AE On Irish Reform - George William Russell
AE On Irish Reform - George William Russell
AE On Irish Reform - George William Russell
Contents
------------
1910
--------------
If we can make inseparable societies with their arms round each other's necks,
working for the same ends, and inspired by the same ideals, we will have a United Ireland.
The unity which depends only on our living in the same latitude and longitude will never
come to much. It seems to me to be mainly blather. You and I, I hope, are bent on
realities.
----------------
1912
To Sir Horace Plunkett, Father Thomas Finlay and Robert A. Anderson, three good
comrades. I dedicate this meditation over the outcome of their work in Ireland.
---------
Contents
-----------
Chapter I
I have heard people speak as if Ireland were a freak, as if our national problems
were absolutely unique, and we could learn little or nothing from other countries.
Agricultural co-operation, for example, might suit farmers in other lands, but it was either
too high or too low for us. The creamery system was a disastrous departure from our
ancient methods of butter-making. We would starve our children if milk and eggs could be
sold at higher prices, for it would make these wholesome articles too costly a luxury for the
home. All this and much more has been gravely urged.
It was natural enough, when the majority of the people were trying to show how
impossible government from Westminster was, that every cause, reasonable or
unreasonable, should be urged to emphasize our unique character and the hopelessness
of other people understanding us sufficiently to let us develop happily. Anything which
would show our problems were not unique seemed to destroy an argument for self-
government, and it looked as if we might at last shape ourselves into a national freak which
would justify, not self-government, but control by the Commissioners for Lunacy. Luckily
it is now being recognized that there are stronger arguments for and against self-
government than the exhibition of our people as freaks, and we can learn many things from
other countries without injury to our Irish pride. We are gradually being won back to
humanity, and men are learning that the problems of rural life in Ireland are not so very
different in character from those which statesmen have to solve in Europe or America.
We can see now that people migrate from rural Ireland for reasons nearly identical
with those which make the Italian peasant emigrate, or make the American cultivator leave
his farm and go to the cities. It is admitted that inefficient government is one of the causes
here, but it would be as easy to prove there is inefficient government everywhere.
Government is inefficient because statesmen have not yet agreed upon the remedy for
rural depopulation. There is no general agreement even among those who personally are
affected by the changes which are going on, and the truth about these or any other
subjects must become almost a platitude before governments will accept it, or foster a new
idea.
The problem of how best to keep a rural population happily contented on the land
has been too suddenly presented to the world for any complete answer yet to be made.
It only assumed an urgent aspect within the last half century, and at first it was difficult to
disentangle temporary causes from those which steadily and inevitably operate. In Ireland
it began after the famine, and if the cause was transitory it was quite sufficient to explain
the flight from Ireland for a considerable number of years. But it does not explain the
continued flight from the land which goes on today in Ireland, as in England or Europe, and
even in the United States, which has admitted many millions from Europe, but whose
agricultural population has remained stagnant during the half century in which these people
were swept from the land in Europe. The American cities received them, but comparatively
few found their way to the land.
The man born on the land once he sets foot in the cities seems rarely to want to
return. Why is there this migration from rural districts? Why this dislike to life on a farm?
Why in half a century should rural life seem to be in danger of breaking up? The beast
replaces man in Ireland, the deer forest in Scotland, the game preserve in England, and
in rural America the machine with a dozen men to guide it replaces a hundred who have
given up the fight. History so far back as we can see shows nothing like this. It is a new
problem, and to solve it properly we must disentangle the temporary causes from those
which must steadily and inevitably operate until a remedy is found.
The thoughts of the world have been too much with the cities, and they have never
sent out the missionaries of civilization into the country. Wealth has shot out its offshoots:
here and there a villa, a castle, a palace; but these were rural exotics, and the countrymen
had no part in them. There has been no fine civilization, no really well organized system
of rural society. Civilization has passed the farmer by. Babylon and Nineveh sent up their
towers to heaven, but the farmers on Chaldean plains toiled in the same way before the
cities were built, while they were in their glory and long after they were heaps of ruins.
Rome had its palaces along the Tiber, and it held the ancient world in fee, but, if it had any
effect on the ancient Italian farmer, it was to injure his interests by the gathering of political
power into the hands of those who dreaded the outcry of the Roman populace, and
sacrificed all other interests to please the mob which swarmed so perilously close to the
gates of its dictators' palaces.
In a country of great cities political power, owing to the easy organization of opinion
among city populations, is almost always used to benefit the city populations. This is true
today, even when the daily paper comes to the man in the farm and tells him what is being
done against his interest in the town, and it must have been still more true in ages when
the countryman heard little or nothing of what fate was being decreed for him. He was
oppressed by forces he could only dimly analyze. He heard of wonderful things at the
centre of life, but he had no part in them. Civilization in historical times has been a flare-up
on a few square miles of brick and mortar. Outside the cities there have always been the
same mean houses, the same implements of labour, the same ignorance, want of
education, the same oblivion of the finer things in life.
The farmers have generally suffered more as the cities increased. The city is
always wresting from the country its arts and industries. Weaving and spinning and other
employments are gone irrevocably from the home to the factory. A crowd of keen-witted
business men have come with offers to the farmer. They will make his butter for him, sell
his stock, market his produce, manufacture his bacon, buy his requirements, even bake
his bread for him, and wherever the farmer has yielded and given way to these insidious
offers he has become poorer than before, his intellect less active, and the countryside has
grown more lifeless and deserted.
So long as travel was difficult, dangerous and expensive, all this did not lead to a
rural exodus. Before a girdle had been put around the world, when for the ignorant
countryman to leave his country was to adventure among fancied giants, anthropophagi,
and men whose heads did grow beneath their shoulders; when to venture across the seas
was perhaps to be washed down by the gulfs or to be lost to humanity upon the Happy
Isles, the countryman, unless exceptionally adventurous or exceptionally oppressed,
remained where he was as long as he could and endured his fate, and tried to make
himself happy with rustic sports, and prosperous by communal organization and mutual
aid. But the powers that were over him mistrusted his communal organizations and broke
them up, and they then educated him for rural life by a system which was a very inferior
replica of the education of a townsman, or else they neglected his education altogether;
and when the train began to hurry swiftly across the land and the steamship across the
sea, and fares were cheap, the long pent-up disgust with their lot broke out among the
countrymen and the rural exodus began.
The world, so vast and vague in its girth to the ancients, has been dwindling through
the centuries, and it has now collapsed to the size of Ireland one hundred years ago. A
man can go nearly half round the world now in the time it would have taken him at the
beginning of last century to travel from Kerry to Antrim. He can easily find out all he wants
to know about distant lands and the life of their cities. The world is all spread out before
the agricultural labourers and before the farmers' sons and daughters to choose where
they will live, and more and more they elect to live the city life. The farm labourer does not
see why he should labour from dawn to dusk for twelve shillings a week, when he could
earn twice that sum in a town, and work for shorter hours at a less exhausting occupation
in an atmosphere of life and activity which is in itself an endless wonder and attraction to
one bred in the silence of the fields. The world is spread out before the countryman, and
in the competition for population the life which is most attractive will win.
We hear the cry of "Back to the land" continually, but for one who returns a
thousand go away. The life which offers most, which seems most intense and most
alluring, wins, and small holdings acts, land acts, peasant proprietorships, and like
remedial measures, touch only the fringe of the problem. Why, in the New England States
there are at the present time about twenty-six thousand derelict farms once held by free-
holders. They had everything and more than everything we are trying to give our Irish
farmers, and where are they now? The cities nodded and beckoned to the children of the
farm and they went, as they are going, and will go, in spite of small holdings, land acts,
labourers' plots, and the rest, if the miracle is not wrought and the countryside made a
place where a man can enjoy the fullest and freest development of his spiritual, intellectual
and social powers. Can the miracle be wrought? It is this question I will try to answer.
------------
Chapter II.
---------
Chapter III.
When steam first began to puff and wheels go round at so many revolutions per
minute, the wild child humanity, who had hitherto developed his civilization in picturesque
unconsciousness of where he was going, and without any set plan, was caught and put in
harness. What are called business habits were invented to make the life of man run in
harmony with the steam engine, and his movements rival the train in punctuality. The
factory system was invented and was an instantaneous success. Men were clothed with
cheapness and uniformity. Their minds grew numerously alike, cheap and uniform also.
They were at their desks at nine o'clock, or at their looms at six. They adjusted themselves
to the punctual wheels. The rapid piston acted as pacemaker, and in England, which
started first on the modern race for wealth, it was an enormous advantage to have tireless
machines of superhuman activity to make the pace, and nerve men, women, and children
to the fullest activity possible.
Business methods had a long start in England, and irregularity and want of
uniformity became after a while such exceptions that they were regarded as deadly sins.
The grocer whose supplies of butter did not arrive week after week by the same train, at
the same hour, and of the same quality, of the same colour, the same saltness, and in the
same kind of box quarreled with the wholesaler, who in his turn quarreled with the
producer. Only the most machine-like race could win custom. After a while every country
felt it had to be drilled or become extinct. Some made themselves into machines to enter
the English market, some to preserve their own markets. Even the indolent Oriental is
getting keyed up, and in another fifty years the Bedouin of the desert will be at his desk
and the wild horseman of Tartary will be oiling his engines.
In Ireland the wild child humanity came under this discipline very slowly. He was in
love with old fashions. For a long time he would have no butter made except in strict
accordance with Gaelic traditions. He skimmed his milk himself, or his wife did, and he or
she pounded away at the churn and were unconcerned about temperatures, and they had
never heard of microbes. There was nothing uniform about the produce, and in a hundred
farms in every parish a hundred flavours originated. They might be all bad, or all good, but
they certainly were never the same. Yet the Irish farmer was manufacturing it for people
who had standardized all their tastes and objected to the slightest change, who wanted
their butter to be as uniform as all the square yards in a roll of wallpaper. The exceptional
excellence of the butter received one week was no compensation for the intolerable flavour
of the next.
Denmark, twenty years before we began, turned itself into a machine, and its
farmers all got up at the same time in the morning and took their milk to creameries, and
cream was separated and churned at the same temperatures. The managers had heard
all about bacteria, and that a microbe became a great grandfather in the winking of an eye,
and they kept their premises as clean as the wards of a hospital, and they turned out butter
so uniform that all the Danish butter might almost have come from the one churning. The
individualist in butter-making was nowhere.
The uniform Briton with uniform tastes revolted against the eccentric variations in
the flavour of butter coming from Ireland, and he paid the Irish middleman or the
wholesaler twenty shillings a hundredweight under the price he paid to the disciplined
Dane. The wholesaler acquiesced, he could do nothing else, but he saw to it that he did
not lose, and he docked the price to the producer in Ireland, unloading his burden on the
unorganized after the fashion of the most powerful. There is always room on top for more
wealth and room at the bottom for more poverty. Bed rock has never been found, but the
organized interests are always making the unorganized conduct extensive investigations
in that direction. The sweated pursue these investigations towards bed rock in the cities,
the small farmer in the country. The young Irish boy and girl growing up felt the occupation
depressing and went to America. They had no interest in inquiry into economic ultimates.
The poultry and egg industry suffered in the same way. There were numerous
relays of middlemen. The higgler went around generally with tea and sugar, and
sometimes, though more rarely, with cash, and collected the eggs. Generally speaking,
the farmer's wife kept them as long as she could, waiting for a rise in price. The higgler
was not indifferent to the satisfaction of selling when prices were higher, and he waited so
long as he thought it was prudent, and sold to the wholesaler in England, who received
grievous complaints from the retailer about the freshness of the eggs and the way they
were packed. Irish eggs grew to have a very bad name, which has only lately been
somewhat refurbished.
A great deal of the collection of eggs was, and still is, carried on by country
shopkeepers. Eggs were bartered for ounces of tea or pounds of sugar, and the egg grew
to be regarded in many districts as part of the currency of the realm. I have myself seen
a child enter a post office, lay down two eggs and ask for a penny stamp. There was little
or no grading, the packing was disgraceful, the eggs were dirty, and their freshness was
too often dubious. So here, as with the butter industry, the retailer in England found his
sense of what was right and reliable and uniform shocked, and he paid for the cases as
one who expected to find a considerable number of the eggs of election quality. In this
business the Danes had also developed a machine-like accuracy, and though farther
removed from the common market, they managed to get their eggs there much fresher
than we did. The Irish producer suffered. The national machinery for distribution of produce
was old and out of date. It moved too slowly for a swift and methodical world. So in these
two important branches of the farmer's business he did badly. He produced badly and
without method. The marketing was inefficient, and as there is always room at the bottom
and nothing to lean up against, the person nearest the market, which was firm and would
not yield, naturally pushed the producer a little further into the abyss, where there was lots
of room.
It must be confessed that every country gets the kind of middlemen it deserves, and
the way the Irish farmer managed his side of the business invited the kind of treatment he
received. If he had sold through his own agents he would very speedily have found what
the requirements of the market were, and would have adapted himself to them. But half
a dozen middlemen, as links between the producer, and the consumer, made a bad
medium for conveying this kind of information, and the Irish farmer struggled on for years
suffering from forces too remote from him for his understanding.
In the marketing of live stock there was the same slackness. The fairs were, and
are still, dominated by rings of dealers, jobbers, "blockers," and "tanglers," whose aim it is
to buy as cheaply as possible. The blockers and tanglers are the jackals of the jobbers,
and the jobbers are the jackals of the big dealers. Irish country people love the excitement,
noise and tumult of a fair. One of our last poets sings of it with exultation:
Why, poet, this was a business assembly. Were you aware that these men were
wrecking their industry by these loose business methods which delighted your eye? We
shall have to keep the poets out of the new Irish Republic as Plato kept them out of his, or
we shall never get our machine to work. The machine, I grant, may never be so
picturesque, but the farmer of the future will compensate himself for the lack of excitement
at the fair by a greater comfort in his home, and the poets must sing of other things. There
will always be love, twilight and the stars.
Irish cattle and swine get to their final destination by devious routes. The first act
in the business is to get the animals out of the farmer's hands as cheaply as possible, and
for this purpose blockers and tanglers exist. They have no money themselves. They are
simply the jackals of the jobbers. When a jobber has made his offer for some cattle which
he wishes to buy, and it has been refused, it is the business of the blockers to remain
beside the farmer and to block other customers. The etiquette of the fair precludes rival
bidding while a man is engaged in bargaining, so the blocker keeps other jobbers off until
the first bidder returns and finds a weary and repentant farmer reduced to submission. His
rent is due, or his instalment to the Land Commission, and he must sell.
The tangler is a variety of the blocker. It is his business to confuse the farmer's
mind as to the real value of his animal. The jobber offers, say, ten pounds, and it is
refused. He winks at his jackals, and one tangler comes up and laughs at the farmer's
price of twelve pounds, and offers eight pounds as all the beast is worth. Tangler
succeeds tangler, and in the end the unfortunate man thinks he must be deceived as to
the merits of his animal, and is glad to sell, perhaps for nine pounds, to the first bidder who
returns at the close of the fair. These jackals often make as much as one pound or two
pounds for their day's work.
Another way in which the farmer suffers is that cattle are generally sold by guess-
work, not by weight, and in calculating value by guess-work the expert beats the farmer.
The jobber sells in turn to the big dealers, who sell again in England, and all these earnings
and profits of blockers, tanglers, jobbers, and dealers are taken off the value of the
farmer's stock. Horses are dealt with in much the same way. Sometimes if there is a brisk
demand there is real competition, and cattle and horses may be sold for their real value,
but, generally speaking, the market is laid out. Pig jobbers regularly lay out the market and
fix prices, and while the farmer knows he is being fleeced he has no remedy. In Ulster,
where pigs are killed before the fair, they must be sold somehow. "The dead must be
buried," as their saying is, and elsewhere where they are sold alive the farmer hesitates
to take the animals back and be at the expense of further feeding, when he is not sure that
the next fair will not see the same gang at work and perhaps with a lower price fixed.
Flax sales are dominated in the same way. The buyers form a ring in the morning
and fiat their ultimatums. Corn and barley are sold by sample, and the producer is nearly
always being fleeced on the excuse that bulk is not equal to sample. If prices go up he
may be paid in full, but if they go down it is generally found that the sample was very
misleading.
Only the merest sketch can be given of the antiquated methods of marketing which
some few years ago prevailed all over Ireland, and which in some branches of the farmer's
business still prevail. There are complications and intricacies which would need volumes
to elucidate. But while I cannot expect the middlemen to recognise the truth of what I have
written, the farmer will verify it; and the fact that these conditions existed, and still exist,
is the motive power behind a revolution in business methods which is going on in Ireland
(which I will describe in other chapters), and which has for its object the giving to the farmer
the complete control of production and marketing, and the elimination of those middle
interests which have acted with such disastrous results on Irish agriculture.
These middlemen did not serve the farmers well. They tricked him at home, and
could not even secure good prices themselves in the markets where they disposed of Irish
produce. Even this year the Department of Agriculture found that sixty percent of the
seeds sold in Ireland were adulterated. To put it briefly, agriculture as a business has been
a house divided against itself. The directors were pocketing the profits as fees, and the
shareholders got decreasing dividends.
I have no enmity to these people at all, but they are an anachronism in the modern
world where industry is drilled and disciplined. I have made these brief sketches of their
methods because I want to show how impossible it is for the unorganized small farmer to
retain any fair proportion of the wealth he creates while forces which he cannot control take
possession of his industry and exploit it. Dual control in agricultural industry is as
impossible to maintain or defend as dual ownership of land. I wish to show how impossible
it is to build up a rural civilization while these loose and wasteful business methods prevail.
While this goes on stagnation or decadence must continue. The farmer will economise
more in labour, he will revert to the cheapest and lowest forms of farming, and labour will
desert the country.
The young people as they grow up will fly from a life which offers them nothing - no
joy, no beauty, no comfort, no hope. Have we not all seen the growing dislike of the land
among the rising generation? How many Irishmen go on the land in the States? Not one
in twenty, not in a hundred, hardly one in a thousand. They have been on the land in
Ireland, and they go anywhere, to any crowded slum, rather than to the fields. God's world,
all the light, the glory, the beauty which the earth puts forth to her children, the dawn over
the hills, the green grass, the odour and incense of flowers, the smell of the turned-up sod,
trees, hills, the multitudinous magnificence of nature - are all being deserted by humanity
because humanity cannot exist on the earth and cultivate it, and maintain thereon an equal
life.
If they remain they are poor, they are ignorant they are beset by hostile forces, they
are enslaved and they give up their inheritance as heirs of the ages and the spoils which
man has ransacked from time. We cry out with Whitman: "Could we wish humanity
indifferent? Could we wish people were made of wood or stone?" The system which has
acted so disastrously to Irish agriculture must be changed, and its agents must disappear.
We need not pity them. A revolution cannot be wrought at once. They will slowly melt into
the new order which will slowly arise, and they will find their place there. The Irish rural
community of the future, I hope, will find a place for all its people.
----------
Chapter IV
This is only a guide to the next generation, and no one need expect from me
proposals for a new Utopia to be floated at once with a promise of huge dividends of
happiness. I do not believe in the designs of those who say they are building for eternity,
as experience has shown that most of these cuttings from flowers in the mind shrivel at
their first transplanting into time. No country can marry any particular solution of its
problems and live happily ever afterwards. Life is an endless struggle, and every nation
will have perpetually to adjust itself to new conditions. Protection may triumph this
generation on earth, but I foresee in the next generation free trade victoriously appearing
in the heavens and renewing the attack with airships.
I have friends who are socialists, and they firmly believe if the world only married
their particular solution of its problems it would, it must, live happily ever after. But I
mistrust them because they are so logical and unanswerable. They are always telling me
that two and two make four, whereas I have a deep-rooted conviction that a happier
assortment of figures might bring about a more pleasing result. Like the poet who formed
out of three sounds, not a fourth sound, but a star, I would like to shift things about more
loosely in hopes of a sudden star emerging out of human chemicals mixed in less equal
proportions than my socialist friends contemplate in their formula.
I know socialism would be the logical solution of all difficulties if humanity was just
emerging from Eden, but there is no use talking about it in Ireland. When the State
decided on turning tenants into proprietors it set up a barrier against socialism which will
last, I fancy, for a couple of hundred years yet. An Irish farmer would pour down boiling
lead on the emissaries of the State who tried to nationalise his land, the land he sweated
sixty years to pay for. There is no fear of socialism in Ireland. There are other and real
dangers. There is the danger that without a complete reorganization of business methods
in rural Ireland it will slip back gradually into the old order with a new class of landlords.
There is the fear that Michael Mulligan, gombeen man, and his class will begin gradually
to absorb the farms of their tied customers and create a new aristocracy. Indeed they are
doing this already.
The old aristocracies swaggered royally to the devil. They borrowed money at sixty
percent and ruined themselves. The new aristocracy, whose coming I dread, have been
accustomed to lend money at sixty percent, and to ruin others. I prefer the former type,
though I hope no one will accuse me of unduly exalting it. I believe the alternative habit
is the more dangerous of the two, and is less easily got rid of as a family tradition. We are
passing by Scylla, and I wish to point the way past Charybdis. We want a raft which can
be constructed in one generation, and which will be able to float the next past our pressing
dangers into the open sea of the future. We need not with the Utopians take thought of
what the next generation will eat or what it will wear. The unborn may very well be trusted
to look after and feed their unborn.
The second danger, I fear, is that without State socialism we may yet get worship
of the State, and belief in its powers, developed to such an extent that the community will
place itself completely in the hands of the government to the utter destruction of self-
reliance, initiative, and independence of spirit. When a man becomes imbecile his friends
place him in an asylum. When a people grow decadent and imbecile they place
themselves in the hands of the State. That is a real danger in Ireland. "But you are talking
nonsense" many readers will say. "Ireland is, and always will be, against the government."
Ah! There is no eternity about these popular emotions. Ireland was against the
government, and hated it so heartily that it brought around a psychological change which
occurs in races as much as in individuals. If an individual, ignoring the wise warning of the
Gospels, condemns any one over much, what he condemns is meted out to him. If he
says some one is very vain, vanity blooms all over him as he speaks, for the remark implies
that the speaker believes he is stainless so far as this fault is concerned. If he says some
one else is a most irritable person, he grows irritated himself, and so on through the whole
range of emotions.
Any philosopher who studied Irish problems calmly, if such a thing were possible,
and seeing the intense hatred of the Irish of any government they had to deal with, could
have prophesied they were bringing upon themselves the fate of being the most governed
people on the face of the earth. Already one in every forty persons in Ireland is in the
employment of the State, and the demand for more government departments is increasing
with feverish intensity. Within only the last couple of years demands have been made for
a department with a million a year to develop industries. Forestry eagerly claimed a
department all to itself. Next, the railways were to be bought by the State and
departmentalized also. Another demand was for State banking, and the income of the
already existing departments has never been sufficient to satisfy either the departments
or the people. They always ought to be doubled.
The State is rapidly becoming a kind of fetish in Ireland, a fetish which is kicked and
prayed to alternately, the kicking testifying to as much belief as the prayers. We complain
quite justly that we are the most expensively governed people in Europe, and we go on
asking for more expensive government departments. If we got all the things we ask for
those who asked for them would instantly count up the cost, add it to that of already
existing departments to prove still more conclusively that the solar system could not
possibly contain a more expensively governed race, and this would be put forward as a
new reason why still more departments should be founded to balance or redress the
wrong.
Any one who has the misfortune I have of being forced every week to read a great
number of country papers will bear me out when I say that nothing is more common than
the demand in every parish meeting, board of guardians, rural or urban council, for State
aid or State subsidies in some form or other. It is the tragedy of the decline and fall of the
human will in the people we are witnessing, a far worse tragedy than the emigration which
is deplored so much. The will is growing powerless to act without partnership with its fetish
or idol the State.
It all arose from the country keeping its eyes fixed on Westminster, on those distant
political hills from which all aid was to come. Ireland has been for many years in the
position of a man whose lawyers have been long conducting a suit for the recovery of
some property which, they assure him, will speedily become his, and who, trusting in these
promises, lives on his expectations, does nothing to help himself, and at last becomes so
poor that he cannot afford even to pay his lawyers. It would have been a demoralizing
position for an individual. It was disastrous for the country.
Ireland has grown to have so little power of self-help that it cannot even pay its own
advocates. We have two great parties. One has been kept in place by force of foreign
arms. The other has been kept in power by force of foreign dollars. Every eye was fixed
on Westminster, with the natural consequence that the powers and possibilities of the
State assumed monstrous and unnatural proportions in men's minds, and what a man or
country could do for itself without State aid dwindled to insignificance. The country seems
to have acted in the spirit of a drunken Belfast workman whom a friend of mine heard
shouting, "A won't do a han's turn till Ireland's free!"
When we were not appealing to the British Government we were not idle with our
prayers in other quarters. We were the most appealing nation on the face of the earth.
We appealed to God, humanity, Europe, the United States, the Colonies, for pity, for
sympathy, for dollars. We warned America that if she did not come to our rescue our
national aspirations would die out and the responsibility would be on her shoulders. One
felt ashamed of the name of Irishman in the midst of all these tearful supplications. I
received a letter once from an American friend who expressed a view which grows more
and more popular in his country. "Can't the Irish people do something except beg? Can
they do nothing for themselves? Can't they dig or do something? Their policy isn't manly,
and when I think of Joan of Arc I feel it isn't even womanly."
All these appeals to the State would not have done so much harm if the
mouthpieces of popular sentiment had not felt it incumbent on them to discourage any non-
political efforts to promote prosperity. These were described as "drawing a red herring
across the track." If self-help had been fostered as industriously as State aid we might
have arrived at something. But politicians would not admit that it was either possible or
desirable that Ireland should help itself until what they wanted done was done first. Irish
misery and poverty were valuable assets in the campaign. The net result in the psychology
of the Irish people was that they grew less and less self-reliant. The State treated Ireland
as the great big incapable baby it was represented to be. The country became like a
gigantic creche with a whole army of officials guiding, controlling, or spoon-feeding it.
Ireland, in spite of professed hatred of the State, has never been nearer to complete
dependence on it than at the present moment.
While this Westminsterism was rampant, internal social reforms such as other
nations carry out for themselves seemed to have no chance. Fifteen years ago all the
economic wastefulness and inefficiency I have described in previous chapters was at its
height. The farmer's pocket was being picked while he listened to his favourite orator, who
informed him the landlord was the only real culprit. But he felt that the explanation did not
cover everything, and all the elements which make for a complete reorganization of rural
society were in solution waiting to be crystallized, and they began to take form. A scientific
friend tells me that crystallization only takes place when a pure atom of the crystal to be
formed falls into the bath. All the atoms of that element in solution then begin to gather
about it. I am not a scientist and cannot guarantee the truth of this, but it provides me with
an excellent illustration, and I feel sure it is accurate because it is true that to create a
human crystal or co-operative organization, a man with the true spirit of mutuality must first
fall into the society to be organized.
This happened in Ireland when Horace Plunkett returned from America in 1889.
Nature had prepared him for the work he was to undertake by gifting him with every kind
of insidious power to drag people out of their own private and proper work and make them
do his work instead. The apostles did not seem by their previous professions more
unsuitable to turn into divines than the people Horace Plunkett collected and filled with his
own spirit and sent out to organize the farmers. Artists, poets, literary men and clergymen
fell victims to him equally with those who were personally interested in farming. Every
extreme of political belief was represented in his circle. Orangeman met Fenian, the
Church of Ireland clergyman met the Catholic priest. The Ulster Unionist found himself to
his astonishment discussing Irish economics with Munster Nationalists.
Sir Horace Plunkett wanted to keep his work non-political. He had not at that time
realized that to the political powers in Ireland the most poisonous character enmity to them
could assume was to be non-political. He has since learned that lesson thoroughly. Really
sincere believers in the power of the State to make people prosperous either by Acts of
Parliament or by stopping other people from passing such Acts, looked on him with disgust,
for he was the beginning of the reaction from patriotism by proxy. He was the spirit of Sinn
Fein casting a rather misleading shadow before it, because such politics as he professed
were vaguely Unionist. They were a great deal too vague for many of his Unionist friends,
as he found when he began to break down a portion of the Chinese walls between patties,
and the mandarins on one side of the walls and the chiefs of the wild hordes on the other
side made frequent and pointed remonstrances. But I am not concerned with his politics,
which I leave to his biographer, hoping one will not be required for many years yet.
He was something better than a politician. He was a statesman with a creative
mind. He saw rural Ireland completely disorganized, the population melting away, Irish
produce badly marketed, prices falling every year, and science unknown on the farm. In
fact, while the country was fighting for the raw material of prosperity, that is, for the land,
the production, manufacture and business connected with it, where profit or loss mainly
arise, was completely neglected. He did not underrate the one great and notable
achievement of Parliamentarianism, its services to Ireland in bringing about a transfer of
land from proprietor to tenant, but he saw that this, however important as a first step, was
not finally most important.
The moral advantages of proprietorship were great, but the financial advantages to
be gained by the transfer were incomparably less than the advantages to be reaped by
better farming and better marketing. These finally were most important; and while the
Parliamentarian fought for the land, Sir Horace Plunkett set himself to solve the problem
of how to keep a prosperous community on the land which the State had made up its mind
should be transferred from landlord to tenant.
It was natural enough, while the leaders of the people in the land war were trying
to drive hard bargains for the land, they should view with intense dislike any effort to
increase production or profit at the same time. They thought rents and prices would rise
along with profits. They were wrong, as events proved. Rents steadily fell. The
Government which was to finance the transfer was not going to allow any of its agencies
to increase values and its own future financial liabilities. But this was the beginning of an
enmity which has lasted up to the present date. The country wisely tried to get what it
could from both. It has nearly done with land purchase. It will have done with it in a few
more years. We are here in sight of the end.
But the new movement for the organization of agriculture opens up infinitely more
interesting and complex vistas. It is not the work which is done which excites enthusiasm,
but the work which is yet to be done - the long vistas and the yet unfolded close. It is not
what the State has done or can do which inspires, but the infinitely nobler possibilities
which arise through the voluntary co-operation of men to wring from nature and life the
utmost they can give. There are unsuspected possibilities in agricultural organization,
beginnings which I believe will finally evolve into splendid consummations. But to show
clearly what it is I hope for, I will give some account of the true significance of a movement
which is little understood for all its notoriety, and for all the political warfare which has
raged about it.
---------
Chapter V.
The true significance of the movement promoted by Sir Horace Plunkett is that it is
an attempt to build up a new social order in Ireland. A social order of some kind we must
have in rural districts, which will bring men into mutually beneficial relations with each
other, which will create or draw out the highest economic, political and human qualities in
the people, and remind them daily that they are units of a society from which they receive
benefits, and to which their loyalty and affection will naturally flow.
A man is not human in the true sense of the word unless he fits into humanity. A
disorganized society is like a heap of bricks. Bricks may be made, but there is no reason
for their existence unless they are to form part of a building. A social order in rural districts
may take on a great many forms. Every organization makes its own demands on its units;
they get accustomed to it, and character is shaped accordingly. You may have the feudal
system, which prevailed in England for so long, where the owner of broad acres was the
head of his district. It was his hereditary duty to look after the welfare of his tenants, and
they in their turn appealed to him in their troubles; they voted for him and gave him political
power. The feudal system at its best produced good results owing to mutual support.
Noblesse oblige was not without meaning in England.
Another kind of social order existed for long periods in Russia, where land was
placed at the disposal of the village communities. The council of the Mir decided
periodically about its allotment among the members of the commune in proportion to their
families and needs. They grew to recognise no claim to land except that based on the
power of the man and his family to work it; and this system generated its own peculiar
social virtues and ideas of justice, solidarity, and unselfishness. There is the co-operative
system, as we find it in Germany, with associations based on mutual liability, where mutual
trust is engendered based on long experience of each other's character. We have
testimony from many observers to the splendid character created among members of
European communes. Wherever there is mutual aid, wherever there is constant give and
take, wherever the prosperity of the individual depends directly and obviously on the
prosperity of the community about him, there the social order tends to produce fine types
of character, with a devotion to public ideas; and this is the real object of all government.
The forms which a social order may take are many. The best is that which produces
the finest type of human being, with the social or kindly instincts most strongly developed.
The worst thing which can happen to a social community is to have no social order at all,
where every man is for himself and the devil may take the hindmost. Generally in such a
community he takes the front rank as well as the stragglers. The phrase, "Every man for
himself," is one of the maxims in the gospel according to Beelzebub. The devil's game with
men is to divide and conquer them. Isolate your man from obligations to a social order and
in most cases his soul drops into the pit like a rotten apple from the Tree of Life.
Fine character in a race is evolved and not taught. It is not due to copy-book
headings or moral maxims given to the youth of the country. It arises from the structure
of society and the appeal it makes to them. One man in every hundred is a freak, a person
lit up by a lamp from within. He may be a poet, an artist, a saint, a social reformer, a
musician, a politician, a person who has found the law of his own being and acts and wills
from his own centre. As for the other ninety-nine, they are just what the social order makes
them. They would, for the most part, prefer to do what is right, but if it is difficult they will
agree to the wrong. Let one trader in a street adulterate his goods and sell them cheap
and get customers. If unchecked, in five years' time half the traders in his neighbourhood
will be adulterating what they sell in order to compete and live. An experimental test of
honesty was made in Glasgow a couple of years ago by a man who went straight down the
streets and bought butter at every shop. Of fifty-two samples only two were unadulterated.
All the vendors were normal beings simply acting as their neighbours acted. The social
virtues are built up by a social order. With no fine organization of society the ninety and
nine odd persons who have no inner light fall into the pit.
We have not had a social order in Ireland since the time of the clans. Our ancient
aristocracies won their positions by the sword. They drew the sword on behalf of their
clansmen, and the clansmen laboured for the chiefs. The aristocracy which succeeded
them drew their rents on their own behalf, and soon found nobody to support them in
Ireland. The chiefs of the old clans won the right to live on their clansmen by their
readiness to die for their clansmen, and the passionate loyalty of the clansmen to their
chiefs is recorded in many a song and story. Our last aristocracy, for the most part, could
not bear the sight of their tenants, and their tenants shot at them through the hedges when
they got the chance. Ireland has gained nothing in national character by the farce of a
feudal system which existed during the last century. The movement I am writing about is
an attempt to build up a true social order.
A social order should provide for three things, for economic development, for
political stability, and a desirable social life. I will try to show how the co-operative
movement provides for these things, which are truly our most pressing national necessities.
I have already given some account of the disabilities unorganized farmers suffered from
in the profitable pursuit of their industry, how the agricultural interest became, like a
paralytic with no control over his limbs, unable to act powerfully on its own behalf. I am not
going to give any minute description of the various kinds of rural associations promoted by
the Irish Agricultural Organization Society. Nearly everybody is by this time more or less
familiar with the work of creameries, agricultural, poultry, flax, home industry, and credit
societies. The dairy societies have released the farmer from the bondage to the butter
merchant and proprietor, and given back to him the control of the processes of
manufacture and sale.
In the credit societies farmers join together, and, creating by their union a greater
security than any of them could offer individually, they are able to get money to finance
their farming operations at very low rates. The joint stock banks lend money to these
societies on wholesale terms, letting them retail it again among their members. Generally
speaking, it has been found possible to borrow money at from three to four percent, and
to lend it for productive purposes at the popular rate of one penny a month for every pound
employed. The trust auctioneer's methods, the gombeen man's methods, cannot stand
this competition.
The poultry societies collect the eggs of their members, they grade and pack them
properly, and market them through their own agencies. The flax societies erect or hire
scutch mills and see that the important work of scutching the flax is performed with the
requisite care. The agricultural societies purchase seeds, implements, fertilisers, feeding
stuffs, and agricultural requirements for their members. Many of them hold thousands of
pounds worth of machinery too expensive for the individual farmer to buy. The societies
buy their requirements at wholesale prices and insure good quality. The home industries
societies have made hopeful beginnings with lace, crochet, embroidery, and rug-making
to provide work for country girls. About one hundred thousand Irish country people are
already members of co-operative societies, and their trade turn-over this year will be close
on three million pounds. The total trade turn-over of the movement, from its inception to
the present, is over twenty-five million pounds. I mention these figures because the
modern mind is indisposed to attach much importance to social reforms where their
importance cannot be instantly translated into an equivalent in the universally intelligible
language of money.
Now, what is really most interesting in the character of the Irish co-operative
movement is not that its promoters have started associations like those I have mentioned.
All over Europe similiar associations have been in existence for many years. What is really
interesting is the way in which the Irish social reformers are developing and adapting to
Irish needs methods of combination which have long been familiar to Continental farmers.
The societies in Ireland are losing their specialised character, their limitation of objects to
this purpose or that, and are more and more assuming a character which can only be
described by calling them general purposes' societies. The successful dairy society begins
to take up the work of an agricultural, poultry, or credit society in addition to the work for
which the farmers were originally organized in the district. It is gradually absorbing into one
large well-managed association all the rural business connected with agriculture in each
parish. The societies are controlled by committees elected by the members, and in a
decade or so, instead of the dislocation and separation of interests which has been so
disastrous in its effects, instead of innumerable petty businesses all striving for their own
rather than the general welfare, there will be in each parish one large association able to
pay well for expert management, with complete control over all processes of purchase,
manufacture and sale, and run by the farmers with the energy of self-interest.
These district associations are rapidly linking themselves on to large federations for
purchase and sale, which again are controlled by representatives of the societies, and
through these the farmers are able to act powerfully in the market. They become their own
middlemen. All the links between production on the farm and sale to the consumer are
getting connected into one system, and that controlled by the agriculturist. These
societies, their federations, and the I.A.O.S. form the nucleus, and a very strong nucleus,
for a vast farmers' trade union, ready to protect their interests, to help them socially,
politically and economically.
This formation of a farmers' trade union has become absolutely necessary in
modern times. Every industry is organized - engineers, bricklayers, carpenters, dock
hands, masons, boilermakers - all have their trade unions. Run through all the trades; for
every one of them there is a trade union, and we all know what they have done for the
workers. The distributive stores in the towns are trade unions of consumers, which protect
them against middlemen, and sometimes against manufacturers. The trade unions look
after the interests of their members, and all these bodies, as they grow strong and insist
powerfully on their own rights, have a natural tendency to squeeze the unorganized, and
relegate them to the ranks of the sweated.
It has been the action of some of these powerfully organized bodies which has had
much to say to the decay of agriculture. The workers in the towns clamoured for cheap
food. Let it come from anywhere, they must be fed. The manufacturers backed them up
because they knew there were two alternatives to be faced. The purchasing power of
money, its capacity to buy bread and meat, had to be increased, or else wages had to be
raised and profits eaten into. They preferred to increase the purchasing power of money,
and all the business skill and organizing power of Great Britain was used to flood the
market with corn and beef, with fruit, and farm and dairy produce. It mattered not at all to
them that, in the face of this competition, agriculture rotted away outside their own cities,
and that the farmers in distant countries broke up more virgin soil, while at their own doors
the land went back to nature, and the all-conquering grass crept up with its battalions of
thin green spears to the very outskirts of the towns. It was immediately easier to invite the
world to send its supplies of food than it was to develop the natural prodigious food-
producing capacity of the fields about them. The farmers were unorganized. They had no
trade union, no powerful voice to plead in their behalf, and today the deer forests in
Scotland, the game preserves in England, the deserts of grass in Ireland, are gigantic
illustrations of the desolation and decay which falls on the industry when men work alone
and are not united to protect their interests.
By the very nature of agriculture it needs this protection more than any other
industry. It is the basic human occupation. Let it fail, and humanity must disappear, and
the birds of the air and the beasts of the field war for the lordship of the planet. Our
princes and captains of industry, and all they control, the high-built factories and titanic
mills, might all disappear without man disappearing; but cut away man from the fields and
fruits of the earth and in six months there will be silence in the streets, and in half a century
the forests will be butting at London and leaning their shoulders against the houses to
overwhelm them.
Agriculture separates its workers, while the factories and mills bring their workers
together. Because of this isolation of the workers in the field, because each man has his
plot of earth to till, and because he is made more or less solitary, there is all the more need
for organization. Legislatures work their will and enact their laws, and these become part
of the social order, and have the army and police to put them in force long before the
farmer has heard of the law, long before he can make any protest. Markets are occupied
and the ways to them blocked before the unorganized farmer can take action. He is
squeezed out perpetually by the acute business man, and made more and more a hewer
of wood and a drawer of water. The tendency of this oppression is to take the higher, more
intellectual, and more profitable departments of agricultural production out of the farmer's
hands and reduce him to the position of a manual labourer.
It is the natural rebellion of farmers against such a destiny which has brought about
their organization over Europe and their fierce battles with trusts in America. But these
associations, while primarily called into being by the necessity of self-defence, have higher
aims, and the creators of these associations all the world over have ever mingled the idea
of protection with splendid dreams of the building up of a rural civilization. They soon
realised that with the union of men to help each other came the promise and potency of
a progress inconceivable before; that with more economic business methods, with
cheapness in purchase, combination in sale, with science in the farm and dairy, with
expensive machinery co-operatively owned, and with the complete control of their own
industry, farmers could create and retain a communal wealth which could purchase for
them the comforts and some of the luxuries of civilization.
It is no unrealisable dream, but a perfectly practical programme, which offers
farmers, as the result of organization and loyal co-operation with each other, not only
political power and economic prosperity, but also a more intellectual and enjoyable social
life. We will yet see the electric light and the telephone in rural districts, and the village hall
with a pleasant hum of friendship in it. Ireland, while it is a late comer among the nations
into the field, has already developed the most complete programme. The promoters of the
co-operative movement here have thought out a whole system, have made an imaginative
co-ordination of isolated methods of organization, and, profiting by the experience of
Europe, are beginning their ideals where their pioneers concluded theirs. We had greater
need in Ireland to think intensely and passionately on these subjects, because the
Continental nations never neglected agriculture nor treated it with the scornful contempt
and neglect of the English-speaking peoples. We were lucky, too, in Ireland in having a
statesman to guide us in our work, a man who could think round his problem, see three
sides to it, its length, its breadth, its thickness, who wanted better farming, better business,
and better living in Ireland, and knew how all these might be obtained.
The opposition to this work of agricultural organization had its origin in the little
country towns which, for the most part, produce nothing, and are mere social parasites.
Of course there are country towns in Ireland which are manufacturing centres and justify
their existence. We have our linen mills in Ulster, and here and there we come across
towns which produce and create wealth and give employment. But we are forced to ask
ourselves whether most of our Irish country towns really serve the country well? Do they
create any social life for the surrounding rural districts other than that based on the facilities
for a social glass? Do they attract people with any other lure than that one might indicate
by saying, where there is a whiskey bottle in the centre, there half a dozen will gather about
it?
Our small Irish country towns, in their external characteristics, are so arid and
unlovely that one longs for a lodge in some vast wilderness as a relief from the unbearable
meanness. Better look out on boundless sand and boundless sky, on two immensities,
than on these mean and straggling towns, those disreputable public houses, those
uncleansed footways like miry manure yards. For if one has a soul and any love for beauty
he must feel like an anarchist if he strays into an Irish country town, and must long for
bombs to wreck and dynamite to obliterate. If we examine into the internal economy of
these excrescences on the face of nature, we find for the most part they are absolutely
non-productive. They create no wealth, they generate no civic virtues, certainly they
manifest none. They are mainly the channels through which porter and whiskey run from
breweries and distilleries into the human stomach; and whatever trade there is is
distributive only.
There is no intellectual life in them. Hardly a country town has a book-shop. Here
and there you will find a yellow assortment of ancient penny novelettes or song-books in
a window, with the dead flies of yesteryear still unswept from the paper, or a row of
sensational tales in gaudy colours, the sensational tales of twenty years ago, and a few
sixpenny reprints. If this business of reading is to be catered for it ought to be done well.
If we cannot give the best, we had much better have no reading at all. Better the ignorance
of great literature - which left the Gaelic poets centuries ago to their own resources, their
own traditions and folk tales, out of which came songs as natural and sweet as the songs
of the birds - than these dust heaps of cheap prints, without high purpose, and glimmering
all over with the phosphorescence of mental decay. Nearly every country in the world
supplies its own literature except Ireland, whose appetite for reading Irish books would not
supply one single literary man in Ireland with an income sufficient for him to live as
comfortably as a sergeant of Constabulary. Towns ought to be conductors, catching the
lightnings on the human mind and distributing them all around their area. The Irish country
towns only developmental bogs about them.
We have grown so accustomed to these arid patches of humanity that we accept
them in a hopeless kind of way, whereas we should rage and prophesy over them as the
prophets of ancient Israel did over Tyre and Sidon. And, indeed, a lordly magnificence of
wickedness is not so hopeless a thing to contemplate as a dead level of petty iniquity, the
soul's death in life, without ideas or aspirations. The Chaldeans - they who built up the
Tower of Heaven in defiance of Heaven - had so much greatness of soul that the next thing
they might do would be to turn it into a house of prayer; but lives filled with everlasting
littleness fill one with deep despair and madness of heart. We want pioneers of civilization
to go out into our country districts with a divine passion in them, the desire of the God-
implanted spirit, to make the world about them into some likeness of the Kingdom of Light.
There are no barriers in our way except ourselves and our own supineness. The
men in any rural district, united together, could make the land they live in as lovely to look
on as the fabled gardens in the valley of Damascus. They could have fruit trees along the
hedgerows, and make the country roads beautiful with colour in spring. This has been
done in many a rural commune on the Continent, and there is no reason why it should not
be done here. Only let us get our men together, get them organized, and one improvement
will rapidly follow another. For all great deeds by races, all civilizations, were built up by
the voluntary efforts of men united together. Sometimes one feels as if there were some
higher mind in humanity which could not act through individuals, but only through
brotherhoods and groups of men. Anyhow, the civilization which is based on individualism
is mean, and the civilization based upon great guilds, fraternities, communes and
associations is of a higher order. If we are to have any rural civilization in Ireland it must
spring out of co-operation.
I have shown, I hope clearly, within the limits of the space at my disposal, how the
organization of the farmers in societies and federations enables the will of the rural
population to have free play with its own problems, as the will of a healthy man directs the
motions of the body, and he is enabled to perform efficiently his work in the world. The co-
operative movement is an organization of the rural interests to enable it to meet the
organization of the urban interests; but, lest it should be supposed that this concentration
of rural energies would adversely affect the towns, I will deal with this question later, and
also show how agricultural organization provides a solution for many national problems
which are a cause of deep anxiety to those whose interests in life are not exhausted by the
solution of their personal problems, but who also think of the destinies of the nation to
which they belong.
-------------
Chapter VI.
I have heard people speak as if the organization movement had decreed capital
punishment to the country towns. The moderate mind has so little power nowadays that
men support legislation and movements as if to win meant the winning of the earthly
Paradise at once, and defeat meant instant lapsing back into the ape and tiger. So some
angry townsmen hear of the spread of co-operation among the farmers as if they were
hearing of the march of armed barbarians on their city.
But it is easy to show that the organization of the farmers will not injuriously affect
urban life in Ireland, and that country towns will not disappear. They will dwindle here and
emerge there, and will adjust themselves to the new conditions, and will prosper on the
whole. No human institutions are permanent. Babylon and Nineveh are heaps of ruins,
and Tyre and Sidon are buried deep out of sight. They were centres of a little swirl of
things in their time, and the caravans met there, and the dark-skinned merchants unrolled
their bales in their markets. They were prophesied against because they did not fulfil the
law, and they are only memories. I have prophesied against many Irish country towns for
this sin in them, that they do not produce. As a man who creates nothing sinks into poverty
and oblivion, so the town which creates no wealth only exists as a burden on the
community, and it is bound to disappear. It may have its uses for a time as a centre of
distribution, but if this work can be better done otherwise it has no claims, economic or
social, on the community, and it must vanish, and the country will be the richer for its
vanishing and will lose nothing, for the productive industries will gain and the population
engaged in productive work will increase. But the idea that agricultural co-operation carried
to its uttermost would destroy urban life in this country is a nightmare based on no
economic fact.
If we take Denmark, a typical co-operative country, with endless dairy and
agricultural societies, bacon factories and rural stores, we find the towns are flourishing,
and it is one of the few countries in the old world, perhaps the only one, which has not only
retained but increased its rural population. A country must first of all safeguard its
producers. It depends absolutely on them to create wealth, and they must be allowed to
create it under the best possible conditions they can devise. I do not think it will seriously
be disputed that the main concern of a nation should be for its productive classes. In the
families of the poor the wage-earner has first of all to be kept in health. If he gets ill, then
the family is lost. No matter how others in the family are pinched, the wage-earner must
be maintained in sufficient health and strength to do his work. The family recognize this.
The nation has yet to recognize it, or we should not have had such serious acceptance
here for the last fifteen years of the complaints about the organization of the farmers
affecting distributors injuriously, as if the interests of the wealth-producers were to be set
aside and their progress hindered, and their operations limited to maintain undisturbed a
class which produces nothing at all, not one solitary sixpence to add to the wealth of the
nation.
There are two kinds of towns, the town which exists because it is a centre of
production, and the town which exists because it is a centre of distribution. The first kind
creates wealth, and its decay is a national loss. If new and more economic methods of
distribution cause the town of distributors to decay it is a national gain. I do not see how
any action or inaction on the part of farmers is to prevent the decay of such towns if they
depend solely on their distributive trade. Anyhow some rows of licensed premises, with
a few men spitting at the corners, do not constitute a civilization whose lapsing Ireland
need lament over with too exquisite a pain. Agricultural co-operation helps the productive
urban centres because, as a result of better rural production, there is more wealth in the
country, more economic purchase and greater consumption. Whatever benefits production
increases consumption. Our makers of artificial fertilizers will admit that farmers are better
buyers of fertilizers since they cheapened the cost to themselves by co-operative
purchase. The makers of dairy machinery, steam threshers and other expensive
implements, have found a market among the organized farmers which they had not
previously found among the unorganized. The society is a better and larger buyer than the
individuals who compose it. Good production in the country stimulates production in the
cities.
The farmers and manufacturers are the wealth-creators in a nation, and the system
which most benefits these must be the best system. No Irish town where there is effective
production will suffer by agricultural co-operation carried to its uttermost limits. It will gain
by having a better market for what it produces. As for the towns which depend solely on
distribution, I think they are bound to dwindle. We cannot stay the progress of a nation or
stereotype present conditions simply to enable every person engaged in distributive trade
to preserve his present income.
National progress is not so effected. If the country gains on the whole, and gains
greatly, the new developments will absorb the workers in the dwindling centres. We need
not lament over them. These non-productive country towns cannot hope to remain for ever
as they are, any more than the ground where the Bedouins pitched their tents for a night
can hope to have the hum of human life above it, and the tread of feet upon it for ever. Life
is a flux, and commercial conditions never remain steadfast. Populations are always
shifting, and change from centre to centre as the lndians who move from hunting-ground
to hunting-ground. The world is like a pot of water which is quiet every now and then until
somebody throws something into it and the water begins to effervesce. With the invention
of railways and the cheapening of transport the old quiet has gone, the world has become
like a boiling pot, and it is going to boil more and more, and not the remotest village can
hope to escape the commotion. Everything is going to be melted down and cast into new
shapes.
There will always be plenty of opportunities for the enterprising commercial
individualist to make money in a prosperous productive community. It is not the producers
who should adapt themselves to the middle agencies, but the middle agencies to the
needs of the producers. The most important factor in securing continued national
prosperity is the power of adaptability among the productive classes. Hard and fast lines,
restrictions on trade methods, will soon make a country drop behind. The power to
continuously adjust production to the needs of the market is one of the greatest
advantages of association among farmers. If middle-men are to survive they must adjust
themselves to the producers, and not try to make the continuance of present conditions the
dominating purpose in Irish rural politics.
It may be said we are hoping to substitute an agricultural ascendency for the urban
ascendency; which dominates politics in these islands, that the organized farmers will
increase the cost of living to the townsman, that food prices are already steadily rising, and
will rise still more owing to the creation of an agricultural trust. It is true food prices are
rising, and will rise still more; but the cause of this is due to the neglect of rural life and the
concentration of wealth, intelligence, civilization and political power in the cities, with the
natural result of a rural exodus. The country people have flocked to the centres of life.
There are ever more and more people engaged in urban industries, and fewer in proportion
in rural production. This is the main cause of the rise in food prices, and there will be no
fall until the countryside is organized and the life there made sufficiently attractive for it to
retain its population and restore the balance. I do not think there is any real danger of the
farmer gaining an ascendency; but even if there were, would it not be better tor humanity
than an urban ascendency? Between a choice of terrors, between a ruined countryside
and a hungry city, who would hesitate? I certainly would make my choice for the hungry
city. When the city is hungry the farmer will produce, and nature will get some of her
children back to her breast and will nourish them, and there will be a strong healthy
population there. But if we declare for the ruined countryside, as England has done, the
prosperity of the towns will be only momentary and life will rot away.
England at present, owing to her neglected rural life, is like a woman exhausted by
long child-bearing, and it can no longer send up to the cities the stream of sturdy rustics
who vitalized its industries for nigh a century. Its city populations grew more and more
feeble, less dependent on themselves and more dependent on the State. I prophesy a rise
in food prices, and, hard as it is, I see in this inevitable rise the chance for the prosperity
of the countryside, and the tilling of the land, and the discomfiture of the grass, and the re-
population of the wilderness, and the reflushing of the veins of humanity with the old divine
vigour got from sun and air, and the smell of the earth and rural labour. Nature, or the
powers who are guardians of humanity, never allow life to stray permanently or hopelessly
from the natural order: and if men will not live the natural life, then with pestilence and
famine in the cities they are scourged back, even as in the parable those who would not
willingly come to the banquet were caught by an iron hand in the highways and forced to
come in. The messengers are already departing on their mission, and those who are
young today will see, before they are middle-aged, the way in which nature guides her
children and keeps them from straying long in paths dangerous to life. Nature has no
intention of allowing her divine brood, made in the image of Deity, to dwindle away into a
crew of little, feeble, feverish city folk. She has other and more grandiose futures before
humanity if ancient prophecy and our deepest, most spiritual, intuitions have any truth in
them.
----------
Chapter VII.
I have already said that a social order ought to provide not only for economic
development, but for political stability. One would have imagined that the advantages of
an organized agriculture to the nation and its bearing on political life would have been
obvious, but it is strange to find politicians still denouncing the co-operative movement as
anti-national. It is hard to know what they mean by a nation. Our Irish politicians have
attacked or held aloof from every non-political movement which showed signs of vitality.
They have denounced the co-operative movement, held sulkily apart from the Gaelic
revival, and the Industrial Development Associations owe nothing to them. Yet they
profess to act and speak in the name of the nation. What is a nation? It is a single yet
multitudinous being, giving evidences of unity and individual character by the power of
growth from within which it manifests. Its people must show signs of individual life and the
power of growth and movement. A race whose people do not manifest in infinite variety
their power to take united action, to evolve their own ideals of society, culture, and industry,
has no right to call itself a nation at all.
Now, the curious thing about Ireland, when one comes to examine the movements
among its people today, is that the only movements which exhibit the signs of life which
can be fixed upon as evidence of nationality, that is, the power of growth from within, the
power of evolving special ideals of culture, industry and society, are movements which the
politicians denounce or ignore, and which are non-political. The co-operative movement,
the Gaelic League, and the Industrial Development Associations are the only bodies in
Ireland which have evolved ideals of industry, culture, and a social order of their own,
which are Irish. They are creative movements, and apart from them there is actually no
evidence of any kind to prove Ireland is a nationality, a living entity with the power of growth
from within. Other Irishmen cry out for nationality, but these bodies manifest life
themselves. They conform to the biological test of life. The biologist, exploring on the
border-ground between organic and inorganic things, had to fix some test of life, and the
test of life in an organism he has fixed as its power to take up protoplasm, the physical
basis of life, and to change it into living tissue. What life is in itself he does not know, but
an organism is living which can take up the substances which are the physical basis of life
and transform them and use them to build up its own being.
These three movements I have mentioned found Irish people exhibiting in Ireland
no signs of organic life. They found, amid all its changes and political turmoil, that Ireland
had evolved no culture of its own, no social order of its own, that its industrial life was
perishing, and national production was at its lowest ebb. These three movements showed
all the signs of life, and communicated it to the Irish people. They took up the unorganized
Irishman, the undifferentiated protoplasm of nationality, and growth began immediately.
The co-operative movement, with nearly a thousand branches of farmers engaged in
productive co-operation, the Gaelic League, with its ideals of a national culture, the
Industrial Development Associations imparting energy to the manufacturer and leading to
the creation of new factories and mills; these bodies, with their productive and creative
ideals, offer the only evidence Ireland can show of distinct national activity manifesting
itself in works and not in talk. I do not call the actions of our one hundred and two
members of Parliament a sign of national activity. I do call the energetic life displayed by
hundreds of thousands of Irishmen in these three movements a true symptom of national
activity, and if our politicians knew their business they would use the work of these bodies
as their best arguments for the granting of their political ideal. They would refer to them
with pride instead of denouncing them or holding sulkily aloof. Apart from these three
movements, which are non-political, no evidence can be offered that there is in Ireland a
national entity, a race bursting with possibilities of life, evolving new ideals, creating a new
structure of society, new industries, and a new national culture.
I do not know what our politicians think, but they act as if they thought that, given
a constitution and the power of self-government, any group of people may become a
nation, and nothing more is required. Wessex, if given a constitution and self-government,
would become a nation. So will Ireland become a nation, and all will go well with us ever
afterwards. Our unstable national life will become stable. But I think it can be shown that
political stability is not really maintained by any kind of constitution. Those who place their
trust in an aristocracy, a bureaucracy or a democratic system of government, as a means
of insuring national stability, are fetish worshipers.
There are deeps below a constitution where national wisdom or national folly are
generated among the people. It is the character of the social order and its effect on the
daily lives of men and women in a country that we must look into if we are to prophesy
political stability or chronic disorder. It has been said that the model of the pyramid was
the tent of the herdsman, that the wooden hut of the early Greek found a majestic
development in the Parthenon, and that the beauty of Gothic cathedrals recreated the
mystery and gloom always about a people living in the forests. The forms that a race has
around it in its infancy are not forgotten but are carried on with it, exalted and expanded
in its day of national grandeur. Tell me how people work and live in the parishes today,
and I will tell you how in the next generation the councillors of the nation will act and think.
If we have in the country parishes of Ireland a host of unorganized peasant proprietors,
each pushing at trivial agricultural business, each acting alone and never in union with his
neighbours, the energy of self-interest in its lower forms will become the predominant
energy, and this will overflow into rural and county councils, and we shall have frequent
jobbery; and in the region of national politics we shall have the conflict of personalities,
rather than the pursuit of public interests.
We have seen all this in our own time, and we know the cause. For good or ill we
are committed to democracy in Ireland. I, for one, believe that democracy will be finally
justified, even if it has to pass through cycles of anarchy to its justification. Every man has
in him a spark of divinity, and with its bursting into flame, with the discovery of the law of
his own being, kingships and overlordships must disappear. But because we believe in far
off divine events we need not disguise from ourselves the fact that democracy today stands
in peril of change into anarchy. A few more social disorders, a national strike, and there
may be a ruddy laying of the democratic dust.
The great problem before democracy is the evolution of a social order which will
ensure, so far as anything human can be ensured, that the democracy will put forward its
best thinkers, its wisest men of affairs, and that it will develop a respect for the man of
special and expert knowledge. Unless the aristocracy of character and mind replace the
demagogue, whose only talent is his fluency on a platform, and the skill with which he
echoes back to an ignorant crowd the prejudices which populate the otherwise emptiness
of their skulls, our democratic systems of today will be no exception to the ancient law or
cycle of political change formulated by Aristotle. Home Rule will not give us in Ireland any
more sagacious politicians than the Union gave us, unless we have a social order which
will educate the people in the choice of representatives. Every people get the kind of
politicians they deserve, and we must organize the nation so that the people may be more
deserving of, and more discerning of, better qualities in their public representatives than
they are at present.
Unorganized individualism in a country where the small farmers who read little or
nothing form a majority of the population will never lead to this knowledge. The promoters
of the organization of agriculture in Ireland are trying to create in every parish associations
of men to help each other and to do their business together. These associations demand
for their success men of scientific knowledge and business capacity at their head. As the
prosperity of the individual in the association depends largely on the success of the
communal enterprise, he rapidly develops public spirit and a desire for good leadership,
and for the public welfare in which his own is implicated. These qualities in the parishes
will become national attributes. They will permeate local government and national
assemblies, and will bring about political stability and sanity and good government. These
qualities can never be engendered by an unorganized rural community weltering in an
anarchy of individual effort, unable, not having experience of them, to appreciate great
qualities of mind or character or the value of special knowledge in affairs. The parish is the
cradle of the nation, and, as the song in the ears of the child and the intonation of tender
voices and the motion of kindly hands mould mind and spirit and are remembered in age,
so the character of the life in our rural communities and the relations men and women
there have one to another, enlarged and flung gigantically upon the screen, will be the
character of the race as shown in Its legislature and councils and public decrees. If we can
so remodel Irish country life by our associations that the success of the individual will
depend on the success of the community, we will develop economic knowledge, sanity of
judgment, and generate a public spirit which will grow upwards, dominate the whole social
organism, and act mightily in whatever legislature destiny may have in store for us.
-----------
Chapter VIII.
We have been much more concerned in Ireland with the evolution of a system of
government than the evolution of a social order. We have clamoured for the beneficent
state, when we should have devoted far more energy towards the creation of the intelligent
citizen. Our political movements, which required an army of drilled voters, unanimous and
thinking alike, destroyed national character and individuality. Our non-political movements,
like the rural life movement and the Gaelic revival, which required, above all things,
individual effort and personal initiative, developed national character and intelligence. No
wonder there was a conflict between the political and non-political movements. Irishmen
were expected by the first to give up thinking for themselves and trust their leaders; and
were required by the second, above all things, to act and think for themselves.
A good many years ago I remember reading a book entitled "Concepts of Modern
Physics." The author explained the ideas held by different groups of scientists about the
atom. For one group it was absolutely necessary to imagine the atom as hard, and they
worked on that hypothesis. But another group of scientists, chemists, if I remember aright,
held that the atom was elastic. They could not work except on that hypothesis. A third
group held that the atom did not exist at all, but what was so supposed was only a vortex
in the ether. The Irishman, for the Nationalist politician, had to be hard and unchanging
as the atom of the physicist, or success could not be guaranteed in the political
phenomena he was trying to bring about. For the purposes of the new non-political
movements the Irishman had to be elastic, capable of change and adjustment, or Ireland
could have no future. It is a temptation to add that to the Unionist there were no Irishmen
at all, but only vortices in the political ether. Stallo, in his book, pleaded for a more
metaphysical treatment of the problems of science. He pointed out that the atom could not
be hard at the command of the physicist, elastic at the command of the chemist, and be
non-existent or a mere vortex in the ether to suit Lord Kelvin.
I plead for a more metaphysical consideration of the Irish atom. I would like to
believe all three theories, and think it is not inconsistent to hold them all. I find it hard to
understand Irish history unless there is an incorruptible and unchangeable atom of
nationality in the Irish soul, and I am glad of it. I believe in an elastic mental sphere about
it capable of adjustment and change, and am glad of it, otherwise Ireland would be
incapable of progress or expansion, and would be a dead sea of humanity. I believe in the
eternal relation of the individual soul to the soul of humanity, and that the vortex theory of
the soul - that it is a centre of motion in a continuous divine element - is true, and this will
finally lead us and all other races to the federation of the world.
I understand and sympathise with the fixed passion of the politician for his theory
of an Irish State, but I do not believe he will gain the results he hopes for unless his State
is composed of people who may truly be called citizens; and citizenship in the true sense
is created much more by the non-political movements than by the political movements in
our time. The highest developments of humanity, of civic and patriotic life the world has
known, have been in the small states, in communities no larger than Sligo. The sense of
solidarity is not begotten by people all belonging to one large nation or great empire; but
by union in local enterprises where a personal relationship can exist between the workers,
and where success in labour promotes pride, and responsibilty is provocative of thought,
and experience in control generates wisdom, and we have the intensive cultivation of
business ability and intelligence. The fondest memories of the intellectual man turn back
to Attica, Sparta, the Dorians, Florence, Venice, and the long list of small nations with great
achievements. There was intensive cultivation of humanity. Men were truly citizens in
most of these small communities, and discharged their duties to the community by
personal service, counsel, and speech, and not in our modern fashion by a vote once in
five or six years, which is the destruction of true citizenship and of the sense of
responsibility, and the begetting of bureaucracies.
To the ancient Greeks, as Mr. Lowes Dickenson says in "The Greek View of Life,"
our modern society would have appeared as a mere congeries of unsatisfactory human
beings, held together partly by political and partly by economic compulsion, but "lacking
that conscious identity of interest with the community to which they belong which alone
constitutes the citizen." It is, of course, impossible for every citizen to sit and speak at
Westminster or College Green, and we cannot have the spirit of true citizenship developed
to any extent in these days by participation in political life. Citizenship must be made a
reality by other means in the modem world, and I will try to show how it can be made a
reality.
The Greeks developed the sense of citizenship by political means, and, because
their states were very small, it was easy to kindle that conscious identity of interest with the
community which draws out the best in man and dedicates it to the service of the State.
A man who has the power of one vote among millions of votes, a power which he exercises
once in five or six years, soon loses all consciousness of identity of interest with a
community too vast and complex for his understanding, and which often in its workings
reduces him to poverty. By political means we can now create in but a very few people that
conscious identity of interest. Our co-operative associations in Ireland, gathering more and
more into themselves the activities connected with production, consumption, and
distribution, and even the social activities, as they grow more comprehensive in their aims,
make the individual more conscious year by year that his interests are identical with the
interests of the community. If it succeeds he shares in its prosperity; and it is this spirit of
mutual interdependence and comradeship in life, continually generated and maintained
and inbred into the people, which is the foundation on which a great State, a great
humanity, a beautiful civilization, can be built. The co-operative associations, properly
constituted and organized, alone in modern times are capable of creating this spirit.
Individualism in life or business can never create it.
I never felt, so far, in any exposition of State Socialism which I have come across,
that the writers had any understanding of social psychology, or by what means life may
react on life so as to evoke brotherhood and public spirit. Understanding of economics
apart from life there often was, and a passion for a mechanical justice, but I, at least,
always feel that humanity under State control would be in a cul de sac. But it is quite
possible to create without revolution, and by an orderly evolution of society within the State,
not controlled by the State, but finally controlling its necessary activities, a number of free
associations of workers and producers which, in the country, would have the character of
small nations, and in the towns, of the ancient guilds, which would, I believe, produce more
beauty, happiness and comfort than the gigantic mediocrity which always is the result of
State activity.
The Co-operative Commonwealth is the fourth alternative to State Socialism, the
Servile State, or our present industrial anarchy; and Irishmen must make up their minds
which of the four alternatives they prefer. They will be driven by the forces working in
society to one or other of these courses. If capital wins we shall have the Servile State,
and an immeasurable bureaucracy to keep the populace in order. If State Socialism wins
humanity will have placed all its hopes on one system, and genius, temperament, passion,
all the infinite variety of human life, will be constrained by one policy. Our present system
is anarchic and inhuman, and the world is hurrying away from it with digust. The Co-
operative Commonwealth alone of all these systems allows freedom and solidarity. It
allows for personal genius and unhampered local initiative. It develops a true sense of
citizenship among its members. Whatever alternative Irishmen choose to promote they
should think long and dispassionately on the prospects for humanity which each offers, and
consider well their varying political, social, and economic possibilities. I have suggested
briefly some of the economic and political considerations arising out of agricultural co-
operation in Ireland, and will turn to consider the social or more human side of Sir Horace
Plunkett's movement.
----------
Chapter IX.
The object of all religion, art, literature and economics is the creation of perfect
human beings. Religion aims at making the perfect human being by acting on man's
spiritual nature. Art aims at making the perfect human being by acting on his aesthetic
nature; literature by acting on his intellectual nature; while economics aims at perfecting
humanity by using material means and agencies. We can only justify our existence as a
nation by trying to produce human beings in Ireland as nearly perfect as all the agencies
we control can make them. We are all like lost sheep when we forget this central truth, and
make art, literature, economics, or nationality an end in themselves. If our new rural
communities existed solely for the production of wealth, and had no higher aims, they
would deserve all the abuse they have received. But they help not only in the evolution of
the economic man and the citizen, but in the evolution of a more kindly human society.
The individualist is like a bee trying to amass honey apart from the hive.
Wordsworth described man as a creature moving about in worlds not realized, but he could
be better described as a creature moving about who does not realize himself. The
primitive man with his stone hatchet as implement of slaughter, and his cave dwelling as
home, was bursting with unrealized possibilities, and must have been unhappy, just as a
young man of genius intended by nature to be a poet is unhappy if he has to live behind
a grocer's counter. The primitive man had within his hairy skull the germs of Plato's
philosophy, of Dante's ecstasy, and of Whitman's humanity. He has since partially realized
that he is an intellectual being; but he has not realized that he is a social being, and he is
still unhappy. He has developed his stone hatchet, an early anti-social implement of
slaughter, into thirteen-inch guns, and Dreadnoughts and bomb-dropping airships; and has
increased his anti-social, that is, his anti-human propensities, and because he is anti-
human he is against himself, against the law of his own being, and has no real happiness.
Humanity today is pregnant with unrealized social possibilities even as the primitive
savage was bursting with intellectual possibilities, with unbuilt BabyIons, unsung epics,
uncarven divine Pheidian forms, and mighty machines of war and peace. But man still
remains unhappy because he has not realized that at the root of his being is not intellect
or power, but feeling and affection. Men pass each other with cold eyes, with no thrill of
pleasure in looking on a fellow being. They have not realized that these other beings
whom they pass with blank eyes are as necessary to their spiritual happiness and
completeness as a warm bed and meals are to their physical comfort. The co-operative
community not only provides for economic development and political stability, but leads its
members to discover themselves as social beings. The saving or making of money by co-
operative means are excellent lures drawing man away from his sulky isolation and miserly
doling out of his humanity to himself and his family alone. After half a century of rural co-
operation Irish people will have realized that primarily they are social beings moved by the
affections, that they are incomplete by themselves, and that life is only complete and full
when there is comradeship in labour and recreation.
How much Ireland needs to make this discovery, how much it needs the passion for
humanity, we are just beginning to find out. The children attending country schools are
badly fed. We allow the State to imprison them for long hours and starve their bodies
under the vain pretence of filling up the empty space with mind. Our lunatic asylums are
full, and our standard of living is lower than that in almost any European country. During
long centuries the voice of woman has rarely been heard in Ireland. Our history is a
monotonous record of man's deeds and misdeeds, of man's ideals and passions; and
women, the cherishers of life, have been neglected, and their special needs ignored, and,
in rural districts especially, the hard lot of the women on the farm has turned many a young
girl's heart to the cities of the New World.
A young Irish girl as she grows up today on an Irish farm receives a better literary
education than her mother received. It is an education which tends to make her more
fastidious. Her horizons are wider than her mother's were. She is better able to make
comparisons between the lot of a small farmer's wife in Ireland, and the lot of women in
other countries. There is hardly an Irish country girl who has not girl friends or sisters in
America; and letters from the new world are read and discussed in every parish in Ireland.
Now and then one hears the drift of these confidential documents; and comparisons of a
woman's lot in the States, either as a domestic help, or as the wife of a prosperous worker
there, are continually being made.
An Irish girl sees how hard her mother's lot is. The mother cooks for the household.
She does its washing. She mends and often makes its clothes. She sweats over the
churn. She feeds the calves, the pigs and the poultry. But it is not all household work.
She often labours in the fields. She assists in the heavy toil of binding corn. She helps in
the haymaking. She attends the threshing machine. She weeds the fields. She thins the
turnips. She picks the potatoes, and lifts the root crops. The life of the small farmer's wife
is a life of continual labour indoors and out of doors. Many a young Irish girl must have
looked on the wrinkled face and bent back and rheumatic limbs of her mother, and grown
maddened in a sudden passion at the thought that her own fresh young life might end just
like this, and must have made up her mind that life on an Irish farm was no life for her. The
new world is a lure to draw her on, and the nightmare thought of a life spent in exhausting
toil on the land impels her from behind. We cannot say how many young Irishwomen leave
rural Ireland from just such motives. I know a great many do.
We must make up our minds that these conditions, these emotions and feelings, lie
behind a great deal of Irish emigration before we discuss remedies. Unless Ireland
realizes it is losing a great part of its population for just such reasons it will never attempt
to solve the problem, or think about remedies. It is futile to say that if Irishmen get what
they want Irish-women will have their problems solved at the same time. The disabilities
attaching to the life of an Irish countrywoman will remain unaffected by changes of
government. They seem almost to be an inseparable and eternal part of woman's lot as
wife of a small farmer. But are they inseparable? If we answer that they are, I am certain
that the migration of women from the land will continue and even increase. It is a period
of awakening intensified self-consciousness for women. Women's rights are everywhere
being discussed. They are comparing their share of the world with man's, and are growing
more and more dissatisfied. In Ireland they rarely go on platforms, or form trade unions,
or press for legislation. Irishwomen as a rule are not politically minded. They do not press
for entry into every occupation that man is engaged in. Irish women have already been
employed like men on the land, and do not like it. They want a more womanly and not a
less womanly life, so they do not go on platforms, but pack up their trunks and silently slip
away.
------------
Chapter X.
It may be irritating to many people to have questions like these raised at a time
when Irish publicists are trying to simplify Irish problems even to imbecility, and to present
a united front in denouncing one evil as the cause of every Irish misfortune, and in
advertising one remedy as all-sufficient to cure them. Life is more complicated than that.
If my diagnosis of a disease in Irish rural life has any truth in it, as I believe it has, the
treatment of it will necessitate a two-fold change in Irish country life, a change in business
and technical methods, and a change in social temper. The co-operative associations,
which substituted the steam separator and the centralizing methods of butter-making for
the home churn over which so many hard-worked wives laboured, indicated the right
direction. The introduction of labour-saving machinery by associations of farmers, and the
hiring of it out to their members, will do much to lessen severe physical labour on the part
of their wives. The change in agricultural economy must be accompanied by a change in
social temper, and our associated farmers must realise that life is not merely concerned
with production, sale, or purchase; and that on them devolves the grand labour of building
up a rural civilization, impelled thereto by a profounder humanity and greater sympathy and
consideration for the weaker sex.
The unsocial isolation of farmers in so many country districts, which is foreign to
Irish, indeed to any human nature, must be broken up. The erection of village halls, which
is going on apace over Ireland, will help in this, and these halls must not be kept, indeed
are not kept, only for the use of men. Something corresponding to the mothers' meetings
or social gatherings of the Granges in the States must be set in motion here, so that
women may meet and discuss their own problems, and educate and encourage each
other, and be emboldened by their union to create public opinion in order that reforms may
be carried out. We know that young girls are going away from the farm, from a life which
offers them little. The State is educating them to greater sensitiveness and fastidiousness.
Their horizons are being widened. They make comparisons between here and there.
They sigh as they look at their mothers, and they decide against rural life; they slip away.
And human life is a chain. People are strung unto each other as link unto link.
Where one goes another goes. The old life has little or no power to hold them. It will
depend greatly upon the efforts of a new Irish organization, the United Irishwomen, the
feminine counterpart of the Irish Agricultural Organization Society, in some sense an
offshoot of it, and certainly an ally, whether these conditions can be altered. The advent
of this organization, whose objects are to unite Irishwomen for the social and economic
advantage of Ireland, is one of the most significant events of recent years.
Quietly into the national life of Ireland womanhood has come with its new standard
of values, testing all things as women do by their worth to humanity. Men are for ever
adventuring with hungry minds; women are for ever brooding with hungry hearts over life.
Men are at once abstract and gross, and the poles of their nature are more apart than a
woman's. Men can dream of heavens and principalities and powers and yet be beasts,
and between their abstract ideals and their gross occupations lies a desert where life has
been neglected in Ireland; and that has been because the voice of women, the cherisher
of life above all things, has been unheard in the national councils. What women, the best
women, are concerned with is the character of life. They love strength, health, vitality,
kindness. They desire to see the comfortable home, the strong man coming in and out,
great sons and the laughter and roundness of well-nourished children. Women are the
preservers of life, and because they have had no organized life or union of their own,
because they were unable to make known their desires and needs, life has decayed in
Ireland. The conditions under which children are taught in the schools, the labour of long
hours without sufficient food or none at all, thrust upon very young children whose
attendance is enforced by the State; the neglect of sanitation, the carelessness of the
conveniences of life shown in the construction of cottages at long distances from a water
supply; all these things, the effect of which is to enfeeble and impoverish life, have come
about because men in Ireland have set about the business of the nation without taking
women into their councils, women having had no national organization of their own which
ranged over the whole field of women's work, which would have given their opinions
weight, and forced recognition of them on public bodies and the legislature. This lack of
organization the United Irishwomen will meet. Their aim is "to resurrect the countryside
which the blindness and passions of men have left barren and joyless."
They wish to work with the co-operative associations and to use them wherever it
is possible. It is pleasant indeed to find the committees of societies extending their usual
operations to become agents for women's work, trying to relieve the skilled women workers
from their servitude to agents, almost always local traders, who, if they do not directly
violate the provisions of the Truck Act, give out no work unless they are certain the money
will come back to their own tills. The beginnings of this comradeship in national effort
between men and women will, I think, be recognized by future historians as marking a most
important psychological change in our national character.
With women's organizations spread over Ireland, working on the home, the garden,
the poultry yard, the schools, and making their opinions felt on public boards and the
organizations of men, Irish life will be sweetened and humanized. They will bring into
Ireland the desire for beauty and comfort which are the beginnings of civilization. They will
bring home to the long drugged and long dulled national conscience that the right aim of
a nation is the creation of fine human beings, and not merely the production of national
wealth. Women, however they may err as individuals, are concerned collectively far more
than men about the character and well-being of a race. It is a divinely-implanted instinct
with them, and this instinct must be liberated and let work its will. Owing to our unsanitary
civilization, with its unhealthy rural slums and its crowded city slums, we have become so
unhealthy and ugly, so distorted from the divine image, that beautiful women and shapely
men who ought to be normal are abnormal. All the strings of our being are frayed or
flaccid, or hanging loose, or are too tight, and there is no health in us; and rarely, rarely
do our eyes light up at a beautiful and healthy human being with the perfect modeling and
sweet curves which denote perfect health. Most men and women do not know what it is
to meet a perfectly healthy human being, or the delight perfect health is to the possessor
of it or to the onlooker. Not knowing what it is they do not look for it.
I would like to select half a dozen people of both sexes, beautiful and healthy
persons, and exhibit them in every village in Ireland, and have them lectured on somewhat
as follows: "This is what you have to aim at in bringing up your children. To aspire to have
a nation of people like these is the right aspiration of a great nationality. Its aim ought to
be to beget 'youths, beautiful, gigantic, and sweet-blooded,' and their counterpart in comely
and robust women. To this end should be all your co-operation, dairying, tillage, and
harvesting. It is to this end you should labour and make sacrifices. But if you scrape and
save to leave money to your children after you die instead of giving them illuminated minds
and healthy bodies, you are damnably bad parents, enemies of your race, and of the
human race. Look now at some normal healthy men and women. See how they bear
God's image on them. Somewhat like this was humanity formed by Deity. If you lose the
divine image, and deface it or forget it in money-making and money-grubbing, you are in
rebellion against God, and are enemies of humanity." This may sound fantastical, but
humanity has strayed so far from its divine original and all that it signifies; we have lost,
so many of us, the primal blessings of youth, ecstasy, and beauty, we may yet have to
rouse a shrivelled and hideous humanity to its own ideal by methods like these.
Humanity has been gradually losing vision of the spirit. It may even lose vision of
the form. We have been teaching people to be everything except human beings. We are
shaping them as farmers, as traders, labourers, factory hands, but not so as to be human
in any sense that we might take pride in the thought. Our sole hope in this respect is in the
new women's movement. It may fill up, it desires to fill up, our chilly scheme of rural life
with humanity; to drape the bare walls and outlines with comfortable feminine inventions,
and enrich the national consciousness, and give a new stimulus to those engaged in the
long and often disheartening labour of building up a rural civilization in Ireland. The highest
types of men have endeavoured from time immemorial to bring heaven down to earth.
This has been the aim of the long line of prophets, saints, seers, religious teachers, and
idealists. The highest types of womanhood have always tried to lift earth to heaven. The
work of both is necessary. The stalagmite rising from the floor meets the stalactite
descending from the roof of the divine cavern, and the one ascends and the other
descends until the pillar is joined. This image may symbolize the tendency of all fine
masculine ideals and of all fine womanly desires. The best augury of the future of the
country life movement in Ireland is the friendly comradeship of these organizations of men
and women, each bringing their own special faculties and qualities to the work of building
up a rural civilization.
------------
Chapter XI.
The greatest danger the new rural organizations have to face is interference from
the State, straddling quite across the path like Apollyon in Bunyan's tale. When the
reaction against laissez-faire set in, students of political psychology felt it would be severe.
For over half a century the State refused to interfere with the evolution of society. But
anybody who had studied history and science, and had observed how action and reaction
are equal, could have foretold that the policy of letting things alone would have been
followed by the policy of letting nothing alone. The State would endeavour to interfere with
everything, dominate everything, and break up every organization of the people which
threatened effective opposition to, or control over, the actions of the Mandarins. The
Servile State, whose swift coming Mr. Hilaire Belloc deplores, seems to be the objective
of the ruling and official classes. The official idea of an earthly paradise seems to be to
have rows of electrical buttons all round the official armchair, so that when one of these
buttons is touched whole battalions of people can be set in motion. All the children of the
State would go to school at a certain hour, and the Mandarin will pride himself on knowing
at any particular moment what each child in every part of the country is being taught.
Another button is touched, an order issued, and an industry marshals itself in response to
official wisdom. It manufactures, packs, and despatches its goods according to the
regulations of the Mandarin. For those who obey promptly there are rewards, subsidies,
and official smiles. For those who disobey there are no rewards, no subsidies, and official
obstruction in their work.
It is this kind of official earthly paradise which began blossoming in the mind of some
philosophic Irish Mandarins, just about the time when State supervision of every person
with less than one hundred and sixty pounds a year was adopted as a policy by the
oligarchy who rule these islands. As it is difficult just at present to lay hold of urban
industries and urban life, the spread of agricultural co-operation has seemed to our Irish
Mandarins the very thing to begin on. Here were associations which could be drilled and
disciplined so as to yield Mandarins and inspectors the exquisite sensation of being rulers.
They could be bribed into the fold by loans, subsidies, certificates and official smiles. They
could be penalized by withholding information, loans, subsidies, and certificates. Here was
a joyful prospect indeed, a fair and glittering vista leading away to the official earthly
paradise; and it has been the continual aim of some of the Mandarins of the Department
of Agriculture to lay hold of, supervise, and control the operations of the co-operative
societies.
The greater the movement grew the greater became the anxiety of the Mandarins
to control it. They felt it would control them if it was not shackled. Their souls ached with
desire, and they rejoiced at every assault upon its leaders by narrow-minded politicians and
petty trade interests; any attack which would drive the guides of the movement out of
public life would make the societies an easy prey. This desire of the Mandarins for control,
this itch for overlordship over everything which besets the new school of bureaucrats, is the
greatest danger before us in our path to the Co-operative Commonwealth. It has
manifested itself lately in an application by the present head of the Department to the
Development Commissioners for funds to enable him to become the director of agricultural
co-operation in Ireland, and to wrest the leadership of the movement from the man who
created it - a proposition which, I think, is the meanest that ever came out of the mean soul
of a politician. The greatest voluntary movement Ireland has ever seen is in danger of
being eaten up by the State, which Neitzsche rightly called "the coldest of all cold
monsters."
The workers in that movement have laboured with an energy and self-sacrifice
which is one of the great moral glories of Ireland. They have poured out treasures of
intellect, energy, and money lavishly to build up a rural civilization. Catholic and Protestant,
Unionist and Nationalist, have worked together. But all this glow of idealism, this kindly life,
was only possible because the movement was self-controlled. The practical man and the
idealist laboured with equal enthusiasm: the first because the work of the world prospered;
the second because things seen were to him the symbols of a nobler transformation taking
place in the minds of men. If the State, "the coldest of all cold monsters," is allowed by
Irishmen to take control of this work, all the fire of life in it will die out. A State department
is sterilized of all beauty of thought. Whoever enters the service of the State has to keep
his heart under lock and key. His official duty is to organize the undisputed platitude, and
to preach the most material commonplace. We all know these are necessary duties, but
are we to give over our hopes and our ideals also to this benumbing agency? Is Ireland
not to have one activity of its children free from the greed of the Mandarin for control?
Our supine population has allowed the most gigantic State machinery to be set up
over it that the modern world has knowledge of. Is nothing to be exempt? For this thing
is surely true; that if our voluntary workers are dispensed with, and the sole link which
united the associations is their relation to a State department, they will never be able to
resist effectively further encroachments on their liberty by the Mandarins. Their officials
will be bribed by doles, or thwarted with restrictions, until the chilly ideal of the bureaucracy
is attained; until the whole activities of the country are under its control to satisfy its itch
for power, and it can contemplate with satisfaction the soulless mediocrity it has instituted.
I have never dreaded the political attacks on the new rural movement. Most of our
latter day Irish politicians are incompetent for any purpose, even their own special job.
They have never been able to devise a scheme of self-government for Ireland, but look
with a cringing consciousness of their own incompetence to English statesmen to devise
a scheme for them; and to the ministers they declare incapable of governing them, and
who ask what kind of government they want, they answer, like the jarvey to his fare who
asks what he owes, "I lave it to yourself, yer honour." The politicians never had either
power or ability to stop the growth of agricultural co-operation, though they tried their
utmost. The trade objection has been a help rather than a hindrance; but the State, with
its gigantic machinery, its innumerable array of officials, and its power to draw on the public
purse for objects which the public loathe, is a real danger the only danger before us, and
the only one worth thinking about.
I have sometimes despaired in face of the apathy of our country people, and of the
difficulty of educating them. Sometimes I have wondered whether we Irish were a people
who could ever stand on our own legs without State crutches to support us in every action.
That genial American humourist, Professor James, who theorized about psychology,
divided all philosophical systems into two classes. One set of philosophical ideas
originated with, and catered for, the intellectual comfort of people who in the far West, the
region where Blanco Posnett lived and blasphemed, are called "Tenderfoots." The second
set of philosophical ideas originated with and developed the self-respect of people who,
in the region of the Rockies, are called "Toughs." The names explain themselves. Our
politicians and our official classes act as if they believed every Irishman was a Tenderfoot.
The self-help movement has acted on the assumption that Irish people at bottom were
Toughs. The results of work by the Toughs are creameries, bacon factories, co-operative
banks, poultry societies, woollen mills, ship-building, and the like. The best expression of
the Tenderfoot policy can be found in the Parish Committees, which paid men to work on
their own holdings. But the Tenderfoot is far greater in words than deeds. He is always
weeping over the sorrows of Ireland, and asking the State to wipe away the tears with
pocket-handkerchiefs costing a million apiece. The policy of self-help he calls doctrinaire
cant. The Tenderfoot policy triumphed in the Congested Districts Board, whose area was
enlarged a few years ago, until it now embraces one-third of Ireland. I believe that the area
for Tenderfoot operations should have been reduced to about thirty parishes along the
western seaboard.
I do not deny there are occasions when the Tenderfoot theory holds good when
people must be helped first before they can help themselves. Babies are rightly treated
by Tenderfoot mothers, but they will grow up useless little cubs if they are not toughened
off as soon as possible. The worst parishes along the western seaboard, like Carna,
Rossmuck, Carraroe, and Pullathomas I give over to the Tenderfoot politicians and
economists, but I object to giving one-third of Ireland to be demoralized by parish
committees and dole-dealing ofiicials. How is an agent of the self-help movement to go
into a parish which is already made into a ward of the political hospital by officials who
stand around it with their best bedside manner? How is he to preach his wholesome
gospel of self-respect and self-help, when the patient has already a tribe of Mandarins
holding out spoons to him filled with Tenderfoot jelly?
I hold that the whole salvation of Ireland depends on what Irish people can do for
themselves. I think the worst enemies Ireland has today are those who are for ever
supplicating State aid on her behalf. If by nature we are a Tenderfoot race, like the French,
then all our efforts have been misdirected. I have had some doubts myself as to the proper
attribution of Irish people to the class of Toughs or Tenderfeet until this year, when the
movement of organized farmers rose in protest against State interference or political
interference with their work. I am now convinced that there are enough Toughs in Ireland
to carry through the scheme of rural organization, and to keep the Mandarins and
politicians in their proper place; who will see that officials are the servants of the public and
not its masters.
The Eden of the bureaucrat is the hell of the governed. Bureaucracies in no country
have brought contentment. Our rural movement, grown strong and independent, will work
in harmony with the State, and will collaborate with it in schemes mutually agreed on, but
it will resist, and rightly resist, all attempts at domination by Government departments
manned by people of the class Mr. Wells calls "second-rate industrious persons." At least
half our officials, after receiving their appointments, show symptoms of a disease which I
cannot describe otherwise than as an attack of incipient Caesarism. It may be the natural
spirituality of the Irish mind which tries to bring the element of infinity into its occupations.
But that is not the way or the place to grow that lower. Without free communities
developing according to their own desires, carrying out some scheme they themselves
have devised, and for which they accept full responsibility, there can be no progressive life
in Ireland. The aim of the wise statesman will be to foster those independent and self-
reliant movements eager in promoting schemes of self-help. The effect of the policy of our
present public men is to turn the Irish into a race of economic babies, with their lips for ever
nuzzling at the nipples of the State. As the new movement spreads it will put forward its
own public men; and it is possible yet in Ireland, where the farmers at least are
independent, to prevent the organization of the Servile State which seems inevitable in
England, where the last act of the legislature has slipped the noose round some fifteen
million people, and where the noose is likely to be pulled tighter by every succeeding
Parliament.
The founder of the Department of Agriculture gave it such a constitution that in due
time, as the other movement he created expanded, its representatives would overflow into
the Council of Agriculture and the Agricultural Board, and control the Department's policy
and keep it to its proper function which is to supply the farmers with the technical
information they want and not to force on them policies they detest. Experts ought to be
on tap and not on top. The official classes will, I believe, be much happier serving the
public than in setting snares, or inventing schemes, to control industries and movements
they had no part in creating, where their interference would be fatal to any fine idealism or
noble humanity. The country has seen lately how a great national institution can be
degraded in popular estimation by its headship being handed over to an incompetent
economist and bitter partisan. Until the organized farmers can control the institution
created to serve their interests, the less authority over their movement they allow to its
officials the better.
--------------
Chapter XII.
For a country where political agitations follow each other as rapidly as plagues in an
Eastern city, it is curious how little constructive thought we can show on the ideals of a rural
civilization. But economic peace ought surely to have its victories to show as well as
political war. I would a thousand times rather dwell on what men and women working
together may do than on what may result from majorities at Westminster. The beauty of
great civilizations has been built up far more by the people working together than by any
corporate action of the State. In these socialistic days we grow pessimistic about our own
efforts and optimistic about the working of the legislature. I think we do right to expect
great things from the State, but we ought to expect still greater things from ourselves. We
ought to know full well that, if the State did twice as much as it does, we shall never rise
out of mediocrity among the nations unless we have unlimited faith in the power of our
personal efforts to raise and transform Ireland, and unless we translate the faith into works.
The State can give a man an economic holding, but only the man himself can make it into
an Earthly Paradise, and it is a dull business, unworthy of a being made in the image of
God, to grind away at work without some noble end to be served, some glowing ideal to
be attained.
Ireland is a horribly melancholy and cynical country. Our literary men and poets,
who ought to give us courage, have taken to writing about the Irish as people who "went
forth to battle, but always fell," sentimentalizing over incompetence instead of invigorating
us and liberating us and directing our energies. We have developed a new and clever
school of Irish dramatists who say they are holding up the mirror to Irish peasant nature,
but they reflect nothing but decadence. They delight in the broken lights of insanity, the
rufiian who beats his wife, the weakling who is unfortunate in love and who goes and drinks
himself to death, while the little decaying country towns are seized on with avidity and
exhibited on the stage in every kind of decay and human futility and meanness. Well, it is
good to be chastened in spirit, but it is a thousand times better to be invigorated in spirit.
To be positive is always better than to be negative. These writers understand and
sympathize with Ireland more through their lower nature than their higher nature. Judging
by the things people write in Ireland, and by what they go to see performed on the stage,
it is more pleasing to them to see enacted characters they know are meaner than
themselves than to see characters which they know are nobler than themselves.
All this is helping on our national pessimism and self-mistrust. It helps to fix these
features permanently in our national character, which were excusable enough as
temporary moods after defeat. The younger generation should hear nothing about failures.
It should not be hypnotized into self-contempt. Our energies in Ireland are sapped by a
cynical self-mistrust which is spread everywhere through society. It is natural enough that
the elder generation, who were promised so many millenniums, but who actually saw four
million people deducted from the population, should be cynical. But it is not right they
should give only to the younger generation the heritage of their disappointments without
any heritage of hope. From early childhood parents and friends are hypnotizing the child
into beliefs and unbeliefs, and too often they are exiling all nobility out of life, all
confidence, all trust, all hope; they are insinuating a mean self-seeking, a self-mistrust, a
vulgar spirit which laughs at every high ideal, until at last the hypnotized child is blinded to
the presence of any beauty or nobility in life.
No country can ever hope to rise beyond a vulgar mediocrity where there is not
unbounded confidence in what its humanity can do. The self-confident American will make
a great civilization yet, because he believes with all his heart and soul in the future of his
country and in the powers of the American people. What Whitman called their "barbaric
yawp" may yet turn into the lordliest speech and thought, but without self-confidence a race
will go no whither. If Irish people do not believe they can equal or surpass the stature of
any humanity which has been upon the globe, then they had better all emigrate and
become servants to some superior race, and leave Ireland to new settlers who may come
here with the same high hopes as the Pilgrim Fathers had when they went to America.
We must go on imagining better than the best we know. Even in their ruins now,
Greece and Italy seem noble and beautiful with broken pillars and temples made in their
day of glory. But before ever there was a white marble temple shining on a hill it shone
with a more brilliant beauty m the mind of some artist who designed it. Do many people
know how that marvellous Greek civilization spread along the shores of the Mediterranean?
Little nations owning no more land than would make up an Irish barony sent out
colony after colony. The seed of beautiful life they sowed grew and blossomed out into
great cities and half divine civilizations. Italy had a later blossoming of beauty in the Middle
Ages, and travellers today go into little Italian towns and find them filled with master-pieces
of painting and architecture and sculpture, witnesses of a time when nations no larger than
an Irish county rolled their thoughts up to Heaven and mixed their imagination with the
angels. Can we be contented in Ireland with the mean streets of our country towns and
the sordid heaps of our villages, dominated in their economics by the vendors of alcohol,
and inspired as to their ideals by the vendors of political animosities?
I would not mind people fighting in a passion to get rid of all that barred some lordly
scheme of life, but quarrels over political bones from which there is little or nothing
wholesome to be picked only disgust. People tell me that the countryside must always be
stupid and backward, and I get angry, as if it were said that only townspeople had immortal
souls, and it was only in the city that the flame of divinity breathed into the first men had
any unobscured glow. The countryside in Ireland could blossom into as much beauty as
the hillsides in mediaeval Italy if we could but get rid of our self-mistrust. We have all that
any race ever had to inspire them, the heavens overhead, the earth underneath, and the
breath of life in our nostrils. I would like to exile the man who would set limits to what we
can do, who would take the crown and sceptre from the human will and say, marking out
some petty enterprise as the limit: "Thus far can we go and no farther, and here shall our
life be stayed." Therefore I hate to hear of stagnant societies who think because they have
made butter well that they have crowned their parochial generation with a halo of glory, and
can rest content with the fame of it all, listening to the whirr of the steam separators and
pouching in peace of mind the extra penny a gallon for their milk. And I dislike the little
groups who meet a couple of times a year and call themselves co-operators, because they
have got their fertilizers more cheaply, and have done nothing else. Why, the village
gombeen man has done more than that! He has at least brought most of the necessities
of life there by his activities; and I say, if we co-operators do not aim at doing more than
the Irish Scribes and Pharisees we shall have little to be proud of.
A poet, interpreting the words of Christ to His followers, who had scorned the
followers of the old order, made Him say:
The co-operative movement is delivering over the shaping of the rural life of Ireland,
and the building up of its rural civilization, into the hands of Irish farmers. The old order of
things has left Ireland unlovely. But if we do not passionately strive to build it better, better
for the men, for the women, for the children, of what worth are we? We continually come
across the phrase "the dull Saxon" in our Irish papers; it crops up in the speeches of our
public orators, but it was an English poet who said:
And it was the last great poet England has produced, who had so much hope for
humanity in his country that in his latest song he could mix earth with heaven, and say that
to human eyes
Shall we think more meanly of the future of Ireland than these ''dull Saxons'' think
of the future of their island? Shall we be content with humble crumbs fallen from the table
of life, and sit like beggars waiting only for what the commonwealth can do for us, leaving
all high hopes and aims to our rulers, whether they be English or Irish?
Every people get the kind of government they deserve. A nation can exhibit no
greater political wisdom in the mass than it generates in its units. It is the pregnant
idealism of the multitude which gives power to the makers of great nations, otherwise the
prophets of civilization are helpless as preachers in the desert and solitary places. So I
have always preached self-help above all other kinds of help, knowing that if we strove
passionately after this righteousness all other kinds of help would be at our service. So,
too, I would brush aside the officious interferer in our co-operative affairs, who would offer
on behalf of the State to do for us what we should, and could, do far better ourselves. We
can build up a rural civilization in Ireland, shaping it to our hearts' desires, warming it with
life, but our rulers and officials can never be warmer than a stepfather, and have no large,
divine, and comfortable words for us; they tinker at the body when it is the soul which
requires to be healed and made whole. The soul of Ireland has to be kindled, and it can
be only kindled by the thought of great deeds and not by the hope of petty parsimonies or
petty gains.
Now, great deeds are never done vicariously. They are done directly and
personally. No country has grown to greatness mainly by the acts of some great ruler, but
by the aggregate activities of all its people. Therefore, every Irish community should make
its own ideals and should work for them. As great work can be done in a parish as in the
legislative assemblies with a nation at gaze. Do people say: "It is easier to work well with
a nation at gaze?" I answer that true greatness becomes the North Pole of humanity, and
when it appears all the needles of Being point to it. You of the young generation, who have
not yet lost the generous ardour of youth, believe it is as possible to do great work and
make noble sacrifices, and to roll the acceptable smoke of offering to Heaven by your work
in an Irish parish, as in any city in the world. Like the Greek architects - who saw in their
dreams hills crowned with white marble-pillared palaces and images of beauty, until these
rose up in actuality - so should you, not forgetting national ideals, still most of all set before
yourselves the ideal of your own neighbourhood. How can you speak of working for all
Ireland, which you have not seen, if you do not labour and dream for the Ireland before
your eyes, which you see as you look out of your own door in the morning, and on which
you walk up and down through the day?
"What dream shall we dream, or what labour shall we undertake?" you may ask, and
it is right that those who exhort should be asked in what manner and how precisely they
would have the listener act or think. I answer: the first thing to do is to create and realize
the feeling for the community, and break up the evil and petty isolation of man from man.
This can be done by every kind of co-operative effort where combined action is better than
individual action. The parish cannot take care of the child as well as the parents, but you
will find in most of the labours of life combined action is more fruitful than individual action.
Some of you have found this out in many branches of agriculture, of which your dairying,
agricultural, credit, poultry, and flax societies are witness. Some of you have combined to
manufacture; some to buy in common; some to sell in common. Some of you have the
common ownership of thousands of pounds' worth of expensive machinery. Some of you
have carried the idea of co-operation for economic ends further, and have used the power
which combination gives you to erect village halls and to have libraries of books, the
windows through which the life and wonder and power of humanity can be seen. Some
of you have light-heartedly, in the growing sympathy of unity, revived the dances and songs
and sports which are the right relaxation of labour. Some Irishwomen here and there have
heard beyond the four walls in which so much of their lives are spent the music of a new
day, and have started out to help and inspire the men and be good comrades to them; and
calling themselves United Irishwomen, they have joined, as men have joined, to help their
sisters who are in economic servitude, or who suffer from the ignorance and indifference
to their special needs in life which pervade the administration of local government.
We cannot build up a rural civilization in Ireland without the aid of Irish women. It
will help life little if we have methods of the twentieth century in the fields, and those of the
fifth century in the home. A great writer said: "Woman is the last thing man will civilize."
If a woman had written on that subject she would have said: "Woman is the last thing man
thinks about when he is building up his empires." It is true that the consciousness of
woman has been always centred too close to the dark and obscure roots of the Tree of
Life, while men have branched out more to the sun and wind, and today the starved soul
of womanhood is crying out over the world for an intellectual life and for more chance of
earning a living. If Ireland will not listen to this cry, its daughters will go on slipping silently
away to other countries, as they have been doing all the best of them, all the bravest, all
those most mentally alive, all those who would have made the best wives and the best
mothers - and they will leave at home the timid, the stupid, and the dull to help in the
deterioration of the race and to breed sons as sluggish as themselves.
In the new world women have taken an important part in the work of the National
Grange, the greatest agency in bettering the economic and social conditions of the
agricultural population in the States. In Ireland the women must be welcomed into the work
of building up a rural civilization, and be aided by men in the promotion of those industries
with which women have been immemorially associated. We should not want to see
women separated from the activities and ideals and aspirations of men. We should want
to see them working together and in harmony. If the women carry on their work in
connection with the associations by which men earn their living they will have a greater
certainty of permanence. I have seen too many little industries and little associations of
women workers spring up and perish in Ireland, which depended on the efforts of some
one person who had not drunk of the elixir of immortal youth, and could not always
continue the work she started; and I have come to the conclusion that the women's
organizations must be connected with the men's organizations, must use their premises,
village halls and rooms for women's meetings. I do not believe women's work can be
promoted so well in any other way.
Men and women have been companions in the world from the dawn of time. I do
not know where they are journeying to, but I believe they will never get to the Delectable
City if they journey apart from each other, and do not share each other's burdens. Working
so, we create the conditions in which the spirit of the community grows strong. We create
the true communal idea, which the Socialists miss in their dream of a vast amalgamation
of whole nationalities in one great commercial undertaking. The true idea of the clan or
commune or tribe is to have in it as many people as will give it strength and importance,
and so few people that a personal tie may be established between them. Humanity has
always grouped itself instinctively in this way. It did so in the ancient clans and rural
communes, and it does so in the parishes and co-operative associations. If they were
larger they would lose the sense of unity. If they were smaller they would be too feeble for
effectual work, and could not take over the affairs of their district.
A rural commune or coroperative community ought to have, to a large extent, the
character of a nation. It should manufacture for its members all things which it profitably
can manufacture for them, employing its own workmen, carpenters, bootmakers, makers
and menders of farming equipment, saddlery, harness, etc. It should aim at feeding its
members and their families cheaply and well, as far as possible out of the meat and grain
produced in the district. It should have a mill to grind their grain, a creamery to
manufacture their butter; or where certain enterprises like a bacon factory are too great
for it, it should unite with other co-operative communities to furnish out such an enterprise.
It should sell for the members their produce, and buy for them their requirements, and hold
for them labour-saving machinery. It should put aside a certain portion of its profits every
year for the creation of halls, libraries, places for recreation and games, and it should
pursue this plan steadily with the purpose of giving its members every social and
educational advantage which the civilization of their time affords. It should have its
councils or village parliaments, where improvements and new ventures could be discussed.
Such a community would soon generate a passionate devotion to its own ideals and
interests among the members, who would feel how their fortunes rose with the fortunes of
the associations of which they were all members. It would kindle and quicken the intellect
of every person in the community. It would create the atmosphere in which national genius
would emerge and find opportunities for its activity.
The clan ought to be the antechamber of the nation and the training ground for its
statesmen. What opportunity leadership in the councils of such a rural community would
give to the best minds! The man of social genius at present finds an unorganized
community, and he does not know how to affect his fellow citizens. A man might easily
despair of affecting the destinies of a nation of forty million people, but yet start with
eagerness to build up a kingdom of the size of Sligo, and shape it nearer to the heart's
desire. The organization of the rural population of Ireland in co-operative associations will
provide the instrument ready to the hand of the social reformer. Some associations will be
more dowered with ability than others, but one will learn from another, and a vast network
of living, progressive organizations will cover rural Ireland, democratic in constitution and
governed by the aristocracy of intellect and character.
Such associations would have great economic advantages in that they would be
self-reliant and self-contained, and would be less subject to fluctuation in their prosperity
brought about by national disasters and commercial crises than the present unorganized
rural communities are. They would have all their business under local control; and, aiming
at feeding, clothing, and manufacturing locally from local resources as far as possible, the
slumps in foreign trade, the shortage in supplies, the dislocations of commerce would
affect them but little. They would make the community wealthier. Every step towards this
organization already taken in Ireland has brought with it increased prosperity, and the
towns benefit by increased purchasing power on the part of these rural associations. New
arts and industries would spring up under the aegis of the local associations. Here we
should find the weaving of rugs, there the manufacture of toys, elsewhere the women
would be engaged in embroidery or lace-making, and, perhaps, everywhere we might get
a revival of the old local industry of weaving homespuns.
We are dreaming of nothing impossible, nothing which has not been done
somewhere already, nothing which we could not do here in Ireland. True, it cannot be
done all at once, but if we get the idea clearly in our minds of the building up of a rural
civilization in Ireland, we can labour at it with the grand persistence of mediaeval burghers
in their little towns, where one generation laid down the foundations of a great cathedral,
and saw only in hope and faith the gorgeous glooms over altar and sanctuary, and the
blaze and flame of stained glass, where apostles, prophets, and angelic presences were
pictured in fire: and the next generation raised high the walls, and only the third generation
saw the realization of what their grandsires had dreamed.
We in Ireland should not live only from day to day, for the day only, like the beasts
in the field, but should think of where all this long cavalcade of the Gael is tending, and
how and in what manner their tents will be pitched in the evening of their generation. A
national purpose is the most unconquerable and victorious of all things on earth. It can
raise up Babylons from the sands of the desert, and make imperial civilizations spring from
out a score of huts, and after it has wrought its will it can leave monuments that seem as
everlasting a portion of nature as the rocks. The Pyramids and the Sphinx in the sands of
Egypt have seemed to humanity for centuries as much a portion of nature as Errigal, or
Benbulben, or Slieve Gullion, have seemed a portion of nature to our eyes in Ireland.
We must have some purpose or plan in building up an Irish civilization. No artist
takes up his paints and brushes and begins to work on his canvas without a clear idea
burning in his brain of what he has to do, else were his work all smudges. Does anyone
think that, out of all these little cabins and farm-houses dotting the green of Ireland, there
will come harmonious effort to a common end without organization and set purpose? The
idea and plan of a great rural civilization must shine like a burning lamp in the imagination
of the youth of Ireland, or we shall only be at cross-purposes and end in little futilities.
We are very fond in Ireland of talking of Ireland a nation. The word "nation" has a
kind of satisfying sound, but I am afraid it is an empty word with no rich significance to most
who use it. The word "laboratory" has as fine a sound, but only the practical scientist has
a true conception of what may take place there, what roar of strange forces, what mingling
of subtle elements, what mystery and magnificence in atomic life. The word without the
idea is like the purse without the coin, the skull without the soul, or any other sham or
empty deceit.
Nations are not built up by the repetition of words, but by the organizing of
intellectual forces. If any of my readers would like to know what kind of thought goes to the
building up of a great nation, let them read the life of Alexander Hamilton, by Oliver, which
can be obtained for a shilling. To this extraordinary man the United States owe their
constitution, almost their existence. To him, far more than to Washington, the idea, plan,
shape of all that marvellous dominion owes its origin and character. He seemed to hold
in his brain, while America was yet a group of half barbaric settlements, the idea of what
it might become. He laid down the plans, the constitution, the foreign policy, the trade
policy, the relation of State to State, and it is only within the last few years almost that
America has realized that she had in Hamilton a supreme political and social intelligence,
the true fountain head of what she has since become.
We have not half a continent to deal with, but size matters nothing. The Russian
Empire, which covers half Europe, and stretches over the Ural Mountains to the Pacific,
would weigh light as a feather in the balance if we compare its services to humanity with
those of the little State of Attica, which was no larger than Tipperary. Every State which
has come to command the admiration of the world has had clearly conceived ideals which
it realized before it went the way which all empires, even the greatest, must go; becoming
finally a legend, a fable, or a symbol. We have to lay down the foundations of a new social
order in Ireland, and, if the possibilities of it are realized, our thousand years of sorrow and
darkness may be followed by as long a cycle of happy effort and ever-growing prosperity.
We shall want all these plans whether we are ruled from Westminster or College Green.
Without an imaginative conception of what kind of civilization we wish to create, the best
government from either quarter will never avail to lift us beyond national mediocrity.
I write for those who have joined the ranks of co-operators without perhaps realizing
all that the movement meant, or all that it tended to. Because we hold in our hearts and
keep holy there the vision of a great future, we have fought passionately for the entire
freedom of our movement from external control, lest the meddling of politicians or official
persons without any inspiration should deflect, for some petty purpose or official
gratification, the strength of that current which was flowing and gathering strength unto the
realization of great ideals. Every country has its proportion of little souls which could find
ample room on a threepenny bit, and be majestically housed in a thimble, who follow out
some little minute practice in an ecstacy of self-satisfaction, seeking some little job which
is the El Dorado of their desires as if there were nought else, as if humanity were not going
from the Great Deep to the Great Deep of Deity, with wind and water, fire and earth, stars
and sun, lordly companions for it on its path to a divine destiny. We have our share of
these in Ireland in high and low places, but I do not write for them. This essay is for those
who are working at laying deep the foundations of a new social order, to hearten them with
some thought of what their labour may bring to Ireland. I welcome to this work the United
Irishwomen. As one of their poetesses has said in a beautiful song, the services of women
to Ireland in the past have been the services of mourners to the stricken. But for today and
tomorrow we need hope and courage and gaiety, and I repeat for them the last passionate
words of her verse:
------------
Chapter XIII.
At the beginnings of the human household some of old Mother Nature's children
decided to look after the House and its furnishing, and some decided to go into the fields
and grow things. Now the Children in the House were always together, and they knew
each other's minds; and as they rarely saw the Children working in the fields they began
to lose interest in them, and finally forgot all about them, and treated them as strangers,
and grumbled at them when the fruit, vegetables, or grain, came to the door of the house
in bad condition, or there was not enough, or the Children of the Fields asked too much for
them. The Children in the House made it gayer and gayer. They lit it up and had brilliant
festivals, and the Children in the Fields saw the lights in the House, and they became
envious. Then they said: "We have as much right to be in the House as those others."
So many of them left working in the Fields and crowded into the House, and the Children
left in the Fields grew more and more lonely, and more and more they went to live in the
House, and share in its pleasures. Then it came about that the Children in the Fields did
not grow enough fruit, or vegetables, or grain, to give plenty to the Children in the House,
and the household grew hungry and quarrelsome.
The Children in the House have never acted fairly by the Children in the Fields.
They have been trying indeed to do so lately; but they are acting ignorantly, because the
Children in the House, who arrange everything, do not really understand how to arrange
life for the Children in the Fields, and there are long centuries of neglect to make up, and
for long centuries the wealth of the world has poured into the cities. There are pleasures
to be enjoyed. There are libraries where all the knowledge of the world is to be learned,
and theatres where all the gaiety in the heart of man or woman can be satiated. There the
great, the wise, and the famous congregate. There national destinies are decided. The
day in the cities is busy and crowded with activity. The night of the cities seems like a
fairyland with the glitter of lights, and with the friendly people in the streets bent on
pleasure, and the houses, too, seem built up to high heaven to those who know only the
cabins and cottages; and, when the misty brilliance of lamps is diffused over the streets,
the great buildings rise up above them like imagined Babylon or many-templed Nineveh.
All this allures the young country boy or girl coming from the fields; and it is only when they
are caught in the net that they realize that every high beauty in the city exists because of
a deformity alongside it: that stupendous wealth exists because there are vast gulfs of
poverty and despair. But the Children of the Fields do not know this, and they come
flocking, allured by the distant gleam.
This is going on the world over, but it will not go on always. Reactions take place
inevitably, even if they occupy vast periods of time; and the reaction against the
domination of the town has begun over the world. There is an immense social change
taking place; part of this change is the organization of the farmers to protect themselves
and their industry, and this organization, when complete, will shift the centre of power to
the country from the town where it has been too long. Humanity is like water, and is always
pushing to its own highest level; and since all cannot live in the city those who must live
in the country are organizing themselves, from farthest east in Japan to farthest west in
California, and they are going to claim for the Children of the Fields access to knowledge,
beauty, pleasure, and power. They are going to build up a civilization so pleasant, so
kindly, so healthy, so prosperous, that the Children of the Fields will not want to live with
the Children of the House; but will be content with where they are, growing comely and
sweet-blooded in the sunshine and pure air, growing wise at their own labours, and strong
in their union. They will have rustic sports and festivals of their own, and because there will
be more of them in the Fields and less in the House, and because they will be better
educated and better equipped, they will produce more, and the Children in the House will
be better fed, and the balance will be struck.
This is the work that, consciously or unconsciously organized farmers over the world
are putting their hands to. Some of them work only for immediate gain, and nobody can
blame them. But some are working for higher aims, not only in Ireland but in America and
Europe. There are men labouring as heroically at the building up of a beautiful rural
civilization as any hero in the past wrought at the making of Rome or Athens or Memphis,
or any of those proud cities which have become to us symbols of tne magnificence of the
world. Here, too, humanity is trying to find its own highest level. However suppressed,
clogged, shackled - that life, in spite of all indirections, missings of the way, is eternally
aiming at the highest. What the social reformer has to do is not to coerce but to liberate
and unite those human energies and let them express themselves freely and rise freely to
their natural level. That they will find their natural level is inevitable, and that level will
seem high or low as men are optimists, or pessimists.
I am one of those who believe that the natural level of the spirit in man is with the
highest in the universe, and I regard as damnable heresies all other conceptions of his
destiny. I hate the people who talk scornfully of Paddy or Hodge, of those who work on the
land; as if the low brow and the dull brain were an inevitable accompaniment of such toil,
as if Spirit were not there, an awful presence, a majesty imprisoned from the infinite. Mr.
Edmond Holmes tells us he found, when he was inspector of national schools in England,
a backward country district where the genius of a teacher divined a soul and a kinship with
immortal things in the children of Hodge. She bent herself to liberate these powers, and
a crowd of lovely things went fluttering out of the opened cage. There the feet of the little
rustics danced as the feet of life should dance. They loved and saw beauty; that is, they
saw with the divine eye. There art and music and literature were loved. There was
imagination, happiness, and quick intelligence; and all this because life was not
suppressed nor disciplined in formal obedience to an external law. The higher was evoked
and it disciplined the lower. Yet all this vision and beauty did not make the children unfit
for labour afterwards, for on inquiry among the farmers it was found that no sluggards or
lazy workers came out of that school. The evocation of the higher faculties in men or
women does not unfit them for the world's labour; for the higher comprehends the lower,
though the lower does not include the higher.
I can speak out of my own knowledge of Ireland. I believe there that those who live
on the land have a deeper life than those who live in the towns; who deceive themselves,
thinking that the twinkling of a sophisticated mind is wisdom; who collect ideas as if they
were collecting postage stamps. The shallow puddle can reflect the stars and heavens
without being deep. The country folk comprehend great fundamental ideas. They do not
understand the sophisticated urban mind. But the rural reformer who starts his work with
the idea that those who labour on the land are, by nature of their avocation, less capable
than the city folk of moulding life nobly and greatly, are unjust to them and will achieve little.
Indeed it is with the people who live on the land, who are bathed continually in sunlight and
pure air, who are close to Mother Nature, that the future and hope of humanity lies.
There is no future for life in the great cities. Life shrivels there and decays, divorced
from the fountain of life. Has anyone ever heard of a Londoner of the fourth generation?
The country people carry quietly about with them, unknown to themselves, divine powers
and tremendous destinies; as children predestined to greatness carry, unknown to
themselves or others, powers that will make beauty or stormy life in the world hereafter.
The country men have been repressed through the ages. They have been serfs. They
have been neglected. They were not allowed to combine to work out their own destiny, but
were used as instruments to make wealth and power for others. Yet the people on the
land have the mighty energies of nature in their blood; and if they are allowed to unite
freely, to work out unrestricted their destiny, nature will work through them the miracles of
wonder and beauty she brings to pass in other forms of life, in the beauty of forests, of
birds and flowers.
I have written this little book, which, I know, is incomplete and chaotic, and
unsatisfactory even as an expression of my own ideas, because at this moment the rural
life movement in Ireland, from which I hope so much, is being assailed on all sides and
misunderstood, the objects of its promoters perverted. I wished to show, however
inadequately, that it is a sincere attempt to solve some Irish and some human problems,
and not the move in a piece of mean political strategy which it has been held up to Ireland
to be.
----------------
NOTE
-----------------------
-----------
* Released November 13.
-----------
I beseech you not to forsake these men who are out on strike. They may have been
to blame for many an action. The masters may perhaps justifiably complain of things done
and undone. But if the masters have rights by the light of reason and for the moment, the
men are right by the light of spirit and for eternity. This labour uprising in Ireland is the
despairing effort of humanity to raise itself out of a dismal swamp of disease and poverty.
James Larkin may have been an indiscreet leader. He may have committed blunders, but
I believe in the sight of heaven the crimes are all on the other side. If our Courts of Justice
were courts of humanity, the masters of Dublin would be in the dock charged with criminal
conspiracy, their crime that they tried to starve out one-third of the people in Dublin, to
break their hearts, and degrade their manhood, for the greatest crime against humanity is
its own degradation.
The men have always been willing to submit their case to arbitration, but the
masters refuse to meet them. They refused to consult with your trades union leaders.
They would not abide by the Askwith report. They refused to hear of prominent Irishmen
acting as arbitrators. They said scornfully of the Peace Committee that it was only
interfering. They say they are not fighting trades unionism, but they refuse point blank to
meet the Trades Council in Dublin. They want their own way absolutely. These Shylocks
of industry want their pound of flesh starved from off the bones of the workers. They think
their employees have no rights as human beings, no spirit whose dignity can be abased.
You have no idea what labour in Ireland, which fights for the bare means of human
support, is up against. The autocrats of industry can let loose upon them the wild beasts
that kill in the name of the State. They can let loose upon them a horde of wild fanatics
who will rend them in the name of God. The men had been deserted by those who were
their natural leaders. For ten weeks the miserable creatures who misrepresent them in
Parliament kept silent. When they were up for the first time in their lives against anything
real they scurried back like rats to their hole. These cacklers about self-government had
no word to say on the politics of their own city, but after ten weeks of silence they came out
with six lines of letter signed by all the six poltroons. They disclaimed in responsibility for
what is happening in the city and county they represent. It was no concern of theirs; but
they would agree to anything the Archbishop might say! Are they not heroic prodigies!
Dublin is looking on these wild alien eyes. It was thought they were democrats; we have
found out they were only democratic blathers.
We are entering from today on a long battle in Ireland. The masters have flung
down a challenge to the workers. The Irish aristocracy were equally scornful of the workers
in the land, and the landlords of land are going or have gone. The landlords of industry will
have disappeared from Ireland when the battle begun this year is ended. Democratic
control of industry will replace the autocracy which exists today. We are working for the
co-operative commonwealth to make it the Irish policy of the future, and I ask you to stand
by the men who are beginning the struggle. There is good human material there.
I have often despaired over Dublin, which John Mitchel called a city of genteel
dastards and bellowing slaves, but a man has arisen who has lifted the curtain which veiled
from us the real manhood in the city of Dublin. Nearly all the manhood is found among
obscure myriads who are paid from five to twenty-one shillings per week. The men who
will sacrifice anything for a principle get rarer and rarer above that limit of wealth. I am a
literary man, a lover of ideas, but I have found few people in my life who would sacrifice
anything for a principle. Yet in Dublin, when the masters issued that humiliating document,
asking men on penalty of dismissal to swear never to join a trades union, thousands of
men who had no connection with the Irish Transport Workers - many among them
personally hostile to that organisation - refused to obey. They would not sign away their
freedom, their right to choose their own heroes and their own ideas. Most of these men
had no strike funds to fall back on. They had wives and children depending on them.
Quietly and grimly they took through hunger the path to the Heavenly City. They stand
silently about the streets. God alone knows what is passing in the heart of these men.
Nobody in the Press in Dublin has said a word about it. Nobody has praised them, no one
has put a crown upon their brows. Yet these men are the true heroes of Ireland today, they
are the descendants of Oscar, Cuchulain, the heroes of our ancient stories. For all their
tattered garments, I recognise in these obscure men a majesty of spirit. It is in these
workers in the towns and in the men in the cabins in the country that the hope of Ireland
lies. The poor have always helped each other, and it is they who listen eagerly to the
preachers of a social order based on brotherhood and cooperation.
I am a literary man and not a manual worker - I am but a voice, while they are the
deed and the being, but I would be ashamed ever in my life again to speak of an ideal if
I did not stand by these men and say of them what I hold to be true. If
you back them up today they will be able to fight their own battles tomorrow, and perhaps
to give you an example. I beseech you not to forsake these men.
--------
SIRS, I address this warning to you, the aristocracy of industry in this city, because,
like all aristocracies, you tend to grow blind in long authority, and to be unaware that you
and your class and its every action are being considered and judged day by day by those
who have power to shake or overturn the whole social order, and whose restlessness in
poverty today is making our industrial civilisation stir like a quaking bog. You do not seem
to realise that your assumption that you are answerable to yourselves alone for your
actions in the industries you control is one that becomes less and less tolerable in a world
so crowded with necessitous life. Some of you have helped Irish farmers to upset a landed
aristocracy in this island, an aristocracy richer and more powerful in its sphere than you are
in yours, with its roots deep in history. They, too, as a class, though not all of them, were
scornful or neglectful of the workers in the industry by which they profited; and to many
who knew them in their pride of place and thought them all-powerful they are already
becoming a memory, the good disappearing together with the bad. If they had done their
duty by those from whose labour came their wealth, they might have continued
unquestioned in power and prestige for centuries to come. The relation of landlord and
tenant is not an ideal one, but any relations in a social order will endure if there is infused
into them some of that spirit of human sympathy which qualifies life for immortality.
Despotisms endure while they are benevolent, and aristocracies while "noblesse oblige"
is not a phrase to be referred to with a cynical smile. Even an oligarchy might be
permanent if the spirit of human kindness, which harmonises all things otherwise
incompatible, is present.
You do not seem to read history so as to learn its lessons. That you are an
uncultivated class was obvious from recent utterances of some of you upon art. That you
are incompetent men in the sphere in which you arrogate imperial powers is certain,
because for many years, long before the present uprising of labour, your enterprises have
been dwindling in the regard of investors, and this while you have carried them on in the
cheapest labour market in these islands, with a labour reserve always hungry and ready
to accept any pittance. You are bad citizens, for we rarely, if ever, hear of the wealthy
among you endowing your city with the munificent gifts which it is the pride of merchant
princes in other cities to offer, and Irishmen not of your city, who offer to supply the wants
left by your lack of generosity, are met with derision and abuse. Those who have
economic power have civic power also, yet you have not used the power that was yours
to right what was wrong in the evil administration of this city. You have allowed the poor
to be herded together so that one thinks of certain places in Dublin as of a pestilence.
There are twenty thousand rooms, in each of which live entire families, and sometimes
more, where no functions of the body can be concealed, and delicacy and modesty are
creatures that are stifled ere they are born. The obvious duty of you in regard to these
things you might have left undone, and it be imputed to ignorance or forgetfulness; but
your collective and conscious action as a class in the present labour dispute has revealed
you to the world in so malign an aspect that the mirror must be held up to you, so that you
may see yourself as every humane person sees you.
The conception of yourselves as altogether virtuous and wronged is I assure you,
not at all the one which onlookers hold of you. No doubt, you have rights on your side. No
doubt, some of you suffered without just cause. But nothing which has been done to you
cries aloud to Heaven for condemnation as your own actions. Let me show you how it
seems to those who have followed critically the dispute, trying to weigh in a balance the
rights and wrongs. You were within the rights society allows you when you locked out your
men and insisted on the fixing of some principle to adjust your future relations with labour
when the policy of labour made it impossible for some of you to carry on your enterprises.
Labour desired the fixing of some such principle as much as you did. But, having once
decided on such a step, knowing how many thousands of men, women and children, nearly
one-third ot the population of this city, would be affected, you should not have let one day
have passed without unremitting endeavours to find a solution of the problem.
What did you do? The representatives of labour unions in Great Britain met you,
and you made of them a preposterous, an impossible demand, and because they would
not accede to it you closed the Conference; you refused to meet them further; you
assumed that no other guarantees than those you asked were possible, and you
determined deliberately, in cold anger, to starve out one-third of the population of this city,
to break the manhood of the men by the sight of the suffering of their wives and the hunger
of their children. We read in the Dark Ages of the rack and thumbscrew. But these
iniquities were hidden and concealed from the knowledge of men in dungeons and torture-
chambers. Even in the Dark Ages humanity could not endure the sight of such suffering,
and it learnt of such misuse of power by slow degrees, through rumour, and when it was
certain it razed its Bastilles to their foundations. It remained for the twentieth century and
the capital city of Ireland to see an oligarchy of four hundred masters deciding openly upon
starving one hundred thousand people, and refusing to consider any solution except that
fixed by their pride. You, masters, asked men to do that which masters of labour in any
other city in these islands had not dared to do. You insolently demanded of those men
who were members of a trade union that they should resign from that union; and from
those who were not members you insisted on a vow that they would never join it.
Your insolence and ignorance of the rights conceded to workers universally in the
modern world were incredible, and as great as your inhumanity. If you had between you
collectively a portion of human soul as large as a threepenny bit, you would have sat night
and day with the representatives of labour, trying this or that solution of the trouble, mindful
of the women and children, who at least were innocent of wrong against you. But no! You
reminded labour you could always have your three square meals a day while it went
hungry. You went into conference again with the representatives of the State, because,
dull as you are, you know public opinion would not stand your holding out. You chose as
your spokesman the bitterest tongue that ever wagged in this island, and then, when an
award was made by men who have an experience in industrial matters a thousand times
transcending yours, who have settled disputes in industries so great that the sum of your
petty enterprises would not equal them, you withdraw again, and will not agree to accept
their solution, and fall back again on your devilish policy of starvation. Cry aloud to Heaven
for new souls! The souls you have got cast upon the screen of publicity appear like the
horrid and writhing creatures enlarged from the insect world, and revealed to us by the
cinematograph.
You may succeed in your policy and ensure your own damnation by your victory.
The men whose manhood you have broken will loathe you, and will always be brooding
and scheming to strike a fresh blow. The children will be taught to curse you. The infant
being moulded in the womb will have breathed into its starved body the vitality of hate. It
is not they - it is you who are blind Samsons pulling down the pillars of the social order.
You are sounding the death-knell of autocracy in industry. There was autocracy in political
life, and it was superseded by democracy. So surely will democratic power wrest from you
the control of industry. The fate of you, the aristocracy of industry, will be as the fate of the
aristocracy of land if you do not show that you have some humanity still among you.
Humanity abhors, above all things, a vacuum in itself, and your class will be cut off from
humanity as the surgeon cuts the cancer and alien growth from the body. Be warned ere
it is too late.
------------
The following letter from "A.E." appeared in "The Times" of Nov. 13th, 1913, after
being denied publication by the Press of Dublin:
It may seem an audacity on the part of one whose views on the politics of this city
are obviously unpopular to attempt once more, through you, to influence public opinion.
But the most unpopular council is not necessarily more filled with unwisdom.
The masters of Dublin I have addressed in vain. I now ask the citizens of Dublin to
consider what effect the policy of the masters is going to have. What has been gained by
this resolute refusal of the federated employers to meet the only body with which
negotiations can be carried on? Have they proved their wisdom? Are we any nearer a
settlement? Are not the forces on the side of labour becoming more resolute and
exasperated week by week?
Nobody in Dublin seems to realise the gigantic power the masters have challenged.
As a disdainful attitude is manifested on the one side, the leaders of labour have settled
into a grim determination never to submit.
The labour leaders, men who have it in their power to do what they threaten, declare
that they will rather hold up the industrial system of these islands than see the humiliation
of the men completed. Are the citizens content? Do they think it right they should sit silent
and have all this brought on them because the masters are too proud to meet the
representatives of labour in Dublin.
These people seem to read nothing, know nothing, or think nothing of what is
happening with respect of labour elsewhere in the world. They do not know that organized
labour has become one of the great powers, that its representatives are met by the
representatives of capital in industrial countries with the respect that the delegates of great
nations meet each other.
In Great Britain the Press, representing all parties, unite in condemning the policy
of the employers. What is the position of the men? They have declared always that they
wanted arbitration boards such as exist in hundreds in industrial centres where the
representatives of organized labour and the federated employers could meet, and to which
disputes over labour could be referred. Agreements entered into after frank and free
discussion as between equals the men will keep. They will not keep agreements into which
they consider they are forced. Labour has a sense of honour of its own which is as high
as the honour of the masters any day.
I will be met by the famous outburst about contracts and the nether world. That
sentence was never uttered in the sense in which it was reported. Mr. Larkin was
speaking, not with reference to the contracts between masters and men, but about the
masters' complaints that owing to strikes they could not carry out their contracts. It may
have been an unfeeling remark, but it was not the defiance of all honour between master
and employee that an abbreviated report made it.
Sir, if you will permit me to say something which may irritate the Irish Press, but
which, I think, is true and necessary to be said, if the Dublin journals had not been so
manifestly biased on the side of the employers, reporters would not have come to regard
their work, not as the true gathering of strike news, but the making up of a case against the
men. Nor would it have been so necessary for me to emphasize one side, as I did in my
Open Letter and the much abused speech at the AIbert Hall.
I am charged with being a revolutionary; I who for seven or eight years past have
week by week been expounding an orderly evolution of society. I am charged with being
against religion; I the sole poet of my generation, who has never written a single poem
which did not try to express a spiritual mood.
But I am not with those who wish to bring about in Ireland a peace of God without
any understanding, and I and all free spirits will fight with all our power against the fanatics
who would bludgeon us into their heaven, to bow to their savage conception of a deity.
The deity of the infuriated bigot, call him by what holy name they choose, is never anything
but the Old Adversary, who can put on the whole outward armoury of God.
I have known, worked with, and loved many noble men, true priests of Christ, and
they would not, I am sure, assert that the spirit which drives a mob to bludgeon and kick
parents before the eyes of their children is the Spirit which is present at the elevation of the
Host. What I say here of the hooligans of religion in Dublin I would say with equal sincerity
of the hooligans of religion in Belfast.
But I do not wish now to explain or defend myself, but to point out the danger of
allowing the present policy to continue. I tell the citizens of this city that, if the civil
authorities, the masters, and their allies in the Press had been trying deliberately and of
set purpose to make of Dublin another Barcelona, with the bomb of the Anarchist a
frequent blazing terror in the streets, if they wished to empty the churches and make of
Dublin another Paris, they could not devise a policy more certain to bring about the result.
The Irish are a gentle people, but history is thronged with evidence that in long-
exasperated men, suffering from real or fancied injustice, gentleness turns to ferocity. To
know that is true we can find ample proof in the story of our own race, whether we begin
with the mythical Cat Head, in the far-off uprising of the common people in Ireland, or come
nearer our own time to the Dynamitards.
I ask my fellow-townsmen to think whether it would not have been better for the
masters of Dublin to have met organised labour, and argued out the rights and wrongs than
to have had months of bitter and futile revilings, with such hot words out of a hot heart as
I myself have uttered? Would it not have been better for the masters to treat the men as
human beings who could be reasoned with than to issue ultimatums like despots to
subjects who must be coerced without discussion?
I ask whether it is most likely agreements will be kept and good work done if the
men are starved into submission, or if they are made after the most open interchange of
opinions?
The State has set up a tribunal which has given its judgment. Ought not public
opinion to insist on the recommendation of the Askwith Committee being tried? How can
the masters complain of the lawlessness of the workers when they themselves set an
example by ignoring the verdict of the only legal tribunal which has tried the case?
Dublin seems to be stumbling darkly and blindly to a tragedy, and the silence of
those who foresee and do not speak is a crime. It is time for the Chorus to cry out to warn
the antagonists in the drama.
----------
[Pamphlet Advertisement:]
Information upon the prices, etc., of Mr. Russell's works can be had at "Irish Worker"
Office, Liberty Hall, Dublin.
-----------------------
Reprinted from the Irish Homestead, The Sackville Press, 11 & 12 Findlater Place, Dublin.
[Circa 1915]
----------------
I feel impelled this week to speak to you personally and directly on the
circumstances brought about by the war which affect you as farmers, because from reports
which have reached me by many channels, public and private, I am certain that immense
numbers of you are unaware of, or do not realise, the new situation created, and that time
is hurrying on rapidly to a point where a light will beat strongly on you and all your doings
and the attention of the nation will be concentrated upon your class and the way in which
you discharge your functions in the national life.
You all know that half the world is at war. Many of you realise it painfully and
intimately through brothers, sons, kin or friends who are actual participants in the fighting.
In that sense you need no more reminder that the world is at war, but you do not yet realise
that you are more than onlookers, that you are called on to be participators in the struggle,
not as combatants, but as part of that other noble army whose business it is in many ways
to heal up the wounds of the combatants, to make good the wastage in society, and to
ameliorate the evil effects of the war. What those working under the Red Cross do for all
combatants alike, without distinction between friend or foe of their country, you are called
upon to do for society at large. Your occupation, always necessary in times of peace, in
time of war, in periods of great human necessity stands out prominently and assumes its
eternal position as the foremost, the most necessary, of all human occupations.
The longer war continues the more does farming, normally hidden behind a hundred
other occupations, come to the front. Men think little in times of plenty of the labours which
bring them the food that enables them to live and work; but let there be shortage and a
wild apprehension springs up in society and people realise that it is upon you and your
labours that they depend altogether. You become the staff on which they lean. Every
other occupation almost might disappear, but yours never, without humanity disappearing,
and any failure of yours in time of necessity to equal the need of the world inflicts the most
terrible suffering on the world. Any neglect of duty in a time of necessity would be as
ignoble as the act of a Red Cross contingent who on the battlefield neglected to attend to
the wounded. The longer the war continues the more insistent will be the claims of the
world upon you who can farm, you over whose fields no armies have marched, to supply
the shortage of food brought about by the withdrawal of millions of your class in Europe to
take part in a redder reaping than any the world has hitherto known.
"Is, then, the necessity for food production that has arisen really so great," you may
ask, "that we must upset the normal routine of our industry? Are you, who say this one of
the many scare-mongers whose souls flare out in wild apprehensions and panic if anything
unusual happens in the world? Is there really fear of shortage of the food supply of the
world? Are people in the islands in which we live in danger of famine?" I can only say that
those whose business it is to search most deeply into the sources of supply are those who
are most deeply concerned about the future and the food supply of the civil population in
Europe. I can only retail to you some facts which I believe to be accurate, and you can
form your own judgment.
In theory, the European countries at war can put somewhat over forty million
persons into the field. The law of conscription, which prevails over Europe, allows few
able-bodied men to evade the obligation of leaving their normal occupation when called
upon by the government to defend their country. The gigantic extent of the war being
waged at present is forcing Germany, France, Austria, Russia, Servia and Belgium to call
more and more on the reserves of humanity in these countries up to the utmost limit, from
boys of eighteen up to elderly men, to decide the destinies of half the world. So great are
the problems to be decided. So great is the number of people gathered to force a solution
of the questions at issue. From these islands, from our own country, we are sending larger
numbers of men than have ever before in our history left our shores on a martial
enterprise. Even from Australia, Canada and New Zealand, from the uttermost ends of the
earth, men are journeying, drawn on by this maelstrom which is swallowing up our
humanity. A very large part, perhaps the largest part of these armies, have been called
from agricultural occupations; only the women and children and the very old are left in the
warring countries in Europe to till and harvest as best they can.
You know what production you might expect from your own farms if all the able-
bodied men from eighteen to forty-five were called away and the work was left to your
wives and children and the elders who remained. Besides this certain decline in production
in the future there has been actual great destruction of crops in the field. Armies stretching
over hundreds of miles, in their rushings to and fro across the continent, make havoc of the
land they fight over. Though the last harvest, tilled in times of peace and gathered in war,
was a full one, anticipation of future shortage is affecting prices. They have gone up
steadily, and will rise still more. It is towards the middle and latter end of this year that
those who have thought most over this question look with painful apprehension. They fear,
nay, they are certain of a shortage in the food supply of the world. They fear for the
workers in the towns. They anticipate food riots and a red conflagration breaking out of
men and women maddened by the hunger of their families and their own hunger.
It will be too late then to think of remedial measures. Whatever must be done to
prevent disaster or to relieve it of its worst terrors and make it bearable must be done now.
Food cannot be created in a day or a week the way coal can be dug out of the earth or oil
drawn from the wells. Meat and wheat, butter, fruit, vegetables, all must be prepared in
anticipation many months beforehand, or years beforehand in the case of cattle. At first
when the war broke out these economic results of the war were not clearly apprehended.
Military requirements necessarily came before everything else. It was vaguely supposed
that, so far as the food supply in these islands was concerned, it simply depended on
keeping the trade routes open; a few weeks would rid the seven seas of enemy cruisers;
and then we could draw upon the world for our granary as usual.
Well, we can draw upon the world and prices are rising. It is impossible in the
modern world, where countries are economically interdependent, to shelter people in one
nation from a commotion which rages fiercely among neighbouring nations. Prices rise in
harmony everywhere, and when there is competition over a continent and a shortage of
supply, no country, however open its ports, can expect to live as usual. The question of
food supply and food prices is further complicated by the uncertainty of receiving supplies.
We doubt the ability of enemy submarines to make effective a blockade of ports in Great
Britain and Ireland. But the sinking, with loss of life, of half-a-dozen ships out of one
thousand would have a great moral effect, which means that shipowners and sailors and
insurance companies would be seriously perturbed, and wages, freight and insurance
would be raised, with consequent further effect upon the cost of cargoes to customers. By
the law of affinities misfortunes for the public never come singly. The attack on the Suez
Canal is conceived for the same purpose. The sinking of one or two ships there also would
produce a moral effect on shipowners and sailors. Every one of these things tends to
increase prices of food stuffs and to make more imperative the necessity for the home
farmer to produce more food stuffs.
"It is all very well to talk about producing more food stuffs," you may answer me, "but
how are we to do it? We also suffer from scarcity or high prices in the supply of raw
materials of our industry. One-eighth of the horse supply of Ireland has become military
fuel. Agricultural labour has also gone to the front, largely through recruiting or the calling
up of reservists. The fertilisers we use are more expensive, so are seeds, so are feeding
stuffs. Even granting that we might procure the seeds, the fertilisers and the feeding stuffs,
how is an increase in tillage and food production to be combined with a shortage in labour
and in horses for agricultural work? You are asking of us impossibilities. We who tilled
before worked hard enough, and you now ask us to slave." I might answer that I know that
you are human and brotherly-hearted enough to other human beings actually to slave to
relieve them if the hungry or starving people were in your own parish, visible to your eyes,
and were actually dependent, to your own knowledge, for food on you and you alone.
Slave, of course, in that case you would.
I am trying to lend you glasses to make you see things at a distance as if they were
close. You may know that already the cost of living for workers in the towns has gone up
twenty-five percent. That is, the wage of the worker who has twenty shillings a week at the
present time can only procure food and coal and other necessaries to the amount which
fifteen shillings would have purchased before the war. It is practically equivalent to a drop
of five shillings a week in the income of such a household. That is, somehow, food or heat
or light must be restricted in the family to the extent of five shillings a week. The
threatened blockade if effective to any degree, actually or morally, will knock some more
shillings off such incomes weekly; and through it all will be going on the exhaustion of the
last harvest of the world and the prospect of meagre production in the warring countries
in Europe. If you exercise your imaginations, if you allow your hearts to brood a little on
all that implies, on all that is threatened, you will see what I mean when I say your industry
is coming into prominence. It is taking its rightful place as the most important of any, and
it is for you, farmers, to take the place your profession and duty make obligatory on you as
a great auxiliary to the Red Cross in the trouble of the world, they relieving the wounded
and you working with all your energy to feed the hungry, and not to have it on your
conscience later on that it was through lethargy of yours that some children may have died
of malnutrition in the cities of your country.
I have shown, I think, that I realise your difficulties with regard to labour, horses and
the raw materials of your industry. But I think, and my belief is confirmed by the opinion
of the greatest agricultural experts - men who are not only farming but who think about
farming, and who enquire beyond their own parish into the sources of supply and the
substitutes and expedients to be adopted - that you could still increase production and do
it with honour and profit to yourselves. I am loth in moments of great human necessity to
mention the word profit along with the word honour, but it must be mentioned because a
large number of you are poor and it would be impossible for many to go to the expense of
increasing production unless they were certain that they would receive a return which
would recoup their expenditure. So I say that there is no production of beef, mutton,
bacon, wheat, oats, potatoes, milk or butter possible in these islands which would not
amply in the coming year repay the cost of labour, implements and raw materials.
You have seen already the improved tendency of prices for your stock and produce,
and you may rest assured that while the war lasts that tendency will persist and for nigh
a year after the war until men can get back to their ancient labours on the land in Europe.
I do not advise you as to the kind of crop you should produce; the greatest practical expert
in agriculture could make no general statement which would apply to all farmers and all
kinds of land. The thing you have to do is to make your farms produce to the utmost you
know them capable of bearing. Nothing will produce less than grass. Grass has borne in
times of peace all it can do. The uttermost stock that grass land can bear has been
calculated, and every farmer knows to a single unit of stock what quantity his grazing lands
will support if untilled. By this method no increase is possible. It is only by tillage methods
that the acres which feed one cow will feed three, and it is tillage of one kind or another you
must adopt if you are to produce more as the times demand.
The agricultural instructors in your county can advise you in these matters, if you
venture upon crops you have not hitherto grown. Our own contributor, Mr. Wibberley, has
made famous a system which he calls continuous cropping, which will, he has proved,
enable the farmer to double, or even in some cases to treble, his milk production or the
number of fattening cattle his acres will support. Most of you are familiar with Mr.
Wibberley's methods. His articles and book on the subject are available, and he himself
and others trained by him can be consulted up to their limit of human energy. They do not
dread work but invite it. So that, so far as technical advice is concerned you are amply
equipped in Ireland.
"But," you will say, "knowledge will not enable us to produce if labour is lacking."
Well, that it is also possible in large measure to overcome by the use of efficient
implements and power machinery. "Are we to buy all these implements, cultivators, disc
harrows, potato diggers, reapers and binders, steam threshers, and what not," you will
ask? "That would be a huge expenditure." Yes, it would, if small farmers had to buy them
for individual use. It would not pay. But it pays the big tillage farmer to use such
implements, and it amply pays the small farmer to use them if he only pays for the use of
them a cost proportionate to the extent he cultivates. That use by the poorest farmers is
made possible and profitable by means of co-operative societies. Societies of small
farmers have been able without feeling the cost to erect and equip with expensive
machinery creameries to the number of many hundreds. Can any small farmer who is a
member of a creamery say he has really felt his share of the burden of putting it up? The
banks have aided you by cheap credit in erecting your creameries, and you have paid off,
or are paying off, the loans from the banks and are richer all the time by the increased
value of your milk. You can just as easily procure through co-operation all the implements
and machinery I have mentioned, hold it in common and let it to the members for fractional
sums, and you will find in every case that the use of the machines will enable you to do
much more work at less expense than when you were employing antiquated implements
and hand labour. As the manual labourer leaves the land, the machine comes in to supply
the power, and it will enable you to pay the labourers who remain a better wage and yet
produce more and more profitably from your land.
All this has been proved by farmers in many parts of Ireland who have adopted the
new methods. It is for you at least to inquire into these methods. It is, I think I have shown,
your obvious human duty in a great human crisis to play your part in it as men, doing your
work, the honourable toil demanded from you, as soldiers and sailors do their less happy
but no more necessary duty in the trenches or on the perilous sea, where sudden death
lurks below the shining waters. You have not any more than those who bear the Red
Cross to ask yourselves the rights or the wrongs of the war. It is your duty as it is theirs to
relieve human suffering or want no matter by what race it is felt. Your energy or your
lethargy in production will not help or hinder one side in this terrible conflict. It will help or
weaken both alike, for increased production or lessened production in the harvests of the
world affect all countries finally, prices tending to find their level as water does. So those
questions of the right or wrong of the war which have been raised in certain quarters in
Ireland do not affect the duty of the farmer as farmer however they may affect his conduct
as citizen or politician. In a very special sense the well-being of the Irish people will
depend, while the war lasts and for some time after, on the enterprise of the farmers. For
the industrial centres in the North are suffering, and will suffer still more as the meagre
supply of flax which has been doled out in half-time work comes to an end. From Belgium
no flax will come to eke out Irish supplies. What escaped destruction in the battles over
the flax-growing centres was taken to Germany. From Russia little came, and it is unlikely
indeed that much will come, so one great Irish industry on which many thousands of Irish
people depended for their means of living has been stricken and will be in a shaky
condition for a year, or perhaps for two years and maybe longer, and all the people
employed in supplying the necessities of the workers in the Irish textile industries will suffer
in their turn through the lessening amount of wages spent.
There has been a kind of fictitious prosperity in some towns brought about by orders
from the Admiralty or War Office, but the spending of money in that way is like the
spending of capital. While the capital lasts the spender may live up to his old standard or
beyond it even, but when the expenditure of capital comes to an end there is absolute
destitution. Unless some new form of wealth production comes in, or unless some old
industry is revitalised to replace the decrepit industries, the nation will be in a very bad way
indeed, and if nothing of the kind happens in Ireland, we will for many years during and
after the war have our town population in a state of extreme poverty. The war will have
destroyed all the hopes of increased prosperity based in late years on the returns of the
Irish trade in imports and exports.
The one Irish industry which can swell and expand and create wealth sufficient to
offset the inevitable waning for a time of our manufacturing industries is agriculture.
Increased production of wealth in the land leads to increased consumption and the
consequent employment of people in the towns to supply the demands of the country
producers. In spite of all the talk about capturing German trade, the real truth is, and it
cannot be controverted by any feather-headed economist, that when a continent, and that
the greatest industrial wealth creating centre in the world, is at war, and production ceases,
the power of consumption ceases. Such nations not being able to produce or sell, are not
able to buy except by using capital, and neutral countries unable to sell their produce are
also limited in their purchases. The markets of the world while the war continues and some
time after will be poor markets except for the farmer, whose products none can dispense
with, and the makers of armaments, who will make their fortunes while the war lasts.
I would like to think that the terms of peace will put it out of the power of the makers
of engines of destruction to make any more fortunes, but I am afraid that, not only during
the war, but long after, makers of munitions of war will be feverishly engaged in replacing
the wastage of battleships, torpedoes, guns, rifles, shells and other scientific inventions of
the devil. Ireland will have little or no share in this work, and the Irish farmer must be the
Atlas who will for a time support the Irish world. After the war is over, men will be returning
in hundreds of thousands to industrial life, and they will find the constriction of trade so
great that it will be years, maybe, before they are reabsorbed. If they leave their country
in despair they will never return. The one hope for helping Ireland over the darkening
abyss of the next years lies in the increased activity of farmers, if they will rise to the need
of the moment. They can increase production to the utmost they are capable of, and can
market all they can produce. The distributive trade at least should not suffer if farmers do
their duty, and the distributive houses can, if custom is good in the country, keep many
manufacturing firms employed. Ireland, if only the farmers worked energetically, could
bear the shock of the war better than its mighty industrial neighbour.
I have spoken of increased production by the farmers as a duty. The word duty
implies obligation. In a merely technical and legal sense Irish farmers have no obligations
connected with the land they occupy other than the payment of their rent or annuities. But
there is another sense in which their obligations to the nation are very real, and if these
obligations are not fulfilled, Irish farmers as a class will suffer just as surely as if they had
the reputation of not paying their legal debts and were refused credit on all sides. Irish
farmers appealed to the nation to support them in their efforts first to have security of
tenure and to have tribunals created which would fix the fair rental farmers should pay, and
after that they asked the nation to back up their great policy of land purchase. The nation
supported farmers in their struggle and secured legislative sanction for the changes they
desired. Public credit was pledged to enable the gigantic financial operations connected
with land purchase to be carried through. Why was all this done? It was not because
farmers were really the poorest class in Ireland. At all times, even today, even in Dublin,
the capital city of this country, many thousands of urban workers lived and live in a state
of wretchedness and poverty which could hardly have been paralleled and certainly not
exceeded even in the worst of the congested districts. The Great Father has His many
mansions in the heavens and the Devil has his on earth. In Dublin alone twenty thousand
families live in one room each, in a state of foetid squalor which you could hardly imagine.
The public aid given to your class was not given because you were the poorest class
in the community, but because public aid given to agriculture promised to repay the nation
by an increasing production of wealth which would finally affect the urban workers in
Ireland. Directly it seemed the State could find no way of making the poor in Irish towns
wealth producers, so they were passed over, but aid given to you promised a return to the
nation. Statesmen were told of the magic of proprietorship and that once you owned the
land you occupied you would immediately increase production, you would improve your
methods, till more, pay labour better and be better customers for the decaying urban
industries in Ireland. The moral obligation as a class you owe to the nation is to help it in
its need, as it helped you in your need.
It cannot be said that these prophecies of increased production have been fulfilled.
Tillage has steadily declined year by year since the Land Acts came into operation. Less
labour has been employed. You are not altogether responsible for this. The decline in
prices for foodstuffs which had been going on since the New World poured the produce
of its virgin soil into the markets of the Old World made it difficult indeed for farmers in the
Old World to compete. You were unorganised for business purposes, are still, three-
quarters of you, unorganised to buy, manufacture, and market in that large economic
manner which in modern times is required for successful business. Technically, you were
uneducated. Methods of farming almost primitive, together with a business policy which
split up your buying and selling into petty and fractional enterprises, could not hope to
make farming a success even on the most fertile land, even if it was burdened with neither
rent nor annuity. That has been changed since the beginning of the century. You have
in Ireland access to technical knowledge. You have a body of extremely able organisers
instructing you in the co-operative methods of doing your business which your rivals in
other lands had so successfully adopted.
I do not blame you for the decline of tillage in the past, for the stagnant statistics in
regard to production. But I do say that if from this year forward there is not a great
improvement, you will have absolutely no moral claim on the Irish nation for a use of
national credit to aid you to purchase the yet unpurchased land. You have today access
to technical knowledge. Co-operative societies for purchase, manufacture and marketing
are easily organised. You have markets crying out for all you can send and offering prices
for your produce such as you never dreamed of a year before. More than this, you have
a great national necessity for the products of your industry. It is not merely the normal
impetus towards wealth production which is expected of you but very definite action by you
to do your utmost as human beings to feed the hungry and to create plenty, so far as you
can, in a world where certainly, and for all you can do, there will not be enough to go round.
You do greatly desire that the policy of land purchase shall be completed. It will be
difficult with a national debt doubled or perhaps trebled after the war is ended to finance
future purchases on such easy terms as past purchases. Public credit will not be so good.
The more a man borrows the more has he to pay for the accommodation he receives. The
more national indebtedness grows, the more expensive does it become to borrow money
for national purposes. If you read the papers you will see that truth illustrated in the terms
of the war loan. Well, after the war is over, with a national debt doubled or trebled, with
industries crippled, and a myriad social problems created by the backwash of the tidal
wave of militarism to be solved, what do you think of your chances of getting the State to
increase its indebtedness on your account, if it appears that the national necessity found
you unmoved, that although the Press rang with the cries of people affected by the scarcity
of food supplies, you went on as before, producing neither more nor less, that you
accepted whatever services the nation could render to your class but did not stir in the
nation's need to render any service to it? You could make no claim, nor as a class would
you have any claim on the nation.
If the past policy was justified by its results, if you increased production, if you had
manfully served the nation, then, I think, a good case could be made out for continuance
of the policy of land purchase. The industry which stood the strain of war best, which
increased its output, and had been a strong factor in the powers of endurance of the
nation, that industry would be certain of preferential treatment by the nation. You will be
judged as a class, not as individuals. The statistical columns in Irish Blue Books will be
merciless witnesses about you as a class, and therefore it is necessary that you should
realise, as a class, that the right method now of fighting for the completion of land purchase
is to make your land produce more food. Political methods will not help you in the future
one jot in this matter if your industry has taken out of the mouths of your advocates the
great argument that ownership led to increased agricultural production and would benefit
the nation. If that argument fails your advocates, if you request aid and confess no
obligations, the nation will turn from you and devote itself to the amelioration of the
conditions of the long neglected workers in Irish towns. I would regret with a personal
passion that your class should cease to be predominant in our national life. I believe that
country is happiest and has the most moral and stable life where agriculture predominates
among the industries. A fine life is possible for humanity working on the land, bronzed by
the sun and wind, living close to nature, affected by its arcane influences, which bring
about essential depth and a noble simplicity of character.
To create a rural civilisation is a great ideal. There is another life, fine in its way,
where humanity, collected in the cities, has exalted urban civilisation by the arts and
sciences until the cities are beautiful and healthy and the life is quickened by intellect. The
first civilisation it is in our power to create in a generation at its best. The second for us
would indeed be a long labour, and if we turned from the task of building up a rural
civilisation to making the urban life predominant, Ireland would wait many a long year
combating the alcoholic intelligence which rules in its towns and which has made them so
generally corrupt in their administration and so mean, dirty and disorderly in their character.
These things will have to be fought, and urban life will demand its just share of national
interest, but we will move a hundred times more rapidly to national prosperity and
happiness if we try to make our civilisation predominantly rural. There will be a better race
in Ireland, stronger men and comelier women, and we will be less subject to shock by the
tidal ebb and flow of the industrial world, with its slumps in trade, its feverish and transient
prosperities, and its dependence upon factors and forces outside Ireland and beyond
possibility of control by us.
I have fought your battles and worked for many years to bring about a rural
civilisation in Ireland, and I think I should be accounted as a friend, and as a friend I give
you this frank and friendly advice about your duty now and have tried to show how your
future status in Ireland depends on your actions in this year of crisis and peril. What I
have said may irritate some of you, but that I cannot help. I would never have been worth
my salt as champion of your co-operative movement if I was not as ready to tell you
unpleasant truths as I was to tell them to your enemies. I have no desire to irritate you, but
only to help you and your cause by telling you what many people are murmuring today, and
what will be an outcry against you tomorrow, if you do not heed the warning.
I subscribe myself your sincere friend,
The Editor
------------------
Second Edition
-----------
-----------
Note
I was asked to put into shape for publication ideas and suggestions for an Irish
settlement which had been discussed among a group whose members represented all
extremes in Irish opinion. The compromise arrived at was embodied in documents written
by members of the group privately circulated, criticized and again amended. I make
special acknowledgments to Colonel Maurice Moore, Mr. James G. Douglas, Mr. Edward
E. Lysaght, Mr. Joseph Johnston, F.T.C.D., Mr. Alec Wilson and Mr. Diarmid Coffey. For
the tone, method of presentation and general arguments used, I alone am responsible.
And if any are offended at what I have said, I am to be blamed, not my fellow-workers.
- A.E.
--------------
Addendum
This pamphlet is a reprint of articles which appeared in the Irish Times on 26th, 28th
and 29th May [1917]. The letters which follow appeared in the same paper on the 31st
May.
"We, the undersigned, having read 'Thoughts for a Convention' by A.E. without
endorsing all his statements, express our general agreement with his conclusions and with
the argument by which these are reached."
The signatories include: -
Does not this suggest that agreement might also be possible in an Irish Convention
if, by some miracle, Irishmen of various parties would step out of their well-fenced
enclosures to take counsel in common?
-Yours, etc.,
James G. Douglas.
Dublin, May 30th, 1917.
----------
Sir - May I express the hope that 'A.E.'s' "Thoughts for a Convention," the last
instalment of which you published yesterday, and which I am informed will reappear as a
penny pamphlet this week, will be widely read? I am not thinking of his conclusions, ably
reasoned as they are, but of the tone and temper in which he handles the most explosive
material in the whole magazine of Irish controversy. It is refreshing to listen to one who not
only has the courage of his convictions, but can also say honestly that the convictions are
his own and not somebody else's.
'A.E.' strikes a note which may go far to make the Convention the success the vast
majority of Irishmen hardly dare to hope that it will be. If he speaks only for himself, "More
shame for his generation" will surely be the verdict of history.
-Yours, etc.,
Horace Plunkett.
--------------------
Mr. Russell's essay was first printed in the Freeman (New York) under the title, "Sir
Auckland Geddes Handiwork."
--------------
Introduction
Most of us feel strongly, and talk strongly, about national questions, but it is the
exceptional man who holds his feelings and his tongue in check until he has achieved
mastery of his more immediate and more egoistic inclinations. Among such exceptional
men, of our generation, I know none more distinguished than the Ulsterman, George W.
Russell. George Russell is the one towering figure of contemporary Ireland. Because he
has never worked in England, like Bernard Shaw or George Moore or W. B. Yeats, his
name is not so well known along the beaten paths of publicity. In proportion to his
achievement he is, I think, not at all well known. But no one who ever sees his weekly
journal, The Irish Homestead, or who has read his poetry, examined his paintings or
thought over his books on nationality and cooperation and the state, can fail to have a
sense of the fine and soaring distinction of this Irishman. And what gives his distinction its
powerful and permanent quality is the base on which it stands.
George Russell is eloquent and imaginative, but he is definite, candid, pointed and
sane. Into his Irishness there is mixed something that has the tang of the Northern
province. It is not exactly Scotch cautiousness. It is not exactly harsh Presbyterian
naturalism. But it is something hard and clear and firm, that cannot be easily traded upon
or misled. And this quality, so often devoted to personal advancement, George Russell
has given with absolute disinterestedness to the large pursuits that I have named. Other
men, of course, in the religious world or the artistic or the educational or the socialistic, can
and do exhibit this sort of disinterestedness. It was common during the war, on both sides.
In Ireland, as the movement that ended in the Easter executions testified, perfect self-
sacrifice for a political or social cause, is by no means rare. But the thing that marks the
devotion of George Russell is the swift and sweeping intelligence that has accompanied
it. In holding to his cause of Irish agricultural and industrial development, he has embraced
the realities of all civilization. It is this, in my opinion, that makes him tower above all other
Irish spokesmen. It is this that makes The Irish Homestead editorials the best editorials
in the English language today.
This is the witness who comes to testify to Americans on the real meaning of Lloyd
George's new bill for the government of Ireland. He does not, so far as I know, enjoy the
business of political discussion. He was appointed by Lloyd George to the Irish Convention
of 1917, and when that convention failed he practically made up his mind to put his future
efforts into activities removed from politics. But much as he distrusts politics, and aloof as
he holds himself from them, he is too anxious for a brotherhood of Irishmen not to speak
when he alone seems able to speak effectively. This accounts for his coming forward now.
He comes forward not as a Nationalist, a Republican or a Unionist. He comes forward as
an Irishman, an economist and a believer in public opinion. In his own words, he writes "in
order that no American who is interested in Ireland may be deceived."
There are many points, indeed, on which Americans may be deceived in regard to
Ireland. What, for example, is the real policy of the British Government? On the face of
it, as a great many Americans of British forbears contend, British policy in regard to Ireland
cannot be dishonest or debased - stupid, perhaps, or misguided, but not dishonest. Men
who believe in what Gilbert Murray calls the "profound consciousness of ultimate
brotherhood between the two great English-speaking peoples" are loath to believe that the
policy of the British Government ever could be crooked and sinister.
They set such assertions down to passion - that passion which, as George Russell
himself declares, when it enters into public life "too often makes men blind in action and
reckless in speech, and things are done and said which bring disaster to the nation."
It is not in passion that George Russell analyzes the sinister policy of Britain. He
does not speak out of those fuming instincts that belong to every herd. He speaks as a
hard, clear economist, who reads what the scales record.
And what a picture he gives us in the article that follows of a governmental policy
not straightforward, not disinterested, not even commonly honest. He does not assert, he
demonstrates, that the British Government has after long calculation devised a scheme by
which the Irish people cannot possibly work out their own salvation. Is this incredible? We
all know that it is not incredible that such schemes should be devised. Some of them were
developed at Versailles. It is a similar scheme that George Russell patiently exposes in
this article. He shows, first of all, the cold policy of the British government in regard to Irish
trade and taxation. He portrays as "sheer robbery," with necessarily dire results, the forced
contribution from Ireland of eighteen millions in sterling a year. But more crippling even
than this exaction, in the judgment of Russell, is the powerlessness of Ireland in regard to
its taxation and its trade. Is there any attempt to aid in the development of Irish agriculture
or industries? Is there any attempt to give Ireland access to American markets, or America
access to Ireland? There is, instead, the actual manacling of Ireland's underdeveloped
industries, in obedience to British jealousy. There is the same cruel and dwarfing inhibition
of Irish technical culture. The Irish government is to have no power to remit taxation or
extend bounties. It is driven to depress the standard of life of its poorer classes, and to
raise an inordinate revenue at the expense of these workers, of which Britain is to skim the
cream. In addition, the Irish must continue to trade through Britain with whatever
customers and producers it has by mere chance in the rest of the world. For this
dependence, also, the bill provides indirectly, governed by its indefensible desire to keep
Ireland enslaved.
Such enslavement, however, requires more than a trade policy; and George Russell
shows further how it is being secured. It is "not the policy of the British Government that
one section of the people should trust another section." He illustrates therefore how the
British Government has juggled with the Ulster area, in "its reactionary attempt to make
religion the basis of politics." This passage in Mr. Russell's argument is particularly
important. When Lloyd George communicated his plan to America he did not explain how
"Ulster" was to be defined. George Russell shows how it has been defined, and why. And
he shows how the Lloyd George division cuts the heart out of representative government
in Ireland, as modern democracy conceives representative government.
But is not Ulster being protected? And is this whole scheme not a sample of
federalism? Mr. Russell explains the bad intention of partitioning Ulster from the rest of
Ireland. He proves the helpless and exasperating subordination that is implied in this kind
of "federalism."
But even if Nationalist Ireland were not actually much richer than Unionist Ireland,
even if the extortion of eighteen million pounds were adjusted to say eight millions, even
if the Council were changed and county option allowed and the police made local and
indirect taxation arranged to suit an Irish standard of living, the bill that is here riddled to
pieces would remain a monument of human perfidy. And this Mr. Russell also intimates.
He intimates it by showing, on the one hand, the high possibilities of civilization that
await Ireland (to which Ireland is alive), and, on the other, the smashing ruthlessness of
British military power. That military power is directed against the heart of Ireland, against
a nationality that has been misunderstood, belittled, reviled and despoiled.
"The power of Germany," said an Oxford Pamphlet in 1914, "the power of Germany
over Alsace Lorraine or over Belgium means, if it means anything at all, that a certain
number of human beings, Belgians or Alsatians, are forced to act in various ways against
their inclinations at the command of other individuals, not because they admire or respect
these individuals but from fear of the consequence of disobedience. The will of Germany
is decided by the wills of individual Germans. It is being exercised at this moment upon
individual Belgians, with what results of suffering and anguish to the victims and
brutalization to the oppressors we are every day learning.
The power of one nation over another which can be gained by war means this and
nothing else than this, in whatever various forms it may be exercised. If we believe that
it is not good for one man to have arbitrary power over others, if we believe that slavery is
bad for the master as well as for the slave, we must believe it equally bad for one nation
to rule over another against its will. To adapt Lincoln's words: "No nation is good enough
to rule over another nation without that other's consent." That is what George Russell
means, with the change of Germany to Britain and Belgium to Ireland, when he utters the
brutal fact: "Great Britain holds Ireland by military power and not by moral power."
Perhaps it is foolish to talk to Americans of British descent, about moral power. But
no one who wants to see life lifted up out of the squalor and hatred, the disease and
famine, into which it has been plunged by mad imperialism can resist pleading, in the name
of principle, for a sober understanding of the facts that Mr. Russell presents. The cause
of Ireland is moral, or it is nothing. No policy of the British Government, however debased
and dishonest, can crush Ireland. It can only give her suffering and anguish, while
brutalizing the oppressor. But the time has now come for the world to set its
consciousness against the establishment of such policies, and resolutely to deprive
imperialism of the sanctions without which it cannot live.
"The Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs [Lord Curzon] has appointed a
committee, with Sir Charles Eliot as chairman, to advise regarding a common policy
towards British institutions, which will tend to promote solidarity among British communities
in foreign countries. The committee has been given a wide scope. It will examine the
question of further fostering solidarity by the propagation of British ideals in foreign
countries. The suggestions made cover the registration of British subjects and
encouragement of British schools, chambers of commerce, and local British newspapers
and clubs."
So British Imperialism is setting its foot in the path of German imperialism. So the
victor drinks of victory, and is blind. But the world is sick of such maleficence! It is through
with such underhand solidarity. Not all the "solidarity" on earth should protect the policies
of the British Government when they have the character which George Russell shows them
to have, in the Irish scheme now supported by so many British guns.
- Francis Hackett
New York City
------------
A Labor of Love?
The new British Ambassador to the United States, prior to his departure for
Washington, perhaps with the idea of propitiating Irish opinion in America, elected to speak
on St. Patrick's Day. He wore a green Irish halo for the occasion. He said it had been a
labor of love for him during last summer and autumn to assist in reducing to legislative form
proposals for ending the Irish question. He said the new Bill for the government of Ireland
was "a sincere attempt to place definitely and finally in the hands of the elected
representatives of the Irish people the duty and responsibility of working out their own
salvation and the salvation of their country." No doubt this statement has been cabled to
America, and I propose to examine here how far this statement is justified and how Ireland
is indebted to Sir Auckland Geddes for his interest in its welfare. I lay this down as a
fundamental proposition, which I do not think will be denied, that whoever controls the
taxation and trade policy of a country controls its destiny and the entire character of its
civilization. The body with control over customs, excise, income-tax, supertax, excess
profits duty and external trade has it in its power to make that country predominantly
industrial or agricultural or to make a balance between urban and rural interests. It can
direct the external trade of the country, make it flow into this or that channel. These
powers over Irish taxation and trade policy are expressly denied to Ireland. Ireland in fact
has less power under this last Bill over its own economic development than it had under
the Act of Union. Under that Act, Ireland had one hundred and two members in the
Imperial Parliament who could at times hold the balance of power. It was not a very real
power, because when the interests of Ireland and Great Britain conflicted, both parties in
Great Britain united against Ireland, but still to the leaders of parties Irish votes were worth
angling for, for British purposes, and had to be paid for by Land Acts or other measures.
The new Bill provides that the Irish representation at Westminster shall be reduced to forty-
two members, and so at Westminster Ireland is made practically powerless, while
everything which really affects Irish economic interests is still legislated for by the British
Parliament.
No Solution Wanted
I am not now arguing for a republic or for independence. I am simply trying to make
clear what element of truth there is in Sir Auckland Geddes' statement that the last
Government of Ireland Bill, which he helped to draft, was a sincere attempt to render
justice to Ireland inside the Empire. The British Ambassador to Washington made other
statements in his speech, justifying British control over our economic system. "Ireland,"
he said, "for good or ill was inevitably within the sphere of the British economic system.
It was dependent on England for manufactured goods of all sorts, and on the entrepot
trade of England for the supply of raw materials of foreign origin. No human power, no
legislation, could end the economic and financial association of Irish and British interests,
nor could any readjustment prevent Ireland suffering because of disturbances in the
exchange-rate between the London money-market and the markets of the outside world."
I grant that the proximity of Great Britain to Ireland makes both these countries natural
customers to each other. But Great Britain is not content with such natural trade. She
forces us to trade with her only. Irish shipping, once prosperous, was gradually crushed
out. Only a few days ago a British paper announced with exultation that the last
independent Irish shipping company had been incorporated in a British shipping trust and
there was not one single Irish overseas shipping company left. As it is, we have now to get
permits to export Irish produce anywhere except to Great Britain. What Sir Auckland
Geddes would have us believe is that we could not get manufactured goods anywhere in
the world except from Great Britain; that America, for example, would not or could not
trade with us; that we could not get steel from the United States for our ship-building
industry, or that Belgium or Russia would not sell flax to our linen-manufacturers, but for
our union with Great Britain: in fact we would be outcasts of the industrial world and no
nation would trade with us, only that Great Britain supports us with its credit and sees to
it that we pay our bills.
Cheated on Exchange
With reference to the exchange, I might point out that the 1918 report on the Irish
trade in imports and exports shows that Irish exports exceeded in value the imports by
L26,885,000 or twenty-five percent. The exports were valued at L152,903,000 and the
imports at L126,018,000. If Ireland had an independent economic system and if the laws
which govern the rates of exchange between Great Britain and the United States, or
between Great Britain and France, prevailed, the British pound sterling would decline in
value to about seventeen or sixteen shillings, and the Irish pound would appreciate in value
in purchasing goods in Great Britain. Great Britain could not export gold at the rate of
twenty-five million pounds annually to balance its trade with us. It balances accounts
between Ireland and itself by the simple plan of extracting eighteen million pounds. All
these restrictions Sir Auckland Geddes has helped during a summer and autumn to devise.
As he says, it has been "a labor of love" to him. If there were any other restrictions which
this labor of love did not suggest to him, are they not all provided for by the power of veto
given to the Irish Viceroy, who will give dissent or approval to Irish legislation on advice
from the British Government? Finally is there not the British army, encamped in Ireland
with tanks, aeroplanes, armoured cars, poisonous gas-bombs and all the paraphernalia
of control? British interests are quite safe. It is only the ironical humor of British Members
of Parliament which makes them protest to the world that they are endangering their
Empire by giving Ireland so much liberty and so many Parliaments.
---------------