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Title: The Conquest of Bread
Author: Pëtr Kropotkin
Date: 1892
Language: en
Topics: agriculture, classical
Source: Retrieved on February 15th, 2009 from http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/anarchist_archives/kropotkin/conquest/toc.html
Notes: English translation first published in 1907.

Pëtr Kropotkin

The Conquest of Bread

Preface

One of the current objections to Communism and Socialism altogether, is

that the idea is so old, and yet it could never be realized. Schemes of

ideal States haunted the thinkers of Ancient Greece; later on, the early

Christians joined in communist groups; centuries later, large communist

brotherhoods came into existence during the Reform movement. Then, the

same ideals were revived during the great English and French

Revolutions; and finally, quite lately, in 1848, a revolution, inspired

to a great extent with Socialist ideals, took place in France. “And yet,

you see,” we are told, “how far away is still the realization of your

schemes. Don’t you think that there is some fundamental error in your

understanding of human nature and its needs?”

At first sight this objection seems very serious. However, the moment we

consider human history more attentively, it loses its strength. We see,

first, that hundreds of millions of men have succeeded in maintaining

amongst themselves, in their village communities, for many hundreds of

years, one of the main elements of Socialism the common ownership of the

chief instrument of production, the land, and the apportionment of the

same according to the labour capacities of the different families; and

we learn that if the communal possession of the land has been destroyed

in Western Europe, it was not from within, but from without, by the

governments which created a land monopoly in favour of the nobility and

the middle classes. We learn, moreover, that the mediæval cities

succeeded in maintaining in their midst for several centuries in

succession a certain socialized organization of production and trade;

that these centuries were periods of a rapid intellectual, industrial,

and artistic progress; and that the decay of these communal institutions

came mainly from the incapacity of men of combining the village with the

city, the peasant with the citizen, so as jointly to oppose the growth

of the military states, which destroyed the free cities.

The history of mankind, thus understood, does not offer, then, an

argument against Communism. It appears, on the contrary, as a succession

of endeavours to realize some sort of communist organization, endeavours

which were crowned with a partial success of a certain duration; and all

we are authorized to conclude is, that mankind has not yet found the

proper form for combining, on communistic principles, agriculture with a

suddenly developed industry and a rapidly growing international trade.

The latter appears especially as a disturbing element, since it is no

longer individuals only, or cities, that enrich themselves by distant

commerce and export; but whole nations grow rich at the cost of those

nations which lag behind in their industrial development.

These conditions, which began to appear by the end of the eighteenth

century, took, however, their full swing in the nineteenth century only,

after the Napoleonic wars came to an end. And modern Communism had to

take them into account.

It is now known that the French Revolution apart from its political

significance, was an attempt made by the French people, in 1793 and

1794, in three different directions more or less akin to Socialism. It

was, first, the equalization of fortunes, by means of an income tax and

succession duties, both heavily progressive, as also by a direct

confiscation of the land in order to subdivide it, and by heavy war

taxes levied upon the rich only. The second attempt was to introduce a

wide national system of rationally established prices of all

commodities, for which the real cost of production and moderate trade

profits had to be taken into account. The Convention worked hard at this

scheme, and had nearly completed its work, when reaction took the

overhand. And the third was a sort of Municipal Communism as regards the

consumption of some objects of first necessity, bought by the

municipalities, and sold by them at cost price.

It was during this remarkable movement, which has never yet been

properly studied, that modern Socialism was born — Fourierism with

L’Ange, at Lyons, and authoritarian Communism with Buonarotti, Babeuf,

and their comrades. And it was immediately after the Great Revolution

that the three great theoretical founders of modern Socialism — Fourier,

Saint Simon, and Robert Owen, as well as Godwin (the No-State Socialism)

— came forward; while the secret communist societies, originated from

those of Buonarotti and Babeuf, gave their stamp to militant Communism

for the next fifty years.

To be correct, then, we must say that modern Socialism is not yet a

hundred years old, and that, for the first half of these hundred years,

two nations only, which stood at the head of the industrial movement,

i.e. Britain and France, took part in its elaboration. Both — bleeding

at that time from the terrible wounds inflicted upon them by fifteen

years of Napoleonic wars, and both enveloped in the great European

reaction that had come from the East.

In fact, it was only after the Revolution of July, 1830, in France, and

the Reform movement of 1830–32, in England, had shaken off that terrible

reaction, that the discussion of Socialism became possible for the next

sixteen to eighteen years. And it was during those years that the

aspirations of Fourier, Saint Simon, and Robert Owen, worked out by

their followers, took a definite shape, and the different schools of

Socialism which exist nowadays were defined.

In Britain, Robert Owen and his followers worked out their schemes of

communist villages, agricultural and industrial at the same time;

immense co-operative associations were started for creating with their

dividends more communist colonies; and the Great Consolidated Trades’

Union was founded — the forerunner of the Labour Parties of our days and

the International Workingmen’s Association.

In France, the Fourierist Considérant issued his remarkable manifesto,

which contains, beautifully developed, all the theoretical

considerations upon the growth of Capitalism, which are now described as

“Scientific Socialism.” Proudhon worked out his idea of Anarchism, and

Mutualism, without State interference. Louis Blanc published his

Organization of Labour, which became later on the programme of Lassalle,

in Germany. Vidal in France and Lorenz Stein in Germany further

developed, in two remarkable works, published in 1846 and 1847

respectively, the theoretical conceptions of Considerant; and finally

Vidal, and especially Pecqueur — the latter in a very elaborate work, as

also in a series of Reports — developed in detail the system of

Collectivism, which he wanted the Assembly of 1848 to vote in the shape

of laws.

However, there is one feature, common to all Socialist schemes, of the

period, which must be noted. The three great founders of Socialism who

wrote at the dawn of the nineteenth century were so entranced by the

wide horizons which it opened before them, that they looked upon it as a

new revelation, and upon themselves as upon the founders of a new

religion. Socialism had to be a religion, and they had to regulate its

march, as the heads of a new church. Besides, writing during the period

of reaction which had followed the French Revolution, and seeing more

its failures than its successes, they did not trust the masses, and they

did not appeal to them for bringing about the changes which they thought

necessary. They put their faith, on the contrary, in some great ruler.

He would understand the new revelation; he would be convinced of its

desirability by the successful experiments of their phalansteries, or

associations; and he would peacefully accomplish by the means of his own

authority the revolution which would bring well-being and happiness to

mankind. A military genius, Napoleon, had just been ruling Europe....

Why should not a social genius come forward and carry Europe with him

and transfer the new Gospel into life?... That faith was rooted very

deep, and it stood for a long time in the way of Socialism; its traces

are ever seen amongst us, down to the present day.

It was only during the years 1840–48, when the approach of the

Revolution was felt everywhere, and the proletarians were beginning to

plant the banner of Socialism on the barricades, that faith in the

people began to enter once more the hearts of the social schemers:

faith, on the one side, in Republican Democracy, and on the other side

in free association and the organizing powers of the working men

themselves.

But then came the Revolution of February, 1848, the middle-class

Republic, and — with it, broken hopes. Four months only after the

proclamation of the Republic, the June insurrection of the Paris

proletarians broke out, and it was crushed in blood. The wholesale

shooting of the working-men, the mass deportations to New Guinea, and

finally the Napoleonian coup d’état followed. The Socialists were

prosecuted with fury, and the weeding out was so terrible and so

thorough that for the next twelve or fifteen years the very traces of

Socialism disappeared; its literature vanished so completely that even

names, once so familiar before 1848, were entirely forgotten; ideas

which were then current — the stock ideas of the Socialists before 1848

— were wiped out of the memories and were taken, later on, by the

present generation, for new discoveries.

However, when a new revival came, about 1866, when Communism and

Collectivism once more came forward, the conception as to the means of

their realization had undergone a deep change. The old faith in

Political Democracy was gone, and the first principles upon which the

Paris working men agreed with the British trade-unionists and Owenites,

when they met in 1866 at London, was that “the emancipation of the

working-men must be accomplished by the working-men themselves.” Upon

another point they also fell in. It was that the labour unions

themselves would have to get hold of the instruments of production, and

organize production themselves. The French idea of the Fourierist and

Mutualist “Association” thus joined hands with Robert Owen’s idea of

“The Great Consolidated Trades’ Union,” which was extended now, so as to

become an International Working-men’s Association.

Again this new revival of Socialism lasted but a few years. Soon came

the war of 1870–1871, the uprising of the Paris Commune — and again: the

free development of Socialism was rendered impossible in France. But

while Germany accepted now from the hands of its German teachers, Marx

and Engels, the Socialism of the French “forty-eighters” — the Socialism

of Considérant and Louis Blanc, and the Collectivism of Pecqueur, —

France made a further step forward.

In March, 1871, Paris had proclaimed that hence forward it would not

wait for the retardatory portions of France, and intended to start

within its Commune its own social development.

The movement was too short-lived to give any positive result. It

remained communalist only. But the working-classes of the old

International saw at once its historical significance. They understood

that the free commune would be henceforth the medium in which the ideas

of modern Socialism may come to realization. The free agro-industrial

communes, of which so much was spoken in 1848, need not be small

phalansteries, or small communities of 2000 persons. They must be vast

agglomerations, like Paris, or, still better, small territories. These

communes would federate, even irrespectively of national frontiers (like

the Cinque Ports, or the Hansa); and large labour associations might

come into existence for the inter-communal service of the railways, the

docks, and so on. Such were the ideas which began vaguely to circulate

after 1871 amongst the thinking working-men, especially in the Latin

countries. In some such organization, the details of which life itself

would settle, the labour circles of these countries saw the medium

through which Socialist forms of life could find a much easier

realization than through the Collectivist system of the State

Socialists.

These are the ideas to which I have endeavoured to give a more or less

definite expression in this book.

Looking back now at the years that have passed since this book was

written, I can say in full conscience that its leading ideas must have

been correct. The State Socialism of the collectivist system has

certainly made some progress. State railways, State banking, and State

trade in spirits have been introduced here and there. But every step

made in this direction, even though it resulted in the cheapening of a

given commodity, was found to be a new obstacle in the struggle of the

working-men for their emancipation. So that we find now amongst the

working-men, especially in England, the idea that even the working of

such a vast national property as a railway-net could be much better

handled by a Federated Union of railway employés, than by a State

organization.

On the other side, we see that countless attempts have been made all

over Europe and America, the leading idea of which is, on the one side,

to get into the hands of the working-men themselves wide branches of

production, and, on the other side, always to widen in the cities the

circles of the functions which the city performs in the interest of its

inhabitants. Trade-unionism, with a growing tendency towards organizing

the different trades internationally, and of being not only an

instrument for improving the conditions of labour, but also to become an

organization which might, at a given moment, take into its hands the

management of production; Co-operativism, both for production and for

distribution, both in industry and agriculture, and attempts at

combining both sorts of co-operation in experimental colonies; and

finally, the immensely varied field of the so-called Municipal Socialism

— these are the three directions in which the greatest amount of

creative power has been developed lately.

Of course, none of these may, in any degree, be taken as a substitute

for Communism, or even for Socialism, both of which imply the common

possession of the instruments of production. But we certainly must look

at all the just-mentioned attempts as upon experiments — like those

which Owen, Fourier, and Saint Simon tried in their colonies —

experiments which prepare human thought to conceive some of the

practical forms in which a communist society might find its expression.

The synthesis of all these partial experiments will have to be made some

day by the constructive genius of some one of the civilized nations, and

it will be done. But samples of the bricks out of which the great

synthetic building will have to be built, and even samples of some of

its rooms, are being prepared by the immense effort of the constructive

genius of man.

Bromley, Kent.

October, 1906.

Chapter 1: Our Riches

I

The human race has travelled far, since those bygone ages when men used

to fashion their rude implements of flint, and lived on the precarious

spoils of the chase, leaving to their children for their only heritage a

shelter beneath the rocks, some poor utensils — and Nature, vast,

ununderstood, and terrific, with whom they had to fight for their

wretched existence.

During the agitated times which have elapsed since, and which have

lasted for many thousand years, mankind has nevertheless amassed untold

treasures. It has cleared the land, dried the marshes, pierced the

forests, made roads; it has been building, inventing, observing,

reasoning; it has created a complex machinery, wrested her secrets from

Nature, and finally it has made a servant of steam. And the result is,

that now the child of the civilized man finds ready, at its birth, to

his hand an immense capital accumulated by those who have gone before

him. And this capital enables him to acquire, merely by his own labour,

combined with the labour of others, riches surpassing the dreams of the

Orient, expressed in the fairy tales of the Thousand and One Nights.

The soil is cleared to a great extent, fit for the reception of the best

seeds, ready to make a rich return for the skill and labour spent upon

it — a return more than sufficient for all the wants of humanity. The

methods of cultivation are known.

On the wide prairies of America each hundred men, with the aid of

powerful machinery, can produce in a few months enough wheat to maintain

ten thousand people for a whole year. And where man wishes to double his

produce, to treble it, to multiply it a hundred-fold, he makes the soil,

gives to each plant the requisite care, and thus obtains enormous

returns. While the hunter of old had to scour fifty or sixty square

miles to find food for his family, the civilized man supports his

household, with far less pains, and far more certainty, on a thousandth

part of that space. Climate is no longer an obstacle. When the sun

fails, man replaces it by artificial heat; and we see the coming of a

time when artificial light also will be used to stimulate vegetation.

Meanwhile, by the use of glass and hot water pipes, man renders a given

space ten and fifty times more productive than it was in its natural

state.

The prodigies accomplished in industry are still more striking. With the

co-operation of those intelligent beings, modern machines — themselves

the fruit of three or four generations of inventors, mostly unknown — a

hundred men manufacture now the stuff to clothe ten thousand persons for

a period of two years. In well-managed coal mines the labour of a

hundred miners furnishes each year enough fuel to warm ten thousand

families under an inclement sky. And we have lately witnessed twice the

spectacle of a wonderful city springing up in a few months at Paris,[1]

without interrupting in the slightest degree the regular work of the

French nation.

And if in manufactures as in agriculture, and as indeed through our

whole social system, the labour, the discoveries, and the inventions of

our ancestors profit chiefly the few, it is none the less certain that

mankind in general, aided by the creatures of steel and iron which it

already possesses, could already procure an existence of wealth and ease

for every one of its members.

Truly, we are rich, far richer than we think; rich in what we already

possess, richer still in the possibilities of production of our actual

mechanical outfit; richest of all in what we might win from our soil,

from our manufactures, from our science, from our technical knowledge,

were they but applied to bringing about the well-being of all.

II

We, in civilized societies, are rich. Why then are the many poor? Why

this painful drudgery for the masses? Why, even to the best paid

workman, this uncertainty for the morrow, in the midst of all the wealth

inherited from the past, and in spite of the powerful means of

production, which could ensure comfort to all in return for a few hours

of daily toil?

The Socialists have said it and repeated it unwearyingly. Daily they

reiterate it, demonstrating it by arguments taken from all the sciences.

It is because all that is necessary for production — the land, the

mines, the highways, machinery, food, shelter, education, knowledge —

all have been seized by the few in the course of that long story of

robbery, enforced migration and wars, of ignorance and oppression, which

has been the life of the human race before it had learned to subdue the

forces of Nature. It is because, taking advantage of alleged rights

acquired in the past, these few appropriate to-day two-thirds of the

products of human labour, and then squander them in the most stupid and

shameful way. It is because, having reduced the masses to a point at

which they have not the means of subsistence for a month, or even for a

week in advance, the few only allow the many to work on condition of

themselves receiving the lion’s share. It is because these few prevent

the remainder of men from producing the things they need, and force them

to produce, not the necessaries of life for all, but whatever offers the

greatest profits to the monopolists. In this is the substance of all

Socialism.

Take, indeed, a civilized country. The forests which once covered it

have been cleared, the marshes drained, the climate improved. It has

been made habitable. The soil, which bore formerly only a coarse

vegetation, is covered to-day with rich harvests. The rock-walls in the

valleys are laid out in terraces and covered with vines bearing golden

fruit. The wild plants, which yielded nought but acrid berries, or

uneatable roots, have been transformed by generations of culture into

succulent vegetables, or trees covered with delicious fruits. Thousands

of highways and railroads furrow the earth, and pierce the mountains.

The shriek of the engine is heard in the wild gorges of the Alps, the

Caucasus, and the Himalayas. The rivers have been made navigable; the

coasts, carefully surveyed, are easy of access; artificial harbours,

laboriously dug out and protected against the fury of the sea, afford

shelter to the ships. Deep shafts have been sunk in the rocks;

labyrinths of underground galleries have been dug out where coal may be

raised or minerals extracted. At the crossings of the highways great

cities have sprung up, and within their borders all the treasures of

industry, science, and art have been accumulated.

Whole generations, that lived and died in misery, oppressed and

ill-treated by their masters, and worn out by toil, have handed on this

immense inheritance to our century.

For thousands of years millions of men have laboured to clear the

forests, to drain the marshes, and to open up highways by land and

water. Every rood of soil we cultivate in Europe has been watered by the

sweat of several races of men. Every acre has its story of enforced

labour, of intolerable toil, of the people’s sufferings. Every mile of

railway, every yard of tunnel, has received its share of human blood.

The shafts of the mine still bear on their rocky walls the marks made by

the pick of the workman who toiled to excavate them. The space between

each prop in the underground galleries might be marked as a miner’s

grave; and who can tell what each of these graves has cost, in tears, in

privations, in unspeakable wretchedness to the family who depended on

the scanty wage of the worker cut off in his prime by fire-damp,

rock-fall, or flood?

The cities, bound together by railroads and waterways, are organisms

which have lived through centuries. Dig beneath them and you find, one

above another, the foundations of streets, of houses, of theatres, of

public buildings. Search into their history and you will see how the

civilization of the town, its industry, its special characteristics,

have slowly grown and ripened through the co-operation of generations of

its inhabitants before it could become what it is to-day. And even

to-day; the value of each dwelling, factory, and warehouse, which has

been created by the accumulated labour of the millions of workers, now

dead and buried, is only maintained by the very presence and labour of

legions of the men who now inhabit that special corner of the globe.

Each of the atoms composing what we call the Wealth of Nations owes its

value to the fact that it is a part of the great whole. What would a

London dockyard or a great Paris warehouse be if they were not situated

in these great centres of international commerce? What would become of

our mines, our factories, our workshops, and our railways, without the

immense quantities of merchandise transported every day by sea and land?

Millions of human beings have laboured to create this civilization on

which we pride ourselves to-day. Other millions, scattered through the

globe, labour to maintain it. Without them nothing would be left in

fifty years but ruins.

There is not even a thought, or an invention, which is not common

property, born of the past and the present. Thousands of inventors,

known and unknown, who have died in poverty, have co-operated in the

invention of each of these machines which embody the genius of man.

Thousands of writers, of poets, of scholars, have laboured to increase

knowledge, to dissipate error, and to create that atmosphere of

scientific thought, without which the marvels of our century could never

have appeared. And these thousands of philosophers, of poets, of

scholars, of inventors, have themselves been supported by the labour of

past centuries. They have been upheld and nourished through life, both

physically and mentally, by legions of workers and craftsmen of all

sorts. They have drawn their motive force from the environment.

The genius of a Séguin, a Mayer, a Grove, has certainly done more to

launch industry in new directions than all the capitalists in the world.

But men of genius are themselves the children of industry as well as of

science. Not until thousands of steam-engines had been working for years

before all eyes, constantly transforming heat into dynamic force, and

this force into sound, light, and electricity, could the insight of

genius proclaim the mechanical origin and the unity of the physical

forces. And if we, children of the nineteenth century, have at last

grasped this idea, if we know now how to apply it, it is again because

daily experience has prepared the way. The thinkers of the eighteenth

century saw and declared it, but the idea remained undeveloped, because

the eighteenth century had not grown up like ours, side by side with the

steam-engine. Imagine the decades that might have passed while we

remained in ignorance of this law, which has revolutionized modern

industry, had Watt not found at Soho skilled workmen to embody his ideas

in metal, bringing all the parts of his engine to perfection, so that

steam, pent in a complete mechanism, and rendered more docile than a

horse, more manageable than water, became at last the very soul of

modern industry.

Every machine has had the same history — a long record of sleepless

nights and of poverty, of disillusions and of joys, of partial

improvements discovered by several generations of nameless workers, who

have added to the original invention these little nothings, without

which the most fertile idea would remain fruitless. More than that:

every new invention is a synthesis, the resultant of innumerable

inventions which have preceded it in the vast field of mechanics and

industry.

Science and industry, knowledge and application, discovery and practical

realization leading to new discoveries, cunning of brain and of hand,

toil of mind and muscle — all work together. Each discovery, each

advance, each increase in the sum of human riches, owes its being to the

physical and mental travail of the past and the present.

By what right then can any one whatever appropriate the least morsel of

this immense whole and say — This is mine, not yours?

III

It has come about, however, in the course of the ages traversed by the

human race, that all that enables man to produce, and to increase his

power of production, has been seized by the few. Sometime, perhaps, we

will relate how this came to pass. For the present let it suffice to

state the fact and analyse its consequences.

To-day the soil, which actually owes its value to the needs of an

ever-increasing population, belongs to a minority who prevent the people

from cultivating it — or do not allow them to cultivate it according to

modern methods.

The mines, though they represent the labour of several generations, and

derive their sole value from the requirements of the industry of a

nation and the density of the population — the mines also belong to the

few; and these few restrict the output of coal, or prevent it entirely,

if they find more profitable investments for their capital. Machinery,

too, has become the exclusive property of the few, and even when a

machine incontestably represents the improvements added to the original

rough invention by three or four generations of workers, it none the

less belongs to a few owners. And if the descendants of the very

inventor who constructed the first machine for lace-making, a century

ago, were to present themselves to-day in a lace factory at Bâle or

Nottingham, and demand their rights, they would be told: “Hands off!

this machine is not yours,” and they would be shot down if they

attempted to take possession of it.

The railways, which would be useless as so much old iron without the

teeming population of Europe, its industry, its commerce, and its marts,

belong to a few shareholders, ignorant perhaps of the whereabouts of the

lines of rails which yield them revenues greater than those of medieval

kings. And if the children of those who perished by thousands while

excavating the railway cuttings and tunnels were to assemble one day,

crowding in their rags and hunger, to demand bread from the

shareholders, they would be met with bayonets and grape-shot, to

disperse them and safeguard “vested interests.”

In virtue of this monstrous system, the son of the worker, on entering

life, finds no field which he may till, no machine which he may tend, no

mine in which he may dig, without accepting to leave a great part of

what he will produce to a master. He must sell his labour for a scant

and uncertain wage. His father and his grandfather have toiled to drain

this field, to build this mill, to perfect this machine. They gave to

the work the full measure of their strength, and what more could they

give? But their heir comes into the world poorer than the lowest savage.

If he obtains leave to till the fields, it is on condition of

surrendering a quarter of the produce to his master, and another quarter

to the government and the middlemen. And this tax, levied upon him by

the State, the capitalist, the lord of the manor, and the middleman, is

always increasing; it rarely leaves him the power to improve his system

of culture. If he turns to industry, he is allowed to work — though not

always even that — only on condition that he yield a half or two-thirds

of the product to him whom the land recognizes as the owner of the

machine.

We cry shame on the feudal baron who forbade the peasant to turn a clod

of earth unless he surrendered to his lord a fourth of his crop. We call

those the barbarous times. But if the forms have changed, the relations

have remained the same, and the worker is forced, under the name of free

contract, to accept feudal obligations. For, turn where he will, he can

find no better conditions. Everything has become private property, and

he must accept, or die of hunger.

The result of this state of things is that all our production tends in a

wrong direction. Enterprise takes no thought for the needs of the

community. Its only aim is to increase the gains of the speculator.

Hence the constant fluctuations of trade, the periodical industrial

crises, each of which throws scores of thousands of workers on the

streets.

The working people cannot purchase with their wages the wealth which

they have produced, and industry seeks foreign markets among the monied

classes of other nations. In the East, in Africa, everywhere, in Egypt,

Tonkin or the Congo, the European is thus bound to promote the growth of

serfdom. And so he does. But soon he finds everywhere similar

competitors. All the nations evolve on the same lines, and wars,

perpetual wars, break out for the right of precedence in the market.

Wars for the possession of the East, wars for the empire of the sea,

wars to impose duties on imports and to dictate conditions to

neighbouring states; wars against those “blacks” who revolt! The roar of

the cannon never ceases in the world, whole races are massacred, the

states of Europe spend a third of their budgets in armaments; and we

know how heavily these taxes fall on the workers.

Education still remains the privilege of a small minority, for it is

idle to talk of education when the workman’s child is forced, at the age

of thirteen, to go down into the mine or to help his father on the farm.

It is idle to talk of studies to the worker, who comes home in the

evening crushed by excessive toil with its brutalizing atmosphere.

Society is thus bound to remain divided into two hostile camps, and in

such conditions freedom is a vain word. The Radical begins by demanding

a greater extension of political rights, but he soon sees that the

breath of liberty leads to the uplifting of the proletariat, and then he

turns round, changes his opinions, and reverts to repressive legislation

and government by the sword.

A vast array of courts, judges, executioners, policemen, and gaolers is

needed to uphold these privileges; and this array gives rise in its turn

to a whole system of espionage, of false witness, of spies, of threats

and corruption.

The system under which we live checks in its turn the growth of the

social sentiment. We all know that without uprightness, without

self-respect, without sympathy and mutual aid, human kind must perish,

as perish the few races of animals living by rapine, or the

slave-keeping ants. But such ideas are not to the taste of the ruling

classes, and they have elaborated a whole system of pseudo-science to

teach the contrary.

Fine sermons have been preached on the text that those who have should

share with those who have not, but he who would act out this principle

is speedily informed that these beautiful sentiments are all very well

in poetry, but not in practice. “To lie is to degrade and besmirch

oneself,” we say, and yet all civilized life becomes one huge lie. We

accustom ourselves and our children to hypocrisy, to the practice of a

double-faced morality. And since the brain is ill at ease among lies, we

cheat ourselves with sophistry. Hypocrisy and sophistry become the

second nature of the civilized man.

But a society cannot live thus; it must return to truth or cease to

exist.

Thus the consequences which spring from the original act of monopoly

spread through the whole of social life. Under pain of death, human

societies are forced to return to first principles: the means of

production being the collective work of humanity, the product should be

the collective property of the race. Individual appropriation is neither

just nor serviceable. All belongs to all. All things are for all men,

since all men have need of them, since all men have worked in the

measure of their strength to produce them, and since it is not possible

to evaluate every one’s part in the production of the world’s wealth.

All things are for all. Here is an immense stock of tools and

implements; here are all those iron slaves which we call machines, which

saw and plane, spin and weave for us, unmaking and remaking, working up

raw matter to produce the marvels of our time. But nobody has the right

to seize a single one of these machines and say, “This is mine; if you

want to use it you must pay me a tax on each of your products,” any more

than the feudal lord of medieval times had the right to say to the

peasant, “This hill, this meadow belong to me, and you must pay me a tax

on every sheaf of corn you reap, on every rick you build.”

All is for all! If the man and the woman bear their fair share of work,

they have a right to their fair share of all that is produced by all,

and that share is enough to secure them well-being. No more of such

vague formulas as “The Right to work,” or “To each the whole result of

his labour.” What we proclaim is THE RIGHT TO WELL-BEING: WELL-BEING FOR

ALL!

Chapter 2: Well-Being for All

I

Well-being for all is not a dream. It is possible, realizable, owing to

all that our ancestors have done to increase our powers of production.

We know, indeed, that the producers, although they constitute hardly

one-third of the inhabitants of civilized countries, even now produce

such quantities of goods that a certain degree of comfort could be

brought to every hearth. We know further that if all those who squander

to-day the fruits of others’ toil were forced to employ their leisure in

useful work, our wealth would increase in proportion to the number of

producers, and more. Finally, we know that contrary to the theory

enunciated by Malthus — that Oracle of middle-class Economics — the

productive powers of the human race increase at a much more rapid ratio

than its powers of reproduction. The more thickly men are crowded on the

soil, the more rapid is the growth of their wealth-creating power.

Thus, although the population of England has only increased from 1844 to

1890 by 62 per cent, its production has grown, to say the least, at

double that rate — to wit, by 130 per cent. In France, where the

population has grown more slowly, the increase in production is

nevertheless very rapid. Notwithstanding the crises through which

agriculture is frequently passing, notwithstanding State interference,

the blood-tax (conscription), and speculative commerce and finance, the

production of wheat in France has increased fourfold, and industrial

production more than tenfold, in the course of the last eighty years. In

the United States the progress is still more striking. In spite of

immigration, or rather precisely because of the influx of surplus

European labour, the United States have multiplied their wealth tenfold.

However, these figures give yet a very faint idea of what our wealth

might become under better conditions. For alongside of the rapid

development of our wealth-producing powers we have an overwhelming

increase in the ranks of the idlers and middlemen. Instead of capital

gradually concentrating itself in a few hands, so that it would only be

necessary for the community to dispossess a few millionaires and enter

upon its lawful heritage — instead of this Socialist forecast proving

true, the exact reverse is coming to pass: the swarm of parasites is

ever increasing.

In France there are not ten actual producers to every thirty

inhabitants. The whole agricultural wealth of the country is the work of

less than seven millions of men, and in the two great industries, mining

and the textile trade, you will find that the workers number less than

two and one-half millions. But the exploiters of labour, how many are

they? — In England (exclusive of Scotland and Ireland), only one million

workers — men, women, and children — are employed in all the textile

trades, rather more than half a million work the mines, rather less than

half a million till the ground, and the statisticians have to exaggerate

all the figures in order to establish a maximum of eight million

producers to twenty-six million inhabitants. Strictly speaking the

creators of the goods exported from Britain to all the ends of the earth

comprise only from six to seven million workers. And what is the sum of

the shareholders and middlemen who levy the first fruits of labour from

far and near, and heap up unearned gains by thrusting themselves between

the producer and the consumer, paying the former not a fifth, nay, not a

twentieth, of the price they exact from the latter?

Nor is this all. Those who withhold capital constantly reduce the output

by restraining production. We need not speak of the cartloads of oysters

thrown into the sea to prevent a dainty, hitherto reserved for the rich,

from becoming a food for the people. We need not speak of the thousand

and one luxuries — stuffs, foods, etc. etc. — treated after the same

fashion as the oysters. It is enough to remember the way in which the

production of the most necessary things is limited. Legions of miners

are ready and willing to dig out coal every day, and send it to those

who are shivering with cold; but too often a third, or even two-thirds,

of their number are forbidden to work more than three days a week,

because, forsooth, the price of coal must be kept up? Thousands of

weavers are forbidden to work the looms, though their wives and children

go in rags, and though three-quarters of the population of Europe have

no clothing worthy the name.

Hundreds of blast-furnaces, thousands of factories periodically stand

idle, others only work half-time — and in every civilized nation there

is a permanent population of about two million individuals who ask only

for work, but to whom work is denied.

How gladly would these millions of men set to work to reclaim waste

lands, or to transform illcultivated land into fertile fields, rich in

harvests! A year of well-directed toil would suffice to multiply

fivefold the produce of dry lands in the south of France which now yield

only about eight bushels of wheat per acre. But these men, who would be

happy to become hardy pioneers in so many branches of wealth-producing

activity, must stay their hands because the owners of the soil, the

mines, and the factories prefer to invest their capital — stolen in the

first place from the community — in Turkish or Egyptian bonds, or in

Patagonian gold mines, and so make Egyptian fellahs, Italian exiles, and

Chinese coolies their wage-slaves.

So much for the direct and deliberate limitation of production; but

there is also a limitation indirect and not of set purpose, which

consists in spending human toil on objects absolutely useless, or

destined only to satisfy the dull vanity of the rich.

It is impossible to reckon in figures the extent to which wealth is

restricted indirectly, the extent to which energy is squandered, that

might have served to produce, and above all to prepare the machinery

necessary to production. It is enough to cite the immense sums spent by

Europe in armaments for the sole purpose of acquiring control of the

markets, and so forcing her own commercial standards on neighbouring

territories and making exploitation easier at home; the millions paid

every year to officials of all sorts, whose function it is to maintain

the rights of minorities — the right, that is, of a few rich men — to

manipulate the economic activities of the nation; the millions spent on

judges, prisons, policemen, and all the paraphernalia of so-called

justice — spent to no purpose, because we know that every alleviation,

however slight, of the wretchedness of our great cities is followed by a

very considerable diminution of crime; lastly, the millions spent on

propagating pernicious doctrines by means of the press, and news

“cooked” in the interest of this or that party, of this politician or of

that company of exploiters.

But over and above this we must take into account all the labour that

goes to sheer waste, in keeping up the stables, the kennels, and the

retinue of the rich, for instance; in pandering to the caprices of

society and to the depraved tastes of the fashionable mob; in forcing

the consumer on the one hand to buy what he does not need, or foisting

an inferior article upon him by means of puffery, and in producing on

the other hand wares which are absolutely injurious, but profitable to

the manufacturer. What is squandered in this manner would be enough to

double our real wealth, or so to plenish our mills and factories with

machinery that they would soon flood the shops with all that is now

lacking to two-thirds of the nation. Under our present system a full

quarter of the producers in every nation are forced to be idle for three

or four months in the year, and the labour of another quarter, if not of

the half, has no better results than the amusement of the rich or the

exploitation of the public.

Thus, if we consider on the one hand the rapidity with which civilized

nations augment their powers of production, and on the other hand the

limits set to that production, be it directly or indirectly, by existing

conditions, one cannot but conclude that an economic system a trifle

more enlightened would permit them to heap up in a few years so many

useful products that they would be constrained to cry — “Enough! We have

enough coal and bread and raiment ! Let us rest and consider how best to

use our powers, how best to employ our leisure.”

No, plenty for all is not a dream — though it was a dream indeed in

those old days when man, for all his pains, could hardly win a bushel of

wheat from an acre of land, and had to fashion by hand all the

implements he used in agriculture and industry. Now it is no longer a

dream, because man has invented a motor which, with a little iron and a

few pounds of coal, gives him the mastery of a creature strong and

docile as a horse, and capable of setting the most complicated machinery

in motion.

But, if plenty for all is to become a reality, this immense capital —

cities, houses, pastures, arable lands, factories, highways, education —

must cease to be regarded as private property, for the monopolist to

dispose of at his pleasure.

This rich endowment, painfully won, builded, fashioned, or invented by

our ancestors, must become common property, so that the collective

interests of men may gain from it the greatest good for all.

There must be EXPROPRIATION. The well-being of all — the end;

expropriation — the means.

II

Expropriation, such then is the problem which History has put before the

men of the twentieth century: the return to Communism in all that

ministers to the well-being of man.

But this problem cannot be solved by means of legislation. No one

imagines that. The poor, no less than the rich, understand that neither

the existing Governments, nor any which might arise out of possible

political changes, would be capable of finding a solution. We feel the

necessity of a social revolution; rich and poor alike recognize that

this revolution is imminent, that it may break out in a very few years.

A great change in thought has been accomplished during the last half of

the nineteenth century; but suppressed, as it was, by the propertied

classes, and denied its natural development, this new spirit must break

now its bonds by violence and realize itself in a revolution.

Whence comes the revolution, and how will it announce its coming? None

can answer these questions. The future is hidden. But those who watch

and think do not misinterpret the signs: workers and exploiters,

Revolutionists and Conservatives, thinkers and men of action, all feel

that the revolution is at our doors.

Well! What are we to do when the thunderbolt has fallen?

We have all been studying the dramatic side of revolution so much, and

the practical work of revolution so little, that we are apt to see only

the stage effects, so to speak, of these great movements; the fight of

the first days; the barricades. But this fight, this first skirmish, is

soon ended, and it is only after the overthrow of the old constitution

that the real work of revolution can be said to begin.

Effete and powerless, attacked on all sides, the old rulers are soon

swept away by the breath of insurrection. In a few days the middle-class

monarchy of 1848 was no more, and while Louis Philippe was making good

his escape in a cab, Paris had already forgotten her “citizen king.” The

government of Thiers disappeared, on the 18th of March, 1871, in a few

hours, leaving Paris mistress of her destinies. Yet 1848 and 1871 were

only insurrections. Before a popular revolution the masters of “the old

order” disappear with a surprising rapidity. Its upholders fly the

country, to plot in safety elsewhere and to devise measures for their

return.

The former Government having disappeared, the army, hesitating before

the tide of popular opinion, no longer obeys its commanders, who have

also prudently decamped. The troops stand by without interfering, or

join the rebels. The police, standing at ease, are uncertain whether to

belabour the crowd or to cry: “Long live the Commune!” while some retire

to their quarters “to await the pleasure of the new Government.” Wealthy

citizens pack their trunks and betake themselves to places of safety.

The people remain. This is how a revolution is ushered in. In several

large towns the Commune is proclaimed. In the streets wander thousands

of men, who in the evening crowd into improvised clubs asking: “What

shall we do?” and ardently discuss public affairs, in which all take an

interest; those who yesterday were most indifferent are perhaps the most

zealous. Everywhere there is plenty of goodwill and a keen desire to

make victory certain. It is a time of supreme devotion. The people are

ready to go forward.

All this is splendid, sublime; but still, it is not a revolution. Nay,

it is only now that-the work of the revolutionist begins.

Doubtless the thirst for vengeance will be satisfied. The Watrins and

the Thomases will pay the penalty of their unpopularity, but that is

only an incident of the struggle and not a revolution.

Socialist politicians, radicals, neglected geniuses of journalism, stump

orators, middle-class citizens, and workmen hurry to the Town Hall to

the Government offices, and take possession of the vacant seats. Some

rejoice their hearts with galloon, admire themselves in ministerial

mirrors, and study to give orders with an air of importance appropriate

to their new position. They must have a red sash, an embroidered cap,

and magisterial gestures to impress their comrades of the office or the

workshop! Others bury themselves in official papers, trying, with the

best of wills, to make head or tail of them. They indite laws and issue

high-flown worded decrees that nobody takes the trouble to carry out —

because the revolution has come. To give themselves an authority which

is lacking they seek the sanction of old forms of Government. They take

the names of “Provisional Government,” “Committee of Public Safety,”

“Mayor,” “Governor of the Town Hall,” “Commissioner of Public Weal,” and

what not. Elected or acclaimed, they assemble in Boards or in Communal

Councils. These bodies include men of ten or twenty different schools,

which, if not exactly “private chapels,” are at least so many sects

which represent as many ways of regarding the scope, the bearing, and

the goal of the revolution. Possibilists, Collectivists, Radicals,

Jacobins, Blanquists, are thrust together, and waste time in wordy

warfare. Honest men come into contact with ambitious ones, whose only

dream is power and who spurn the crowd whence they sprung. Coming

together with diametrically opposed views, they are forced to form

arbitrary alliances in order to create majorities that can but last a

day. Wrangling, calling each other reactionaries, authoritarians, and

rascals, incapable of coming to an understanding on any serious measure,

dragged into discussions about trifles, producing nothing better than

bombastic proclamations, yet taking themselves seriously, unwitting that

the real strength of the movement is in the streets.

All this may please those who like the theatre, but it is not

revolution. Nothing yet has been accomplished. Meanwhile the people

suffer. The factories are idle, the workshops closed; industry is at a

standstill. The worker does not even earn the meagre wage which was his

before. Food goes up in price. With that heroic devotion which has

always characterized them, and which in great crises reaches the

sublime, the people wait patiently. “We place these three months of want

at the service of the Republic,” they said in 1848, while “their

representatives” and the gentlemen of the new Government, down to the

meanest Jack-in-office, received their salary regularly.

The people suffer. With the childlike faith, with the good humour of the

masses who believe in their leaders, they think that “yonder,” in the

House, in the Town Hall, in the Committee of Public Safety, their

welfare is being considered. But “yonder” they are discussing everything

under the sun except the welfare of the people. In 1793, while famine

ravaged France and crippled the Revolution; whilst the people were

reduced to the depths of misery, whilst the Champs Élysée were lined

with luxurious carriages where women displayed their jewels and

splendour, Robespierre was urging the Jacobins to discuss his treatise

on the English Constitution. While the worker was suffering in 1848 from

the general stoppage of trade the Provisional Government and the House

were wrangling over military pensions and prison labour, without

troubling how the people were to live during this crisis. And could one

cast a reproach at the Paris Commune, which was born beneath the

Prussian cannon, and lasted only seventy days, it would be for this same

error — this failure to understand that the Revolution could not triumph

unless those who fought on its side were fed, that on fifteen pence a

day a man cannot fight on the ramparts and at the same time support a

family.

The people suffer and say: “How to find the way out of these

difficulties?”

III

It seems to us that there is only one answer to this question: We must

recognize, and loudly proclaim, that every one, whatever his grade in

the old society, whether strong or weak, capable or incapable, has,

before everything, THE RIGHT TO LIVE, and that society is bound to share

amongst all, without exception, the means of existence at its disposal.

We must acknowledge this, and proclaim it aloud, and act up to it.

It must be so contrived that from the first day of the revolution the

worker shall know that a new era is opening before him; that

henceforward none need crouch under the bridges, with palaces hard by,

none need fast in the midst of food, none need perish with cold near

shops full of furs; that all is for all, in practice as well as in

theory, and that at last, for the first time in history, a revolution

has been accomplished which considers the NEEDS of the people before

schooling them in their DUTIES.

This cannot be brought about by Acts of Parliament, but only by taking

immediate and effective possession of all that is necessary to ensure

the well-being of all; this is the only really scientific way of going

to work, the only way to be understood and desired by the mass of the

people. We must take possession, in the name of the people, of the

granaries, the shops full of clothing, and the dwelling houses. Nothing

must be wasted. We must organize without delay to feed the hungry, to

satisfy all wants, to meet all needs, to produce, not for the special

benefit of this one or that one, but to ensure that society as a whole

will live and grow.

Enough of ambiguous words like “the right to work,” with which the

people were misled in 1848, and which are still used to mislead them.

Let us have the courage to recognize that Well-being for all,

henceforward possible, must be realized.

When the workers claimed the right to work in 1848, national and

municipal workshops were organized, and workmen were sent to drudge

there at the rate of 1s. 8d. a day! When they asked that labour should

be organized, the reply was: “Patience, friends, the Government will see

to it; meantime here is your 1s. 8d. Rest now, brave toiler, after your

lifelong struggle for food!” Meantime the cannons were trained, the

reserves called out, and the workers themselves disorganized by the many

methods well known to the middle classes, till one fine day they were

told to go and colonize Africa or be shot down.

Very different will be the result if the workers claim the right to

well-being! In claiming that right they claim the right to possess the

wealth of the community — to take the houses to dwell in, according to

the needs of each family; to seize the stores of food and learn the

meaning of plenty, after having known famine too well. They proclaim

their right to all wealth — fruit of the labour of past and present

generations — and learn by its means to enjoy those higher pleasures of

art and science too long monopolized by the middle classes.

And while asserting their right to live in comfort, they assert, what is

still more important, their right to decide for themselves what this

comfort shall be, what must be produced to ensure it, and what discarded

as no longer of value.

The “right to well-being” means the possibility of living like human

beings, and of bringing up children to be members of a society better

than ours, whilst the “right to work” only means the right to be always

a wage-slave, a drudge, ruled over and exploited by the middle class of

the future. The right to well-being is the Social Revolution, the right

to work means nothing but the Treadmill of Commercialism. It is high

time for the worker to assert his right to the common inheritance and to

enter into possession.

Chapter 3: Anarchist Communism

I

Every society which has abolished private property will be forced, we

maintain, to organize itself on the lines of Communistic Anarchy.

Anarchy leads to Communism, and Communism to Anarchy, both alike being

expressions of the predominant tendency in modern societies, the pursuit

of equality.

Time was when a peasant family could consider the corn which it grew, or

the woollen garments woven in the cottage, as the products of its own

toil. But even then this way of looking at things was not quite correct.

There were the roads and the bridges made in common, the swamps drained

by common toil, and the communal pastures enclosed by hedges which were

kept in repair by each and all. If the looms for weaving or the dyes for

colouring fabrics were improved, all profited; so even in those days a

peasant family could not live alone, but was dependent in a thousand

ways on the village or the commune.

But nowadays, in the present state of industry, when everything is

interdependent, when each branch of production is knit up with all the

rest, the attempt to claim an Individualist origin for the products of

industry is absolutely untenable. The astonishing perfection attained by

the textile or mining industries in civilized countries is due to the

simultaneous development of a thousand other industries, great and

small, to the extension of the railroad system, to inter-oceanic

navigation, to the manual skill of thousands of workers, to a certain

standard of culture reached by the working classes as a whole, to the

labours, in short, of men in every corner of the globe.

The Italians who died of cholera while making the Suez Canal, or of

anchylosis in the St. Gothard Tunnel, and the Americans mowed down by

shot and shell while fighting for the abolition of slavery have helped

to develop the cotton industry in France and England, as well as the

work-girls who languish in the factories of Manchester and Rouen, and

the inventor who (following the suggestion of some worker) succeeds in

improving the looms.

How, then, shall we estimate the share of each in the riches which ALL

contribute to amass?

Looking at production from this general, synthetic point of view, we

cannot hold with the Collectivists that payment proportionate to the

hours of labour rendered by each would be an ideal arrangement, or even

a step in the right direction.

Without discussing whether exchange value of goods is really measured in

existing societies by the amount of work necessary to produce it —

according to the doctrine of Smith and Ricardo, in whose footsteps Marx

has followed — suffice it to say here, leaving ourselves free to return

to the subject later, that the Collectivist ideal appears to us

untenable in a society which considers the instruments of labour as a

common inheritance. Starting from this principle, such a society would

find itself forced from the very outset to abandon all forms of wages.

The mitigated individualism of the collectivist system certainly could

not maintain itself alongside a partial communism — the socialization of

land and the instruments of production. A new form of property requires

a new form of remuneration. A new method of production cannot exist side

by side with the old forms of consumption, any more than it can adapt

itself to the old forms of political organization.

The wage system arises out of the individual ownership of the land and

the instruments of labour. It was the necessary condition for the

development of capitalist production, and will perish with it, in spite

of the attempt to disguise it as “profit-sharing.” The common possession

of the instruments of labour must necessarily bring with it the

enjoyment in common of the fruits of common labour.

We hold further that Communism is not only desirable, but that existing

societies, founded on Individualism, are inevitably impelled in the

direction of Communism. The development of Individualism during the last

three centuries is explained by the efforts of the individual to protect

himself from the tyranny of Capital and of the State. For a time he

imagined, and those who expressed his thought for him declared, that he

could free himself entirely from the State and from society. “By means

of money,” he said, “I can buy all that I need.” But the individual was

on a wrong tack, and modern history has taught him to recognize that,

without the help of all, he can do nothing, although his strong-boxes

are full of gold.

In fact, alongside this current of Individualism, we find in all modern

history a tendency, on the one hand, to retain all that remains of the

partial Communism of antiquity, and, on the other, to establish the

Communist principle in the thousand developments of modern life.

As soon as the communes of the tenth, eleventh, and twelfth centuries

had succeeded in emancipating themselves from their lords,

ecclesiastical or lay, their communal labour and communal consumption

began to extend and develop rapidly. The township — and not private

persons — freighted ships and equipped expeditions, and the benefit

arising from the foreign trade did not accrue to individuals, but was

shared by all. The townships also bought provisions for their citizens.

Traces of these institutions have lingered on into the nineteenth

century, and the folk piously cherish the memory of them in their

legends.

All that has disappeared. But the rural township still struggles to

preserve the last traces of this Communism, and it succeeds — except

when the State throws its heavy sword into the balance.

Meanwhile new organizations, based on the same principle — to every man

according to his needs — spring up under a thousand different forms; for

without a certain leaven of Communism the present societies could not

exist. In spite of the narrowly egoistic turn given to men’s minds by

the commercial system, the tendency towards Communism is constantly

appearing, and influences our activities in a variety of ways.

The bridges, for the use of which a toll was levied in the old days, are

now become public property and free to all; so are the high roads,

except in the East, where a toll is still exacted from the traveller for

every mile of his journey. Museums, free libraries, free schools, free

meals for children; parks and gardens open to all; streets paved and

lighted, free to all; water supplied to every house without measure or

stint — all such arrangements are founded on the principle: “Take what

you need.”

The tramways and railways have already introduced monthly and annual

season tickets, without limiting the number of journeys taken; and two

nations, Hungary and Russia, have introduced on their railways the zone

system, which permits the holder to travel five hundred or a thousand

miles for the same price. It is but a short step from that to a uniform

charge, such as already prevails in the postal service. In all these

innovations, and a thousand others, the tendency is not to measure the

individual consumption. One man wants to travel a thousand miles,

another five hundred. These are personal requirements. There is no

sufficient reason why one should pay twice as much as the other because

his need is twice as great. Such are the signs which appear even now in

our individualist societies.

Moreover, there is a tendency, though still a feeble one, to consider

the needs of the individual, irrespective of his past or possible

services to the community. We are beginning to think of society as a

whole, each part of which is so intimately bound up with the others that

a service rendered to one is a service rendered to all.

When you go into a public library — not indeed the National Library of

Paris, but, say, into the British Museum or the Berlin Library — the

librarian does not ask what services you have rendered to society before

giving you the book, or the fifty books which you require, and he comes

to your assistance if you do not know how to manage the catalogue. By

means of uniform credentials — and very often a contribution of work is

preferred — the scientific society opens its museums, its gardens, its

library, its laboratories, and its annual conversaziones to each of its

members, whether he be a Darwin, or a simple amateur.

At St. Petersburg, if you are pursuing an invention, you go into a

special laboratory or a workshop, where you are given a place, a

carpenter’s bench, a turning lathe, all the necessary tools and

scientific instruments, provided only you know how to use them; and you

are allowed to work there as long as you please. There are the tools;

interest others in your idea, join with fellow workers skilled in

various crafts, or work alone if you prefer it. Invent a flying machine,

or invent nothing — that is your own affair. You are pursuing an idea —

that is enough.

In the same way, those who man the lifeboat do not ask credentials from

the crew of a sinking ship; they launch their boat, risk their lives in

the raging waves, and sometimes perish, all to save men whom they do not

even know. And what need to know them? “They are human beings, and they

need our aid — that is enough, that establishes their right — To the

rescue!

Thus we find a tendency, eminently communistic, springing up on all

sides, and in various guises, in the very heart of theoretically

individualist societies.”

Suppose that one of our great cities, so egotistic in ordinary times,

were visited to-morrow by some calamity — a siege, for instance — that

same selfish city would decide that the first needs to satisfy were

those of the children and the aged. Without asking what services they

had rendered, or were likely to render to society, it would first of all

feed them. Then the combatants would be cared for, irrespective of the

courage or the intelligence which each has displayed, and thousands of

men and women would outvie each other in unselfish devotion to the

wounded.

This tendency exists and is felt as soon as the most pressing needs of

each are satisfied, and in proportion as the productive power of the

race increases. It becomes an active force every time a great idea comes

to oust the mean preoccupations of everyday life.

How can we doubt, then, that when the instruments of production are

placed at the service of all, when business is conducted on Communist

principles, when labour, having recovered its place of honour in

society, produces much more than is necessary to all — how can we doubt

but that this force (already so powerful) will enlarge its sphere of

action till it becomes the ruling principle of social life?

Following these indications, and considering further the practical side

of expropriation, of which we shall speak in the following chapters, we

are convinced that our first obligation, when the revolution shall have

broken the power upholding the present system, will be to realize

Communism without delay.

But ours is neither the Communism of Fourier and the Phalansteriens, nor

of the German State-Socialists. It is Anarchist Communism, — Communism

without government — the Communism of the Free. It is the synthesis of

the two ideals pursued by humanity throughout the ages — Economic and

Political Liberty.

II

In taking “Anarchy” for our ideal of political organization we are only

giving expression to another marked tendency of human progress. Whenever

European societies have developed up to a certain point they have shaken

off the yoke of authority and substituted a system founded roughly more

or less on the principles of individual liberty. And history shows us

that these periods of partial or general revolution, when the

governments were overthrown, were also periods of sudden progress both

in the economic and the intellectual field. Now it is the

enfranchisement of the communes, whose monuments, produced by the free

labour of the guilds, have never been surpassed; now it is the peasant

rising which brought about the Reformation and imperilled the papacy;

and then again it is the society, free for a brief space, which was

created at the other side of the Atlantic by the malcontents from the

Old World.

Further, if we observe the present development of civilized peoples we

see, most unmistakably, a movement ever more and more marked to limit

the sphere of action of the Government, and to allow more and more

liberty to the individual. This evolution is going on before our eyes,

though cumbered by the ruins and rubbish of old institutions and old

superstitions. Like all evolutions, it only waits a revolution to

overthrow the old obstacles which block the way, that it may find free

scope in a regenerated society.

After having striven long in vain to solve the insoluble problem — the

problem of constructing a government “which will constrain the

individual to obedience without itself ceasing to be the servant of

society,” men at last attempt to free themselves from every form of

government and to satisfy their need for organization by a free contract

between individuals and groups pursuing the same aim. The independence

of each small territorial unit becomes a pressing need; mutual agreement

replaces law, and everywhere regulates individual interests in view of a

common object.

All that was once looked on as a function of the Government is to-day

called in question. Things are arranged more easily and more

satisfactorily without the intervention of the State. And in studying

the progress made in this direction, we are led to conclude that the

tendency of the human race is to reduce Government interference to zero;

in fact, to abolish the State, the personification of injustice,

oppression, and monopoly.

We can already catch glimpses of a world in which the bonds which bind

the individual are no longer laws, but social habits — the result of the

need felt by each one of us to seek the support, the co-operation, the

sympathy of his neighbours.

Assuredly the idea of a society without a State will give rise to at

least as many objections as the political economy of a society without

private capital. We have all been brought up from our childhood to

regard the State as a sort of Providence; all our education, the Roman

history we learned at school, the Byzantine code which we studied later

under the name of Roman law, and the various sciences taught at the

universities, accustom us to believe in Government and in the virtues of

the State providential.

To maintain this superstition whole systems of philosophy have been

elaborated and taught; all politics are based on this principle; and

each politician, whatever his colours, comes forward and says to the

people, “Give me the power, and I both can and will free you from the

miseries which press so heavily upon you.”

From the cradle to the grave all our actions are guided by this

principle. Open any book on sociology or jurisprudence, and you will

find there the Government, its organization, its acts, filling so large

a place that we come to believe that there is nothing outside the

Government and the world of statesmen.

The press teaches us the same in every conceivable way. Whole columns

are devoted to parliamentary debates and to political intrigues. The

vast every day life of a nation is barely mentioned in a few lines when

dealing with economic subjects, law, or in “divers facts” relating to

police cases. And when you read these newspapers, you hardly think of

the incalculable number of beings — all humanity, so to say — who grow

up and die, who know sorrow, who work and consume, think and create

outside the few encumbering personages who have been so magnified that

humanity is hidden by their shadows enlarged by our ignorance.

And yet as soon as we pass from printed matter; to life itself, as soon

as we throw a glance at society, we are struck by the infinitesimal part

played by the Government. Balzac already remarked how millions of

peasants spend the whole of their lives without knowing anything about

the State, save the heavy taxes they are compelled to pay. Every day

millions of transactions are made without Government intervention, and

the greatest of them — those of commerce and of the Exchange — are

carried on in such a way that the Government could not be appealed to if

one of the contracting parties had the intention of not fulfilling his

agreement. Should you speak to a man who understands commerce he will

tell you that the everyday business transacted by merchants would be

absolutely impossible were it not based on mutual confidence. The habit

of keeping his word, the desire not to lose his credit, amply suffice to

maintain this relative honesty. The man who does not feel the slightest

remorse when poisoning his customers with noxious drugs covered with

pompous labels thinks he is in honour bound to keep his engagements.

Now, if this relative morality has developed under present conditions,

when enrichment is the only incentive and the only aim, can we doubt its

rapid progress when appropriation of the fruits of others’ labour will

no longer be the basis of society?

Another striking fact, which especially characterizes our generation,

speaks still more in favour of our ideas. It is the continual extension

of the field of enterprise due to private initiative, and the prodigious

development of free groups of all kinds. We shall discuss this more at

length in the chapter devoted to Free Agreement. Suffice it to mention

that the facts are so numerous and so customary that they are the

essence of the second half of the nineteenth century, even though

political and socialist writers ignore them, always preferring to talk

to us about the functions of Government.

These organizations, free and infinitely varied, are so natural an

outcome of our civilization; they expand so rapidly and group themselves

with so much ease; they are so necessary a result of the continual

growth of the needs of civilized man; and lastly, they so advantageously

replace governmental interference that we must recognize in them a

factor of growing importance in the life of societies. If they do not

yet spread over the whole of the manifestations of life, it is that they

find an insurmountable obstacle in the poverty of the worker, in the

casts of present society, in the private appropriation of capital, and

in the State. Abolish these obstacles and you will see them covering the

immense field of civilized man’s activity.

The history of the last fifty years furnishes a living proof that

Representative Government is impotent to discharge the functions we have

sought to assign to it. In days to come the nineteenth century will be

quoted as having witnessed the failure of parliamentarianism.

But this impotence is becoming evident to all; the faults of

parliamentarianism, and the inherent vices of the representative

principle, are self-evident, and the few thinkers who have made a

critical study of them (J. S. Mill and Leverdays) did but give literary

form to the popular dissatisfaction. It is not difficult, indeed, to see

the absurdity of naming a few men and saying to them, “Make laws

regulating all our spheres of activity, although not one of you knows

anything about them!”

We are beginning to see that government by majorities means abandoning

all the affairs of the country to the tide-waiters who make up the

majorities in the House and in election committees; to those, in a word,

who have no opinion of their own. But mankind is seeking and already

finding new issues.

The International Postal Union, the railway unions, and the learned

societies give us examples of solutions based on free agreement in place

and stead of law.

To-day, when groups scattered far and wide wish to organize themselves

for some object or other, they no longer elect an international

parliament of Jacks-of-all-trades. No, where it is not possible to meet

directly or come to an agreement by correspondence, delegates versed in

the question at issue are sent to treat, with the instructions:

“Endeavour to come to an agreement on such or such a question and then

return not with a law in your pocket, but with a proposition of

agreement which we may or may not accept.”

Such is the method of the great industrial companies, the learned

societies, and the associations of every description, which already

cover Europe and the United States. And such should be the method of an

emancipated society. While bringing about expropriation, society cannot

continue to organize itself on the principle of parliamentary

representation. A society founded on serfdom is in keeping with absolute

monarchy; a society based on the wage system and the exploitation of the

masses by the capitalists finds its political expression in

parliamentarianism. But a free society, regaining possession of the

common inheritance, must seek, in free groups and free federations of

groups, a new organization, in harmony with the new economic phase of

history.

Every economic phase has a political phase corresponding to it, and it

would be impossible to touch property without finding at the same time a

new mode of political life.

Chapter 4: Expropriation

I

It is told of Rothschild that, seeing his fortune threatened by the

Revolution of 1848, he hit upon the following stratagem: “I am quite

willing to admit,” said he, “that my fortune has been accumulated at the

expense of others, but if it were divided to-morrow among the millions

of Europe, the share of each would only amount to five shillings. Very

well, then, I undertake to render to each his five shillings if he asks

me for it.”

Having given due publicity to his promise, our millionaire proceeded as

usual to stroll quietly through the streets of Frankfort. Three or four

passers-by asked for their five shillings, which he disbursed with a

sardonic smile. His stratagem succeeded, and the family of the

millionaire is still in possession of its wealth.

It is in much the same fashion that the shrewd heads among the middle

classes reason when they say, “Ah, Expropriation! I know what that

means. You take all the overcoats and lay them in a heap, and every one

is free to help himself and fight for the best.”

But such jests are irrelevant as well as flippant. What we want is not a

redistribution of overcoats, although it must be said that even in such

a case, the shivering folk would see advantage in it. Nor do we want to

divide up the wealth of the Rothschilds. What we do want is so to

arrange things that every human being born into the world shall be

ensured the opportunity in the first instance of learning some useful

occupation, and of becoming skilled in it; next, that he shall be free

to work at his trade without asking leave of master or owner, and

without handing over to landlord or capitalist the lion’s share of what

he produces. As to the wealth held by the Rothschilds or the

Vanderbilts, it will serve us to organize our system of communal

production.

The day when the labourer may till the ground without paying away half

of what he produces, the day when the machines necessary to prepare the

soil for rich harvests are at the free disposal of the cultivators, the

day when the worker in the factory produces for the community and not

the monopolist — that day will see the workers clothed and fed, and

there will be no more Rothschilds or other exploiters.

No one will then have to sell his working power for a wage that only

represents a fraction of what he produces.

“So far so good,” say our critics, “but you will have Rothschilds coming

in from outside. How are you to prevent a person from amassing millions

in China and then settling amongst you? How are you going to prevent

such a one from surrounding himself with lackeys and wage-slaves — from

exploiting them and enriching himself at their expense?”

“You cannot bring about a revolution all over the world at the same

time. Well, then, are you going to establish custom-houses on your

frontiers to search all who enter your country and confiscate the money

they bring with them? — Anarchist policemen firing on travellers would

be a fine spectacle!”

But at the root of this argument there is a great error. Those who

propound it have never paused to inquire whence come the fortunes of the

rich. A little thought would, however, suffice to show them that these

fortunes have their beginnings in the poverty of the poor. When there

are no longer any destitute there will no longer be any rich to exploit

them.

Let us glance for a moment at the Middle Ages, when great fortunes began

to spring up.

A feudal baron seizes on a fertile valley. But as long as the fertile

valley is empty of folk our baron is not rich. His land brings him in

nothing; he might as well possess a property in the moon.

What does our baron do to enrich himself? He looks out for peasants —

for poor peasants!

If every peasant-farmer had a piece of land, free from rent and taxes,

if he had in addition the tools and the stock necessary for farm labour,

who would plough the lands of the baron? Everyone would look after his

own. But there are thousands of destitute persons ruined by wars, or

drought, or pestilence. They have neither horse nor plough. (Iron was

costly in the Middle Ages, and a draughthorse still more so.)

All these destitute creatures are trying to better their condition. One

day they see on the road at the confines of our baron’s estate a

notice-board indicating by certain signs adapted to their comprehension

that the labourer who is willing to settle on this estate will receive

the tools and materials to build his cottage and sow his fields, and a

portion of land rent free for a certain number of years. The number of

years is represented by so many crosses on the sign-board, and the

peasant understands the meaning of these crosses.

So the poor wretches swarm over the baron’s lands, making roads,

draining marshes, building villages. In nine years he begins to tax

them. Five years later he increases the rent. Then he doubles it. The

peasant accepts these new conditions because he cannot find better ones

elsewhere; and little by little, with the aid of laws made by the

barons, the poverty of the peasant becomes the source of the landlord’s

wealth. And it is not only the lord of the manor who preys upon him. A

whole host of usurers swoop down upon the villages, multiplying as the

wretchedness of the peasants increases. That is how things went in the

Middle Ages. And to-day is it not still the same thing? If there were

free lands which the peasant could cultivate if he pleased, would he pay

£50 to some “shabble of a duke”[2] for condescending to sell him a

scrap? Would he burden himself with a lease which absorbed a third of

the produce? Would he — on the métayer system — consent to give the half

of his harvest to the landowner?

But he has nothing. So he will accept any conditions, if only he can

keep body and soul together, while he tills the soil and enriches the

landlord.

So in the nineteenth century, just as in the Middle Ages, the poverty of

the peasant is a source of wealth to the landed proprietor.

II

The landlord owes his riches to the poverty of the peasants, and the

wealth of the capitalist comes from the same source.

Take the case of a citizen of the middle class, who somehow or other

finds himself in possession of £20,000. He could, of course, spend his

money at the rate of £2,000 a year, a mere bagatelle in these days of

fantastic, senseless luxury. But then he would have nothing left at the

end of ten years. So, being a “practical person,” he prefers to keep his

fortune intact, and win for himself a snug little annual income as well.

This is very easy in our society, for the good reason that the towns and

villages swarm with workers who have not the wherewithal to live for a

month, or even a fortnight. So our worthy citizen starts a factory. The

banks hasten to lend him another £20,000, especially if he has a

reputation for “business ability”; and with this round sum he can

command the labour of five hundred hands.

If all the men and women in the country-side had their daily bread sure

and their daily needs already satisfied, who would work for our

capitalist at a wage of half a crown a day, while the commodities one

produces in a day sell in the market for a crown or more?

Unhappily — we know it all too well — the poor quarters of our towns and

the neighbouring villages are full of needy wretches, whose children

clamour for bread. So, before the factory is well finished, the workers

hasten to offer themselves. Where a hundred are required three hundred

besiege the doors, and from the time his mill is started the owner, if

he only has average business capacities, will clear £40 a year out of

each mill-hand he employs.

He is thus able to lay by a snug little fortune; and if he chooses a

lucrative trade and has “business talents” he will soon increase his

income by doubling the number of the men he exploits.

So he becomes a personage of importance. He can afford to give dinners

to others personages — to the local magnates, the civic, legal, and

political dignitaries. With his money he can “marry money”; by and by he

may pick and choose places for his children, and later on perhaps get

something good from the Government — a contract for the army or for the

police. His gold breeds gold; till at last a war, or even a rumour of

war, or a speculation on the Stock Exchange, gives him his great

opportunity.

Nine-tenths of the great fortunes made in the United States are (as

Henry George has shown in this “Social Problems”) the result of knavery

on a large scale, assisted by the State. In Europe, nine-tenths of the

fortunes made in our monarchies and republics have the same origin.

There are not two ways of becoming a millionaire.

This is the secret of wealth; find the starving and destitute, pay them

half a crown, and make them produce five shillings worth in the day,

amass a fortune by these means, and then increase it by some lucky hit,

made with the help of the State.

Need we go on to speak of small fortunes attributed by the economists to

forethought and frugality, when we know that mere saving in itself

brings in nothing, so long as the pence saved are not used to exploit

the famishing?

Take a shoemaker, for instance. Grant that his work is well paid, that

he has plenty of custom, and that by dint of strict frugality he

contrives to lay by from eighteen pence to two shillings a day, perhaps

two pounds a month.

Grant that our shoemaker is never ill, that he does not half starve

himself, in spite of his passion for economy; that he does not marry or

that he has no children; that he does not die of consumption; suppose

anything and everything you please!

Well, at the age of fifty he will not have scraped together £800; and he

will not have enough to live on during his old age, when he is past

work. Assuredly this is not how great fortunes are made. But suppose our

shoemaker, as soon as he has laid by a few pence, thriftily conveys them

to the savings bank, and that the savings bank lends them to the

capitalist who is just about to “employ labour,” i.e. to exploit the

poor. Then our shoemaker takes an apprentice, the child of some poor

wretch, who will think himself lucky if in five years time his son has

learned the trade and is able to earn his living.

Meanwhile our shoemaker does not lose by him, and if trade is brisk he

soon takes a second, and then a third apprentice. By and by he will take

two or three working men — poor wretches, thankful to receive half a

crown a day for work that is worth five shillings, and if our shoemaker

is “in luck,” that is to say, if he is keen enough and mean enough, his

working men and apprentices will bring him in nearly one pound a day,

over and above the product of his own toil. He can then enlarge his

business. He will gradually become rich, and no longer have any need to

stint himself in the necessaries of life. He will leave a snug little

fortune to his son.

That is what people call “being economical and having frugal, temperate

habits.” At bottom it is nothing more nor less than grinding the face of

the poor.

Commerce seems an exception to this rule. “Such a man,” we are told,

“buys tea in China, brings it to France, and realizes a profit of thirty

per cent on his original outlay. He has exploited nobody.”

Nevertheless the case is analogous. If our merchant had carried his

bales on his back, well and good! In early medieval times that was

exactly how foreign trade was conducted, and so no one reached such

giddy heights of fortune as in our days. Very few and very hardly earned

were the gold coins which the medieval merchant gained from a long and

dangerous voyage. It was less the love of money than the thirst of

travel and adventure that inspired his undertakings.

Nowadays the method is simpler. A merchant who has some capital need not

stir from his desk to become wealthy. He telegraphs to an agent telling

him to buy a hundred tons of tea; he freights a ship, and in a few

weeks, in three months if it is a sailing ship, the vessel brings him

his cargo. He does not even take the risks of the voyage, for his tea

and his vessel are insured, and if he has expended four thousand pounds

he will receive more than five thousand; that is to say, if he has not

attempted to speculate in some novel commodities, in which case he runs

a chance of either doubling his fortune or losing it altogether.

Now, how could he find men willing to cross the sea, to travel to China

and back, to endure hardship and slavish toil and to risk their lives

for a miserable pittance? How could he find dock labourers willing to

load and unload his ships for “starvation wages”? How? Because they are

needy and starving. Go to the seaports, visit the cook-shops and taverns

on the quays, and look at these men who have come to hire themselves,

crowding round the dock-gates, which they besiege from early dawn,

hoping to be allowed to work on the vessels. Look at these sailors,

happy to be hired for a long voyage, after weeks and months of waiting.

All their lives long they have gone to the sea in ships, and they will

sail in others still, until they have perished in the waves.

Enter their homes, look at their wives and children in rags, living one

knows not how till the father’s return, and you will have the answer to

the question. Multiply examples, choose them where you will, consider

the origin of all fortunes, large or small, whether arising out of

commerce, finance, manufactures, or the land. Everywhere you will find

that the wealth of the wealthy springs from the poverty of the poor.

This is why an anarchist society need not fear the advent of a

Rothschild who would settle in its midst. If every member of the

community knows that after a few hours of productive toil he will have a

right to all the pleasures that civilization procures, and to those

deeper sources of enjoyment which art and science offer to all who seek

them, he will not sell his strength for a starvation wage. No one will

volunteer to work for the enrichment of your Rothschild. His golden

guineas will be only so many pieces of metal — useful for various

purposes, but incapable of breeding more.

In answering the above objection we have at the same time indicated the

scope of Expropriation. It must apply to everything that enables any man

— be he financier, mill-owner, or landlord — to appropriate the product

of others’ toil. Our formula is simple and comprehensive.

We do not want to rob any one of his coat, but we wish to give to the

workers all those things the lack of which makes them fall an easy prey

to the exploiter, and we will do our utmost that none shall lack aught,

that not a single man shall be forced to sell the strength of his right

arm to obtain a bare subsistence for himself and his babes. This is what

we mean when we talk of Expropriation; this will be our duty during the

Revolution, for whose coming we look, not two hundred years hence, but

soon, very soon.

III

The ideas of Anarchism in general and of Expropriation in particular

find much more sympathy than we are apt to imagine among men of

independent character, and those for whom idleness is not the supreme

ideal. “Still,” our friends often warn us, “take care you do not go too

far! Humanity cannot be changed in a day, so do not be in too great a

hurry with your schemes of Expropriation and Anarchy, or you will be in

danger of achieving no permanent result.”

Now, what we fear with regard to Expropriation is exactly the contrary.

We are afraid of not going far enough, of carrying out Expropriation on

too small a scale to be lasting. We would not have the revolutionary

impulse arrested in mid-career, to exhaust itself in half measures,

which would content no one, and while producing a tremendous confusion

in society, and stopping its customary activities, would have no vital

power — would merely spread general discontent and inevitably prepare

the way for the triumph of reaction.

There are, in fact, in a modern State established relations which it is

practically impossible to modify if one attacks them only in detail.

There are wheels within wheels in our economic organization — the

machinery is so complex and interdependent that no one part can be

modified without disturbing the whole. This becomes clear as soon as an

attempt is made to expropriate anything.

Let us suppose that in a certain country a limited form of expropriation

is effected. For example, that, as it has been suggested more than once,

only the property of the great landlords is socialized, whilst the

factories are left untouched; or that, in a certain city, house property

is taken over by the Commune, but everything else is left in private

ownership; or that, in some manufacturing centre, the factories are

communalized, but the land is not interfered with.

The same result would follow in each case — a terrible shattering of the

industrial system, without the means of reorganizing it on new lines.

Industry and finance would be at a deadlock, yet a return to the first

principles of justice would not have been achieved, and society would

find itself powerless to construct a harmonious whole.

If agriculture could free itself from great landowners, while industry

still remained the bondslave of the capitalist, the merchant, and the

banker, nothing would be accomplished. The peasant suffers to-day not

only in having to pay rent to the landlord; he is oppressed on all hands

by existing conditions. He is exploited by the tradesman, who makes him

pay half a crown for a spade which, measured by tile labour spent on it,

is not worth more than sixpence. He is taxed by the State, which cannot

do without its formidable hierarchy of officials, and finds it necessary

to maintain an expensive army, because the traders of all nations are

perpetually fighting for the markets, and any day a little quarrel

arising from the exploitation of some part of Asia or Africa may result

in war.

Then again the peasant suffers from the depopulation of country places:

the young people are attracted to the large manufacturing towns by the

bait of high wages paid temporarily by the producers of articles of

luxury, or by the attractions of a more stirring life. The artificial

protection of industry, the industrial exploitation of foreign

countries, the prevalence of stock-jobbing, the difficulty of improving

the soil and the machinery of production — all these agencies combine

nowadays to work against agriculture, which is burdened not only by

rent, but by the whole complex of conditions in a society based on

exploitation. Thus, even if the expropriation of land were accomplished,

and every one were free to till the soil and cultivate it to the best

advantage, without paying rent, agriculture, even though it should enjoy

— which can by no means be taken for granted — a momentary prosperity,

would soon fall back into the slough in which it finds itself to-day.

The whole thing would have to be begun over again, with increased

difficulties.

The same holds true of industry. Take the converse case: instead of

turning the agricultural labourers into peasant-proprietors, make over

the factories to those who work in them. Abolish the

master-manufacturers, but leave the landlord his land, the banker his

money, the merchant his Exchange, maintain the swarm of idlers who live

on the toil of the workmen, the thousand and one middlemen, the State

with its numberless officials, and industry would come to a standstill.

Finding no purchasers in the mass of peasants who would remain poor; not

possessing the raw material, and unable to export their produce, partly

on account of the stoppage of trade, and still more so because

industries spread all over the world, the manufacturers would feel

unable to struggle, and thousands of workers would be thrown upon the

streets. These starving crowds would be ready and willing to submit to

the first schemer who came to exploit them; they would even consent to

return to the old slavery, if only under promise of work.

Or, finally, suppose you oust the landowners, and hand over the mills

and factories to the worker, without interfering with the swarm of

middlemen who drain the product of our manufacturers, and speculate in

corn and flour, meat and groceries, in our great centres of commerce.

Then, as soon as exchange is arrested, the great cities are left without

bread, and others find no buyers for their articles of luxury, a

terrible counter-revolution will take place — a counter-revolution

treading upon the slain, sweeping the towns and villages with shot and

shell; there would be proscriptions, panic, flight, tend all the terrors

of the guillotine, as it was in France in 1815, 1848, and 1871.

All is interdependent in a civilized society; it is impossible to reform

any one thing without altering the whole. Therefore, on the day we

strike at private property, under any one of its forms, territorial or

industrial, we shall be obliged to attack them all. The very success of

the Revolution will demand it.

Besides, we could not, if we would, confine ourselves to a partial

expropriation. Once the principle of the “Divine Right of Property” is

shaken, no amount of theorizing will prevent its overthrow, here by the

slaves of the toil, there by the slaves of the machine.

If a great town, Paris for example, were to confine itself to taking

possession of the dwelling houses or the factories, it would be forced

also to deny the right of the bankers to levy upon the Commune a tax

amounting to £2,000,000 in the form of interest for former loans. The

great city would be obliged to put itself in touch with the rural

districts, and its influence would inevitably urge the peasants to free

themselves from the landowner. It would be necessary to communalize the

railways, that the citizens might get food and work, and lastly, to

prevent the waste of supplies, and to guard against the trust of

corn-speculators, like those to whom the Commune of 1793 fell a prey, it

would have to place in the hands of the City the work of stocking its

warehouses with commodities, and apportioning the produce.

Nevertheless, some Socialists still seek to establish a distinction. “Of

course,” they say, “the soil, the mines, the mills, and manufactures

must be expropriated, these are the instruments of production, and it is

right we should consider them public property. But articles of

consumption — food, clothes, and dwellings — should remain private

property.”

Popular common sense has got the better of this subtle distinction. We

are not savages who can live in the woods, without other shelter than

the branches. The civilized man needs a roof, a room, a hearth, and a

bed. It is true that the bed, the room, and the house is a home of

idleness for the non-producer. But for the worker, a room, properly

heated and lighted, is as much an instrument of production as the tool

or the machine. It is the place where the nerves and sinews gather

strength for the work of the morrow. The rest of the workman is the

daily repairing of the machine.

The same argument applies even more obviously to food. The so-called

economists of whom we speak would hardly deny that the coal burnt in a

machine is as necessary to production as the raw material itself. How

then can food, without which the human machine could do no work, be

excluded from the list of things indispensable to the producer? Can this

be a relic of religious metaphysics? The rich man’s feast is indeed a

matter of luxury, but the food of the worker is just as much a part of

production as the fuel burnt by the steam-engine.

The same with clothing. If the economists who draw this distinction

between articles of production and of consumption dressed themselves in

the fashion of New Guinea, we could understand their objection. But men

who could not write a word without a shirt on their back are not in a

position to draw such a hard and fast line between their shirt and their

pen. And though the dainty gowns of their dames must certainly rank as

objects of luxury, there is nevertheless a certain quantity of linen,

cotton, and woollen stuff which is a necessity of life to the producer.

The shirt and shoes in which he goes to his work, his cap and the jacket

he slips on after the day’s toil is over, these are as necessary to him

as the hammer to the anvil.

Whether we like it or not, this is what the people mean by a revolution.

As soon as they have made a clean sweep of the Government, they will

seek first of all to ensure to themselves decent dwellings and

sufficient food and clothes — free of capitalist rent.

And the people will be right. The methods of the people will be much

more in accordance with science than those of the economists who draw so

many distinctions between instruments of production and articles of

consumption. The people understand that this is just the point where the

Revolution ought to begin; and they will lay the foundations of the only

economic science worthy the name — a science which might be called “The

Study of the Needs of Humanity, and of the Economic Means to satisfy

them.”

Chapter 5: Food

I

If the coming Revolution is to be a Social Revolution it will be

distinguished from all former uprisings not only by its aim, but also by

its methods. To attain a new end, new means are required.

The three great popular movements which we have seen in France during

the last hundred years differ from each other in many ways, but they

have one common feature.

In each case the people strove to overturn the old regime, and spent

their heart’s blood for the cause. Then, after having borne the brunt of

the battle, they sank again into obscurity. A Government, composed of

men more or less honest, was formed and undertook to organize — the

Republic in 1793, Labour in 1848, and the Free Commune in 1871. Imbued

with Jacobin ideas, this Government occupied itself first of all with

political questions, such as the reorganization of the machinery of

government, the purifying of the administration, the separation of

Church and State, civic liberty, and such matters. It is true the

workmen’s clubs kept an eye on the members of the new Government, and

often imposed their ideas on them. But even in these clubs, whether the

leaders belonged to the middle or to the working classes, it was always

middle-class ideas which prevailed. They discussed various political

questions at great length, but forgot to discuss the question of bread.

Great ideas sprang up at such times, ideas that have moved the world;

words were spoken which still stir our hearts, at the interval of a

century. But the people were starving in the slums.

From the very commencement of the Revolution industry inevitably came to

a stop — the circulation of produce was checked, and capital concealed

itself. The master — the employer — had nothing to fear at such times,

he battened on his dividends, if indeed he did not speculate on the

wretchedness around; but the wage-earner was reduced to live from hand

to mouth. Want knocked at the door.

Famine was abroad in the land — such famine as had hardly been seen

under the old regime.

“The Girondists are starving us!” was the cry in the workmen’s quarters

in 1793, and thereupon the Girondists were guillotined, and full powers

were given to “the Mountain” and to the Commune. The Commune indeed

concerned itself with the question of bread, and made heroic efforts to

feed Paris. At Lyons, Fouché and Collot d’Herbois established city

granaries, but the sums spent on filling them were woefully

insufficient. The town councils made great efforts to procure corn; the

bakers who hoarded flour were hanged — and still the people lacked

bread.

Then they turned on the royalist conspirators and laid the blame at

their door. They guillotined a dozen or fifteen a day — servants and

duchesses alike, especially servants, for the duchesses had gone to

Coblentz. But if they had guillotined a hundred dukes and viscounts

every day, it would have been equally hopeless.

The want only grew. For the wage-earner can not live without his wage,

and the wage was not forthcoming. What difference could a thousand

corpses more or less make to him?

Then the people began to grow weary. “So much for your vaunted

Revolution! You are more wretched than ever before,” whispered the

reactionary in the ears of the worker. And little by little the rich

took courage, emerged from their hiding-places, and flaunted their

luxury in the face of the starving multitude. They dressed up like

scented fops and said to the workers: “Come, enough of this foolery!

What have you gained by rebellion?”

Sick at heart, his patience at an end, the revolutionary had at last to

admit to himself that the cause was lost once more. He retreated into

his hovel and awaited the worst.

Then reaction proudly asserted itself, and accomplished a politic

stroke. The Revolution dead, nothing remained but to trample its corpse

under foot.

The White Terror began. Blood flowed like water, the guillotine was

never idle, the prisons were crowded, while the pageant of rank and

fashion resumed its old course, and went on as merrily as before.

This picture is typical of all our revolutions. In 1848 the workers of

Paris placed “three months of starvation” at the service of the

Republic, and then, having reached the limit of their powers, they made

one last desperate effort — an effort which was drowned in blood. In

1871 the Commune perished for lack of combatants. It had taken measures

for the separation of Church and State, but it neglected, alas, until

too late, to take measures for providing the people with bread. And so

it came to pass in Paris that élégantes and fine gentlemen could spurn

the confederates, and bid them go sell their lives for a miserable

pittance, and leave their “betters” to feast at their ease in

fashionable restaurants.

At last the Commune saw its mistake, and opened communal kitchens. But

it was too late. Its days were already numbered, and the troops of

Versailles were on the ramparts.

“Bread, it is bread that the Revolution needs!”

Let others spend their time in issuing pompous proclamations, in

decorating themselves lavishly with official gold lace, and in talking

about political liberty!...

Be it ours to see, from the first day of the Revolution to the last, in

all the provinces fighting for freedom, that there is not a single man

who lacks bread, not a single woman compelled to stand with the weariful

crowd outside the bake-house-door, that haply a coarse loaf may be

thrown to her in charity, not a single child pining for want of food.

It has always been the middle-class idea to harangue about “great

principles” — great lies rather!

The idea of the people will be to provide bread for all. And while

middle-class citizens, and workmen infested with middle-class ideas

admire their own rhetoric in the “Talking Shops,” and “practical people”

are engaged in endless discussions on forms of government, we, the

“Utopian dreamers” — we shall have to consider the question of daily

bread.

We have the temerity to declare that all have a right to bread, that

there is bread enough for all, and that with this watchword of Bread for

All the Revolution will triumph.

II

That we are Utopians is well known. So Utopian are we that we go the

length of believing that the Revolution can and ought to assure shelter,

food, and clothes to all — an idea extremely displeasing to middle-class

citizens, whatever their party colour, for they are quite alive to the

fact that it is not easy to keep the upper hand of a people whose hunger

is satisfied.

All the same, we maintain our contention: bread must be found for the

people of the Revolution, and the question of bread must take precedence

of all other questions. If it is settled in the interests of the people,

the Revolution will be on the right road; for in solving the question of

Bread we must accept the principle of equality, which will force itself

upon us to the exclusion of every other solution.

It is certain that the coming Revolution — like in that respect to the

Revolution of 1848 — will burst upon us in the middle of a great

industrial crisis. Things have been seething for half a century now, and

can only go from bad to worse. Everything tends that way — new nations

entering the, lists of international trade and fighting for possession

of the world’s markets, wars, taxes ever increasing. National debts, the

insecurity of the morrow, and huge colonial undertakings in every corner

of the globe.

There are millions of unemployed workers in Europe at this moment. It

will be still worse when Revolution has burst upon us and spread like

fire laid to a train of gunpowder. The number of the out-of-works will

be doubled as soon as barricades are erected in Europe and the United

States. What is to be done to provide these multitudes with bread?

We do not know whether the folk who call them selves “practical people”

have ever asked themselves this question in all its nakedness. But we do

know that they wish to maintain the wage system, and we must therefore

expect to have “national workshops” and “public works” vaunted as a

means of giving food to the unemployed.

Because national workshops were opened in 1789 and in 1793; because the

same means were resorted to in 1848; because Napoleon III succeeded in

contenting the Parisian proletariat for eighteen years by giving them

public works — which cost Paris to-day its debt of £80,000,000 — and its

municipal tax of three or four pounds a-head;[3] because this excellent

method of “taming the beast” was customary in Rome, and even in Egypt

four thousand years ago; and lastly, because despots, kings, and

emperors have always employed the ruse of throwing a scrap of food to

the people to gain time to snatch up the whip — it is natural that

“practical” men should extol this method of perpetuating the wage

system. What need to rack our brains when we have the time-honoured

method of the Pharaohs at our disposal?

Yet should the Revolution be so misguided as to start on this path, it

would be lost.

In 1848, when the national workshops were opened on February 27, the

unemployed of Paris numbered only 800; a fortnight later they had

already increased to 49,000. They would soon have been 100,000, without

counting those who crowded in from the provinces.

Yet at that time trade and manufacturers in France only employed half as

many hands as to-day. And we know that in time of Revolution exchange

and industry suffer most from the general upheaval.

To realize this we have only to think for a moment of the number of

workmen whose labour depends directly or indirectly upon export trade,

or of the number of hands employed in producing luxuries, whose

consumers are the middle-class minority.

A revolution in Europe means the unavoidable stoppage of at least half

the factories and workshops. It means millions of workers and their

families thrown on the streets.

And our “practical men” would seek to avert this truly terrible

situation by means of national relief works; that is to say, by means of

new industries created on the spot to give work to the unemployed!

It is evident, as Proudhon has already pointed out, that the smallest

attack upon property will bring in its train the complete

disorganization of the system based upon private enterprise and wage

labour. Society itself will be forced to take production in hand, in its

entirety, and to reorganize it to meet the needs of the whole people.

But this cannot be accomplished in a day or a month; it must take a

certain time thus to reorganize the system of production, and during

this time millions of men will be deprived of the means of subsistence.

What then is to be done ?

There is only one really practical solution of the problem — boldly to

face the great task which awaits us, and instead of trying to patch up a

situation which we ourselves have made untenable, to proceed to

reorganize production on a new basis.

Thus the really practical course of action, in our view, would be that

the people should take immediate possession of all the food of the

insurgent districts, keeping strict account of it all, that none might

be wasted, and that by the aid of these accumulated resources every one

might be able to tide over the crisis. During that time an agreement

would have to be made with the factory workers, the necessary raw

material given them and the means of subsistence assured to them while

they worked to supply the needs of the agriculture population. For we

must not forget that while France weaves silks and satins to deck the

wives of German financiers, the Empress of Russia, and the Queen of the

Sandwich Islands, and while Paris fashions wonderful trinkets and

playthings for rich folk all the world over, two-thirds of the French

peasantry have not proper lamps to give them light, or the implements

necessary for modern agriculture. Lastly, unproductive land, of which

there is plenty, would have to be turned to the best advantage, poor

soils enriched, and rich soils, which yet, under the present system, do

not yield a quarter, no, nor a tenth of what they might produce,

submitted to intensive culture and tilled with as much care as a market

garden or a flower plot. It is impossible to imagine any other practical

solution of the problem; and, whether we like it or not, sheer force of

circumstances will bring it to pass.

III

The most prominent characteristic of capitalism is the wage system,

which in brief amounts to this: — A man, or a group of men, possessing

the necessary capital, starts some industrial enterprise; he undertakes

to supply the factory or workshops with raw material, to organize

production, to pay the employés a fixed wage, and lastly, to pocket the

surplus value or profits, under pretext of recouping himself for

managing the concern, for running the risks it may involve, and for the

fluctuations of price in the market value of the wares.

To preserve this system, those who now monopolize capital would be ready

to make certain concessions; to share, for example, a part of the

profits with the workers, or rather to establish a “sliding scale,”

which would oblige them to raise wages when prices were high; in brief,

they would consent to certain sacrifices on condition that they were

still allowed to direct industry and to take its first fruits.

Collectivism, as we know, does not abolish wages, though it introduces

considerable modifications into the existing order of things. It only

substitutes the State, that is to say, Representative Government,

national or local, for the individual employer of labour. Under

Collectivism it is the representatives of the nation, or of the

district, and their deputies and officials who are to have the control

of industry. It is they who reserve to themselves the right of employing

the surplus of; production — in the interests of all. Moreover,

Collectivism draws a very subtle but very far reaching distinction

between the work of the labourer and of the man who has learned a craft.

Unskilled labour in the eyes of the collectivist is simple labour, while

the work of the craftsman, the mechanic, the engineer, the man of

science, etc., is what Marx calls complex labour, and is entitled to a

higher wage. But labourers and craftsmen, weavers and men of science,

are all wage-servants of the State — “all officials,” as was said

lately, to gild the pill.

The coming Revolution can render no greater service to humanity than to

make the wage system, in all its forms, an impossibility, and to render

Communism, which is the negation of wage-slavery, the only possible

solution.

For even admitting that the Collectivist modification of the present

system is possible, if introduced gradually during a period of

prosperity and peace — though for my part I question its practicability

even under such conditions — it would become impossible in a period of

Revolution, when the need of feeding hungry millions springs up with the

first call to arms. A political revolution can be accomplished without

shaking the foundations of industry, but a revolution where the people

lay hands upon property will inevitably paralyse exchange and

production. Millions of public money would not suffice for wages to the

millions of out-of-works.

This point cannot be too much insisted upon; the reorganization of

industry on a new basis (and we shall presently show how tremendous this

problem is) cannot be accomplished in a few days, nor, on the other

hand, will the people submit to be half starved for years in order to

oblige the theorists who uphold the wage system. To tide over the period

of stress they will demand what they have always demanded in such cases

— communization of supplies — the giving of rations.

It will be in vain to preach patience. The people will be patient no

longer, and if food is not put in common they will plunder the bakeries.

If the people are not strong enough to carry all before them, they will

be shot down to give Collectivism a fair field for experiment. To this

end “order” must be maintained at any price — order, discipline,

obedience! And as the capitalists will soon realize that when the people

are shot down by those who call themselves Revolutionists, the

Revolution itself will become hateful in the eyes of the masses; they

will certainly lend their support to the champions of order — even

though they are collectivists. In such a line of conduct, the

capitalists will see a means of hereafter crushing the collectivists in

their turn. If “order is established” in this fashion, the consequences

are easy to foresee. Not content with shooting down the “marauders,” the

faction of “order” will search out the “ringleaders of the mob.” They

will set up again the law courts and reinstate the hangman. The most

ardent revolutionists will be sent to the scaffold. It will be 1793 over

again.

Do not let us forget how reaction triumphed in the last century. First

the “Hébertists,” “the madmen,” were guillotined — those whom Mignet,

with the memory of the struggle fresh upon him, still called

“Anarchists.” The Dantonists soon followed them; and when the party of

Robespierre had guillotined these revolutionaries, they in their turn

had to mount the scaffold; whereupon the people, sick of bloodshed, and

seeing the revolution lost, threw up the sponge, and let the

reactionaries do their worst.

If “order is restored,” we say, the social democrats will hang the

anarchists; the Fabians will hang the social democrats, and will in

their turn be hanged by the reactionaries; and the Revolution will come

to an end.

But everything confirms us in the belief that the energy of the people

will carry them far enough, and that, when the Revolution takes place,

the idea of anarchist Communism will have gained ground. It is not an

artificial idea. The people themselves have breathed it in our ear, and

the number of communists is ever increasing, as the impossibility of any

other solution becomes more and more evident.

And if the impetus of the people is strong enough, affairs will take a

very different turn. Instead of plundering the bakers’ shops one day,

and starving the next, the people of the insurgent cities will take

possession of the warehouses, the cattle markets, — in fact of all the

provision stores and of all the food to be had. The well-intentioned

citizens, men and women both, will form themselves into bands of

volunteers and address themselves to the task of making a rough general

inventory of the contents, of each shop and warehouse. In twenty-four

hours the revolted town or district will know what Paris has not found

out yet, in spite of its statistical committees, and what it never did

find out during the siege — the quantity of provisions it contains. In

forty-eight hours millions of copies will be printed of the tables

giving a sufficiently exact account of the available food, the places

where it is stored, and the means of distribution.

In every block of houses, in every street, in every town ward, bands of

volunteers will have been organized. These commissariat volunteers will

work in unison and keep in touch with each other. If only the Jacobin

bayonets do not get in the way; if only the self-styled “scientific”

theorists do not thrust themselves in to darken counsel! Or rather let

then expound their muddle-headed theories as much as they like, provided

they have no authority, no power! And that admirable spirit of

organization inherent in the people, above all in every social grade of

the French nation,[4] but which they have so seldom been allowed to

exercise, will initiate, even in so huge a city as Paris, and in the

midst of a Revolution, an immense guild of free workers, ready to

furnish to each and all the necessary food.

Give the people a free hand, and in ten days the food service will be

conducted with admirable regularity. Only those who have never seen the

people hard at work, only those who have passed their lives buried among

documents, can doubt it. Speak of the organizing genius of the “Great

Misunderstood,” the people, to those who have seen it in Paris in the

days of the barricades, or in London during the great dockers strike,

when half a million of starving folk had to be fed, and they will tell

you how superior it is to the official ineptness of Bumbledom.

And even supposing we had to endure a certain amount of discomfort and

confusion for a fortnight or a month, surely that would not matter very

much. For the mass of the people it would still be an improvement on

their former condition; and, besides, in times of Revolution one can

dine contentedly enough on a bit of bread and cheese while eagerly

discussing events.

In any case, a system which springs up spontaneously, under stress of

immediate need, will be infinitely preferable to anything invented

between four walls by hide-bound theorists sitting on any number of

committees.

IV

The people of the great towns will be driven by force of circumstances

to take possession of all the provisions, beginning with the barest

necessaries, and gradually extending Communism to other things, in order

to satisfy the needs of all the citizens.

The sooner it is done the better; the sooner it is done the less misery

there will be and the less strife.

But upon what basis must society be organized in order that all may

share and share alike? This is the question that meets us at the outset.

We answer that there are no two ways of it. There is only one way in

which Communism can be established equitably, only one way which

satisfies our instincts of justice and is at the same time practical,

namely, the system already adopted by the agrarian communes of Europe.

Take for example a peasant commune, no matter where, even in France,

where the Jacobins have, done their best to destroy all communal usage.

If the commune possesses woods and copses, then, so long as there is

plenty of wood for all, every one can take as much as he wants, without

other let or hindrance than the public opinion of his neighbours. As to

the timber-trees, which are always scarce, they have to be carefully

apportioned.

The same with the communal pasture land; while there is enough and to

spare, no limit is put to what the cattle of each homestead may consume,

nor to the number of beasts grazing upon the pastures. Grazing grounds

are not divided, nor is fodder doled out, unless there is scarcity. All

the Swiss communes, and many of those in France and Germany too,

wherever there is communal pasture land, practice this system.

And in the countries of Eastern Europe, where there are great forests

and no scarcity of land, you find the peasants felling the trees as they

need them, and cultivating as much of the soil as they require, without

any thought of limiting each man’s share of timber or of land. But the

timber will be divided, and the land parcelled out, to each household

according to its needs, as soon as either becomes scarce, as is already

the case in Russia.

In a word, the system is this: no stint or limit to what the community

possesses in abundance, but equal sharing and dividing of those

commodities which are scarce or apt to run short. Of the three hundred

and fifty millions who inhabit Europe, two hundred millions still follow

this system of natural Communism.

It is a fact worth remarking that the same system prevails in the great

towns in the distribution of one commodity at least, which is found in

abundance, the water supplied to each house.

As long as there is no fear of the supply running short, no water

company thinks of checking the consumption of water in each house. Take

what you please! But during the great droughts, if there is any fear of

supply failing, the water companies know that all they have to do is to

make known the fact, by means of a short advertisement in the papers,

and the citizens will reduce their consumption of water and not let it

run to waste.

But if water were actually scarce, what would be done? Recourse would be

had to a system of rations. Such a measure is so natural, so inherent in

common sense, that Paris twice asked to be put on rations during the two

sieges which it underwent in 1871.

Is it necessary to go into details, to prepare tables showing how the

distribution of rations may work, to prove that it is just and

equitable, infinitely more just and equitable than the existing state of

things? All these tables and details will not serve to convince those of

the middle classes, nor, alas, those of the workers tainted with

middle-class prejudices, who regard the people as a mob of savages ready

to fall upon and devour each other, directly the Government ceases to

direct affairs. But those only who have never seen the people resolve

and act on their own initiative could doubt for a moment that if the

masses were masters of the situation, they would distribute rations to

each and all in strictest accordance with justice and equity.

If you were to give utterance, in any gathering of people, to the

opinion that delicacies — game and such-like — should be reserved for

the fastidious palates of aristocratic idlers, and black bread given to

the sick in the hospitals, you would be hissed. But say at the same

gathering, preach at the street corners and in the market places, that

the most tempting delicacies ought to be kept for the sick and feeble —

especially for the sick. Say that if there are only five brace of

partridge in the entire city, and only one case of sherry wine, they

should go to sick people and convalescents. Say that after the sick come

the children. For them the milk of the cows and goats should be reserved

if there is not enough for all. To the children and the aged the last

piece of meat, and to the strong man dry bread, if the community be

reduced to that extremity.

Say, in a word, that if this or that article of consumption runs short,

and has to be doled out, to those who have most need most should be

given. Say that and see if you do not meet with universal agreement.

The man who is full-fed does not understand this, but the people do

understand, have always understood it; and even the child of luxury, if

he is thrown on the street and comes into contact with the masses, even

he will learn to understand.

The theorists — for whom the soldier’s uniform and the barrack mess

table are civilization’s last word — would like no doubt to start a

regime of National Kitchens and “Spartan Broth.” They would point out

the advantages thereby gained, the economy in fuel and food, if such

huge kitchens were established, where every one could come for their

rations of soup and bread and vegetables.

We do not question these advantages. We are well aware that important

economies have already been achieved in this direction — as, for

instance, when the handmill, or quern, and the baker’s oven attached to

each house were abandoned. We can see perfectly well that it would be

more economical to cook broth for a hundred families at once, instead of

lighting a hundred separate fires. We know, besides, that there are a

thousand ways of doing up potatoes, but that cooked in one huge pot for

a hundred families they would be just as good.

We know, in fact, that variety in cooking being a matter of the

seasoning introduced by each cook or housewife, the cooking together of

a hundred weight of potatoes would not prevent each cook or housewife

from dressing and serving them in any way she pleased. And we know that

stock made from meat can be converted into a hundred different soups to

suit a hundred different tastes.

But though we are quite aware of all these facts, we still maintain that

no one has a right to force the housewife to take her potatoes from the

communal kitchen ready cooked if she prefers to cook them herself in her

own pot on her own fire. And, above all, we should wish each one to be

free to take his meals with his family, or with his friends, or even in

a restaurant, if so it seemed good to him.

Naturally large public kitchens will spring up to take the place of the

restaurants, where people are poisoned nowadays. Already the Parisian

housewife gets the stock for her soup from the butcher and transforms it

into whatever soup she likes, and London housekeepers know that they can

have a joint roasted, or an apple or rhubarb tart baked at the baker’s

for a trifling sum, thus economizing time and fuel. And when the

communal kitchen — the common bakehouse of the future — is established,

and people can get their food cooked without the risk of being cheated

or poisoned, the custom will no doubt become general of going to the

communal kitchen for the fundamental parts of the meal, leaving the last

touches to be added as individual taste shall suggest.

But to make a hard and fast rule of this, to make a duty of taking home

our food ready cooked, that would be as repugnant to our modern minds as

the ideas of the convent or the barrack — morbid ideas born in brains

warped by tyranny or superstition.

Who will have a right to the food of the commune? will assuredly be the

first question which we shall have to ask ourselves. Every township will

answer for itself, and we are convinced that the answers will all be

dictated by the sentiment of justice. Until labour is reorganized, as

long as the disturbed period lasts, and while it is impossible to

distinguish between inveterate idlers and genuine workers thrown out of

work, the available food ought to be shared by all without exception.

Those who have been enemies to the new order will hasten of their own

accord to rid the commune of their presence. But it seems to us that the

masses of the people, which have always been magnanimous, and have

nothing of vindictiveness in their disposition, will be ready to share

their bread with all who remain with them, conquered and conquerors

alike. It will be no loss to the Revolution to be inspired by such an

idea, and, when work is set agoing again, the antagonists of yesterday

will stand side by side in the same workshops. A society where work is

free will have nothing to fear from idlers.

“But provisions will run short in a month!” our critics at once exclaim.

“So much the better,” say we. It will prove that for the first time on

record the people have had enough to eat. As to the question of

obtaining fresh supplies, we shall discuss the means in our next

chapter.

V

By what means could a city in a state of revolution be supplied with

food? We shall answer this question, but it is obvious that the means

resorted to will depend on the character of the Revolution in the

provinces, and in neighbouring countries. If the entire nation, or,

better still, if all Europe should accomplish the Social Revolution

simultaneously, and start with thorough-going Communism, our procedure

would be simplified; but if only a few communities in Europe make the

attempt, other means will have to be chosen. The circumstances will

dictate the measures.

We are thus led, before we proceed further, to glance at the state of

Europe, and, without pretending to prophesy, we may try to foresee what

course the Revolution will take, or at least what will be its essential

features.

Certainly it would be very desirable that all Europe should rise at

once, that expropriation should be general, and that communistic

principles should inspire all and sundry. Such a universal rising would

do much to simplify the task of our century.

But all the signs lead us to believe that it will not take place. That

the Revolution will embrace Europe we do not doubt. If one of the four

great continental capitals — Paris, Vienna, Brussels, or Berlin — rises

in revolution and overturns its Government, it is almost certain that

the three others will follow its example within a few weeks’ time. It

is, moreover, highly probable that the Peninsulas and even London and

St. Petersburg would not be long in following suit. But whether the

Revolution would everywhere exhibit the same characteristics is

doubtful.

Though it is more than probable that expropriation will be everywhere

carried into effect on a larger or smaller scale, and that this policy

carried out by any one of the great nations of Europe will influence all

the rest; yet the beginnings of the Revolution will exhibit great local

differences, and its course will vary in different countries. In

1789–93, the French peasantry took four years to finally rid themselves

of the redemption of feudal rights, and the bourgeois to overthrow

royalty. Let us keep that in mind, therefore, and be prepared to see the

Revolution develop itself somewhat gradually. Let us not be disheartened

if here and there its steps should move less rapidly. Whether it would

take an avowedly socialist character in all European nations, at any

rate at the beginning, is doubtful. Germany, be it remembered, is still

realizing its dream of a United Empire. Its advanced parties see visions

of a Jacobin Republic like that of 1848, and of the organization of

labour according to Louis Blanc; while the French people, on the other

hand, want above all things a free Commune, whether it be a communist

Commune or not.

There is every reason to believe that, when the coming Revolution takes

place, Germany will go further than France went in 1793. The eighteenth

century Revolution in France was an advance on the English Revolution of

the seventeenth, abolishing as it did at one stroke the power of the

throne and the landed aristocracy, whose influence still survives in

England. But, if Germany goes further and does greater things than

France did in 1793, there can be no doubt that the ideas which will

foster the birth of her Revolution will be those of 1848, as the ideas

which will inspire the Revolution in Russia will be those of 1789,

modified somewhat by the intellectual movements of our own century.

Without, however, attaching to these forecast a greater importance than

they merit, we may safely conclude this much: the Revolution will take a

different character in each of the different European nations; the point

attained in the socialization of wealth will not be everywhere the same.

Will it therefore be necessary, as is sometimes suggested, that the

nations in the vanguard of the movement should adapt their pace to those

who lag behind? Must we wait till the Communist Revolution is ripe in

all civilized countries? Clearly not! Even if it were a thing to be

desired it is not possible. History does not wait for the laggards.

Besides, we do not believe that in any one country the Revolution will

be accomplished at a stroke, in the twinkling of an eye, as some

socialists dream. It is highly probable that if one of the five or six

large towns of France — Paris, Lyons, Marseilles, Lille, Saint-Etienne,

Bordeaux — were to proclaim the Commune, the others would follow its

example, and that many, smaller towns would do the same. Probably also

various mining districts and industrial centres would hasten to rid

themselves of “owners” and “masters,” and form themselves into free

groups.

But many country places have not advanced to that point. Side by side

with the revolutionized communes such places would remain in an

expectant attitude, and would go on living on the Individualist system.

Undisturbed by visits of the bailiff or the tax-collector, the peasants

would not be hostile to the revolutionaries, and thus, while profiting

by the new state of affairs they would defer the settlement of accounts

with the local exploiters: But with that practical enthusiasm which

always characterizes agrarian uprisings (witness the passionate toil of

1792) they would throw themselves into the task of cultivating the land,

which, freed from taxes and mortgages, would become so much dearer to

them.

As to abroad, revolution would break out every where, but revolution

under divers aspects, in one country State Socialism, in another

Federation; everywhere more or less Socialism, not conforming to any

particular rule.

VI

Let us now return to our city in revolt, and consider how its citizens

can provide foodstuffs for themselves. How are the necessary provisions

to be obtained if the nation as a whole has not accepted Communism? This

is the question to be solved. Take, for example, one of the large French

towns — take the capital itself, for that matter. Paris consumes every

year thousands of tons of grain, 350,000 head of oxen, 200,000 calves,

300,000 swine, and more than two millions of sheep, besides great

quantities of game. This huge city devours, besides, 18 million pounds

of butter, 172 million eggs, and other produce in like proportion.

It imports flour and grain from the United States and from Russia,

Hungary, Italy, Egypt, and the Indies; live stock from Germany, Italy,

Spain — even Roumania and Russia; and as for groceries, there is not a

country in the world that it does not lay under contribution. Now, let

us see how Paris or any other great town could be revictualled by

home-grown produce, supplies of which could be readily and willingly

sent in from the provinces.

To those who put their trust in “authority” the question will appear

quite simple. They would begin by establishing a strongly centralized

Government, furnished with all the machinery of coercion — the police,

the army, the guillotine. This Government would draw up a statement of

all the produce contained in France. It would divide the country into

districts of supply, and then command that a prescribed quantity of some

particular foodstuff be sent to such a place on such a day, and

delivered at such a station, to be there received on a given day by a

specified official and stored in particular warehouses.

Now, we declare with the fullest conviction, not merely that such a

solution is undesirable, but that it never could by any possibility be

put into practice. It is wildly Utopian!

Pen in hand, one may dream such a dream in the study, but in contact

with reality it comes to nothing; for, like all such theories, it leaves

out of account the spirit of independence that is in man. The attempt

would lead to a universal uprising, to three or four Vendées, to the

villages rising against the towns, all the country up in arms defying

the city for its arrogance in attempting to impose such a system upon

the country.

We have already had too much of Jacobin Utopias! Let us see if some

other form of organization will meet the case.

In 1793 the provinces starved the large towns, and killed the

Revolution. And yet it is a known fact that the production of grain in

France during 1792–93 had not diminished; indeed the evidence goes to

show that it had increased. But after having taken possession of the

manorial lands, after having reaped a harvest from them, the peasants

would not part with their grain for paper-money. They withheld their

produce, waiting for a rise in the price, or the introduction of gold.

The most rigorous measures of the National Convention were without

avail, and even the fear of death failed to break up the ring, or force

its members to sell their corn. For it is matter of history that the

commissaries of the Convention did not scruple to guillotine those who

withheld their grain from the market, and pitilessly executed those who

speculated in foodstuffs. All the same, the corn was not forthcoming,

and the townsfolk suffered from famine.

But what was offered to the husbandman in exchange for his hard toil?

Assignats, scraps of paper decreasing in value every day, promises of

payment, which could not be kept. A forty-pound note would not purchase

a pair of boots, and the peasant, very naturally, was not anxious to

barter a year’s toil for a piece of paper with which he could not even

buy a shirt.

As long as worthless paper money — whether called assignats or labour

notes — is offered to the peasant-producer it will always be the same.

The country will withhold its produce, and the towns will suffer want,

even if the recalcitrant peasants are guillotined as before.

We must offer to the peasant in exchange for his toil not worthless

paper money, but the manufactured articles of which he stands in

immediate need. He lacks the proper implements to till the land, clothes

to protect him properly from the inclemencies of the weather, lamps and

oil to replace his miserable rushlight or tallow dip, spades, rakes,

ploughs. All these things, under present conditions, the peasant is

forced to do without, not because he does not feel the need of them, but

because, in his life of struggle and privation, a thousand useful things

are beyond his reach; because he has no money to buy them.

Let the town apply itself, without loss of time, to manufacturing all

that the peasant needs, instead of fashioning gewgaws for the wives of

rich citizens. Let the sewing machines of Paris be set to work on

clothes for the country-folk: workaday clothes and clothes for Sunday

too, instead of costly evening dresses. Let the factories and foundries

turn out agricultural implements, spades, rakes, and such-like, instead

of waiting till the English send them to France, in exchange for French

wines!

Let the towns send no more inspectors to the villages, wearing red,

blue, or rainbow-coloured scarves, to convey to the peasant orders to

take his produce to this place or that, but let them send friendly

embassies to the country-folk and bid them in brotherly fashion: “Bring

us your produce, and take from our stores and shops all the manufactured

articles you please.” Then provisions would pour in on every side. The

peasant would only withhold what he needed for his own use, and would

send the rest into the cities, feeling for the first time in the course

of history that these toiling townsfolk were his comrades — his

brethren, and not his exploiters.

We shall be told, perhaps, that this would necessitate a complete

transformation of industry. Well, yes, that is true of certain

departments; but there are other branches which could be rapidly

modified in such a way as to furnish the peasant with clothes, watches,

furniture, and the simple implements for which the towns make him pay

such exorbitant prices at the present time. Weavers, tailors,

shoemakers, tinsmiths, cabinet-makers, and many other trades and crafts

could easily direct their energies to the manufacture of useful and

necessary articles, and abstain from producing mere luxuries. All that

is needed is that the public mind should be thoroughly convinced of the

necessity of this transformation, and should come to look upon it as an

act of justice and of progress, and that it should no longer allow

itself to be cheated by that dream, so dear to the theorists — the dream

of a revolution which confines itself to taking possession of the

profits of industry, and leaves production and commerce just as they are

now.

This, then, is our view of the whole question. Cheat the peasant no

longer with scraps of paper — be the sums inscribed upon them ever so

large; but offer him in exchange for his produce the very things of

which he, the tiller of the soil, stands in need. Then the fruits of the

land will be poured into the towns. If this is not done there will be

famine in our cities, and reaction and despair will follow in its train.

VII

All the great towns, we have said, buy their grain, their flour, and

their meat, not only from the provinces, but also from abroad. Foreign

countries send Paris spices, fish, and various dainties, besides immense

quantities of corn and meat.

But when the Revolution comes we must depend on foreign countries as

little as possible. If Russian wheat, Italian or Indian rice, and

Spanish or Hungarian wines abound in the markets of western Europe, it

is not that the countries which export them have a superabundance, or

that such a produce grows there of itself, like the dandelion in the

meadows. In Russia, for instance, the peasant works sixteen hours a day,

and half starves from three to six months every year, in order to export

the grain with which he pays the landlord and the State. To-day the

police appears in the Russian village as soon as the harvest is gathered

in, and sells the peasant’s last horse and last cow for arrears of taxes

and rent due to the landlord, unless the victim immolates himself of his

own accord by selling the grain to the exporters. Usually, rather than

part with his live stock at a disadvantage, he keeps only a nine months’

supply of grain, and sells the rest. Then, in order to sustain life

until the next harvest, he mixes birch-bark and tares with his flour for

three months, if it has been a good year, and for six if it has been

bad, while in London they are eating biscuits made of his wheat.

But as soon as the Revolution comes, the Russian peasant will keep bread

enough for himself and his children; the Italian and Hungarian peasants

will do the same; and the Hindoo, let us hope, will profit by these good

examples; and the farmers of America will hardly be able to cover all

the deficit in grain which Europe will experience. So it will not do to

count on their contributions of wheat and maize satisfying all the

wants.

Since all our middle-class civilization is based on the exploitation of

inferior races and countries with less advanced industrial systems, the

Revolution will confer a boon at the very outset, by menacing that

“civilization,” and allowing the so-called inferior races to free

themselves.

But this great benefit will manifest itself by a steady and marked

diminution of the food supplies pouring into the great cities of western

Europe.

It is difficult to predict the course of affairs in the provinces. On

the one hand the slave of the soil will take advantage of the Revolution

to straighten his bowed back. Instead of working fourteen or fifteen

hours a day, as he does at present, he will be at liberty to work only

half that time, which of course would have the effect of decreasing the

production of the principal articles of consumption — grain and meat.

But, on the other hand, there will be an increase of production as soon

as the peasant realizes that he is no longer forced to support the idle

rich by his toil. New tracts of land will be cleared, new and improved

machines set a-going.

“Never was the land so energetically cultivated as in 1792, when the

peasant had taken back from the landlord the soil which he had coveted

so long,” Michelet tells us, speaking of the Great Revolution.

Before long, intensive culture would be within the reach of all.

Improved machinery, chemical manures, and all such matters would be

common property. But everything tends to indicate that at the outset

there would be a falling off in agricultural products, in France as

elsewhere.

In any case it would be wisest to count upon such a falling off of

contributions from the provinces as well as from abroad.

And how is this falling off to be made good? Why, in heaven’s name, by

setting to work ourselves! No need to rack our brains for far-fetched

panaceas when the remedy lies close at hand!

The large towns must undertake to till the soil, like the country

districts. We must return to what biology calls “the integration of

functions” — after the division of labour the taking up of it as a whole

— this is the course followed throughout Nature.

Besides, philosophy apart, the force of circumstances would bring about

this result. Let Paris see that at the end of eight months it will be

running short of bread, and Paris will set to work to grow wheat.

“What about land?” It will not be wanting, for it is round the great

towns, and round Paris especially, that the parks and pleasure grounds

of the landed gentry are to be found. These thousands of acres only

await the skilled labour of the husbandman to surround Paris with fields

infinitely more fertile and productive than the steppes of southern

Russia, where the soil is dried up by the sun. Nor will labour be

lacking. To what should the two million citizens of Paris turn their

attention when they would be no longer catering for the luxurious fads

and amusements of Russian princes, Roumanian grandees, and wives of

Berlin financiers?

With all the mechanical inventions of the century; with all the

intelligence and technical skill of the worker accustomed to deal with

complicated machinery; with inventors, chemists, professors of botany,

practical botanists like the market gardeners of Gennevilliers; with all

the plant that they could use for multiplying and improving machinery,

and, finally, with the organizing spirit of the Parisian people, their

pluck and energy — with all these at its command, the agriculture of the

anarchist Commune of Paris would be a very different thing from the rude

husbandry of the Ardennes.

Steam, electricity, the heat of the sun, and the breath of the wind,

will ere long be pressed into service. The steam harrow and the steam

plough will quickly do the rough work of preparation, and the soil, thus

cleaned and enriched, will only need the intelligent care of man, and of

woman even more than man, to be clothed with luxuriant vegetation — not

once but three or four times in the year.

Thus, learning the art of horticulture from experts, and trying

experiments in different methods on small patches of soil reserved for

the purpose, vying with each other to obtain the best returns, finding

in physical exercise, without exhaustion or overwork, the health and

strength which so often flags in cities, — men, women, and children will

gladly turn to the labour of the fields, when it is no longer a slavish

drudgery, but has become pleasure, a festival, a renewal of health and

joy.

“There are no barren lands; the earth is worth what man is worth” — that

is the last word of modern agriculture. Ask of the earth and she will

give you bread, provided that you ask aright.

A district, though it were as small as the departments of the Seine and

the Seine-et-Oise, and with so great a city as Paris to feed, would be

practically sufficient to grow upon it all the food supplies, which

otherwise might fail to reach it.

The combination of agriculture and industry, the husbandman and the

mechanic in the same individual — this is what anarchist communism will

inevitably lead us to, if it starts fair with expropriation.

Let the Revolution only get so far, and famine is not the enemy it will

have to fear. No, the danger which will menace it lies in timidity,

prejudice, and half-measures. The danger is where Danton saw it when he

cried to France: “Dare, dare, and yet again, dare!” The bold thought

first, and the bold deed will not fail to follow.

Chapter 6: Dwellings

I

Those who have closely watched the growth of certain ideas among the

workers must have noticed that on one momentous question — the housing

of the people, namely — a definite conclusion is being imperceptibly

arrived at. It is a known fact that in the large towns of France, and in

many of the smaller ones also, the workers are coming gradually to the

conclusion that dwelling-houses are in no sense the property of those

whom the State recognizes as their owners.

This idea has evolved naturally in the minds of the people, and nothing

will ever convince them again that the “rights of property” ought to

extend to houses.

The house was not built by its owner. It was erected, decorated, and

furnished by innumerable workers — in the timber yard, the brick field,

and the workshop, toiling for dear life at a minimum wage.

The money spent by the owner was not the product of his own toil. It was

amassed, like all other riches, by paying the workers two-thirds or only

a half of what was their due.

Moreover — and it is here that the enormity of the whole proceeding

becomes most glaring — the house owes its actual value to the profit

which the owner can make out of it. Now, this profit results from the

fact that his house is built in a town possessing bridges, quays, and

fine public buildings, and affording to its inhabitants a thousand

comforts and conveniences unknown in villages; a town well paved,

lighted with gas, in regular communication with other towns, and itself

a centre of industry, commerce, science, and art; a town which the work

of twenty or thirty generations has gone to render habitable, healthy,

and beautiful.

A house in certain parts of Paris may be valued at thousands of pounds

sterling, not because thousands of pounds’ worth of labour have been

expended on that particular house, but because it is in Paris; because

for centuries workmen, artists, thinkers, and men of learning and

letters have contributed to make Paris what it is to-day — a centre of

industry, commerce, politics, art, and science; because Paris has a

past; because, thanks to literature, the names of its streets are

household words in foreign countries as well as at home; because it is

the fruit of eighteen centuries of toil, the work of fifty generations

of the whole French nation.

Who, then, can appropriate to himself the tiniest plot of ground, or the

meanest building, without committing a flagrant injustice? Who, then,

has the right to sell to any bidder the smallest portion of the common

heritage?

On that point, as we have said, the workers are agreed. The idea of free

dwellings showed its existence very plainly during the siege of Paris,

when the cry was for an abatement pure and simple of the terms demanded

by the landlords. It appeared again during the Commune of 1871, when the

Paris workmen expected the Communal Council to decide boldly on the

abolition of rent. And when the New Revolution comes, it will be the

first question with which the poor will concern themselves.

Whether in time of revolution or in time of peace, the worker must be

housed somehow or other; he must have some sort of roof over his head.

But, however tumble-down and squalid your dwelling may be, there is

always a landlord who can evict you. True, during the Revolution he

cannot find bailiffs and police-serjeants to throw your rags and

chattels into the street, but who knows what the new Government will do

to-morrow? Who can say that it will not call in the aid of force again,

and set the police pack upon you to hound you out of your hovels? We

have seen the Commune proclaim the remission of rents due up to the

first of April only![5] After that rent had to be paid, though Paris was

in a state of chaos, and industry at a standstill; so that the

revolutionist had absolutely nothing to depend upon but his allowance of

fifteen pence a day!

Now the worker must be made to see clearly that in refusing to pay rent

to a landlord or owner he is not simply profiting by the disorganization

of authority. He must understand that the abolition of rent is a

recognized principle, sanctioned, so to speak, by popular assent; that

to be housed rent-free is a right proclaimed aloud by the people.

Are we going to wait till this measure, which is in harmony with every

honest man’s sense of justice, is taken up by the few socialists

scattered among the middle-class elements, of which the Provisionary

Government will be composed? We should have to wait long — till the

return of reaction, in fact!

This is why, refusing uniforms and badges — those outward signs of

authority and servitude — and remaining people among the people, the

earnest revolutionists will work side by side with the masses, that the

abolition of rent, the expropriation of houses, may become an

accomplished fact. They will prepare the ground and encourage ideas to

grow in this direction; and when the fruit of their labours is ripe, the

people will proceed to expropriate the houses without giving heed to the

theories which will certainly be thrust in their way — theories about

paying compensation to landlords, and finding first the necessary funds.

On the day that the expropriation of houses takes place, on that day,

the exploited workers will have realized that the new times have come,

that Labour will no longer have to bear the yoke of the rich and

powerful, that Equality has been openly proclaimed, that this Revolution

is a real fact, and not a theatrical make-believe, like so many others

preceding it.

II

If the idea of expropriation be adopted by the people it will be carried

into effect in spite of all the “insurmountable” obstacles with which we

are menaced.

Of course, the good folk in new uniforms, seated in the official

arm-chairs of the Hôtel de Ville, will be sure to busy themselves in

heaping up obstacles. They will talk of giving compensation to the

landlords, of preparing statistics, and drawing up long reports. Yes,

they would be capable of drawing up reports long enough to outlast the

hopes of the people, who, after waiting and starving in enforced

idleness, and seeing nothing come of all these official researches,

would lose heart and faith in the Revolution and abandon the field to

the reactionaries. The new bureaucracy would end by making expropriation

hateful in the eyes of all.

Here, indeed, is a rock which might shipwreck our hopes. But if the

people turn a deaf ear to the specious arguments used to dazzle them,

and realize that new life needs new conditions, and if they undertake

the task themselves, then expropriation can be effected without any

great difficulty.

“But how? How can it be done?” you ask us. We shall try to reply to this

question, but with a reservation. We have no intention of tracing out

the plans of expropriation in their smallest details. We know beforehand

that all that any man, or group of men, could suggest to-day would be

far surpassed by the reality when it comes. Man will accomplish greater

things, and accomplish them better and by simpler methods than those

dictated to him beforehand. Thus we are content to indicate the manner

by which expropriation might be accomplished without the intervention of

Government. We do not propose to go out of our way to answer those who

declare that the thing is impossible. We confine ourselves to replying

that we are not the upholders of any particular method of organization.

We are only concerned to demonstrate that expropriation could be

effected by popular initiative, and could not be effected by any other

means whatever.

It seems very likely that, as soon as expropriation is fairly started,

groups of volunteers will spring up in every district, street, and block

of houses, and undertake to inquire into the number of flats and houses

which are empty and of those which are overcrowded, the unwholesome

slums and the houses which are too spacious for their occupants and

might well be used to house those who are stifled in swarming tenements.

In a few days these volunteers would have drawn up complete lists for

the street and the district of all the flats, tenements, family mansions

and villa residences, all the rooms and suites of rooms, healthy and

unhealthy, small and large, foetid dens and homes of luxury.

Freely communicating with each other, these volunteers would soon have

their statistics complete. False statistics can be manufactured in board

rooms and offices, but true and exact statistics must begin with the

individual and mount up from the simple to the complex.

Then, without waiting for any one’s leave, those citizens will probably

go and find their comrades who were living in miserable garrets and

hovels and will say to them simply: “It is a real Revolution this time,

comrades, and no mistake about it. Come to such a place this evening;

all the neighbourhood will be there; we are going to redistribute the

dwelling-houses. If you are tired of your slum-garret, come and choose

one of the flats of five rooms that are to be disposed of, and when you

have once moved in you shall stay, never fear. The people are up in

arms, and he who would venture to evict you will have to answer to

them.”

“But every one will want a fine house or a spacious flat!” we are told.

No, you are mistaken. It is not the people’s way to clamour for the

moon. On the contrary, every time we have seen them set about repairing

a wrong we have been struck by the good sense and instinct for justice

which animates the masses. Have we ever known them demand the

impossible? Have we ever seen the people of Paris fighting among

themselves while waiting for their rations of bread or firewood during

the two sieges? The patience and resignation which prevailed among them

was constantly held up to admiration by the foreign press

correspondents; and yet these patient waiters knew full well that the

last comers would have to pass the day without food or fire.

We do not deny that there are plenty of egotistic instincts in isolated

individuals in our societies. We are quite aware of it. But we contend

that the very way to revive and nourish these instincts would be to

confine such questions as the housing of the people to any board or

committee, in fact, to the tender mercies of officialism in any shape or

form. Then indeed all the evil passions spring up, and it becomes a case

of who is the most influential person on the board. The least inequality

causes wranglings and recriminations. If the smallest advantage is given

to any one, a tremendous hue and cry is raised — and not without reason.

But if the people themselves, organized by streets, districts, and

parishes, undertake to move the inhabitants of the slums into the

half-empty dwellings of the middle classes, the trifling inconveniences,

the little inequalities will be easily tided over. Rarely has appeal

been made to the good instincts of the masses — only as a last resort,

to save the sinking ship in times of revolution — but never has such an

appeal been made in vain; the heroism, the self-devotion of the toiler

has never failed to respond to it. And thus it will be in the coming

Revolution.

But, when all is said and done, some inequalities, some inevitable

injustices, will remain. There are individuals in our societies whom no

great crisis can lift out of the deep ruts of egoism in which they are

sunk. The question, however, is not whether there will be injustices or

no, but rather how to limit the number of them.

Now all history, all the experience of the human race, and all social

psychology, unite in showing that the best and fairest way is to trust

the decision to those whom it concerns most nearly. It is they alone who

can consider and allow for the hundred and one details which must

necessarily be overlooked in any merely official redistribution.

III

Moreover, it is by no means necessary to make straightway an absolutely

equal redistribution of all the dwellings. There will no doubt be some

inconveniences at first, but matters will soon be righted in a society

which has adopted expropriation.

When the masons, and carpenters, and all who are concerned in house

building, know that their daily bread is secured to them, they will ask

nothing better than to work at their old trades a few hours a day. They

will adapt the fine houses which absorbed the time of a whole staff of

servants, and in a few months homes will have sprung up, infinitely

healthier and more conveniently arranged than those of to-day. And to

those who are not yet comfortably housed the anarchist Commune will be

able to say: “Patience, comrades! Palaces fairer and finer than any the

capitalists built for themselves will spring from the ground of our

enfranchised city. They will belong to those who have most need of them.

The anarchist Commune does not build with an eye to revenues. These

monuments erected to its citizens, products of the collective spirit,

will serve as models to all humanity; they will be yours.”

If the people of the Revolution expropriate the houses and proclaim free

lodgings — the communalizing of houses and the right of each family to a

decent dwelling — then the Revolution will have assumed a communistic

character from the first, and started on a course from which it will be

by no means easy to turn it. It will have struck a fatal blow at

individual property.

For the expropriation of dwellings contains in germ the whole social

revolution. On the manner of its accomplishment depends the character of

all that follows. Either we shall start on a good road leading straight

to anarchist communism, or we shall remain sticking in the mud of

despotic individualism.

It is easy to see the numerous objections — theoretic on the one hand,

practical on the other — with which we are sure to be met. As it will be

a question of maintaining iniquity at any price, our opponents will of

course protest “in the name of justice.” “Is it not a crying shame,”

they will exclaim, “that the people of Paris should take possession of

all these fine houses, while the peasants in the country have only

tumble-down huts to live in?” But do not let us make a mistake. These

enthusiasts for justice forget, by a lapse of memory to which they are

subject, the “crying shame” which they themselves are tacitly defending.

They forget that in this same city the worker, with his wife and

children, suffocates in a noisome garret, while from his window he sees

the rich man’s palace. They forget that whole generations perish in

crowded slums, starving for air and sunlight, and that to redress this

injustice ought to be the first task of the Revolution.

Do not let these disingenuous protests hold us back. We know that any

inequality which may exist between town and country in the early days of

the Revolution will be transitory and of a nature to right itself from

day to day; for the village will not fail to improve its dwellings as

soon as the peasant has ceased to be the beast of burden of the farmer,

the merchant, the money-lender, and the State. In order to avoid an

accidental and transitory inequality, shall we stay our hand from

righting an ancient wrong?

The so-called practical objections are not very formidable either. We

are bidden to consider the hard case of some poor fellow who by dint of

privation has contrived to buy a house just large enough to hold his

family. And we are going to deprive him of his hard-earned happiness, to

turn him into the street! Certainly not. If his house is only just large

enough for his family, by all means let him stay there. Let him work in

his little garden too; our “boys” will not hinder him — nay, they will

lend him a helping hand if need be. But suppose he lets lodgings,

suppose he has empty rooms in his house; then the people will make the

lodger understand that he need not pay his former landlord any more

rent. Stay where you are, but rent free. No more duns and collectors;

Socialism has abolished all that!

Or again, suppose that the landlord has a score of rooms all to himself,

and some poor woman lives near by with five children in one room. In

that case the people would see whether, with some alterations, these

empty rooms could not be converted into a suitable home for the poor

woman and her five children. Would not that be more just and fair than

to leave the mother and her five little ones languishing in a garret,

while Sir Gorgeous Midas sat at his ease in an empty mansion? Besides,

good Sir Gorgeous would probably hasten to do it of his own accord; his

wife will be delighted to be freed from half her big, unwieldy house

when there is no longer a staff of servants to keep it in order.

“So you are going to turn everything upside down.” say the defenders of

law and order. “There will be no end to the evictions and removals.

Would it not be better to start fresh by turning everybody out of doors

and redistributing the houses by lot?” Thus our critics; but we are

firmly persuaded that if no Government interferes in the matter, if all

the changes are entrusted to those free groups which have sprung up to

undertake the work, the evictions and removals will be less numerous

than those which take place in one year under the present system, owing

to the rapacity of landlords.

In the first place, there are in all large towns almost enough empty

houses and flats to lodge all the inhabitants of the slums. As to the

palaces and suites of fine apartments, many working people would not

live in them if they could. One could not “keep up” such houses without

a large staff of servants. Their occupants would soon find themselves

forced to seek less luxurious dwellings. The fine ladies would find that

palaces were not well adapted to self-help in the kitchen. Gradually

people would shake down. There would be no need to conduct Dives to a

garret at the bayonet’s point, or install Lazarus in Dives’s palace by

the help of an armed escort. People would shake down amicably into the

available dwellings with the least possible friction and disturbance.

Have we not the example of the village communes redistributing fields

and disturbing the owners of the allotments so little that one can only

praise the intelligence and good sense of the methods they employ. Fewer

fields change hands under the management of the Russian Commune than

where personal property holds sway, and is for ever carrying its

quarrels into courts of law. And are we to believe that the inhabitants

of a great European city would be less intelligent and less capable of

organization than Russian or Hindoo peasants?

Moreover, we must not blink the fact that every revolution means a

certain disturbance to everyday life, and those who expect this

tremendous lift out of the old grooves to be accomplished without so

much as jarring the dishes on their dinner tables will find themselves

mistaken. It is true that Governments can change without disturbing

worthy citizens at dinner, but the crimes of society towards those who

have nourished and supported it are not to be redressed by any such

political sleight of parties.

Undoubtedly there will be a disturbance, but it must not be of pure

destruction; it must be minimized. And again — it is impossible to lay

too much stress on this maxim — it will be by addressing ourselves to

the interested parties, and not to boards and committees, that we shall

best succeed in reducing the sum of inconveniences for everybody.

The people commit blunder on blunder when they have to choose by ballot

some hare-brained candidate who solicits the honour of representing

them, and takes upon himself to know all, to do all, and to organize

all. But when they take upon themselves to organize what they know, what

touches them directly, they do it better than all the “talking-shops”

put together. Is not the Paris Commune an instance in point? and the

great dockers’ strike? and have we not constant evidence of this fact in

every village commune?

Chapter 7: Clothing

I

When the houses have become the common heritage of the citizens, and

when each man has his daily supply of food, another forward step will

have to be taken. The question of clothing will of course demand

consideration next, and again the only possible solution will be to take

possession, in the name of the people, of all the shops and warehouses

where clothing is sold or stored, and to throw open the doors to all, so

that each can take what he needs. The communalization of clothing — the

right of each to take what he needs from the communal stores, or to have

it made for him at the tailors and outfitters — is a necessary corollary

of the communalization of houses and food.

Obviously we shall not need for that to despoil all citizens of their

coats, to put all the garments in a heap and draw lots for them, as our

critics, with equal wit and ingenuity, suggest. Let him who has a coat

keep it still — nay, if he have ten coats it is highly improbable that

any one will want to deprive him of them, for most folk would prefer a

new coat to one that has already graced the shoulders of some fat

bourgeois; and there will be enough new garments and to spare, without

having recourse to second-hand wardrobes.

If we were to take an inventory of all the clothes and stuff for

clothing accumulated in the shops and stores of the large towns, we

should find probably that in Paris, Lyons, Bordeaux, and Marseilles,

there was enough to enable the commune to offer garments to all the

citizens, of both sexes; and if all were not suited at once, the

communal outfitters would soon make good these shortcomings. We know how

rapidly our great tailoring and dressmaking establishments work

nowadays, provided as they are with machinery specially adapted for

production on a large scale.

“But every one will want a sable-lined coat or a velvet gown!” exclaim

our adversaries.

Frankly, we do not believe it. Every woman does not dote on velvet, nor

does every man dream of sable linings. Even now, if we were to ask each

woman to choose her gown, we should find some to prefer a simple,

practical garment to all the fantastic trimmings the fashionable world

affects.

Tastes change with the times, and the fashion in vogue at the time of

the Revolution will certainly make for simplicity. Societies, like

individuals, have their hours of cowardice, but also their heroic

moments; and though the society of to-day cuts a very poor figure sunk

in the pursuit of narrow personal interests and second-rate ideas, it

wears a different air when great crises come. It has its moments of

greatness and enthusiasm. Men of generous nature will gain the power

which to-day is in the hand of jobbers. Self-devotion will spring up,

and noble deeds beget their like; even the egotists will be ashamed of

hanging back, and will be drawn in spite of themselves to admire, if not

to imitate, the generous and brave.

The great Revolution of 1793 abounds in examples of this kind, and it is

ever during such times of spiritual revival — as natural to societies as

to individuals — that the spring-tide of enthusiasm sweeps humanity

onwards.

We do not wish to exaggerate the part played by such noble passions, nor

is it upon them that we would found our ideal of society. But we are not

asking too much if we expect their aid in tiding over the first and most

difficult moments. We cannot hope that our daily life will be

continuously inspired by such exalted enthusiasms, but we may expect

their aid at the first, and that is all we need.

It is just to wash the earth clean, to sweep away the shards and refuse,

accumulated by centuries of slavery and oppression, that the new

anarchist society will have need of this wave of brotherly love. Later

on it can exist without appealing to the spirit of self-sacrifice,

because it will have eliminated oppression, and thus created a new world

instinct with all the feelings of solidarity.

Besides, should the character of the Revolution be such as we have

sketched here, the free initiative of individuals would find an

extensive field of action in thwarting the efforts of the egotists.

Groups would spring up in every street and quarter to undertake the

charge of the clothing. They would make inventories of all that the city

possessed, and would find out approximately what were the resources at

their disposal. It is more than likely that in the matter of clothing

the citizens would adopt the same principle as in the matter of

provisions — that is to say, they would offer freely from the common

store everything which was to be found in abundance, and dole out

whatever was limited in quantity.

Not being able to offer to each man a sable-lined coat, and to every

woman a velvet gown, society would probably distinguish between the

superfluous and the necessary, and, provisionally, at least, class sable

and velvet among the superfluities of life, ready to let time prove

whether what is a luxury to-day may not become common to all to-morrow.

While the necessary clothing would be guaranteed to each inhabitant of

the anarchist city, it would be left to private activity to provide for

the sick and feeble those things, provisionally considered as luxuries,

and to procure for the less robust such special articles, as would not

enter into the daily consumption of ordinary citizens.

“But,” it may be urged, “this grey uniformity means the end of

everything beautiful in life and art.”

“Certainly not!” we reply; and we still base our opinion on what already

exists. We propose to show presently how an Anarchist society could

satisfy the most artistic tastes of its citizens without allowing them

to amass the fortunes of millionaires.

Chapter 8: Ways and Means

I

If a society, a city, or a territory, were to guarantee the necessaries

of life to its inhabitants (and we shall see how the conception of the

necessaries of life can be so extended as to include luxuries), it would

be compelled to take possession of what is absolutely needed for

production; that is to say — land, machinery, factories, means of

transport, etc. Capital in the hands of private owners would be

expropriated and returned to the community.

The great harm done by bourgeois society, as we have already mentioned,

is not only that capitalists seize a large share of the profits of each

industrial and commercial enterprise, thus enabling them to live without

working, but that all production has taken a wrong direction, as it is

not carried on with a view to securing well-being to all. For this

reason we condemn it.

Moreover, it is impossible to carry on mercantile production in

everybody’s interest. To wish it would be to expect the capitalist to go

beyond his province and to fulfill duties that he cannot fulfill without

ceasing to be what he is — a private manufacturer seeking his own

enrichment. Capitalist organization, based on the personal interest of

each individual trader, has given all that could be expected of it to

society — it has increased the productive force of work. The capitalist,

profiting by the revolution effected in industry by steam, by the sudden

development of chemistry and machinery, and by other inventions of our

century, has endeavoured in his own interest to increase the yield of

work, and in a great measure he has succeeded. But to attribute other

duties to him would be unreasonable. For example, to expect that he

should use this superior yield of work in the interest of society as a

whole, would be to ask philanthropy and charity of him, and a capitalist

enterprise cannot be based on charity.

It now remains for society to extend this greater productivity, which is

limited to certain industries, and to apply it to the general good. But

it is evident that to guarantee well-being to all, society must take

back possession of all means of production.

Economists, as is their wont, will not fail to remind us of the

comparative well-being of a certain category of young robust workmen,

skilled in certain special branches of industry. It is always this

minority that is pointed out to us with pride. But is this well-being,

which is the exclusive right of a few, secure? To-morrow, maybe,

negligence, improvidence, or the greed of their employers, will deprive

these privileged men of their work, and they will pay for the period of

comfort they have enjoyed with months and years of poverty or

destitution. How many important industries — woven goods, iron, sugar,

etc. — without mentioning short-lived trades, have we not seen decline

or come to a standstill alternately on account of speculations, or in

consequence of natural displacement of work, and lastly from the effects

of competition due to capitalists them selves! If the chief weaving and

mechanical industries had to pass through such a crisis as they have

passed through in 1886, we hardly need mention the small trades, all of

which come periodically to a standstill.

What, too, shall we say to the price which is paid for the relative

well-being of certain categories of workmen? Unfortunately, it is paid

for by the ruin of agriculture, the shameless exploitation of the

peasants, the misery of the masses. In comparison with the feeble

minority of workers who enjoy a certain comfort, how many millions of

human beings live from hand to mouth, without a secure wage, ready to go

wherever they are wanted; how many peasants work fourteen hours a day

for a poor pittance! Capital depopulates the country, exploits the

colonies and the countries where industries are but little developed,

dooms the immense majority of workmen to remain without technical

education, to remain mediocre even in their own trade.

This is not merely accidental, it is a necessity of the capitalist

system. In order to remunerate certain classes of workmen, peasants must

become the beasts of burden of society; the country must be deserted for

the town; small trades must agglomerate in the foul suburbs of large

cities, and manufacture a thousand things of little value for next to

nothing, so as to bring the goods of the greater industries within reach

of buyers with small salaries. That bad cloth may sell, garments are

made for ill-paid workers by tailors who are satisfied with a starvation

wage! Eastern lands in a backward state are exploited by the West, in

order that, under the capitalist system, workers in a few privileged

industries may obtain certain limited comforts of life.

The evil of the present system is therefore not that the “surplus-value”

of production goes to the capitalist, as Rodbertus and Marx said, thus

narrowing the Socialist conception and the general view of the

capitalist system; the surplus-value itself is but a consequence of

deeper causes. The evil lies in the possibility of a surplus-value

existing, instead of a simple surplus not consumed by each generation;

for, that a surplus-value should exist, means that men, women, and

children are compelled by hunger to sell their labour for a small part

of what this labour produces, and, above all, of what their labour is

capable of producing. But this evil will last as long as the instruments

of production belong to a few. As long as men are compelled to pay

tribute to property holders for the right of cultivating land or putting

machinery into action, and the property holder is free to produce what

bids fair to bring him in the greatest profits, rather than the greatest

amount of useful commodities — well-being can only be temporarily

guaranteed to a very few, and is only to be bought by the poverty of a

section of society. It is not sufficient to distribute the profits

realized by a trade in equal parts, if at the same time thousands of

other workers are exploited. It is a case of PRODUCING THE GREATEST

AMOUNT OF GOODS NECESSARY TO THE WELL-BEING OF ALL, WITH THE LEAST

POSSIBLE WASTE OF HUMAN ENERGY.

This cannot be the aim of a private owner; and this is why society as a

whole, taking this view of production as its ideal, will be compelled to

expropriate all that enhances well-being while producing wealth. It will

have to take possession of land, factories, mines, means of

communication, etc., and besides, it will have to study what products

will promote general well-being, as well as the ways and means of

production.

II

How many hours a day will man have to work to produce nourishing food, a

comfortable home, and necessary clothing for his family? This question

has often preoccupied Socialists, and they generally came to the

conclusion that four or five hours a day would suffice, on condition, be

it well understood, that all men work. At the end of last century,

Benjamin Franklin fixed the limit at five hours; and if the need of

comfort is greater now, the power of production has augmented too, and

far more rapidly.

In speaking of agriculture further on, we shall see what the earth can

be made to yield to man when he cultivates it scientifically, instead of

throwing seed haphazard in a badly ploughed soil as he mostly does

to-day. In the great farms of Western America, some of which cover 30

square miles, but have a poorer soil than the manured soil of civilized

countries, only 10 to 15 English bushels per English acre are obtained;

that is to say, half the yield of European farms or of American farms in

Eastern States. And nevertheless, thanks to machines which enable 2 men

to plough 4 English acres a day, 100 men can produce in a year all that

is necessary to deliver the bread of 10,000 people at their homes during

a whole year.

Thus it would suffice for a man to work under the same conditions for 30

hours, say 6 half-days of five hours each, to have bread for a whole

year; and to work 30 half-days to guarantee the same to a family of 5

people.

We shall also prove by results obtained nowadays that if we had recourse

to intensive agriculture, less than 6 half-days’ work could procure

bread, meat, vegetables, and even luxurious fruit for a whole family.

And again, if we study the cost of workmen’s dwellings, built in large

towns to-day, we can ascertain that to obtain, in a large English city,

a detached little house, as they are built for workmen, from 1400 to

1800 half-days’ work of 5 hours would be sufficient. As a house of that

kind lasts 50 years at least, it follows that 28 to 36 half-days’ work a

year would provide well-furnished, healthy quarters, with all necessary

comfort for a family. Whereas when hiring the same apartment from an

employer, a workman pays 75 to 100 days’ work per year.

Mark that these figures represent the maximum of what a house costs in

England to-day, being given the defective organization of our societies.

In Belgium, workmen’s cities have been built far cheaper. Taking

everything into consideration, we are justified in affirming that in a

well-organized society 30 or 40 half-days’ work a year will suffice to

guarantee a perfectly comfortable home.

There now remains clothing, the exact value of which is almost

impossible to fix, because the profits realized by a swarm of middlemen

cannot be estimated. Let us take cloth, for example, and add up all the

deductions made by landowners, sheep owners, wool merchants, and all

their intermediate agents, then by railway companies, mill-owners,

weavers, dealers in ready-made clothes, sellers and commission agents,

and you will get an idea of what is paid to a whole swarm of capitalists

for each article of clothing. That is why it is perfectly impossible to

say how many days’ work an overcoat that you pay £3 or £4 in a. large

London shop represents.

What is certain is that with present machinery they no doubt manage to

manufacture an incredible amount of goods.

A few examples will suffice. Thus in the United States, in 751 cotton

mills (for spinning and weaving), 175,000 men and women produce

2,033,000,000 yards of cotton goods, besides a great quantity of thread.

On the average, more than 12,000 yards of cotton goods alone are

obtained by a 300 days’ work of 9½ hours each, say 40 yards of cotton in

10 hours. Admitting that a family needs 200 yards a year at most, this

would be equivalent to 50 hours’ work, say 10 half-days of 5 hours each.

And we should have thread besides; that is to say, cotton to sew with,

and thread to weave cloth with, so as to manufacture woolen stuffs mixed

with cotton.

As to the results obtained by weaving alone, the official statistics of

the United States teach us that in 1870 if workmen worked 13 to 14 hours

a day, they made 10,000 yards of white cotton goods in a year; thirteen

years later (1886) they wove 30,000 yards by working only 55 hours a

week.

Even in printed cotton goods they obtained, weaving and printing

included, 32,000 yards in 2670 hours of work a year — say about 12 yards

an hour. Thus to have your 200 yards of white and printed cotton goods

17 hours’ work a year would suffice. It is necessary to remark that raw

material reaches these factories in about the same state as it comes

from the fields, and that the transformations gone through by the piece

before it is converted into goods are completed in the course of these

17 hours. But to buy these 200 yards from the tradesman, a well-paid

workman must give at the very least 10 to 15 days’ work of 10 hours

each, say 100 to 150 hours. find as to the English peasant, he would

have to toil for a month, or a little more, to obtain this luxury. By

this example we already see that by working 50 half-days per year in a

well-organized society we could dress better than the lower middle

classes do to-day.

But with all this we have only required 60 half-days’ work of 5 hours

each to obtain the fruits of the earth, 40 for housing, and 50 for

clothing, which only makes half a year’s work, as the year consists of

300 working-days if we deduct holidays.

There remain still 150 half-days’ work which could be made use of for

other necessaries of life — wine, sugar, coffee, tea, furniture,

transport, etc. etc.

It is evident that these calculations are only approximative, but they

can also be proved in an other way. When we take into account how many,

in the so-called civilized nations, produce nothing, how many work at

harmful trades, doomed to disappear, and lastly, how many are only

useless middlemen, we see that in each nation the number of real

producers could be doubled. And if, instead of every 10 men, 20 were

occupied in producing useful commodities, and if society took the

trouble to economize human energy, those 20 people would only have to

work 5 hours a day without production decreasing. And it would suffice

to reduce the waste of human energy at the service of wealthy families,

or of those administrations that have one official to every ten

inhabitants, and to utilize those forces, to augment the productivity of

the nation, to limit work to four or even to three hours, on condition

that we should be satisfied with present production.

After studying all these facts together, we may arrive, then, at the

following conclusion: Imagine a society, comprising a few million

inhabitants, engaged in agriculture and a great variety of industries —

Paris, for example, with the Department of Seine-et-Oise. Suppose that

in this society all children learn to work with their hands as well as

with their brains. Admit that all adults, save women, engaged in the

education of their children, bind themselves to work 5 hours a day from

the age of twenty or twenty-two to forty-five or fifty, and that they

follow occupations they have chosen in any one branch of human work

considered necessary. Such a society could in return guarantee

well-being to all its members; that is to say, a more substantial

well-being than that enjoyed to-day by the middle classes. And,

moreover, each worker belonging to this society would have at his

disposal at least 5 hours a day which he could devote to science, art,

and individual needs which do not come under the category of

necessities, but will probably do so later on, when man’s productivity

will have augmented, and those objects will no longer appear luxurious

or inaccessible.

Chapter 9: The Need For Luxury

I

Man, however, is not a being whose exclusive purpose in life is eating,

drinking, and providing a shelter for himself. As soon as his material

wants are satisfied, other needs, of an artistic character, will thrust

themselves forward the more ardently. Aims of life vary with each and

every individual; and the more society is civilized, the more will

individuality be developed, and the more will desires be varied.

Even to-day we see men and women denying themselves necessaries to

acquire mere trifles, to obtain some particular gratification, or some

intellectual or material enjoyment. A Christian or an ascetic may

disapprove of these desires for luxury; but it is precisely these

trifles that break the monotony of existence and make it agreeable.

Would life, with all its inevitable sorrows, be worth living, if besides

daily work man could never obtain a single pleasure according to his

individual tastes?

If we wish for a Social Revolution, it is no doubt in the first place to

give bread to all; to transform this execrable society, in which we can

every day see robust workmen dangling their arms for want of an employer

who will exploit them; women and children wandering shelterless at

night; whole families reduced to dry bread; men, women, and children

dying for want of care and even for want of food. It is to put an end to

these iniquities that we rebel.

But we expect more from the Revolution. We see that the worker compelled

to struggle painfully for bare existence, is reduced to ignorance of

these higher delights, the highest within man’s reach, of science, and

especially of scientific discovery; of art, and especially of artistic

creation. It is in order to obtain these joys for all, which are now

reserved to a few; in order to give leisure and the possibility of

developing intellectual capacities, that the social revolution must

guarantee daily bread to all. After bread has been secured, leisure is

the supreme aim.

No doubt, nowadays, when hundreds and thousands of human beings are in

need of bread, coal, clothing, and shelter, luxury is a crime; to

satisfy it the worker’s child must go without bread! But in a society in

which all can eat sufficiently the needs which we consider luxuries

to-day will be the more keenly felt. And as all men do not and cannot

resemble one another (the variety of tastes and needs is the chief

guarantee of human progress) there will always be, and it is desirable

that there should always be, men and women whose desire will go beyond

those of ordinary individuals in some particular direction.

Everybody does not need a telescope, because, even if learning were

general, there are people who prefer examining things through a

microscope to studying the starry heavens. Some like statues, some

pictures. A particular individual has no other ambition than to possess

an excellent piano, while another is pleased with an accordion. The

tastes vary, but the artistic needs exist in all. In our present, poor

capitalistic society, the man who has artistic needs cannot satisfy them

unless he is heir to a large fortune, or by dint of hard work

appropriates to himself an intellectual capital which will enable him to

take up a liberal profession. Still he cherishes the hope of some day

satisfying his tastes more or less, and for this reason he reproaches

the idealist Communist societies with having the material life of each

individual as their sole aim. — “In your communal stores you may perhaps

have bread for all,” he says to us, “but you will not have beautiful

pictures, optical instruments, luxurious furniture, artistic jewelry —

in short, the many things that minister to the infinite variety of human

tastes. And in this way you suppress the possibility of obtaining

anything besides the bread and meat which the commune can offer to all,

and the grey linen in which all your lady citizens will be dressed.”

These are the objections which all communist systems have to consider,

and which the founders of new societies, established in American

deserts, never understood. They believed that if the community could

procure sufficient cloth to dress all its members, a music hall in which

the “brothers” could strum a piece of music, or act a play from time to

time, it was enough. They forgot that the feeling for art existed in the

agriculturist as well as in the burgher, and, notwithstanding that the

expression of artistic feeling varies according to the difference in

culture, in the main it remains the same. In vain did the community

guarantee the common necessaries of life, in vain did it suppress all

education that would tend to develop individuality, in vain did it

eliminate all reading save the Bible. Individual tastes broke forth, and

caused general discontent; quarrels arose when somebody proposed to buy

a piano or scientific instruments; and the elements of progress flagged.

The society could only exist on condition that it crushed all individual

feeling, all artistic tendency, and all development.

Will the anarchist Commune be impelled by the same direction? Evidently

not, if it understands that while it produces all that is necessary to

material life, it must also strive to satisfy all manifestations of the

human mind.

II

We frankly confess that when we think of the abyss of poverty and

suffering that surrounds us, when we hear the heartrending cry of the

worker walking the streets begging for work, we are loth to discuss the

question: How will men act in a society, whose members are properly fed,

to satisfy certain individuals desirous of possessing a piece of Sèvres

china or a velvet dress?

We are tempted to answer: Let us make sure of bread to begin with, we

shall see to china and velvet later on.

But as we must recognize that man has other needs besides food, and as

the strength of Anarchy lies precisely in that it understands all human

faculties and all passions, and ignores none, we shall, in a few words,

explain how man can contrive to satisfy all his intellectual and

artistic needs.

We have already mentioned that by working 4 or 5 hours a day till the

age of forty-five or fifty, man could easily produce all that is

necessary to guarantee comfort to society.

But the day’s work of a man accustomed to toil does not consist of;

hours; it is a 10 hours’ day for 300 days a year, and lasts all his

life. Of course, when a man is harnessed to a machine, his health is

soon undermined and his intelligence is blunted; but when man has the

possibility of varying occupations, and especially of alternating manual

with intellectual work, he can remain occupied without fatigue, and even

with pleasure, for 10 or 12 hours a day. Consequently the man who will

have done 4 or 5 hours of manual work necessary for his existence, will

have before him 5 or 6 hours which he will seek to employ according to

his tastes. And these 5 or 6 hours a day will fully enable him to

procure for himself, if he associates with others, all he wishes for, in

addition to the necessaries guaranteed to all.

He will discharge first his task in the field, the factory, and so on,

which he owes to society as his contribution to the general production.

And he will employ the second half of his day, his week, or his year, to

satisfy his artistic or scientific needs, or his hobbies.

Thousands of societies will spring up to gratify every taste and every

possible fancy.

Some, for example, will give their hours of leisure to literature. They

will then form groups comprising authors, compositors, printers,

engravers, draughtsmen, all pursuing a common aim — the propagation of

ideas that are dear to them.

Nowadays an author knows that there is a beast of burden, the worker, to

whom, for the sum of a few shillings a day, he can entrust the printing

of his books; but he hardly cares to know what a printing office is

like. If the compositor suffers from lead-poisoning, and if the child

who sees to the machine dies of anæmia, are there not other poor

wretches to replace them?

But when there will be no more starvelings ready to sell their work for

a pittance, when the exploited worker of to-day will be educated and

will have his own ideas to put down in black and white and to

communicate to others, then the authors and scientific men will be

compelled to combine among themselves and with the printers, in order to

bring out their prose and their poetry.

So long as men consider fustian and manual labour as a mark of

inferiority, it will appear amazing to them to see an author setting up

his own book in type, for has he not a gymnasium or games by way of

diversion? But when the opprobrium connected with manual labour has

disappeared, when all will have to work with their hands, there being no

one to do it for them, then the authors as well as their admirers will

soon learn the art of handling composing-sticks and type; they will know

the pleasure of coming together — all admirers of the work to be printed

— to set up the type, to shape it into pages, to take it in its virginal

purity from the press. These beautiful machines, instruments of torture

to the child who attends on them from morn till night, will be a source

of enjoyment for those who will make use of them in order to give voice

to the thoughts of their favourite author.

Will literature lose by it? Will the poet be less a poet after having

worked out of doors or helped with his hands to multiply his work? Will

the novelist lose his knowledge of human nature after having rubbed

shoulders with other men in the forest or the factory, in the laying out

of a road or on a railway line? Can there be two answers to these

questions?

Maybe some books will be less voluminous; but then, more will be said on

fewer pages. Maybe fewer waste-sheets will be published; but the matter

printed will be more attentively read and more appreciated. The book

will appeal to a larger circle of better educated readers, who will be

more competent to judge.

Moreover, the art of printing, that has so little progressed since

Gutenberg, is still in its infancy. It takes two hours to compose in

type what is written in ten minutes, but more expeditious methods of

multiplying thought are being sought after and will be discovered.

What a pity every author does not have to take his share in the printing

of his works! What progress printing would have already made! We should

no longer be using the movable letters, as in the seventeenth century.

III

Is it a dream to conceive a society in which — all having become

producers, all having received an education that enables them to

cultivate science or art, and all having leisure to do so — men would

combine to publish the works of their choice, by contributing each his

share of manual work? We have already hundreds of learned, literary, and

other societies; and these societies are nothing but voluntary groups of

men, interested in certain branches of learning, and associated for the

purpose of publishing their works. The authors who write for the

periodicals of these societies are not paid, and the periodicals are not

for sale; they are sent gratis to all quarters of the globe, to other

societies, cultivating the same branches of learning. This member of the

society may insert in its review a one-page note summarizing his

observations; another may publish therein an extensive work, the results

of long years of study; while others will confine themselves to

consulting the review as a starting point for further research. It does

not matter: all these authors and readers are associated for the

production of works in which all of them take an interest.

It is true that a learned society, like the individual author, goes to a

printing office where workmen are engaged to do the printing. Nowadays,

those who belong to the learned societies despise manual labour; which

indeed is carried on under very bad conditions; but a community which

would give a generous philosophic and scientific education to all its

members, would know how to organize manual labour in such a way that it

would be the pride of humanity. Its learned societies would become

associations of explorers, lovers of science, and workers — all knowing

a manual trade and all interested in science.

If, for example, the society is studying geology, all will contribute to

the exploration of the earth’s strata; each member will take his share

in research, and ten thousand observers where we have now only a

hundred, will do more in a year than we can do in twenty years. And when

their works are to be published, ten thousand men and women, skilled in

different trades, will be ready to draw maps, engrave designs, compose,

and print the books. With gladness will they give their leisure — in

summer to exploration in winter to indoor work And when their works

appear, they will find not only a hundred, but ten thousand readers

interested in their common work.

This is the direction in which progress is already moving. Even to-day,

when England felt the need of a complete dictionary of the English

language, the birth of a Littré, who would devote his life to this work,

was not waited for. Volunteers were appealed to, and a thousand men

offered their services, spontaneously and gratuitously, to ransack the

libraries, to take notes, and to accomplish in a few years a work which

one man could not complete in his lifetime. In all branches of human

intelligence the same spirit is breaking forth, and we should have a

very limited knowledge of humanity could we not guess that the future is

announcing itself in such tentative co-operation, which is gradually

taking the place of individual work.

For this dictionary to be a really collective work, it would have

required that many volunteer authors, printers and printers’ readers

should have worked in common; but something in this direction is done

already in the Socialist Press, which offers us examples of manual and

intellectual work combined. It happens in our newspapers that a

Socialist author composes in lead his own article. True, such attempts

are rare, but they indicate in which direction evolution is going.

They show the road of liberty. In future, when a man will have something

useful to say-a word that goes beyond the thoughts of his century, he

will not have to look for an editor who might advance the necessary

capital. He will look for collaborators among those who know the

printing trade, and who approve the idea of his new work. Together they

will publish the new book or journal.

Literature and journalism will cease to be a means of money-making and

living at the cost of others. But is there any one who knows literature

and journalism from within, and who does not ardently desire that

literature should at last be able to free itself from those who formerly

protected it, and who now exploit it, and from the multitude which with

rare exceptions pays it in proportion to its mediocrity, or to the ease

with which it adapts itself to the bad taste of the greater number?

Letters and science will only take their proper place in the work of

human development when, freed from all mercenary bondage, they will be

exclusively cultivated by those that love them, and for those that love

them.

IV

Literature, science, and art must be cultivated by free men. Only on

this condition will they succeed in emancipating themselves from the

yoke of the State, of Capital, and of the bourgeois mediocrity which

stifles them.

What means has the scientist of to-day to make researches that interest

him? Should he ask help of the State, which can only be given to one

candidate in a hundred, and which none may obtain who does not

ostensibly promise to keep to the beaten track? Let us remember how the

Institute of France censured Darwin how the Academy of St. Petersburg

treated Mendeléeff with contempt, and how the Royal Society of London

refused to publish Joule’s paper, in which he determined the mechanical

equivalent of heat, finding it “unscientific.”[6]

It is why all great researches, all discoveries revolutionizing science,

have been made outside academies and universities, either by men rich

enough to remain independent, like Darwin and Lyell, or by men who

undermined their health by working in poverty and often in great

straits, losing no end of time for want of a laboratory, and unable to

procure the instruments or books necessary to continue their researches,

but persevering against hope and often dying before they had reached the

end in view Their name is legion.

Altogether, the system of help granted by the State is so bad that

science has always endeavoured to emancipate itself from it. For this

very reason there are thousands of learned societies organized and

maintained by volunteers in Europe and America, — some having developed

to such a degree that all the resources of subventioned societies, and

the wealth of millionaires would not buy their treasures. No

governmental institution is as rich as the Zoological Society of London,

which is supported by voluntary contributions.

It does not buy the animals which in thousands people its gardens: they

are sent by other societies and by collectors of the entire world. The

Zoological Society of Bombay will send an elephant as a gift; another

time a hippopotamus or a rhinoceros is offered by Egyptian naturalists.

And these magnificent presents are pouring in every day, arriving from

all quarters of the globe — birds, reptiles, collections of insects,

etc. These consignments often comprise animals that could not be bought

for all the gold in the world; thus, a traveller who has captured an

animal at life’s peril, and now loves it as he would love a child, will

give it to the Society because he is sure it will be cared for. The

entrance fee paid by visitors and they are numberless, suffices for the

maintenance of that immense institution.

What is defective in the Zoological Society of London, and in other

kindred societies, is that the member’s fee cannot be paid in work: that

the keepers and numerous employés of this Large institution are not

recognized as members of the Society, while many have no other incentive

to joining the society than to put the cabalistic letters F.Z.S. (Fellow

of the Zoological Society) on their cards. In a word, what is needed is

a more perfect co-operation.

We may say the same about inventors that we have said of scientists. Who

does not know what sufferings nearly all great inventions that have come

to light have cost? Sleepless nights, families deprived of bread, want

of tools and materials for experiments, is the history of nearly all

those who have enriched industry with inventions which are the truly

legitimate pride of our civilization.

But what are we to do to alter conditions that everybody is convinced

are bad? Patents have been tried, and we know with what results. The

inventor sells his patent for a few shillings, and the man who has only

lent the capital pockets the often enormous profits resulting from the

invention. Besides, patents isolate the inventor. They compel him to

keep secret his researches which therefore end in failure; whereas the

simplest suggestion, coming from a brain less absorbed in the

fundamental idea, sometimes suffices to fertilize the invention and make

it practical. Like all State control, patents hamper the progress of

industry. Thought being incapable of being patented, patents are a

crying injustice in theory, and in practice they result in one of the

great obstacles to the rapid development of invention.

What is needed to promote the spirit of invention is, first of all, the

awakening of thought, the boldness of conception, which our entire

education causes to languish; it is the spreading of a scientific

education, which would increase the number of inquirers a hundred-fold;

it is faith that humanity is going to take a step forward, because it is

enthusiasm, the hope of doing good, that has inspired all the great

inventors. The Social Revolution alone can give this impulse to thought,

this boldness, this knowledge, this conviction of working for all.

Then we shall have vast institutes supplied with motor-power and tools

of all sorts, immense industrial laboratories open to all inquirers,

where men will be able to work out their dreams, after having acquitted

themselves of their duty towards society; where they will spend their

five or six hours of leisure; where they will make their experiments;

where they will find other comrades, experts in other branches of

industry, likewise coming to study some difficult problem, and therefore

able to help and enlighten each other, the encounter of their ideas and

experience causing the longed-for solution to be found. And yet again,

this is no dream. Solanoy Gorodok, in Petersburg, has already partially

realized it as regards technical matters. It is a factory well furnished

with tools and free to all; tools and motor-power are supplied gratis,

only metals and wood are charged for at cost price. Unfortunately

workmen only go there at night when worn out by ten hours’ labour in the

workshop. Moreover, they carefully hide their inventions from each

other, as they are hampered by patents and Capitalism, that bane of

present society, that stumbling-block in the path of intellectual and

moral progress.

V

And what about art? From all sides we hear lamentations about the

decadence of art. We are, indeed, far behind the great masters of the

Renaissance. The technicalities of art have recently made great

progress; thousands of people gifted with a certain amount of talent

cultivate every branch, but art seems to fly from civilization!

Technicalities make headway, but inspiration frequents artists’ studios

less than ever.

Where, indeed, should it come from? Only a grand idea can inspire art.

Art is in our ideal synonymous with creation, it must look ahead; but

save a few rare, very rare exceptions, the professional artist remains

too philistine to perceive new horizons.

Moreover, this inspiration cannot come from books; it must be drawn from

life, and present society cannot arouse it.

Raphael and Murillo painted at a time when the search of a new ideal

could adapt itself to old religious traditions. They painted to decorate

great churches which represented the pious work of several generations.

The basilic with its mysterious aspect, its grandeur, was connected with

the life itself of the city and could inspire a painter. He worked for a

popular monument; he spoke to his fellow-citizens, and in return he

received inspiration; he appealed to the multitude in the same way as

did the nave, the pillars, the stained windows, the statues, and the

carved doors. Nowadays the greatest honour a painter can aspire to is to

see his canvas, framed in gilded wood, hung in a museum, a sort of old

curiosity shop, where you see, as in the Prado, Murillo’s Ascension next

to a beggar of Velasquez and the dogs of Philip II. Poor Velasquez and

poor Murillo! Poor Greek statues which lived in the Acropolis of their

cities, and are now stifled beneath the red cloth hangings of the

Louvre!

When a Greek sculptor chiselled his marble he endeavoured to express the

spirit and heart of the city. All its passions, all its traditions of

glory, were to live again in the work. But to-day the united city has

ceased to exist; there is no more communion of ideas. The town is a

chance agglomeration of people who do not know one another, who have no

common interest, save the of enriching themselves at the expense of one

another. The fatherland does not exist.... What fatherland can the

international banker and the rag-picker have in common? Only when

cities, territories, nations, or groups of nations, will have renewed

their harmonious life, will art be able to draw its inspiration from

ideals held in common. Then will the architect conceive the city’s

monument which will no longer be a temple, a prison, or a fortress; then

will the painter, the sculptor, the carver, the ornament; worker know

where to put their canvases, their statues, and their decorations;

deriving their power of execution from the same vital source, and

gloriously marching all together towards the future.

But till then art can only vegetate. The best canvases of modern artists

are those that represent nature, villages, valleys, the sea with its

dangers, the mountain with its splendours. But how can the painter

express the poetry of work in the fields if he has only contemplated it,

imagined it, if he has never delighted in it himself? If he only knows

it as a bird of passage knows the country he soars over on his

migrations? If, in the vigour of early youth, he has not followed the

plough at dawn and enjoyed mowing grass with a large swathe of the

scythe next to hardly haymakers vying in energy with lively young girls

who fill the air with their songs? The love of the soil and of what

grows on it is not acquired by sketching with a paint brush — it is only

in its service; and without loving it, how paint it. This is why all

that the best painters have produced in this direction is still so

imperfect, not true to life, nearly always merely sentimental. There is

no strength in it.

You must have seen a sunset when returning from work. You must have been

a peasant among peasants to keep the splendour of it in your eye. You

must have been at sea with fishermen at all hours of the day and night,

have fished yourself, struggled with the waves faced the storm, and

after rough work experienced the joy of hauling a heavy net, or the

disappointment of seeing it empty, to understand the poetry of fishing.

You must have spent time in a factory, known the fatigues and the joys

of creative work, forged metals by the vivid light of a blast furnace,

have felt the life in a machine, to understand the power of man and to

express it in a work of art. You must in fact, be permeated with popular

feelings, to describe them. Besides, the works of future artists who

will have lived the life of the people, like the great artists of the

past, will not be destined for sale. They will be an integrant part of a

living whole that would not be complete without them, any more than they

would be complete without it. Men will go to the artist’s own city to

gaze at his work, and the spirited and serene beauty of such creations

will produce its beneficial effect on heart and mind.

Art, in order to develop, must be bound up with industry by a thousand

intermediate degrees blended, so to say, as Ruskin and the great

Socialist poet Morris have proved so often and so well. Everything that

surrounds man, in the street, in the interior and exterior of public

monuments, must be of a pure artistic form.

But this will only be capable of realization in a society in which all

enjoy comfort and leisure. Then we shall see art associations, in which

each can find room for his capacity, for art cannot dispense with an

infinity of purely manual and technical supplementary works. These

artistic associations will undertake to embellish the houses of their

members, as those kind volunteers, the young painters of Edinburgh, did

in decorating the walls and ceilings of the great hospital for the poor

in their city.

A painter or sculptor who has produced a work of personal feeling will

offer it to the woman he loves, or to a friend. Executed for love’s

sake, will his work, inspired by love, be inferior to the art that

to-day satisfies the vanity of the philistine because it has cost much

money?

The same will be done as regards all pleasure not comprised in the

necessaries of life. He who wishes for a grand piano will enter the

association of musical instrument makers. And by giving the association

part of his half-days’ leisure, he will soon possess the piano of his

dreams. If he is passionately fond of astronomical studies he will join

the association of astronomers, with it philosophers, its observers, its

calculators, with its artists in astronomical instruments, its

scientists and amateurs, and he will have the telescope he desires by

taking his share of the associated work, for it is especially the rough

work that is needed in an astronomical observatory bricklayer’s,

carpenter’s, founder’s, mechanic’s work, the last touch being given to

the instrument of precision by the artist.

In short, the five or seven hours a day which each will have at his

disposal, after having consecrated several hours to the production of

necessities, will amply suffice to satisfy all longings for luxury

however varied. Thousands of associations would undertake to supply

them. What is now the privilege of an insignificant minority would be

accessible to all. Luxury, ceasing to be a foolish and ostentatious

display of the bourgeois class, would become an artistic pleasure.

Every one would be the happier for it. In collective work, performed

with a light heart to attain a desired end, a book, a work of art, or an

object of luxury, each will find an incentive, and the necessary

relaxation that makes life pleasant.

In working to put an end to the division between master and slave we

work for the happiness of both, for the happiness of humanity.

Chapter 10: Agreeable Work

I

When Socialists declare that a society, emancipated from Capital, would

make work agreeable, and would suppress all repugnant and unhealthy

drudgery, they get laughed at. And yet even to-day we can see the

striking progress made in this direction; and wherever this progress has

been achieved, employers congratulate themselves on the economy of

energy obtained thereby.

It is evident that a factory could be made as healthy and pleasant as a

scientific laboratory. And it is no less evident that it would be

advantageous to make it so. In a spacious and well-ventilated factory

work is better; it is easy to introduce small ameliorations, of which

each represents an economy of time or of manual labour. And if most of

the workshops we know are foul and unhealthy, it is because the workers

are of no account in the organization of factories, and because the most

absurd waste of human energy is its distinctive feature.

Nevertheless, now and again, we already find some factories so well

managed that it would be a real pleasure to work in them, if the work,

be it well understood, were not to last more than four or five hours a

day, and if every one had the possibility of varying it according to his

tastes.

Look at this factory, unfortunately consecrated to engines of war. It is

perfect as far as regards sanitary and intelligent organization. It

occupies fifty English acres of land, fifteen of which are roofed with

glass. The pavement of fire-proof bricks is as clean as that of a

miner’s cottage, and the glass roof is carefully cleaned by a gang of

workmen who do nothing else. In this factory are forged steel ingots or

blooms weighing as much as twenty tons; and when you stand thirty feet

from the immense furnace, whose flames have a temperature of more than a

thousand degrees, you do not guess its presence save when its great jaws

open to let out a steel monster. And the monster is handled by only

three or four workmen, who now here, now there, open a tap, causing

immense cranes to move by pressure of water in the pipes.

You enter expecting to hear the deafening noise of stampers, and you

find that there are no stampers. The immense hundred-ton guns and the

crank-shafts of transatlantic steamers are forged by hydraulic pressure,

and instead of forging steel, the worker has but to turn a tap to give

it shape, which makes a far more homogeneous metal, without crack or

flaw, of the blooms, whatever be their thickness.

We expect an infernal grating, and we find machines which cut blocks of

steel thirty feet long with no more noise than is needed to cut cheese.

And when we expressed our admiration to the engineer who showed us

round, he answered —

“It is a mere question of economy! This machine, that planes steel, has

been in use for forty-two years. It would not have lasted ten years if

its component parts, badly adjusted, lacking in cohesive strength,

‘interfered’ and creaked at each movement of the plane!”

“And the blast-furnaces? It would be a waste to let heat escape instead

of utilizing it. Why roast the founders, when heat lost by radiation

represents tons of coal?”

“The stampers that made buildings shake five leagues off were also

waste! It is better to forge by pressure than by impact, and it costs

less — there is less loss.”

“In a factory, light, cleanliness, the space allotted to each bench, is

but a simple question of economy. Work is better done when you can see

and you have elbow-room.”

“It is true,”; he said, “we were very cramped before coming here. Land

is so expensive in the vicinity of large towns — landlords are so

grasping!”

It is even so in mines. We know what mines are like nowadays from Zola’s

descriptions and from newspaper reports. But the mine of the future will

be well ventilated, with a temperature as easily regulated as that of a

library; there will be no horses doomed to die below the earth:

underground traction will be carried on by means of an automatic cable

put in motion at the pit’s mouth. Ventilators will be always working,

and there will never be explosions. This is no dream. Such a mine is

already to be seen in England; we went down it. Here again this

organization is simply a question of economy. The mine of which we

speak, in spite of its immense depth (466 yards), has an output of a

thousand tons of coal a day, with only two hundred miners — five tons a

day per each worker, whereas the average for the two thousand pits in

England is hardly three hundred tons a year per man.

If necessary, we could multiply examples proving that Fourier’s dream

regarding material organization was not a Utopia.

This question has, however, been so frequently discussed in Socialist

newspapers that public opinion might have been educated. Factory, forge,

and mine can be as healthy and magnificent as the finest laboratories in

modern universities, and the better the organization the more will man’s

labour produce.

If it be so, can we doubt that work will become a pleasure and a

relaxation in a society of equals, in which “hands” will not be

compelled to sell themselves to toil, and to accept work under any

conditions? Repugnant tasks will disappear, because it is evident that

these unhealthy conditions are harmful to society as a whole. Slaves can

submit to them, but free men will create new conditions, and their work

will be pleasant and infinitely more productive. The exceptions of

to-day will be the rule of to-morrow.

The same will come to pass as regards domestic work, which to-day

society lays on the shoulders of that drudge of humanity — woman.

II

A society regenerated by the Revolution will make domestic slavery

disappear — this last form of slavery, perhaps the most tenacious,

because it is also the most ancient. Only it will not come about in the

way dreamt of by Phalansterians, nor in the manner often imagined by

authoritarian Communists.

Phalansteries are repugnant to millions of human beings. The most

reserved man certainly feels the necessity of meeting his fellows for

the purpose of common work, which becomes the more attractive the more

he feels himself a part of an immense whole. But it is not so for the

hours of leisure, reserved for rest and intimacy. The phalanstery and

the familystery do not take this into account, or else they endeavour to

supply this need by artificial groupings.

A phalanstery, which is in fact nothing but an immense hotel, can please

some, and even all at a certain period of their life, but the great mass

prefers family life (family life of the future, be it understood). They

prefer isolated apartments, Normans and Anglo-Saxons even going as far

as to prefer houses of from six to eight rooms, in which the family, or

an agglomeration of friends, can live apart. Sometimes a phalanstery is

a necessity, but it would be hateful, were it the general rule.

Isolation, alternating with time spent in society, is the normal desire

of human nature. This is why one of the greatest tortures in prison is

the impossibility of isolation, much as solitary confinement becomes

torture in its turn, when not alternated with hours of social life.

As to considerations of economy, which are sometimes laid stress on in

favour of phalansteries, they are those of a petty tradesman. The most

important economy, the only reasonable one, is to make life pleasant for

all, because the man who is satisfied with his life produces infinitely

more than the man who curses his surroundings.[7]

Other Socialists reject the phalanstery. But when you ask them how

domestic work can be organized, they answer: “Each can do ‘his own

work.’ My wife manages the house; the wives of bourgeois will do as

much.” And if it is a bourgeois playing at Socialism who speaks, he will

add, with a gracious smile to his wife: “Is it not true, darling, that

you would do without a servant in a Socialist society? You would work

like the wife of our good comrade Paul or the wife of John the

carpenter?”

Servant or wife, man always reckons on woman to do the house-work.

But woman, too, at last claims her share — in the emancipation of

humanity. She no longer wants to be the beast of burden of the house.

She considers it sufficient work to give many years of her life to the

rearing of her children. She no longer wants to be the cook, the mender,

the sweeper of the house! And, owing to American women taking the lead

in obtaining their claims, there is a general complaint of the dearth of

women who will condescend to domestic work in the United States. My lady

prefers art, politics, literature, or the gaming tables; as to the

work-girls, they are few, those who consent to submit to apron-slavery,

and servants are only found with difficulty in the States. Consequently,

the solution, a very simple one, is pointed out by life itself.

Machinery undertakes three-quarters of the household cares.

You black your boots, and you know how ridiculous this work is. What can

be more stupid than rubbing a boot twenty or thirty times with a brush?

A tenth of the European population must be compelled to sell itself in

exchange for a miserable shelter and insufficient food, and woman must

consider herself a slave, in order that millions of her sex should go

through this performance every morning.

But hairdressers have already machines for brushing glossy or woolly

heads of hair. Why should we not apply, then, the same principle to the

other extremity? So it has been done, and nowadays the machine for

blacking boots is in general use in big American and European hotels.

Its use is spreading outside hotels. In large English schools, where the

pupils are boarding in the houses of the teachers, it has been found

easier to have one single establishment which undertakes to brush a

thousand pairs of boots every morning.

As to washing up! Where can we find a housewife who has not a horror of

this long and dirty work, that is usually done by hand, solely because

the work of the domestic slave is of no account.

In America they do better. There are already a number of cities in which

hot water is conveyed to the houses as cold water is in Europe. Under

these conditions the problem was a simple one, and a woman — Mrs.

Cochrane — solved it. Her machine washes twelve dozen plates or dishes,

wipes them and dries them, in less than three minutes. A factory in

Illinois manufactures these machines and sells them at a price within

reach of the average middle-class purse. And why should not small

households send their crockery to an establishment as well as their

boots? It is even probable that the two functions, brushing and washing

up, will be undertaken by the same association.

Cleaning, rubbing the skin off your hands when washing and wringing

linen; sweeping floors and brushing carpets, thereby raising clouds of

dust which afterwards occasion much trouble to dislodge from the places

where they have settled down, all this work is still done because woman

remains a slave, but it tends to disappear as it can be infinitely

better done by machinery. Machines of all kinds will be introduced into

households, and the distribution of motor-power in private houses will

enable people to work them without muscular effort.

Such machines cost little to manufacture. If we still pay very much for

them, it is because they are not in general use, and chiefly because an

exorbitant tax is levied upon every machine by the gentlemen who wish to

live in grand style and who have speculated on land, raw material,

manufacture, sale, patents, and duties.

But emancipation from domestic toil will not be brought about by small

machines only. Households are emerging from their present state of

isolation; they begin to associate with other households to do in common

what they did separately.

In fact, in the future we shall not have a brushing machine, a machine

for washing up plates, a third for washing linen, and so on, in each

house. To the future, on the contrary, belongs the common heating

apparatus that sends heat into each room of a whole district and spares

the lighting of fires. It is already so in a few American cities. A

great central furnace supplies all houses and all rooms with hot water,

which circulates in pipes; and to regulate the temperature you need only

turn a tap. And should you care to have a blazing fire in any particular

room you can light the gas specially supplied for heating purposes from

a central reservoir. All the immense work of cleaning chimneys and

keeping up fires — and woman knows what time it takes — is disappearing.

Candles, lamps, and even gas have had their day. There are entire cities

in which it is sufficient to press a button for light to burst forth,

and, indeed, it is a simple question of economy and of knowledge to give

yourself the luxury of electric light. And lastly, also in America, they

speak of forming societies for the almost complete suppression of

household work. It would only be necessary to create a department for

every block of houses. A cart would come to each door and take the boots

to be blacked, the crockery to be washed up, the linen to be washed, the

small things to be mended (if it were worth while), the carpets to be

brushed, and the next morning would bring back the things entrusted to

it all well cleaned. A few hours later your hot coffee and your eggs

done to a nicety would appear on your table. It is a fact that between

twelve and two o’clock there are more than twenty million Americans and

as many Englishmen who eat roast beef or mutton, boiled pork, potatoes,

and a seasonable vegetable. And at the lowest figure eight million fires

burn during two or three hours to roast this meat and cook these

vegetables; eight million women spend their time to prepare this meal,

that perhaps consists at most of ten different dishes.

“Fifty fires burn,” wrote an American woman the other day, “where one

would suffice!” Dine at home, at your own table, with your children, if

you like; but only think yourself, why should these fifty women waste

their whole morning to prepare a few cups of coffee and a simple meal!

Why fifty fires, when two people and one single fire would suffice to

cook all these pieces of meat and all these vegetables? Choose your own

beef or mutton to be roasted if you are particular. Season the

vegetables to your taste if you prefer a particular sauce! But have a

single kitchen with a single fire, and organize it as beautifully as you

are able to.

Why has woman’s work never been of any account? Why in every family are

the mother and three or four servants obliged to spend so much time at

what pertains to cooking? Because those who want to emancipate mankind

have not included woman in their dream of emancipation, and consider it

beneath their superior masculine dignity to think “of those kitchen

arrangements,” which they have rayed on the shoulders of that

drudge-woman.

To emancipate woman is not only to open the gates of the university, the

law courts, or the parliaments, for her, for the “emancipated” woman

will always throw domestic toil on to another woman. To emancipate woman

is to free her from the brutalizing toil of kitchen and washhouse; it is

to organize your household in such a way as to enable her to rear her

children, if she be so minded, while still retaining sufficient leisure

to take her share of social life.

It will come to pass. As we have said, things are already improving.

Only let us fully understand that a revolution, intoxicated with the

beautiful words Liberty, Equality, Solidarity would not be a revolution

if it maintained slavery at home. Half humanity subjected to the slavery

of the hearth would still have to rebel against the other half.

Chapter 11: Free Agreement

I

Accustomed as we are by hereditary prejudices and absolutely unsound

education and training to see Government, legislation and magistracy

everywhere around, we have come to believe that man would tear his

fellow man to pieces like a wild beast the day the police took his eye

off him; that chaos would come about if authority were overthrown during

a revolution. And with our eyes shut we pass by thousands and thousands

of human groupings which form themselves freely, without any

intervention of the law, and attain results infinitely superior to those

achieved under governmental tutelage.

If you open a daily paper you find its pages are entirely devoted to

Government transactions and to political jobbery. A Chinaman reading it

would believe that in Europe nothing gets done save by order of some

master. You find nothing in them about institutions that spring up, grow

up, and develop without ministerial prescription. Nothing — or hardly

nothing! Even when there is a heading — “Sundry Events” — it is because

they are connected with the police. A family drama, an act of rebellion,

will only be mentioned if the police have appeared on the scene.

Three hundred and fifty million Europeans love or hate one another,

work, or live on their incomes; but, apart from literature, theatre, or

sport, their lives remain ignored by newspapers if Governments have not

intervened in some way or other. It is even so with history. We know the

least details of the life of a king or of a parliament; all good and bad

speeches pronounced by the politicians have been preserved. “Speeches

that have never had the least influence on the vote of a single member,”

as an old parliamentarian said. Royal visits, good or bad humour of

politicians, jokes or intrigues, are all carefully recorded for

posterity. But we have the greatest difficulty to reconstitute a city of

the Middle Ages, to understand the mechanism of that immense commerce

that was carried on between Hanseatic cities, or to know how the city of

Rouen built its cathedral. If a scholar spends his life in studying

these questions, his works remain unknown, and parliamentary histories —

that is to say, the defective ones, as they only treat of one side of

social life — multiply, are circulated, are taught in schools.

And we do not even perceive the prodigious work accomplished every day

by spontaneous groups of men, which constitutes the chief work of our

century.

We therefore propose to point out some of these most striking

manifestations, and to prove that men, as soon as their interests do not

absolutely clash, act in concert, harmoniously, and perform collective

work of a very complex nature.

It is evident that in present society, based on individual property —

that is to say, on plunder, and on a narrow minded and therefore foolish

individualism — facts of this kind are necessarily few in number;

agreements are not always perfectly free, and often have a mean, if not

execrable aim.

But what concerns us is not to give examples which we could blindly

follow, and which, moreover, present society could not possibly give us.

What we have to do is to prove that, in spite of the authoritarian

individualism which stifles us, there remains in our life, taken as a

whole, a great part in which we only act by free agreement, and that it

would be much easier than we think to dispense with Government.

In support of our view we have already mentioned railways, and we are

about to return to them.

We know that Europe has a system of railways, 175,000 miles long, and

that on this network you can nowadays travel from north to south, from

east to west, from Madrid to Petersburg, and from Calais to

Constantinople, without stoppages, without even changing carriages (when

you travel by express). More than that: a parcel thrown into a station

will find its addressee anywhere, in Turkey or in Central Asia, without

more formality needed for sending it than writing its destination on a

bit of paper.

This result might have been obtained in two ways. A Napoleon, a

Bismarck, or some potentate having conquered Europe, would from Paris,

Berlin, or Rome, draw a railway map and regulate the hours of the

trains. The Russian Tsar Nicholas I dreamt of taking such action. When

he was shown rough drafts of railways between Moscow and Petersburg, he

seized a ruler and drew on the map of Russia a straight line between

these two capitals, saying, “Here is the plan.” And the road ad was

built in a straight line, filling in deep ravines, building bridges of a

giddy height, which had to be abandoned a few years later, at a cost of

about £120,000 to £150,000 per English mile.

This is one way, but happily things were managed differently. Railways

were constructed piece by piece, the pieces were joined together, and

the hundred divers companies, to whom these pieces belonged, came to an

understanding concerning the arrival and departure of their trains, and

the running of carriages on their rails, from all countries, without

unloading merchandise as it passes from one network to another.

All this was done by free agreement, by exchange of letters and

proposals, by congresses at which relegates met to discuss certain

special subjects, but not to make laws; after the congress, the

delegates returned to their companies, not with a law, but with the

draft of a contract to be accepted or rejected.

There were certainly obstinate men who would not be convinced. But a

common interest compelled them to agree without invoking the help of

armies against the refractory members.

This immense network of railways connected together, and the enormous

traffic it has given rise to, no doubt constitutes the most striking

trait of our century; and it is the result of free agreement. If a man

had foreseen or predicted it fifty years ago, our grandfathers would

have thought him idiotic or mad. They would have said: “Never will you

be able to make the shareholders of a hundred companies listen to

reason! It is a Utopia, a fairy tale. A central Government, with an

‘iron’ director, can alone enforce it.”

And the most interesting thing in this organization is, that there is no

European Central Government of Railways! Nothing! No minister of

railways, no dictator, not even a continental parliament, not even a

directing committee! Everything is done by contract.

So we ask the believers in the State, who pretend that “we can never do

without a central Government, were it only for regulating the traffic,”

we ask them: “But how do European railways manage without them? How do

they continue to convey millions of travelers and mountains of luggage

across a continent? If companies owning railways have been able to

agree, why should railway workers, who would take possession of

railways, not agree likewise? And if the Petersburg Warsaw Company and

that of Paris Belfort can act in harmony, without giving themselves the

luxury of a common commander, why, in the midst of our societies,

consisting of groups of free workers, should we need a Government?”

II

When we endeavour to prove by examples that even to-day, in spite of the

iniquitous organization of society as a whole, men, provided their

instincts be not diametrically opposed, agree without the intervention

of authority, we do not ignore the objections that will be put forth.

These examples have their defective side, because it is impossible to

quote a single organization exempt from the exploitation of the weak by

the strong, the poor by the rich. That is why Statists will not fail to

tell us with their wonted logic: “You see that the intervention of the

State necessary to put an end to this exploitation!”

Only they forget the lessons of history; they do not tell us to what

extent the State itself has contributed towards the existing order by

creating proletarians and delivering them up to exploiters. They also

forget to tell us if it is possible to put an end to exploitation while

the primal causes -- private capital and poverty, two-thirds of which

are artificially created by the State -- continue to exist.

As regards the complete harmony among railway companies, we expect them

to say: “Do you not see railway companies oppress and ill-use their

employers and their travellers! The State must intervene to protect the

public!”

But have we not often repeated that as long as there are capitalists,

this abuse of power will be perpetuated It is precisely the State, the

would-be benefactor, that has given to the companies that monopoly which

they possess to-day. Has it not created concessions, guarantees? Has it

not sent its soldiers against railwaymen on strike? And during the first

trials (we see it in Russia), has it not extended the privilege to

forbidding the press mentioning railway accidents, so as not to

depreciate the shares it guaranteed? Has it not favoured the monopoly

which has anointed the Vanderbilts and the Polyakoffs, the directors of

the P.L.M., the C.P.R., the St. Gothard, “the kings of the times”?

Therefore, if we give as an example the tacit agreement come to between

railway companies, it is by no means as an ideal of economical

management, nor even an ideal of technical organization. It is to show

that if capitalists, without any other aim than that of augmenting their

dividends at other people's expense, can exploit railways successfully

without establishing an International Department, societies of working

men will be able to do it just as well, and even better, without

nominating a Ministry of European railways.

Another objection is raised that is more serious at first sight. We may

be told that the agreement we speak of is not perfectly free, that the

large companies lay down the law to the small ones. They might, for

example, quote a certain rich company compelling travellers who go from

Berlin to Bâle to pass via Cologne and Frankfort, instead of taking the

Leipzig route; a second, carrying goods sixty or a hundred and thirty

miles in a roundabout way (on long distances) to favour influential

shareholders; a third, ruining secondary lines. In the United States

travellers and goods are sometimes compelled to travel impossibly

circuitous routes so that dollars may flow into the pocket of a

Vanderbilt.

Our answer will be the same: As long as Capital exists, the greater'

Capital will oppress the lesser. But oppression does not result from

Capital only. It is also owing to the support given them by the State,

to monopoly created by the State in their favour, that certain large

companies oppress the little ones. The early Socialists have shown how

English legislation did all in its powers to ruin small industries,

drive the peasant to poverty, and deliver over to wealthy industrial

employers battalions of men, compelled to work for no matter what

salary. Railway legislation did exactly the same. Strategic lines,

subsidized lines, companies which received the International Mail

monopoly, everything was brought into play to forward wealthy

financiers' interests. When Rothschild, creditor to all European States,

puts capital in a railway, his faithful subjects, the ministers, will do

their best to make him earn more.

In the United States, in the Democracy that authoritarians hold up to us

as an ideal, the most scandalous fraudulency has crept into everything

that concerns railroads. Thus, if a company ruins its competitors by

cheap fares, it is often enabled to do so because it is reimbursed by

land given to it by the State for a gratuity. Documents recently

published concerning the American wheat trade have fully shown up the

part played by the State in the exploitation of the weak by the strong.

Here, too, the power of accumulated capital has grown tenfold and a

hundredfold by State help. So that, when we see syndicates of railway

companies (a product of free agreement) succeeding in protecting their

small companies against big ones, we are astonished at the intrinsic

force of free agreement that can hold its own against all-powerful

Capital favoured by the State. It is a fact that little companies exist,

in spite of the State's partiality. If in France, land of

centralization, we only see five or six large companies, there are more

than a hundred and ten in Great Britain who agree remarkably well, and

who are certainly better organized for the rapid transit of travellers

and goods than the French and German companies.

Moreover, that is not the question. Large Capital, favoured by the

State, can always, if it be to its advantage, crush the lesser one. What

is of importance to us is this: The agreement between hundreds of

companies to whom the railways of Europe belong, was established without

intervention of a central government laying down the law to the divers

societies; it has subsisted by means of congresses composed of

delegates, who discuss among themselves, and submit proposals, not laws,

to their constituents. It is a new principle that differs completely

from all governmental principle, monarchical or republican, absolute or

parliamentarian. It is an innovation that has been timidly introduced

into the customs of Europe, but has come to stay.

III

How often have we not read in the writings of State-loving Socialists:

“Who, then, will undertake the regulation of canal traffic in future

society? Should it enter the mind of one of your Anarchist 'comrades' to

put his barge across a canal and obstruct thousands of boats, who will

force him to yield to reason?”

Let us confess the supposition to be somewhat fanciful, yet it might be

said, for instance: “Should a certain commune, or a group of communes,

want to make their barges pass before others, they might perhaps block

the canal in order to carry stones, while wheat, needed in another

commune, would have to stand by. Who, then, would regulate the barge

traffic if not the Government?”

But real life has again demonstrated that Government can be very well

dispensed with here as elsewhere. Free agreement, free organization,

replace that noxious and costly system, and do better.

We know what canals mean to Holland. They are its highways. We also know

how much traffic there is on the canals. What is carried along our

highroads and railroads is transported on canal boats in Holland. There

you could find cause to fight, to make your boats pass before others.

There the Government might really interfere to keep the traffic in

order.

Yet it is not so. The Dutch settled matters in a more practical way,

long ago, by founding a kind of guilds, or syndicates of boatmen. These

were free associations sprung from the very needs of navigation. The

right of way for the boats was adjusted by a certain registered order;

they followed one another in turn. None were allowed to get ahead of the

others under pain of being excluded from the guild. None could station

more than a certain number of days along the quay, and if the owner

found no goods to carry during that time, so much the worse for him; he

had to depart with his empty barge to leave room for newcomers.

Obstruction was thus avoided, even though the competition between the

private owners of the boats continued to exist. Were the latter

suppressed, the agreement would have been only the more cordial. It is

unnecessary to add that the ship-owners could adhere or not to the

syndicate. That was their business, but most of them elected to join it.

Moreover, these syndicates offered such great advantages that they

spread also along the Rhine, the Weser, the Oder, and as far as Berlin.

The boatmen did not wait for a great Bismarck to annex Holland to

Germany, and to appoint an Ober Haupt General Staats Canal Navigations

Rath (Supreme Head Councillor of the General States Canal Navigation),

with a number of stripes corresponding to the length of the title. They

preferred coming to an international understanding. Besides, a number of

ship-owners, whose sailing vessels ply between Germany and Scandinavia,

as well as Russia, have also joined these syndicates, in order to

regulate traffic in the Baltic and to bring about a certain harmony in

the chassé-croisé of vessels. These associations have sprung up freely,

recruiting volunteer adherents, and have nought in common with

governments.

It is, however, more than probable that here too greater capital

oppresses lesser. Maybe the syndicate has also a tendency to become a

monopoly, especially where it receives the precious patronage of the

State that will not fail to interfere with it. Let us not forget either

that these syndicates represent associations whose members have only

private interests at stake, and that if at the same time each ship-owner

were compelled -- by the socializing of production, consumption, and

exchange -- to belong to a hundred other associations for the satisfying

of his needs, things would have a different aspect. A group of

ship-owners, powerful on sea, would feel weak on land, and they would be

obliged to lessen their claims in order to come to terms with railways,

factories, and other groups.

At any rate, without discussing the future, here is another spontaneous

association that has dispensed with Government. Let us quote more

examples. As we are talking of ships and boats, let us mention one of

the most splendid organizations that our century has brought forth, one

of those we may with right be proud of -- the English Lifeboat

Association.

It is known that every year more than a thousand ships are wrecked on

the shores of England. At sea a good ship seldom fears a storm. It is

near the coasts that danger threatens -- rough seas that shatter her

stem-post, squalls that carry off her masts and sails, currents that

render her unmanageable, reefs and sand banks on which she runs aground.

Even in olden times, when it was a custom among inhabitants of the

coasts to light fires in order to attract vessels on to reefs, and to

seize their cargoes, they always strove to save the crew. Seeing a ship

in distress, they launched their nutshells and went to the rescue of

shipwrecked sailors, only too often finding a watery grave themselves.

Every hamlet along the seashore has its legends of heroism, displayed by

woman as well as by man, to save crews in distress.

No doubt the State and men of science have done something to diminish

the number of casualties. Lighthouses, signals, charts, meteorological

warnings have diminished them greatly, but there remain a thousand ships

and several thousand human lives to be saved every year.

To this end a few men of goodwill put their shoulders to the wheel.

Being good sailors and navigators themselves, they invented a lifeboat

that could weather a storm without being torn to pieces or capsizing,

and they set to work to interest the public in their venture, to collect

the necessary funds for constructing boats, and for stationing them

along the coasts, wherever they could be of use.

These men, not being Jacobins, did not turn to the Government. They

understood that to bring their enterprise to a successful issue they

must have the co-operation, the enthusiasm, the local knowledge, and

especially the self-sacrifice of sailors. They also understood that to

find men who at the first signal would launch their boat at night, in a

chaos of waves, not suffering themselves to be deterred by darkness or

breakers, and struggling five, six, ten hours against the tide before

reaching a vessel in distress — men ready to risk their lives to save

those of others, there must be a feeling of solidarity, a spirit of

sacrifice not to be bought with galloon. It was therefore a perfectly

spontaneous movement, sprung from agreement and individual initiative.

Hundreds of local groups arose along the coasts. The initiators had the

common sense not to pose as masters. They looked for sagacity in the

fishermen's hamlets, and when a lord sent £1000 to a village on the

coast to erect a lifeboat station, and his offer was accepted, he left

the choice of a site to the local fishermen and sailors.

Models of new boats were not submitted to the Admiralty. We read in a

Report of the Association: “As it is of importance that lifeboatmen

should have full confidence in the vessel they man, the Committee will

make a point of constructing and equipping the boats according to the

lifeboatmen's expressed wish.” In consequence every year brings with it

new improvements.

The work is wholly conducted by volunteers organizing in committees and

local groups; by mutual aid and agreement! -- "Oh, Anarchists! --

Moreover, they ask nothing of ratepayers, and in a year they may receive

£40,000 in spontaneous subscriptions.

As to the results, here they are: In 1891 the Association possessed 293

lifeboats. The same year it saved 601 shipwrecked sailors and 33

vessels. Since its foundation it has saved 32,671 human beings. In 1886,

three lifeboats with all their men having perished at sea, hundreds of

new volunteers entered their names, organized themselves into local

groups, and the agitation resulted in the construction of twenty

additional boats. As we proceed, let us note that every year the

Association sends to the fishermen and sailors excellent barometers, at

a price three times less than their sale price. It propagates

meteorological knowledge, and warns the parties concerned of the sudden

changes predicted by men of science.

Let us repeat that these hundreds of committees and local groups are not

organized hierarchically, and are composed exclusively of volunteers,

life boatmen, and people interested in the work. The Central Committee,

which is more of a centre for correspondence, in no wise interferes.

It is true that when voting on a question of education or local taxation

takes place in a district, these committees do not, as such, take part

in the deliberations, a modesty, which unfortunately the members of

elected bodies do not imitate. But, on the other hand, these brave men

do not allow those who have never faced a storm to legislate for them

about saving life. At the first signal of distress they rush forth,

concert, and go ahead. There are no galloons, but much goodwill.

Let us take another society of the same kind that of the Red Cross. The

name matters little; let us examine it.

Imagine somebody saying twenty-five years ago: “The State, capable as it

is of massacring twenty thousand men in a day, and of wounding fifty

thousand more, is incapable of helping its own victims; as long as war

exists private initiative must intervene, and men of goodwill must

organize internationally for this humane work!” What mockery would not

have met the man who would have dared thus to speak! To begin with he

would have been called Utopian, and if that did not silence him he would

have been told: “Volunteers will be found wanting precisely where they

are most needed, your hospitals will be centralized in a safe place,

while what is indispensable will be wanting in the ambulances. National

rivalry will cause poor soldiers to die without help.” Disheartening

remarks are only equalled by the number of speakers. Who of us has not

heard men hold forth in this strain?

Now we know what happened. Red Cross societies organized themselves

freely, everywhere, in all countries, in thousands of localities; and

when the war of 1870-1 broke out, the volunteers set to work. Men and

women offered their services. Thousands of hospitals and ambulances were

organized; trains were started carrying ambulances, provisions, linen,

and medicaments for the wounded. The English committees sent entire

convoys of food, clothing, tools, grain to sow, beasts of draught, even

steam-ploughs with their attendants to help in the tillage of

departments devastated by the war! Only consult La Croix Rouge, by

Gustave Moynier, and you will be really struck by the immensity of the

work performed.

As to the prophets ever ready to deny other men's courage, good sense,

and intelligence, and believing themselves to be the only ones capable

of ruling the world with a rod, none of their predictions were realized.

The devotion of the Red Cross volunteers was beyond all praise. They

were only too glad to occupy the most dangerous posts; and whereas the

salaried doctors of the State fled with their staff when the Prussians

approached, the Red Cross volunteers continued their work under fire,

enduring the brutalities of Bismarck's and Napoleon's officers,

lavishing their care on the wounded of all nationalities. Dutch,

Italians, Swedes, Belgians, even Japanese and Chinese agreed remarkably

well. They distributed their hospitals and their ambulances according to

the needs of the occasion. They vied with one another especially in the

hygiene of their hospitals And there is many a Frenchman who still

speaks with deep gratitude of the tender care he received from a Dutch

or German volunteer in the Red Cross ambulances. But what is this to an

authoritarian? His ideal is the regiment doctor, salaried by the State.

What does he care for the Red Cross and its hygienic hospitals, if the

nurses be not functionaries?

Here is then an organization, sprung up but yesterday, and which reckons

its members by hundreds of thousands; possesses ambulances, hospital

trains, elaborates new processes for treating wounds, and so on, and is

due to the spontaneous initiative of a few devoted men.

Perhaps we shall be told that the State has something to do with this

organization. Yes, States have laid hands on it to seize it. The

directing committees are presided over by those whom flunkeys call

princes of the blood. Emperors and queens lavishly patronize the

national committees. But it is not to this patronage that the success of

the organization is due. It is to the thousand local committees of each

nation; to the activity of individuals, to the devotion of all those who

try to help the victims of war. And this devotion would be far greater

if the State did not meddle with it.

In any case, it was not by the order of an International Directing

Committee that Englishmen and Japanese, Swedes and Chinamen, bestirred

themselves to send help to the wounded in 1871. It was not by order of

an international ministry that hospitals rose on the invaded territory

and that ambulances were carried on to the battlefield. It was by the

initiative of volunteers from each country. Once on the spot, they did

not get hold of one another by the hair as foreseen by Jacobins; they

all set to work without distinction of nationality.

We may regret that such great efforts should be put to the service of so

bad a cause, and ask ourselves like the poet's child: “Why inflict

wounds if you are to heal them afterwards?” In striving to destroy the

power of capital and bourgeois authority, we work to put an end to

massacres, and we would far rather see the Red Cross volunteers put

forth their activity to bring about (with us) the suppression of war;

but we had to mention this immense organization as another illustration

of results produced by free agreement and free aid.

If we wished to multiply examples taken from the art of exterminating

men we should never end. Suffice to quote the numerous societies to

which the German army owes its force, that does not only depend on

discipline, as is generally believed. I mean the societies whose aim is

to propagate military knowledge.

At one of the last congresses of the Military Alliance (Kriegerbund),

delegates from 2452 federated societies, comprising 151,712 members,

were present. But there are besides very numerous Shooting, Military

Games, Strategical Games, Topographical Studies Societies "these are the

workshops in which the technical knowledge of the German army is

developed, not in regimental schools. It is a formidable network of all

kinds of societies, including military men and civilians, geographers

and gymnasts, sportsmen and technologists, which rise up spontaneously,

organize, federate, discuss, and explore the country. It is these

voluntary and free associations that make up the real backbone of the

German army.

Their aim is execrable. It is the maintenance of the Empire. But what

concerns us, is to point out that, in spite of military organization

being the “Great mission” of the State, success in this branch is the

more certain the more it is left to the free agreement of groups and to

the free initiative of individuals. Even in matters pertaining to war,

free agreement is thus appealed to; and to further prove our assertion

let us mention the three hundred thousand British volunteers, the

British National Artillery Association, and the Society, now in course

of organization, for the defence of England's coasts, as well as the

appeals made to the commercial fleet, the Bicyclists' Corps, and the new

organizations of private motor-cars and steam launches.

The State is abdicating and appealing in its holy functions to private

individuals. Everywhere free organization trespasses on its domain. And

yet, the facts we have quoted let us catch only a glimpse of what free

agreement has in store for us in the future, when there will be no more

State.

Chapter 12: Objections

I

Let us now examine the principal objections put forth against Communism.

Most of them are evidently caused by a simple misunderstanding, yet they

raise important questions and merit our attention.

It is not for us to answer the objections raised by authoritarian

Communism — we ourselves hold with them. Civilized nations have suffered

too much in the long, hard struggle for the emancipation of the

individual, to disown their past work and to tolerate a Government that

would make itself felt in the smallest details of a citizen’s life, even

if that Government had no other aim than the good of the community.

Should an authoritarian Socialist society ever succeed in establishing

itself, it could not last; general discontent would soon force it to

break up, or to reorganize itself on principles of liberty.

It is of an Anarchist-Communist society we are about to speak, a society

that recognizes the absolute liberty of the individual, that does not

admit of any authority, and makes use of no compulsion to drive men to

work. Limiting our studies to the economic side of the question, let us

see if such a society, composed of men as they are to-day, neither

better nor worse, neither more nor less industrious, would have a chance

of successful development.

The objection is known. “If the existence of each is guaranteed, and if

the necessity of earning wages does not compel men to work, nobody will

work. Every man will lay the burden of his work on another if he is not

forced to do it himself.” Let us first remark the incredible levity with

which this objection is raised, without taking into consideration that

the question is in reality merely to know, on the one hand, whether you

effectively obtain by wage-work the results you aim at; and, on the

other hand, whether voluntary work is not already more productive to-day

than work stimulated by wages. A question which would require profound

study. But whereas in exact sciences men give their opinion on subjects

infinitely less important and less complicated after serious research,

after carefully collecting and analyzing facts, on this question they

will pronounce judgment without appeal, resting satisfied with any one

particular event, such as, for example, the want of success of a

communist association in America. They act like the barrister, who does

not see in the council for the opposite side a representative of a

cause, or an opinion contrary to his own, but a simple adversary in an

oratorical debate; and if he be lucky enough to find a repartee, does

not otherwise care to justify his cause. Therefore the study of this

essential basis of all Political Economy, the study of the most

favourable conditions for giving society the greatest amount of useful

products with the least waste of human energy, does not advance. They

limit themselves to repeating commonplace assertions, or else they

pretend ignorance of our assertions.

What is most striking in this levity is that even in capitalist

Political Economy you already find a few writers compelled by facts to

doubt the axiom put forth by the founders of their science, that the

threat of hunger is man’s best stimulant for productive work. They begin

to perceive that in production a certain collective element is

introduced which has been too much neglected up till now, and which

might be more important than personal gain. The inferior quality of

wage-work, the terrible waste of human energy in modern agricultural and

industrial labour, the ever growing quantity of pleasure-seekers, who

to-day load their burden on others’ shoulders, the absence of a certain

animation in production that is becoming more and more apparent; all

this begins to preoccupy the economists of the “classical” school. Some

of them ask themselves if they have not got on the wrong track: if the

imaginary evil being, that was supposed to be tempted exclusively by a

bait of lucre or wages, really exists. This heresy penetrates even into

universities; it is found in books of orthodox economy.

This does not hinder a great many Socialist reformers to remain

partisans of individual remuneration, and defending the old citadel of

wagedom, notwithstanding that it is being delivered over stone by stone

to the assailants by its former defenders.

They fear that without compulsion the masses will not work.

But during our own lifetime have we not heard the same fears expressed

twice? By the anti-abolitionists in America before Negro emancipation,

and by the Russian nobility before the liberation of the serfs? “Without

the whip the Negro will not work,” said the anti-abolitionist. “Free

from their master’s supervision the serfs will leave the fields

uncultivated,” said the Russian serf-owners. It was the refrain of the

French noblemen in 1789, the refrain of the Middle Ages, a refrain as

old as the world, and we shall hear it every time there is a question of

sweeping away an injustice. And each time actual facts give it the lie.

The liberated peasant of 1792 ploughed with a wild energy unknown to his

ancestors, the emancipated Negro works more than his fathers, and the

Russian peasant, after having honoured the honeymoon of his emancipation

by celebrating Fridays as well as Sundays, has taken up work with as

much eagerness as his liberation was the more complete. There, where the

soil is his, he works desperately; that is the exact word for it. The

anti-abolitionist refrain can be of value to slave-owners; as to the

slaves themselves, they know what it is worth, as they know its motive.

Moreover, Who but economists taught us that if a wage-earner’s work is

but indifferent, an intense and productive work is only obtained from a

man who sees his wealth increase in proportion to his efforts? All hymns

sung in honour of private property can be reduced to this axiom.

For it is remarkable that when economists, wishing to celebrate the

blessings of property, show us how an unproductive, marshy, or stony

soil is clothed with rich harvests when cultivated by the peasant

proprietor, they in nowise prove their thesis in favour of private

property. By admitting: that the only guarantee not to be robbed of the

fruits of your labour is to possess the instruments of labour — which is

true — the economists only prove that man really produces most when he

works in freedom, when he has a certain choice in his occupations, when

he has no overseer to impede him, and lastly, when he sees his work

bringing in a profit to him and to others who work like him, but

bringing in nothing to idlers. This is all we can deduct from their

argumentation, and we maintain the same ourselves.

As to the form of possession of the instruments of labour, they only

mention it indirectly in their demonstration, as a guarantee to the

cultivator that he shall not be robbed of the profits of his yield nor

of his improvements. Besides, in support of their thesis in favour of

private property against all other forms of possession, should not the

economists demonstrate that under the form of communal property land

never produces such rich harvests as when the possession is private? But

it is not so; in fact, the contrary has been observed.

Take for example a commune in the canton of Vaud, in the winter time,

when all the men of the village go to fell wood in the forest, which

belongs to them all. It is precisely during these festivals of toil that

the greatest ardour for work and the most considerable display of human

energy are apparent. No salaried labour, no effort of a private owner

can bear comparison with it.

Or let us take a Russian village, when all its inhabitants mow a field

belonging to the commune, or farmed by it. There you will see what man

can produce when he works in common for communal production. Comrades

vie with one another in cutting the widest swath; women bestir

themselves in their wake so as not to be distanced by the mowers. It is

a festival of labour, in which a hundred people do work in a few hours

that would not have been finished in a few days had they worked

separately. What a sad contrast compared to the work of the isolated

owner!

In fact, we might quote scores of examples among the pioneers of

America, in Swiss, German, Russian, and in certain French villages; or

the work done in Russia by gangs (artels) of masons, carpenters,

boatmen, fishermen, etc., who undertake a task and divide the produce or

the remuneration among themselves, without it passing through the

intermediary of middlemen. We could also mention the great communal

hunts of nomadic tribes, and an infinite number of successful collective

enterprises. And in every case we could show the unquestionable

superiority of communal work compared to that of the wage-earner or the

isolated private owner.

Well-being, that is to say, the satisfaction of physical, artistic, and

moral needs, has always been the most powerful stimulant to work. And

when a hireling produces bare necessities with difficulty, a free

worker, who sees ease and luxury increasing for him and for others in

proportion to his efforts, spends infinitely far more energy and

intelligence, and obtains first-class products in far greater abundance.

The one feels riveted to misery, the other hopes for ease and luxury in

the future. In this lies the whole secret. Therefore a society aiming at

the well-being of all, and at the possibility of all enjoying life in

all its manifestations, will supply voluntary work which will be

infinitely superior and yield far more than work has produced up till

now under the goad of slavery, serfdom, or wagedom.

II

Nowadays, whoever can load on others his share of labour indispensable

to existence, does so, and it is admitted that it will always be so.

Now work indispensable to existence is essentially manual. We may be

artists or scientists; but none of us can do without things obtained by

manual work — bread, clothes, roads, ships, light, heat, etc. And,

moreover, however highly artistic or however subtly metaphysical are our

pleasures, they all depend on manual labour. And it is precisely this

labour — basis of life — that every one tries to avoid.

We understand perfectly well that it must be so nowadays.

Because, to do manual work now, means in reality to shut yourself up for

ten or twelve hours a day in an unhealthy workshop, and to remain

riveted to the same task for twenty or thirty years, and maybe for your

whole life.

It means to be doomed to a paltry wage, to the uncertainty of the

morrow, to want of work, often to destitution, more often than not to

death in a hospital, after having worked forty years to feed, clothe,

amuse, and instruct others than yourself and your children.

It means to bear the stamp of inferiority all your life, because,

whatever the politicians tell us, the manual worker is always considered

inferior to the brain worker, and the one who has toiled ten hours in a

workshop has not the time, and still less the means, to give himself the

high delights of science and art, nor even to prepare himself to

appreciate them; he must be content with the crumbs from the table of

privileged persons.

We understand that under these conditions manual labour is considered a

curse of fate.

We understand that all men have but one dream — that of emerging from,

or enabling their children to emerge from this inferior state; to create

for themselves an “independent” position, which means what? — To also

live by other men’s work!

As long as there will be a class of manual workers and a class of

“brain” workers, black hands and white hands, it will be thus.

What interest, in fact, can this depressing work have for the worker,

when he knows that the fate awaiting him from the cradle to the grave

will be to live in mediocrity, poverty, and insecurity of the morrow?

Therefore, when we see the immense majority of men take up their

wretched task every morning, we are surprised at their perseverance, at

their zeal for work, at the habit that enables them, like machines

blindly obeying an impetus given, to lead this life of misery without

hope for the morrow; without foreseeing ever so vaguely that some day

they, or at least their children, will be part of a humanity rich in all

the treasures of a bountiful nature, in all the enjoyments of knowledge,

scientific and artistic creation, reserved to-day to a few privileged

favourites.

It is precisely to put an end to this separation between manual and

brain work that we want to abolish wagedom, that we want the Social

Revolution. Then work will no longer appear a curse of fate: it will

become what it should be — the free exercise of all the faculties of

man.

Moreover, it is time to submit to a serious analysis this legend about

superior work, supposed to be obtained under the lash of wagedom.

It is enough to visit, not the model factory and workshop that we find

now and again, but ordinary factories, to conceive the immense waste of

human energy that characterizes modern industry. For one factory more or

less rationally organized, there are a hundred or more which waste man’s

labour, without a more substantial motive than that of perhaps bringing

in a few pounds more per day to the employer.

Here you see youths from twenty to twenty five years of age, sitting all

day long on a bench, their chests sunken in, feverishly shaking their

heads and bodies to tie, with the speed of conjurers, the two ends of

worthless scraps of cotton, the refuse of the lace-looms. What progeny

will these trembling and rickety bodies bequeath to their country? “But

they occupy so little room in the factory, and each of them brings me in

sixpence a day,” will say the employer.

In an immense London factory you could see girls, bald at seventeen from

carrying trays of matches on their heads from one room to another, when

the simplest machine could wheel the matches to their tables. But...it

costs so little, the work of women who have no special trade! What is

the use of a machine? When these can do no more, they will be easily

replaced...there are so many in the street.

On the steps of a mansion on an icy night you will find a bare-footed

child asleep, with its bundle of papers in its arms...child-labour costs

so little that it may well be employed, every evening, to sell

tenpenny-worth of papers, of which the poor boy will receive a penny, or

a penny half-penny. And lastly, you may see a robust man tramping,

dangling his arms; he has been out of work for months. Meanwhile his

daughter grows pale in the overheated vapours of the workshop for

dressing stuffs, and his son fills blacking pots by hand, or waits hours

at the corner of a street till a passer-by enables him to earn a penny.

And so it is everywhere, from San Francisco to Moscow, and from Naples

to Stockholm. The waste of human energy is the distinguishing and

predominant trait of industry, not to mention trade where it attains

still more colossal proportions.

What a sad satire is that name, Political Economy, given to the science

of waste of energy under the system of wagedom!

This is not all. If you speak to the director of a well-organized

factory, he will naively explain to you that it is difficult nowadays to

find a skilful, vigorous, and energetic workman, who works with a will.

“Should such a man present himself among the twenty or thirty who call

every Monday asking us for work, he is sure to be received, even if we

are reducing the number of our hands. We recognize him at the first

glance, and he is always accepted, even though we have to get rid of an

older and less active worker the next day.” And the one who has just

received notice to quit, and all those who receive it to-morrow, go to

reinforce that immense reserve army of capital — workmen out of work —

who are only called to the loom or the bench when there is pressure of

work, or to oppose strikers. And those others, the average workers that

are the refuse of the better-class factories? They join the equally

formidable army of aged and indifferent workers that continually

circulates between the second-class factories — those which barely cover

their expenses and make their way in the world by trickery and snares

laid for the buyer, and especially for the consumer in distant

countries.

And if you talk to the workmen themselves, you will soon learn that the

rule in such factories is — never to do entirely what you are capable

of. “Shoddy pay — shoddy work!” this is the advice which the working man

receives from his comrades upon entering such a factory.

For the workers know that if in a moment of generosity they give way to

the entreaties of an employer and consent to intensify the work in order

to carry out a pressing order, this nervous work will be exacted in the

future as a rule in the scale of wages. Therefore in all such factories

they prefer never to produce as much as they can. In certain industries

production is limited so as to keep up high prices, and sometimes the

password, “Go-canny,” is given, which signifies, “Bad work for bad pay!”

Wage-work is serf-work; it cannot, it must not, produce all that it

could produce. And it is high time to disbelieve the legend which

represents wagedom as the best incentive to productive work. If industry

nowadays brings in a hundred times more than it did in the days of our

grandfathers, it is due to the sudden awakening of physical and chemical

sciences towards the end of last century; not to the capitalist

organization of wagedom, but in spite of that organization.

III

Those who have seriously studied the question do not deny any of the

advantages of Communism, on condition, be it well understood, that

Communism be perfectly free, that is to say, Anarchist. They recognize

that work paid with money, even disguised under the name of “labour

notes,” to Workers’ associations governed by the State, would keep up

the characteristics of wagedom and would retain its disadvantages. They

agree that the whole system would soon suffer from it, even if society

came into possession of the instruments of production. And they admit

that, thanks to integral education given to all children, to the

laborious habits of civilized societies, with the liberty of choosing

and varying their occupations and the attractions of work done by equals

for the well-being of all, a Communist society would not be wanting in

producers who would soon make the fertility of the soil triple and

tenfold, and give a new impulse to industry.

This our opponents agree to. “But the danger,” they say, “will come from

that minority of loafers who will not work, and will not have regular

habits in spite of excellent conditions that make work pleasant. To-day

the prospect of hunger compels the most refractory to move along with

the others. The one who does not arrive in time is dismissed. But a

black sheep suffices to contaminate the whole flock, and two or three

sluggish or refractory workmen lead the others astray and bring a spirit

of disorder and rebellion into the workshop that makes work impossible;

so that in the end we shall have to return to a system of compulsion

that forces the ringleaders back into the ranks. And is not the system

of wages paid in proportion to work performed, the only one that enables

compulsion to be employed, without hurting the feelings of the worker?

Because all other means would imply the continual intervention of an

authority that would be repugnant to free men.” This, we believe, is the

objection fairly stated.

It belongs to the category of arguments which try to justify the State,

the Penal Law, the Judge, and the Gaoler.

“As there are people, a feeble minority, who will not submit to social

customs,” the authoritarians say, “we must maintain magistrates,

tribunals and prisons, although these institutions become a source of

new evils of all kinds.”

Therefore we can only repeat what we have so often said concerning

authority in general: “To avoid a possible evil you have recourse to

means which in themselves are a greater evil, and become the source of

those same abuses that you wish to remedy. For do not forget that it is

wagedom, the impossibility of living otherwise than by selling your

labour, which has created the present Capitalist system, whose vices you

begin to recognize.” Let us also remark that this authoritarian way of

reasoning is but a justification of what is wrong in the present system.

Wagedom was not instituted to remove the disadvantages of Communism; its

origin, like that of the State and private ownership, is to be found

elsewhere. It is born of slavery and serfdom imposed by force, and only

wears a more modern garb. Thus the argument in favour of wagedom is as

valueless as those by which they seek to apologize for private property

and the State.

We are, nevertheless, going to examine the objection, and see if there

is any truth in it.

To begin with, Is it not evident that if a society, founded on the

principle of free work, were really menaced by loafers, it could protect

itself without an authoritarian organization and without having recourse

to wagedom?

Let us take a group of volunteers, combining for some particular

enterprise. Having its success at heart, they all work with a will, save

one of the associates, who is frequently absent from his post. Must they

on his account dissolve the group, elect a president to impose fines, or

maybe distribute markers for work done, as is customary in the Academy?

It is evident that neither the one nor the other will be done, but that

some day the comrade who imperils their enterprise will be told:

“Friend, we should like to work with you; but as you are often absent

from your post, and you do your work negligently, we must part. Go and

find other comrades who will put up with your indifference!”

This way is so natural that it is practiced everywhere nowadays, in all

industries, in competition with all possible systems of fines, docking

of wages, supervison, etc.; a workman may enter the factory at the

appointed time, but if he does his work badly, if he hinders his

comrades by his laziness or other defects, and they quarrel with him on

that account, there is an end of it; he is compelled to leave the

workshop.

Authoritarians pretend that it is the almighty employer and his

overseers who maintain regularity and quality of work in factories. In

fact, in a somewhat complicated enterprise, in which the wares produced

pass through many hands before being finished, it is the factory itself,

the workmen as a unity, who see to the good quality of the work.

Therefore the best factories of British private industry have few

overseers, far less on an average than the French factories, and less

than the British State factories.

A certain standard of public morals is maintained in the same way.

Authoritarians say it is due to rural guards, judges, and policemen,

whereas in reality it is maintained in spite of judges, policemen, and

rural guards. “Many are the laws producing crimirials!” has been said

long ago.

Not only in industrial workshops do things go on in this way; it happens

everywhere, every day, on a scale that only bookworms have as yet no

notion of. When a railway company, federated with other companies, fails

to fulfil its engagements, when its trains are late and goods lie

neglected at the stations, the other companies threaten to cancel the

contract, and that threat usually suffices.

It is generally believed, at any rate it is taught, that commerce only

keeps to its engagements from fear of lawsuits. Nothing of the sort;

nine times in ten the trader who has not kept his word will not appear

before a judge. There, where trade is very great, as in London, the sole

fact of having driven a creditor to bring a lawsuit suffices for the

immense majority of merchants to refuse for good to have any dealings

with a man who has compelled one of them to go to law.

Then, why should means that are used to-day among mates in the workshop,

traders, and railway companies, not be made use of in a society based on

voluntary work?

Take, for example, an association stipulating that each of its members

should carry out the following contract: “We undertake to give you the

use of our houses, stores, streets, means of transport, schools,

museums, etc., on condition that, from twenty to forty-five or fifty

years of age, you consecrate four or five hours a day to some work

recognized as necessary to existence. Choose yourself the producing

groups which you wish to join, or organize a new group, provided that it

will undertake to produce necessaries. And as for the remainder of your

time, combine together with those you like for recreation, art, or

science, according to the bent of your taste.

“Twelve or fifteen hundred hours of work a year, in a group producing

food, clothes, or houses, or employed in public health, transport, etc.,

is all we ask of you. For this work we guarantee to you all that these

groups produce or will produce. But if not one, of the thousands of

groups of our federation, will receive you, whatever be their motive; if

you are absolutely incapable of producing anything useful, or if you

refuse to do it, then live like an isolated man or like an invalid. If

we are rich enough to give you the necessaries of life we shall be

delighted to give them to you. You are a man, and you have the right to

live. But as you wish to live under special conditions, and leave the

ranks, it is more than probable that you will suffer for it in your

daily relations with other citizens. You will be looked upon as a ghost

of bourgeois society, unless some friends of yours, discovering you to

be a talent, kindly free you from all moral obligation towards society

by doing necessary work for you.

“And lastly, if it does not please you, go and look for other conditions

else where in the wide world, or else seek adherents and organize with

them on novel principles. We prefer our own.”

That is what could be done in a communal society in order to turn away

sluggards if they became too numerous.

IV

We very much doubt that we need fear this contingency in a society

really based on the entire freedom of the individual.

In fact, in spite of the premium on idleness offered by private

ownership of capital, the really lazy man, unless he is ill, is

comparatively rare.

Among workmen it is often said that bourgeois are idlers. There are

certainly enough of them, but they, too, are the exception. On the

contrary, in every industrial enterprise, you are sure to find one or

more bourgeois who work very hard. It is true that the majority of

bourgeois profit by their privileged position to award themselves the

least unpleasant tasks, and that they work under hygienic conditions of

air, food, etc., which permit them to do their business without too much

fatigue. But these are precisely the conditions which we claim for all

workers, without exception. We must also say that if, thanks to their

privileged position, rich people often make absolutely useless or even

harmful work in society, nevertheless the Ministers, Heads of

Departments, factory owners, traders, bankers, etc., subject themselves

for a few hours a day to work which they find more or less tiresome, all

preferring their hours of leisure to this obligatory work. And if in

nine cases out of ten this work is fateful, they find it none the less

tiring for that. But it is precisely because the middle class put forth

a great energy, even in doing harm (knowingly or not) and defending

their privileged position, that they have succeeded in defeating the

landed nobility, and that they continue to rule the masses. If they were

idlers they would long since have ceased. to exist, and would have

disappeared like the aristocrats. In a society that would expect only

four or five hours a day of useful, pleasant, and hygienic work, they

would perform their task perfectly, and they certainly would not put up

with the horrible conditions in which men toil nowadays without

reforming them. If a Huxley spent only five hours in the sewers of

London, rest assured that he would have found the means of making them

as sanitary as his physiological laboratory.

As to the laziness of the great majority of workers, only philistine

economists and philanthropists say such nonsense.

If you ask an intelligent manufacturer, he will tell you that if workmen

only put it into their heads to be lazy, all factories would have to be

closed, for no measure of severity, no system of spying would be of any

use. You should have seen the terror caused in 1887 among British

employers when a few agitators started preaching the “go-canny” theory —

“for bad pay bad work”; “take it easy, do not overwork yourselves, and

waste all you can.” — “They demoralize the worker, they want to kill

industry!” cried those who formerly inveighed against the immorality of

the worker and the bad quality of his work. But if the worker were what

he is represented to be — namely, the idler whom you have continually to

threaten with dismissal from the workshop — what would the word

“demoralization” signify?

So when we speak of a possible idleness, we must well understand that it

is a question of a small minority in society; and before legislating for

that minority, would it not be wise to study its origin? Whoever

observes with an intelligent eye sees well enough that the child reputed

lazy at school is often the one which does not understand what he is

badly taught. Very often, too, it is suffering from cerebral anæmia,

caused by poverty and an anti-hygienic education. A boy who is lazy at

Greek or Latin would work admirably were he taught in science,

especially if taught by the medium of manual labour. A girl reputed

nought at mathematics becomes the first mathematician of her class if

she by chance meets somebody who can explain to her the elements of

arithmetic she did not understand. And a workman, lazy in the workshop,

cultivates his garden at dawn, while gazing at the rising sun, and will

be at work again at nightfall, when all nature goes to its rest.

Somebody said that dirt is matter in the wrong place. The same

definition applies to nine-tenths of those called lazy. They are people

gone astray in a direction that does not answer to their temperament nor

to their capacities. In reading the biography of great men, we are

struck with the number of “idlers” among them. They were lazy as long as

they had not found the right path, and afterwards laborious to excess.

Darwin, Stephenson, and many others belonged to this category of idlers.

Very often the idler is but a man to whom it is repugnant to make all

his life the eighteenth part of a pin, or the hundredth part of a watch,

while he feels he has exuberant energy which he would like to expend

elsewhere. Often, too, he is a rebel who cannot submit to being fixed

all his life to a work-bench in order to procure a thousand pleasures

for his emulover, while knowing himself to be far the less stupid of the

two, and knowing his only fault to be that of having been born in hovel

instead of coming into the world in a castle.

Lastly, a good many “idlers” do not know the trade by which they are

compelled to earn their living. Seeing the imperfect thing made by their

own hands, striving vainly to do better, and perceiving that they never

will succeed on account of the bad habits of work already acquired, they

begin to hate their trade, and, not knowing any other, hate work in

general. Thousands of workmen and artists who are failures suffer from

this cause.

On the other hand, he who since his youth has learned to play the piano

well, to handle the plans well, the chisel, the brush, or the file, so

that he feels that what he does is beautiful, will never give up the

piano, the chisel, or the file. He will find pleasure in his work which

does not tire him, as long as he is not overdriven.

Under the one name, idleness, a series of results due to different

causes have been grouped, of which each one could be a source of good,

instead of being a source of evil to society. Like all questions

concerning criminality and related to human faculties, facts have been

collected having nothing in common with one another. They say laziness

or crime, without giving themselves the trouble to analyse their cause.

They are in haste to punish them, without inquiring if the punishment

itself does not contain a premium on “laziness” or “crime.”[8]

This is why a free society, seeing the number of idlers increasing in

its midst, would no doubt think of looking for the cause of laziness, in

order to suppress it, before having recourse to punishment. When it is a

case, as we have already mentioned, of simple bloodlessness, then,

before stuffing the brain of a child with science, nourish his system so

as to produce blood, strengthen him, and, that he shall not waste his

time, take him to the country or to the seaside; there, teach him in the

open air, not in books — geometry, by measuring the distance to a spire,

or the height of a tree; natural sciences, while picking flowers and

fishing in the sea; physical science, while building the boat he will go

to fish in. But for mercy’s sake do not fill his brain with sentences

and dead languages. Do not make an idler of him!...

Such a child has neither order nor regular habits. Let first the

children inculcate order among themselves, and later on, the laboratory,

the workshop, work done in a limited space, with many tools about, will

teach them method. But do not make disorderly beings out of them by your

school, whose only order is the symmetry of its benches, and which —

true image of the chaos in its teachings — will never inspire anybody

with the love of harmony, of consistency, and method in work.

Do not you see that by your methods of teaching, framed by a Ministry

for eight million scholars, who represent eight million different

capacities, you only impose a system good for mediocrities, conceived by

an average of mediocrities? Your school becomes a University of

laziness, as your prison is a University of crime. Make the school free,

abolish your University grades, appeal to the volunteers of teaching;

begin that way, instead of making laws against laziness which only serve

to increase it.

Give the workman who is compelled to make a minute particle of some

object, who is stifled at his little tapping machine, which he ends by

loathing, give him the chance of tilling the soil, felling trees in the

forest, sailing the seas in the teeth of a storm, dashing through space

on an engine, but do not make an idler of him by forcing him all his

life to attend to a small machine, to plough the head of a screw, or to

drill the eye of a needle.

Suppress the cause of idleness, and you may take it for granted that few

individuals will really hate work, especially voluntary work, and that

there will be no need to manufacture a code of laws on their account.

Chapter 13: The Collectivist Wages System

I

It is our opinion that collectivists commit a twofold error in their

plans for the reconstruction of society. While speaking of abolishing

capitalist rule, they intend nevertheless to retain two institutions

which are the very basis of this rule — Representative Government and

the Wages System.

As regards so-called representative government, we have often spoken

about it. It is absolutely incomprehensible to us that intelligent men —

and such are not wanting in the collectivist party — can remain

partisans of national or municipal parliaments after all the lessons

history has given them — in France, in England, in Germany, or in the

United States.

While we see parliamentary rule breaking up, and from all sides

criticism of this rule growing louder — not only of its results, but

also of its principles — how is it that revolutionary socialists defend

a system already condemned to die?

Built up by the middle classes to hold their own against royalty,

sanctioning, and at the same time strengthening, their sway over the

workers, parliamentary rule is pre-eminently a middle-class rule. The

upholders of this system have never seriously affirmed that a parliament

or a municipal council represent a nation or a city. The most

intelligent among them know that this is impossible. The middle class

has simply used the parliamentary system to raise a barrier between

itself and royalty, without giving the people liberty. But gradually, as

the people become conscious of their interests and the variety of their

interests multiply, the system can no longer work. Therefore democrats

of all countries vainly imagine (livers) palliatives. The Referendum is

tried and found to be a failure; proportional representation is spoken

of, so is representation of minorities, and other parliamentary Utopias.

In a word, they strive to find what is not to be found, and they are

compelled to recognize that they are in a wrong way, and confidence in a

Representative Government disappears.

It is the same with the wages system; for after having proclaimed the

abolition of private property, and the possession in common of all means

of production, how can they uphold the wages system in any form? It is,

nevertheless, what collectivists are doing when they recommend

labour-cheques.

It is easy to understand why the early English socialists came to the

system of labour-cheques. They simply tried to make Capital and Labour

agree. They repudiated the idea of violently laying hands on capitalist

property.

It is also easily understood why Proudhon took up the idea later on. In

his Mutualist system he tried to make Capital less offensive,

notwithstanding the retaining of private property, which he detested

from the bottom of his heart, but which he believed to be necessary to

guarantee individuals against the State.

Neither is it astonishing that certain economists, more or less

bourgeois, admit labour-cheques. They care little whether the worker is

paid in labour-notes or in coin stamped with the effigy of the Republic

or the Empire. They only care to save from destruction individual

ownership of dwelling-houses, of land, of factories; in any case that of

dwelling-houses and the capital that is necessary for manufacturing. And

labour-notes would just answer the purpose of upholding this private

property.

As long as labour-notes can be exchanged for Jewels or carriages, the

owner of the house will willingly accept them for rent. And as long as

dwelling-houses, fields, and factories belong to isolated owners, men

will have to pay them, in one way or another, for being allowed to work

in the fields or factories, or for living in the houses. The owners will

accept to be paid by the workers in gold, in paper-money, or in cheques

exchangeable for all sorts of commodities. But how can we defend

labour-notes, this new form of wagedom, when we admit that houses,

fields, and factories will no longer be private property, and that they

will belong to the commune or the nation?

II

Let us closely examine this system of remuneration for work done,

preached by French, German, English, and Italian collectivists (Spanish

anarchists, who still call themselves collectivists, imply by

Collectivism the possession in common of all instruments of production,

and the “liberty of each group to divide the produce, as they think fit,

according to communist or any other principles”). It amounts to this:

Everybody works in field, factory, school, hospital, etc. The

working-day is fixed by the State, which owns land, factories, roads,

etc. Every work-day is paid for with a labour-note, which is inscribed

with these words: Eight hours work. With this cheque the worker can

procure all sorts of merchandise in the stores owned by the State or by

divers corporations. The cheque is divisible, so that you can buy an

hour’s-work worth of meat, ten minutes worth of matches, or half an hour

of tobacco. After the Collectivist Revolution, instead of saying

“two-pence worth of soap,” we shall say “five minutes worth of soap.”

Most collectivists, true to the distinction laid down by middle-class

economists (and by Marx) between qualified work and simple work, tell

us, moreover, that qualified or professional work must be paid a certain

quantity more than simple work. Thus an hour’s work of a doctor will

have to be considered as equivalent to two or three hours’ work of a

hospital nurse, or to three hours’ work of a navvy. “Professional, or

qualified work, will be a multiple of simple work,” says the

collectivist Grönlund, “because this kind of work needs a more or less

long apprenticeship.”

Other collectivists, such as the French Marxists, do not make this

distinction. They proclaim “Equality of Wages.” The doctor, the

schoolmaster, and the professor will be paid (in labour-cheques) at the

same rate as the navvy. Eight hours visiting the sick in a hospital will

be worth the same as eight hours spent in earth-works or else in mines

or factories.

Some make a greater concession; they admit that disagreeable or

unhealthy work — such as sewerage — could be paid for at a higher rate

than agreeable work. One hour’s work of a sewerman would be worth, they

say, two hours of a professor’s work.

Let us add that certain collectivists admit of corporations paying a

lump sum for work done. Thus a corporation would say: “Here are a

hundred tons of steel. A hundred workmen were required to produce them,

and it took them ten days. Their work-day being an eight-hours day, it

has taken them eight thousand working hours to produce a hundred tons of

steed eight hours a ton.” For this the State would pay them eight

thousand labour-notes of one hour each, and these eight thousand cheques

would be divided among the members of the iron-works as they themselves

thought proper.

On the other hand, a hundred miners having taken twenty days to extract

eight thousand tons of coal, coal would be worth two hours a ton, and

the sixteen thousand cheques of one hour each, received by the Guild of

Miners, would be divided among their members according to their own

appreciation.

If the miners protested, and said that a ton of steel should only cost

six hours’ work instead of eight; if the professor wished to have his

day paid twice more than the nurse, then the State would interfere and

would settle their differences.

Such is, in a few words, the organization collectivists wish to see

arise out of the Social Revolution. As we see, their principles are:

Collective property of the instruments of production, and remuneration

to each according to the time spent in producing, while taking into

account the productivity of his labour. As to the political system, it

would be Parliamentarianism modified by positive instructions given to

those elected, by the Referendum — a vote, taken by noes or ayes by the

nation.

Let us own that this system appears to us unrealizable.

Collectivists begin by proclaiming a revolutionary principle — the

abolition of private property — then they deny it no sooner than

proclaimed by upholding an organization of production and consumption

that originated in private property.

They proclaim a revolutionary principle, and ignore the consequences

that this principle will inevitably bring about. They forget that the

very fact of abolishing individual property in the instruments of work —

land, factories, road, capital, — must launch society into absolutly new

chanels; must completely overthrow the present system of production,

both in its aim as well as in its means; must modify daily relations

between individuals, as soon as land, machinery, and all other

instruments of production are considered common property.

They say, “No private property,” and immediately after strive to

maintain private property in its daily manifestations. “You shall be a

Commune as far as regards production: fields, tools, machinery, all that

has been invented up till now — factories, railways, harbours, mines,

etc., all are yours. Not the slightest distinction will be made

concerning the share of each in this collective property.

“But from to-morrow you will minutely debate the share you are going to

take in the creation of new machinery, in the digging of new mines. You

will carefully weigh what part of the new produce belongs to you. You

will count your minutes of work, and you will take care that a minute of

your neighbours cannot buy more than yours.

“And as an hour measures nothing, as in some factories a worker can see

to six power-looms at a time, while in another he only tends two, you

will weigh the muscular force, the brain energy, and the nervous energy

you have expended. You will accurately calculate the years of

apprenticeship in order to appraise the amount each will contribute to

future production. And this — after having declared that you do not take

into account his share in past production.”

Well, for us it is evident that a society cannot be based on two

absolutely opposed principles, two principles that contradict one

another continually. And a nation or a commune that would have such an

organization would be compelled to revert to private property in the

instruments of production, or to transform itself immediately into a

communist society.

III

We have said that certain collectivist writers desire that a distinction

should be made between qualified or professional work and simple work.

They pretend that an hour’s work of an engineer, an architect, or a

doctor, must be considered as two or three hours’ work of a blacksmith,

a mason, or a hospital nurse. And the same distinction must be made

between all sorts of trades necessitating a more or less long

apprenticeship and the simple toil of day labourers.

Well, to establish this distinction would be to maintain all the

inequalities of present society. It would mean fixing a dividing line,

from the beginning, between the workers and those who pretend to govern

them. It would mean dividing society into two very distinct classes —

the aristocracy of knowledge above the horny-handed lower orders — the

one doomed to serve the other; the one working with its hands to feed

and clothe those who, profiting by their leisure, study how to govern

their fosterers.

It would mean reviving one of the distinct peculiarities of present

society and giving it the sanction of the Social Revolution. It would

mean setting up as a principle an abuse already condemned in our ancient

crumbling society.

We know the answer we shall get. They will speak of “Scientific

Socialism”; they will quote bourgeois economists, and Marx too, to prove

that a scale of wages has its raison d’être, as “the labour-force” of

the engineer will have cost more to society than the “labour-force” of

the navvy. In fact, — have not economists tried to prove to us that if

an engineer is paid twenty times more than a navvy it is because the

“necessary” outlay to make an engineer is greater than that necessary to

make a navvy? And has not Marx asserted that the same distinction is

equally logical between two branches of manual labour? He could not

conclude otherwise, having on his own account taken up Ricardo’s theory

of value, and upheld that goods are exchanged in proportion to the

quantity of work socially necessary for their production.

But we know what to think of this. We know that if engineers,

scientists, or doctors are paid ten or a hundred times more than a

labourer, and that a weaver earns three times more than an agricultural

labourer, and ten times more than a girl in a match factory, it is not

by reason of their “cost of production,” but by reason of a monopoly of

education, or a monopoly of industry. Engineers, scientists, and doctors

merely exploit their capital — their diplomas — as middle-class

employers exploit a factory, or as nobles used to exploit their titles

of nobility.

As to the employer who pays an engineer twenty times more than a

labourer, it is simply due to personal interest; if the engineer can

economize £4000 a year on the cost of production, the employer pays him

£800 And if the employer has a foreman who saves £400 on the work by

cleverly sweating workmen, he gladly gives him £80 or £120 a year. He

parts with an extra £40 when he expects to gain £400 by it; and this is

the essence of the Capitalist system. The same differences obtain among

divers manual trades.

Let them, therefore, not talk to us of “the cost of production” which

raises the cost of skilled labour, and tell us that a student who has

gaily spent his youth in a university has a right to a wage ten times

greater than the son of a miner who has grown pale in a mine since the

age of eleven; or that a weaver has a right to a wage three or four

times greater than that of an agricultural labourer. The cost of

teaching a weaver his work is not four times greater than the cost of

teaching a peasant his. The weaver simply benefits by the advantages his

industry reaps in Europe, in comparison with countries that have as yet

no industries.

Nobody has ever calculated the cost of production and if a loafer costs

far more to society than a worker, it remains to be seen whether a

robust day-labourer does not cost more to society than a skilled

artisan, when we have taken into account infant-mortality among the

poor, the ravages of anæmia, and premature deaths.

Could they, for example, make us believe that the 1s. 3d. paid to a

Paris workwoman, the 3d. paid to an Auvergne peasant girl who grows

blind at lace-making, or the 1s. 8d. paid to the peasant represent their

“cost of production.” We know full well that people work for less, but

we also know that they do so exclusively because, thanks to our

wonderful organization, they would die of hunger did they not accept

these mock wages.

For us the scale of remuneration is a complex result of taxes, of

governmental tutelage, of Capitalist monopoly. In a word, of State and

Capital. Therefore, we say that all wages theories have been invented

after the event to justify injustices at present existing, and that we

need not take them into consideration.

Neither will they fail to tell us that the Collectivist scale of wages

would be an improvement. “It would be better,” so they say, “to see

certain artisans receiving a wage two or three times higher than common

labourers, than to see a minister receiving in a day what a workman

cannot earn in a year. It would be a great step towards equality.”

For us this step would be the reverse of progress. To make a distinction

between simple and professional work in a new society would result in

the Revolution sanctioning and recognizing as a principle a brutal fact

we submit to nowadays, but that we nevertheless find unjust. It would

mean imitating those gentlemen of the French Assembly who proclaimed

August 4^(th), 1789, the abolition of feudal rights, but who on August

8^(th) sanctioned these same rights by imposing dues on the peasants to

compensate the noblemen, placing these dues under the protection of the

Revolution. It would mean imitating the Russian Government, which

proclaimed, at the time of the emancipation of the serfs, that the land

should henceforth belong to the nobility, while formerly the lands were

considered belonging to the serfs.

Or else, to take a better known example, when the Commune of 1871

decided to pay members of the Commune Council 12s. 6d. a day, while the

Federates on the ramparts received only 1s. 3d., this decision was

hailed as an act of superior democratic equality. In reality, the

Commune only ratified the former inequality between functionary and

soldier, Government and governed. Coming from an Opportunist Chamber of

Deputies, such a decision would have appeared admirable, but the Commune

doomed her revolutionary principles because she failed to put them into

practice.

Under our existing social system, when a minister gets paid £4000 a

year, while a workman must content himself with £40 or less; when a

foreman is paid two or three times more than a workman, and among

workmen there is every gradation, from 8s. a day down to the peasant

girl’s 3d.; we disapprove of the high salary of the minister as well as

of the difference between the 8s. of the workman and the 3d. of the poor

woman. And we say, “Down with the privileges of education, as well as

with those of birth!” We are anarchists precisely because these

privileges revolt us.

They revolt us already in this authoritarian society. Could we endure

them in a society that began by proclaiming equality?

That is why some collectivists, understanding the impossibility of

maintaining a scale of wages in a society inspired by the breath of the

Revolution, hasten to proclaim equality of wage. But they meet with new

difficulties, and their equality of wages becomes the same unrealizable

Utopia as the scale of wages of other collectivists.

A society having taken possession of all social wealth, having boldly

proclaimed the right of all to this wealth — whatever share they may

have taken in producing it will be compelled to abandon any system of

wages, whether in currency or labour-notes.

IV

The collectivists say, “To each according to his deeds”; or, in other

terms, according to his share of services rendered to society. They

think it expedient to put this principle into practice as soon as the

Social Revolution will have made all instruments of production common

property. But we think that if the Social Revolution had the misfortune

of proclaiming such a principle, it would mean its necessary failure; it

would mean leaving the social problem, which past centuries have

burdened us with, unsolved. In fact, in a society like ours, in which

the more a man works the less he is remunerated, this principle, at

first sight, may appear to be a yearning for justice. But it is really

only the perpetuation of past injustice. It was by virtue of this

principle that wagedom began, to end in the glaring inequalities and all

the abominations of present society; because, from the moment work done

was appraised in currency or in any other form of wage; the day it was

agreed upon that man would only receive the wage he could secure to

himself, the whole history of State-aided Capitalist Society was as good

as written; it germinated in this principle.

Shall we, then, return to our starting-point and go through the same

evolution again ? Our theorists desire it, but fortunately it is

impossible. The Revolution will be communist; if not, it will be drowned

in blood, and have to be begun over again.

Services rendered to society, be they work in factory or field, or

mental services, cannot be valued in money. There can be no exact

measure of value (of what has been wrongly-termed exchange value), nor

of use value, with regard to production. If two individuals work for the

community five hours a day, year in year out, at different work which is

equally agreeable to them, we may say that on the whole their labour is

equivalent. But we cannot divide their work, and say that the result of

any particular day, hour, or minute of work of the one is worth the

result of a minute or hour of the other.

We may roughly say that the man who during his lifetime has deprived

himself of leisure during ten hours a day has given far more to society

than the one who has only deprived himself of leisure during five hours

a day, or who has not deprived himself at all. But we cannot take what

he has done during two hours and say that the yield is worth twice as

much as the yield of another individual, working only one hour, and

remunerate him in proportion. It would be disregarding all that is

complex in industry, in agriculture, in the whole life of present

society; it would be ignoring to what extent all individual work is the

result of past and present labour of society as a whole. It would mean

believing ourselves to be living in the Stone Age, whereas we are living

in an age of steel.

If you enter a coal-mine you will see a man in charge of a huge machine

that raises and lowers a cage. In his hand he holds a lever that stops

and reverses the course of the machine; he lowers it and the cage turns

back in the twinkling of an eye; he raises it, he lowers it again with a

giddy swiftness. All attention, he follows with his eyes fixed on the

wall an indicator that shows him On a small scale, at which point of the

shaft the cage is at each second of its progress; as soon as the

indicator has reached a certain level he suddenly stops the course of

the cage, not a yard higher nor lower than the required spot. And no

sooner have the colliers unloaded their coal-wagons, and pushed empty

ones instead, than he reverses the lever and again sends the cage back

into space.

During eight or ten consecutive hours he must pay the closest attention.

Should his brain relax for a moment, the cage would inevitably strike

against the gear, break its wheels, snap the rope, crush men, and

obstruct work in the mine. Should he waste three seconds at each touch

of the lever, in our modern perfected mines, the extraction would be

reduced from twenty to fifty tons a day.

Is it he who is of greatest use in the mine? Or, is it perhaps the boy

who signals to him from below to raise the cage? Is it the miner at the

bottom of the shaft, who risks his life every instant, and who will some

day be killed by fire-damp? Or is it the engineer, who would lose the

layer of coal, and would cause the miners to dig on rock by a simple

mistake in his calculations? And lastly, is it the mine owner who has

put all his capital into the mine, and who has perhaps, contrary to

expert advice asserted that excellent coal would be found there?

All the miners engaged in this mine contribute to the extraction of coal

in proportion to their strength, their energy, their knowledge, their

intelligence, and their skill. And we may say that all have the right to

live, to satisfy their needs, and even their whims, when the necessaries

of life have been secured for all. But how can we appraise their work?

And, moreover, Is the coal they have extracted their work? Is it not

also the work of men who have built the railway leading to the mine and

the roads that radiate from all its stations? Is it not also the work of

those that have tilled and sown the fields, extracted iron, cut wood in

the forests, built the machines that burn coal, and so on?

No distinction can be drawn between the work of each man. Measuring the

work by its results leads us to absurdity; dividing and measuring them

by hours spent on the work also leads us to absurdity. One thing

remains: put the needs above the works, and first of all recognize the

right to live, and later on, to the comforts of life, for all those who

take their share in production.

But take any other branch of human activity — take the manifestations of

life as a whole. Which one of us can claim the higher remuneration for

his work? Is it the doctor who has found out the illness, or the nurse

who has brought about recovery by her hygienic care? Is it the inventor

of the first steam-engine, or the boy, who, one day getting tired of

pulling the rope that formerly opened the valve to let steam enter under

the piston, tied the rope to the lever of the machine, without

suspecting that he had invented the essential mechanical part of all

modern machinery — the automatic valve.

Is it the inventor of the locomotive, or the work man of Newcastle, who

suggested replacing the stones formerly laid under the rails by wooden

sleepers, as the stones, for want of elasticity, caused the trains to

derail? Is it the engineer on the locomotive? The signalman who can stop

trains? The switchman who transfers a train from one line to another? —

To whom do we owe the transatlantic cable? Is it to the engineer who

obstinately affirmed that the cable would transmit messages when learned

electricians declared it to be impossible? Is it to Maury, the

scientist, who advised that thick cables should be set aside for others

as thin as canes? Or else to those volunteers, come from nobody knows

where, who spent their days and nights on deck minutely examining every

yard of the cable, and removed the nails that the stockholders of

steamship companies stupidly caused to be driven into the non-conducting

wrapper of the cable, so as to make it unserviceable.

And in a wider sphere, the true sphere of life, with its joys, its

sufferings, and its accidents, can not each one of us recall some one

who has rendered him so great a service that we should be indignant if

its equivalent in coin were mentioned? The service may have been but a

word, nothing but a word spoken at the right time, or else it may have

been months and years of devotion, and are we going to appraise these

“incalculable” services in “labour-notes”?

“The works of each!” But human society would not exist for more than two

consecutive generations if every one did not give infinitely more than

that for which he is paid in coin, in “cheques,” or in civic rewards.

The race would soon become extinct if mothers did not sacrifice their

lives to take care of their children, if men did not give all the time,

without demanding an equivalent, if men did not give just to those from

whom they expect no reward.

If middle-class society is decaying, if we have got into a blind alley

from which we cannot emerge without attacking past institutions with

torch and hatchet, it is precisely because we have calculated too much.

It is because we have let ourselves be influenced into giving only to

receive. It is because we have aimed at turning society into a

commercial company based on debit and credit.

Collectivists know this. They vaguely under stand that a society could

not exist if it carried out the principle of “Each according to his

deeds.” They have a notion that necessaries — we do not speak of whims —

the needs of the individual, do not always correspond to his works. Thus

De Paepe tells us: “The principle — the eminently Individualist

principle — would, however, be tempered by social intervention, for the

education of children and young persons (including maintenance and

lodging), and by the social organization for assisting the infirm and

the sick, for retreats for aged workers, etc.” They understand that a

man of forty, father of three children, has other needs than young man

of twenty. They know that the woman who suckles her infant and spends

sleepless nights at its bedside, cannot do as much work as the man who

has slept peacefully. They seem to take in that men and women, worn out

maybe by dint of overwork for society, may be incapable of doing as much

work as those who have spent their time leisurely and pocketed their

“labour-notes” in the privileged career of State functionaries.

They are eager to temper their principle. They say: “Society will not

fail to maintain and bring up its children; to help both aged and

infirm. Without doubt needs will be the measure of the cost that society

will burden itself with, to temper the principle of deeds.”

Charity, charity, always Christian charity, organized by the State this

time. They believe in improving asylums for foundlings, in effecting

old-age and sick insurances — so as to temper their principle. But they

cannot yet throw aside the idea of “wounding first and healing

afterwards!”

Thus, after having denied Communism, after having laughed at their ease

at the formula — “To each according to his needs” these great economists

discover that they have forgotten something, the needs of the producers,

which they now admit. Only it is for the State to estimate them, for the

State to verify if the needs are not disproportionate to the work.

The State will dole out charity. Thence to the English poor-law and the

workhouse is but a step.

There is but a degree, because even this stepmother of a society against

whom we are in revolt has also been compelled to temper her

individualist principles; she, too, has had to make concessions in a

communist direction and under the same form of charity.

She, too, distributes halfpenny dinners to prevent the pillaging of her

shops; builds hospital — often very bad ones, though sometimes splendid

ones — to prevent the ravages of contagious diseases. She, too, after

having paid the hours of labour, shelters the children of those she has

wrecked. She takes their needs into consideration and doles out charity.

Poverty, we have said elsewhere, was the primary cause of wealth. It was

poverty that created the first capitalist; because, before accumulating

“surplus value,” of which we hear so much, men had to be sufficiently

destitute to consent to sell their labour, so as not to die of hunger.

It was poverty that made capitalists. And if the number of poor rapidly

increased during the Middle Ages, it was due to the invasions and wars

that followed the founding of States, and to the increase of riches

resulting from the exploitation of the East, that tore the bonds asunder

which once united agrarian and urban communities, and taught them to

proclaim the principle of wages, so dear to exploiters, instead of the

solidarity they formerly practised.

And it is this principle that is to spring from a revolution which men

dare to call by the name of Social Revolution, a name so clear to the

starved, the oppressed, and the sufferers?

It can never be. For the day on which old institutions will fall under

the proletarian axe, voices will cry out: “Bread, shelter, ease for

all!” And those voices will be listened to; the people will say: “Let us

begin by allaying our thirst for life, for happiness, for liberty, that

we have never quenched. And when we shall have tasted of this joy we

will set to work to demolish the last vestiges of middle-class rule, its

morality drawn from account-books, its ‘debit and credit’ philosophy,

its ‘mine and yours’ institutions. ‘In demolishing we shall build,’ as

Proudhon said; and we shall build in the name of Communism and Anarchy.”

Chapter 14: Consumption And Production

I

Looking at society and its political organization from a different

standpoint than that of authoritarian schools — for we start from a free

individual to reach a free society, instead of beginning by the State to

come down to the individual — we follow the same method in economic

questions. We study the needs of individuals, and the means by which

they satisfy them, before discussing Production, Exchange, Taxation,

Government, etc.

To begin with, the difference may appear trifling, but in reality it

upsets official Political Economy.

If you open the works of any economist you will find that he begins with

PRODUCTION, the analysis of means employed nowadays for the creation of

wealth; division of labour, manufacture, machinery, accumulation of

capital. From Adam Smith to Marx, all have proceeded along these lines.

Only in the latter parts of their books do they treat of CONSUMPTION,

that is to say, of the means necessary to satisfy the needs of

individuals; and, moreover, they confine themselves to explaining how

riches are divided among those who vie with one another for their

possession.

Perhaps you will say this is logical. Before satisfying needs you must

create the wherewithal to satisfy them. But before producing anything,

must you not feel the need of it? Is it not necessity that first drove

man to hunt, to raise cattle, to cultivate land, to make implements, and

later on to invent machinery? Is it not the study of needs that should

govern production? It would therefore be quite as logical to begin by

considering needs and afterwards to discuss the means of production in

order to satisfy these needs.

This is precisely what we mean to do.

But as soon as we look at it from this point of view, Political Economy

entirely changes its aspect. It ceases to be a simple description of

facts, and becomes a science. We can define it as: The study of the

needs of humanity,and the means of satisfying them with the least

possible waste of human energy. Its true name should be, Physiology of

Society. It constitutes a parallel science to the physiology of plants

and animals, which also is the study of the needs of plants and animals,

and the most advantageous ways of satisfying them. In the series of

social sciences, the economy of human societies takes the place,

occupied in the series of biological sciences by the physiology of

organic bodies.

We say, here are human beings, united in a society. All feel the need of

living in healthy houses. The savage’s hut no longer satisfies them;

they require a more or less comfortable solid shelter. The question is,

then: whether, man’s capacity for production being given, every man can

have a house of his own? and what is hindering him from having it?

And we are soon convinced that every family in Europe could perfectly

well have a comfortable house, such as are built in England, in Belgium,

or in Pullman City, or else an equivalent set of rooms. A certain number

of days’ work would suffice to build a pretty little airy house, well

fitted up and lighted by gas.

But nine-tenths of Europeans have never possessed a healthy house,

because at all times common people have had to work day after day to

satisfy the needs of their rulers, and have never had the necessary

leisure or money to build, or to have built, the home of their dreams.

And they can have no houses, and will inhabit hovels as long as present

conditions remain unchanged.

As you see, we proceed contrary to economists, who immortalize the

so-called laws of production, and reckoning up the number of houses

built every year, demonstrate by statistics, that the new built houses

not sufficing to meet all demands, nine-tenths of Europeans must live in

hovels.

Let us pass on to food. After having enumerated the benefits accruing

from the division of labour economists tell us the division of labour

requires that some men should work at agriculture and others at

manufacture. Farmers producing so much, factories so much, exchange

being carried on in such a way, they analyze the sale, the profit the

net gain or the surplus value,the wages, the taxes, banking, and so on.

But after having followed them so far, we are none the wiser, and if we

ask them: “How is it that millions of human beings are in want of bread,

when every family could grow sufficient wheat to feed ten, twenty, and

even a hundred people annually?” they answer us by droning the same

anthem — division of labour, wages, surplus value, capital, etc. —

arriving at the same conclusion, that production is insufficient to

satisfy all needs; a conclusion which, if true, does not answer the

question: “Can or cannot man by his labour produce the bread he needs?

And if he cannot, what is hindering him?”

Here are 350 million Europeans. They need so much bread, so much meat,

wine, milk, eggs, and butter every year. They need so many houses, so

much clothing. This is the minimum of their needs. Can they produce all

this? and if they can, will there then be left sufficient leisure for

art,science, and amusement? — in a word, for everything that is not

comprised in the category of absolute necessities? If the answer is in

the affirmative, — What hinders them going ahead? What must they do to

remove obstacles? Is time needed? Let them take it! But let us not lose

sight of the aim of production — the satisfaction of needs.

If the most imperious needs of man remain unsatisfied, what must he do

to increase the productivity of his work? And is there no other cause?

Might it not be that production, having lost sight of the needs of man,

has strayed in an absolutely wrong direction, and that its organization

is at fault? And as we can prove that such is the case, let us see how

to reorganize production so as to really satisfy all needs.

This seems to us the only right way of facing things. The only way that

would allow of Political Economy becoming a science — the Science of

Social Physiology.

It is evident that when this science will treat of production, as it is

at present carried on by civilized nations, by Hindoo communes, or by

savages, it will hardly state facts otherwise than the economists state

them now; that is to say as a simple descriptive chapter, analogous to

descriptive chapters of Zoology and Botany. But if this chapter were

written to throw light on the economy of energy, necessary to satisfy

human needs, the chapter would gain in precision, as well as in

descriptive value. It would clearly prove the frightful waste of human

energy under the present system, and would admit, as we do, that as long

as this system exists,the needs of humanity will never be satisfied.

The point of view, we see, would be entirely changed. Behind the loom

that weaves so many yards of cloth, behind the steel-plate perforator,

and behind the safe in which dividends are hoarded, we should see man,

the artisan of production, more often than not excluded from the feast

he has prepared for others. We should also understand that the

standpoint being wrong, so-called laws of value and exchange are but a

very false explanation of events, as they happen nowadays; and that

things will come to pass very differently when production is organized

in such a manner as to meet all needs of society.

II

There is not one single principle of Political Economy that does not

change its aspect if you look at it from our point of view.

Take, for instance, over-production, a word which every day re-echoes in

our ears. Is there a single economist, academician, or candidate for

academical honours, who has not supported arguments, proving that

economic crises are due to overproduction — that at a given moment more

cotton, more cloth, more watches are produced than are needed! Have not

men accused of “rapacity” the capitalists who are obstinately bent on

producing more than can possibly be consumed! But on careful examination

all these reasonings prove unsound. In fact, Is there a commodity among

those in universal use which is produced in greater quantity than need

be? Examine one by one all commodities sent out by countries exporting

on a large scale,and you will see that nearly all are produced in

insufficient quantities for the inhabitants of the countries exporting

them.

It is not a surplus of wheat that the Russian peasant sends to Europe.

The most plentiful harvests of wheat and rye in European Russia only

yield enough for the population. And as a rule the peasant deprives

himself of what he actually needs when he sells his wheat or rye to pay

rent and taxes.

It is not a surplus of coal that England sends to the four corners of

the globe, because only three-quarters of a ton, per head of population,

annually, remain for home domestic consumption, and millions of

Englishmen are deprived of fire in the winter, or have only just enough

to boil a few vegetables. In fact, setting aside useless luxuries, there

is in England, which exports more than any other country, but a single

commodity in universal use — cottons — whose production is sufficiently

great to perhaps exceed the needs of the community. Yet when we look

upon the rags that pass for wearing apparel worn by over a third of the

inhabitants of the United Kingdom, we are led to ask ourselves whether

the cottons exported would not, within a trifle, suit the real needs of

the population?

As a rule it is not a surplus that is exported, though it may have been

so originally. The fable of the barefooted shoemaker is as true of

nations as it was formerly of artisans. We export the necessary

commodities. And we do so, because the workmen cannot buy with their

wages what they have produced, and pay besides the rent and interest to

the capitalist and the banker.

Not only does the ever-growing need of comfort remain unsatisfied, but

strict necessaries are often wanting. “Surplus production” does,

therefore, not exist, at least not in the sense which is given to it by

the theorists of Political Economy.

Taking another point — all economists tell us that there is a

well-proved law: “Man produces more than he consumes.” After he has

lived on the proceeds of his toil, there remains a surplus. Thus, a

family of cultivators produces enough to feed several families, and so

forth.

For us, this oft-repeated sentence has no sense. If it meant that each

generation leaves something to future generations, it would be true;

thus, for example, a farmer plants a tree that will live, maybe, for

thirty, forty, or a hundred years, and whose fruits will still be

gathered by the farmer’s grandchildren. Or he clears a few acres of

virgin soil, and we say that the heritage of future generations has been

increased by that much. Roads, bridges, canals, his house and his

furniture are so much wealth bequeathed to succeeding generations.

But this is not what is meant. We are told that the cultivator produces

more than he need consume. Rather should they say that, the State having

always taken from him a large share of his produce for taxes, the priest

for tithe, and the landlord for rent, a whole class of men has been

created, who formerly consumed what they produced — save what was set

aside for unforeseen accidents, or expenses incurred in afforestation,

roads, etc. — but who to-day are compelled to live very poorly, from

hand to mouth, the remainder having been taken from them by the State,

the landlord, the priest, and the usurer.

Let us also observe that if the needs of the individual are our

starting-point, we cannot fail to reach Communism, an organization which

enables us to satisfy all needs in the most thorough and economical way.

While if we start from our present method of production, and aim at gain

and surplus value, without taking into account if production corresponds

to the satisfaction of needs, we necessarily arrive at Capitalism, or at

most at Collectivism — both being but divers forms of our wages’ system.

In fact, when we consider the needs of the individual and of society,

and the means which man has resorted to in order to satisfy them during

his varied phases of development, we are convinced of the necessity of

systematizing our efforts, instead of producing haphazard as we do

nowadays. It grows evident that the appropriation by a few of all riches

not consumed, and transmitted from one generation to another, is not in

the general interest.We can state as a fact that owing to these methods

the needs of three-quarters of society are not satisfied, and that the

present waste of human strength is the more useless and the more

criminal.

We discover, moreover, that the most advantageous use of all commodities

would be, for each of them, to go, first, for satisfying those needs

which are the most pressing: that, in other words, the so-called “value

in use” of a commodity does not depend on a simple whim, as has often

been affirmed, but on the satisfaction it brings to real needs.

Communism — that is to say, an organization which would correspond to a

view of Consumption, Production, and Exchange, taken as; a whole —

therefore becomes the logical consequence of the comprehension of

things, the only one, in our opinion, that is really scientific.

A society that will satisfy the needs of all, and which will know how to

organize production, will also have to make a clean sweep of several

prejudices concerning industry, and first of all of the theory often

preached by economists — The Division of Labour theory — which we are

going to discuss in the next chapter.

Chapter 15: The Division of Labour

I

Political Economy has always confined itself to stating facts occurring

in society, and justifying them in the interest of the dominant class.

Thus it is in favour of the division of labour created by industry.

Having found it profitable to capitalists it has set it up as a

principle.

Look at the village smith, said Adam Smith, the father of modern

Political Economy. If he has never been accustomed to making nails he

will only succeed by hard toil in forging two to three hundred a day,

and even then they will be bad. But if this same smith has never done

anything but nails, he will easily supply as many as two thousand three

hundred in the course of a day. And Smith hastened to the conclusion —

“Divide labour, specialize, go on specializing; let us have smiths who

only know how to make heads or points of nails, and by this means we

shall produce more. We shall grow rich.”

That a smith sentenced for life to the making of heads of nails would

lose all interest in his work, would be entirely at the mercy of his

employer with his limited handicraft, would be out of work four months

out of twelve, and that his wages would decrease when he could be easily

replaced by an apprentice, Smith did not think of it when he exclaimed —

“Long live the division of labour. This is the real gold-mine that will

enrich the nation!” And all joined in the cry.

And later on, when a Sismondi or a J. B. Say began to understand that

the division of labour, instead of enriching the whole nation, only

enriches the rich, and that the worker, who for life is doomed to making

the eighteenth part of a pin, grows stupid and sinks into poverty — what

did official economists propose? Nothing! They did not say to themselves

that by a lifelong grind at one and the same mechanical toil the worker

would lose his intelligence and his spirit of invention, and that, on

the contrary, a variety of occupations would result in considerably

augmenting the productivity of a nation. But this is the very issue now

before us.

If, however, only economists preached the permanent and often hereditary

division of labour, we might allow them to preach it as much as they

pleased. But ideas taught by doctors of science filter into men’s minds

and pervert them; and from repeatedly hearing the division of labour,

profits, interest, credit, etc., spoken of as problems long since

solved, men, and workers too, end by arguing like economists, and by

venerating the same fetishes.

Thus we see a number of socialists, even those who have not feared to

point out the mistakes of science, justifying the division of labour.

Talk to them about the organization of work during the Revolution, and

they answer that the division of labour must be maintained; that if you

sharpened pins before the Revolution you must go on sharpening them

after. True, you will not have to work more than five hours a day, but

you will have to sharpen pins all your life, while others will make

designs for machines that will enable you to sharpen hundreds of

millions of pins during your lifetime; and others again will be

specialists in the higher branches of literature, science, and art, etc.

You were born to sharpen pins while Pasteur was born to invent the

inoculation against anthrax, and the Revolution will leave you both to

your respective employments. Well, it is this horrible principle, so

noxious to society, so brutalizing to the individual, source of so much

harm, that we propose to discuss in its divers manifestations.

We know the consequences of the division of labour full well. It is

evident that we are divided into two classes: on the one hand, producers

who consume very little and are exempt from thinking because they only

do physical work, and who work badly because their brains remain

inactive; and on the other hand, the consumers, who, producing little or

hardly anything, have the privilege of thinking for the others, and who

think badly because the whole world of those who toil with their hands

is unknown to them. The labourers of the soil know nothing of machinery

those who work at machinery ignore everything about agriculture. The

ideal of modern industry is a child tending a machine that he cannot and

must not understand, and a foreman who fines him if his attention flags

for a moment. The ideal of industrial agriculture is to do away with the

agricultural labourer altogether and to set a man who does odd jobs to

tend a steam-plough or a threshing-machine. The division of labour means

labelling and stamping men for life — some to splice ropes in factories,

some to be foremen in a business, others to shove huge coal-baskets in a

particular part of a mine; but none of them to have any idea of

machinery as a whole, nor of business, nor of mines. And thereby they

destroy the love of work and the capacity for invention that, at the

beginning of modern industry, created the machinery on which we pride

ourselves so much.

What they have done for individuals, they also wanted to do for nations.

Humanity was to be divided into national workshops, having each its

speciality. Russia, we were taught, was destined by nature to grow corn;

England to spin cotton; Belgium to weave cloth; while Switzerland was to

train nurses and governesses. Moreover, each separate city was to

establish a speciality. Lyons was to weave silk, Auvergne to make lace,

and Paris fancy articles. Economists believed that specialization opened

an immense field for production and consumption, and that an era of

limitless wealth for mankind was at hand.

But these great hopes vanished as fast as technical knowledge spread

abroad. As long as England stood alone as a weaver of cotton, and as a

metal-worker on a large scale; as long as only Paris made artistic fancy

articles, etc., all went well, economists could preach so-called

division of labour without being refuted.

But a new current of thought induced all civilized nations to

manufacture for themselves. They found it advantageous to produce what

they formerly received from other countries, or from their colonies,

which in their turn aimed at emancipating themselves from the

mother-country. Scientific discoveries universalized the methods of

production and henceforth it was useless to pay an exorbitant price

abroad for what could easily be produced at home. Does not then this

industrial revolution strike a crushing blow at the theory of the

division of labour which was supposed to be so sound?

Chapter 16: The Decentralization of Industry

I

After the Napoleonic wars Britain all but succeeded in ruining the main

industries which had sprung up in France at the end of the preceding

century. She became also mistress of the seas and had no rivals of

importance. She took in the situation, and knew how to turn its

privileges and advantages to account. She established an industrial

monopoly, and, imposing upon her neighbours her prices for the goods she

alone could manufacture, accumulated riches upon riches.

But as the middle-class Revolution of the eighteenth century abolished

serfdom and created a proletariat in France, industry, hampered for a

time in its flight, soared again, and from the second half of the

nineteenth century France ceased to be a tributary of England for

manufactured goods. To-day she too has grown into a nation with an

export trade. She sells far more than sixty million pounds’ worth of

manufactured goods, and two-thirds of these goods are fabrics. The

number of Frenchmen working for export or living by their foreign trade,

is estimated at three millions.

France is therefore no longer England’s tributary. In her turn she has

striven to monopolize certain branches of foreign industry, such as

silks and ready-made clothes, and has reaped immense profits therefrom;

but she is on the point of losing this monopoly for ever, as England is

on the point of losing the monopoly of cotton goods.

Travelling eastwards, industry has reached Germany. Fifty years ago

Germany was a tributary of England and France for most manufactured

commodities in the higher branches of industry. It is no longer so. In

the course of the last forty-five years, and especially since the

Franco-German war, Germany has completely reorganized her industry. The

new factories are stocked with the best machinery; the latest creations

of industrial art in cotton goods from Manchester, or in silks from

Lyons, etc., are now realized in recent German factories. It took two or

three generations of workers, at Lyons and Manchester, to construct the

modern machinery; but Germany adopted it in its perfected state.

Technical schools, adapted to the needs of industry, supply the

factories with an army of intelligent workmen — practical engineers, who

can work with hand and brain. German industry starts at the point which

was only reached by Manchester and Lyons after fifty years of groping in

the dark, of exertion and experiments.

It follows that as Germany manufactures as well at home, she diminishes

her imports from France and England year by year. She has not only

become their rival in manufactured goods in Asia and in Africa, but also

in London and in Paris. Shortsighted people may cry out against the

Frankfort Treaty, they may explain German competition by little

differences in railway tariffs; they may linger on the petty side of

questions and neglect great historical facts. But it is none the less

certain that the main industries, formerly in the hands of England and

France, have progressed eastward, and in Germany they found a country,

young, full of energy, possessing an intelligent middle class, and eager

in its turn to enrich itself by foreign trade.

While Germany freed itself from subjection to France and England,

manufactured her own cotton cloth, constructed her own machines — in

fact, manufactured all commodities — the main industries took also root

in Russia, where the development of manufacture is the more surprising

as it sprang up but yesterday.

At the time of the abolition of serfdom in 1861, Russia hardly had any

factories. Everything they needed — machines, rails, railway-engines,

rich materials — came from the West. Twenty years later she possessed

already 85,000 factories, and the goods from these factories had

increased fourfold in value.

The old machinery was superseded, and now nearly all the steel in use in

Russia, three-quarters of the iron, two-thirds of the coal, all railway

engines, railway-carriages, rails, nearly all steamers, are made in

Russia.

Russia, destined — so wrote economists — to remain an agricultural

territory, has rapidly developed into a manufacturing country. She

orders hardly anything from England, and very little from Germany.

Economists hold the customs responsible for these facts, and yet cottons

manufactured in Russia are sold at the same price as in London. Capital

taking no cognizance of fatherland, German and English capitalists,

accompanied by engineers and foremen of their own nationalities, have

introduced in Russia and in Poland manufactories, the excellence of

whose goods compete with the best from England. If customs were

abolished to-morrow, manufacture would only gain by it. Not long ago the

British manufacturers delivered another hard blow to the imports of

cloth and woollens from the West. They set up in southern and middle

Russia immense wool factories, stocked with the most perfect machinery

from Bradford, and already now Russia hardly imports more than a few

pieces of English cloth and French woollen fabrics as samples.

The main industries not only move eastward, they are spreading to the

southern peninsulas. The Turin Exhibition of 1884 has already shown the

progress made in Italian manufactured produce, and, let us not make any

mistake about it, the mutual hatred of the French and Italian middle

classes has no other origin than their industrial rivalry. Spain is also

becoming an industrial country; while in the East, Bohemia has suddenly

sprung up to importance as a new centre of manufactures, provided with

perfected machinery and applying the best scientific methods.

We might also mention Hungary’s rapid progress in the main industries,

but let us rather take Brazil as an example. Economists sentenced Brazil

to cultivate cotton for ever, to export it in its raw state, and to

receive cotton-cloth from Europe in exchange. In fact, forty years ago

Brazil had only nine wretched little cotton factories with 385 spindles.

To-day there are 108 cotton-mills, possessing 715,000 spindles and

26,050 looms, which throw 234 million yards of textiles on the market

annually.

Even Mexico is setting about manufacturing cotton-cloth, instead of

importing it from Europe. As to the United States they have quite freed

themselves from European tutelage, and have triumphally developed their

manufacturing powers.

But it was India which gave the most striking proof against the

specialization of national industry.

We all know the theory: the great European nations need colonies, for

colonies send raw material — cotton fibre, unwashed wool, spices, etc.,

to the mother-land. And the mother-land, under pretence of sending them

manufactured wares, gets rid of her burnt stuffs, her machine scrap-iron

and every thing which she no longer has use for. It costs her little or

nothing, and none the less the articles are sold at exorbitant prices.

Such was the theory — such was the practice for a long time. In London

and Manchester fortunes were made while India was being ruined. In the

India Museum in London unheard-of riches, collected in Calcutta and

Bombay by English merchants, are to be seen.

But other English merchants and capitalists conceived the very simple

idea that it would be more expedient to exploit the natives of India by

making cotton-cloth in India itself, than to import from twenty to

twenty-four million pounds’ worth of goods annually.

At first a series of experiments ended in failure. Indian weavers —

artists and experts in their own craft — could not inure themselves to

factory life; the machinery sent from Liverpool was bad; the climate had

to be taken into account; and merchants had to adapt themselves to new

conditions, now fully observed, before British India could become the

menacing rival of the Mother-land she is to-day.

She now possesses 200 cotton factories which employ about 196,400

workmen, and contain 5,231,000 spindles and 48,400 looms, and 38 jute

mills, with 409,000 spindles. She exports annually to China, to the

Dutch Indies, and to Africa, nearly eight million pounds’ worth of the

same white cotton-cloth, said to be England’s speciality. And while

English workmen are unemployed and in great want, Indian women weave

cotton by machinery for the Far East at the rate of sixpence a day. In

short, intelligent manufacturers are fully aware that the day is not far

off when they will not know what to do with the “factory hands” who

formerly weaved cotton-cloth exported from England. Besides which it is

becoming more and more evident that India will not import a single ton

of iron from England. The initial difficulties in using the coal and the

iron ore obtained in India have been overcome; and foundries, rivalling

those in England, have been built on the shores of the Indian Ocean.

Colonies competing with the mother-land in its production of

manufactured goods, such is the factor which will regulate economy in

the twentieth century.

And why should India not manufacture ? What should be the hindrance ?

Capital? — But capital goes wherever there are men, poor enough to be

exploited. Knowledge? — But knowledge recognizes no national barriers.

Technical skill of the worker? — No. Are, then, Hindoo workmen inferior

to the 237,000 boys and girls, not eighteen years old, at present

working in the English textile factories?

II

After having glanced at national industries it would be very interesting

to turn to special industries.

Let us take silk, for example, an eminently French product in the first

half of the nineteenth century. We all know how Lyons became the

emporium of the silk trade. At first raw silk was gathered in southern

France, till little by little they ordered it from Italy, from Spain,

from Austria, from the Caucasus, and from Japan, for the manufacture of

their silk fabrics. In 1875, out of five million kilos of raw silk

converted into stuffs in the vicinity of Lyons, there were only four

hundred thousand kilos of French silk. But if Lyons manufactured

imported silk, why should not Switzerland, Germany, Russia, do as much?

Silk weaving developed indeed in the villages round Zurich. Bâle became

a great centre of the silk trade. The Caucasian Administration engaged

women from Marseilles and workmen from Lyons to teach Georgians the

perfected rearing of silkworms, and the art of converting silk into

fabrics to the Caucasian peasants. Austria followed. Then Germany, with

the help of Lyons workmen, built great silk factories. The United States

did likewise in Paterson.

And to-day the silk trade is no longer a French monopoly. Silks are made

in Germany, in Austria, in the United States, and in England. In winter,

Caucasian peasants weave silk handkerchiefs at a wage that would mean

starvation to the silkweavers of Lyons. Italy sends silks to France; and

Lyons, which in 1870–4 exported 460 million francs’ worth of silk

fabrics, exports now only one-half of that amount. In fact, the time is

not far off when Lyons will only send higher class goods and a few

novelties as patterns to Germany, Russia, and Japan.

And so it is in all industries. Belgium has no longer the cloth

monopoly; cloth is made in Germany, in Russia, in Austria, in the United

States. Switzerland and the French Jura have no longer a clockwork

monopoly: watches are made everywhere. Scotland no longer refines sugar

for Russia: Russian sugar is imported into England. Italy, although

neither possessing coal nor iron, makes its own ironclads and engines

for her steamers. Chemical industry is no longer an English monopoly;

sulphuric acid and soda are made even in the Urals. Steam-engines, made

at Winterthur, have acquired everywhere a wide reputation, and at the

present moment, Switzerland, that has neither coal nor iron — nothing

but excellent technical schools — makes machinery better and cheaper

than England. So ends the theory of Exchange.

The tendency of trade, as for all else, is toward decentralization.

Every nation finds it advantageous to combine agriculture with the

greatest possible variety of foundries and manufactories. The

specialization, of which economists spoke so highly, enriched a number

of capitalists but is now of no use. On the contrary, it is to the

advantage of every region, every nation, to grow their own wheat, their

own vegetables, and to manufacture all produce they consume at home.

This diversity is the surest pledge of the complete development of

production by mutual co-operation, and the moving cause of progress,

while specialization is a hindrance to progress.

Agriculture can only prosper in proximity to factories. And no sooner

does a single factory appear than an infinite variety of other factories

must spring up around, so that, mutually supporting and stimulating one

another by their inventions, they increase their productivity.

III

It is foolish indeed to export wheat and import flour, to export wool

and import cloth, to export iron and import machinery; not only because

transportation is a waste of time and money, but, above all, because a

country with no developed industry inevitably remains behind the times

in agriculture; because a country with no large factories to bring steel

to a finished condition is also backward in all other industries; and

lastly, because the industrial and technical capacities of the nation

remain undeveloped.

In the world of production everything holds together nowadays.

Cultivation of the soil is no longer possible without machinery, without

great irrigation works, without railways, without manure factories. And

to adapt this machinery, these railways, these irrigation engines, etc.,

to local conditions, a certain spirit of invention, a certain amount of

technical skill, that lie dormant as long as spades and ploughshares are

the only implements of cultivation, must be developed.

If fields are to be properly cultivated, and are to yield the abundant

harvests man has the right to expect, it is essential that workshops,

foundries, and factories develop within the reach of the fields. A

variety of occupations, a variety of skill arising therefrom end working

together for a common aim — these are the genuine forces of progress.

And now let us imagine the inhabitants of a city or a territory —

whether vast or small — stepping for the first time on to the path of

the Social Revolution.

We are sometimes told that “nothing will have changed”: that the mines,

the factories, etc., will be expropriated, and proclaimed national or

communal property, that every man will go back to his usual work, and

that the Revolution will then be accomplished.

But this is a dream: the Social Revolution cannot take place so simply.

We have already mentioned that should the Revolution break out to-morrow

in Paris, Lyons, or any other city — should the workers lay hands on

factories, houses, and banks, present production would be completely

revolutionized by this simple fact.

International commerce will come to a standstill; so also will the

importation of foreign bread-stuffs; the circulation of commodities and

of provisions will be paralyzed. And then, the city or territory in

revolt will be compelled to provide for itself, and to reorganize

production. If it fails to do so, it is death. If it succeeds, it will

revolutionize the economic life of the country.

The quantity of imported provisions having decreased, consumption having

increased, one million Parisians working for exportation purposes having

been thrown out of work, a great number of things imported to-day from

distant or neighbouring countries not reaching their destination,

fancy-trade being temporarily at a standstill, What will the inhabitants

have to eat six months after the Revolution?

We think that when the stores are empty, the masses will seek to obtain

their food from the land. They will be compelled to cultivate the soil,

to combine agricultural production with industrial production in Paris

and its environs. They will have to abandon the merely ornamental trades

and consider the most urgent need — bread.

Citizens will be obliged to become agriculturists. Not in the same

manner as peasants who wear themselves out, ploughing for a wage that

barely provides them with sufficient food for the year’ but by following

the principles of market-gardeners’ intensive agriculture, applied on a

large scale by means of the best machinery that man has invented or can

invent. They will till the land — not, how ever, like the country beast

of burden a Paris jeweller would object to that. They will reorganize

cultivation, not in ten years’ time, but at once, during the

revolutionary struggles, from fear of being worsted by the enemy.

Agriculture will have to be carried on by intelligent beings; availing

themselves of their knowledge, organizing themselves in joyous gangs for

pleasant work, like the men who, a hundred years ago, worked in the

Champ de Mars for the Feast of the Federation — a work of delight, when

not carried to excess, when scientifically organized, when man invents

and improves his tools and is conscious of being a useful member of the

community.

Of course, they will not only cultivate, they will also produce those

things which they formerly used to order from foreign parts. And let us

not forget that for the inhabitants of a revolted territory, “foreign

parts” may include all districts that have not joined in the

revolutionary movement. During the Revolutions of 1793 and 1871 Paris

was made to feel that “foreign parts” meant even the country district at

her very gates. The speculator in grains at Troyes starved the

sansculottes of Paris more effectually than the German armies brought on

French soil by the Versailles conspirators. The revolted city will be

compelled to do without “foreigners,” and why not? France invented

beetroot sugar when sugar-cane ran short during the continental

blockade. Parisians discovered salt petre in their cellars when they no

longer received any from abroad. Shall we be inferior to our

grandfathers, who with difficulty lisped the first words of science?

A revolution is more than the destruction of a political system. It

implies the awakening of human intelligence, the increasing of the

inventive spirit tenfold, a hundredfold; it is the dawn of a new,

science — the science of men like Laplace, Lamarck, Lavoisier. It is a

revolution in the minds of men, more than in their institutions.

And economists tell us to return to our workshops, as if passing through

a revolution were going home after a walk in the Epping forest!

To begin with, the sole fact of having laid hands on middle-class

property implies the necessity of completely reorganizing the whole of

economic life in workshops, in dockyards, and in factories.

And the revolution will not fail to act in this direction. Should Paris,

during the social revolution, be cut off from the world for a year or

two by the supporters of middle-class rule, its millions of intellects,

not yet depressed by factory life — that City of little trades which

stimulate the spirit of invention — will show the world what man’s brain

can accomplish without asking any help from without, but the motor force

of the sun that gives light, the power of the wind that sweeps away

impurities, and the silent life-forces at work in the earth we tread on.

We shall see then what a variety of trades, mutually co-operating on a

spot of the globe and animated by the social revolution, can do to feed,

clothe, house, and supply with all manner of luxuries millions of

intelligent men.

We need write no fiction to prove this. What we are sure of, what has

already been experimented upon, and recognized as practical, would

suffice to carry it into effect, if the attempt were fertilized,

vivified by the daring inspiration of the Revolution and the spontaneous

impulse of the masses.

Chapter 17: Agriculture

I

Political Economy has often been reproached with drawing all its

deductions from the decidedly false principle, that the only incentive

capable of forcing a man to augment his power of production is personal

interest in its narrowest sense.

The reproach is perfectly true; so true that epochs of great industrial

discoveries and true progress in industry are precisely those in which

the happiness of all was the aim pursued, and in which personal

enrichment was least thought of. Great investigators and great inventors

aimed, without doubt, at the emancipation of mankind. And if Watt,

Stephenson, Jacquard, etc., could have only foreseen what a state of

misery their sleepless nights would bring to the workers, they would

probably have burned their designs and broken their models.

Another principle that pervades Political Economy is just as false. It

is the tacit admission, common to all economists, that if there is often

over-production in certain branches, a society will nevertheless never

have sufficient products to satisfy the wants of all, and that

consequently the day will never come when nobody will be forced to sell

his labour in exchange for wages. This tacit admission is found at the

basis of all theories and the so-called “laws” taught by economists.

And yet it is certain that the day when any civilized association of

individuals would ask itself, what are the needs of all, and the means

of satisfying them, it would see that, in industry as in agriculture, it

already possesses sufficient to provide abundantly for all needs, on

condition that it knows how to apply these means to satisfy real needs.

That this is true as regards industry no one can contest. Indeed, it

suffices to study the processes already in use to extract coals and ore,

to obtain steel and work it, to manufacture what is used for clothing,

etc., in large industrial establishments, in order to perceive that we

could already increase our production fourfold and yet economize work.

We go further. We assert that agriculture is in the same position: the

labourer, like the manufacturer, already possesses the means to increase

his production, not only fourfold but tenfold, and he will be able to

put it into practice as soon as he feels the need of it, as soon as the

socialist organization of work will be established instead of the

present capitalistic one.

Each time agriculture is spoken of, men imagine a peasant bending over

the plough, throwing badly sorted corn haphazard into the ground and

waiting anxiously for what the good or bad season will bring forth; or a

family working from morn to night and reaping as reward a rude bed, dry

bread, and coarse beverage. In a word, they picture “the wild beast” of

La Bruyère.

And for this man, thus subjected to misery, the utmost relief society

proposes is to reduce his taxes or his rent. But they do not even dare

to imagine a cultivator standing erect, taking leisure, and producing by

a few hours’ work per day sufficient food to nourish, not only his own

family, but a hundred men more at the least. In their most glowing

dreams of the future Socialists do not go beyond American extensive

culture, which, after all, is but the infancy of agricultural art.

The agriculturist has broader ideas to-day — his conceptions are on a

far grander scale. He only asks for a fraction of an acre in order to

produce sufficient vegetables for a family; and to feed twenty-five

horned beasts he needs no more space than he formerly required to feed

one; his aim is to make his own soil, to defy seasons and climate, to

warm both air and earth around the young plant; to produce, in a word,

on one acre what he used to crop on fifty acres, and that without any

excessive fatigue — by greatly reducing, on the contrary, the total of

former labour. He knows that we will be able to feed everybody by giving

to the culture of the fields no more time than what each can give with

pleasure and joy.

This is the present tendency of agriculture.

While scientific men, led by Liebig, the creator of the chemical theory

of agriculture, often got on the wrong tack in their love of mere

theories, unlettered agriculturists opened up new roads to prosperity.

Market-gardeners of Paris, Troyes, Rouen, Scotch and English gardeners,

Flemish farmers, peasants of Jersey, Guernsey, and farmers on the Scilly

Isles have opened up such large horizons that the mind hesitates to

grasp them. While up till lately a family of peasants needed at least

seventeen to twenty acres to live on the produce of the soil — and we

know how peasants live — we can no longer say what is the minimum area

on which all that is necessary to a family can be grown, even including

articles of luxury, if the soil is worked by means of intensive culture.

Ten years ago it could already be asserted that a population of thirty

million individuals could live very well, without importing anything, on

what could be grown in Great Britain. But now, when we see the progress

recently made in France as well as in England, and when we contemplate

the new horizons which open before us, we can say that in cultivating

the earth as it is already cultivated in many places, even on poor

soils, fifty or sixty million inhabitants to the territory of Great

Britain would still be a very feeble proportion to what man could exact

from the soil.

In any case (as we are about to demonstrate) we may consider it as

absolutely proved that if to-morrow Paris and the two departments of

Seine and of Seine-et-Oise organized themselves as an Anarchist commune,

in which all worked with their hands, and if the entire universe refused

to send them a single bushel of wheat, a single head of cattle, a single

basket of fruit, and left them only the territory of the two

departments, they could not only produce corn, meat, and vegetables

necessary for themselves, but also articles of luxury in sufficient

quantities for all.

And, in addition, we affirm that the sum total of this labour would be

far less than that expended at present to feed these people with corn

harvested in Auvergne and Russia, with vegetables produced a little

everywhere by extensive agriculture, and with fruit grown in the South.

It is self-evident that we in nowise desire “all” exchange to be

suppressed, nor that each region should strive to produce that which

will only grow in its climate by a more or less artificial culture. But

we care to draw attention to the fact that the theory of exchange, such

as is understood to-day, is strangely exaggerated — that exchange is

often useless and even harmful. We assert, moreover, that people have

never had a right conception of the immense labour of Southern wine

growers, nor of that of Russian and Hungarian corn growers, whose

excessive labour could also be very much reduced if they adopted

intensive culture, instead of their present system of extensive

agriculture.

II

It would be impossible to quote here the mass of facts on which we base

our assertions. We are therefore obliged to refer our readers who want

further information to another book, “Fields, Factories, and Workshops.”

Above all we earnestly invite those who are interested in the question

to read several excellent works published in France and elsewhere, and

of which we give a list at the close of this book [9]. As to the

inhabitants of large towns, who have as yet no real notion of what

agriculture can be, we advise them to explore the surrounding

market-gardens and study the cultivation. They need but observe and

question market-gardeners, and a new world will be open to them. They

will thus be able to see what European agriculture may be in the

twentieth century; and they will understand with what force the social

revolution will be armed when we know the secret of taking everything we

need from the soil.

A few facts will suffice to show that our assertions are in no way

exaggerated. We only wish them to be preceded by a few general remarks.

We know in what a wretched condition European agriculture is. If the

cultivator of the soil is not plundered by the landowner, he is robbed

by the State. If the State taxes him moderately, the money-lender

enslaves him by means of promissory notes, and soon turns him into the

simple tenant of a soil belonging in reality to a financial company. The

landlord, the State, and the banker thus plunder the cultivator by means

of rent, taxes, and interest. The sum varies in each country, but it

never falls below the quarter, very often the half of the raw produce.

In France agriculturists paid the State quite recently as much as 44 per

cent of the gross produce.

Moreover, the share of the owner and the State always goes on

increasing. As soon as the cultivator has obtained more plentiful crops

by prodigies of labour, invention, or initiative, the tribute he will

owe to the landowner, the State, and the banker will augment in

proportion. If he doubles the number of bushels reaped per acre, rent

will be doubled and taxes too, and the State will take care to raise

them still more if the prices go up. And so on. In short, everywhere the

cultivator of the soil works twelve to sixteen hours a day; these three

vultures take from him everything he might lay by; they rob him

everywhere of what would enable him to improve his culture. This is why

agriculture progresses so slowly.

The cultivator can only occasionally make some progress, in some

exceptional regions, under quite exceptional circumstances, following

upon a quarrel between the three vampires. And yet we have said nothing

about the tribute every cultivator pays to the manufacturer. Every

machine, every spade, every barrel of chemical manure, is sold to him at

three or four times its real cost. Nor let us forget the middleman, who

levies the lion’s share of the earth’s produce.

This is why, during all this century of invention and progress,

agriculture has only improved from time to time on very limited areas.

Happily there have always been small oases, neglected for some time by

the vultures; and here we learn what intensive agriculture can produce

for mankind. Let us mention a few examples.

In the American prairies (which, however, only yield meagre spring wheat

crops, from 7 to 15 bushels an acre, and even these are often marred by

periodical droughts), 500 men, working only during eight months, produce

the annual food of 50,000 people. With all the improvements of the last

few years, one man’s yearly labour (300 days) yields, delivered in

Chicago as flour, the yearly food of 250 men. Here the result is

obtained by a great economy in manual labour: on those vast plains,

which the eye cannot encompass, ploughing, harvesting, thrashing, are

organized in almost military fashion. There is no useless running to and

fro, no loss of time — all is done with parade-like precision.

This is agriculture on a large scale — extensive agriculture, which

takes the soil from nature without seeking to improve it. When the earth

has yielded ail it can, they leave it; they seek elsewhere for a virgin

soil, to be exhausted in its turn. But there is also “intensive”

agriculture, which is already worked, and will be more and more so, by

machinery. Its object is to cultivate a limited space well, to manure,

to improve, to concentrate work, and to obtain the largest crop

possible. This kind of culture spreads every year, and whereas

agriculturists in the south of France and on the fertile plains of

Western America are content with an average crop of 11 to 15 bushels per

acre by extensive culture, they reap regularly 39 even 55, and sometimes

60 bushels per acre in the north of France. The annual consumption of a

man is thus obtained from less than a quarter of an acre.

And the more intense the culture is, the less work is expended to obtain

a bushel of wheat. Machinery replaces man at the preliminary work and

for the improvements needed by the land — such as draining, clearing of

stones — which will double the crops in future, once and for ever.

Sometimes nothing but keeping the soil free of weeds without manuring,

allows an average soil to yield excellent crops from year to year. It

has been done for twenty years in succession at Rothamstead, in

Hertfordshire.

Let us not write an agricultural romance, but be satisfied with a crop

of 44 bushels per acre. That needs no exceptional soil, but merely a

rational culture; and let us see what it means.

The 3,600,000 individuals who inhabit the two departments of Seine and

Seine-et-Oise consume yearly for their food a little less than 22

million bushels of cereals, chiefly wheat; and in our hypothesis they

would have to cultivate, in order to obtain this crop, 494,200 acres out

of the 1,507,300 acres which they possess. It is evident they would not

cultivate them with spades. That would need too much time — 96 work-days

of 5 hours per acre. It would be preferable to improve the soil once for

all — to drain what needed to be drained to level what needed levelling,

to clear the soil of stones, were it even necessary to spend 5 million

days of 5 hours in this preparatory work — an average of 10 work-days to

each acre.

Then they would plough with the steam-digger, which would take one and

three-fifths of a day per acre, and they would give another one and

three-fifths of a day for working with the double plough. Seeds would be

sorted by steam instead of taken haphazard, and they would be carefully

sown in rows instead of being thrown to the four winds. Now all this

work would not take 10 days of 5 hours per acre if the work were done

under good conditions. But if 10 million work-days are given to good

culture during 3 or 4 years, the result will be later on crops of 44 to

55 bushels per acre by only working half the time.

Fifteen million work-days will have thus been spent to give bread to a

population of 3,600,000 inhabitants. And the work would be such that

each could do it without having muscles of steel, or without having even

worked the ground before. The initiative and the general distribution of

work would come from those who know the soil. As to the work itself,

there is no townsman of either sex so enfeebled as to be incapable of

looking after machines and of contributing his share to agrarian work

after a few hours’ apprenticeship.

Well, when we consider that in the present chaos there are, in a city

like Paris, without counting the unemployed of the upper classes, about

100,000 men out of work in their several trades, we see that the power

lost in our present organization would alone suffice to give, with a

rational culture, bread necessary to the three or four million

inhabitants of the two departments.

We repeat, this is no fancy dream, and we have not spoken of the truly

intensive agriculture. We have not depended upon the wheat (obtained in

three years by Mr. Hallett) of which one grain, replanted, produced 5000

or 6000, and occasionally 10,000 grains, which would give the wheat

necessary for a family of five individuals on an area of 120 square

yards. On the contrary, we have only mentioned what has been already

achieved by numerous farmers in France, England, Belgium, etc., and what

might be done to-morrow with the experience and knowledge acquired

already by practice on a large scale.

But without a revolution, neither to-morrow, nor after to-morrow will

see it done, because it is not to the interest of landowners and

capitalists; and because peasants who would find their profit in it have

neither the knowledge nor the money, nor the time to obtain what is

necessary to go ahead.

The present society has not yet reached this stage. But let Parisians

proclaim an Anarchist Commune, and they will of necessity come to it,

because they will not be foolish enough to continue making luxurious

toys (which Vienna, Warsaw, and Berlin make as well already) and to run

the risk of being left without bread.

Moreover, agricultural work, by the help of machinery, would soon become

the most attractive and the most joyful of all occupations.

“We have had enough jewellery and enough dolls’ clothes,” they would

say; “it is high time for the workers to recruit their strength in

agriculture, to go in search of vigour, of impressions of nature, of the

joy of life, that they have forgotten in the dark factories of the

suburbs.”

In the Middle Ages it was Alpine pasture lands, rather than guns, which

allowed the Swiss to shake off lords and kings. Modern agriculture will

allow a city in revolt to free itself from the combined bourgeois

forces.

III

We have seen how the 3½ million inhabitants of the two departments round

Paris could find ample bread by cultivating only a third of their

territory. Let us now pass on to cattle.

Englishmen, who eat much meat, consume on an average a little less than

220 lb. a year per adult. Supposing all meats consumed were oxen, that

makes a little less than the third of an ox. An ox a year for 5

individuals (including children) is already a sufficient ration. For 3½

million inhabitants this would make an annual consumption of 700,000

head of cattle.

To-day, with the pasture system, we need at least 5 million acres to

nourish 660,000 head of cattle. This makes 9 acres per each head of

horned cattle. Nevertheless, with prairies moderately watered by spring

water (as recently done on thousands of acres in the south-west of

France), 1¼ million acres already suffice. But if intensive culture is

practiced, and beetroot is grown for fodder, you only need a quarter of

that area, that is to say, about 310,000 acres. And if we have recourse

to maize and practice ensilage (the compression of fodder while green)

like Arabs, we obtain fodder on an area of 217,500 acres.

In the environs of Milan, where sewer water is used to irrigate the

fields, fodder for 2 to 3 horned cattle per each acre is obtained on an

area of 22,000 acres; and on a few favoured fields, up to 177 tons of

hay to the 10 acres have been cropped, the yearly provender of 36 milch

cows. Nearly nine acres per head of cattle are needed under the pasture

system, and only 2½ acres for 9 oxen or cows under the new system. These

are the opposite extremes in modern agriculture.

In Guernsey, on a total of 9884 acres utilized, nearly half (4695 acres)

are covered with cereals and kitchen-gardens; only 5189 acres remain as

meadows. On these 5189 acres, 1480 horses, 7260 head of cattle, 900

sheep, and 4200 pigs are fed, which makes more than 3 head of cattle per

2 acres, without reckoning the sheep or the pigs. It is needless to add

that the fertility of the soil is made by seaweed and chemical manures.

Returning to our 3½ million inhabitants belonging to Paris and its

environs, we see that the land necessary for the rearing of cattle comes

down from 5 million acres to 197,000. Well, then, let us not stop at the

lowest figures, let us take those of ordinary intensive culture; let us

liberally add to the land necessary for smaller cattle which must

replace some of the horned beasts and allow 395,000 acres for the

rearing of cattle — 494,000 if you like, on the 1,013,000 acres

remaining after bread has been provided for the people.

Let us be generous and give 5 million work-days to put this landinto a

productive state.

After having therefore employed in the course of a year 20 million

work-days, half of which are for permanent improvements, we shall have

bread and meat assured to us, without including all the extra meat

obtainable in the shape of fowls, pigs, rabbits, etc.; without taking

into consideration that a population provided with excellent vegetables

and fruit consumes less meat than Englishmen, who supplement their poor

supply of vegetables by animal food. Now, how much do 20 million

work-days of 5 hours make per inhabitant? Very little indeed. A

population of 3½ millions must have at least 1,200,000 adult men, and as

many women capable of work. Well, then, to give bread and meat to all,

it would need only 17 half-days of work a year per man. Add 3 million

work-days, or double that number if you like, in order to obtain milk.

That will make 25 work-days of 5 hours in all — nothing more than a

little pleasurable country exercise — to obtain the three principal

products bread, meat, and milk. The three products which, after housing,

cause daily anxiety to nine-tenths of mankind.

And yet — let us not tire of repeating — these are not fancy dreams. We

have only told what is, what has been, obtained by experience on a large

scale. Agriculture could be reorganized in this way to-morrow if

property laws and general ignorance did not offer opposition.

The day Paris has understood that to know what you eat and how it is

produced, is a question of public interest; the day when everybody will

have understood that this questions is infinitely more important than

all the parliamentary debates of the present times — on that day the

Revolution will be an accomplished fact. Paris will take possession of

the two departments and cultivate them. And then the Parisian worker,

after having laboured a third of his existence in order to buy bad and

insufficient food, will produce it himself, under his walls, within the

enclosure of his forts (if they still exist), in a few hours of healthy

and attractive work.

And now we pass on to fruit and vegetables. Let us go outside Paris and

visit the establishment of a market-gardener who accomplishes wonders

(ignored by learned economists) at a few miles from the academies.

Let us visit, suppose, M. Ponce, the author of a work on

market-gardening, who makes no secret of what the earth yields him, and

who has published it all along.

M. Ponce, and especially his workmen, work like niggers. It takes eight

men to cultivate a plot a little less than 3 acres (27/10). They work

12, and even 15 hours a day, that is to say, three times more than is

needed. Twenty-four of them would not be too many. To which M. Ponce

will probably answer that as he pays the terrible sum of £100 rent a

year for his 27/10 acres of land, and £100 for manure bought in the

barracks, he is obliged to exploit. He would no doubt answer, “Being

exploited, I exploit in my turn.” His installation has also cost him

£1200, of which certainly more than half went as tribute to the idle

barons of industry. In reality, this establishment represents at most

3000 work-days, probably much less.

But let us examine his crops: nearly 10 tons of carrots, nearly 10 tons

of onions, radishes, and small vegetables, 6000 heads of cabbage, 3000

heads of cauliflower, 5000 baskets of tomatoes, 5000 dozen of choice

fruit, 154,000 salads; in short, a total of 123 tons of vegetables and

fruit to 27/10 acres — 120 yards long by 109 yards broad, which makes

more than 44 tons of vegetables to the acre.

But a man does not eat more than 660 lb. of vegetables and fruit a year,

and 2½ acres of a market-garden yield enough vegetables and fruit to

richly supply the table of 350 adults during the year. Thus 24 persons

employed a whole year in cultivating 27/10 acres of land, and only

working 5 hours a day, would produce sufficient vegetables and fruit for

350 adults, which is equivalent at least to 500 individuals.

To put it in another way: in cultivating like M. Ponce — and his results

have already been surpassed — 350 adults should each give a little more

than 100 hours a year (103) to produce vegetables and fruit necessary

for 500 people.

Let us mention that such a production is not the exception. It takes

place, under the walls of Paris, on an area of 2220 acres, by 5000

market-gardeners. Only these market-gardeners are reduced nowadays to a

state of beasts of burden, in order to pay an average rent of £32 per

acre.

But do not these facts, which can be verified by every one, prove that

17,300 acres (of the 519,000 remaining to us) would suffice to give all

necessary vegetables, as well as a liberal amount of fruit to the 3½

millions inhabitants of our two departments?

As to the quantity of work necessary to produce these fruits and

vegetables, it would amount to 50 million work-days of 5 hours (50 days

per adult male), if we measure by the market-gardeners’ standard of

work. But we could reduce this quantity if we had recourse to the

process in vogue in Jersey and Guernsey. We must also remember that the

Paris market-gardener is forced to work so hard because he mostly

produces early season fruits, the high prices of which have to pay for

fabulous rents, and that this system of culture entails more work than

is really necessary. The market-gardeners of Paris, not having the means

to make a great outlay on their gardens, and being obliged to pay

heavily for glass, wood, iron, an coal, obtain their artificial heat out

of manure, while it can be had at much less cost in hothouses.

IV

The market-gardeners, we say, are forced to become machines and to

renounce all joys of lift to obtain their marvellous crops. But these

hard grinders have rendered a great service to humanity in teaching us

that the soil can be “made.” They make it with old hotbeds of manure,

which have already served to give the necessary warmth to young plants

and to early fruit; and they make it in such great quantity that they

are compelled to sell it in part, otherwise it would raise the level of

their gardens by one inch every year. They do it so well (so Barral

teaches us, in his “Dictionary of Agriculture,” in an article on

market-gardeners) that in recent contracts, the market-gardener

stipulates that he will carry away his soil with him when he leaves the

bit of ground he is cultivating. Loam carried away on carts, with

furniture and glass frames — that is the answer of practical cultivators

to the learned treatises of a Ricardo, who represented rent as a means

of equalizing the natural advantages of the soil. “The soil is worth

what man is worth,” that is the gardeners’ motto.

And yet the market-gardeners of Paris and Rouen labour three times as

hard to obtain the same results as their fellow-workers in Guernscy or

in England. Applying industry to agriculture these last make their

climate in addition to their soil, by means of the greenhouse.

Fifty years ago the greenhouse was the luxury of the rich. It was kept

to grow exotic plants for pleasure. But nowadays its use begins to be

generalized. A tremendous industry has grown up lately in Guernsey and

Jersey, where hundreds of acres are already covered with glass — to say

nothing of the countless small greenhouses kept in every little farm

garden. Acres and acres of greenhouses have lately been built also at

Worthing, in the suburbs of London, and in several other parts of

England and Scotland.

They are built of all qualities, beginning with those which have granite

walls, down to those which represent mere shelters made in planks and

glass frames, which cost, even now, with all the tribute paid to

capitalists and middlemen, less than 3s. 6d. per square yard under

glass. Most of them are heated for at least three or four months every

year; but even the cool greenhouses, which are not heated at all, give

excellent results — of course, not for growing grapes and tropical

plants, but for potatoes, carrots, peas, tomatoes, and so on.

In this way man emancipates himself from climate, and at the same time

he avoids also the heavy work with the hot-beds, and he saves both in

buying much less manure and in work. Three men to the acre, each of them

working less than sixty hours a week, grow on very small spaces what

formerly required acres and acres of land.

The result of all these recent conquests of culture is, that if one half

only of the adults of a city gave each about fifty half-days for the

culture of the finest fruit and vegetables out of season, they would

have all the year round an unlimited supply of that sort of fruit and

vegetables for the whole population.

But there is a still more important fact to notice. The greenhouse has

nowadays a tendency to become a mere kitchen garden under glass. And

when it is used to such a purpose, the simplest plank-and-glass unheated

shelters already give fabulous crops — such as, for instance, 500

bushels of potatoes per acre as a first crop, ready by the end of April;

after which a second and a third crop are obtained in the extremely high

temperature which prevails in the summer under glass.

I gave in my “Fields, Factories, and Workshops,” most striking facts in

this direction. Sufficient to say here, that at Jersey, 34 men, with one

trained gardener only, cultivate 13 acres under glass, from which they

obtain 143 tons of fruit and early vegetables, using for this

extraordinary culture less than 1000 tons of coal.

And this is done now in Guernsey and Jersey on a very large scale, quite

a number of steamers constantly plying between Guernsey and London, only

to export the crops of the greenhouses.

Nowadays, in order to obtain that same crop of 500 bushels of potatoes,

we must plough every year a surface of 4 acres, plant it, cultivate it,

weed it, and so on; whereas with the glass, even if we shall have to

give perhaps, to start with, half a day’s work per square yard in order

to build the greenhouse — we shall save afterwards at least one-half,

and probably three-quarters of the formerly required yearly labour.

These are facts, results which every one can verify himself. And these

facts are already a hint as to what man could obtain from the earth if

he treated it with intelligence.

V

In all the above we have reasoned upon what already withstood the test

of experience. Intensive culture of the fields, irrigated meadows, the

hothouse, and finally the kitchen garden under glass are realities.

Moreover, the tendency is to extend and to generalize these methods of

culture, because they allow of obtaining more produce with less work and

with more certainty.

In fact, after having studied the most simple glass shelters of

Guernsey, we affirm that, taking all in all, far less work is expended

for obtaining potatoes under glass in April, than in growing them in the

open air, which requires digging a space four times as large, watering

it, weeding it, etc. Work is likewise economized in employing a

perfected tool or machine, even when an initial expense had to be

incurred to buy the tool.

Complete figures concerning the culture of common vegetables under glass

are still wanting. This culture is of recent origin, and is only carried

out on small areas. But we have already figures concerning the fifty

years old culture of early season grapes, and these figures are

conclusive.

In the north of England, on the Scotch frontier, where coal only costs

3s. a ton at the pit’s mouth, they have long since taken to growing

hothouse grapes. Thirty years ago these grapes, ripe in January, were

sold by the grower at 20s. per lb. and resold at 40s. per lb. for

Napoleon III’s table. To-day the same grower sells them at only 2s. 6d.

per lb. He tells us so himself in a horticultural journal. The fall is

caused by tons and tons of grapes arriving in January to London and

Paris.

Thanks to the cheapness of coal and an intelligent culture, grapes from

the north travel now southwards, in a contrary direction to ordinary

fruit. They cost so little that in May, English and Jersey grapes are

sold at 1s. 8d. per lb. by the gardeners, and yet this price, like that

of 40s. thirty years ago, is only kept up by slack production.

In March, Belgium grapes are sold at from 6d. to 8d., while in October,

grapes cultivated in immense quantities — under glass, and with a little

artificial heating in the environs of London — are sold at the same

price as grapes bought by the pound in the vineyards of Switzerland and

the Rhine, that is to say, for a few halfpence. Yet they still cost

two-thirds too much, by reason of the excessive rent of the soil and the

cost of installation and heating, on which the gardener pays a

formidable tribute to the manufacturer and middleman. This being

understood, we may say that it costs “next to nothing” to have delicious

grapes under the latitude of, and in our misty London in autumn. In one

of the suburbs, for instance, a wretched glass and plaster shelter, 9

ft. 10 in. long by 6½ ft. wide, resting against our cottage, gave us

about fifty pounds of grapes of an exquisite taste in October, for nine

consecutive years. The crop came from a Hamburg vine-stalk, six years

old. And the shelter was so bad that the rain came through. At night the

temperature was always that of outside. It was evidently not heated, for

that would be as useless as to heat the street! And the cares to be

given were: pruning the vine half an hour every year; and bringing a

wheelbarrowful of manure, which is thrown over the stalk of the vine,

planted in red clay outside the shelter.

On the other hand, if we estimate the amount of care given to the vine

on the borders of the Rhine or Lake Leman, the terraces constructed

stone upon stone on the slopes of the hills, the transport of manure and

also of earth to a height of two or three hundred feet, we come to the

conclusion that on the whole the expenditure of work necessary to

cultivate vines is more considerable in Switzerland or on the banks of

the Rhine than it is under glass in London suburbs.

This may seem paradoxical, because it is generally believed that vines

grow of themselves in the south of Europe, and that the vinegrower’s

work costs nothing. But gardeners and horticulturists, far from

contradicting us, confirm our assertions. “The most advantageous culture

in England is vine culture,” wrote a practical gardener, editor of the

“English Journal of Horticulture.” Prices speak eloquently for

themselves, as we know.

Translating these facts into communist language, we may assert that the

man or woman who takes twenty hours a year from his leisure time to give

some little care — very pleasant in the main — to two or three

vine-stalks sheltered by simple glass under any European climate, will

gather as many grapes as their family and friends can eat. And that

applies not only to vines, but to all fruit trees.

The Commune that will put the processes of intensive culture into

practice on a large scale will have all possible vegetables, indigenous

or exotic, and all desirable fruits, without employing more than about

ten hours a year per inhabitant.

In fact, nothing would be easier than to verify the above statements by

direct experiment. Suppose 100 acres of a light loam (such as we have at

Worthing) are transformed into a number of market gardens, each one with

its glass houses for the rearing of the seedlings and young plants.

Suppose also that 50 more acres are covered with glass, houses, and the

organization of the whole is left to practical experienced French

maraîchers, and Guernsey or Worthing greenhouse gardeners.

In basing the maintenance of these 150 acres on the Jersey average,

requiring the work of three men per acre under glass — which makes less

than 8,600 hours of work a year — it would need about 1,300,000 hours

for the 150 acres. Fifty competent gardeners could give five hours a day

to this work, and the rest would be simply done by people who, without

being gardeners by profession, would soon learn how to use a spade, and

to handle the plants. But this work would yield at least — we have seen

it in a preceding chapter — all necessaries and articles of luxury in

the way of fruit and vegetables for at least 40,000 or 50,000 people.

Let us admit that among this number there are 13,500 adults, willing to

work at the kitchen-garden; then, each one would have to give 100 hours

a year distributed over the whole year. These hours of work would become

hours of recreation spent among friends and children in beautiful

gardens, more beautiful probably than those of the legendary Semiramis.

This is the balance sheet of the labour to be spent in order to be able

to eat to satiety fruit which we are deprived of to-day, and to have

vegetables in abundance, now so scrupulously rationed out by the

housewife, when she has to reckon each halfpenny which must go to enrich

capitalists and landowners [10].

If only humanity had the consciousness of what it CAN, and if that

consciousness only gave it the power to will!

If it only knew that cowardice of the spirit is the rock on which all

revolutions have stranded until now.

VI

We can easily perceive the new horizons opening before the social

revolution.

Each time we speak of revolution the worker who has seen children

wanting food lowers his brow and repeats obstinately — “What of bread?

Will there be sufficient if everyone eats according to his appetite?

What if the peasants, ignorant tools of reaction, starve our towns as

the black bands did in France in 1793 — what shall we do?”

Let them do their worst! The large cities will have to do without them.

At what, then, should the hundreds of thousands of workers, who are

asphyxiated to-day in small workshops and factories, be employed on the

day they regain their liberty? Will they continue locking themselves up

in factories after the Revolution? Will they continue to make luxurious

toys for export when they see their stock of corn getting exhausted,

meat becoming scarce, and vegetables disappearing without being

replaced?

Evidently not! They will leave the town and go into the fields! Aided by

a machinery which will enable the weakest of us to put a shoulder to the

wheel, they will carry revolution into previously enslaved culture as

they will have carried it into institutions and ideas.

Hundreds of acres will be covered with glass, and men, and women with

delicate fingers, will foster the growth of young plants. Hundreds of

other acres will be ploughed by steam, improved by manures, or enriched

by artificial soil obtained by the pulverization of rocks. Happy crowds

of occasional labourers will cover these acres with crops, guided in the

work and experiments partly by those who know agriculture, but

especially by the great and practical spirit of a people roused from

long slumber and illumined by that bright beacon — the happiness of all.

And in two or three months the early crops will relieve the most

pressing wants, and provide food for a people who, after so many

centuries of expectation, will at least be able to appease their hunger

and eat according to their appetite.

In the meanwhile, popular genius, the genius of a nation which revolts

and knows its wants, will work at experimenting with new processes of

culture that we already catch a glimpse of, and that only need the

baptism of experience to become universal. Light will be experimented

with — that unknown agent of culture which makes barley ripen in

forty-five days under the latitude of Yakutsk; light, concentrated or

artificial, will rival heat in hastening the growth of plants. A Mouchot

of the future will invent a machine to guide the rays of the sun and

make them work, so that we shall no longer seek sun-heat stored in coal

in the depths of the earth. They will experiment the watering of the

soil with cultures of micro-organisms — a rational idea, conceived but

yesterday, which will permit us to give to the soil those little living

beings, necessary to feed the rootless, to decompose and assimilate the

component parts of the soil.

They will experiment.... But let us stop here or we shall enter into the

realm of fancy. Let us remain in the reality of acquired facts. With the

processes of culture in use, applied on a large scale, and already

victorious in the struggle against industrial competition, we can give

ourselves ease and luxury in return for agreeable work. The near future

will show what is practical in the processes that recent scientific

discoveries give us a glimpse of. Let us limit ourselves at present to

opening up the new path that consists in the study of the needs of man,

and the means of satisfying them.

The only thing that may be wanting to the Revolution is the boldness of

initiative.

With our minds already narrowed in our youth, enslaved by the past in

our mature age and till the grave, we hardly dare to think. If a new

idea is mentioned — before venturing on an opinion of our own, we

consult musty books a hundred years old, to know what ancient masters

thought on the subject.

It is not food that will fail, if boldness of thought and initiative are

not wanting to the revolution.

Of all the great days of the French Revolution, the most beautiful, the

greatest, was the one on which delegates who had come from all parts of

France to Paris, worked all with the spade to plane the ground of the

Champ de Mars, preparing it for the fête of the Federation.

That day France was united: animated by the new spirit, she had a vision

of the future in the working in common of the soil.

And it will again be by the working in common of the soil that the

enfranchized societies will find their unity and will obliterate hatred

and oppression which had divided them.

Henceforth, able to conceive solidarity — that immense power which

increases man’s energy and creative forces a hundredfold — the new

society will march to the conquest of the future with all the vigour of

youth.

Leaving off production for unknown buyers, and looking in its midst for

needs and tastes to be satisfied, society will liberally assure the life

and ease of each of its members, as well as that moral satisfaction

which work gives when freely chosen and freely accomplished, and the joy

of living without encroaching on the life of others.

Inspired by a new daring — thanks to the sentiment of solidarity — all

will march together to the conquest of the high joys of knowledge and

artistic creation.

A society thus inspired will fear neither dissensions within nor enemies

without. To the coalitions of the past it will oppose a new harmony, the

initiative of each and all, the daring which springs from the awakening

of a people’s genius.

Before such an irresistible force “conspiring kings” will be powerless.

Nothing will remain for them but to bow before it, and to harness

themselves to the chariot of humanity, rolling towards new horizons

opened up by the Social Revolution.

Table 1

DEPARTMENTS OF SEINE AND SEINE-ET-OISE

Areas to be cultivated to feed the inhabitants (in acres):

Quantity of annual work necessary to improve and cultivate the above

surfaces in five-hour work-days:

[1] For the International Paris Exhibitions of 1889 and 1900.

[2] “Shabble of a Duke” is an expression coined by Carlyle; it is a

somewhat free rendering of Kropotkine’s “Monsieur le Vicomte,” but I

think it expresses his meaning. — Trans.

[3] The municipal debt of Paris amounted in 1904 to 2,266,579,100

francs, and the charges for it were 121,000,000 francs.

[4] Kropotkine is here supposing the Revolution to break out first in

France. — Trans.

[5] The decree of the 30 March: by this decree rents due up to the terms

of October, 1870, and January and April, 1871, were annulled.

[6] We know this from Playfair, who mentioned it at Joule’s death.

[7] It seems that the Communists of Young Icaria had understood the

importance of a free choice in their daily relations apart from work.

The ideal of religious Communists has always been to have meals in

common; it is by meals in common that early Christians manifested their

adhesion to Christianity. Communion is still a vestige of it. Young

Icarians had given up this religious tradition. They dined in a common

dining-room, but at small separate tables, at which they sat according

to the attractions of the moment. The Communists of Amana have each

their house and dine at home, while taking their provisions at will at

the communal stores.

[8] See my book, “In Russian and French Prisons.” London 1887

[9] Consult “La Répartition métrique des impôts,” by A. Toubeau, two

vols., published by Guillaumin in 1880. (We do not in the least agree

with Toubeau’s conclusions, but it is a real encyclopædia, indicating

the sources which prove what can be obtained from the soil.) “La Culture

maraîchere,” by M. Ponce, Paris, 1869. “Le Potager Gressent,” Paris,

1885, an excellent practical work. “Physiologie et culture du blé,” by

Risler, Paris, 1881. “Le blé, sa culture intensive et extensive,” by

Lecouteux, Paris, 1883. “La Cité Chinoise,” by Eugène Simon. “Le

dictionnaire d’agriculture,” by Barral (Hachette, editor). “The

Rothamstead Experiments,” by Wm. Fream, London, 1888 — culture without

manure, etc. (the “Field” office, editor). “Fields, Factories, and

Workshops,” by the author. London (Swan Sonnenschein); cheap editions at

6d. and 1s.

[10] Summing up the figures given on agriculture, figures proving that

the inhabitants of the two départements of Seine and Seine-et-Oise can

perfectly well live on their own territory by employing very little time

annually to obtain food, we have: [see table 1 at the end of the

document]. If we suppose that half only of the able-bodied adults (men

and women) are willing to work at agriculture, we see that 70 million

work-days must be divided among 1,200,000 individuals, which gives us 58

work-days of 5 hours for each of these workers. With that the population

of the two departments would have all necessary bread, meat, milk,

vegetables, and fruit, both ordinary and luxury. To-day a workman spends

for the necessary food of his family (generally less than what is

necessary) at least one-third of his 300 work-days a year, about 1000

hours be it, instead of 290. That is, he thus gives about 700 hours too

much to fatten the idle and the would-be administrators, because he does

not produce his own food, but buys it of middlemen, who in their turn

buy it of peasants who exhaust themselves by working with bad tools,

because, being robbed by the landowners and the State, they cannot

procure better ones.