Ragged Trousered Philanthropists by Robert Tressell (fiction novels to read .txt) ๐
Another answer is that `The Philanthropists' is not a treatise oressay, but a novel. My main object was to write a readable story fullof human interest and based on the happenings of everyday life, thesubject of Socialism being treated incidentally.
This was the task I set myself. To what extent I have succeeded isfor others to say; but whatever their verdict, the work possesses atleast one merit - that of being true. I have invented nothing. Thereare no scenes or incidents in the story that I have not eitherwitnessed myself or had conclusive evidence of. As far as I dared Ilet th
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his masterโs daughter and succeed to his masterโs business. In those
days to be a โmasterโ tradesman meant to be master of the trade, not
merely of some underpaid drudges in oneโs employment. The apprentices
were there to master the trade, qualifying themselves to become master
workers themselves; not mere sweaters and exploiters of the labour of
others, but useful members of society. In those days, because there
was no labour-saving machinery the community was dependent for its
existence on the productions of hand labour. Consequently the
majority of the people were employed in some kind of productive work,
and the workers were honoured and respected citizens, living in
comfort on the fruits of their labour. They were not rich as we
understand wealth now, but they did not starve and they were not
regarded with contempt, as are their successors of today.
`The next great change came with the introduction of steam machinery.
That power came to the aid of mankind in their struggle for existence,
enabling them to create easily and in abundance those things of which
they had previously been able to produce only a bare sufficiency. A
wonderful power - equalling and surpassing the marvels that were
imagined by the writers of fairy tales and Eastern stories - a power
so vast - so marvellous, that it is difficult to find words to convey
anything like an adequate conception of it.
`We all remember the story, in The Arabian Nights, of Aladdin, who in
his poverty became possessed of the Wonderful Lamp and - he was poor
no longer. He merely had to rub the Lamp - the Genie appeared, and at
Aladdinโs command he produced an abundance of everything that the
youth could ask or dream of. With the discovery of steam machinery,
mankind became possessed of a similar power to that imagined by the
Eastern writer. At the command of its masters the Wonderful Lamp of
Machinery produces an enormous, overwhelming, stupendous abundance and
superfluity of every material thing necessary for human existence and
happiness. With less labour than was formerly required to cultivate
acres, we can now cultivate miles of land. In response to human
industry, aided by science and machinery, the fruitful earth teems
with such lavish abundance as was never known or deemed possible
before. If you go into the different factories and workshops you will
see prodigious quantities of commodities of every kind pouring out of
the wonderful machinery, literally like water from a tap.
`One would naturally and reasonably suppose that the discovery or
invention of such an aid to human industry would result in increased
happiness and comfort for every one; but as you all know, the reverse
is the case; and the reason of that extraordinary result, is the
reason of all the poverty and unhappiness that we see around us and
endure today - it is simply because - the machinery became the
property of a comparatively few individuals and private companies, who
use it not for the benefit of the community but to create profits for
themselves.
`As this labour-saving machinery became more extensively used, the
prosperous class of skilled workers gradually disappeared. Some of
the wealthier of them became distributers instead of producers of
wealth; that is to say, they became shopkeepers, retailing the
commodities that were produced for the most part by machinery. But
the majority of them in course of time degenerated into a class of
mere wage earners, having no property in the machines they used, and
no property in the things they made.
`They sold their labour for so much per hour, and when they could not
find any employer to buy it from them, they were reduced to
destitution.
`Whilst the unemployed workers were starving and those in employment
not much better off, the individuals and private companies who owned
the machinery accumulated fortunes; but their profits were diminished
and their working expenses increased by what led to the latest great
change in the organization of the production of the necessaries of
life - the formation of the Limited Companies and the Trusts; the
decision of the private companies to combine and co-operate with each
other in order to increase their profits and decrease their working
expenses. The results of these combines have been - an increase in
the quantities of the things produced: a decrease in the number of
wage earners employed - and enormously increased profits for the
shareholders.
`But it is not only the wage-earning class that is being hurt; for
while they are being annihilated by the machinery and the efficient
organization of industry by the trusts that control and are beginning
to monopolize production, the shopkeeping classes are also being
slowly but surely crushed out of existence by the huge companies that
are able by the greater magnitude of their operations to buy and sell
more cheaply than the small traders.
`The consequence of all this is that the majority of the people are in
a condition of more or less abject poverty - living from hand to
mouth. It is an admitted fact that about thirteen millions of our
people are always on the verge of starvation. The significant results
of this poverty face us on every side. The alarming and persistent
increase of insanity. The large number of would-be recruits for the
army who have to be rejected because they are physically unfit; and
the shameful condition of the children of the poor. More than
one-third of the children of the working classes in London have some
sort of mental or physical defect; defects in development; defects of
eyesight; abnormal nervousness; rickets, and mental dullness. The
difference in height and weight and general condition of the children
in poor schools and the children of the so-called better classes,
constitutes a crime that calls aloud to Heaven for vengeance upon
those who are responsible for it.
`It is childish to imagine that any measure of Tariff Reform or
Political Reform such as a paltry tax on foreign-made goods or
abolishing the House of Lords, or disestablishing the Church - or
miserable Old Age Pensions, or a contemptible tax on land, can deal
with such a state of affairs as this. They have no House of Lords in
America or France, and yet their condition is not materially different
from ours. You may be deceived into thinking that such measures as
those are great things. You may fight for them and vote for them, but
after you have got them you will find that they will make no
appreciable improvement in your condition. You will still have to
slave and drudge to gain a bare sufficiency of the necessaries of
life. You will still have to eat the same kind of food and wear the
same kind of clothes and boots as now. Your masters will still have
you in their power to insult and sweat and drive. Your general
condition will be just the same as at present because such measures as
those are not remedies but red herrings, intended by those who trail
them to draw us away from the only remedy, which is to be found only
in the Public Ownership of the Machinery, and the National
Organization of Industry for the production and distribution of the
necessaries of life, not for the profit of a few but for the benefit
of all!
`That is the next great change; not merely desirable, but imperatively
necessary and inevitable! That is Socialism!
`It is not a wild dream of Superhuman Unselfishness. No one will be
asked to sacrifice himself for the benefit of others or to love his
neighbours better than himself as is the case under the present
system, which demands that the majority shall unselfishly be content
to labour and live in wretchedness for the benefit of a few. There is
no such principle of Philanthropy in Socialism, which simply means
that even as all industries are now owned by shareholders, and
organized and directed by committees and officers elected by the
shareholders, so shall they in future belong to the State, that is,
the whole people - and they shall be organized and directed by
committees and officers elected by the community.
`Under existing circumstances the community is exposed to the danger
of being invaded and robbed and massacred by some foreign power.
Therefore the community has organized and owns and controls an Army
and Navy to protect it from that danger. Under existing circumstances
the community is menaced by another equally great danger - the people
are mentally and physically degenerating from lack of proper food and
clothing. Socialists say that the community should undertake and
organize the business of producing and distributing all these things;
that the State should be the only employer of labour and should own
all the factories, mills, mines, farms, railways, fishing fleets,
sheep farms, poultry farms and cattle ranches.
`Under existing circumstances the community is degenerating mentally
and physically because the majority cannot afford to have decent
houses to live in. Socialists say that the community should take in
hand the business of providing proper houses for all its members, that
the State should be the only landlord, that all the land and all the
houses should belong to the whole peopleโฆ
`We must do this if we are to keep our old place in the van of human
progress. A nation of ignorant, unintelligent, half-starved,
broken-spirited degenerates cannot hope to lead humanity in its
never-ceasing march onward to the conquest of the future.
`Vain. mightiest fleet of iron framed;
Vain the all-shattering guns
Unless proud England keep, untamed,
The stout hearts of her sons.
`All the evils that I have referred to are only symptoms of the one
disease that is sapping the moral, mental and physical life of the
nation, and all attempts to cure these symptoms are foredoomed to
failure, simply because they are the symptoms and not the disease.
All the talk of Temperance, and the attempts to compel temperance, are
foredoomed to failure, because drunkenness is a symptom, and not the
disease.
`India is a rich productive country. Every year millions of pounds
worth of wealth are produced by her people, only to be stolen from
them by means of the Money Trick by the capitalist and official class.
Her industrious sons and daughters, who are nearly all tdtal
abstainers, live in abject poverty, and their misery is not caused by
laziness or want of thrift, or by Intemperance. They are poor for the
same reason that we are poor - Because we are Robbed.
`The hundreds of thousands of pounds that are yearly wasted in
well-meant but useless charity accomplish no lasting good, because
while charity soothes the symptoms it ignores the disease, which is -
the PRIVATE OWNERSHIP of the means of producing the necessaries of
life, and the restriction of production, by a few selfish individuals
for their own profit. And for that disease there is no other remedy
than the one I have told you of - the PUBLIC OWNERSHIP and cultivation
of the land, the PUBLIC OWNERSHIP OF the mines, railways, canals,
ships, factories and all the other means of production, and the
establishment of an Industrial Civil Service - a National Army of
Industry - for the purpose of producing the necessaries, comforts and
refinements of life in that abundance which has been made possible by
science and machinery - for the use and benefit of THE WHOLE OF THE
PEOPLE.โ
`Yes: and whereโs the money to come from for all this?โ shouted Crass,
fiercely.
`Hear, hear,โ cried the man behind the moat.
`Thereโs no money difficulty about it,โ replied Barrington. `We can
easily find all the money we shall need.โ
`Of course,โ said Slyme, who had been reading the Daily Ananias,
`thereโs all the
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