Publication information |
Source: Weekly People Source type: newspaper Document type: editorial Document title: “At President McKinley’s Bier” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: New York, New York Date of publication: 21 September 1901 Volume number: 11 Issue number: 25 Pagination: 4 |
Citation |
“At President McKinley’s Bier.” Weekly People 21 Sept. 1901 v11n25: p. 4. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (personal response); assassinations (comparison). |
Named persons |
Marie François Sadi Carnot; Sante Geronimo Caserio [identified as Santos below]; Leon Czolgosz; Dante Alighieri; William McKinley. |
Notes |
The 21 September 1901 and 28 September 1901 issues of Weekly People both designate themselves as issue number 25. |
Document |
At President McKinley’s Bier
That masterly “anatomy of crime,” Dante’s “Inferno,”
and withal as sublime as it is a profound treatise on morality, places not the
malefactors of ostensibly equal crimes in the same circles of hell. Not all
the thieves, for instance, nor all the homicides are lumped together. Where
theft is aided by “breach of trust,” the evil-doer is relegated to a deeper
groove; and so where homicide has treachery or hypocrisy for its handmaid, the
crime is marked of deeper dye, and its perpetrator consigned to direr tortures.
The assassination of rulers is nothing new. It
is no special product of the present system. Throughout the ages it has made
its appearance, under all forms of society. This notwithstanding, the deed of
Czolgosz, following so close upon that of Santos, the assassin of President
Carnot, and accompanied with such close resemblance therewith, takes it from
the general head of rulercide, and gives notice to society that it has to deal
with a Dantescan variety of intensified crime.
Whether personal resentment, private interest,
or personal malice hitherto steeled the arm of the assassins of rulers, their
deed ever bore the mark of virile boldness. The deed of the Czolgoszes and Santoses
lacks this mark; in its stead it carries the brand of hypocrisy and treachery.
And it is natural; and herein lies the ominousness of the manifestation.
Former assassinations of rulers were the acts
of ORGANIZED forces; the Santos-Czolgosz species is AUTONOMOUS. Organization,
however dastardly its purpose, has physical strength in its make-up, is conscious
thereof, and demeans itself accordingly: Treachery, therefore, is a mark it
need not and does not assume. Otherwise with individualistic autonomy. The single
man, whatever his field of operation, is weak as a reed, all the more when his
purpose calls for physical effort. Hence what his acts lack in the backing of
physical fibre, is substituted with perfidy. Santos clears his way to his victim
with a bouquet, in which a dagger lies concealed; Czolgosz throws the guards
off their watch with the d[e]meanor of a cripple, his hand that holds the murderous
pistol being bandaged with a handkerchief. In the one case as in the other deep-dyed
treachery, double-facedness, is the distinguishing feature;—and that is the
hellish depth, that, by an inevitable chain of causes and effects, is reached
from the premises of individualistic autonomy, or be it the “Manchester School,”
or be it the intellectual mother of Capitalist Society.
Not a stricken family merely, mourning the loss
of a beloved member; not even millions of partisans merely, mourning the loss
of their triumphant standard-bearer; no, not these merely, but the human heart
and intellect, standing at President McKinley’s bier, is steeped in gloom at
the contemplation of the Santos-Czolgosz flowers of the Upas tree of Individualistic
Autonomy.