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- Contents of this file page
- CENTENNIAL ORATION. 1
- ORGANIZED CHARITIES. 14
- THE BIGOTRY OF COLLEGES. 17
- **** ****
-
- This file, its printout, or copies of either
- are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
-
- Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
-
- The Works of ROBERT G. INGERSOLL
-
- **** ****
-
- CENTENNIAL ORATION.
-
- One hundred years ago, our fathers retired the gods from
- politics.
-
- THE Declaration of Independence is the grandest, the bravest,
- and the profoundest political document that was ever signed by the
- representatives of a people. It is the embodiment of physical and
- moral courage and of political wisdom.
-
- I say of physical courage, because it was a declaration of war
- against the most powerful nation then on the globe; a declaration
- of war by thirteen weak, unorganized colonies; a declaration of war
- by a few people, without military stores, without wealth, without
- strength, against the most powerful kingdom on the earth; a
- declaration of war made when the British navy, at that day the
- mistress of every sea, was hovering along the coast of America,
- looking after defenseless towns and villages to ravage and destroy.
- It was made when thousands of English soldiers were upon our soil,
- and when the principal cities of America were in the substantial
- possession of the enemy. And so, I say, all things considered, it
- was the bravest political document ever signed by man. And if it
- was physically brave, the moral courage of the document is almost
- infinitely beyond the physical. They had the courage not only, but
- they had the almost infinite wisdom, to declare that all men are
- created equal.
-
- Such things had occasionally been said by some political
- enthusiast in the olden time, but, for the first time in the
- history of the world, the representatives of a nation, the
- representatives of a real, living, breathing, hoping people,
- declared that all men are created equal. With one blow, with one
- stroke of the pen, they struck down all the cruel, heartless
- barriers that aristocracy, that priestcraft, that king-craft had
- raised between man and man. They struck down with one immortal blow
- that infamous spirit of caste that makes a God almost a beast, and
- a beast almost a god. With one word, with one blow, they wiped away
- and utterly destroyed, all that had been done by centuries of war
- -- centuries of hypocrisy -- centuries of injustice.
-
- What more did they do? They then declared that each man has a
- right to live. And what does that mean? It means that he has the
-
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- right to make his living. It means that he has the right to breathe
- the air, to work the land, that he stands the equal of every other
- human being beneath the shining stars; entitled to the product of
- his labor -- the labor of his hand and of his brain.
-
- What more? That every man has the right to pursue his own
- happiness in his own way. Grander words than. these have never been
- spoken by man.
-
- And what more did these men say? They laid down the doctrine
- that governments were instituted among men for the purpose of
- preserving the rights of the people. The old idea was that people
- existed solely for the benefit of the state -- that is to say, for
- kings and nobles.
-
- The old idea was that the people were the wards of king and
- priest -- that their bodies belonged to one and their souls to the
- other.
-
- And what more? That the people are the source of political
- power. That was not only a revelation, but it was a revolution. It
- changed the ideas of people with regard to the source of political
- power. For the first time it made human beings men. What was the
- old idea? The old idea was that no political power came from, or in
- any manner belonged to, the people. The old idea was that the
- political power came from the clouds; that the political power came
- in some miraculous way from heaven; that it came down to kings, and
- queens, and robbers. That was the old idea. The nobles lived upon
- the labor of the people; the people had no rights; the nobles stole
- what they had and divided with the kings, and the kings pretended
- to divide what they stole with God Almighty. The source, then, of
- political power was from above. The people were responsible to the
- nobles, the nobles to the king, and the people had no political
- rights whatever, no more than the wild beasts of the forest. The
- kings were responsible to God; not to the people. The kings were
- responsible to the clouds; not to the toiling millions they robbed
- and plundered.
-
- And our forefathers, in this Declaration of Independence,
- reversed this thing, and said: No; the people, they are the source
- of political power, and their rulers, these presidents, these kings
- are but the agents and servants of the great sublime people. For
- the first time, really, in the history of the world, the king was
- made to get off the throne and the people were royally seated
- thereon. The people became the sovereigns, and the old sovereigns
- became the servants and the agents of the people. It is hard for
- you and me now to even imagine the immense results of that change.
- It is hard for you and for me, at this day, to understand how
- thoroughly it had been ingrained in the brain of almost every man
- that the king had some wonderful right over him that in some
- strange way the king owned him; that in some miraculous manner he
- belonged, body and soul, to somebody who rode on a horse -- to
- somebody with epaulets on his shoulders and a tinsel crown upon his
- brainless head.
-
- Our forefathers had been educated in that idea, and when they
- first landed on American shores they believed it. They thought they
-
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- belonged to somebody, and that they must be loyal to some thief who
- could trace his pedigree back to antiquity's most successful
- robber.
-
- It took a long time for them to get that idea out of their
- heads and hearts. They were three thousand miles away from the
- despotisms of the old world, and every wave of the sea was an
- assistant to them. The distance helped to disenchant their minds of
- that infamous belief, and every mile between them and the pomp and
- glory of monarchy helped to put republican ideas and thoughts into
- their minds. Besides that, when they came to this country, when the
- savage was in the forest and three thousand miles of waves on the
- other side, menaced by barbarians on the one hand and famine on the
- other, they learned that a man who had courage, a man who had
- thought, was as good as any other man in the world, and they built
- up, as it were, in spite of themselves, little republics. And the
- man that had the most nerve and heart was the best man, whether he
- had any noble blood in his veins or not.
-
- It has been a favorite idea with me that our fore-fathers were
- educated by Nature, that they grew grand as the continent upon
- which they landed; that the great rivers -- the wide plains -- the
- splendid lakes -- the lonely forests -- the sublime mountains --
- that all these things stole into and became a part of their being,
- and they grew great as the country in which they lived. They began
- to hate the narrow, contracted views of Europe. They were educated
- by their surroundings, and every little colony had to be to a
- certain extent a republic. The kings of the old world endeavored to
- parcel out this land to their favorites. But there were too many
- Indians. There was too much courage required for them to take and
- keep it, and so men had to come here who were dissatisfied with the
- old country -- who were dissatisfied with England, dissatisfied
- with France, with Germany, with Ireland and Holland. The kings'
- favorites stayed at home. Men came here for liberty, and on account
- of certain principles they entertained and held dearer than life.
- And they were willing to work, willing to fell the forests, to
- fight the savages, willing to go through all the hardships, perils
- and dangers of a new country, of a new land; and the consequence
- was that our country was settled by brave and adventurous spirits,
- by men who had opinions of their own and were willing to live in
- the wild forests for the sake of expressing those opinions, even if
- they expressed them only to trees, rocks, and savage men. The best
- blood of the old world came to the new.
-
- When they first came over they did not have a great deal of
- political philosophy, nor the best ideas of liberty. We might as
- well tell the truth. When the Puritans first came, they were
- narrow. They did not understand what liberty meant -- what
- religious liberty, what political liberty, was; but they found out
- in a few years. There was one feeling among them that rises to
- their eternal honor like a white shaft to the clouds -- they were
- in favor of universal education. Wherever they went they built
- schoolhouses, introduced books and ideas of literature. They
- believed that every man should know how to read and how to write,
- and should find out all that his capacity allowed him to
- comprehend. That is the glory of the Puritan fathers.
-
-
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- They forgot in a little while what they had suffered, and they
- forgot to apply the principle of universal liberty -- of
- toleration. Some of the colonies did not forget it, and I want to
- give credit where credit should be given. The Catholics of Maryland
- were the first people on the new continent to declare universal
- religious toleration. Let this be remembered to their eternal
- honor. Let it be remembered to the disgrace of the Protestant
- government of England, that it caused this grand law to be
- repealed. And to the honor and credit of the Catholics of Maryland
- let it be remembered that the moment they got back into power they
- re-enacted the old law. The Baptists of Rhode Island also, led by
- Roger Williams, were in favor of universal religious liberty.
-
- No American should fail to honor Roger Williams. He was the
- first grand advocate of the liberty of the soul. He was in favor of
- the eternal divorce of church and state. So far as I know, he was
- the only man at that time in this country who was in favor of real
- religious liberty. While the Catholics of Maryland declared in
- favor of religious toleration, they had no idea of religious
- liberty, They would not allow anyone to call in question the
- doctrine of the Trinity, or the inspiration of the Scriptures. They
- stood ready with branding-iron and gallows to burn and choke out of
- man the idea that, he had a fight to think and to express his
- thoughts.
-
- So many religions met in our country -- so many theories and
- dogmas came in contact -- so many follies, mistakes, and
- stupidities became acquainted with each other, that religion began
- to fall somewhat into disrepute. Besides this, the question of a
- new nation began to take precedence of all others.
-
- The people were too much interested in this world to quarrel
- about the next. The preacher was lost in the patriot. The Bible was
- read to find passages against kings.
-
- Everybody was discussing the rights of man. Farmers and
- mechanics suddenly became statesmen, and in every shop and cabin
- nearly every question was asked and answered.
-
- During these years of political excitement the interest in
- religion abated to that degree that a common purpose animated men
- of all sects and creeds.
-
- At last our fathers became tired of being colonists -- tired
- of writing and reading and signing petitions, and presenting them
- on their bended knees to an idiot king. They began to have an
- aspiration to form a new nation, to be citizens of a new republic
- instead of subjects of an old monarchy. They had the idea -- the
- Puritans, the Catholics, the Episcopalians, the Baptists, the
- Quakers, and a few Freethinkers, all had the idea -- that they
- would like to form a new nation.
-
- Now, do not understand that all of our fathers were in favor
- of independence. Do not understand that they were all like
- Jefferson; that they were all like Adams or Lee; that they were all
- like Thomas Paine or John Hancock. There were thousands and
- thousands of them who were opposed to American independence. There
-
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- were thousands and thousands who said: "When you say men are
- created equal, it is a lie when you say the political power resides
- in the great body of the people, it is false." Thousands and
- thousands of them said: "We prefer Great Britain." But the men who
- were in favor of independence, the men who knew that a new nation
- must be born, went on full of hope and courage, and nothing could
- daunt or stop or stay the heroic, fearless few.
-
- They met in Philadelphia; and the resolution was moved by Lee
- of Virginia, that the colonies ought to be independent states, and
- ought to dissolve their political connection with Great Britain.
-
- They made up their minds that a new nation must be formed. All
- nations had been, so to speak, the wards of some church. The
- religious idea as to the source of power had been at the foundation
- of all governments, and had been the bane and curse of man.
-
- Happily for us, there was no church strong enough to dictate
- to the rest. Fortunately for us, the colonists not only, but the
- colonies differed widely in their religious views. There were the
- Puritans who hated the Episcopalians, and Episcopalians who hated
- the Catholics, and the Catholics who hated both, while the Quakers
- held them all in contempt. There they were, of every sort, and
- color and kind, and how was it that they came together? They had a
- common aspiration. They wanted to form a new nation. More than
- that, most of them cordially hated Great Britain; and they pledged
- each other to forget these religious prejudices, for a time at
- least, and agreed that there should be only one religion until they
- got through, and that was the religion of patriotism. They solemnly
- agreed that the new nation should not belong to any particular
- church, but that it should secure the rights of all.
-
- Our fathers founded the first secular government that was ever
- founded in this world. Recollect that. The first secular
- government; the first government that said every church has exactly
- the same rights and no more; every religion has the same rights,
- and no more. In other words, our fathers were the first men who had
- the sense, had the genius, to know that no church should be allowed
- to have a sword; thai it should be allowed only to exert its moral
- influence.
-
- You might as well have a government united by force with Art,
- or with Poetry, or with Oratory, as with Religion. Religion should
- have the influence upon mankind that its goodness, that its
- morality, its justice, its charity, its reason, and its argument
- give it, and no more. Religion should have the effect upon mankind
- that it necessarily has, and no more. The religion that has to be
- supported by law is. without value, not only, but a fraud and
- curse. The religious argument that has to be supported by a musket,
- is hardly worth making. A prayer that must have a cannon behind it,
- better never be uttered. Forgiveness ought not to go in partnership
- with shot and shell. Love need not carry knives and revolvers.
-
- So our fathers said: "We will form a secular government, and
- under the flag with which we are going to enrich the air, we will
- allow every man to worship God as he thinks best." They said:
- "Religion is an individual thing between each man and his creator,
-
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- and he can worship as he pleases and as he desires." And why did
- they do this? The history of the world warned them that the liberty
- of man was not safe in the clutch and grasp of any church. They had
- read of and seen the thumb-screws, the racks, and the dungeons of
- the Inquisition. They knew all about the hypocrisy of the olden
- time. They knew that the church had stood side by side with the
- throne; that the high priests were hypocrites, and that the kings
- were robbers. They also knew that if they gave power to any church,
- it would corrupt the best church in the world. And so they said
- that power must not reside in a church, or in a sect, but power
- must be wherever humanity is -- in the great body of the people.
- And the officers and servants of the people must be responsible to
- them. And so I say again, as I said in the commencement, this is
- the wisest, the profoundest, the bravest political document that
- ever was written and signed by man.
-
- They turned, as I tell you, everything squarely about. They
- derived all their authority from the people. They did away forever
- with the theological idea of government.
-
- And what more did they say? They said that whenever the rulers
- abused this authority, this power, incapable of destruction,
- returned to the people. How did they come to say this? I will tell
- you. They were pushed into it. How? They felt that they were
- oppressed; and whenever a man feels that he is the subject of
- injustice, his perception of right and wrong is wonderfully
- quickened.
-
- Nobody was ever in prison wrongfully who did not believe in
- the writ of habeas corpus. Nobody ever suffered wrongfully without
- instantly having ideas of justice.
-
- And they began to inquire what rights the king of Great
- Britain had. They began to search for the charter of his authority.
- They began to investigate and dig down to the bed-rock upon which,
- society must be founded, and when the got down there, forced there,
- too, by their oppressors, forced against their own prejudices and
- education, they found at the bottom of things, not lords, not
- nobles, not pulpits, not thrones, but humanity and the rights of
- men.
-
- And so they said, We are men; we are men. They found out they
- were men. And the next thing they said, was, "We will be free men;
- we are weary of being colonists; we are tired of being subjects; we
- are men; and these colonies ought to be states; and these states
- ought to be a nation and that nation ought to drive the last
- British soldier into the sea." And so they signed that brave
- Declaration of Independence.
-
- I thank every one of them from the bottom of my heart for
- signing that sublime declaration. I thank them for their courage --
- for their patriotism -- for their wisdom -- for the splendid
- confidence in themselves and in the human race. I thank them for
- what they were, and for what we are -- for what they did, and for
- what we have received -- for what they suffered, and for what we
- enjoy.
-
-
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- What would we have been if we had remained colonists and
- subjects? What would we have been to-day? Nobodies -- ready to get
- down on our knees and crawl in the very dust at the sight of
- somebody that was supposed to have in him some drop of blood that
- flowed in the veins of that mailed marauder -- that royal robber,
- William the Conqueror.
-
- They signed that Declaration of Independence, although they
- knew that it would produce a long, terrible, and bloody war. They
- looked forward and saw poverty, deprivation, gloom, and death. But
- they also saw, on the wrecked clouds of war, the beautiful bow of
- freedom.
-
- These grand men were enthusiasts; and the world has been
- raised only by enthusiasts. In every country there have been a few
- who have given a national aspiration to the people. The enthusiasts
- of 1776 were the builders and framers of this great and splendid
- Government; and they were the men who saw, although others did not,
- the golden fringe of the mantle of glory that will finally cover
- this world. They knew, they felt, they believed that they would
- give a new constellation to the political heavens -- that they
- would make the Americans a grand people -- grand as the continent
- upon which they lived.
-
- The war commenced. There was little money, and less credit.
- The new nation had but few friends. To a great extent each soldier
- of freedom had to clothe and feed himself. He was poor and pure,
- brave and good, and so he went to the fields of death to fight for
- the rights of man.
-
- What did the soldier leave when he went?
-
- He left his wife and children,
-
- Did he leave them in a beautiful home, surrounded by
- civilization, in the repose of law, in the security of a great and
- powerful republic?
-
- No. He left his wife and children on the edge, on the fringe
- of the boundless forest, in which crouched and crept the red
- savage, who was at that time the ally of the still more savage
- Briton. He left his wife to defend herself, and he left the
- prattling babes to be defended by their mother and by nature. The
- mother made the living; she planted the corn and the potatoes, and
- hoed them in the sun, raised the children, and, in the darkness of
- night, told them about their brave father and the "sacred cause"
- She told them that in a little while the war would be over and
- father would come back covered with honor and glory.
-
- Think of the women, of the sweet children who listened for the
- footsteps of the dead -- who waited through the sad and desolate
- years for the dear ones I who never came.
-
- The soldiers of 1776 did not march away with music and
- banners. They went in silence, looked at and gazed after by eyes
- filled with tears. They went to meet, not an equal, but a superior
- -- to fight five times their number -- to make a desperate stand to
-
-
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- stop the advance of the enemy, and then, when their ammunition gave
- out, seek the protection of rocks, of rivers, and of hills.
-
- Let me say here: The greatest test of courage on the earth is
- to bear defeat without losing heart. That army is the bravest that
- can be whipped the greatest number of times and fight again.
-
- Over the entire territory, so to speak, then settled by our
- forefathers, they were driven again and again. Now and then they
- would meet the English with something like equal numbers, and then
- the eagle of victory would proudly perch upon the stripes and
- stars. And so they went on as best they could, hoping and fighting
- until they came to the dark and somber gloom of Valley Forge.
-
- There were very few hearts then beneath that flag that did not
- bean to think that the struggle was useless; that all the blood and
- treasure had been shed and spent in vain. But there were some men
- gifted with that wonderful prophecy that fulfills itself, and with
- that wonderful magnetic power that makes heroes of everybody they
- come in contact with.
-
- And so our fathers went through the gloom of that terrible
- time, and still fought on. Brave men wrote grand words, cheering
- the despondent; brave men did brave deeds, the rich man gave his
- wealth, the poor man gave his life, until at last, by the victory
- of Yorktown, the old banner won its place in the air, and became
- glorious forever.
-
- Seven long years of war -- fighting for what? For the
- principle that all men are created equal -- a truth that nobody
- ever disputed except a scoundrel; nobody, nobody in the entire
- history of this world. No man ever denied that truth who was not a
- rascal, and at heart a thief; never, never, and never will. What
- else were they fighting for? Simply that in America every man
- should have a right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
- Nobody ever denied that except a villain; never, never. It has been
- denied by kings -- they were thieves. It has been denied by
- statesmen -- they were liars. It has been denied by priests, by
- clergymen, by cardinals, by bishops, and by popes -- they were
- hypocrites.
-
- What else were they fighting for? For the idea that all
- political power is vested in the great body of the people. The
- great body of the people make all the money; do all the work. They
- plow the land, cut down the forests; they produce everything that
- is produced. Then who shall say what shall be done with what is
- produced except the producer?
-
- Is it the non-producing thief, sitting on a throne, surrounded
- by vermin?
-
- Those were the things they were fighting for; and that is all
- they were fighting for. They fought to build up a new, a great
- nation to establish an asylum for the oppressed of the world
- everywhere. They knew the history of this world. They knew the
- history of human slavery.
-
-
-
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- The history of civilization is the history of the slow and
- painful enfranchisement of the human race. In the olden times the
- family was a monarchy, the father being the monarch. The mother and
- children were the veriest slaves. The will of the father was the
- supreme law. He had the power of life and death. It took thousands
- of years to civilize this father, thousands of years to make the
- condition of wife and mother and child even tolerable. A few
- families constituted a tribe; the tribe had a chief; the chief was
- a tyrant; a few tribes formed a nation; the nation was governed by
- a king, who was also a tyrant. A strong nation robbed, plundered,
- and took captive the weaker ones. This was the commencement of
- human slavery.
-
- It is not possible for the human imagination to conceive of
- the horrors of slavery. It has left no possible crime uncommitted,
- no possible cruelty un-perpetrated. It has been practiced and
- defended by all nations in some form. It has been upheld by all
- religions. It has been defended by nearly every pulpit. From the
- profits derived from the slave trade churches have been built,
- cathedrals reared and priests paid. Slavery has been blessed by
- bishop, by cardinal, and by pope. It has received the sanction of
- statesmen, of kings, and of queens. It has been defended by the
- throne, the pulpit and the bench. "Monarchs have shared in the
- profits. Clergymen have taken their part of the spoils, reciting
- passages of Scripture in its defence at the same time, and judges
- have taken their portion in the name of equity and law.
-
- Only a few years ago our ancestors were slaves.
- Only a few years ago they passed with and belonged to the soil,
- like the coal under it and rocks on it.
-
- Only a few years ago they were treated like beasts of
- burden, worse far than we treat our animals at the present day.
- Only a few years ago it was a crime in England for a man to have
- a Bible in his house, a crime for which men were hanged, and
- their bodies afterward burned. Only a few years ago fathers could
- and did sell their children. Only few years ago our ancestors
- were not allowed to write their thoughts -- that being a crime.
- Only a few years ago to be honest, at least in the expression of
- your ideas, was a felony. To do right was a capital offence; and
- in those days chains and whips were the incentives to labor, and
- the preventives of thought. Honesty was a vagrant, justice a
- fugitive, and liberty in chains. Only a few years ago men were
- denounced because they doubted the inspiration of the Bible --
- because they denied miracles, and laughed at the wonders
- recounted by the ancient Jews.
-
- Only a few years ago a man had to believe in the total
- depravity of the human heart in order to be respectable. Only a
- few years ago, people who thought God too good to punish in
- eternal flames an unbaptized child were considered infamous.
-
- As soon as our ancestors began to get free they began to
- enslave others. With an inconsistency that defies explanation,
- they practiced upon others the same outrages that had been
- perpetrated upon them. As soon as white slavery began to be
- abolished, black slavery commenced. In this infamous traffic
-
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- nearly every nation of Europe embarked. Fortunes were quickly
- realized; the avarice and cupidity of Europe were excited; all
- ideas of justice were discarded; pity fled from the human breast
- a few good, brave men recited the horrors of the trade; avarice
- was deaf; religion refused to hear; the trade went on; the
- governments of Europe upheld it in the name of commerce -- in the
- name of civilization and religion.
-
- Our fathers knew the history of caste. They knew that in the
- despotisms of the Old World it a was disgrace to be useful. They
- knew that a mechanic was esteemed as hardly the equal of a hound,
- and far below a blooded horse. They knew that a nobleman held a
- son of labor in contempt -- that he had no rights the royal
- loafers were bound to respect.
-
- The world has changed.
-
- The other day there came shoemakers, potters, workers in wood
- and iron, from Europe, and they were received in the city of New
- York as though they had been princes. They had been sent by the
- great republic of France to examine into the arts and manufactures
- of the great republic of America. They looked a thousand times
- better to me than the Edward Alberts and Albert Edwards -- the
- royal vermin, that live on the body politic. And I would think much
- more of our Government if it would fete and feast them, instead of
- wining and dining the imbeciles of a royal line.
-
- Our fathers devoted their lives and fortunes to the grand work
- of founding a government for the protection of the rights of man.
- The theological idea as to the source of political power had
- poisoned the web and woof of every government in the world, and our
- fathers banished it from this continent forever.
-
- What we want to-day is what our fathers wrote down. They did
- not attain to their ideal; we approach it nearer, but have not
- reached it yet. We want, not only the independence of a State, not
- only the independence of a nation, but something far more glorious
- -- the absolute independence of the individual. That is what we
- want. I want it so that I, one of the children of Nature, can stand
- on an equality with the rest; that I can say this is MY air, MY
- sunshine, MY earth, and I have a right to live, and hope and
- aspire, and labor, and enjoy the fruit of that labor, as much as
- any individual or any nation on the face of the globe.
-
- We want every American to make to-day, on this hundredth
- anniversary, a declaration of individual independence. Let each man
- enjoy his liberty to the utmost enjoy all he can; but be sure it is
- not at the expense of another. The French Convention gave the best
- definition of liberty I have ever read: "The liberty of one citizen
- ceases only where the liberty of another citizen commences." I know
- of no better definition. I ask you to-day to make a declaration of
- individual independence. And if you are independent be just. Allow
- everybody else to make his declaration of individual independence
- Allow your wife, allow your husband, allow your children to make
- theirs. Let everybody be absolutely free and independent, knowing
- only the sacred obligations of honesty and affection. Let us be
- independent of party, independent of everybody and everything
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 10
-
- CENTENNIAL ORATION.
-
- except our own consciences and our own brains. Do not belong to any
- clique. Have clear title-deeds in fee simple to yourselves, without
- any mortgages on the premises to anybody in the world.
-
- It is a grand thing to be the owner of yourself. It is a grand
- thing to protect the rights of others. It is a sublime thing to be
- free and just.
-
- Only a few days ago I stood in Independence Hall -- in that
- little room where was signed the immortal paper. A little room,
- like any other; and it did not seem possible that from that room
- went forth ideas, like cherubim and seraphim, spreading heir wings
- over a continent, and touching, as with holy fire, the hearts of
- men.
-
- In a few moments I was in the park, where are gathered the
- accomplishment of a century. Our fathers never dreamed of the
- things I saw. There were hundreds of locomotives, with their nerves
- of steel and breath of flame -- every kind of machine, with
- whirling wheels and curious cogs and cranks, and the myriad
- thoughts of men that have been wrought in iron, brass and steel.
- And going out from one little building were wires in the air,
- stretching to every civilized nation, and they could send a shining
- messenger in a moment to any part of the world, and it would go
- sweeping under the waves of the sea with thoughts and words within
- its glowing heart. I saw all that had been achieved by this nation,
- and I wished that the signers of the Declaration -- the soldiers of
- the Revolution -- could see what a century of freedom has produced.
- I wished they could see the fields we cultivate -- the rivers we
- navigate -- the railroads running over the Alleghanies, far into
- what was then the unknown forest -- on over the broad prairies --
- on over the vast plains -- away over the mountains of the West, to
- the Golden Gate of the Pacific. All this is the result of a hundred
- years of freedom.
-
- Are you not more than glad that in 1776 was announced the
- sublime principle that political power resides with the people?
- That our fathers then made up their minds nevermore to be colonists
- and subjects, but that they would be free and independent citizens
- of America?
-
- I will not name any of the grand men who fought for liberty.
- All should be named, or none. I feel that the unknown soldier who
- was shot down without even his name being remembered -- who was
- included only in a report of "a hundred killed," or "a hundred
- missing," nobody knowing even the number that attached to his
- august corpse -- is entitled to as deep and heartfelt thanks as the
- titled leader who fell at the head of the host.
-
- Standing here amid the sacred memories of the first, on the
- golden threshold of the second, I ask, Will the second century be
- as grand as the first? I believe it will, because we are growing
- more and humane. I believe there is more human kindness, more real,
- sweet human sympathy, a greater desire to help one another, in the
- United States, than in all the world besides.
-
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 11
-
- CENTENNIAL ORATION.
-
- We must progress. We are just at the commencement of
- invention. The steam engine -- the telegraph -- these are but the
- toys with which science has been amused. Wait; there will be
- grander things, there will be wider and higher culture -- a grander
- standard of character, of literature and art.
-
- We have now half as many millions of people as we have years,
- and many of us will live until a hundred millions stand beneath the
- flag. We are getting more real solid sense. The schoolhouse is the
- finest building in the village. We are writing and reading more
- books; we are painting and buying more pictures; we are struggling
- more and more to get at the philosophy of life, of things -- trying
- more and more to answer the questions of the eternal Sphinx. We are
- looking in every direction -- investigating; in short, we are
- thinking and working. Besides all this, I believe the people are
- nearer honest than ever before. A few rears ago we were willing to
- live upon the labor of four million slaves. Was that honest? At
- last, we have a national conscience. At last, we have carried out
- the Declaration of Independence. Our fathers wrote it -- we have
- accomplished it. The black man was a slave -- we made him a
- citizen. We found four million human beings in manacles, and now
- the hands of a race are held up in the free air without a chain.
-
- I have had the supreme pleasure of seeing a man -- once a
- slave -- sitting in the seat of his former master in the Congress
- of the United States. I have had that pleasure, and when I saw it
- my eyes were filled with tears. I felt that we had carried out the
- Declaration of Independence -- that we had given reality to it, and
- breathed the breath of life into its every word. I felt that our
- flag would float over and protect the colored man and his little
- children, standing straight in the sun, just the same as though he
- were white and worth a million. I would protect him more, because
- the rich white man could protect himself.
-
- All who stand beneath our banner are free. Ours is the only
- flag that has in reality written upon it: Liberty, Fraternity,
- Equality -- the three grandest words in all the languages of men.
-
- Liberty: Give to every man the fruit of his own labor -- the
- labor of his hands and of his brain.
-
- Fraternity: Every man in the right is my brother.
-
- Equality: The rights of all are equal: justice, poised and
- balanced in eternal calm, will shake from the golden scales in
- which are weighed the acts of men, the very dust of prejudice and
- caste: No race, no color, no previous condition, can change the
- rights of men.
-
- The Declaration of Independence has at last been carried out
- in letter and in spirit.
-
- The second century will be grander than the first.
-
- Fifty millions of people are celebrating this day. To-day, the
- black man looks upon his child and says: The avenues to distinction
- are open to you -- upon your brow may fall the civic wreath -- this
- day belongs to you.
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 12
-
- CENTENNIAL ORATION.
-
- We are celebrating the courage and wisdom of our fathers, and
- the glad shout of a free people the anthem of a grand nation,
- commencing at the Atlantic, is following the sun to the Pacific,
- across a continent of happy homes.
-
- We are a great people. Three millions have increased to fifty
- -- thirteen States to thirty-eight. We have better homes, better
- clothes, better food and more of it, and more of the conveniences
- of life, than any other people upon the globe.
-
- The farmers of our country live better than did the kings and
- princes two hundred years ago -- and they have twice as much sense
- and heart. Liberty and labor have given us all. I want every person
- here to believe in the dignity of labor -- to know that the
- respectable man is the useful man -- the man who produces or helps
- others to produce something of value, whether thought of the brain
- or work of the hand.
-
- I want you to go away with an eternal hatred in your breast of
- injustice, of aristocracy, of caste, of the idea that one man has
- more rights than another because he has better clothes, more land,
- more money, because he owns a railroad, or is famous and in high
- position. Remember that all men have equal rights. Remember that
- the man who acts best his part -- who loves his friends the best --
- is most willing to help others -- truest to the discharge of
- obligation -- who has the best heart -- the most feeling -- the
- deepest sympathies -- and who freely gives to others the rights
- that he claims for himself is the best man. I am willing to swear
- to this.
-
- What has made this country? I say again, liberty and labor.
- What would we be without labor? I want every farmer when plowing
- the rustling corn of June -- while mowing in the perfumed fields --
- to feel that he is adding to the wealth and glory of the United
- States. I want every mechanic -- every man of toil, to know and
- feel that he is keeping the cars running, the telegraph wires in
- the air; that he is making the statues and painting the pictures;
- that he is writing and printing the books; that he is helping to
- fill the world with honor, with happiness, with love and law.
-
- Our country is founded upon the dignity of labor -- upon the
- equality of man. Ours is the first real Republic in the history of
- the world. Beneath our flag the people are free. We have retired
- the gods from politics. We have found that man is the only source
- of political power, and that the governed should govern. We have
- disfranchised the aristocrats of the air and have given one country
- to mankind.
-
- END
-
-
-
- **** ****
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 13
-
- ORGANIZED CHARITIES.
-
- I HAVE no great confidence in organized charities.
-
- Money is left and buildings are erected and sinecures provided
- for a good many worthless people. Those in immediate control are
- almost, or when they were appointed were almost, in want
- themselves, and they naturally hate other beggars.
-
- They regard persons who ask assistance as their enemies. There
- is an old story of a tramp who begged a breakfast. After breakfast
- another tramp came to the same place to beg his breakfast, and the
- first tramp with blows and curses drove him away, saying at the
- same time: "I expect to get dinner here myself."
-
- This is the general attitude of beggar toward beggar.
-
- Another trouble with organized charities is the machinery, the
- various methods they have adopted to prevent what they call fraud.
- They are exceedingly anxious that the needy, that those who ask
- help, who have been without fault, shall be attended to, their rule
- apparently being to assist only the unfortunate perfect.
-
- The trouble is that Nature produces very few specimens of that
- kind. As a rule, men come to want on account of their
- imperfections, on account of their ignorance, on account of their
- vices, and their vices are born of their lack of capacity, of their
- want of brain. In other words, they are failures of Nature, and the
- fact that they need help is not their own fault, but the fault of
- their construction, their surroundings.
-
- Very few people have the opportunity of selecting their
- parents, and it is exceedingly difficult in the matter of
- grandparents. Consequently, I do not hold people responsible for
- hereditary tendencies, traits and vices. Neither do I praise them
- for having hereditary virtues.
-
- A man going to one of these various charitable establishments
- is cross-examined. He must give his biography. And after he has
- answered all the supercilious, impudent questions, he is asked for
- references.
-
- Then the people referred to are sought out, to find whether
- the statements made by the applicant are true. By the time the
- thing is settled the man who asked aid has either gotten it
- somewhere else or has, in the language of the Spiritualists,
- "passed over to the other side."
-
- Of course this does not trouble the persons in charge of the
- organized charities, because their salaries are going on.
-
- As a rule, these charities were commenced by the best of
- people. Some generous, philanthropic man or woman gave a life to
- establish a "house," it may be, for aged women, for orphans, for
- the waifs of the pavements.
-
- These generous people, filled with the spirit of charity,
- raised a little money, succeeded in hiring or erecting a humble
- building, and the money they collected, so honestly given, they
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 14
-
- ORGANIZED CHARITIES.
-
- honestly used to bind up the wounds and wipe away the tears of the
- unfortunate, and to save, if possible, some who had been wrecked on
- the rocks and reefs of crime.
-
- Then some very rich man dies who had no charity and who would
- not have left a dollar could he have taken his money with him. This
- rich man, who hated his relatives and the people he actually knew,
- gives a large sum of money to some particular charity -- not that
- he had any charity, but because he wanted to be remembered as a
- philanthropist.
-
- Then the organized charity becomes rich, and the richer the
- meaner, the richer the harder of heart and the closer of fist.
-
- Now, I believe that Trinity Church, in this city, would be
- called an organized charity. The church was started to save, if
- possible, a few souls from eternal torment, and on the plea of
- saving these souls money was given to the church.
-
- Finally the church became rich. It is now a landlord -- has
- many buildings to rent. And if what I hear is true there is no
- harder landlord in the city of New York.
-
- So, I have heard it said of Dublin University, that it is
- about the hardest landlord in Ireland.
-
- I think you will find that all such institutions try to
- collect the very last cent, and, in the name of pity, drive pity
- from their hearts.
-
- I think it is Shakespeare who says, "Pity drives out pity,"
- and he must have had organized charities in his mind when he
- uttered this remark. Of course a great many really good and
- philanthropic people leave vast sums of money to charities.
-
- I find that it is sometimes very difficult to get an injured
- man, or one seized with some sudden illness, taken into a city
- hospital. There are so many rules and so many regulations, so many
- things necessary to be done, that while the rules are being
- complied with the soul of the sick or injured man, weary of the
- waiting, takes its flight. And after the man is dead, the doctors
- are kind enough to certify that he died of heart failure.
-
- So -- in a general way -- I speak of all the asylums, of all
- the homes for orphans. When I see one of those buildings I feel
- that it is full of petty tyranny, of what might be called pious
- meanness, devout deviltry, where the object is to break the will of
- every recipient of public favor.
-
- I may be all wrong. I hope I am. At the same time I fear that
- I am somewhere near right.
-
- You may take our prisons; the treatment of prisoners is often
- infamous. The Elmira Reformatory is a worthy successor of the
- Inquisition, a disgrace, in my judgment, to the State of New York,
- to the civilization of our day. Every little while something comes
- to light showing the cruelty, the tyranny, the meanness, of these
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 15
-
- ORGANIZED CHARITIES.
-
- professional distributors of public charity -- of these professed
- reformers.
-
- I know that they are visited now and then by committees from
- the Legislature, and I know that the keepers of these places know
- when the "committee" may be expected.
-
- I know that everything is scoured and swept and burnished for
- the occasion; and I know that the poor devils that have been abused
- or whipped or starved, fear to open their mouths, knowing that if
- they do they may not be believed and that they will be treated
- afterward as though they were wild beasts,
-
- I think these public institutions ought to be open to
- inspection at all times. I think the very best men ought to be put
- in control of them. I think only those doctors who have passed, and
- recently passed, examinations as to their fitness, as to their
- intelligence and professional acquirements, ought to be put in
- charge,
-
- I do not think that hospitals should be places for young
- doctors to practice sawing off the arms and legs of paupers or
- hunting in the stomachs of old women for tumors. I think only the
- skillful, the experienced, should be employed in such places.
- Neither do I think hospitals should be places where medicine is
- distributed by students to the poor.
-
- Ignorance is a poor doctor, even for the poor, and if we
- pretend to be charitable we ought to carry it out.
-
- I would like to see tyranny done away with in prisons, in the
- reformatories, and in all places under the government or
- supervision of the State.
-
- I would like to have all corporal punishment abolished, and I
- would also like to see the money that is given to charity
- distributed by charity and by intelligence. I hope all these
- institutions will be overhauled.
-
- I hope all places where people are pretending to take care of
- the poor and for which they collect money from the public, will be
- visited, and will be visited unexpectedly and the truth told.
-
- In my judgment there is some better way. I think every
- hospital, every asylum, every house for waifs and orphans should be
- supported by taxation, not by charity; should be under the care and
- control of the State absolutely.
-
- I do not believe in these institutions being managed by any
- individual or by any society, religious or secular, but by the
- State. I would no more have hospitals and asylums depend on charity
- than I would have the public school depend on voluntary
- contributions.
-
- I want the schools supported by taxation and to be controlled
- by the State, and I want the hospitals and asylums and charitable
- institutions founded and controlled and carried on in the same way.
- Let the property of the State do it.
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 16
-
- ORGANIZED CHARITIES.
-
- Let those pay the taxes who are able. And let us do away
- forever with the idea that to take care of the sick of the
- helpless, is a charity. It is not a charity. It is a duty. It is
- something to be done for our own sakes. It is no more a charity
- than it is to pave or light the streets, no more a charity than it
- is to have a system of sewers.
-
- It is all for the purpose of protecting society and of
- civilizing ourselves.
-
- END
-
- **** ****
-
- THE BIGOTRY OF COLLEGES.
-
- UNIVERSITIES are naturally conservative. They know that if
- suspected of being really scientific, orthodox Christians will keep
- their sons away, so they pander to the superstitions of the times.
-
- Most of the universities are exceedingly poor, and poverty is
- the enemy of independence. Universities, like people, have the
- instinct of self-preservation. The University of Kansas is like the
- rest.
-
- The faculty of Cornell, upon precisely the same question, took
- exactly the same action, and the faculty of the University of
- Missouri did the same. These institutions must be the friends and
- defenders of superstition.
-
- The Vanderbilt College, or University of Tennessee, discharged
- Professor Winchell because he differed with the author of Genesis
- on geology.
-
- There colleges act as they must, and we should blame nobody.
- If Humboldt and Darwin were now alive they would not be allowed to
- teach in these institutions of learning."
-
- We need not find fault with the president and professors. They
- want to keep their places. The probability is that they would like
- to do better -- that they desire to be free, and, if free, would,
- with all their hearts, welcome the truth. Still, these universities
- seem to do good. The minds of their students are developed to that
- degree, that they naturally turn to me as the defender of their
- thoughts.
-
- This gives me great hope for the future. The young, the
- growing, the enthusiastic, are on my side. All the students who
- have selected me are my friends, and I thank them with all my
- heart.
- **** ****
-
- Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
-
- The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
- hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
- and information for today. If you have such books please contact
- us, we need to give them back to America.
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 17