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Title: Henry George
Author: Benjamin De Casseres
Date: 1931
Language: en
Topics: Henry George, biography
Source: Retrieved 07/07/2022 from https://archive.org/details/sim_american-mercury_1931-05_23_89/
Notes: Published in The American Mercury, 1931–05: Vol. 23 Issue 89, pp.103–112

Benjamin De Casseres

Henry George

It was in 1887. I was fourteen—an age at which, normally, the heavenly

maiden, Maya, organizes her fashion-show of Ideals and Illusions in the

souls of youngsters. I was selling cigars in a store at the corner of

Seventh and Market streets in Philadelphia. The show—cases, loaded with

their precious treasures of two-fers and Pittsburgh stogies, were so

high and I was so small that I had to use a stool to get a good look at

a customer. Thus I waited on hundreds of Quaker City nickel-squanderers.

A word or two about the morning news, the weather, a near-smutty

anecdote between geysers of Battle-Ax juice or oracular puffs from their

Lancaster filler and Connecticut wrapper, and they were gone. I could

feel cocoons and embryos of ideas pullulating in my skull. I awaited a

fertilizing word from one of the customers, but they were all as

cut-and-dried and predestined to eternal stupidity as a Philadelphia

councilman.

However, as Swedenborg says, “the attractions are proportioned to the

destinies.” He who devoutly desires Glad Tidings—even though he he

impounded in a Philadelphia cigar store—shall receive Glad Tidings. So

one day they loomed through the door with a sea—rolling gait, wearing

White duck trousers that flapped like a pair of awnings, a turned-down

proletarian collar with a parson’s white tie and a dirty-white sombrero

which shaded a fat, angelic, smooth-shaven face, starred with two large

blue eyes in which swam Mirage. He seemed somewhere in his fifties. I

stood on my stool to wait on him, the look-out in my brain whispering,

“This fellow is different—he has Tidings!” In a deep, prophetic voice,

which belied his childish face, he asked for “the best three-for-five

cigars you have.” I noticed that under his arm he carried in the manner

of street newsboys about a score of papers called the Standard. My

curiosity all aflame, I asked him about the Standard. It was a summons

to his vasty deep. He laid the papers down very carefully, as if they

were a serialized Torah, tucked the best three—for-five in his coat

pocket, beamed over the case right into my face—ah! the Master and the

Young Seeker!—and began:

“Young man, the Standard is the organ of the greatest economic movement

that the world has ever known, the paper of Henry George, who—”

And then, raptly, ardently, oracularly, he went on for ten minutes,

expounding to me the gospel of the Single Tax and the messiahship of

Henry George—he the Ancient Mariner of a fixed idea and I the arrested

Bridegroom of his tale.

Although Henry George had run the year before for mayor of New York, he

was still only a name to me. Beside, the year before I had been

pre-puberty and mentally closed, hence a dyed-in-the-carpet Republican,

with the Philadelphia Press as the Way, the Truth and the Life. All I

knew of Henry George was that, according to the Press, he was a

nihilist, an anarchist, a socialist, a confiscator, an enemy of the

Flag, a man compared to whom a Philadelphia Democrat was almost a human

being. Yet here was a man who looked to me as harmless as a tenor, and

he was telling me that Henry George was the greatest man who had

appeared in the world “since Our Lord.” ...

Suddenly I remembered that when I was eleven or twelve years old I had

heard a street fiddler whom we used to call Crazy Joe say precisely the

same thing about a poet who lived over the river in Camden. But Pop

Ziegler, our neighborhood saloon-keeper, before whose place Joe used to

play, assured his customers that Joe was, for all that, quite

harmless.... Yet such are the sudden antics of pubescent idealism—the

blessed state that I now found myself in—that I was quite prepared for

the enormous heresy that the only sane people were the crazy ones.

My new angel-faced friend lived by peddling the Standard and preaching

the doctrines of Henry George in the towns and villages of the East and

Middle West. He had been in jail—“occasionally martyred for the cause,”

he called it—many times. He thus grew to enormous proportions in my

newly-hatched Seeking. He left no stone unturned to convert me, which

was easy. He discovered my lunch hour and laid for me. We walked up and

down Market and Seventh streets eating apples—Yogi and his little Kim—,

he syringing me full of Single-Tax redemption, denouncing the rich and

hoisting Henry George higher and higher in the empyrean; I toddling

along under the great sombrero, catching the pearls from this Oyster of

Truth with wide-open brain, mouth and cars. Like Mother Church, he had

caught me young. I never knew him to sell a Standard. He never seemed to

want to sell one as long as he could talk.

The manager of the cigar store was Smitty, an old Englishman of military

carriage who looked like Lawrence d’Orsay in “The Earl of Pawtucket.”

Smitty and my new friend—whose name I never knew, but whom I called

“George,” at the sound of which he blew out like a balloon—were

instantaneous enemies. It was said that Smitty had been at Balaklava,

which, when I informed George of it, caused him to say loudly in the

hero’s hearing, “There’ll be no Balaklavas when the people own the

land!” Smitty’s only answer was to spit on the floor and tousle his

deciduous mustachios. He could not afford to argue with a daily

three-for-five customer.

The Hobo of the Ideal disappeared from my life as apocalyptically as he

had come. He stood with me in front of the window of the Press, pointed

to a bulletin saying that the Chicago anarchists had been hanged, and

whispered to me, “The time has come! “ Solemnly ordering me to save up

enough pocket-money to buy a second-hand copy of “Progress and Poverty,”

he shook my hand grandly, and I never saw him again.

Ten years afterward I hurried to New York to walk, at nightfall, from

the Grand Central Palace to Brooklyn Bridge behind the body of Henry

George, to the continuous strains of Chopin’s “Funeral March” and “La

Marseillaise.” The sidewalks were packed with men and women weeping over

the death of the American Karl Marx. Where was “George”—he who had

injected into my head my first heroic illusion and given me my first

baptism in the water of the Dead Sea of political economy? Henry George,

my “George,” and all such fellows—all were buffoons of the Absolute, not

untouched by the grace of the sublime and the pathos of futility.

II

The American—and by American I mean him of Anglo-Saxon«Puritan stock—is

a theocratic. He is a mystic, an absolutist. He believes himself the

Superior Man just as inexorably as the orthodox Jew believes he is of

the Chosen People. The Anglo-Saxon-Puritan is Ipse Dixit; he is Ex

Cathedra. Conquest and dominance have fixed his mind in dogmatic,

narrow, inelastic molds. Always the conqueror, he believes himself to be

of divine origin, and so his religious, moral, social and economic

concepts are absolute, world-redemptive. He produces order, but not a

high degree of civilization. He can never become wholly civilized

because he is without humor or skepticism.

His democracy is only a veiled theocracy. He believes that the doctrine

of majority role is of divine origin. He makes war to force it on those

who will have none of it. His country is God’s country. His two major

home-made religions—Mormonism and Christian Science—are founded on

revelations. They are absolutes. His dollar-worship, his materialism,

has the fervor of this absolutism. Methodism, Baptism are absolutes. His

manners and morals are absolutes. Good and evil, virtue and vice are

absolutes. This is true and good from all eternity; that is false and

had from all eternity. He is incapable of the European point of view or

any point of view except his own. Every variant, every new idea, is

subversive of the race, the species itself, in the eye of the

Anglo-Saxon—Puritan. When he becomes a radical, a liberal, an atheist he

is still absolute in bis radicalism, his liberalism, his atheism. The

plexus of beliefs may change; his sensibility remains dogmatic,

intolerant, propagandist. The meld is never broken, no matter what new

liquids are poured into it.

Every great American (and all real Americans who achieve fame are

necessarily great), from Washington to Hoover, is a blood-relative of

Ecce Homo. If no one will salute him as such, he salutes himself, as

Walt Whitman did. He could not conceivably say, “Well, maybe you’re

right after all.” His answer is always—it is congenital, pre-natal; he

cannot help it—: “By God! you ought to be hanged for those ideas! You

ought to be deported!” The fury and gusto which go into the living of

life in other races—notably the Latin and the Slavic—in the

Anglo-Saxon-Puritan go into “converting” the world, punishing “crimes

against public morals,” “uplifting” the masses, and suppressing all

spontaneous life. Even Anglo-Saxon—Puritan multi-millionaires, when they

grow old, make of their philanthropies a mystical rite; they “hold their

moneys in trust,” as God put the coal mines of Pennsylvania into the

keeping of George Baer. In a word, the Anglo-Saxon-Puritan soul is

messianic—even when it is shooting down defenseless natives at Amritsar

or murdering recalcitrant Nicaraguans.

Out of the very belly of this messianic absolutism popped Henry George

in 1839, in the Protestant Rome of absolutism in politics, morals and

religion—Philadelphia. He was of English, Welsh, Scottish blood.

Superimpose on this hyperboreal combination a family life which radiated

from St. Paul’s Episcopal Church (Low Church); a mother fanatically

religious, whose main activities were given over to redeeming

Philadelphia and the heathen over-seas; a devout father who published

Church books, and Sundays given over to the most austere devotions—and

you have the sources of the man. Even on week-days young Henry had to

read “Scottish Chiefs” surreptitiously, for his mother thought it was

“irreligious.”

With this inheritance, this family environment and a city in which

everything was as precise and invariable as the steady growth of its

Sunday speak-easies and cemeteries, the mind of Henry George could not

be otherwise than mathematical, unimaginative, absolute, messianic. He

will, later on, broaden, develop; but he will always be the fanatic, the

man With a fixed idea, a mental monorail. The psychological root and

bark of his environment will always remain the same. The complexion of

hereditary dogmas will change, but the meld of cocksure dogmatism will

remain. Religious sensibility will color all he says and does. The

hard-and-fast theology of his ancestors, of his parents, of his

upbringing, will reappear as the Single Tax. The conception of Original

Sin will transform itself into the sin of private ownership in land.

Hell—fire will become Poverty. Heaven will become Progress. The Citadels

of Sin to be destroyed will be custom-houses and tax-offices. As in the

cases of Tolstoy, Karl Marx, Lenin, Bernard Shaw and other

religio-economic crackpots—who merely preach the old theological

slave—morality of envy under the mask of the modernist sensibility, with

murder and hellfire still burning fiercely in their eyes—George will

devise a scheme whereby the poor shall inherit the earth and Lazarus

shall have the wealth of Dives.

It is all very logical, this Single Tax scheme of redemption—as logical

as the predestination of Calvin or the fatality of Jonathan Edwards. The

mistake that all such crackpots make is in believing that logic and

truth are identical: the fact is that logic is merely a mental deduction

made from a temperamental prejudice or an illusion called a premiss,

which anyone is free to invent. Henry George had his premiss chosen for

him by his Anglo-Scotch-Welsh ancestors. He assumed that God gave to man

equal rights in earth, air and light. Assumption, first of all, that God

exists; secondly, that He knows of the existence of men; thirdly, that

He has given something to them; fourthly (implied assumption derived

from Christian ethics), that He loves only the poor and the

disinherited. Granting the assumptions of Joseph Smith and Mrs. Eddy,

their religions are just as sound. As I shall show later, this whole

fantastic matter was “revealed” to George. He, too, produced his Bible,

“Progress and Poverty.” Also he had those other characteristics of the

founders of Utopias—honesty, sincerity, fearlessness. There was nothing

of the mountebank about him. He was as true to form as his mother, who

did so much to redeem Philadelphia from sin.

III

At 16 young George felt a stirrin’ of the bones in his domestic

sepulchre. He got the sea in his brain and shipped for 36 a month to

India and Australia. He kept a journal, which reveals a mind totally

destitute of imagination, poetry, or, indeed, thought of any kind. It is

nothing but a ship’s log. Returning to Philadelphia, he took up

typesetting at 52 a week. (Philadelphia in those days, as always, paid

the highest wages.) The first break with his parents came at this time

over the question of slavery. They upheld the institution on the ground

that it was sound Scripture, and for the added Scotch reason that it

would cost too much to destroy it. Henry was for redeeming the Negro. He

burst other buttons about this time. The sea had taught him tricks; he

boxed, fenced, drank red-eye, and joined a literary society where they

read Byron and frisked the girls. He made out a rather remarkable

analysis of himself based on his cranial bumps. He admitted self«esteem,

destructiveness, a minimum of mirth, combativeness, and a “large

individuality.” When home irked again, in 1858, when he was nineteen, he

took ship once more, this time for California. A letter awaited him

there from his mother. See what he fled in Eternal Philadelphia:

There is nothing stirring or startling in this great city. Religion

seems to be the all-engrossing subject. Christians are looking for great

results from this outpouring of the spirit. Look to Jesus, my dear

child!

But young George had no intention of looking to Jesus. His eye was on

the Golden Calf. Gold, in fact, was Jesus out there. He caught the fever

and headed for the Frazer river, where there was a strike. Here he made

his first prophetic economic observation: “The condition of those who

have to work for their living must become not better, but worse.” All

historic facts would have told him this was not true, but what are facts

to a budding messiah? Back to San Francisco, broke. He peddles

clothes-wringers, becomes a weigher in a rice-mill, tramps it, grows

Walt Whitmans and becomes more and more unbuttoned in his dress.

Ticket-taker for a fellow named Sam Clemens, who came to Sacramento to

lecture. Married, begat children, and often went to work without

breakfast.

The ills of Lazarus were full upon him. He relieved himself by doing his

first bit of Writing, “On the Profitable Employment of Time.” In this

essay I once more verify my belief that all religious, philosophical and

economic theories are the product of some defect or need in some

individual—in the last analysis, always a physical need or defect. “I am

constantly longing for wealth,“ he says. “... It is my principal object

in life to obtain wealth.” That is the whole burden of the essay. We

shall see how the growing maggot of poverty and privation developed into

a colossal Chimera. Empty bellies produce Utopian-thievish dreams.

His bump of destructiveness, which he admitted as a boy, together with

the natural instinct of those who are penniless to smash anything or

everything at hand, went into action when Lincoln was assassinated.

George led a gang to clean out the Democratic News-Letter, but when he

got there he found that his friend, I. Trump, and his Republican

yannigans, in full-blown patriotic-homicidal ecstasy, had done the

business. There is only a toy-bridge length between venom and sentiment,

so Henry, finding no building for good patriotic hands to loot, hurried

home and wrote an article, in glowing sweat and fervor, on Lincoln. He

sent it to the Alta Californian, and it got for him the job of editorial

writer. I pick the most beautiful sky-rocket out of this basket of

fireworks:

And when on plains and uplands, where now the elephant and spring-bok

roam, farms shall be tilled and homes arise; and on great lakes and

rivers, now the haunts of the hippopotamus, a thousand paddles shall

beat, the mothers of nations yet unborn shall teach their children to

call him [Lincoln] blessed!

At this phase in his evolution he suddenly felt a call to defend the

Monroe Doctrine, and so joined a gang to get Maximilian out of Mexico

and help Juarez. They were all nabbed for technical piracy. His next

adventure was purely intellectual—he listened to a lecturer expound the

beauties of the protective tariff and immediately became a free trader.

The area of quixotic absolutism begins to spread. He next attacked the

Associated Press and Western Union monopoly in California because the

paper on which he worked could not get adequate service. This brought

him to New York, another convert, ultimately, from the corrupt

simplicity of Philadelphia to the flagitious complexity of the

super-Bagdad. Here, at the age of thirty, at about the same age that

Walt Whitman received his well-known illumination, he got the first

flash of his yet unknown Mission. He recorded some years later the

following significant experience in New York:

Once in daylight, and in a city street, there came to me a Vision, a

Call—give it what name you please. But every nerve quivered. And there

and then I made a vow.

Symptomatic of the best-attested Pauline conversion-phenomena! This vow

was nothing more or less than to do away with poverty; it was the

startling contrast be; tween the poor and the rich in the Big Town that

caused the concussive flash. He asked himself, among other things, why

everything in the universe was governed by law—and Society was not. Here

again we see his fundamental defect, his inability to face and affirm

the existence of facts that did not square with his growing sentimental

absolutism. Nature and Nature’s God and all “natural laws” are

benevolent (Rousseau ga-ga). Only man in society is evil (more Rousseau

ga-ga).

George could not face the fact—his theological ancestry forbade it—that

poverty, evil, vice and crime, like everything else in the universe, are

evolved according to inexorable natural laws. The

moralist-sentimentalist-absolutist of his type will never admit, must

never admit, that all society, no matter how highly organized, is only,

and will always be, a thinly veiled cannibalism, and that his own

absolutism, his own doctrine of pity and redemption, like Marx’s, Shaw’s

and Lenin’s, are expressions of that cannibalistic law with only an

extra veil or two to cover them. Whatever is, is Moloch! George would

have shaken his fist in my face at this, with “That’s a horrible, a

hideous thought, young man!” My answer might have been, “Confer with

your special Yahweh about the matter. Personally, I am not in the

councils of the Omnipotent and I do not know why these things should be.

But so they are, absolutist and sentimental blueprint Utopian crack pots

to the contrary notwithstanding.“

IV

Although now a free-trader, an under-dog liberator, a Jeffersonian

Democrat and an ismist of the finest carat, he also became, on his

return to California, an anti-Chinese propagandist. Maybe he still had

some Philadelphia inhibitions to overcome. Or because his humanism had

gone smack up against political aspirations? I hate to look for dirty

common—sense motives in the soul of a World—Weeper, but here it was:

Henry George was for hurling to the ground all tariff walls, but was hat

for building a wall so high against the Orient that no Chinaman or Jap

could ever hope to participate in our then few blessings on the coast.

However, he salved his conscience by getting an anti-telegraph monopoly

bill through the Legislature. Unluckily, he did not know how to hold a

job. Great revelations, it seems, come only to the jobless, as we know

from the New Testament—and the following:

He took to horseback riding, and it was while galloping over the rough

California roads that the Sphinx—as his son puts it in his biography of

his father—had the Great Riddle jolted out of her, and finally picked

Henry as the repository of the Secret. Here is the Annunciation:

Absorbed in my own thoughts, I had driven the horse into the hills until

he panted. Stopping for breath, I asked a passing teamster, for want of

something better to say, what land was worth there.... He said, “I don’t

know exactly, but there is a man over there who will sell some land at a

thousand dollars an acre.” Like a flash it came upon me that there was

the reason of advancing poverty With increasing wealth. With the growth

of population, land grows in value, and the men who work it must pay

more for the privilege. I turned back, amidst quiet thought, to the

perception that then came to me and has been with me ever since.

It is curious the part that humble animals play in the life of Inspired

Men. Mahomet straddled a mule, another One rode an ass at a critical

moment in His life, and there was, of course, Balaam’s vocable burro....

Here was the Single Tax dogma at last!—born on a panting Rozinante in

the California hills, a magnificent bladder-doll of a theory to be

presented to his Dulcinea del Toboso, the transfigured wench of the

House of Lazarus. Our hero’s subconscious absolutism had broken through

all dikes at last, and now swallowed up in his consciousness everything

else. From this moment onward the mystical syllable Om became Land.

Another Paraclete had been born.

He made his first onset against the California landsharks, Stanford,

Crocker, Huntington and the Central Pacific Railway, in a paper of which

he was the editor in Sacramento. Naturally, they bought the paper (O

Moloch!), and he had to quit. He then tried to get into the Legislature.

Licked to a tatter. In 1871 he was riding a mustang—pony (always the

prophetic Balaam motive!) around San Francisco, blue-eyed, seedy of

dress, with a sandy, messianic heard, lost in the absolute realms of

Land. On March 26, 1871 (all his biographers insist on the Date), he sat

down at his desk, and the Sphinx unriddled another wad of herself: “Our

Land and Land Policy, National and State.” All the facts fitted his

theories—naturally. All about “wages and interest,” “the law of rent,”

and so on; if you know your Adam Smith, Ricardo and John Stuart Mill,

you know the jargon. In this work, as in all his work, I find everything

stated and re-stated except one simple fact: that might is right.

He found time to turn up at the Baltimore convention as a Greeley man.

He was now the editor of the San Francisco Post, wherein he rode

full-tilt against all “evils.” In the manner of Socrates he used to stop

stock-still on the crowded streets and remain thus for some time in

profound meditation. No Xantippe, however, disturbed him, for every

monomaniac achieves Nirvana. He renounced all churches and creeds—except

of course his own, which behind his doctrine of Land was, consciously or

unconsciously, that of Auguste Comte, who proclaimed the Religion of

Humanity, which merely means throwing the current Pepe out of the

Vatican and putting Lazarus in his chair. But he was still, and always,

intensely sociable, even participating in High links at the Bohemian

Club (pre-Sterling).

Now, however, like all Great Founders, he had his weeks in Gethsemane.

His Sphinx battled in his soul with boodle-needs. He gambled in Nevada

mining stocks. He got the gold-fever again in 1875. He lost all in both

ventures. These Temptations in the Desert having been undergone, he took

a State job as inspector of gas meters. It is somewhat pathetic, this

phase, for between Sphinx-unriddlings he had to test the registry of

meters by forcing a measured quantity of air through them in place of

gas, fastening a brass sea; on all that met the lawful requirement. He

got a fee for every meter so tested and scaled. He then tried for the

chair of political economy at the University of California, hot his

Sphinx was then bellowing “Land!” so loudly that the earth-bound

interests that controlled the university sent him to the right-about.

The Greater Date—September 18, 1877—had now arrived: he began “Progress

and Poverty.” Would this book ever have seen the light if he had got

rich in his mining speculations or staked off a gold field or two?

Another mean, dirty question, I admit, but I recall that he had

announced that “it is my principal object in life to obtain wealth.” His

Sphinx, however, know him far better than he knew himself. It is mum

before Mammon; or maybe Mammon dines on Sphinxes. “Progress and

Poverty,” like all great Births, occurred amid terrible portents:

strikes, panics, mutinies among the unemployed, Committees of Public

Safety, and the bar-sinister of illegitimacy on the ’scutcheon of

Rutherford B. Hayes. The Land Reform League of California was formed for

“the abolition of land monopoly:” the first attempt at propaganda for

Henry Georgeism. He finished “Progress and Poverty” in 1879, and it is

recorded that he sat down with the family with a far-off look in his

eye, ate up all the tomatoes on the table, and then demanded why they

did not give him any tomatoes. It is well these things should be

recorded. Also, that he had to pawn his watch to buy the tomatoes! He

sent “Progress and Poverty” to the Appletons, the publishers of Herbert

Spencer, who rejected it on the ground that it was too “aggressive.”

They finally took it, however, after he had begun to set it up himself.

He sent the first copy to his father with this messianic message:

It is with a deep feeling of gratitude to Our Father in Heaven that I

send you a printed copy of the book.

Any American Reformer, Founder, Uplifter, New Thoughter might have

written that. They are all Chosen.

V

George came to New York definiter in 1880. He was broke, as usual. The

book went slowly, but it made converts of Henry Ward Beecher, Heber

Newton, Poultney Bigelow, Charles A. Dana and John Russell Young. Young

wrote to the author: “The truth—to he accepted in a sense of worship, a

dogma of political infallibility.” George replied: “I do not see that a

musket need be fired. But if necessary, war be it then! There was never

a holier cause. No, never a holier cause.” The italics are mine. The

Scotch—Puritan Torquemada in George’s blood began to said smoke. For

God, the Land and the Poor! Onward‚ Christian bayonets! But the Prophet

had to have a job. So he ghosted for Abram S. Hewitt, then a rich member

of Congress, at 350 a week, writing official reports that appeared over

the latter’s name. “The first thing I shall do,” he said, “is to get a

suit of clothes.” The presidential contest was then on between Gar.

field and General Hancock. George was for Hancock, who was beaten

because he was a Federal commander without whiskers and because he told

the truth when he declared that “the tariff is a local issue.”

Ireland at this time was bleeding again over the land question, although

Ingersoll had expressed told the Irish that the make that was strangling

their country had not crawled from London but from the Vatican. George

sailed to “free Ireland.” In London he met Herbert Spencer, who told him

that the Land Leaguers ought to pay their rent. George recalled to him

that he had said in “Social Statics,” “Equity does not permit property

in land.” But Spencer had survived his early fiddle-faddle and had

chopped up his adolescent absolutism into utilitarian hits. George

denounced him as a renegade in a book he later wrote called “A Perplexed

Philosopher.” Spencer ignored him, kept developing, and finally

announced that, “strictly speaking we do not know anything.” He was on

the way to Cosmic Humor—when he died—something George would never have

forgiven. Spencer had also said that if the had belonged to everybody,

then by exactly the same reasoning “so does every- thing I’ve got on,

including my watch” (which had been presented to him by his American

admirers).

Meanwhile, there was Dr. Edward McGlynn, of St. Stephen’s Catholic

Church in New York, who had come out for “Progress and Poverty” in a

fiery speech, thereby nearly splitting the Church in half. As a

Christian he had made a fatal mistake—he had gone Lazarus one hundred

per cent. The Prefect of the Propaganda in Rome wrote to Cardinal

McCloskey ordering the suppression of “the priest McGlynn” for making

speeches “opposed to the teachings of the Catholic Church.” (“The meek

shall inherit the earth.” Bah! said the Pope.) McGlynn was finally

excommunicated because he would not go to Rome to recant. He made such

inroads With his Fiery Crusade for George, however, that Cardinal

Satelli restored him in 1892. McGlynn dictated the terms and got a clean

bill of health from the Catholic University at Washington. George dubbed

him Galileo McGlynn. During this famous light, which brought the Church

to its knees, burial in consecrated ground was refused to anyone who had

any connection with McGlynn or his Anti-Poverty Society. When two

Ordained Absolutes get to scrapping—!

George came back to America from Ireland famous, with “Progress and

Poverty” going strong, but he had no sooner got home than he was called

to England to lecture. He was now almost as famous over there as

Gladstone. He got in as another Absolute, Karl Marx, passed away in

London. It was just as well, for these rival Utopians would never have

got along together, although their tears both fell into Lazarus’ pot.

Tremendous meeting in St. James’ Hall. Labouchere (Labby) presided. He

emitted this epigram: “Four Georges have muddled England. Now comes

George the Fifth!” The progress through England had a Peter—the-Hermit

smell. And there was world publicity. Where was Bernard Shaw? Biting his

nails in a vegetarian dump and mumbling, “My racket will beat yours,

Henry”?

Came 1886. George was nominated for mayor of New York by the Trade and

Labor Conference. Against him was Abram S. Hewitt, Tammany, and Theodore

Roosevelt, Republican. George exposed Hewitt as the recipient of his

unholy ghosting. Hewitt came back with the charge that he had to fire

him for ramming land-reform stuff in everything he wrote. The whole

campaign turned on the land question and attracted universal attention.

The most beautifully gilded Star of Hope between 1776 and the advent of

Bryan appeared in the American firmament. George’s fixed idea that the

Single Tax was the long-lost Aladdin’s Lamp had now reached its apogee.

Everything under the sun went into that furnace in his skull. He called

for the instant abolition of customs houses and all taxes save the land

tax, the abolition of saloons, brothels, almshouses, Tammany, poverty,

and all sumptuary laws, and the confiscation of land—out of the débris

of which he saw himself stepping as Grand Concert Master of an

Eisteddfod of Human Happiness which should last forever and forever, for

he believed in the immortality of the soul.

There is very little doubt that he was elected. This was before the

Australian ballot, when Tammany gorged the ballot-boxes while you

waited. The Hall, however, as a sap to the labor vote, allowed him to

run a good second and made Teddy a rank third.

George then founded the Standard, and ran for Secretary of State of New

York in the Fall of 1887. He was licked again, his vote in New York City

being cut in half. But there was some compensation in the conversion to

the cause of Tom Johnson of Cleveland, millionaire steel manufacturer

and street-railway magnate. Tom announced that he was now convinced that

all his wealth had been stolen. He posed as Dives waiting for Lazarus to

relieve him of it—legally, of course, be added (the sly rascal!). Then

came the Anti-Poverty Society, which was organized at Chickering Hall

with McGlynn as president and George as vice-president. Here the Lord’s

Prayer was cheered to the echo. (Note always the evangelical, truly

American root of this movement.)

Before the Standard blew up in 1892 George had a tilt with Thomas Henry

Huxley. Huxley published an essay in 1890 denying the doctrine of

“natural rights” in land or anything else. George called Huxley

Professor Bullhead. This is what, I believe, psychologists call the

unconscious auto-descriptive retort. Strangely, though, George liked

Schopenhauer. He had no notion of art. The magic deviltries of a Liszt,

the frozen lyricisms of a Rodin, and the fairy-worlds of a Keats were

beyond him. He adored Falstaff, probably because he was unlanded, and

hated Coriolanus, probably because he belonged to the landed gentry. At

this time also he wrote a most curious article for a magazine entitled

“To Destroy the Rum Power.” Nothing illustrates better than this article

the grotesque logic of the absolutist mind. He opposed Prohibition and

high license and advocated the lifting of all taxes whatsoever on drink.

No taxes, he argued‚ would make rum purer. “Drug store whiskey is

reputed worse than saloon whiskey, and the worst whiskey of all is

Prohibition whiskey.” All restrictions make drink; more deadly. “As for

the saloon, the license system makes it more gorgeous and enticing,

while Prohibition drives it into lower and lower forms.” If all taxes,

therefore, on the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors were

abolished everybody would want to go into the liquor-selling business.

Competition would thus destroy it (!). “If everybody were free to sell

liquor we would all have to go out of business.” (Would we, though!)

“The cheaper and easier a thing is to get the quicker it will fall into

disuse.” (But does not thirst spring eternal in the human gullet?) And

he winds up:

Intemperance today springs mainly from that unjust distribution of

wealth which gives to some less and to others more than they have fairly

earned.... It is the vice of those who are starved and those who are

gorged.... Free trade in everything would abolish intemperance.

The clear old gobe-mouches!

In 1897, his health failing, he ran for mayor again, conducting a

terrific four cornered fight, with his fanaticism distended to the

bursting point, against Judge Robert Van Wyck, Benjamin F. Tracy and

Seth Low. He called himself the party of Thomas Jefferson—“what I stand

for is the rights of all men.” It may have been so, but, as Huxley

annoyingly asked, What are those rights? There are none except to grab,

to have and to hold. He collapsed before the campaign was over and died.

Thus ended the life of an admirable man, the last forlorn tatter of

doctrinaire Individualism, a buffoon of the Absolute.