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| The Great
Enigma of our Times |
The association of progress with poverty is the great enigma of our
times. The utilization of steam and electricity, the introduction of
improved processes and labour-saving machinery, the greater subdivision
and grander scale of production, the wonderful facility of exchanges,
have multiplied enormously the effectiveness of labour.
It was natural to expect, and it was expected, that labour saving
inventions would lighten the toil and improve the condition of the
labourer; that the enormous increase in the power of producing wealth
would make real poverty a thing of the past.
Could a Franklin or a Priestley have seen in a vision of the future,
the steamship taking the place of the sailing vessel, the railway train
of the wagon, the reaping machine of the scythe, the threshing machine
of the flail; could he have heard the throb of the engines that in
obedience to human will, and for the satisfaction of human desire, exert
a power greater than that of all the men and all the beasts of burden of
the earth combined; could he have seen the forest tree transformed into
finished lumber -- into doors, sashes, blinds, boxes or barrels, with
hardly the touch of a human hand; the great workshops where boots and
shoes are turned out from improved facilities of exchange and
communication -- sheep killed in Australia eaten fresh in England, and
the order given by the London banker in the afternoon executed in San
Francisco in the morning of the same day; could he have conceived of the
hundred thousand improvements which these only suggest, what would he
have inferred as to the social condition of mankind?
It would not have seemed like an inference. Further than the vision
went it would have seemed as though he saw, and his heart would have
leaped and his nerves would have thrilled, as one who from a height
beholds just ahead of the thirst-stricken caravan the living gleam of
rustling woods and the glint of laughing waters. Plainly, in the sight
of the imagination, he would have beheld those new forces elevating
society from its very foundations, lifting the very poorest above the
possibility of want, exempting the very lowest from anxiety for the
material needs of life. He would have seen those slaves of the lamp of
knowledge taking on themselves the traditional curse, those muscles of
iron and sinews of steel making the poorest labourer's life a holiday,
in which every high quality and noble impulse could have scope to grow.
And out of those bounteous material conditions he would have seen
arising, as necessary sequences, moral conditions realizing the golden
age of which mankind has always dreamed. Youth no longer stunted and
starved; age no longer harried by avarice; the man with the muck-rake
drinking in the glory of the stars! Foul things fled; discord turned to
harmony! For how could there be greed when all had enough? How could
there be the vice, the crime, the ignorance, the brutality, that spring
from poverty and the fear of poverty, exist where poverty had vanished?
Who should crouch where all were freemen? Who oppress where all were
peers?
More or less, vague or clear, these have been the hopes, these the
dreams born of the improvements which give this wonderful era its
pre-eminence. They have sunk so deeply into the popular mind as
radically to change the currents of thought, to recast creeds and
displace the most fundamental conceptions.
It is true that disappointment has followed disappointment. Discovery
upon discovery and invention after invention have neither lessened the
toil of those who most need respite nor brought plenty to the poor. But
there have been so many things to which it seemed this failure could be
attributed that up to our time the new faith has hardly weakened. We
have better appreciated the difficulties to be overcome, but not the
less trusted that the tendency of the times was to overcome them.
Now, however, we are coming into collision with facts which there can
be no mistaking. From all parts of the civilized world come complaints
of industrial depression; of labour condemned to involuntary idleness;
of capital massed and wasting; of pecuniary distress among business men;
of want and suffering and anxiety among the working classes. There is
distress where large standing armies are maintained, but there is also
distress where the standing armies are nominal; there is distress where
protective tariffs are applied, but there is also distress where trade
is nearly free; there is distress where autocratic government yet
prevails, but there is also distress where political power is wholly in
the hands of the people; in countries where paper is money, and in
countries where gold and silver are the only currency. Evidently,
beneath all such things as these, from local circumstances but are in
some way or another engendered by progress itself.
This association of poverty with progress is the great enigma of our
times. It is the central fact from which spring industrial, social, and
political difficulties that perplex the world, and with which
statesmanship, and philanthropy and education grapple in vain. From it
come the clouds that overhang the future of the most progressive and
self-reliant nations. It is the riddle that the Sphinx of Fate puts to
our civilization, which not to answer is to be destroyed. So long as all
the increased wealth which modern progress brings goes but to build up
great fortunes, to increase luxury and make sharper the contrast between
the House of Have and the House of Want, progress is not real and cannot
be permanent.
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