Songs of the Great
Adventure Luke North
1917
Songs
of The Great Adventure |
AUDACITY
WHO WILL WORK FOR A FREE EARTH?
GIVE LABOR THE VISION OF A FREE EARTH
THIS WILL COME
TITLE
WHO WILL JOIN THE GREAT ADVENTURE?
ON AND AFTER— |
"I AM FOR
MEN"
A MILLION JOBLESS MEN
A WAR SONG FOR MEN
THE WHITE MAN'S TOTEM
THAT THE LAND BE OPENED TO MAN
OMITTED FROM THE SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY
WHAT'S IT TO YOU?
CALIFORNIA |
New
Bottles |
EARTH'S
GOD
MAN'S GOD
SELF RESPECT
THE UNKNOWN
THE ONLY REVOLUTIONARY
AS TO HATE
THE NATIVITY
|
THE ONLY
DANGER
THE ONLY VIRTUE
TO KEEP THE IDEAL
ANTINOMIES
A MAN'S PRAYER
THE OLD ART
THE NEW ART |
LIFE
LURES
THE BLIND GODDESS
HUMILITY
WANTED — MEN
NO MAN'S KEEPER
THAT I MAY STRIVE
A NEW VALOR
|
HATE IS
FORCE
BE STRONG FIRST
THE NEW POWER
THE LOVE OF GOLD OR THE LOVE OF MAN
HATE GODS, LOVE MEN
THE MASTER MOTIVE
THE STATE |
The Naked
Truth |
STARK
WINTER
WHO ARE THE STRONG?
BE TRUTHFUL
BUSINESS
CULTURE
|
BOTTOM
FACTS
I AM FREE
PREPAREDNESS
THREE BLOOD BROTHERS |
WE'RE GOING
TO HANG A BOY IN CALIFORNIA
WHERE ARE THE WOMEN OF CALIFORNIA
TWO IN A MILLION
ONLY THE POOR
|
WE LOVE
MURDER
IF HE WERE YOURS
IF WE HATED MURDER
YOUR BROTHER
I WILL NOT FIGHT |
War
Lines |
ARMAGEDDON
WAR'S MASKS
WAR WILL NOT CEASE
THE REAL WAR
|
THE NEW
WAR
A FLAGGERAL
ALL THIS KILLING
THE LESSER EVIL |
PEACE AND
WAR
ITS SHAME
ITS STRUT
THE LIE
|
SLAY YOUR
MASTERS
THE EUCHARIST
IF WE MUST |
New
Songs |
SONG OF THE PRINTING PRESS
A PLEA FOR MAN
SONG OF THE RAILWAY CROSSING
THAT LOVE BE BOLD |
A
MAN BELIEF
SONG OF THE HANGMAN
THE DOCTRINE OF RIGHTS |
Personal
Privilege |
PERSONAL PRIVILEGE
A FRIEND OF MINE
DIVERGENCE
FAY |
WHY I STAY
NOW
AT THE ROSSLYN HOTEL |
Facets of
Truth |
THE SILVER
THREAD
HUMAN NATURE PERCENTAGES
STILL WAITING FOR HEAVEN
HUMAN NATURE
|
THE SOURCE OF
POWER
PERSONAL SALVATION
IDEALS |
MARTYRDOM AND
SACRIFICE
OODLES OF KNOWLEDGE
THE LINE OF CLEAVAGE
|
NOT THE WORST
THING
THE HEART LEADS
THE WORLD IS AWAKE |
Songs of The Great
Adventure
AUDACITY
Indeed, on earth with Fate we shall conspire,
Recast the wolfish Scheme of Things entire,
Break feudal codes that hold men from the
earth,
Remold the nations to the Heart's Desire.
'Tis Fear that cozens Hope of its caress
And leaves your piety all comfortless.
'Tis Fear, I say, that robs e'en Love of joy
And tinges human life with bitterness.
'Tis Fear, 'tis Fear of flesh, of death, of "lust"
In Nature, God, or Self, no helpful trust,
All modern life is ruled by dead men's codes
—
Its Faith is based on shining bits of dust.
O Man! stand up, and dare be What thou art;
Dare live, enjoy, demand; forget the mart;
Dare to be free, dare even that thine
Heart Shall lead! O, be the very God thou art.
Dare lift thy head from custom's slavish yoke,
Tear from Society its tradesman's cloak.
Dare take the Soil, thy heritage of birth
—
Dare all, dare all! Thyself alone invoke!
O, be a gambler bold and freely throw
The dice of life, lay all its hollow show
Of dross upon the cloth — its Gold to win
—
And play the greatest game the heart can know!
WHO WILL WORK FOR A FREE
EARTH?
Who will work for a Free Earth —
To establish the rule that no one shall hold more
land than he uses —
Who will — Work! — not merely talk and attend
lectures and banquets — Who will Work
To end poverty quickly by establishing the rule and
the law —
That the Earth shall be open to all on
equal terms?
Who will do his share Now —
Here in California, Oregon, Texas — wherever
—
At This Moment to apply the Golden
Rule at the base of life —
To abolish basic laws and customs that pauperize the
many by giving the land and its resources to monopolists
and speculators —
Who will Work now to establish the rule of a Free
Earth?
Who will give all he can —
Of himself, his talents, his time, his thought, his
cash, and his energy —
Whatever he has to give — give it freely,
finely, generously,
For no private gain higher or lower
Than the satisfaction of doing his
utmost to halt the starving of children, the prostitution
of maids, the wage slaveries of men and women, the
disemployment of millions —
Who will give and work Now?
Here is the Opportunity —
To take an actual, tangible, definite step in a
legal and orderly manner
To achieve the First Necessity of an unenslaved
Manhood — A Free and Open Earth!
The rule of which once gained, the
downward pressure toward greater and greater human
degradation — toward increasing suicide, crime,
prostitution, and disemployment — will be
halted!
On a free and open earth —
Cooperation will be practicable,
Real Individualism will be possible,
Fraternalism's profit can be shared by all,
The parent Privilege will be dead!
The root cause of War will be gone!
The institutions of Comradeship may then begin to
grow.
Dreams and longings of the enlightened human heart
may then take shape.
Man's innate sense of justice (sans quibble)
—
The human passion to utter freely the Soul's fondest
boldest deepest urges —
Manhood's need to be fearless and expansive —
his everlasting search for the Intangible!
Womanhood's need for a wholesome earth on which to
breed Courageous Men — and lure them to higher daring
with the "starry treachery of her eyes!" —
All these — and all the lesser or greater things of
growth, happiness, peace, comfort, expression and
experience —
Whatever it is that all or any of us are after
—
All these must Begin!
How can they otherwise begin save
—
On a Free and Open Earth?
And here we have made a start —
Here in California and in Oregon and in Texas —
Here we have drawn a Human Bill
— a peoples' measure, to be enacted by the People
—
A bill that says in essence:
"Use your land or get off it and let some one else use it
— use the oil, coal, timber, ores of the earth or
yield the titles by which you hold them idle!"
By the terms of this bill the People assert
(grant and establish to themselves) —
To the Whole People on Equal Terms
The earth and its resources! —
Grant and Establish to Themselves at least the legal
power to control and share fairly the land and its
produce.
If there develop "other bridges to cross"
Before the earth can be opened to all men
—
We shall be the better able to cross them having
crossed this one unitedly, compactly.
If other power than legal power
Shall be necessary to open the earth to man
We shall be thrice armed and doubly strong
For having taken the legal power Together!
Here now is the struggle for a Free Earth Fairly
begun!
What will You do to further it?
GIVE LABOR THE VISION OF A FREE
EARTH
Comes a voice: "Labor is Life — Not Vision!"
Comes to rebuke the idealists, those "dreamy men and women
filled with ideas."
A voice
Echoing the masters' dictum
That whatever is must be;
And the church's dogma —
A few are chosen of God and many not.
It is not true. What is
"God and my country" but a vision?
What are all the shibboleths of the masters —
Law and Order, Progress, Posterity, Patriotism, Majesty of
the Law, Preservation of the State —
Would you call them actualities? —
And a thousand other sounding phrases
By which the masses are chained —
What are these but visions? —
False ideals impressed upon Labor,
Dreams (nightmares) dogmas
By which Labor was led to captivity
And is held there?
Labor does not originate its own visions
But its capacity for them is inherent
Unending profound.
Labor is led imprisoned bound
And might be Freed
By visions!
Above all is Labor Vision —
Too much so for that it lacks wisdom
To sift the false from the true
And falls victim to the abstract ideals
Most insistently impressed upon it.
Only by Visions —
By ideals unattaint of narrow petty personal cash or
material considerations —
Shall Labor be led to its own unfoldment,
For only by visions
Is Labor deeply stirred
And blindly led.
As Labor is led to the shambles
So it can be led to the Light —
By Visions.
Give Labor the vision of a Free Earth
And a Splendid Manhood
Here! — in this world —
Now! — in this generation.
Give it the vision of an earth free
Of hate and its gallows —
An earth with no prisons or penal codes,
No judges and detectives,
No landlords and paupers —
Give Labor a vision
That will stir its soul to Action,
Awaken its heroism and daring
And Manhood!
Labor is not all blind
All content with its chains.
See, it turns toward the Light —
Yearns for other Visions!
And we meet Labor's soul hunger
With logic! with political economy!
With lectures and resolutions —
Of a thousand differing and contradicting kinds.
We greet Labor with our own
Lack of Vision
Or with hopeless theologic platitudes
A little changed in phrasing.
Labor staggers confused bewildered
At the multiplicity of counsel.
Our mechanized logic frightens it.
Whom shall it follow —
Which ist or ism of a dozen?
And where is the Vision —
The saner, better, purer Ideal
Than "God and my country"?
Labor is not Vision, say you?
Labor is all Vision — a prisoner to its
visions.
It is we who think a little
That lack vision.
Think a little harder, friends —
Open the heart —
And back will come the vision —
The beautiful vision of a Free Earth
Without paupers, parasites, and prostitutes —
The vision we have lost
In wrangling over its distant details,
In debating how (not) to obtain it —
The vision of a decenter Home for Man
On Earth — on a free earth! —
Forgetful that only Labor can build it.
We have lost the Vision.
Open the Heart for its return.
Let it burn out
The dissonances of our differences
And knit us into a compact priesthood
To lead the human mass
To its own unfoldment.
With our regained Vision
Let us greet Labor.
With our Vision
We will arouse in Labor
Its deepest wildest strongest
Holiest and boldest Passion
Of Man for Man,
The passion of Life and daring
And High Adventure
That shall tread down
Tyrants and tyranny,
Exploiters and exploitation,
In a mad mighty rush of Man
Toward the Light —
In a sweep as impetuous
As a band of a thousand bisons
Obliterating everything in its path —
As irresistibly as the manhood of Europe
Swept across the nations and the seas
To rescue the Holy Sepulchre!
Labor has no vision?
It once had!
And can have again.
Labor has no vision!
Whose fault is that?
Ours.
We, the makers of visions —
The natural priesthood of the mass —
We have failed
To give Labor a Vision.
When in distrust
Of its theologic visions
It turns to us
We give it — economics!
Labor has had visions,
Has one now —
Hell's vision of death and hate and murder
In Europe.
And in America
It clings doubtingly to the old visions,
The masters' visions —
But its face is turned our way
And in its eyes is a cosmic hunger
A world longing — a mute
Searching passion for a New Vision
Ere it plunges
To another sea of blood.
No vision!
Let us give it a Vision —
An impracticable unattainable
Dream Vision!
In its rush to gain which
It may strike off many chains
And at the mid-goal
Find itself on a Free Earth
Potentially its own master.
Do we fear?
Do we doubt?
What is it that stays us?
Shall the mass be led only by evil visions?
Can't the mass be led by
Love as well as hate?
Can't it be easier led by
Love than by hate —
To its own unfolding
Than its own undoing?
The cosmic tide of human progression
The world wave of democratization
The trend of all the human centuries
Are ours to use.
They await intelligent employment.
They point the way
Of Least Resistance!
Kings priests exploiters
Have to battle against them.
They are on our side.
All the Powers of Light, seen and unseen, known and
guessed,
Will aid us.
Love and intelligence —
The human head and heart —
All their highest mightiest values —
Those that have saved the race
From extinction
In its darkest hours —
All will be on our side!
Impracticable!
It is the only practicable
Move on the human horizon —
The only one that will achieve
Anything worth crossing the street to get.
It is the only move
That can win!
Greed's tyranny is
Increasing!
In America, as elsewhere,
Its victims grow more numerous
Every year.
Manhood is waning!
Your hope of further education
Is futile
On a monopolized earth!
Why do we haggle and hesitate —
We, the Intelligent Minority of America?
If Labor has no Vision —
The fault is ours.
Come, let us regain our Vision
And show it to Labor —
to the human mass —
And start them on
The Holiest Crusade
The weary old world has ever known! —
Man's Great Adventure — the quest
For the human alkahest!
alkahest: the hypothetical
universal solvent once sought by
alchemists. |
THIS WILL COME
And Labor bold in all its might shall rise
Its own to grasp and hold — high heaven
emprise!
The earth to seize and make forever Free —
Thus strip from Greed its power to tyrannise!
TITLE
What mortal makes or adds an inch of land?
O'er earth let him alone stretch forth the hand
Of lustful ownership and sun and air
And liberty and even life command!
WHO WILL JOIN THE GREAT
ADVENTURE?
Who then will join a movement to release America's land
to its inhabitants upon Equal Terms? —
Destroy Privilege at its Base
Halt the hunger, prostitution, child labor,
and "crime" so ridiculously Unnecessary in an undeveloped
land of immeasurable richness! —
Stop the Cosmic Hideous Joke of a million idle
men on a billion Unused Acres!!
Who will join a movement to release Man from needless,
deadening poverty and free him to himself — to his
better, truer, kinder, wholesome Self that hungers for
expression and experience, and is deterred first and mainly
by the terrible economic pressure which brings but misery
and grief even to the few who reap its harvest?
Who will join — Who will give themselves unreservedly
—
Who will find their own keenest good —
Who will serve, and dare, with no hope of reward or
preferment, for no honors, titles, emoluments, epaulettes,
or iron crosses — the greatest cause the world has
ever known?
Who will join the Great Adventure! — to free, not a
class, not a race nor a color of men, but all men!
—
And make of America the world's Asylum
where everyone may find a
Home
without a Landlord and reap all his labor sows?
Who will join with those who Care and Feel and will Resolve
to Free the Earth
Quickly! tomorrow, today, very soon! —
in This generation! — Now —
By the force of numbers!
By the power of Human Sympathy quickened to
life from its long sleep in the deeps of Man?
For the manumission of All, regardless of
class, creed, doctrine, tenet, ism —
Heeding only the First Human Need, free access
to the Land!
Who will help the effort to establish a tenure of use and
occupance as sole title to earth, air, and sky
—
Thus to abolish Exploitation at its root
—
By an Immediate appeal to the Heart of the Human
Crowd!
Careful to eschew ephemeral sentimentality, or the
lower emotions that lead to violence and play into the
hands of Greed —
Yet fearless of any contingency, deeming the Human
Need of paramount importance —
A concentrated, united appeal, by the Entire Intelligent
Minority of America —
Of all the sociologic schools and doctrines
—
Combined in a mighty effort to arouse the whole
human mass from its Apathy —
Centering upon the One Demand, a Free Earth
(intellectual differences of method to be considered
afterward) —
Invoking as its leverage the only power of human
unanimity, the Heart Force latent in every being
—
Who will join The Great Adventure?
ON AND AFTER —
On and after —
O, what shall the date be?
On and after which
No man shall rob another
By authority of the State.
On and after —
Men! Let's make it soon!
On and after which
No man's daughter need sell
Her sex for bread.
On and after —
Are we nearly ready to be Men?
On and after which
None shall kill and debauch
By power of the State.
On and after —
The world has waited long for the date
On and after which
Greed shall not fatten
On human sweat and blood.
On and after —
Men will blush to recall the day
On and after which
Five million jobless wanderers
Found homes and work on the Land!
On and after —
On and after which
No man shall hold of earth
More than he can use!
"I AM FOR MEN"
He stood for Men —
Not for parties, sections, classes;
Not for dogmas, doctrines, isms —
Nor all the minutiae of over-elaborated plans for the
future,
Nor for craven caution, dissimulation, equivocation
—
Patience that now outrages virtue —
Program'd ways and means which if not followed
The world may stay in hell.
He stood for Men —
For in his soul he knew the line of cleavage
Was not between the robber and the robbed —
Was not marked by external difference,
By rank or class or occupation or wealth or poverty.
He knew that poor men could be very cruel and rich men
kind.
He knew the line of cleavage was in the heart — those
who care and those who don't —
This Henry George who wrote "Progress and
Poverty."
He stood for Men —
And was he wrong to yield no tithe to classes?
What has now become of all the appeals
To class interest, class consciousness, class
solidarity?
The human heart will not respond to them — in every
class are tyrants.
The human mass forgets its every interest,
Flings to the wind all self and class advantage
And goes out to die for a word.
He stood for Men —
And showed the world how to unshackle the chains that bind
men.
He showed how poverty begins,
Where modern slavery has its roots,
And how to tear them up.
The earth is for all men, he said —
And his word has gone around the world —
And now it's time to act!
He stood for Men —
Not creeds and doctrines, nor all the lesser details of
future contingencies.
He bared the earth to man.
It is for us to take it.
He tried to gain it, and was beaten back to his
death.
Now we will gain it —
At whatever cost!
A MILLION JOBLESS MEN
A million jobless men —
On twenty-three hundred million acres of idle
earth
Rich with unworked mines,
Webbed with highways and railroads,
Watered with rivers and brooks
Under snow-capped peaks and mountain
lakes.
A Million jobless men —
In an idle, unused, vacant, fertile land
Dotted here and there with villages and
cities
In which a hundred million mouths want
food
And a hundred million human needs
And longings go half supplied.
A million jobless men —
Idle, hungry, roofless, shabby men
With ten million women and children dependent
upon them,
Wandering aimlessly over twenty-three hundred
million acres
Of land that is mostly fertile and mostly idle
—
Idle, vacant, unused land — and a
starving people!
A million jobless men —
In an idle, vacant, unused land broad
enough
To house without crowding every human being in
the world —
Rich enough to support
All the earth's population,
Its own few people but partly housed, fed and
clothed!
A million jobless men —
Clerks, bookkeepers, artisans, laborers, all
the professions —
Men with nothing to do, who can find no
work,
While two million stunted children labor in
mine and mill
And needy women must sell their sex for food
—
A million or maybe six million jobless men!
—
A million jobless men —
And ten million poorly paid men who get barely
enough to sustain their families,
And a million women on the streets, and a
million hungry children,
Plus a million mortgaged homes, and a million
business bankrupts —
On twenty-three hundred million acres of
inexhaustible richness not a thousandth part of which has
been touched!
A million jobless men —
And twenty million human dolts content to live
in hell —
To lecture, write, legislate, investigate,
resolve, and vote
To "cure unemployment !" with a learned
President
And a cabinet and a congress of economic
students
Who institute Employment Bureaus!! to feed the
hungry, jobless, idle men tramping over idle, vacant,
undeveloped land!
A million jobless men —
And ten million legislators, judges,
detectives, soldiers, sheriffs, constables, and
policemen
With clubs, guns, bayonets, legal process,
penal codes, prisons, handcuffs, dungeons, and
gallows
To keep these million jobless men from going
on the idle, naked, fertile acres
And feeding themselves, their women, and
children!
A million jobless men —
In 1914
Now most all at work making death machinery to
blow each other to hell!
The land still idle — and a million wage
slaves making murder machinery!
A WAR SONG FOR MEN
Hear the rumbling legions
Now the hour of war!
Not to slay the foeman
Nor to bleed a state.
War for human beings,
Love instead of hate.
Hear the tramp of millions;
Nor bombs nor cannon roar
Only men awakened,
Aliens by birth —
Overwhelming legions
To seize and free the earth!
Rising are the millions:
Nor fear nor hope can bar.
Not for gods or dogmas
Not for words their fight.
Singleness of purpose —
Might befriends their right.
Race nor creed divide them,
Gathering near and far;
Puissant come the millions,
Captained by their need.
Thought and care are leading
Earth to wrench from Greed!
War's for gain forever;
Then let the gain be ours.
Keep the braid and tinsel,
All the minted gold;
Earth alone we're taking —
Birthright of the bold!
Scorn your death devices,
Greed's infernal powers;
Life itself we're seeking!
This our first command,
Pealing now as thunder —
Open ye the land!
Rise the famished millions
Driven off the land;
Spurning peace or plunder,
Seeking lust nor loot.
Thralls to sloth no longer
The millions sluff the brute.
Upright humans hungry,
Fearlessly they' band,
Codes nor laws nor titles!
O, governments, beware —
Heed the need of millions —
Men who know and dare!
THE WHITE MAN'S TOTEM
Paper titles to idle acres
Are the crime and shame
Of christendom —
Its prisons and brothels
Paupers and billionaires!
Paper titles to idle oil lands
Are gasoline at 20 cents
Plus the wage slaveries
Disemployment and slums
Of civilization.
Paper titles to idle acres
Are the white man's idol
His totem and fetish
His bloody sacrifice
Of women and children!
THAT THE LAND BE OPENED TO MAN
That the land be opened to the people.
That every adult stand in actu or potenitally on his
own piece of earth
From which only death can dislodge him.
That the whole people say to Greed:
"The parent privilege is dead: the primal monopoly
has ceased: the base of exploitation is destroyed.
All have access to the earth without toll or
price."
That the people say to Ignorance:
"We have changed the system of land tenure, on which
rested your power to enslave.
Every man shall own himself, and by the privilege to
withhold land shall no man have the power to own
another.
The unused earth is free."
And if Doubt and Envy linger to question:
"Why one man will have better land than another
— acres more fertile, lots nearer market, sites more
pleasing for residence?"
A child may answer: "Those who hold the better sites
will gladly, freely equalize the difference to others
— when exploitation's necessity no longer stifles the
better impulses: 'tis a detail that free men will settle in
a manly way."
And the people say:
"But never again shall Greed or Ignorance gain power
to rack-rent, distrain, wage-slave, pauperize, and
disemploy the millions
Thru the primal curse of land monopoly."
And if Doubt or Doctrine hesitate and ask:
"How then with railroads, carriers, utilities,
banks, trusts, and mines ?"
Even the Child may answer: "How about them now? Free
land will not increase their power."
And the Student will interpose to say: "Free land
will greatly or entirely destroy their power of
exploitation. What is left we can then consider."
That the whole people say to Greed and Ignorance:
"There shall be no mortgage on the bare land, nor
any title thereto but use and occupance; land is to live
on, cultivate, and develop — not for
speculation.
None shall own or hold of earth an inch more than he
can use: every idle lot or acre shall be as free as air and
sun to him who needs it for a home, a store, a workshop, a
garden, or a farm."
And if the Disputer arise with, "But — If
—"
He shall be silenced by a child again:
"These are not issues for slaves to settle. Free men
each with a foothold on the soil will settle them in a
bold, kind, free way — let us not doubt."
And the Student will add: "Every social and
industrial problem, nay most of the psychologic problems
too, that men now rack their ingenuity to solve, will under
free land assume entirely different aspects —
Free land will change the surface and the heart of
civilization."
That the Human Heart thunder to the world:
"Poverty is dead. Disemployment is ended. The earth
is open.
The poor, the weak, the ignorant, the blind shall
never be trampled and vampirized again by the withholding
of the unused land —
For I have bared the bosom of earth to man and
in her breasts is sustenance inexhaustible."
OMITTED FROM THE SPOON RIVER
ANTHOLOGY
I was the leading singletaxer in Spoon
River
I organized its first singletax club
I once saw Henry George himself
And I knew Louis F. Post
And Daniel Kiefer.
I wrote articles for the press
About taxation problems,
Was a fluent talker
And could prove the falsities of Karl Marx to anybody
But a socialist.
I was called the John Z. White
Of Spoon River.
We had a flourishing club,
With after dinner lectures and discussions
One a month — regular.
And weekly luncheons at which we discussed the shipping
bill or the currency question
And entertained any noted person
Who came to Spoon River.
Singletax became favorably known
To the Better Elements of Society.
The congregational minister
Preached a sermon on it.
We had a debate at the high school,
"Resolved that singletax is scientific."
We had an exclusive membership
Of cultured persons
Tirelessly devoted to the cause of
Rational taxation.
If I had lived another year
I would have gone to the legislature
Where I could have scrutinized
Every measure
In its relation to the Philosophy
Of singletax.
But there arose in our midst
A band of irresponsible agitators
Who stirred up the people
To open the land!
They were emotionalists
And would not discuss calmly a compromise with those who do
not care for the immediate Practise of their
preaching.
They ranted about the army of disemployed,
About women driven to prostitution,
Men toiling for a pittance,
Children as wage slaves,
Babes starving.
They joined with socialists,
Anarchists, syndicalists, I. W. W's —
People like that!
With anybody who would struggle
To change the land tenure
To use and occupancy
Right away!
I opposed them eloquently
And with stratagem
For their radical demands
Would alienate from our Cause
The growing tolerance of the corporations and business
men,
The interest of the politicians
And the curiosity of club women.
Bankers, leading citizens, the daily press
Would view us with distrust.
Could anything be worse
For the success of a Forward Movement?
I tried to rally the old war horses
To stand by their colors
And preserve the sacred
And respectable
Singletax philosophy
In unsullied purity
From these anarchists
And disturbers.
But the agitators
Had the voting strength,
So Mrs. Jonesburg and I resigned
And started a Singletax Philomathic Society
For the discussion of proper methods
To alleviate poverty
Three-quarters of an inch a year
Without causing any annoyance
To Existing Conditions.
If I had lived
We might have rehabilitated
Singletax in respectable circles.
But the idea
Of unscientific people
Led by agitators
Demanding the whole earth
Immediately!
Was too great a shock.
They said I died
Of heart failure.
But I don't understand that
For the autopsy surgeons
Couldn't find such an organ
And said it had probably
Been absorbed
In my brain development.
WHAT'S IT TO YOU?
What is it to you
That children starve in a land of plenty
That girls are driven to the street for food and
shelter
And idle men tramp unused acres
And broken human lives strew every pathway —
What is it to You?
Not only the rich are guilty
Of the pauperism that degrades humanity
But You, and all, who assent,
Who do less than the most you can do
To stay it. Your hands are red
With the blood of discouraged, starved,
Women, children, and men — your own kin.
The guilt is Yours especially who Knowing
The cause of pauperism
Do less than you might do to stay it.
What is it to you that children starve
Women whore, men steal or beg or tramp
Merely for bread — in a land of Wondrous Plenty
—
What is it to You?
CALIFORNIA
Now
And as It has been for many shameful years.
In a land of wondrous plenty,
Richer than the Indies,
Children hunger — Maids
For bread or ribbons ply the street,
Mothers drudge or steal or starve,
Or whore — yes, for merely food and shelter!
(Who make the thing shall hear the word)
Whores for bread! — thousands, thousands
In a land richer than the Indies!
Why
For lack of Faith and Courage in those who Knew
For that the earth and all
Its natural plenty — its idle, unused chances,
Its mines and wood and streams,
And fairest, waiting acres — all the
Source of every human need or heart's desire —
Its rent and city value — its crops — its
wondrous yield!
All are held by ancient paper titles —
(Dead hands that clutch the living) — held
By a few — from the many — and most held
idle,
Held away from idle, needy, Living human beings!
And Then —
The People of the State of California
do enact as follows:
That Every child have play and plenty
Every mother All her needs
Every girl her ribbons and her beau
Every boy — A Chance to Win!
Every man have equal access
To the earth, its acres, mines and trees
Reaping All he sows!
That human faces upward turning
Every soul may grow and dare!
Next: New Bottles
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