登陆注册
20048400000012

第12章 THE COMING SLAVERY(3)

Moreover, the two are pervaded by substantially the same illusion. In the one case, as in the other, what looks like a gratis benefit is not a gratis benefit. The amount which, under the old Poor Law, the half-pauperized labourer received from the parish to eke out his weekly income, was not really, as it appeared, a bonus; for it was accompanied by a substantially-equivalent decrease in his wages, as was quickly proved when the system was abolished and the wages rose. Just so is it with these seeming boons received by working people in towns. I do not refer only to the fact that they unawares pay in part through the raised rents of their dwellings (when they are not actual ratepayers); but I refer to the fact that the wages received by them are, like the wages of the farm-labourer, diminished by these public burdens falling on employers. Read the accounts coming of late from Lancashire concerning the cotton strike, containing proofs, given by artisans themselves, that the margin of profit is so narrow that the less skilful manufacturers, as well as those with deficient capital, fail, and that the companies of co-operators who compete with them can rarely hold their own; and then consider what is the implication respecting wages. Among the costs of production have to be reckoned taxes, general and local. If, as in our large towns, the local rates now amount to one-third of the rental or more -- if the employer has to pay this, not on his private dwelling only, but on his business-premises, factories, warehouses, or the like;it results that the interest on his capital must be diminished by that amount, or the amount must be taken from the wages-fund, or partly one and partly the other. And if competition among capitalists in the same business and in other businesses, has the effect of so keeping down interest that while some gain others lose, and not a few are ruined -- if capital, not getting adequate interest, flows elsewhere and leaves labour unemployed;then it is manifest that the choice for the artisan under such conditions, lies between diminished amount of work or diminished rate of payment for it. Moreover, for kindred reasons these local burdens raise the costs of the things he consumes. The charges made by distributors are, on the average, determined by the current rates of interest on capital used in distributing businesses; and the extra costs of caring on such businesses have to be paid for by extra prices. So that as in the past the rural worker lost in one way what he gained in another, so in the present does the urban worker: there being too, in both cases, the loss entailed on him by the cost of administration and the waste accompanying it.

"But what has all this to do with 'the coming slavery'?" will perhaps be asked. Nothing directly, but a good deal indirectly, as we shall see after yet another preliminary section.

It is said that when railways were first opened in Spain, peasants standing on the tracks were not unfrequently run over;and that the blame fell on the engine-drivers for not stopping: rural experiences having yielded no conception of the momentum of a large mass moving at a high velocity.

The incident is recalled to me on contemplating the ideas of the so-called "practical" politician, into whose mind there enters no thought of such a thing as political momentum, still less of a political momentum which, instead of diminishing or remaining constant, increases. The theory on which he daily proceeds is that the change caused by his measure will stop where he intends it to stop. He contemplates intently the things his act will achieve, but thinks little of the remoter issues of the movement his act sets up, and still less of its collateral issues. When, in war-time, "food for powder" was to be provided by encouraging population -- when Mr Pitt said, "Let us make relief in cases where there are a number of children a matter of right and honour, instead of a ground for opprobrium and contempt;"(1*) it was not expected that the poor-rates would be quadrupled in fifty years, that women with many bastards would be preferred as wives to modest women, because of their incomes from the parish, and that hosts of ratepayers would be pulled down into the ranks of pauperism. Legislators who in 1833 voted *20,000 a year to aid in building school-houses, never supposed that the step they then took would lead to forced contributions, local and general, now amounting to *6,000,000; they did not intend to establish the principle that A should be made responsible for educating B's offspring; they did not dream of a compulsion which would deprive poor widows of the help of their elder children; and still less did they dream that their successors, by requiring impoverished parents to apply to Boards of Guardians to pay the fees which School Boards would not remit, would initiate a habit of applying to Boards of Guardians and so cause pauperization.(2*) Neither did those who in 1834 passed an Act regulating the labour of women and children in certain factories, imagine that the system they were beginning would end in the restriction and inspection of labour in all kinds of producing establishments where more than fifty people are employed; nor did they conceive that the inspection provided would grow to the extent of requiring that before a "young person" is employed in a factory, authority must be given by a certifying surgeon, who, by personal examination (to which no limit is placed) has satisfied himself that there is no incapacitating disease or bodily infirmity: his verdict determining whether the "young person" shall earn wages or not.(3*) Even less, as I say, does the politician who plumes himself on the practicalness of his aims, conceive the indirect results which will follow the direct results of his measures.

同类推荐
  • 集古今佛道论衡实录

    集古今佛道论衡实录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 续焚书

    续焚书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 洞渊集

    洞渊集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 太上灵宝上元天官消愆灭罪忏

    太上灵宝上元天官消愆灭罪忏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 龙城录

    龙城录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 修道者传奇

    修道者传奇

    少年因缘际会学的异术,后来考上大学之后,本以为那些稀奇古怪的事情应该没有太多,结果发现他想岔了。宿舍鬼影,操场上的叫声,草丛中的黑猫,同样神秘的同学,邙山来客……以及自己神秘的师傅本书前几张主要写的是主角和师傅学道,第二卷开始校园篇……
  • 暗夜迷情

    暗夜迷情

    神都洛阳接连发生与生死簿有关的三桩人命案,安排新年庆典的鸿胪寺主管一死一病,狄仁杰临危受命,接管了新年庆典事宜,并且帮助新任大理寺卿曾泰开始对命案的调查。与此同时,被贬戍边的李元芳和流放犯狄景辉在横渡黄河时,巧遇突厥王子并闯入一个荒郊宅院,碰到了一对古怪的父女,竟是新任狄仁杰卫士长沈槐的亲戚。经过一番离奇曲折,洛阳的杀人案在突厥王子的帮助下告破。李元芳一行也...
  • 英雄出世

    英雄出世

    本书是作者的一部历史长篇小说,书中以清末民初为背景,从不同侧面和不同社会阶层的生存状态入手,向读者展现了一个个回味无穷的故事。
  • 宁静

    宁静

    二零零八年是注定不平凡的一年。那一年,北京成功举办了奥运;那一年,汶川大地震。天哭地恸;那一年,下了伤心美丽的大雪……二零零八年,我遇见了宁静。我,一个成绩半吊子相貌平平的中二少年,习惯了寂寞倒霉命运……二零零八年,宁静叩响了我尘封已久的心门,像黎明之前的第一缕曙光,温暖、可人又美丽……二零零八年,美丽的错误美丽地发生了……二零零八年,在此之前,我自认为我是被命运女神玩弄之后抛弃的倒霉鬼。二零零八年,这个倒霉鬼迎来了春天……二零零八年,宁静,遇到你,用尽了我一生的运气;遇见你,是我一生最美丽的奇迹;遇见你……二零零八年啊,还记得我吗?
  • 洪荒之神龙皇

    洪荒之神龙皇

    看一个得到了神墓中拜将台的小青年如何走遍洪荒看一头龙皇如何带领龙族走向万千世界看回到来天劈地时的神龙如何走过众多大劫,解开仙神之谜
  • 总裁的神秘高手

    总裁的神秘高手

    【火热新书】在地下世界代号宙斯,人称神王的李峰,意外来到都市,各色各样的美女投怀送抱,让李峰挑花了眼。“峰哥,收我做你小老婆好不好?”一个绝色尤物走来,幽怨的说道。“不好意思,我对胸部太小的女人没有兴趣…”李峰无奈的说道。“峰哥,收我做你小弟吧?”“你实力这么弱,也好意思做我小弟?”李峰不屑的说道。“可是我妹妹长的国色天香…”“这样啊,看在你一片诚心的份上,你以后就跟我吧…”李峰眼睛一亮道。
  • 最好的健康给孩子:5~13岁儿童健康手册

    最好的健康给孩子:5~13岁儿童健康手册

    本书针对5~13岁儿童的健康现状,用通俗易懂的语言为你讲解儿童生活习惯、心理健康、身体健康、家庭安全等健康知识,从孩子健康方面存在的问题及调养知识等方面作了全面的梳理、解疑和精心的指导。
  • 如旧倾情

    如旧倾情

    喜欢一个人,该是卑微到骨子里的,她就好似四月吹来清爽的风,九月里湿润的雨。这是一个关于爱唠嗑的小王子和喜欢小猪佩琦的宋组长的故事。“你一直喜欢我好不好?”“好。”
  • 星海圣雄

    星海圣雄

    无限宇宙中,只有三样东西,是任何人也无法夺走的:吃进肚子里的食物,藏在心中的梦想,记在脑海里的知识!圣者之道,护佑万物生灵;雄者之途,百战铸就荣耀!
  • 万灵灯仪

    万灵灯仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。