Assassination and Anarchy
[Address delivered in Peoria at Mass-meeting in
memory of the death of President McKinley.]
IN the presence of the grief and humiliation of a
great nation, one would wish to be silent. Words cannot give right
utterance to what we feel. They are apt even to strike us as but
noise and sound, to distract and disturb rather than to strengthen
and console. There is not question here of the passing of a man,
however true, however good, however noble he may have been. The
occasion does not call for clamorous denunciation or vulgar abuse;
much less for appeals to the beast of prey that ever lurks in the
human breast. Crime is not a remedy for crime; lawlessness is not
a corrective of lawlessness. A great people and petty thoughts or
revengeful feelings go ill together. The strong do not rail; the
brave make no outcries. In proportion to one’s power should be his
forbearance and self-control. If our dead President was great, he
was great through his [137][138] kindliness,
his forgiving spirit, his desire to be of help, his modesty and
lowly-mindedness. His greatness sprang from his Christian faith
and character, rather than from any surpassing intellectual endowments.
If we grieve for his sad taking away, let our thoughts and sentiments
be such as he would approve. To die as he died can hardly be deemed
an evil for him. For more than half a century he had led a life
of honesty, purity, and honor; he had served his God and his country
from his earliest years; he had reached the topmost height to which
an American citizen may aspire. He had the respect of the whole
people; and those who disagreed with him in matters of policy were
glad to accord him the high merit of a disinterested patriotism.
In the midst of a whole world who thus honored him, while still
in the full vigor of manhood, untouched by the palsying and blighting
hand of age, he is suddenly stricken by one whose mental and moral
nature had been wholly perverted. He dies in the fulfillment of
kindly offices; he dies in the midst of the people who loved him
and whom he loved; he dies after many years of life of noblest service
and without stain. His task is done; his fame is secure; and his
example remains with us to show us what a true American should be.
When the generous and the good have
been [138][139] placed on the summit
of earthly things, their memory abides as a possession forever.
The calamity which has befallen, has befallen not him, but the nation.
When dire misfortunes overtake individuals or a people whom inner
power makes great, they convert what might utterly destroy baser
natures to means of good. We shall therefore seek to find the uses
there may be in this adversity. The cry of shame and rage which
has been heard throughout the whole land is intelligible. It is
the instinctive utterance of the love we bear our country and of
the infinite abhorrence we feel for whoever or whatever may do it
hurt. Within our inmost souls we are persuaded that America is God’s
greatest earthly gift to His children; that He has destined it to
be the training ground of a nobler race, the home of a more Christlike
and diviner humanity, whose beneficent influence shall be as self-diffusive
as love, and as wide-spreading as the unending globe. When, therefore,
a crime is committed against the one man who is the symbol and the
representative of the whole national life, we are filled with amazement,
we are confused with astonishment, we are roused to indignation,
and in our mad bewilderment we lose sight of the fundamental principles
on which our government rests. Declaimers and demagogues think to
win favor by violent lan- [139][140]
guage, and even from the chairs which have been established to teach
wisdom, rash counsels are given. When shall we acquire that repose
which is a mark of maturity, the imperturbable mind which belongs
to those who have faith in an overruling Providence and are certain
of themselves?
There are no patent remedies for social
evils. What we sow we reap, whether there be question of individuals
or of nations. We cannot remain habitually indifferent to the supreme
interests of religion and justice, and when emergencies come upon
us, save ourselves by devices and contrivances. We do not need more
or new laws: what we need is a new spirit—a more real faith in God,
a more real love of our fellow-man, more honesty, more chastity,
more unselfishness. We need a religion that will not lead us to
think it enough to skin and film the ulcerous place, but that will
impel us to probe deep and cut away the gangrenous flesh that poisons
the fountains of life.
As a people we are wanting in respect
for those who are clothed with authority; we lack reverence; we
are too ready to persuade ourselves that all is well so long as
wealth and population increase; we wish to be flattered, and we
turn away from the truth-speakers who love us, to listen to the
demagogues who would lure us [140][141]
to ruin. We seek facile solutions of the great problems, and distrust
whoever, for instance, declares that to teach the young to read,
write, and cipher is not to educate them; that education consists
essentially in the building of character, which is what a man is,
and not what he knows. We forget that morality, and not legality,
is the only foundation on which a free government can securely rest.
When corrupt influences determine legislation, laws cease to be
regarded as binding. Men yield to force, but in their hearts they
rebel against the injustice.
When immoralities and crimes become
general, minds are perverted and consciences made callous. How is
it possible to read day after day of the suicides, the murders,
the lynchings, the robberies, the divorces, the adulteries, the
prostitutions and corruptions with which the newspapers are filled,
and not to lose the sense of the sacredness of human life?
Vice propagates itself far more easily
than virtue, as men take disease, but not health, from one another;
and if whoever is guilty of crime, or of misdeeds of whatever kind,
is at once advertised to the world in millions of sheets as an object
of curiosity, of interest, and at times of admiration, how can the
readers of such things retain balance of judgment and a sensitive
consciousness of the heinousness of sin? [141][142]
It is easy to put to death the wretched
man who has committed the outrage which has filled us all with consternation;
it is easy to denounce and difficult to exaggerate the inhumanity,
the fiendish nature of those who would destroy the whole fabric
of society, our very civilization, the beliefs, the laws, the forces,
which make us men and give value to life; it is easy in the hour
of national affliction to gather in numerous assemblies throughout
the land to utter our grief and to express our abhorrence. And all
this is well, springing as it does from what is best within us;
but it has little efficacy. It will do good only if it helps to
make us good. We cannot destroy anarchy by enacting more rigid laws;
much less by resorting to violence.
“God bless every undertaking,” said
President McKinley in 1897, “God bless every undertaking which revives
patriotism and rebukes the indifferent and lawless.” And in 1894:
“With patriotism in our hearts there is no danger of anarchy and
no danger to the American Union.”
There is the patriotism of instinct,
that which binds a man to the land of his birth and to the home
about which cluster his earliest and sweetest memories; and there
is the patriotism of reason and religion, whereby we are made conscious
that our dearest interests, temporal and [142][143]
eternal, are vitally associated with our country, with its prosperity
and security, its honor and welfare. The patriotism of instinct
needs little encouragement; it is implanted by nature and is self-developed;
but that of reason and religion must be cultivated and cherished
with ceaseless care and vigilance, as reason and religion themselves
are living forces only in the self-active.
To this higher patriotism none but
the wise and good are true; and false to it are not those alone
who commit crime against the majesty and sacredness of the State,
but false to it are all who are vicious themselves, all who by word
or example sow the seeds of vice. The germ of anarchy is in every
wrongdoer, in every lawbreaker. It is in those who propagate
irreligion, who undermine man’s faith in God and in his own spiritual
nature, for the moral code of the people is their religion. What
is right or wrong for them is what they believe, not what they know,
to be so. For all of us, indeed, duty is a thing of faith, not of
the pure reason. Religion has rocked the cradles of all the nations,
and infidelity, issuing in insatiable greed and sensuality, has
dug the graves of those that have perished, sophistry and indulgence
destroying what had been built by faith and virtue. There is the
principle of anarchy in the mobs [143][144]
that gather to torture and murder with fiendish cruelty the unfortunate
beings for whose punishment laws have been enacted. There is the
germ of anarchy in the homes of those who marry as recklessly, and
separate with as little compunction, as animals breed. It is in
the boodleism which in our cities fosters prostitution, the criminal
saloon, the dance hall, and the gambling den. It is in our street
fairs, when they are made a pretext for pandering to the lowest
passions of the crowd. It lurks in the very constitution of our
competitive system, if this system leads us to prefer markets to
men, riches to the dignity and honor of human beings; if it so turns
us away from the ends and ideals for which the wise live as to make
of the nation a money-getting mob, where the few are dwarfed and
crippled by their enormous possessions, while the multitude seek
to drown their sense of misery in alcohol and degrading pleasures.
It is not conceivable that this should be the fate of us, the heirs
of all ages, us, the latest birth of time. Rather shall we lay to
heart and be convinced in our inmost souls of this truth, uttered
by one of the best inspired teachers of our age: “There is no wealth
but life—life, including all its powers of love, of joy, and of
admiration. That country is the richest which nourishes the greatest
number of noble and [144][145] happy
human beings; that man is richest who, having perfected the functions
of his own life to the utmost, has also the widest helpful influence,
both personal and by means of his possessions, over the lives of
others.”
There is not now, nor has there ever
been, a civilized people. Ignorance, sin, depravity, injustice,
cruelty, deceit, greed, and selfishness have always prevailed and
still prevail in the world. The majority has never loved, nor does
it now love, truth and mercy and purity and holiness. But we, more
than any other people, are dedicated to the securing of the largest
freedom, the fullest opportunity, the completest justice to all—to
men and women, to the strong and the weak, to the rich and the poor.
These are the principles which we proclaimed when first we took
our place in the family of Christian nations; these are the principles
which our greatest and most representative men, whether orators
or statesmen or warriors or poets, have with deepest conviction
asserted to be the embodiment of the spirit of America. This is
the meaning of our life; this is the key to our destiny. Our conception
of democracy is not that it is, like some of the barbarian empires
of the past, an irresistible power whose mission is to overrun and
subjugate, to conquer and lay waste. On the contrary, from our point
of view democracy [145][146] is a beneficent
force. It rests on faith in human nature; on the educability of
all men, if they be but rightly environed and attended.
Institutions are preserved by the
principles from which they originate, and if our country is to grow,
not in wealth and numbers alone, but in inner power and worth, we
must adhere with unalterable fidelity to the great truths which
inspired our fathers when they founded the Republic. Nay, since
it is the nature of vital truth to develop, we must see more clearly
than it was possible for them to see, that the Republic means justice
to all, good-will to all, helpfulness to all; and first of all,
to those who are overburdened, who are insufficiently equipped,
who are sorely tried. The cry of the laborer is for justice, not
for charity; and it is a cry which all the good gladly reëcho. But
let us remember that men are just only when they love. Sympathy
gives insight, and where this is lacking we are blind to the injustice
our fellows suffer and we do them wrong with easy consciences. The
impulse now, as of old, is to seek to overcome evil with evil. The
world is so full of perversity that the only way, it would seem,
in which society can protect itself is to cut off for a time or
for ever those who sin against its laws. But no punishment, however
severe, can destroy the roots from which grows the tree [146][147]
that bears the bitter fruit; and if in any part of the world men
should ever become rightly civilized, they will overcome evil with
good. They will not condemn men to do work which they cannot do
with joy, work which takes away heart and hope, which cripples the
body and darkens the mind. They will suffer none to live in ignorance
who might have knowledge; none to live in vice who might be made
pure and holy. In their cities there will not be found districts
where no innocent or healthful creature can breathe and not become
tainted. There shall be no fortunes built on dead men’s bones and
cemented with blood; no splendid dwellings around which shriek the
ghosts of women whose toil did not bring enough to save them from
lives of shame. It is toward all this that we must strive and struggle,
if we are not to be recreant to our most sacred duties, false to
the mission which God has given to America.
In the shadow of the gloom that falls
on the hearts of all the people, as what was mortal of the most
religious, the most God-fearing of our presidents is lowered into
the grave, let the eternal principles of freedom and justice, of
truth and love, of religion and righteousness, gleam on us with
fuller beauty and power, like stars from the raven bosom of night.
Let us rouse ourselves from the torpor
which [147][148] benumbs our spiritual
being. Let us forget a little our petty and selfish interests and
pleasures, that we may become able to enter into the larger life
of our country, each working as a separate individual force for
the good of all. So shall the calamity which has befallen startle
us into newness of heart and mind, making us more solicitous for
the common welfare, more careful lest we ourselves give offense;
so shall there be more love and piety in our homes, more reverence
and docility in our schools, more faith and religion in our churches,
more wisdom and virtue in our public life. And in this way, and
possibly in no other, shall we be able to make such crimes as this,
which has filled us with horror and dismay, for ever impossible.
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