*THE
WORKER*
BRISBANE, JUNE 15, 1895.
Bystanders'
Notebook.
WHAT
TO DO.
Men ever talk of reform, and say that we must teach
masses to look for better days, and yet they never think of taking
the bram out of their own eye. Hear a man pitch about the evils of
drinking; five minutes after he has met a friend and says “Mine's a
whiskey.” Another man is a red-hot unionist, lends a man a quid and
tells everybody of his generosity, or has his name down in two sheds
starting on the same date. What we want to do is not to talk of
reforming others, but to start right away on bedrock and reform
ourselves. We're all tarred with the same brush. I can tell others
what to do, but you don't catch me doing it. Oh dear no, I'm a
reformer. Why, if every man in the bush, or even every leading man,
started to reform himself, we would gallop to the millenium quick and
lively. Find your own weak points and endeavour to alter them. Keep
on trying, even if you never succeed. Far better, he who fights all
his life 'gainst some special failing, even if he never conquers it,
and dies, bereft of friends and all, under a gum tree, than he, who
never having anything to tempt him, lives pure and upright all his
life and dies in a feather bed, with the odour of sanctity and
respectability all around him.
TRUTHFUL DICK.
* * *
GARBLED
GOVERNMENT REPORTS.
The preposterous statements made by some of the
Government picnic party re the
alleged absence of unemployed at the towns they visited is simply
astounding in its colossal impudence and would amuse people up this
way were it not so cruelly sad heartlessly false. These Fat Men
legislators were invited here and there and entertained by toadies
and parvenus whose heads were turned at being privileged to hob-nob
with Cabinet Ministers and bask in the reflected glory of their
effulgent presence. Sycophant-like, they assured the Ministers that,
owing to their heaven-born financing, work is now plentiful and all
surplus labour is provided for. Ministers and their parasites shook
hands with each other, assured themselves they were deuced clevah
fellahs, and then gave forth their famous hee-haws, which other
donkeys up and down the colony hastened to re-echo, thereby
proclaiming themselves to be the most successful asses that ever
brayed. How very applicable to this class of people are some of
Swift's lines on an upstart -
Let purse-proud M----- next approach;
With what an air he mounts his coach.
A cart would best become the knave.
A dirty parasite and slave;
His heart in poison deeply dipt,
His tongue with oily accents tipt;
A smile still ready at command;
The pliant bow, the forehead bland,
Puffed up with pride and insolence
Without a grain of common sense.
See with what consequence he stalks -
With what pomposity he talks?
See how the gaping crowd admire
The stupid blockhead and the liar?
How long shall vice triumphant reign;
How long shall mortals bend to gain?
How long shall virtue hide her face,
And leave her votaries in disgrace?
I made a rough list yesterday and found that here, in
Townsville, over thirty men whom I am personally acquainted with are
at present unemployed and unregistered, and I know that these are
only a small fraction of the scores of good steady men who are out of
work. Anyone not wilfully blind can see them day after day walking
our streets in their vain search for employment. When I read the
twaddle of a lot of fat, callous, self-complacent money bags who have
never known what it is to carry a swag looking for work or feel the
pinch of poverty and hunger, I feel compelled to write these few
lines to let Brisbane workers know the truth about labour in this
district.
COSMOPOLITAN, TOWNSVILLE.
* * *
THE
AIM OF THE TRUE MODERN SOCIALIST.
The aim of the Socialist Party is not the subdivision of
property, whether capital or land, but the control of it by the
representatives of the community. The aim of the modern Socialist
movement is not to enable this or that comparatively free person to
lead an ideal life, but to loosen the fetters of the millions who
toil in our factories and mines, and who cannot possibly be moved to
Freeland or Utopia. For the last two generations we have had social
prophets, who, seeing the impossibility of at once converting the
whole country, founded here and there small companies of the
faithful, who immediately endeavoured to put into practice whatever
complete ideal they professed. The gradual adoption of this ideal by
the whole people was expected from the steady expansion of these
isolated communities. But in no single case has this expectation been
fulfilled. Most of these isolated colonies outside the world have
failed. Some few, under more favourable circumstances, have grown
prosperous. But whether they become rich or remain poor, they are
equally disastrous to the real progress of Socialism inside the world
as we know it. Wise prophets nowadays do not found a partial
community which adopts the whole faith; they cause rather the partial
adoption of their faith by the whole community. Incomplete reform is
effected in the world of ordinary citizens instead of complete reform
outside of it. Genuine Socialism grows by vertical instead of
horizontal expansion;
we must make ever more Socialistic the institutions
amidst which we live, instead of expecting them to be suddenly
surprised by any new set imported from elsewhere. By this method
progress may be slow but failure is impossible. No nation having once
nationalised or municipalised any industry has ever retraced its
steps or reversed its action.
SIDNEY WEBB.
No comments:
Post a Comment