Bengough's Primer, Lessons 61 to
70
Lessons 1-12 |
Lessons 13-24 | Lessons 25-36 | Lessons 37-48 | Lessons 49-60 | Lessons 61-70
LESSON LXI — Plain Good Man ... Does Not
Know ... Wastes His Tears |
Who is this Man, and why does he Weep?
He is a Plain, Good Man, who Works at a Trade, and
has by Years of Toil got a Nice wee Home all paid
for. And he sheds Tears now at the Thought of the
One-Tax plan which will Rob him of the Land he Owns,
and do him much Harm. Poor Chap!
He Means well, but he does not Know. He will by no
means be Hurt, as he Thinks.
In the First place, his Bit of Land will have to
pay a Tax as bare Land, and as it is not Large, nor
in a Fine part of the Town, that Tax will not be a
Great one. But that One Tax will be All.
His House will be Free, and all the Goods he has;
and he may Build and Paint and Mend things all he
Likes, and there will be no more Tax, nor will there
be any Tax on what he Wears, or Eats, or Earns.
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Woodcut: A working man, well-dressed but not
fancy, standing on a sidewalk; a house behind him has
a picket fence. In front of him are two placards on a
fence or wall:
- The Single Tax is Coming — Lecture by Wm
Lloyd Garrison
- Equity Does Not Count — Enhance Private
Ownership Of Land -- Herbert Spencer, Social
Statics IX
The man is holding his forehead,
grief-stricken.
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labor
single
tax
urban land
value relative to rural
untaxing
buildings
perverse
incentives
|
LESSON LXII
— Stop Drink Curse ... Lay Down Arms
... Make Things Worse
|
Here is a Man with a Gun; he is in the Troop. And
next to him is a Man who Drinks; and next is a Jail
Bird, and next is a Sick Man.
Each of These is just one of a great Crowd of his
Class. It is the Aim of Good Men to have Peace on
Earth, so that no Men need to Fight; and to stop Gin
Mills and all their Ills, and to make all men Good so
there need be no Jails, and to Heal all the Sick on
Earth.
This is a good Work, is it not?
But if so much of the Earth has a Barb Wire Fence
round it, and is Held by those who Own it; and if the
World is now so Small that there is not Work for All
who now ask for Work, would it not make things a deal
Worse if Good Men could Reach the Aim they are at,
Break up the Jails, Heal the Sick, Stop the Drink,
and so on? Would it not Add new Crowds to the Out of
Works?
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Woodcut: Four figures:
- The first is a soldier, with a rifle;
- The second is a bedraggled looking man, perhaps
drunk;
- The third is a prisoner, in striped clothes,
with a ball and chain;
- The fourth is an invalid, propped up with
pillows in an armchair and covered with a
blanket
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peace
desperado
enclosure
purpose of
living
justice
|
LESSON LXIII
— Land Lord Stays ... Still On Top ...
Can't Down Him
|
What does this Cut Mean?
It Means that the Land Lord is on Top all the
While, and it is True. He is just like a Cork that
Floats on a Stream. If the Tide comes in and the
Stream gets High, Up goes the Cork. It is still on
Top, and you can not Down it.
Just so, if we had Free Trade in this Land or if
we shut out the Drink that does so much Harm, and if
Thus we made the Land bloom with new Life, what would
it Do? It would bring more Folks, and the Town would
Grow.
We would have more Works, and more Hands, and so
Goods would go Down in Price, but the New Crowds
would need Land to Stand on, and have Homes on, and
as we can not Make more Land than there now is, Up,
Up, Up would go its Worth -- the Rent for the Purse
of the Land Lord.
|
Woodcut: A man in suit and top-hat, floating in
water. He is surrounded by a life preserver labeled
"Land," and perhaps floats rather high in the
water! |
landlord
all
benefits...
population
growth
land
value
urban land
value relative to rural
in
one's sleep
barriers to
entry
|
LESSON LXIV
— Fine Bright Town ... Free Street Cars
... Land Rents Rise
|
It would be a Fine, Bright Town that would have
Free Street Cars, would it not? No Town yet has such
a Snap as that. But if it had, and Fine Parks as
well, and all Things that Heart could Wish for, who
would Gain Most by it?
The Men who own the Land, to be sure.
It would be Worth more to Live in such a Place,
would it not? And Folks would Flock in, would they
not?
Yes; and when they Got there, the Chaps who Own
the Land of the Town would just put up the Rent of
the Land so as to make the Cost of Life in that Town
as High as in Towns where they have to Pay to Ride in
Street Cars, and have Few or None of the Good things
I speak of.
The Land Lord owns the Toll Gate, my Child, as you
see, and he does not Fail to get his Toll, Rain or
Shine.
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Woodcut: On the right, a very fat man, with
top-hat. Behind him is a wall, with a sign "pay here,"
and next to him is a gate in the wall, labeled "land
ownership." At the left is the figure of a horse, with
bridle, stopped at the gate. |
public
spending
population
increase
all
benefits...
in
one's sleep
theft
unearned
increment
deadweight
loss
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LESSON LXV
— Squid Eats Men ... One Tax Plan ...
Spear That Kills
|
Have no Fear, my Child: it can not Get Out to Eat
you. It is a Thing of Vile Shape, is it not?
What is it?
It is what they call a Squid. It lives in the Sea,
and Eats Men if it gets hold of them.
It lives on Land, too. And here you see Men caught
in its great Arms. There are Words on the Arms to
tell you what they Mean.
Men may Kill Squids in the Sea with Spears, but on
Land the thing to Kill them is the One-Tax plan,
which will Cut off the Land Arm by a Tax on Rent; and
will Cut off the Rest by a Law which will give All
these Lines of Trade in to the Hands of the State, to
be Used and Held for All.
When that is Done the Squid will do no more Harm;
and there need be no more Vile Slums, but all may
have a Chance to Live a Clean Life in this World.
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Woodcut: a somewhat comical looking octopus or
squid. Its body is labeled "Monopoly." Its tentacles
each hold a struggling human figure. The tentacles
are labeled:
- Light On Co.
- Water Powers
- Railways
- Telephones
- Telegraphs
- Land
|
single
tax
justice
equality
monopoly
land
monopoly
railroads
privilege
land
land
monopoly capitalism
|
LESSON LXVI
— With Bad Laws ... Greed Won't Let ...
Gold Rule Work
|
"Do to Men as you would have them Do to You."
This is what we call the Rule of Gold. It is Grand
and Good, is it not?
Men would like to Act on it, too, but they Do not.
Why? They Dare not.
They say it is a Fine Rule but it will not Work in
our Day, for Biz is Biz.
You see, the Cause is this: Each Man now Feels
that his Feet are not in a Sure Place. He has Want,
or the Fear of Want in front of Him or, so to speak,
He has all he can do to Keep the Wolf from his
Door.
He says, "I must be Just to my Own, and so I can
not be Kind to All. Who knows but I may Lose what I
have? If So, I will need Work to Earn more, and who
Knows that I can get Work? No: I must Show Greed like
the Rest of Men and get all I can by Fair means or
Foul."
The Rule of Gold is Good, but it will not Work in
this state of Things.
|
Woodcut: A man, just outside the door to his home.
He holds a baseball bat, and is being menanced by a
huge skinny snarling dog, labeled "WANT." |
golden
rule
poverty
justice
|
LESSON LXVII
— Take First Step ... Make Land Free
... Then Go On
|
Oh, see the Great Head, and what a Lot of Limbs!
What does this Mean?
This is the State as Some Good Men think it Ought
to Be. They would fix Things so that the Few could
not Hold Land for Spec. In This they are at One with
Us.
But they Go On to Say that the Tools of Trade, all
the Mills, and Works, and Shops, must be Held by the
State as Well as the Land, or Things will not be
quite Right.
As it is now, they Point out, there is a vast
Waste of Toil and Wealth, while those who do most
Work are the Ones who Starve.
This may be True, my Child, but let us Take the
First step First. When we have Made the Land Free,
and have put the Rail Roads and such Things in to the
Hands of the State, we will have Time to Talk of this
Next Step.
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Woodcut: The upper half of the woodcut is occupied
by a huge head, a man with a mustache. Below are seven
bodies, but we don't see their heads; the single head
is hiding them, or perhaps they all share a single
head. |
is
this socialism?
land
different from capital
|
LESSON LXVIII
— How One Tax ... Plan Would Work ...
Made Quite Plain
|
Now, my Child, we come near to the End of the
Book. I hope you see through the Plan of the One Tax
and How it would Work.
Yes, I Think I Do. The State would take All the
Land and Rent it Out. Is not that it?
No; You are quite Wrong. The State would Leave the
Land with Those who now Own it. It would just tax the
Land at its Right Worth, and Each Man who Held it
would get a Tax Bill for that Sum each year, to wit,
the Sum of the Rent of the Bare Land, and there would
be but this One Tax to pay.
From the Whole of the Funds thus Got, a Part would
go to Meet the Needs of the State. There would still
be a Good Sum Left, and this would go Back to the
Folks at Large in the form of Good Roads, Lights,
Parks, and so on. Get this Clear in your Head, my
Child.
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Woodcut: a plump child is looking through a large
telescope, mounted on a stand. The telescope is labeled
"Single Tax Plan" |
single
tax
title
ownership
possession
usufruct
land
value
land value
taxation
public
spending
infrastructure
|
LESSON LXIX
— Hard On Chap ... Who Holds Land ...
Just For Spec.
|
Now I see what you Mean. But, Pray tell me, would
it not be Hard on the Man who bought Land and Paid
for it, to put the One-Tax Plan at Work and Knock out
the Spec. there is now in Land? He paid for it in
Good Cash, but if he can not Sell it or Rent it for
More than he Gave, will he not Lose the Gain he meant
to Make?
He will, my Child; but God made Land for Use, and
the Man who Lives on Land Rent is of no more Use than
the Worm that eats our Vines.
The State has a Right to Tax what it Likes, and so
it can Tax Land Rent.
We may Weep for the Poor Chaps who thus get Hurt,
but what of Those who are Hurt in the same way by the
Tax we now put on Things in which they Deal? There is
the Man who has Built a House for Gain. Do we not
Hurt him the same way when we Tax a House?
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Woodcut: a large striped beetle, filling nearly
the whole panel. The paler stripes are labeled
- landlordism;
- land speculation;
- consumes but does not produce
|
compensation
single
tax
landlord
slavery
speculation
|
LESSON LXX
— See The Cat ... Now Go Forth ... And
Spread Light
|
Now, to bring the Book to a Close, I ask you, my
Child, Do you see the Cat?
By this I Mean do you see Through the One-Tax
Plan, and grasp the Thought that it would in Truth
make men Free?
That Thought is like the Trick which you have seen
in a Print on a Card, as in this Cut. It is a lot of
Trees, and you are told to Find the Cat. At First you
can see no Shape of a Cat, but at last you Find it
and it is then so Plain you see it with Ease. So when
you once see the One-Tax Plan it will Grow on you in
the same Way. The Cat is in the Grove at the Top of
this Page. And in the square space you read these
Words, "A tax on Land Rent will make us Free."
I have Shown you how it will Do this, my Child,
and now I bid you Good-By.
Go Thou and Spread the Light.
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Woodcut: A drawing of a forest. In the center is a
combination of trees that is clearly also a drawing of
a cat, and its body bears the words "A Tax on Land-Rent
will Make Us Free" |
seeing the
cat
single
tax
freedom
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FINIS |
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RESTITUTION
Enough! the lie is ended; God only Owns the
land;
No parchment deed hath virtue unsigned by His own
hand;
Out on the bold blasphemers who would eject the
Lord,
And pauperize his children, and trample on His
Word!
Behold this glorious temple, with dome of starry
sky,
And floor of greensward scented, and trees for
pillars high,
And song of birds for music, and bleat of lambs for
prayer,
And incense of sweet vapors uprising everywhere!
Behold His table bounteous, spread over land and
sea,
The sure reward of labor, to every mortal free;
And hark! through Nature's anthem there rises the
refrain:
"God owns the Earth, but giveth it unto the Sons of
men."
But see, within the temple, as in Solomon's of
old,
The money-changers haggle, and souls are bought and
sold;
And that is called an owner's which can only be the
Lord's,
And Christ is not remembered, nor His whip of knotted
cords.
But Christ has not forgotten, and wolfish human
greed
Shall be driven from our heritage; God's bounties
shall be freed;
And from out out hoary statutes shall be torn the
crime-stained leaves
Which have turned the world, God's temple, into a den
of thieves!
J. W. BENGOUGH.
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earth is the
Lord's
title
poverty
land
as God's provisioning for all
well-provisioned
ship
created
equal
natural
opportunities
equal
opportunity
ownership
slavery
theft
thou shalt
not steal
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previous
Lessons 1-12 |
Lessons 13-24 | Lessons 25-36 | Lessons 37-48 | Lessons 49-60 | Lessons 61-70
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