the Fifth Henry, Strafford in posse, Cromwell, Marlborough, Clive, Wellington, All conspicuous in the front rank. Within the same period Who else, of the equally great, has produced equal number? Napoleon said that Turenne is the greatest French soldier; His tone is imperial; such are the nine I have mentioned! With Lord Clive, I am astonished at our moderation In not patronizing those who so flippantly judge us, Since Turenne is no greater than any one of my Britons. This brief canto is not intended as brag, but correction ; Not to spatter with praise our great fieldmen, but still not to stint it. Let Our Empire enlarged give this order correlative chances ! 119. If you and I could own every pound on the planet, With our fellow-creatures jammed in starvation and slavery, What a lone and imperial eminence we should occupy! Yet the modern methods, so dubbed, tend direct to this status. You may have it alone if you wish, for I could not be happy. Neither deem myself really w^ealthy, in such situation. My Twentieth Century Syndicate motives are altruist. By what right should I be almoner? By the same whereby you grasp every thing! There is more in mere mind than is called to accumulate fortune; More even than great mind is called to make up the great human; Francis Bacon and Daniel Webster step up to illustrate. There is more in a man than the man, as George Bancroft expressed it; But the more is latent; the other victoriously sordid. My main Syndicate purpose is to develop this latent. We need solvent concerns to earn interest for shareholding widows ; For, my friend with this book, if these widows must marry for living, You and I could take only two, if we cared to be happy. But let us keep our heads till I get up my Syndicate, 126 Which will absorb the results of the Russian peace-congress, And wherein every one will find chance, of course Britain the biggest. And big pick we shall have with the widows, all crazy to marry us For the double advantage of syndicate honors and dividends, Since no duke is so big as the man who shall make this successful. While his coadjutors pace proudly his level. It is not our duty to efface any part of Our Empire For the peace and safety of friends bearing menace gratuitous. Let them take the chip-shoulderstraps ofT and take on the chances, Like France, with five possible foes to watch on her limits. The States may remodel the world by initiative moral. If so, they will need moral aid, and we must be ready. 120. Here is a wholly new story of patriotic Hellenic. There was always for me, in things Grecian, a vein of the comic; But this annal eclipses the fun-pride of all later eras. And has very strong claims to attention of seekers of office. King of Crete was Minos, and judge of Elysium and Tartarus. Present king and a judge of the future, he ought to be truthful. But he traded in bulls with intention of cheating Poseidon, And was caught in the act, and his misapplied bull driven to madness. While the other was slain; losing two bulls by being dishonest; Who conquered King Nisus by captivating his daughter. She unfilially clipping the purple life-tress from the parent; Minos, famous in cattleyard yarns as the owner of ]\Iinotaur, Who troubled his majesty somewhat as stepson and half breed; Insidious worker for all it was worth of the labyrinth, The earliest political machine, if not the most devioiis; Least known, though he should be best known, as the master of Talos, A brass man, supposed to have been presented by Vulcan, Since 'tis hard to imagine who else in that age could have made him, Some of his traits being submissive and others volcanic, Vulcan known to be both, at least in affairs matrimonial. What could be done with a man made of vivified armor 127 And proof against sword, bludgeon, catapult, arrow and burning? His purpose was that of patrolling this Cretan isle royal. He was efficient indeed; thrice a day he marched 'round it. A single sentry as good as an army was Talos. A people of pretexts the Greeks, ever prompt at dissension, Crete a coveted land then as now, and Minos unlovely And quick at provoking a quarrel as Beneks Ofeeshow, Once a Thousand-Nights' statesman some thousands of miles from Arabia, Who, as natural result, found semblables prone to oblige him. But Talos, this army of one man, was very efficient. He challenged a friend as a foe till he knew he was friendly, And little he cared for affirmative proof of the friendship, And brief was the time he permitted to prove the intention. All comers were treated alike as they stepped on the beach there. All were warm/iy received without waiting for notice of errand; For when he espied the approach of prospective encroachers He lighted a fire and heated himself to the red point And then went to the shore to salute the presumptive invaders, Whom he embraced, inattentive to story of object, Overcoming them equally thus in the heat of his greeting. How many the kings who have prayed to be spared their friends' kindness? What king ere was saved from all friends and all foes except Minos? What statesman or sentinel ever has saved one save Talos? Who had but one vein, stopped by nail in the top of his cranium. Which was drawn by J\Iedea, who bled him to death, the vile priestess; i Bled a brass man to death ; it required a brass priestess to do it, ; That the Argonauts might land for what was elsewhere or nowhere: '' The pirates of yachting who sailed for the fleece that was golden. Each seeking a fortune as payment for going a-yachting; j Argonauts, prototypic of all who wish something for nothing, : And founder not, land not, these sons of perpetual motion, 'a But whether discoverers or victims thereof, 'tis their secret. s O gods of reward, by what means shall we merit or keep it? ' Perish the hybrid who tells you that Talos o'erdid it, ,; For friend, politician nor foe ever once pestered Minos. | What object in semce except that of being successful? > 128 { Name me the servant of state more successful than Talos, A sentinel simply, the bronze pyro-warden of Candia! No kingdom was ever so perfectly guarded as Crete was. What equal instance of office-beggars defeated? I appeal for reply to the chairmen of all federations From forty-nine north away southward to Tierra del Fuego ! One officer only; an indestructible coast-guard, Indestructible but for the treacherous whim of a priestess. Taking the place of cabinet, general and army. More efficient than European fleets around Crete in our decade. What a sarcastic reflection on modern great nations! 121. Do you call it necessary evil, or evil necessity? I mean militarism ; one is euphemism for the other. Whatever Emperor may do in suppressing the cause of it. Or President in proclaiming civilian ideals In Chinese ports, British Guiana, or East or West Indies, Is consistent with Washington's Farewell Address the world over Without regard to philanthropy, glory or doctrine. Be he Nicholas or William; for George was a civilian and soldier, But soldier with purpose of fixing civilian supremacy. This is George's greatest justification of fortune. Therefore lift high the praise of civilianism, O ye peoples! 122. Between silence and platitude, let us adore you for silence. We know the old truths, and your triteness cannot augment them; Nor mine ; I tell some of them over for pointing a satire. If the thought will not warrant the sentence, blow not with your inkhorn, You will aid your repute among friends by not blotting your topic. Be sure of a new idea for the pen or thn platform; Neither frenzy nor vagary, but something responsive to judgment. Avoid secular paeans of syndicates antagonistic 129 And come in with me, for mine can be only harmonious! Jot nothing down till framed up in the epigrammatic: Your cantos fall dead if in style they be dry or long-winded. Bright results, not the process of polishing, dazzle our optics. The new man and woman are doing us up for a novel. We are starting afresh as Adam and Eve would have started In an Eden of science, the Euphratian having been luckless, And therefore dismissed in the hope of less bitter experience. Help us avoid the result of the dictum of Gresham That plutocracy will not disappear save in bloodshed; "That a larger army than that General Grant commanded Will not save from worse fate than dissolution of Union ;" Gresham. Aristotle of politics dead in a clerkship. To divide an empire to rule it is sanctified politics. Toleration invites impositon; beware the ecclesiast Who begins by intrusion and ends by absorbing your freedom. The mass sits on aisle-benches while pewmen debate in the vestry. And superstition and capital tell you God willed it Till superstition tells capital God needs the hoardings ; The ]^.Iost High thus appearing to wreck the estate of his children. But with layman and priest in My Syndicate on one level The Lord will not be abused nor the godly be mulcted. 123. A race despotic in conscience is despot in politics ; A race in politics free is free also in conscience. All divisional grasp must be limited by an average. All ambition of race be responsive at last to equality. Man or race has the right to whatever its talents can gather. But no race has the right to attempt to sit down on its equals. That is a formula simple for dealing with all of them. One tyranny, as one liberty, leads to another. Will pride in the past mixt with present apathy save you? Let them surrender to freedom the casuist pretences Wherewith they insult the blood-purchased right of dissenting! Charles the Ninth would be the first slain in a new St. Bartholomew. 130 124- 'The age of the martyrs is past because nothing demands it; It is always past when the despot is tired of exacting; Or during the peace imposed by extermination. You can call it up in a night if a martyr be needed, And for modern purpose revive St. Barthol and Smithfield. Any lost soul with a pretext tongue-laden can work this. Private murder is still wholly free against free speech and conscience. Take the cases of Hanford and Cronin, both in Chicago. Shall ex-cronies of Cronin continue to dictate your politics? In history are many periods with evils and martyrs; Yoi] ''an resurrect the worst by repeating its evil. Such period simply sleeps till you waken its genius, That of the copperhead waiting the boy in the playfield. Your reformer is always sincere till he turns politician; Ihen he knows himself impossible as reformer. Who, if he stay by his character, becomes martyr. Let not love of your country appear in your praise of another. Imitation is not evolution ; w^e had a statesman Who affected to think so ; criticism will destroy him ! Politicians of soothing-syrup cannot soften conditions. Domestic reform resembles a jug of molasses; A sweet dish of brief vogue put aside for the beef of the Tories ■Or some force-giving dish which revives our respect for our country. England thrives or suffers by foreign affairs, not domestic, And succeeds by the men who can rule there, or fails in their absence. Truth advances, despite gifted good men who see not its bearings ; That is why one kingdom 'came three, and the three became empire. Tell this to the gentry of inkhom who next seek your suffrage. I regret hostile propositions, which nature provides not. But her children, who correlate ever\^thing v/ith the guinea. I could reconcile some of them, but leave you to do it. Because process of learning surpasses acceptance of dogma. •