Slow Movement of Great Reforms [excerpt]
No one visited the
Pan-American Exposition at Buffalo without picking up new ideas
or saw ways of improving on old ones. The workingman who walked
through the machinery, liberal arts or electricity building, for
example, was a poor stick indeed if he did not go away better prepared
to give satisfaction to his employers, and be of more value to himself
and the community in which he lived. That such an assembling of
the latest achievements in the arts and sciences must necessarily
aid the inventive mind is beyond question.
For myself I was particularly interested
in the crowds. And to see these it was not necessary to visit the
Midway, though doubtless few people went to the exposition without
taking a stroll, at least, through this fascinating highway of all
nations. Each building, and department in a measure, had its type
of crowd. In those devoted to manufactures and the liberal arts
the women were in the majority. In the machinery building the men
predominated—in the main thoughtful men who came with a purpose.
The art building attracted a still different class, and it was not
at all difficult to note a facial resemblance running through a
considerable number.
Having been on the grounds during
the illness and death of President McKinley, when the eyes of the
whole nation, it is supposed, were directed towards Buffalo, and
hoping for the good news that would tell of his recovery from the
assassin’s bullet, I had a favorable opportunity to see just how
much the crowds really were interested in the outcome of the fatal
[194][195] shooting, and to hear the
expressions of opinion on socialism, anarchy and reform movements
generally. When home with those we know, we are not apt to pay much
attention to chance expressions. They are so multitudinous that
their value is depreciated, but to talk with a stranger on a burning
question, when he feels certain that the airing of his opinions
cannot affect his business or his social, religious or political
welfare, is a different thing. So I made it a point, while on the
grounds, and opportunity offered, to drop a word or two with an
interrogation point attached, just to see how the land lay in the
minds of the average citizen away from home.
The result showed that even the mildest
of socialism, let alone the more drastic sort, will have hard sledding
for many years to gain even a respectable foothold. And as for anarchy,
not one in a thousand, it might be said, has conceived of any but
the violent kind—if such can be called anarchy at all. The seeds
that are to bring forth the cooperative commonwealth and revolutionize
industry have not yet sprouted. The commercial interests of the
country must yet go through many financial panics and take all sorts
of remedies for industrial ills before the common people will listen
to the voice of the socialist philosopher demanding the dethronement
of the present captains of industry.
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