Past and Present
Past and Present INTRODUCTIONBook I—ProemChapter IChapter IIChapter IIIChapter IVChapter VChapter VIBook II—The Ancient MonkChapter IChapter IIChapter IIIChapter IVChapter VChapter VIChapter VIIChapter VIIIChapter IXChapter XChapter XIChapter XIIChapter XIIIChapter XIVChapter XVChapter XVIChapter XVIIBook III—The Modern WorkerChapter IChapter IIChapter IIIChapter IVChapter VChapter VIChapter VIIChapter VIIIChapter IXChapter XChapter XIChapter XIIChapter XIIIChapter XIVChapter XVBook IV—HoroscopeChapter IChapter IIChapter IIIChapter IVChapter VChapter VIChapter VIIChapter VIIICopyright
Past and Present
Thomas Carlyle
INTRODUCTION
Here is Carlyle's new poem, hisIliadof English woes, to follow his poem on France, entitled
theHistory of the French Revolution.In
its first aspect it is a political tract, and since Burke, since
Milton, we have had nothing to compare with it. It grapples
honestly with the facts lying before all men, groups and disposes
them with a master's mind, and, with a heart full of manly
tenderness, offers his best counsel to his brothers. Obviously it
is the book of a powerful and accomplished thinker, who has looked
with naked eyes at the dreadful political signs in England for the
last few years, has conversed much on these topics with such
wisemen of all ranks and parties as are drawn to a scholar's house,
until, such daily and nightly meditation has grown into a great
connection, if not a system of thoughts; and the topic of English
politics becomes the best vehicle for the expression of his recent
thinking, recommended to him by the desire to give some timely
counsels, and to strip the worst mischiefs of their plausibility.
It is a brave and just book, and not a semblance. "No new truth,"
say the critics on all sides. Is it so? Truth is very old, but the
merit of seers is not to invent but to dispose objects in their
right places, and he is the commander who is always in the mount,
whose eye not only sees details, but throws crowds of details into
their right arrangement and a larger and juster totality than any
other. The book makes great approaches to true contemporary
history, a very rare success, and firmly holds up to daylight the
absurdities still tolerated in the English and European system. It
is such an appeal to the conscience and honour of England as cannot
be forgotten, or be feigned to be forgotten. It has the merit which
belongs to every honest book, that it was self-examining before it
was eloquent, and so hits all other men, and, as the country people
say of good preaching, "comes bounce down into every pew." Every
reader shall carry away something. The scholar shall read and
write, the farmer and mechanic shall toil, with new resolution, nor
forget the book when they resume their labour.Though no theocrat, and more than most philosophers, a
believer in political systems, Mr. Carlyle very fairly finds the
calamity of the times, not in bad bills of Parliament, nor the
remedy in good bills, but the vice in false and superficial aims of
the people, and the remedy in honesty and insight. Like every work
of genius, its great value is in telling such simple truths. As we
recall the topics, we are struck with force given to the plain
truths; the picture of the English nation all sitting enchanted,
the poor, enchanted so that they cannot work, the rich, enchanted
so that they cannot enjoy, and are rich in vain; the exposure of
the progress of fraud into all arts and social activities; the
proposition that the labourer must have a greater share in his
earnings; that the principle of permanence shall be admitted into
all contracts of mutual service; that the state shall provide at
least schoolmaster's education for all the citizens; the
exhortation to the workman that he shall respect the work and not
the wages; to the scholar that he shall be there for light; to the
idle, that no man shall sit idle; the picture of Abbot Samson, the
true governor, who "is not there to expect reason and nobleness of
others, he is there to give them of his own reason and nobleness;"
the assumption throughout the book, that a new chivalry and
nobility, namely the dynasty of labour, is replacing the old
nobilities. These things strike us with a force which reminds us of
the morals of the Oriental or early Greek masters, and of no modern
book. Truly in these things is great reward. It is not by sitting
so at a grand distance and calling the human racelarvae,that men are to be helped, nor by
helping the depraved after their own foolish fashion; but by doing
unweariedly the particular work we were born to do. Let no man
think himself absolved because he does a generous action and
befriends the poor, but let him see whether he so holds his
property that a benefit goes from it to all. A man's diet should be
what is simplest and readiest to be had, because it is so private a
good. His house should be better, because that is for the use of
hundreds, perhaps of thousands, and is the property of the
traveler. But his speech is a perpetual and public instrument; let
that always side with the race and yield neither a lie nor a sneer.
His manners,—let them be hospitable and civilising, so that no
Phidias or Raphael shall have taught anything better in canvas or
stone; and his acts should be representative of the human race, as
one who makes them rich in his having, and poor in his
want.It requires great courage in a man of letters to handle the
contemporary practical questions; not because he then has all men
for his rivals, but because of the infinite entanglements of the
problem, and the waste of strength in gathering unripe fruits. The
task is superhuman; and the poet knows well that a little time will
do more than the most puissant genius. Time stills the loud noise
of opinions, sinks the small, raises the great, so that the true
emerges without effort and in perfect harmony to all eyes; but the
truth of the present hour, except in particulars and single
relations, is unattainable. Each man can very well know his own
part of duty, if he will; but to bring out the truth for beauty,
and as literature, surmounts the powers of art. The most elaborate
history of today will have the oddest dislocated look in the next
generation. The historian of today is yet three ages off. The poet
cannot descend into the turbid present without injury to his rarest
gifts. Hence that necessity of isolation which genius has always
felt. He must stand on his glass tripod, if he would keep his
electricity.But when the political aspects are so calamitous that the
sympathies of the man overpower the habits of the poet, a higher
than Literary inspiration may succour him. It is a costly proof of
character, that the most renowned scholar of England should take
his reputation in his hand and should descend into the ring; and he
has added to his love whatever honour his opinions may forfeit. To
atone for this departure from the vows of the scholar and his
eternal duties to this secular charity, we have at least this gain,
that here is a message which those to whom it was addressed cannot
choose but hear. Though they die, they must listen. It is plain
that whether by hope or by fear, or were it only by delight in this
panorama of brilliant images; all the great classes of English
society must read, even those whose existence it proscribes. Poor
Queen Victoria—poor Sir Robert Peel—poor Primate and Bishops—poor
Dukes and Lords! There is no help in place or pride or in looking
another way; a grain of wit is more penetrating than the lightning
of the night-storm, which no curtains or shutters will keep out.
Here is a book which will be read, no thanks to anybody but itself.
What pains, what hopes, what vows, shall come of the reading! Here
is a book as full of treason as an egg is full of meat, and every
lordship and worship and high form and ceremony of English
conservatism tossed like a football into the air, and kept in the
air, with merciless kicks and rebounds, and yet not a word is
punishable by statute. The wit has eluded all official zeal; and
yet these dire jokes, these cunning thrusts, this darning sword of
Cherubim waved high in air, illuminates the whole horizon, and
shows to the eyes of the universe every wound it inflicts. Worst of
all for the party attacked, it bereaves them beforehand of all
sympathy, by anticipating the plea of poetic and humane
conservatism, and impressing the reader with the conviction that
the satirist himself has the truest love for everything old and
excellent in English land and institutions, and a genuine respect
for the basis of truth in those whom he exposes.We are at some loss how to state what strikes us as the fault
of this remarkable book, for the variety and excellence of the
talent displayed in it is pretty sure to leave all special
criticism in the wrong. And we may easily fail in expressing the
general objection which we feel. It appears to us as a certain
disproportion in the picture, caused by the obtrusion of the whims
of the painter. In this work, as in his former labours, Mr. Carlyle
reminds us of a sick giant. His humours are expressed with so much
force of constitution that his fancies are more attractive and more
credible than the sanity of duller men. But the habitual
exaggeration of the tone wearies whilst it stimulated.It is felt to be so much deduction from the universality of
the picture. It is not serene sunshine, but everything is seen in
lurid storm lights. Every object attitudinises, to the very
mountains and stars almost, under the refraction of this wonderful
humorist; and instead of the common earth and sky, we have a
Martin's Creation or Judgment Day. A crisis has always arrived
which requires adeus ex machina.One can
hardly credit, whilst under the spell of this magician, that the
world always had the same bankrupt look, to foregoing ages as to
us—as of a failed world just re-collecting its old withered forces
to begin again and try to do a little business. It was perhaps
inseparable from the attempt to write a book of wit and imagination
on English politics, that a certain local emphasis and love of
effect, such as is the vice of preaching, should appear, producing
on the reader a feeling of forlornness by the excess of value
attributed to circumstances. But the splendour of wit cannot
out—dazzle the calm daylight, which always shows every individual
man in balance with his age, and able to work out his own salvation
from all the follies of that, and no such glaring contrasts or
severalties in that or this. Each age has its own follies, as its
majority is made up of foolish young people; its superstitions
appear no superstitions to itself; and if you should ask the
contemporary, he would tell you, with pride or with regret
(according as he was practical or poetic), that he had none. But
after a short time, down go its follies and weakness and the memory
of them; its virtues alone remain, and its limitation assumes the
poetic form of a beautiful superstition, as the dimness of our
sight clothes the objects in the horizon with mist and colour. The
revelation of Reason is this of the un-changeableness of the fate
of humanity under all its subjective aspects; that to the cowering
it always cowers, to the daring it opens great avenues. The
ancients are only venerable to us because distance has destroyed
what was trivial; as the sun and stars affect us only grandly,
because we cannot reach to their smoke and surfaces and say, Is
that all?And yet the gravity of the times, the manifold and increasing
dangers of the English State, may easily excuse some over-
colouring of the picture; and we at this distance are not so far
removed from any of the specific evils, and are deeply participant
in too many, not to share the gloom and thank the love and the
courage of the counselor. This book is full of humanity, and
nothing is more excellent in this as in all Mr. Carlyle's works
than the attitude of the writer. He has the dignity of a man of
letters, who knows what belongs to him, and never deviates from his
sphere; a continuer of the great line of scholars, and sustains
their office in the highest credit and honour. If the good heaven
have any good word to impart to this unworthy generation, here is
one scribe qualified and clothed for its occasion. One excellence
he has in an age of Mammon and of criticism, that he never suffers
the eye of his wonder to close. Let who will be the dupe of
trifles, he cannot keep his eye oft from that gracious Infinite
which embosoms us.As a literary artist he has great merits, beginning with the
main one that he never wrote one dull line. How well-read, how
adroit, what thousand arts in his one art of writing; with his
expedient for expressing those unproven opinions which he
entertains but will not endorse, by summoning one of his men of
straw from the cell,—and the respectable Sauerteig, or
Teufelsdrockh, or Dryasdust, or Picturesque Traveler, says what is
put into his mouth, and disappears. That morbid temperament has
given his rhetoric a somewhat bloated character; a luxury to many
imaginative and learned persons, like a showery south-wind with its
sunbursts and rapid chasing of lights and glooms over the
landscape, and yet its offensiveness to multitudes of reluctant
lovers makes us often wish some concession were possible on the
part of the humorist. Yet it must not be forgotten that in all his
fun of castanets, or playing of tunes with a whip-lash like some
renowned charioteers,—in all this glad and needful venting of his
redundant spirits, he does yet ever and anon, as if catching the
glance of one wise man in the crowd, quit his tempestuous key, and
lance at him in clear level tone the very word, and then with new
glee return to his game. He is like a lover or an outlaw who wraps
up his message in a serenade, which is nonsense to the sentinel,
but salvation to the ear for which it is meant. He does not dodge
the question, but gives sincerity where it is
due.One word more respecting this
remarkable style. We have in literature few specimens of
magnificence. Plato is the purple ancient, and Bacon and Milton the
moderns of the richest strains. Burke sometimes reaches to that
exuberant fullness, though deficient in depth. Carlyle in his
strange, half mad way, has entered the Field of the Cloth of Gold,
and shown a vigour and wealth of resource which has no rival in the
tourney play of these times—the indubitable champion of England.
Carlyle is the first domestication of the modern system, with its
infinity of details, into style. We have been civilising very fast,
building London and Paris, and now planting New England and India,
New Holland and Oregon—and it has not appeared in literature; there
has been no analogous expansion and recomposition in books.
Carlyle's style is the first emergence of all this wealth and
labour with which the world has gone with child so long. London and
Europe, tunneled, graded corn-lawed, with trade-nobility, and East
and West Indies for dependencies, and America, with the Rocky Hills
in the horizon, have never before been conquered in literature.
This is the first invasion and conquest. How like an air-balloon or
bird of Jove does he seem to float over the continent, and stooping
here and there pounce on a fact as a symbol which was never a
symbol before. This is the first experiment, and something of
rudeness and haste must be pardoned to so great an achievement. It
will be done again and again, sharper, simpler; but fortunate is he
who did it first, though never so giant-like and fabulous. This
grandiose character pervades his wit and his imagination. We have
never had anything in literature so like earthquakes as the
laughter of Carlyle. He "shakes with his mountain mirth." It is
like the laughter of the Genii in the horizon. These jokes shake
down Parliament-house and Windsor Castle, Temple and Tower, and the
future shall echo the dangerous peals. The other particular of
magnificence is in his rhymes. Carlyle is a poet who is altogether
too burly in his frame and habit to submit to the limits of metre.
Yet he is full of rhythm, not only in the perpetual melody of his
periods, but in the burdens, refrains, and returns of his sense and
music. Whatever thought or motto has once appeared to him fraught
with meaning, becomes an omen to him henceforward, and is sure to
return with deeper tones and weightier import, now as threat, now
as confirmation, in gigantic reverberation, as if the hills, the
horizon, and the next ages returned the sound.
Book I—Proem
Chapter I
MidasThe condition of England, on which many pamphlets are now in
the course of publication, and many thoughts unpublished are going
on in every reflective head, is justly regarded as one of the most
ominous, and withal one of the strangest, ever seen in this world.
England is full of wealth, of multifarious produce, supply for
human want in every kind; yet England is dying of inanition. With
unabated bounty the land of England blooms and grows; waving with
yellow harvests; thick-studded with workshops, industrial
implements, with fifteen millions of workers, understood to be the
strongest, the cunningest and the willingest our Earth ever had;
these men are here; the work they have done, the fruit they have
realised is here, abundant, exuberant on every hand of us: and
behold, some baleful fiat as of Enchantment has gone forth, saying,
"Touch it not, ye workers, ye master-workers, ye master-idlers;
none of you can touch it, no man of you shall be the better for it;
this is enchanted fruit!" On the poor workers such fiat falls
first, in its rudest shape; but on the rich masterworkers too it
falls; neither can the rich master-idlers, nor any richest or
highest man escape, but all are like to be brought low with it, and
made 'poor' enough, in the money-sense or a far fataller
one.Of these successful skillful workers some two millions, it is
now counted, sit in Workhouses, Poor-law Prisons; or have 'out-door
relief' flung over the wall to them,—the workhouse Bastille being
filled to bursting, and the strong Poor-law broken asunder by a
stronger.* They sit there, these many months now; their hope of
deliverance as yet small. In workhouses, pleasantly so named,
because work cannot be done in them. Twelve hundred thousand
workers in England alone; their cunning right-hand lamed, lying
idle in their sorrowful bosom; their hopes, outlooks, share of this
fair world, shut in by narrow walls. They sit there, pent up, as in
a kind of horrid enchantment; glad to be imprisoned and enchanted,
that they may not perish starved. The picturesque Tourist, in a
sunny autumn day, through this bounteous realm of England,
describes the Union Workhouse on his path. 'Passing by the
Workhouse of St. Ives in Huntingdonshire, on a bright day last
autumn,' says the picturesque Tourist, 'I saw sitting on wooden
benches, in front of their Bastille and within their ringwall and
its railings, some half-hundred or more of these men. Tall robust
figures, young mostly or of middle age; of honest countenance, many
of them thoughtful and even intelligent-looking men. They sat
there, near by one another; but in a kind of torpor, especially in
a silence, which was very striking. In silence: for, alas, what
word was to be said? An Earth all lying round, crying, Come and
till me, come and reap me;—yet we here sit enchanted! In the eyes
and brows of these men hung the gloomiest expression, not of anger,
but of grief and shame and manifold inarticulate distress and
weariness; they returned my glance with a glance that seemed to
say, "Do not look at us. We sit enchanted here, we know not why.
The Sun shines and the Earth calls; and, by the governing Powers
and Impotences of this England, we are forbidden to obey. It is
impossible, they tell us!" There was something that reminded me of
Dante's Hell in the look of all this; and I rode swiftly
away.So many hundred thousands sit in workhouses: and other
hundred thousands have not yet got even workhouses; and in thrifty
Scotland itself, in Glasgow or Edinburgh City, in their dark lanes,
hidden from all but the eye of God, and of rare Benevolence the
minister of God, there are scenes of woe and destitution and
desolation, such as, one may hope, the Sun never saw before in the
most barbarous regions where men dwelt. Competent witnesses, the
brave and humane Dr. Alison, who speaks what he knows, whose noble
Healing Art in his charitable hands becomes once more a truly
sacred one, report these things for us: these things are not of
this year, or of last year, have no reference to our present state
of commercial stagnation, but only to the common state. Not in
sharp fever-fits, but in chronic gangrene of this kind is Scotland
suffering. A Poor-law, any and every Poor-law, it may be observed,
is but a temporary measure; an anodyne, not a remedy: Rich and
Poor, when once the naked facts of their condition have come into
collision, cannot long subsist together on a mere Poor-law. True
enough:—and yet, human beings cannot be left to die! Scotland too,
till something better come, must have a Poor-law, if Scotland is
not to be a byword among the nations. O, what a waste is there; of
noble and thrice-noble national virtues; peasant Stoicisms,
Heroisms; valiant manful habits, soul of a Nation's worth,—which
all the metal of Potosi cannot purchase back; to which the metal of
Potosi, and all you can buy withit,is dross and dust!Why dwell on this aspect of the matter? It is too
indisputable, not doubtful now to any one. Descend where you will
into the lower class, in Town or Country, by what avenue you will,
by Factory Inquiries, Agricultural Inquiries, by Revenue Returns,
by Mining-Labourer Committees, by opening your own eyes and
looking, the same sorrowful result discloses itself: you have to
admit that the working body of this rich English Nation has sunk or
is fast sinking into a state, to which, all sides of it considered,
there was literally never any parallel. At Stockport Assizes,— and
this too has no reference to the present state of trade, being of
date prior to that,—a Mother and a Father are arraigned and found
guilty of poisoning three of their children, to defraud a
'burial-society' of some31.8s.due on the death of each child: they are arraigned, found
guilty; and the official authorities, it is whispered, hint that
perhaps the case is not solitary, that perhaps you had better not
probe farther into that department of things. This is in the autumn
of 1841; the crime itself is of the previous year or season.
"Brutal savages, degraded Irish," mutters the idle reader of
Newspapers; hardly lingering on this incident. Yet it is an
incident worth lingering on; the depravity, savagery and degraded
Irishism being never so well admitted. In the British land, a human
Mother and Father, of white skin and professing the Christian
religion, had done this thing; they, with their Irishism and
necessity and savagery, had been driven to do it. Such instances
are like the highest mountain apex emerged into view; under which
lies a whole mountain region and land, not yet emerged. A human
Mother and Father had said to themselves, What shall we do to
escape starvation? We are deep sunk here, in our dark cellar; and
help is far.—Yes, in the Ugolino Hungertower stern things happen;
best-loved little Gaddo fallen dead on his Father's knees!—The
Stockport Mother and Father think and hint: Our poor little
starveling Tom, who cries all day for victuals, who will see only
evil and not good in this world: if he were out of misery at once;
he well dead, and the rest of us perhaps kept alive? It is thought,
and hinted; at last it is done. And now Tom being killed, and all
spent and eaten, Is it poor little starveling Jack that must go, or
poor little starveling Will?— What an inquiry of ways and
means!In starved sieged cities, in the uttermost doomed ruin of old
Jerusalem fallen under the wrath of God, it was prophesied and
said, 'The hands of the pitiful women have sodden their own
children.' The stern Hebrew imagination could conceive no blacker
gulf of wretchedness; that was the ultimatum of degraded
god-punished man. And we here, in modern England, exuberant with
supply of all kinds, besieged by nothing if it be not by invisible
Enchantments, are we reaching that?—How come these things?
Wherefore are they, wherefore should they be?Nor are they of the St. Ives workhouses, of the Glasgow
lanes, and Stockport cellars, the only unblessed among us. This
successful industry of England, with its plethoric wealth, has as
yet made nobody rich; it is an enchanted wealth, and belongs yet to
nobody. We might ask, Which of us has it enriched? We can spend
thousands where we once spent hundreds; but can purchase nothing
good with them. In Poor and Rich, instead of noble thrift and
plenty, there is idle luxury alternating with mean scarcity and
inability. We have sumptuous garnitures for our Life, but have
forgotten tolivein the middle
of them. It is an enchanted wealth; no man of us can yet touch it.
The class of men who feel that they are truly better off by means
of it, let them give us their name!Many men eat finer cookery, drink dearer liquors,—with what
advantage they can report, and their Doctors can: but in the heart
of them, if we go out of the dyspeptic stomach, what increase of
blessedness is there? Are they better, beautifuller, stronger,
braver? Are they even what they call 'happier? Do they look with
satisfaction on more things and human faces in this God's Earth; do
more things and human faces look with satisfaction on them? Not so.
Human faces gloom discordantly, disloyally on one another. Things,
if it be not mere cotton and iron things, are growing disobedient
to man. The Master Worker is enchanted, for the present, like his
Workhouse Workman; clamours, in vain hitherto, for a very simple
sort of 'Liberty:' the liberty 'to buy where he finds it cheapest,
to sell where he finds it dearest.' With guineas jingling in every
pocket, he was no whit richer; but now, the very guineas
threatening to vanish, he feels that he is poor indeed. Poor Master
Worker! And the Master Unworker, is not he in a still fataller
situation? Pausing amid his game-preserves, with awful eye,—as he
well may! Coercing fifty-pound tenants; coercing, bribing,
cajoling; doing what he likes with his own. His mouth full of loud
futilities, and arguments to prove the excellence of his Corn-law;*
and in his heart the blackest misgiving, a desperate
half-consciousness that his excellent Corn-law is indefensible,
that his loud arguments for it are of a kind to strike men too
literallydumb.To whom, then, is this wealth of England wealth? Who is it
that it blesses; makes happier, wiser, beautifuller, in any way
better? Who has got hold of it, to make it fetch and carry for him,
like a true servant, not like a false mock-servant; to do him any
real service whatsoever? As yet no one. We have more riches than
any Nation ever had before; we have less good of them than any
Nation ever had before. Our successful industry is hitherto
unsuccessful; a strange success, if we stop here! In the midst of
plethoric plenty, the people perish; with gold walls, and full
barns, no man feels himself safe or satisfied. Workers, Master
Workers, Unworkers, all men, come to a pause; stand fixed, and
cannot farther. Fatal paralysis spreading inwards, from the
extremities, in St. Ives workhouses, in Stockport cellars, through
all limbs, as if towards the heart itself. Have we actually got
enchanted, then; accursed by some god?—Midas longed for gold, and insulted the Olympians. He got
gold, so that whatsoever he touched became gold,—and he, with his
long ears, was little the better for it. Midas had misjudged the
celestial music-tones; Midas had insulted Apollo and the gods: the
gods gave him his wish, and a pair of long ears, which also were a
good appendage to it. What a truth in these old
Fables!
Chapter II
The SphinxHow true, for example, is that other old Fable of the Sphinx,
who sat by the wayside, propounding her riddle to the passengers,
which if they could not answer she destroyed them! Such a Sphinx is
this Life of ours, to all men and societies of men. Nature, like
the Sphinx, is of womanly celestial loveliness and tenderness; the
face and bosom of a goddess, but ending in claws and the body of a
lioness. There is in her a celestial beauty,— which means celestial
order, pliancy to wisdom; but there is also a darkness, a ferocity,
fatality, which are infernal. She is a goddess, but one not yet
disimprisoned; one still half-imprisoned,—the inarticulate, lovely
still encased in the inarticulate, chaotic. How true! And does she
not propound her riddles to us? Of each man she asks daily, in mild
voice, yet with a terrible significance, "Knowest thou the meaning
of this Day? What thou canst do Today; wisely attempt to do?"
Nature, Universe, Destiny, Existence, howsoever we name this grand
unnameable Fact in the midst of which we live and struggle, is as a
heavenly bride and conquest to the wise and brave, to them who can
discern her behests and do them; a destroying fiend to them who
cannot. Answer her riddle, it is well with thee. Answer it not,
pass on regarding it not, it will answer itself; the solution for
thee is a thing of teeth and claws; Nature is a dumb lioness, deaf
to thy pleadings, fiercely devouring. Thou art not now her
victorious bridegroom; thou art her mangled victim, scattered on
the precipices, as a slave found treacherous, recreant, ought to be
and must.With Nations it is as with individuals: Can they rede the
riddle of Destiny? This English Nation, will it get to know the
meaning ofitsstrange new
Today? Is there sense enough extant, discoverable anywhere or
anyhow, in our united twenty-seven million heads to discern the
same; valour enough in our twenty-seven million hearts to dare and
do the bidding thereof? It will be seen!—The secret of gold Midas, which he with his long ears never
could discover, was, That he had offended the Supreme Powers;—that
he had parted company with the eternal inner Facts of this
Universe, and followed the transient outer Appearances thereof; and
so was arrivedhere.Properly it
is the secret of all unhappy men and unhappy nations. Had they
known Nature's right truth, Nature's right truth would have made
them free. They have become enchanted; stagger spell-bound, reeling
on the brink of huge peril, because they were not wise enough. They
have forgotten the right Inner True, and taken up with the Outer
Sham-true. They answer the Sphinx's question wrong. Foolish men
cannot answer it aright! Foolish men mistake transitory semblance
for eternal fact, and go astray more and more.Foolish men imagine that because judgment for an evil thing
is delayed, there is no justice, but an accidental one, here below.
Judgment for an evil thing is many times delayed some day or two,
some century or two, but it is sure as life, it is sure as death!
In the centre of the world-whirlwind, verily now as in the oldest
days, dwells and speaks a God. The great soul of the world
isjust.O brother, can it be
needful now, at this late epoch of experience, after eighteen
centuries of Christian preaching for one thing, to remind thee of
such a fact; which all manner of Mahometans, old Pagan Romans,
Jews, Scythians and heathen Greeks, and indeed more or less all men
that God made, have managed at one time to see into; nay which thou
thyself, till 'redtape' strangled the inner life of thee, hadst
once some inkling of: That there is justice here below; and even,
at bottom, that there is nothing else but justice! Forget that,
thou hast forgotten all. Success will never more attend thee: how
can it now? Thou hast the whole Universe against thee. No more
success: mere sham-success, for a day and days; rising ever
higher,—towards its Tarpeian Rock. Alas, how, in thy soft-hung
Longacre vehicle, of polished leather to the bodily eye, of redtape
philosophy, of expediencies, clubroom moralities, Parliamentary
majorities to the mind's eye, thou beautifully rollest: but knowest
thou whitherward? It is towards theroad's
end.Old use-and-wont; established methods,
habitudes, once true and wise; man's noblest tendency, his
perseverance, and man's ignoblest, his inertia; whatsoever of noble
and ignoble Conservatism there is in men and Nations, strongest
always in the strongest men and Nations: all this is as a road to
thee, paved smooth through the abyss,—till all thisend.Till men's bitter necessities can
endure thee no more. Till Nature's patience with thee is done; and
there is no road or footing any farther, and the abyss yawns
sheer—Parliament and the Courts of Westminster are venerable to me;
how venerable; grey with a thousand years of honourable age! For a
thousand years and more, Wisdom and faithful Valour, struggling
amid much Folly and greedy Baseness, not without most sad
distortions in the struggle, have built them up; and they are as we
see. For a thousand years, this English Nation has found them
useful or supportable; they have served this English Nation's
want;beena road to it through
the abyss of Time. They are venerable, they are great and strong.
And yet it is good to remember always that they are not the
venerablest, nor the greatest, nor the strongest! Acts of
Parliament are venerable; but if they correspond not with the
writing on the Adamant Tablet, what are they? Properly their one
element of venerableness, of strength or greatness, is, that they
at all times correspond therewith as near as by human possibility
they can. They are cherishing destruction in their bosom every hour
that they continue otherwise.Alas, how many causes that can plead well for themselves in
the Courts of Westminster; and yet in the general Court of the
Universe, and free Soul of Man, have no word to utter! Honourable
Gentlemen may find this worth considering, in times like ours. And
truly, the din of triumphant Law-logic, and all shaking of
horse-hair wigs and learned-sergeant gowns having comfortably
ended, we shall do well to ask ourselves withal, What says that
high and highest Court to the verdict? For it is the Court of
Courts, that same; where the universal soul of Fact and very Truth
sits President;—and thitherward, more and more swiftly, with a
really terrible increase of swiftness, all causes do in these days
crowd for revisal,—for confirmation, for modification, for reversal
with costs. Dost thou know that Court; hast thou had any
Law-practice there? What, didst thou never enter; never file any
petition of redress, reclaimer, disclaimer or demurrer, written as
in thy heart's blood, for thy own behoof or another's; and silently
await the issue? Thou knowest not such a Court? Hast merely heard
of it by faint tradition as a thing that was or had been? Of thee,
I think, we shall get little benefit.For the gowns of learned-sergeants are good: parchment
records, fixed forms, and poor terrestrial justice, with or without
horse-hair, what sane man will not reverence these? And yet,
behold, the man is not sane but insane, who considers these alone
as venerable. Oceans of horse-hair, continents of parchment, and
learned-sergeant eloquence, were it continued till the learned
tongue wore itself small in the indefatigable learned mouth, cannot
make unjust just. The grand question still remains, Was the
judgment just? If unjust, it will not and cannot get harbour for
itself, or continue to have footing in this Universe, which was
made by other than One Unjust. Enforce it by never such statuting,
three readings, royal assents; blow it to the four winds with all
manner of quilted trumpeters and pursuivants, in the rear of them
never so many gibbets and hangmen, it will not stand, it cannot
stand. From all souls of men, from all ends of Nature, from the
Throne of God above, there are voices bidding it: Away, away! Does
it take no warning; does it stand, strong in its three readings, in
its gibbets and artillery-parks? The more woe is to it, the
frightfuller woe. It will continue standing, for its day, for its
year, for its century, doing evil all the while; but it has One
enemy who is Almighty: dissolution, explosion, and the everlasting
Laws of Nature incessantly advance towards it; and the deeper its
rooting, more obstinate its continuing, the deeper also and huger
will its ruin and overturn be.In this God's-world, with its wild-whirling eddies and mad
foam-oceans, where men and nations perish as if without law, and
judgment for an unjust thing is sternly delayed, dost thou think
that there is therefore no justice? It is what the fool hath said
in his heart. It is what the wise, in all times, were wise because
they denied, and knew forever not to be. I tell thee again, there
is nothing else but justice. One strong thing I find here below:
the just thing, the true thing. My friend, if thou hadst all the
artillery of Woolwich trundling at thy back in support of an unjust
thing; and infinite bonfires visibly waiting ahead of thee, to
blaze centuries long for thy victory on behalf of it,—I would
advise thee to call halt, to fling down thy baton, and say, "In
God's name, No!" Thy 'success?' Poor devil, what will thy success
amount to? If the thing is unjust, thou hast not succeeded; no, not
though bonfires blazed from North to South, and bells rang, and
editors wrote leading-articles, and the just thing lay trampled out
of sight, to all mortal eyes an abolished and annihilated thing.
Success? In few years, thou wilt be dead and dark,—all cold,
eyeless, deaf; no blaze of bonfires, ding-dong of bells or
leading-articles visible or audible to thee again at all forever:
What kind of success is that!—It is true all goes by approximation in this world; with any
not insupportable approximation we must be patient. There is a
noble Conservatism as well as an ignoble. Would to Heaven, for the
sake of Conservatism itself, the noble alone were left, and the
ignoble, by some kind severe hand, were ruthlessly lopped away,
forbidden ever more to skew itself! For it is the right and noble
alone that will have victory in this struggle; the rest is wholly
an obstruction, a postponement and fearful imperilment of the
victory. Towards an eternal centre of right and nobleness, and of
that only, is all this confusion tending. We already know whither
it is all tending; what will have victory, what will have none! The
Heaviest will reach the centre. The Heaviest, sinking through
complex fluctuating media and vortices, has its deflexions, its
obstructions, nay at times its resiliences, its reboundings;
whereupon some blockhead shall be heard jubilating, "See, your
Heaviest ascends!"—but at all moments it is moving centreward, fast
as is convenient for it; sinking, sinking; and, by laws older than
the World, old as the Maker's first Plan of the World, it has to
arrive there.Await the issue. In all battles, if you await the issue, each
fighter has prospered according to his right. His right and his
might, at the close of the account, were one and the same. He has
fought with all his might, and in exact proportion to all his right
he has prevailed. His very death is no victory over him. He dies
indeed; but his work lives, very truly lives. A heroic Wallace,
quartered on the scaffold, cannot hinder that his Scotland become,
one day, a part of England: but he does hinder that it become, on
tyrannous unfair terms, a part of it; commands still, as with a
god's voice, from his old Valhalla and Temple of the Brave, that
there be a just real union as of brother and brother, not a false
and merely semblant one as of slave and master. If the union with
England be in fact one of Scotland's chief blessings, we thank
Wallace withal that it was not the chief curse. Scotland is not
Ireland: no, because brave men rose there, and said, "Behold, ye
must not tread us down like slaves; and ye shall not,—and cannot!"
Fight on, thou brave true heart, and falter not, through dark
fortune and through bright. The cause thou fightest for, so far as
it is true, no farther, yet precisely so far, is very sure of
victory. The falsehood alone of it will be conquered, will be
abolished, as it ought to be: but the truth of it is part of
Nature's own Laws, cooperates with the World's eternal Tendencies,
and cannot be conquered.Thedustof controversy,
what is it but thefalsehoodflying off from all manner of conflicting true forces, and
making such a loud dust-whirlwind,—that so the truths alone may
remain, and embrace brother-like in some true resulting-force! It
is ever so. Savage fighting Heptarchies: their fighting is an
ascertainment, who has the right to rule over whom; that out of
such waste-bickering Saxondom a peacefully cooperating England may
arise. Seek through this Universe; if with other than owl's eyes,
thou wilt find nothing nourished there, nothing kept in life, but
what has right to nourishment and life. The rest, look at it with
other than owl's eyes, is not living; is all dying, all as good as
dead! Justice was ordained from the foundations of the world; and
will last with the world and longer.From which I infer that the inner sphere of Fact, in this
present England as elsewhere, differs infinitely from the outer
sphere and spheres of Semblance. That the Temporary, here as
elsewhere, is too apt to carry it over the Eternal. That he who
dwells in the temporary Semblances, and does not penetrate into the
eternal Substance, willnotanswer the Sphinx-riddle of Today, or of any Day. For the
substance alone is substantial; that is the law of Fact: if you
discover not that, Fact, who already knows it, will let you also
know it by and by!What is justice? that, on the whole, is the question of the
Sphinx to us. The law of Fact is, that justice must and will be
done. The sooner the better; for the Time grows stringent,
frightfully pressing! "What is justice?" ask many, to whom cruel
Fact alone will be able to prove responsive. It is like jesting
Pilate asking, What is Truth? Jesting Pilate had not the smallest
chance to ascertain what was Truth. He could not have known it, had
a god shewn it to him. Thick serene opacity, thicker than
amaurosis, veiled those smiling eyes of his to Truth; the
innerretinaof them was gone
paralytic, dead. He looked at Truth; and discerned her not, there
where she stood. "What is justice?" The clothed embodied justice
that sits in Westminster Hall, with penalties, parchments,
tipstaves, is very visible. But the unembodied justice, whereof
that other is either an emblem, or else is a fearful
indescribability, is not so visible! For the unembodied Justice is
of Heaven; a Spirit, and Divinity of Heaven,—invisible to all but
the noble and pure of soul. The impure ignoble gaze with eyes, and
she is not there. They will prove it to you by logic, by endless
Hansard Debatings, by bursts of Parliamentary eloquence. It is not
consolatory to behold! For properly, as many men as there are in a
Nation whocanwithal see
Heaven's invisible Justice, and know it to be on Earth also
omnipotent, so many men are there who stand between a Nation and
perdition. So many, and no more. Heavy-laden England, how many hast
thou in this hour? The Supreme Power sends new and ever new,
allbornat least with hearts of
flesh and not of stone;—and heavy Misery itself, once heavy enough,
will prove didactic!—
Chapter III
Manchester InsurrectionBlusterowski, Colacorde, and other Editorial prophets of the
Continental Democratic Movement, have in their leading-articles
shewn themselves disposed to vilipend the late Manchester
Insurrection, as evincing in the rioters an extreme backwardness to
battle; nay as betokening, in the English People itself, perhaps a
want of the proper animal-courage indispensable in these ages. A
million hungry operative men started up, in utmost paroxysm of
desperate protest against their lot; and, ask Colacorde and
company, How many shots were fired? Very few in comparison! Certain
hundreds of drilled soldiers sufficed to suppress this
million-headed hydra's and tread it down, without the smallest
appeasement or hope of such, into its subterranean settlements
again, there to reconsider itself. Compared with our revolts in
Lyons, in Warsaw and elsewhere, to say nothing of incomparable
Paris City past or present, what a lamblike
Insurrection!—The present Editor is not here, with his readers, to
vindicate the character of Insurrections; nor does it matter to us
whether Blusterowski and the rest may think the English a
courageous people or not courageous. In passing, however, let us
mention that, to our view, this was not an unsuccessful
Insurrection; that as Insurrections go, we have not heard lately of
any that succeeded so well.A million of hungry operative men, as Blusterowski says, rose
all up, came all out into the streets, and—stood there. What other
could they do? Their wrongs and griefs were bitter, insupportable,
their rage against the same was just: but who are they that cause
these wrongs, who that will honestly make effort to redress them?
Our enemies are we know not who or what; our friends are we know
not where! How shall we attack any one, shoot or be shot by any
one? O, if the accursed invisible Nightmare, that is crushing out
the life of us and ours, would take a shape; approach us like the
Hyrcanian tiger, the Behemoth of Chaos, the Archfiend himself; in
any shape that we could see, and fasten on!—A man can have himself
shot with cheerfulness; but it needs first that he see clearly for
what. Shew him the divine face of justice, then the diabolic
monster which is eclipsing that: he will fly at the throat of such
monster, never so monstrous, and need no bidding to do it. Woolwich
grapeshot will sweep clear all streets, blast into invisibility so
many thousand men: but if your Woolwich grapeshot be but eclipsing
Divine justice, and the God's-radiance itself gleam recognisable
athwart such grapeshot,—then, yes then is the time come for
fighting and attacking. All artillery-parks have become weak, and
are about to dissipate: in the God's-thunder, their poor thunder
slackens, ceases; finding that it is, in all senses of the term,
abruteone!—That the Manchester Insurrection stood still, on the streets,
with an indisposition to fire and bloodshed, was wisdom for it even
as an Insurrection. Insurrection, never so necessary, is a most sad
necessity; and governors who wait for that to instruct them, are
surely getting into the fatallest courses,—proving themselves Sons
of Nox and Chaos, of blind Cowardice, not of seeing Valour! How can
there be any remedy in insurrection? It is a mere announcement of
the disease,—visible now even to Sons of Night. Insurrection
usually 'gains' little; usually wastes how much! One of its worst
kinds of waste, to say nothing of the rest, is that of irritating
and exasperating men against each other, by violence done; which is
always sure to be injustice done, for violence does even justice
unjustly.Who shall compute the waste and loss, the obstruction of
every sort, that was produced in the Manchester region by Peterloo
alone! Some thirteen unarmed men and women cut down,—the number of
the slain and maimed is very countable: but the treasury of rage,
burning hidden or visible in all hearts ever since, more or less
perverting the effort and aim of all hearts ever since, is of
unknown extent. "How ye came among us, in your cruel armed
blindness, ye unspeakable County Yeomanry, sabres flourishing,
hoofs prancing, and slashed us down at your brute pleasure; deaf,
blind to allourclaims and woes
and wrongs; of quick sight and sense to your own claims only! There
lie poor sallow workworn weavers, and complain no more now; women
themselves are slashed and sabred, howling terror fills the air;
and ye ride prosperous, very victorious,—ye unspeakable: give us
sabres too, and then come-on a little!" Such are Peterloos. In all
hearts that witnessed Peterloo, stands written, as in
fire-characters, or smoke-characters prompt to become fire again, a
legible balance-account of grim vengeance; very unjustly balanced,
much exaggerated, as is the way with such accounts; but payable
readily at sight, in full with compound interest! Such things
should be avoided as the very pestilence. For men's hearts ought
not to be set against one another; but setwithone another, and all against the
Evil Thing only. Men's souls ought to be left to see clearly; not
jaundiced, blinded, twisted all awry, by revenge, mutual
abhorrence, and the like. An Insurrection that can announce the
disease, and then retire with no such balance-account opened
anywhere, has attained the highest success possible for
it.And this was what these poor Manchester operatives, with all
the darkness that was in them and round them, did manage to
perform. They put their huge inarticulate question, "What do you
mean to do with us?" in a manner audible to every reflective soul
in this kingdom; exciting deep pity in all good men, deep anxiety
in all men whatever; and no conflagration or outburst of madness
came to cloud that feeling anywhere, but everywhere it operates
unclouded. All England heard the question: it is the first
practical form of our Sphinx-riddle. England will answer it; or, on
the whole, England will perish;—one does not yet expect the latter
result!For the rest, that the Manchester Insurrection could yet
discern no radiance of Heaven on any side of its horizon; but
feared that all lights, of the O'Connor or other sorts, hitherto
kindled, were but deceptive fish-oil transparencies, or bog
will-o'-wisp lights, and no dayspring from on high: for this also
we will honour the poor Manchester Insurrection, and augur well of
it. A deep unspoken sense lies in these strong men,—
inconsiderable, almost stupid, as all they can articulate of it is.
Amid all violent stupidity of speech, a right noble instinct of
what is doable and what is not doable never forsakes them: the
strong inarticulate men and workers, whomFactpatronises; of whom, in all
difficulty and work whatsoever, there is good augury! This work too
is to be done: Governors and Governing Classes thatcanarticulate and utter, in any
measure, what the law of Fact and Justice is, may calculate that
here is a Governed Class who will listen.And truly this first practical form of the Sphinx-question,
inarticulately and so audibly put there, is one of the most
impressive ever asked in the world. "Behold us here, so many
thousands, millions, and increasing at the rate of fifty every
hour. We are right willing and able to work; and on the Planet
Earth is plenty of work and wages for a million times as many. We
ask, If you mean to lead us towards work; to try to lead us, —by
ways new, never yet heard of till this new unheard-of Time? Or if
you declare that you cannot lead us? And expect that we are to
remain quietly unled, and in a composed manner perish of
starvation? What is it you expect of us? What is it you mean to do
with us?" This question, I say, has been put in the hearing of all
Britain; and will be again put, and ever again, till some answer be
given it.Unhappy Workers, unhappier Idlers, unhappy men and women of
this actual England! We are yet very far from an answer, and there
will be no existence for us without finding one. "A fair
day's-wages for a fair day's-work:" it is as just a demand as
Governed men ever made of Governing. It is the everlasting right of
man. Indisputable as Gospels, as arithmetical
multiplication-tables: it must and will have itself fulfilled; —and
yet, in these times of ours, with what enormous difficulty,
next-door to impossibility! For the times are really strange; of a
complexity intricate with all the new width of the ever-widening
world; times here of half-frantic velocity of impetus, there of the
deadest-looking stillness and paralysis; times definable as shewing
two qualities, Dilettantism and Mammonism;—most intricate
obstructed times! Nay, if there were not a Heaven's radiance of
justice, prophetic, clearly of Heaven, discernible behind all these
confused worldwide entanglements, of Landlord interests,
Manufacturing interests, Tory-Whig interests, and who knows what
other interests, expediencies, vested interests, established
possessions, inveterate Dilettantisms, Midas-eared Mammonisms,—it
would seem to everyone a flat impossibility, which all wise men
might as well at once abandon. If you do not know eternal justice
from momentary Expediency, and understand in your heart of hearts
how justice, radiant, beneficent, as the all-victorious
Light-element, is also in essence, if need be, an
all-victoriousFire-element,
and melts all manner of vested interests, and the hardest iron
cannon, as if they were soft wax, and does ever in the long-run
rule and reign, and allows nothing else to rule and reign,—you also
would talk of impossibility! But it is only difficult, it is not
impossible. Possible? It is, with whatever difficulty, very clearly
inevitable.Fair day's-wages for fair-day's-work! exclaims a sarcastic
man; alas, in what corner of this Planet, since Adam first awoke on
it, was that ever realised? The day's-wages of John Milton's
day's-work, namedParadise LostandMilton's Works,were
Ten Pounds paid by instalments, and a rather close escape from
death on the gallows. Consider that: it is no rhetorical flourish;
it is an authentic, altogether quiet fact,—emblematic, quietly
documentary of a whole world of such, ever since human history
began. Oliver Cromwell quitted his farming; undertook a Hercules'
Labour and lifelong wrestle with that Lernean Hydracoil, wide as
England, hissing heaven-high through its thousand crowned,
coroneted, shovel-hatted quackheads; and he did wrestle with it,
the truest and terriblest wrestle I have heard of; and he wrestled
it, and mowed and cut it down a good many stages, so that its
hissing is ever since pitiful in comparison, and one can walk
abroad in comparative peace from it;—and his wages, as I
understand, were burial under the gallows-tree near Tyburn
Turnpike, with his head on the gable of Westminster Hall, and two
centuries now of mixed cursing and ridicule from all manner of men.
His dust lies under the Edgeware Road, near Tyburn Turnpike, at
this hour; and his memory is—Nay, what matters what his memory is?
His memory, at bottom, is or yet shall be as that of a god: a
terror and horror to all quacks and cowards and insincere persons;
an everlasting encouragement, new memento, battleword, and pledge
of victory to all the brave. It is the natural course and history
of the Godlike, in every place, in every time. What god ever
carried it with the Tenpound Franchisers; in Open Vestry, or with
any Sanhedrim of considerable standing? When was a god found
agreeable to everybody? The regular way is to hang, kill, crucify
your gods, and execrate and trample them under your stupid hoofs
for a century or two; till you discover that they are gods,—and
then take to braying over them, still in a very long-eared
manner!—So speaks the sarcastic man; in his wild way, very mournful
truths.Day's-wages for day's-work? continues he: The Progress of
Human Society consists even in this same. The better and better
apportioning of wages to work. Give me this, you have given me all.
Pay to every man accurately what he has worked for, what he has
earned and done and deserved,—to this man broad lands and honours,
to that man high gibbets and treadmills: what more have I to ask?
Heaven's Kingdom, which we daily pray for,hascome; God's will is done on Earth
even as it is in Heaven! Thisisthe radiance of celestial justice; in the light or in the
fire of which all impediments, vested interests, and iron cannon,
are more and more melting like wax, and disappearing from the
pathways of men. A thing ever struggling forward; irrepressible,
advancing inevitable; perfecting itself, all days, more and
more,—never to beperfecttill
that general Doomsday, the ultimate Consummation, and Last of
earthly Days.True, as to 'perfection' and so forth, answer we; true
enough! And yet withal we have to remark, that imperfect Human
Society holds itself together, and finds place under the Sun, in
virtue simply of someapproximationto perfection being actually made and put in practice. We
remark farther, that there are supportable approximations, and then
likewise insupportable. With some, almost with any, supportable
approximation men are apt, perhaps too apt, to rest indolently
patient, and say, It will do. Thus these poor Manchester manual
workers mean only, by day's-wages for day's-work, certain coins of
money adequate to keep them living;—in return for their work, such
modicum of food, clothes and fuel as will enable them to continue
their work itself! They as yet clamour for no more; the rest, still
inarticulate, cannot yet shape itself into a demand at all, and
only lies in them as a dumb wish; perhaps only, still more
inarticulate, as a dumb, altogether unconscious want.Thisis the supportable approximation
they would rest patient with, That by their work they might be kept
alive to work more!—Thisonce
grown unattainable, I think, your approximation may consider itself
to have reached the insupportable stage; and may prepare, with
whatever difficulty, reluctance and astonishment, for one of two
things, for changing or perishing! With the millions no longer able
to live, how can the units keep living? It is too clear the Nation
itself is on the way to suicidal death.Shall we say then, The world has retrograded in its talent of
apportioning wages to work, in late days? The world had always a
talent of that sort, better or worse. Time was when the mere
_hand_worker needed not announce his claim to the world by
Manchester Insurrections!—The world, with its Wealth of Nations,
Supply-and-demand and such like, has of late days been terribly
inattentive to that question of work and wages. We will not say,
the poor world has retrograded even here: we will say rather, the
world has been rushing on with such fiery animation to get work and
ever more work done, it has had no time to think of dividing the
wages; and has merely left them to be scrambled for by the Law of
the Stronger, law of Supply-and-demand, law of Laissez-faire, and
other idle Laws and Un-laws,—saying, in its dire haste to get the
work done, That is well enough!And now the world will have to pause a little, and take up
that other side of the problem, and in right earnest strive for
some solution of that. For it has become pressing. What is the use
of your spun shirts? They hang there by the million unsaleable; and
here, by the million, are diligent bare backs that can get no hold
of them. Shirts are useful for covering human backs; useless
otherwise, an unbearable mockery otherwise. You have fallen
terribly behind with that side of the problem! Manchester
Insurrections, French Revolutions, and thousandfold phenomena great
and small, announce loudly that you must bring it forward a little
again. Never till now, in the history of an Earth which to this
hour nowhere refuses to grow corn if you will plough it, to yield
shirts if you will spin and weave in it, did the mere manual
two-handed worker (however it might fare with other workers) cry in
vain for such "wages" ashe