登陆注册
26304400000105

第105章 CHAPTER XVII ECHOES OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION(3)

Although one or two ardent young people rushed into print to defend me from the charge of "abetting anarchy," it seemed to me at the time that mere words would not avail. I had felt that the protection of the law itself extended to the most unpopular citizen was the only reply to the anarchistic argument, to the effect that this moment of panic revealed the truth of their theory of government; that the custodians of law and order have become the government itself quite as the armed men hired by the medieval guilds to protect them in the peaceful pursuit of their avocations, through sheer possession of arms finally made themselves rulers of the city. At that moment I was firmly convinced that the public could only be convicted of the blindness of its course, when a body of people with a hundred-fold of the moral energy possessed by a Settlement group, should make clear that there is no method by which any community can be guarded against sporadic efforts on the part of half-crazed, discouraged men, save by a sense of mutual rights and securities which will include the veriest outcast.

It seemed to me then that in the millions of words uttered and written at that time, no one adequately urged that public-spirited citizens set themselves the task of patiently discovering how these sporadic acts of violence against government may be understood and averted. We do not know whether they occur among the discouraged and unassimilated immigrants who might be cared for in such a way as enormously to lessen the probability of these acts, or whether they are the result of anarchistic teaching. By hastily concluding that the latter is the sole explanation for them, we make no attempt to heal and cure the situation. Failure to make a proper diagnosis may mean treatment of a disease which does not exist, or it may furthermore mean that the dire malady from which the patient is suffering be permitted to develop unchecked. And yet as the details of the meager life of the President's assassin were disclosed, they were a challenge to the forces for social betterment in American cities. Was it not an indictment to all those whose business it is to interpret and solace the wretched, that a boy should have grown up in an American city so uncared for, so untouched by higher issues, his wounds of life so unhealed by religion that the first talk he ever heard dealing with life's wrongs, although anarchistic and violent, should yet appear to point a way of relief?

The conviction that a sense of fellowship is the only implement which will break into the locked purpose of a half-crazed creature bent upon destruction in the name of justice, came to me through an experience recited to me at this time by an old anarchist.

He was a German cobbler who, through all the changes in the manufacturing of shoes, had steadily clung to his little shop on a Chicago thoroughfare, partly as an expression of his individualism and partly because he preferred bitter poverty in a place of his own to good wages under a disciplinary foreman. The assassin of President McKinley on his way through Chicago only a few days before he committed his dastardly deed had visited all the anarchists whom he could find in the city, asking them for "the password" as he called it. They, of course, possessed no such thing, and had turned him away, some with disgust and all with a certain degree of impatience, as a type of the ill-balanced man who, as they put it, was always "hanging around the movement, without the slightest conception of its meaning."

Among other people, he visited the German cobbler, who treated him much as the others had done, but who, after the event had made clear the identity of his visitor, was filled with the most bitter remorse that he had failed to utilize his chance meeting with the assassin to deter him from his purpose. He knew as well as any psychologist who has read the history of such solitary men that the only possible way to break down such a persistent and secretive purpose, was by the kindliness which might have induced confession, which might have restored the future assassin into fellowship with normal men.

In the midst of his remorse, the cobbler told me a tale of his own youth; that years before, when an ardent young fellow in Germany, newly converted to the philosophy of anarchism, as he called it, he had made up his mind that the Church, as much as the State, was responsible for human oppression, and that this fact could best be set forth "in the deed" by the public destruction of a clergyman or priest; that he had carried firearms for a year with this purpose in mind, but that one pleasant summer evening, in a moment of weakness, he had confided his intention to a friend, and that from that moment he not only lost all desire to carry it out, but it seemed to him the most preposterous thing imaginable. In concluding the story he said;

"That poor fellow sat just beside me on my bench; if I had only put my hand on his shoulder and said, 'Now, look here, brother, what is on your mind? What makes you talk such nonsense? Tell me. I have seen much of life, and understand all kinds of men. I have been young and hot-headed and foolish myself,' if he had told me of his purpose then and there, he would never have carried it out. The whole nation would have been spared this horror." As he concluded he shook his gray head and sighed as if the whole incident were more than he could bear--one of those terrible sins of omission; one of the things he "ought to have done," the memory of which is so hard to endure.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 百狐记

    百狐记

    百狐记,是一部关于探索神秘事件的小说,这篇小说是自编,或许不会太真实。
  • 最实用的交通百科

    最实用的交通百科

    本书共分三章:分别是交通工具、交通运输和交通管理,内容从慢悠悠的牛车到现代化的汽车,从简单的独木舟到豪华游轮,从无动力的滑翔机到探索宇宙的航天飞机。
  • 仙缘之来世爱恋

    仙缘之来世爱恋

    这一天很快就到来了,这一天众神欢聚一堂,有说有笑的喝着酒,吃着菜说着话。
  • 穿越之妾本无心

    穿越之妾本无心

    她本是21世纪大龄女青年,只因丧父之痛一不小心穿越成一个国之母,天哪!单纯的她如何应付那个自称皇上的男人!和后宫三千佳丽!在一个人生地不熟的时代!她该如何步步为营,化险为夷!
  • 超级智能

    超级智能

    这是讲述一个超级努力的平凡少年,在获得超级智能系统后,逆袭高富帅、成就无上学霸、练就超级神功、迎娶白富美、走上人生巅峰的一个传奇故事!剧情无虐主,开足BUFF光环,以轻松舒畅为主!
  • 太后嫁到

    太后嫁到

    被家人算计,意外穿越,她已是大商史上最年轻的皇太后!奸臣陷害,皇子谋逆,留给她的,是令大商子民谈之鄙夷的烂货身份!她迎风而立,波澜不惊,一路走来,改变是的大商的天,不变的是她。有朝一日,她站在世间之巅,身侧美男相伴,众美相偕!
  • 悲权之颂

    悲权之颂

    令人世间向往的权利,在权利的背后又隐藏着多少当权者的阴谋?在你死我活的处境下,又擦出了怎样的爱情火花?这不是一场故事,而是一次漫长的权利之旅。
  • 醉眼看人

    醉眼看人

    主角有特殊身份吗?——没有!主角有异能吗?——没有!特长总有吧——能喝!这算什么特长?——喝醉了艳遇!
  • 龙炎弑天

    龙炎弑天

    上古时,风云变,群魔聚。诸神乱,天地变,龙炎碎。闯魔域,霸天下,盗古墓。历万险,聚龙炎,进神界。入神域,斩蚩尤,救盘古。看云辰,弑神魔,逆乾坤!一个平凡少年一条不同寻常的修炼之路一个流传万古的传说一段至死不渝的爱情一个特殊的位面一场惊魂的盗墓一个新奇的游戏谱写了一本奇迹之书——《龙炎弑天》!
  • 限时溺宠:老公大人,我嫁你

    限时溺宠:老公大人,我嫁你

    她是全市人眼里的落魄千金。男友的背叛,继母的恶毒,父亲的不问不顾,母亲的自杀,妹妹被自己送到了远在B市的意大利,最疼爱自己的外婆双目.......当她想要远离这一切,去寻找远在天边的母亲时,一只温热的大手抓住了她的手臂,“嫁给我,我为你查明一切,嫁给我,我不会让你后悔。”晚上,她搂上他的脖颈:“老公,你为什么对我这么好?”*求收藏求票票求支持~