
| Eugene Debs lashes out against World War I and calls on the crowd to join the Socialist party, Canton, Ohio, June 16, 1918. |
Comrades, friends and fellow-workers:
For
this very cordial greeting, this very hearty reception, I thank you all
with the fullest appreciation of your interest in and your devotion to the
cause for which I am to speak to you this afternoon. [Applause.]
To
speak for labor; to plead the cause of the men and women and children who
toil; to serve the working class, has always been to me a high privilege;
[Applause] a duty of love. I have just returned from a visit over yonder,
where three of our most loyal comrades are paying the penalty for their
devotion to the cause of the working class. [Applause.] They have come to
realize, as many of us have, that it is extremely dangerous to exercise
the constitutional right of free speech in a country fighting to make
democracy safe in the world. [Applause.]
I
realize that, in speaking to you this afternoon, there are certain
limitations placed upon the right of free speech. I must be exceedingly
careful, prudent, as to what I say, and even more careful and prudent as
to how I say it. I may not be able to say all I think; but I am not going
to say anything that I do not think. [Applause.] I would rather a thousand
times be a free soul in jail than to be a sycophant and coward in the
streets. [Applause and shouts.] They may put those boys in jail -- and
some of the rest of us in jail -- but they can not put the Socialist
movement in jail. [Applause and shouts.] Those prison bars separate their
bodies from ours, but their souls are here this afternoon. [Applause and
cheers.] They are simply paying the penalty that all men have paid in all
the ages of history for standing erect, and for seeking to pave the way to
better conditions for mankind. [Applause.]
If it
had not been for the men and women who, in the past, have had the moral
courage to go to jail, we would still be in the jungles. [Applause.]
...There is but one thing you have to be concerned about, and that is that
you keep four square with the principles of the international Socialist
movement. [Applause.] It is only when you begin to compromise that trouble
begins. [Applause.] So far as I am concerned, it does not matter what
others may say, or think, or do, as long as I am sure that I am right with
myself and the cause. [Applause.] There are so many who seek refuge in the
popular side of a great question...
If
you go to the city of Washington, and you examine the pages of the
Congressional Directory, you will find that almost all of those
corporation lawyers and cowardly politicians, members of Congress, and
misrepresentatives of the masses -- you will find that almost all of them
claim, in glowing terms, that they have risen from the ranks to places of
eminence and distinction. I am very glad I cannot make that claim for
myself. [Laughter.] I would be ashamed to admit that I had risen from the
ranks. When I rise it will be with the ranks, and not from the ranks.
[Applause.]...
The
Socialists of Ohio, it appears, are very much alive this year. The party
has been killed recently [laughter], which, no doubt, accounts for its
extraordinary activity. [Laughter.] There is nothing that helps the
Socialist Party so much as receiving an occasional death blow. [Laughter
and cheers.] The oftener it is killed the more active, the more energetic,
the more powerful it becomes.
They
who have been reading the capitalist newspapers realize what a capacity
[the papers] have for lying. We have been reading them lately. They know
all about the Socialist Party, the Socialist movement, except what is
true. [Laughter.] Only the other day they took an article that I had
written -- and most of you have read it -- most of you members of the
party, at least -- and they made it appear that I had undergone a
marvelous transformation. [Laughter.] I had suddenly become changed, had,
in fact, come to my senses; I had ceased to be a wicked Socialist, and had
become a respectable Socialist [laughter], a patriotic Socialist -- as if
I had ever been anything else. [Laughter.]
What
was the purpose of this deliberate
misrepresentation? It is so self-evident that it suggests itself. The
purpose was to sow the seeds of dissension in our ranks; to have it appear
that we were divided among ourselves; that we were pitted against each
other, to our mutual undoing. But Socialists were not born yesterday.
[Applause.] They know how to read capitalist newspapers [laughter and
applause]; and to believe exactly the opposite of what they read.
[Applause and laughter.]
It is
true that these are anxious, trying days for us all -- testing days for
the women and men who are upholding the banner of labor in the struggle of
the working class of all the world against the exploiters of all the world
[applause]; a time in which the weak and cowardly will falter and fail and
desert. They lack the fiber to endure the revolutionary test; they fall
away; they disappear as if they had never been. On the other hand, they
who are animated by the unconquerable spirit of the social revolution;
they who have the moral courage to stand erect and assert their
convictions; standby them; fight for them; go to jail, or to hell for
them, if need be [applause and shouts] -- they are writing their names, in
this crucial hour -- they are writing their names in faceless letters in
the history of mankind. [great applause.]
Those
boys over
yonder -- those comrades of ours -- and how I love them! Aye, they are
my younger brothers [laughter and applause]; their very names throb in my
heart, thrill in my veins, and surge in my soul! [Applause.] I am proud of
them; they are there for us; [applause] and we are here for them.
[Applause, shouts and cheers.] Their lips, though temporarily mute, are
more eloquent than ever before; and their voice, though silent, is heard
around the world. [Great applause.]
Are
we opposed to Prussian militarism? [Laughter; shouts from the crowd of
"Yes! Yes!"] Why, we have been fighting it since the day the Socialist
movement was born; [applause] and we are going to continue to fight it,
day and night, until it is wiped from the face of the earth. [Thunderous
applause and cheers.] Between us there is no truce, no compromise.
But
before I proceed along this line, let me recall a little history, in which
I think we are all interested...
You
remember that at the close of Theodore Roosevelt's second term as
President, he went over to
Africa to make war on some of his ancestors. [Laughter, cheers, and applause.]
You remember that, at the close of his expedition, he visited the capitals
of
Europe,
and that he was wined and dined, dignified and glorified by all the
Kaisers and Czars and Emperors of the
Old
World.
[Applause.] He visited
Potsdam
while the Kaiser was there, and, according to the accounts published in
the American newspapers, he and the Kaiser were soon on the most familiar
terms. [Laughter.] They were hilariously intimate with each other, and
slapped each other on the back. [Laughter.] After
Roosevelt
had reviewed the Kaiser's troops, according to the same accounts, he
became enthusiastic over the Kaiser's legions and said: "If I had that
kind of an army, I could conquer the world!" [Laughter.] He knew the
Kaiser then just as well as he knows him now. He knew that he was the
Kaiser, the "Beast of Berlin". And yet, he permitted himself to be
entertained by that Beast of Berlin; [applause] had his feet under the
mahogany of the Beast of Berlin; was cheek by jowl with the Beast of
Berlin. [Applause.] And, while
Roosevelt was being entertained royally by the German Kaiser, that same
Kaiser was putting the leaders of the Socialist Party in jail for fighting
the Kaiser and the
Junkers of
Germany.
[Applause.] Roosevelt was the guest of honor in the White House of the
Kaiser, while the Socialists were in the jails of the Kaiser for fighting
the Kaiser. [Applause.] Who then was fighting for democracy?
Roosevelt?
[Shouts of "No."] Roosevelt, who was honored by the Kaiser, or the
Socialists who were in jail by order of the Kaiser? [Applause.]
"Birds of a feather flock together." [Laughter.]
When
the newspapers reported that Kaiser Wilhelm and ex-President Theodore
Roosevelt recognized each other at sight, were perfectly intimate with
each other at the first touch, they made the admission that is fatal to
the claim of Theodore Roosevelt, that he is the friend of the common
people and the champion of democracy; they admitted that they were kith
and kin; that they were very much alike; that their ideas and ideals were
about the same. If Theodore Roosevelt is the great champion of democracy
[laughter] -- the arch foe of autocracy [laughter] -- , what business had
he as the guest of honor of the Prussian Kaiser? And when he met the
Kaiser, and did honor to the Kaiser, under the terms imputed to him,
wasn't it pretty strong proof that he himself was a Kaiser at heart?
[Applause] Now, after being the guest of Emperor Wilhelm, the Beast of
Berlin, he comes back to this country, and wants you to send ten-million
men over there to kill the Kaiser, to murder his former friend and pal.
Rather queer, isn't it? And yet, he is the patriot, and we are the
traitors.[Applause.] I challenge you to find a Socialist anywhere on the
face of the earth who was ever the guest of the Beast of Berlin
[applause], except as an inmate of his prison.
A
little more history along the same line. I have a distinct recollection
of it. It occurred fifteen years ago when Prince Henry [the Kaiser's
brother] came here. All of our plutocracy, all of the wealthy
representatives living along Fifth Avenue -- all, all of them -- threw
their palace doors wide open and received Prince Henry with open arms.
But they were not satisfied with this; they got down and groveled in the
dust at his feet. Our plutocracy -- women and men alike -- vied with each
other to lick the boots of Prince Henry, the brother and representative of
the Beast of Berlin. [Applause.] And still our plutocracy, our Junkers,
would have us believe that all the Junkers are confined to Germany. It is
precisely because we refuse to believe this that they brand us as
disloyalists. They want our eyes focused on the Junkers in Berlin so that
we will not see those within our own borders.
They
tell us that we live in a great free republic; that our institutions are
democratic; that we are a free and self-governing people. [Laughter. ]
This is too much, even for a joke. [Laughter.] But it is not a subject for
levity; it is an exceedingly serious matter.
To
whom do the Wall Street Junkers in our country marry their daughters?
After they have wrung their countless millions from your sweat, your agony
and your life's blood, in a time of war as in a time of peace, they invest
these untold millions in the purchase of titles of broken-down
aristocrats, such as princes, dukes, counts and other parasites and
no-accounts. [Laughter.] Would they be satisfied to wed their daughters to
honest working men? [Shouts from the crowd, "No!"] To real democrats? Oh,
no! They scour the markets of Europe for vampires who are titled and
nothing else. [Laughter. ] And they swap their millions for the titles, so
that matrimony with them becomes literally a matter of money. [Laughter.]
These
are the gentry who are today wrapped up in the American flag, who shout
their claim from the housetops that they are the only patriots, and who
have their magnifying glasses in hand, scanning the country for evidence
of disloyalty, eager to apply the brand of treason to the men who dare to
even whisper their opposition to Junker rule in the United Sates. No
wonder Sam Johnson declared that "patriotism is the last refuge of the
scoundrel." He must have had this Wall Street gentry in mind, or at least
their prototypes, for in every age it has been the tyrant, the oppressor
and the exploiter who has wrapped himself in the cloak of patriotism, or
religion, or both, to deceive and overawe the people. [Applause.]
They
would have you believe that the Socialist Party consists in the main of
disloyalists and traitors. It is true in a sense not at all to their
discredit. We frankly admit that we are disloyalists and traitors to the
real traitors of this nation; [applause] to the gang that on the Pacific
coast are trying to hang
Tom Mooney and Warren Billings in spite of their well-known innocence
and the protest of practically the whole civilized world. [Applause,
shouts and cheers.]
I
know Tom Mooney intimately, as if he were my own brother. He is an
absolutely honest man. [Applause.] He had no more to do with the crime
with which he was charged and for which he was convicted than I had.
[Applause.] And if he ought to go to the gallows, so ought I. If he is
guilty, every man who belongs to a labor organization or to the Socialist
Party is likewise guilty.
What
is Tom Mooney guilty of? I will tell you. I am familiar with his record.
For years he has been fighting bravely and without compromise the battles
of the working class out on the Pacific coast. He refused to be bribed
and he could not be browbeaten. In spite of all attempts to intimidate
him, he continued loyally in the service of the organized workers, and for
this he became a marked man. The henchmen of the powerful and corrupt
corporations, concluding finally that he could not be bought or bribed or
bullied, decided he must therefore be murdered. That is why Tom Mooney is
today a life prisoner, and why he would have been hanged as a felon long
ago but for the world-wide protest of the working-class. [Applause.]
Tom
Mooney was the chief representative of the working class they could not
control. [Applause.] They own the railways; they control the great
industries; they are the industrial masters and the political rulers of
the people. From their decision, there is no appeal. They are the
autocrats of the Pacific coast, as cruel and infamous as any that ever
ruled in Germany or any other country in the
Old
World.
[Applause.] When their rule became so corrupt that at last a grand jury
indicted them, and they were placed on trial, and Francis J. Heney was
selected to assist in their prosecution, this gang, represented by the
Chamber of Commerce; this gang of plutocrats, autocrats and high-binders,
hired an assassin to shoot Heney down in the courtroom. The same
identical gang that hired the murderer to kill Heney also hired false
witnesses to swear away the life of Tom Mooney and, foiled in that, they
have kept him in a foul prison-hole ever since. [Applause.]
Every
solitary one of these aristocratic conspirators and would-be murderers
claims to be an arch-patriot. Every one of them insists that the war is
being waged to make the world safe for democracy. What humbug! What rot!
What false pretense! These autocrats, these tyrants, these red-handed
robbers and murderers, the "patriots," while the men who have the courage
to stand face to face with them, speak the truth, and fight for their
exploited victims -- they are the disloyalists and traitors. If this be
true, I want to take my place side by side with the traitors in this
fight! [Great applause.]
The
other day they sentenced Kate Richards O'Hare to the penitentiary for five
years. Think of sentencing a woman to the penitentiary simply for
talking! [Laughter.] The United States, under plutocratic rule, is the
only country that would send a woman to prison for five years for
exercising the right of free speech. [Applause.] If this be treason, let
them make the most of it. [Applause.]
...The only testimony against her was that of a hired witness. And when
the farmers, the men and women who were in the audience she addressed,
when they went to Bismarck where the trial was held, to testify in her
favor, to swear that she had not used the language she was charged with
having used, the judge refused to allow them to go upon the stand. This
would seem incredible to me if I had not had some experience of my own
with federal courts.
Who
appoints our federal judges? The people? In all the history of the
country, the working class have never named a federal judge. There are
hundreds of these judges and every solitary one holds his position, his
tenure, through the influence and power of corporate capital. The
corporations and trusts dictate their appointment. And when they go to
the bench, they go, not to serve the people, but to serve the interests
that place them and keep them where they are.
_______________
I would rather a thousand times
be a free soul in jail
than to be a sycophant coward in the streets!
_______________
Why,
the other day, by a vote of five to four, a kind of craps game --[Debs
acts like he's rolling dice] "come seven, come 'leven" [laughter] -- they
declared the child labor law unconstitutional, a law secured after twenty
years of education and agitation on the part of all kinds of people. And
yet, by a majority of one, the Supreme Court -- a body of corporation
lawyers, with just one exception -- wiped that law from the statute books,
and this in our so-called democracy, so that we may continue to grind the
flesh and blood and bones of puny little children into profits for the
Junkers of Wall Street![Applause.] And this in a country that boasts of
fighting to make the world safe for democracy? [Laughter.] The history of
this country is being written in the blood of the childhood the industrial
lords have murdered.
These
are not palatable truths to them. They do not like to hear them; and what
is more, they do not want you to hear them. And that is why they brand us
as undesirable citizens [laughter and applause], and as disloyalists and
traitors. If we were actual traitors -- traitors to the people and to
their welfare and progress -- we would be regarded as eminently
respectable citizens of the republic; we would hold high office, have
princely incomes, and ride in limousines; and we would be pointed out as
the elect who have succeeded in life in honorable pursuit, and worthy of
emulation by the youth of the land. It is precisely because we are
disloyal to the traitors that we are loyal to the people of this nation!
[Applause.]
...[Socialist papers] have all been suppressed. What a wonderful
compliment they pay us! [Laughter and applause.] They are afraid that we
may mislead and contaminate you. You are their wards; they are your
guardians, and they know what is best for you to read and hear and know.
[Laughter.] They are bound to see to it that our vicious doctrines do not
reach your ears. [Laughter] And so in our great democracy, under our free
institutions, they flatter our press by suppression, and they ignorantly
imagine that they have silenced revolutionary propaganda in the United
States. What an awful mistake they make for our benefit! As a matter of
justice to them we should respond with resolutions of thanks and
gratitude. Thousands of people who had never before heard of our papers
are now inquiring for and insisting upon seeing them. They have succeeded
only in arousing curiosity in our literature and propaganda. And woe to
him who reads Socialist literature from curiosity! He is surely a goner.
[Applause.]
...How stupid and short-sighted the ruling class really is! Cupidity is
stone blind. It has no vision. The greedy, profit-seeking exploiter
cannot see beyond the end of his nose. ... He has no capacity for
literature; no appreciation of art; no soul for beauty. That is the
penalty the parasites pay for the violation of the laws of life. The
Rockefellers are blind. Every move they make in their game of greed but
hastens their own doom... Every time they strangle a Socialist paper they
add a thousand voices proclaiming the truth of the principles of socialism
and the ideals of the Socialist movement. They help us in spite of
themselves. Socialism is a growing idea; an expanding philosophy. It is
spreading over the entire face of the earth; it is as vain to resist it as
it would be to arrest the sunrise on the morrow. It is coming, coming,
coming all along the line. Can you not see it? If not, I advise you to
consult an oculist.
...The little that I am, the little that I am hoping to be, I owe to the
Socialist movement. [Applause. ] It has given me my ideas and ideals; my
principles and convictions, and I would not exchange one of them for all
of Rockefeller's bloodstained dollars. [Cheers.] It has taught me how to
serve -- a lesson to me of priceless value. It has taught me the ecstasy
in the handclasp of a comrade. It has enabled me to hold high communion
with you, and made it possible for me to take my place side by side with
you in the great struggle for the better day; to multiply myself over and
over again, to thrill with a fresh-born manhood; to feel life truly
worthwhile; to open new avenues of vision; to spread out glorious vistas;
to know that I am kin to all that throbs; to be class-conscious, and to
realize that, regardless of nationality, race, creed, color, or sex, every
man, every woman who toils, who renders useful service, every member of
the working class without an exception, is my comrade, my brother and
sister -- and that to serve them and their cause is the highest duty of my
life. [Great applause.]
And
in their service I can feel myself expand; I can rise to the stature of a
man and claim the right to a place on earth -- a place where I can stand
and strive to speed the day of industrial freedom and social justice.
Yes,
my comrades, my heart is attuned to yours. Aye, all our hearts now throb
as one great heart responsive to the battle cry of the social revolution.
Here, in this alert and inspiring assemblage [applause] our hearts are
with the Bolsheviki of Russia. [Deafening and prolonged applause.] Those
Russian comrades of ours have made greater sacrifices, have suffered more,
and have shed more heroic blood than any like number of men and women
anywhere on earth; they have laid the foundation of the first real
democracy that ever drew the breath of life in this world. [Applause.]
It
has been charged that Lenin and Trotsky and the leaders of the revolution
were treacherous, that they made a traitorous peace with Germany. Let us
consider that proposition briefly. At the time of the revolution Russia
had been three years in the war. Under the Czar she had lost more than
four million of her ill-clad, poorly-equipped, half-starved soldiers,
slain outright or disabled on the field of battle. She was absolutely
bankrupt. Her soldiers were mainly without arms. This was what was
bequeathed to the revolution by the Czar and his regime, and for this
condition Lenin and Trotsky were not responsible, nor the Bolsheviki. For
this appalling state of affairs the Czar and his rotten bureaucracy were
solely responsible. When the Bolsheviki came into power and went through
the archives, they found and exposed the secret treaties -- the treaties
that were made between the Czar and the French government, the British
government and the Italian government, proposing, after the victory was
achieved, to dismember the German Empire and destroy the Central Powers.
These treaties have never been denied nor repudiated. Very little has
been said about them in the American press. I have a copy of these
treaties, showing that the purpose of the Allies is exactly the purpose of
the Central Powers, and that is the conquest and spoilation of the weaker
nations that has always been the purpose of war.
Wars
throughout history have been waged for conquest and plunder. In the
Middle Ages when the feudal lords who inhabited the castles whose towers
may still be seen along the Rhine concluded to enlarge their domains, to
increase their power, their prestige, and their wealth, they declared war
upon one another. But they themselves did not go to war anymore than the
modern feudal lords, the barons of Wall Street go to war.[Applause.] The
feudal barons of the Middle Ages, the economic predecessors of the
capitalists of our day, declared all wars. And their miserable serfs
fought all the battles. The poor, ignorant serfs had been taught to
revere their masters; to believe that when their masters declared war upon
one another, it was their patriotic duty to fall upon one another and to
cut one another's throats for the profit and glory of the lords and barons
who held them in contempt. And that is war in a nutshell...
And
here let me emphasize the fact -- and it cannot be repeated too often --
that the working class who fight all the battles, the working class who
make the supreme sacrifices, the working class who freely shed their blood
and furnish the corpses, have never yet had a voice in either declaring
war or making peace. It is the ruling class that invariably does both.
They alone declare war and they alone make peace.
"Yours not to reason why; Yours but to do and die." That is their motto
and we object on the part of the awakening workers of this nation. If war
is right, let it be declared by the people. You who have your lives to
lose, you certainly above all others have the right to decide the
momentous issue of war or peace. [Applause.]
Rose
Pastor Stokes! And when I mention her name I take off my hat.[Applause.]
Here we have another heroic and inspiring comrade. She had her millions
of dollars at command. Did her wealth restrain her an instant? On the
contrary her supreme devotion to the cause outweighed all considerations
of a financial or social nature. She went out boldly to plead the cause
of the working class and they rewarded her high courage with a ten years'
sentence to the penitentiary. Think of it!
Ten years!
Roosevelt said vauntingly the other day that he would be heard [even] if
he went to jail. He knows very well that he is taking no risk of going to
jail. He is shrewdly laying his wires for the Republican nomination in
1920 and he is adept in making the appeal of the demagogue. He would do
anything to discredit the Wilson administration that he may give himself
and his party all credit. That is the only rivalry there is between the
two old capitalist parties -- the Republican Party and the Democratic
Party -- the political twins of the master class. They are not going to
have any friction between them this fall. They are all patriots in this
campaign, and they are going to combine to prevent the election of any
disloyal Socialist. I have never heard anyone tell of any difference
between these corrupt capitalist parties. Do you know of any? I certainly
do not. The situation is that one is in and the other trying to break in,
and that is substantially the only difference between them. [Laughter.]
Rose
Pastor Stokes never uttered a word she did not have a legal,
constitutional right to utter. But her message to the people, the message
that stirred their thoughts and opened their eyes -- that must be
suppressed; her voice must be silenced. And so she was promptly subjected
to a mock-trial and sentenced to the penitentiary for ten years...
[Here
Mr. Debs is handed a drink of water.]
How
good this sip of cool water from the hand of a comrade! It is as
refreshing as if it were out on the desert waste. And how good it is to
look into your glowing faces this afternoon! [Applause.] You are really
good looking [laughter] to me, I assure you. And I am glad there are so
many of you. Your tribe has increased amazingly since first I came here.
[Laughter.] You used to be so few and far between.
A few
years ago when you struck a town the first thing you had to do was to see
if you could locate a Socialist; and you were pretty lucky if you struck
the trail of one before you left town. If he happened to be the only one
and he is still living, he is now regarded as a pioneer and pathfinder; he
holds a place of honor in your esteem, and he has lodgment in the hearts
of all who have come after him. It is far different now. You can hardly
throw a stone in the dark without hitting a Socialist. [Laughter.] They
are everywhere in increasing numbers; and what marvelous changes are
taking place in the people!
Some
years ago I was to speak at Warren in this state. It happened to be at
the time that President McKinley was assassinated. In common with all
others I deplored that tragic event. There is not a Socialist who would
have been guilty of that crime. We do not attack individuals. We do not
seek to avenge ourselves upon those opposed to our faith. We have no
fight with individuals as such. We are capable of pitying those who hate
us. [Applause.] We do not hate them; we know better; we would freely give
them a cup of water if they needed it. [Applause.]
...President McKinley, as I have said, had been assassinated. I was first
to speak at Portsmouth, having been booked there some time before the
assassination. Promptly the Christian ministers of Portsmouth met in
special session and passed a resolution declaring that "Debs, more than
any other person, was responsible for the assassination of our beloved
President." [Laughter.] It was due to the doctrine that Debs was preaching
that this crime was committed, according to these patriotic parsons, and
so this pious gentry, the followers of the meek and lowly Nazarene,
concluded that I must not be permitted to enter the city. And they had
the mayor issue an order to that effect. I went there soon after,
however.
I
sent word to the mayor that I would speak that night, according to
schedule, or I would leave there in a box for the return trip. [Applause.]
The
Grand Army of the Republic called a special meeting and then marched to
the hall in full uniform and occupied the front seats in order to silence
me if my speech did not suit them. I went to the hall, however, found it
open, and made my speech. There was no interruption. I told the audience
frankly who was responsible for the President's assassination. I said:
"As long as there is misery caused by robbery at the bottom there will be
assassination at the top." [Applause.] I showed them, evidently to their
satisfaction, that it was their own capitalist system that was
responsible; the system that had impoverished and brutalized the ancestors
of the poor witless boy who had murdered the President. Yes, I made my
speech that night, and it was well received, but when I left there, I was
still an"undesirable citizen."
Some
years later I returned to Warren. It seemed that the whole population was
out for the occasion. I was received with open arms.[Applause.] I was no
longer a demagogue; no longer a fanatic or an undesirable citizen. I had
become exceedingly respectable simply because the Socialists had increased
in numbers, and socialism had grown in influence and power. If ever I
become entirely respectable, I shall be quite sure that I have outlived
myself. [Laughter.]
It is
the minorities who have made the history of this world. It is the few who
have had the courage to take their places at the front; who have been true
enough to themselves to speak the truth that was in them; who have dared
oppose the established order of things; who have espoused the cause of the
suffering, struggling poor; who have upheld without regard to personal
consequences the cause of freedom and righteousness. It is they, the
heroic, self-sacrificing few who have made the history of the race and who
have paved the way from barbarism to civilization. The many prefer to
remain upon the popular side. They lack the courage and vision to join a
despised minority that stands for a principle; they have not the moral
fiber that withstands, endures and finally conquers. They are to be
pitied and not treated with contempt for they cannot help their
cowardice. But, thank God, in every age and in every nation there have
been the brave and self-reliant few, and they have been sufficient to
their historic task; and we, who are here today, are under infinite
obligations to them because they suffered, they sacrificed, they went to
jail, they had their bones broken upon the wheel, they were burned at the
stake and their ashes scattered to the winds by the hands of hate and
revenge in their struggle to leave the world better for us than they found
it for themselves. We are under eternal obligations to them because of
what they did and what they suffered for us, and the only way we can
discharge that obligation is by doing the best we can for those who are to
come after us. [Applause.] And this is the high purpose of every Socialist
on earth. Everywhere they are animated by the same lofty principles;
everywhere they have the same noble ideals; everywhere they are clasping
hands across national boundary lines; everywhere they are calling one
another Comrade, the blessed word that springs from the heart of unity and
bursts into blossom upon the lips. Each passing day they are getting into
closer touch all along the battle line, waging the holy war of the working
class of the world against the ruling and exploiting class of the world.
Do
you wish to hasten the day of victory? Join the Socialist Party! Don't
wait for the morrow. Join now! [Applause.] Enroll your name without fear,
and take your place where you belong. You cannot do your duty by proxy.
You have got to do it yourself, and do it squarely and then, as you look
yourself in the face, you will have no occasion to blush. You will know
what it is to be a real man or woman. You will lose nothing; you will
gain everything. [Applause.] Not only will you lose nothing, but you will
find something of infinite value, and that something will be yourself.
And that is your supreme need -- to find yourself -- to really know
yourself and your purpose in life. [Applause.]
You
need at this time especially to know that you are fit for something better
than slavery and cannon fodder. [Applause.] You need to know that you were
not created to work and produce and impoverish yourself to enrich an idle
exploiter. You need to know that you have a mind to improve, a soul to
develop, and a manhood to sustain... You need to know that as long as you
are ignorant, as long as you are indifferent, as long as you are
apathetic, unorganized and content, you will remain exactly where you
are.[Applause.] You will be exploited; you will be degraded, and you will
have to beg for a job. You will get just enough for your slavish toil to
keep you in working order, and you will be looked down upon with scorn and
contempt by the very parasites that live and luxuriate out of your sweat
and unpaid labor.
If
you would be respected you have got to begin by respecting yourself.
[Applause. ] Stand up squarely and look yourself in the face and see a
man! Do not allow yourself to fall into the predicament of the poor fellow
who, after he had heard a Socialist speech, concluded that he too ought to
be a Socialist. The argument he had heard was unanswerable. "Yes," he
said to himself, "all the speaker said was true, and I certainly ought to
join the party." But after a while he allowed his ardor to cool, and he
soberly concluded that by joining the party he might anger his boss and
lose his job. He then concluded: "I can't take the chance."
That
night he slept alone. There was something on his conscience and it
resulted in a dreadful dream. Men always have such dreams when they
betray themselves. A Socialist is free to go to bed with a clear
conscience. He goes to sleep with his manhood and he awakens and walks
forth in the morning with his self-respect. He is unafraid and he can
look the whole world in the face [applause], without a tremor and without
a blush. But this poor weakling who lacked the courage to do the bidding
of his reason and conscience was haunted by a startling dream and at
midnight, he awoke in terror, bounded from his bed and exclaimed: "My God,
there is nobody in this room." [Laughter.] He was absolutely right.
[Laughter and applause.] There was nobody in that room.
How
would you like to sleep in a room that had nobody in it? [Laughter.] It is
an awful thing to be nobody. That is certainly a state of mind to get out
of, the sooner the better.
There
is a great deal of hope for Baker, Ruthenberg and Wagenknecht who are in
jail for their convictions; but for the fellow that is nobody, there is no
pardoning power. He is "in" for life. Anybody can be nobody; but it
takes a man to be somebody.
To
turn your back on the corrupt Republican Party and the still more corrupt
Democratic Party -- the gold-dust lackeys of the ruling class [laughter]
counts for still more after you have stepped out of those popular and
corrupt capitalist parties to join a minority party that has an ideal,
that stands for a principle, and fights for a cause. [Applause.] This will
be the most important change you have ever made and the time will come
when you will thank me for having made the suggestion. It was the day of
days for me. I remember it well. It was like passing from midnight
darkness to the noon-tide light of day. It came almost like a flash and
found me ready.
...[The Democrats and Republicans are continually talking about your
patriotic duty. It is not their but your patriotic duty that they are
concerned about. There is a decided difference. Their patriotic duty
never takes them to the firing line or chucks them into the trenches.
And
now among other things they are urging you to "cultivate" war gardens,
while at the same time a government war report just issued shows that
practically 52 percent of the arable, tillable soil is held out of use by
the landlords, speculators, and profiteers. They themselves do not
cultivate the soil. They could not if they would. Nor do they allow
others to cultivate it. They keep it idle to enrich themselves, to pocket
the millions of dollars of unearned increment. Who is it that makes this
land valuable while it is fenced in and kept out of use? It is the
people. Who pockets this tremendous accumulation of value? The
landlords. And these landlords who toil not and spin not are supreme
among American "patriots."
In
passing, I suggest that we stop a moment to think about the term"landlord."
"LANDLORD!" Lord of the Land! The lord of the land is indeed a
superpatriot. This lord, who practically owns the earth tells you that we
are fighting this war to make the world safe for democracy -- he who shuts
out all humanity from his private domain; he who profiteers at the expense
of the people who have been slain and mutilated by multiplied thousands,
under pretense of being the great American patriot. It is he, this
identical patriot, who is in fact the archenemy of the people; it is he
that you need to wipe from power. It is he who is a far greater menace to
your liberty and your well-being than the Prussian Junkers on the other
side of the Atlantic ocean! [Applause.]
Fifty-two percent of the land kept out of use, according to their own
figures! They tell you that there is an alarming shortage of flour and
that you need to produce more. They tell you further that you have got to
save wheat so that more can be exported for the soldiers who are fighting
on the other side, while half of your tillable soil is held out of use by
the landlords and profiteers. What do you think of that?...
When
you have organized industrially, you will soon learn that you can manage
as well as operate industry. You will soon realize that you do not need
the idle masters and exploiters. They are simply parasites. They do not
employ you as you imagine, but you employ them to take from you what you
produce, and that is how they function in industry. You can certainly
dispense with them in that capacity. You do not need them to depend upon
for your jobs. You can never be free while you work and live by their
sufferance. You must own your own tools and then you will control your
own jobs, enjoy the products of your own labor and be freemen instead of
industrial slaves.
Organize industrially and make your organization complete. Then unite in
the Socialist Party. Vote as you strike and strike as you vote...
When
we unite and act together on the industrial field and when we vote
together on election day we shall develop the supreme power of the one
class that can and will bring permanent peace to the world. We shall then
have the intelligence, the courage, and the power for our great task. In
due time, industry will be organized on a cooperative basis. We shall
conquer the public power. We shall then transfer the title deeds of the
railroads, the telegraph lines, the mines, mills and great industries to
the people in their collective capacity; we shall take possession of all
these social utilities in the name of the people. We shall then have
industrial democracy. We shall be a free nation whose government is of,
and by, and for the people.
And
now for all of us to do our duty! The clarion call is ringing in our ears,
and we cannot falter without being convicted of treason to ourselves and
to our great cause.
Do
not worry over the charge of treason to your masters, but be concerned
about the treason that involves yourselves. [Applause.] Be true to
yourself and you cannot be a traitor to any good cause on earth.
Yes,
in good time we are going to sweep into power in this nation and
throughout the world. We are going to destroy all enslaving and degrading
capitalist institutions and re-create them as free and humanizing
institutions. The world is daily changing before our eyes. The sun of
capitalism is setting; the sun of socialism is rising. It is our duty to
build the new nation and the free republic. We need industrial and social
builders. We Socialists are the builders of the beautiful world that is
to be. We are all pledged to do our part. We are inviting -- aye,
challenging you this afternoon in the name of your own manhood and
womanhood -- to join us and do your part.
In
due time the hour will strike and this great cause triumphant -- the
greatest in history -- will proclaim the emancipation of the working class
and the brotherhood of all mankind! [Thunderous and prolonged applause.]