Mr. Walter Bassett.
DEAR SIR: I am inviting you, with nine of your
fellow-captains of industry, to visit me here on my island for the purpose of
considering plans for the reconstruction of society upon some rational basis.
Up to the present, social evolution has been a blind and aimless blundering
thing. The time has come for a change. Man has risen from the vitalised slime
of the primeval sea to the mastery of matter; but he has not yet mastered
society. Man is to-day as much the slave to his collective stupidity as a
hundred thousand generations ago he was a slave to matter.
There are two theoretical methods whereby man may
become the master of society and make a society an intelligent and efficacious
device of the pursuit and capture of happiness and laughter. The first theory
advances the proposition that no government can be wiser than the people that
compose that government; that reform and development must spring from the
individual; that in so far as individuals become wiser and better, by that much
will their government become wiser and better; in short, that the majority of
individuals must become wiser and better before their government becomes wiser
and better. The mob, the political conventions, the abysmal brutality and
stupid ignorance of all concourses of people, give the lie to this theory. In a
mob the collective intelligence and mercy is that of the least intelligent and
most brutal members that compose the mob. On the other hand, a thousand
passengers will surrender themselves to the wisdom and discretion of the
captain when their ship is in a storm on the sea. In such a matter he is the
wisest and most experienced among them.
The second theory advances the proposition that
the majority of the people are not pioneers, that they are weighted down by the
inertia of the established; that the government that is representative of them
represents only their feebleness, and futility, and brutishness; that this
blind thing called government is not the serf of their wills, but that they are
the serfs of it; in short, speaking always of the great mass, that they do not
make government, but that government makes them, and that government is, and
has been, a stupid and awful monster, misbegotten of the glimmerings of
intelligence that come from the inertia-crushed mass.
Personally, I incline to the second theory. Also,
I am impatient. For a hundred thousand generations, from the first social
groups of our savage forebears, government has remained a monster. To-day, the
inertia-crushed mass has less laughter in it than ever before. In spite of
man's mastery of matter, human suffering and misery and degradations mar the
fair world.
Wherefore I have decided to step in and become
captain of this world-ship for a while. I have the intelligence and the wide
vision of the skilled expert. Also, I have the power. I shall be obeyed. The
men of all the world shall perform my bidding and make governments so that they
shall become laughter-producers. The remodelled governments I have in mind
shall not make the people happy, wise, and noble by decree; but they shall give
opportunity for the people to become happy, wise and noble.
I have spoken. I have invited you and nine of
your fellow-captains to confer with me. On March 3d the yacht Energon
will sail from San Francisco. You are requested to be on board the night
before. This is serious. The affairs of the world must be handled for a time by
a strong hand. Mine is that strong hand. If you fail to obey my summons, you
will die. Candidly, I do no expect that you will obey. But your death for
failure to be will cause obedience on the part of those I subsequently summon.
You will have served a purpose. And please remember that I have no unscientific
sentimentality about the value of human life. I carry always in the background
of my consciousness the innumerable billions of lives that are to laugh and be
happy in future æons on the earth.
Yours for the reconstruction of society,
GOLIAH.
The publication of this letter did not cause even
local amusement. Men might have smiled to themselves as they read it, but it
was so palpably the handiwork of a crank that it did not merit discussion.
Interest did not arouse till next morning. An Associated Press dispatch to the
Eastern States, followed by interviews by eager-nosed reporters, had brought
out the names of the other nine captains of industry who had received similar
letters but who had not thought the matter of sufficient importance to be made
public. But the interest aroused was mild, and it would have died out quickly
had not Gabberton cartooned a chronic presidential aspirant as
"Goliah." Then came the song that was sung hilariously from sea to
sea, with the refrain, "Goliah will catch you if you don't watch
out."
The weeks passed and the incident was forgotten.
Walter Bassett had forgotten it likewise; but on the evening of February 22d,
he was called to the telephone by the Collector of the Port. "I just
wanted to tell you," said the latter, "that the yacht Energon
has arrived and gone to anchor in the stream off Pier Seven."
What happened that night Walter Bassett has never
divulged. But it is known that he rode down in his auto to the water-front,
chartered one of Crowley's launches, and was put aboard the strange yacht. It
is further known that when he returned to the shore, three hours later, he
immediately dispatched a sheaf of telegrams to his nine fellow-captains of
industry who had received letters from Goliah. These telegrams were similarly
worded, and read: "The yacht Energon has arrived. There is
something in this. I advise you to come."
Bassett was laughed at for his pains. It was a
huge laugh that went up (for his telegrams had been made public), and the
popular song on Goliah revived and became more popular than ever. Goliah and
Bassett were cartooned and lampooned unmercifully, the former, as the Old Man
of the Sea, riding on the latter's neck. The laugh tittered and rippled through
clubs and social circles, was restrainedly merry in the editorial columns, and
broke out in loud guffaws in the comic weeklies. There was a serious side as
well, and Bassett's sanity was gravely questioned by many, and especially by
his business associates.
Bassett had ever been a short-tempered man, and
after he sent the second sheaf of telegrams to his brother captains, and had
been laughed at again, he remained silent. In this second sheaf he had said:
"Come, I implore you. As you value your life, come." He arranged all
his business affairs for an absence, and on the night of March 2d went on board
the Energon. The latter, properly cleared, sailed next morning. And next
morning the newsboys in every city and town were crying "Extra."
In the slang of the day, Goliah had delivered the
goods. The nine captains of industry who had failed to accept his invitation
were dead. A sort of violent disintegration of the tissues was the report of
the various autopsies held on the bodies of the slain millionaires; yet the
surgeons and physicians (the most highly skilled in the land had participated)
would not venture the opinion that the men had been slain. Much less would they
venture the conclusion, "at the hands of parties unknown." It was all
too mysterious. They were stunned. Their scientific credulity broke down. They
had no warrant in the whole domain of science for believing that an anonymous
person on Palgrave Island had murdered the poor gentlemen.
One thing was quickly learned, however, namely,
that Palgrave Island was no myth. It was charted and well known to all
navigators, lying on the line of 160 west longitude, right at its intersection
of the tenth parallel north latitude, and only a few miles away from Diana
Shoal. Like Midway and Fanning, Palgrave Island was isolated, volcanic and
coral in formation. Furthermore, it was uninhabited. A survey ship, in 1887,
had visited the place and reported the existence of several springs and of a
good harbour that was very dangerous of approach. And that was all that was
known of the tiny speck of land that was soon to have focussed on it the awed
attention of the world.
Goliah remained silent till March 24th. On the
morning of that day, the newspapers published his second letter, copies of
which had been received by the ten chief politicians of the United States - ten
leading men in the political world who were conventionally known as
"statesmen." The letter, with the same superscription as before, was
as follows:
DEAR SIR: I have spoken in no uncertain
tone. I must be obeyed. You may consider this an invitation or a summons; but
if you still wish to tread this earth and laugh, you will be aboard the yacht
Energon, in San Francisco Harbour, not later than the evening of April
5th. It is my wish and my will that you confer with me here on Palgrave Island
in the matter of reconstructing society upon some rational basis.
Do not misunderstand me, when I tell you that I
am one with a theory. I want to see that theory work, and therefore I call upon
your co-operation. In this theory of mine, lives are but pawns; I deal with
quantities of lives. I am after laughter, and those that stand in the way of
laughter must perish. The game is big. There are fifteen hundred million human
lives to-day on the planet. What is your single life against them? It is as
naught, in my theory. And remember that mine is the power. Remember that I am a
scientist, and that one life, or one million of lives, mean nothing to me as
arrayed against the countless billions of billions of the lives of the
generations to come. It is for their laughter that I seek to reconstruct
society now; and against them your own meagre little life is a paltry thing
indeed.
Whoso has power can command his fellows. By
virtue of that military device known as the phalanx, Alexander conquered his
bit of the world. By virtue of that chemical device, gunpowder, Cortes with his
several hundred cutthroats conquered the empire of the Montezumas. Now I am in
possession of a device that is all my own. In the course of a century not more
than half a dozen fundamental discoveries or inventions are made. I have made
such an invention. The possession of it gives me the mastery of the world. I
shall use this invention, not for commercial exploitation, but for the good of
humanity. For that purpose I want help - willing agents, obedient hands; and I
am strong enough to compel the service. I am taking the shortest way, though I
am in no hurry. I shall not clutter my speed with haste.
The incentive of material gain developed man from
the savage to the semi-barbarian he is to-day. This incentive has been a useful
device for the development of the human; but it has now fulfilled its function
and is ready to be cast aside into the scrap-heap of rudimentary vestiges such
as gills in the throat and belief in the divine right of kings. Of course you
do not think so; but I do not see that will prevent you from aiding me to fling
the anachronism into the scrap-heap. For I tell you now that the time has come
when more food and shelter and similar sordid things shall be automatic, as
free and easy and involuntary of access as the air. I shall make them
automatic, what of my discovery and the power that discovery gives me. And with
food and shelter automatic, the incentive of material gain passes away from the
world forever. With food and shelter automatic, the higher incentives will
universally obtain - the spiritual, æsthetic, and intellectual incentives
that will tend to develop and make beautiful and noble body, mind, and spirit.
Then all the world will be dominated by happiness and laughter. It will be the
reign of universal laughter.
Yours for that day,
GOLIAH.
Still the world would not believe. The ten
politicians were at Washington, so that they did not have the opportunity of
being convinced that Bassett had had, and not one of them took the trouble to
journey out to San Francisco to make the opportunity. As for Goliah, he was
hailed by the newspapers as another Tom Lawson with a panacea; and there were
specialists in mental disease who, by analysis of Goliah's letters, proved
conclusively that he was a lunatic.
The yacht Energon arrived in the harbour
of San Francisco on the afternoon of April 5th, and Bassett came ashore. But
the Energon did not sail next day, for not one of the ten summoned
politicians had elected to make the journey to Palgrave Island. The newsboys,
however, called "Extra" that day in all the cities. The ten
politicians were dead. The yacht, lying peacefully at anchor in the harbour,
became the centre of excited interest. She was surrounded by a flotilla of
launches and rowboats, and many tugs and steamboats ran excursions to her.
While the rabble was firmly kept off, the proper authorities and even reporters
were permitted to board her. The mayor of San Francisco and the chief of police
reported that nothing suspicious was to be seen upon her, and the port
authorities announced that her papers were correct and in order in every
detail. Many photographs and columns of descriptive matter were run in the
papers.
The crew was reported to be composed principally
of Scandinavians - fair-haired, blue-eyed Swedes; Norwegians afflicted with the
temperamental melancholy of their race; stolid Russian Finns; and a slight
sprinkling of Americans and English. It was noted that there was nothing
mercurial and fly-away about them. They seemed weighty men, oppressed by a sad
and stolid bovine-sort of integrity. A sober seriousness and enormous certitude
characterised all of them. They appeared men without nerves and without fear,
as though upheld by some overwhelming power or carried in the hollow of some
superhuman hand. The captain, a sad-eyed, strong-featured American, was
cartooned in the papers as "Gloomy Gus" (the pessimistic hero of the
comic supplement).
Some sea captain recognised the Energon as
the yacht Scud, once owned by Merrivale of the New York Yacht Club. With
this clew it was soon ascertained that the Scud had disappeared several
years before. The agent who sold her reported the purchaser to be merely
another agent, a man he had seen neither before nor since. The yacht had been
reconstructed at Duffey's shipyard in New Jersey. The change in her name and
registry occurred at that time and had been legally executed. Then the
Energon had disappeared in a shroud of mystery.
In the meantime, Bassett was going crazy - at
least his friends and business associates said so. He kept away from his vast
business enterprises, and said that he must hold his hands until the other
masters could join with him in the reconstruction of society - proof
indubitable that Goliah's bee had entered his bonnet. To reporters he had
little to say. He was not at liberty, he said, to relate what he had seen on
Palgrave Island; but he could assure them that the matter was serious, the most
serious thing that had ever happened. His final word was that the world was on
the verge of a turn-over, for good or ill he did not know, but, one way or the
other, he was absolutely convinced that the turn-over was coming. As for
business, business could go hang. He had seen things, he had, and that was all
there was to it.
There was a great telegraphing, during this
period, between the local Federal officials and the State and War Departments
at Washington. A secret attempt was made late one afternoon to board the
Energon and place the captain under arrest - the Attorney-General having
given the opinion that the captain could be held for the murder of the ten
"statesmen." The government launch was seen to leave Meigg's Wharf
and steer for the Energon, and that was the last ever seen of the launch
and the men on board of it. The Government tried to keep the affair hushed up,
but the cat was slipped out of the bag by the families of the missing men and
the papers were filled with monstrous versions of the affair.
The Government now proceeded to extreme measures.
The battleship Alaska was ordered to capture the strange yacht, or,
failing that, to sink her. These were secret instructions; but thousands of
eyes, from the water-front and from the shipping in the harbour, witnessed what
happened that afternoon. The battleship got under way and steamed slowly toward
the Energon. At half a mile distant the battleship blew up - simply blew
up, that was all, her shattered frame sinking to the bottom of the bay, a
riff-raff of wreckage and a few survivors strewing the surface. Among the
survivors was a young lieutenant who had had charge of the wireless on board
the Alaska. The reporters got hold of him first, and he talked. No
sooner had the Alaska got under way, he said, than a message was
received from the Energon. It was in the international code, and it was
a warning to the Alaska to come no nearer than half a mile. He had sent
the message, through the speaking tube, immediately to the captain. He did not
know anything more, except that the Energon twice repeated the message
and that five minutes afterward the explosion occurred. The captain of the
Alaska had perished with his ship, and nothing more was to be
learned.
The Energon, however, promptly hoisted
anchor and cleared out to sea. A great clamour was raised by the papers; the
Government was charged with cowardice and vacillation in its dealings with a
mere pleasure yacht and a lunatic who called himself "Goliah," and
immediate and decisive action was demanded. Also, a great howl went up about
the loss of life, especially the wanton killing of the ten
"statesmen." Golian promptly repied. In fact, so prompt was his reply
that the experts in wireless telegraphy announced that, since it was impossible
to send wireless messages so great a distance, Goliah was in their very midst
and not on Palgrave Island. Goliah's letter was delivered to the Associated
Press by a messenger boy who had been engaged on the street. The letter was as
follows:
What are a few paltry lives? In your
insane wars you destroy millions of lives and think nothing of it. In your
fratricidal commercial struggle you kill countless babes, women, and men, and
you triumphantly call the shambles "individualism." I call it
anarchy. I am going to put a stop to your wholesale destruction of human
beings. I want laughter, not slaughter. Those of you who stand in the way of
laughter will get slaughter.
Your government is trying to delude you into
believing that the destruction of the Alaska was an accident. Know here
and now that it was by my orders that the Alaska was destroyed. In a few
short months, all battleships on all seas will be destroyed or flung to the
scrap-heap, and all nations shall disarm; fortresses shall be dismantled,
armies disbanded, and warfare shall cease from the earth. Mine is the power. I
am the will of God. The whole world shall be in vassalage to me, but it shall
be a vassalage of peace.
I am,
GOLIAH.
"Blow Palgrave Island out of the
water!" was the head-line retort of the newspapers. The Government was of
the same frame of mind, and the assembling of the fleets began. Walter Bassett
broke out in ineffectual protest, but was swiftly squelched by the threat of a
lunacy commission. Goliah remained silent. Against Palgrave Island five great
fleets were hurled - the Asiatic Squadron, the South Pacific Squadron, the
North Pacific Squadron, the Caribbean Squadron, and half of the North Atlantic
Squadron, the two latter coming through the Panama Canal.
"I have the honour to report that we
sighted Palgrave Island on the evening of April 29th," ran the report of
Captain Johnson, of the battleship North Dakota, to the Secretary of the
Navy. "The Asiatic Squadron was delayed and did not arrive until the
morning of April 30th. A council of the admirals was held, and it was decided
to attack early next morning. The destroyer Swift VII crept in,
unmolested, and reported no warlike preparations on the island. It noted
several small merchant steamers in the harbour, and the existence of a small
village in a hopelessly exposed position that could be swept by our fire.
"It had been decided that all the vessels
should rush in, scattered, upon the island, opening fire at three miles, and
continuing to the edge of the reef, there to retain loose formation and engage.
Palgrave repeatedly warned us, by wireless, in the international code, to keep
outside the ten-mile limit; but no heed was paid to the warnings.
"The North Dakota did not take part
in the movement of the morning of May 1st. This was due to a slight accident of
the preceding night that temporarily disabled our steering-gear. The morning of
May 1st broke clear and calm. There was a slight breeze from the southwest that
quickly died away. The North Dakota lay twelve miles off the island. At
the signal the squadrons charged in upon the island, from all sides, at full
speed. Our wireless receiver continued to tick off warnings from the island.
The ten-mile limit was passed, and nothing happened. I watched through my
glasses. At five miles nothing happened; at four miles nothing happened; at
three miles, the New York, in the lead on our side of the island, opened
fire. She fired only one shot. Then she blew up. The rest of the vessels never
fired a shot. They began to blow up, everywhere, before our eyes. Several
swerved about and started back, but they failed to escape. The destroyer
Dart III nearly made the ten-mile limit when she blew up. She was the
last survivor. No harm came to the North Dakota, and that night, the
steering gear being repaired, I gave orders to sail for San
Francisco."
To say that the United States was stunned is but
to expose the inadequacy of language. The whole world was stunned. It
confronted that blight of the human brain, the unprecedented. Human endeavour
was a jest, a monstrous futility, when a lunatic on a lonely island, who owned
a yacht and an exposed village, could destroy five of the proudest fleets in
Christendom. And how had he done it? Nobody knew. The scientists lay down in
the dust of the common road and wailed and gibbered. They did not know.
Military experts committed suicide by scores. The mighty fabric of warfare they
had fashioned was a gossamer veil rent asunder by a miserable lunatic. It was
too much for their sanity. Mere human reason could not withstand the shock. As
the savage is crushed by the sleight-of-hand of the witch-doctor, so was the
world crushed by the magic of Goliah. How did he do it? It was the awful face
of the Unknown upon which the world gazed and by which it was frightened out of
the memory of its proudest achievements.
But all the world was not stunned. There was the
invariable exception - the Island Empire of Japan. Drunken with the wine of
success deep-quaffed, without superstition and without faith in aught but its
own ascendant star, laughing at the wreckage of science and mad with pride of
race, it went forth upon the way of war. America's fleets had been destroyed.
From the battlements of heaven the multitudinous ancestral shades of Japan
leaned down. The opportunity, God-given, had come. The Mikado was in truth a
brother of the gods.
The war-monsters of Japan were loosed in mighty
fleets. The Philippines were gathered in as a child gathers a nosegay. It took
longer for the battleships to travel to Hawaii, to Panama, and to the Pacific
Coast. The United States was panic-stricken, and there arose the powerful party
of dishonourable peace. In the midst of the clamour the Energon arrived
in San Francisco Bay and Goliah spoke once more. There was a little brush as
the Energon came in, and a few explosions of magazines occurred along
the war-tunnelled hills as the coast defences went to smash. Also, the blowing
up of the submarine mines in the Golden Gate made a remarkably fine display.
Goliah's message to the people of San Francisco, dated as usual from Palgrave
Island, was published in the papers. It ran:
Peace? Peace be with you. You shall have
peace. I have spoken to this purpose before. And give you me peace. Leave my
yacht Energon alone. Commit one overt act against her and not one stone
in San Francisco shall stand upon another.
To-morrow let all good citizens go out upon the
hills that slope down to the sea. Go with music and laughter and garlands. Make
festival for the new age that is dawning. Be like children upon your hills, and
witness the passing of war. Do not miss the opportunity. It is your last chance
to behold what hence-forth you will be compelled to seek in museums of
antiquities.
I promise you a merry day.
GOLIAH.
The madness of magic was in the air. With the
people it was as if all their gods had crashed and the heavens still stood.
Order and law had passed away from the universe; but the sun still shone, the
wind still blew, the flowers still bloomed - that was the amazing thing about
it. That water should continue to run down hill was a miracle. All the
stabilities of the human mind and human achievement were crumbling. The one
stable thing that remained was Goliah, a madman on an island. And so it was
that the whole population of San Francisco went forth next day in colossal
frolic upon the hills that overlooked the sea. Brass bands and banners went
forth, brewery wagons and Sunday-school picnics - all the strange heterogeneous
groupings of swarming metropolitan life.
From the sea-rim rose the smoke from the funnels
of a hundred hostile vessels of war, all converging upon the helpless,
undefended Golden Gate. And not all undefended, for out through the Golden Gate
moved the Energon, a tiny toy of white, rolling like a straw in the
stiff sea on the bar where the strong ebb-tide ran in the teeth of the summer
sea-breeze. But the Japanese were cautious. Their thirty- and
forty-thousand-ton battleships slowed down half a dozen miles off-shore and
manœuvred in ponderous evolutions; while tiny scout-boats (lean,
six-funnelled destroyers) ran in, cutting blackly the flashing sea like so many
sharks. But, compared with the Energon, they were leviathans. Compared
with them, the Energon was as the sword of the arch-angel Michael, and
they the forerunners of the hosts of hell.
But the flashing of the sword, the good people of
San Francisco, gathered on her hills, never saw. Mysterious, invisible, it
cleaved the air and smote the mightiest blows of combat the world had ever
witnessed. The good people of San Francisco saw little and understood less.
They saw only a million and a half tons of brine-cleaving, thunder-flinging
fabrics hurled skyward and smashed back in ruin to sink into the sea. It was
all over in five minutes. Remained upon the wide expanse of sea only the
Energon, rolling white and toy-like on the bar.
Goliah spoke to the Mikado and the Elder
Statesmen. It was only an ordinary cable message, dispatched from San Francisco
by the captain of the Energon; but it was of sufficient moment to cause
the immediate withdrawal of Japan from the Philippines and of her surviving
fleets from the sea. Japan the sceptical was converted. She had felt the weight
of Goliah's arm. And meekly she obeyed when Golian commanded her to dismantle
her war vessels and to convert the metal into useful appliances for the arts of
peace. In all the ports, navy-yards, machine-shops and foundries of Japan tens
of thousands of brown-skinned artisans converted the war-monsters into myriads
of useful things such as ploughshares (Goliah insisted on ploughshares),
gasoline engines, bridge-trusses, telephone and telegraph wire, steel rails,
locomotives, and rolling stock for railways. It was a world-penance for a world
to see, and paltry indeed it made appear that earlier penance, barefooted in
the snow, of an emperor to a pope for daring to squabble over temporal
power.
Goliah's next summons was to the ten leading
scientists of the United States. This time there was no hesitancy in obeying.
The savants were ludicrously prompt, some of them waiting in San Francisco for
weeks so as not to miss the scheduled sailing-date. They departed on the
Energon on June 15th; and while they were on the sea, on the way to
Palgrave Island, Golian performed another spectacular feat. Germany and France
were preparing to fly at each other's throats. Goliah commanded peace. They
ignored the command, tacitly agreeing to fight it out on land, where it seemed
safer for the belligerently inclined. Goliah set the date of June 19th for the
cessation of hostile preparations. Both countries mobilised their armies on
June 18th and hurled them at the common frontier. And on June 19th Goliah
struck. All generals, war secretaries and jingo leaders in the two countries
died on that day; and that day two vast armies, undirected, like strayed sheep,
walked over each other's frontier and fraternised. But the great German War
Lord had escaped - it was learned, afterward, by hiding in the huge safe where
were stored the secret archives of his empire. And when he emerged he was a
very penitent war lord, and like the Mikado of Japan he was set to work beating
his sword-blades into ploughshares and pruning-hooks.
But in the escape of the German Emperor was
discovered a great significance. The scientists of the world plucked up
courage, got back their nerve. One thing was conclusively evident - Goliah's
power was not magic. Law still reigned in the universe. Goliah's power had
limitations, else had the German Emperor not escaped by secretly hiding in a
steel safe. Many learned articles on the subject appeared in the magazines.
The ten scientists arrived back from Palgrave
Island on July 6th. Heavy platoons of police protected them from the reporters.
No, they had not seen Goliah, they said in the one official interview that was
vouchsafed; but they had talked with him, and they had seen things. They were
not permitted to state definitely all that they had seen and heard, but they
could say that the world was about to be revolutionised. Goliah was in the
possession of a tremendous discovery that placed all the world at his mercy,
and it was a good thing for the world that Goliah was merciful. The ten
scientists proceeded directly to Washington on a special train, where, for
days, they were closeted with the heads of government, while the nations hung
breathless on the outcome.
But the outcome was a long time in arriving. From
Washington the President issued commands to the masters and leading figures of
the nation. Everything was secret. Day by day deputations of bankers, railway
lords, captains of industry, and Supreme Court justices arrived; and when they
arrived they remained. The weeks dragged on, and then, on August 25th, began
the famous issuance of proclamations. Congress and the Senate co-operated with
the President in this, while the Supreme Court justices gave their sanction and
the money-lords and the captains of industry agreed. War was declared upon the
capitalist masters of the nation. Martial law was declared over the whole
United States. The supreme power was vested in the President.
In one day child labour in the whole country was
abolished. It was done by decree, and the United States was prepared with its
army to enforce its decrees. In the same day all women factory workers were
dismissed to their homes, and all the sweat-shops were closed. "But we
cannot make profits!" wailed the petty capitalists. "Fools!" was
the retort of Goliah. "As if the meaning of life were profits. Give up
your businesses and your profit-mongering." "But there is nobody to
buy our businesses!" they wailed. "Buy and sell - is that all the
meaning life has for you?" replied Goliah. "You have nothing to sell.
Turn over your little cut-throating, anarchistic businesses to the Government
so that they may be rationally organised and operated." And the next day,
by decree, the Government began taking possession of all factories, shops,
mines, ships, railroads, and producing lands.
The nationalisation of the means of production
and distribution went on apace. Here and there were sceptical capitalists of
moment. They were made prisoners and haled to Palgrave Island, and when they
returned they always acquiesced in what the Government was doing. A little
later the journey to Palgrave Island became unnecessary. When objection was
made, the reply of the officials was: "Goliah has spoken" - which was
another way of saying, "He must be obeyed."
The captains of industry became heads of
departments. It was found that civil engineers, for instance, worked just as
well in government employ as, before, they had worked in private employ. It was
found that men of high executive ability could not violate their nature. They
couldn't escape exercising their executive ability, any more than a crab could
escape crawling or a bird could escape flying. And so it was that all the
splendid force of the men who had previously worked for themselves was not put
to work for the good of society. The half-dozen great railway chiefs
co-operated in the organising of a national system of railways that was
amazingly efficacious. Never again was there such as thing as a car shortage.
These chiefs were not the Wall Street railway magnates, but they were the men
who formerly had done the real work while in the employ of the Wall Street
magnates.
Wall Street was dead. There was no more buying
and selling and speculating. Nobody had anything to buy or sell. There was
nothing in which to speculate. "Put the stock-gamblers to work," said
Goliah; "give those that are young, and that so desire, a chance to learn
useful trades." "Put the drummers, and salesmen, and advertising
agents, and real estate agents to work," said Goliah; and by hundreds of
thousands the erstwhile useless middlemen and parasites went into useful
occupations. The four hundred thousand idle gentlemen of the country who had
lived upon incomes were likewise put to work. Then there were a lot of helpless
men in high places who were cleared out, the remarkable thing about this being
that they were cleared out by their own fellows. Of this class were the
professional politicians, whose wisdom and power consisted of manipulating
machine-politics and grafting. There was no longer any graft. Since there were
no private interests to purchase special privileges, no bribes were offered to
legislators, and legislators for the first time legislated for the people. The
result was that men who were efficient, not in corruption, but in direction,
found their way into the legislatures.
With this rational organisation of society
amazing results were brought about. The national day's work was eight hours,
and yet production increased. In spite of the great permanent improvements and
of the immense amount of energy consumed in systematising the competitive chaos
of society, production double and tripled upon itself. The standard of living
increased, and still consumption could not keep up with production. The maximum
working-age was decreased to fifty years, to forty-nine years, and to
forty-eight years. The minimum working age went up from sixteen years to
eighteen years. The eight-hour day became a seven-hour day, and in a few months
the national working day was reduced to five hours.
In the meantime glimmerings were being caught,
not of the identity of Goliah, but of how he had worked and prepared for his
assuming control of the world. Little things leaked out, clews were followed
up, apparently unrelated things were pieced together. Strange stories of blacks
stolen from Africa were remembered, of Chinese and Japanese contract coolies,
who had mysteriously disappeared, of lonely South Sea islands raided and their
inhabitants carried away; stories of yachts and merchant steamers, mysteriously
purchased, that had disappeared and the descriptions of which remotely tallied
with the crafts that had carried the Orientals, and Africans, and islanders
away. Where had Goliah got the sinews of war? was the question. And the
surmised answer was: By exploiting these stolen labourers. It was they that
lived in the exposed village on Palgrave Island. It was the product of their
toil that had purchased the yachts and merchant steamers and enable Goliah's
agents to permeate society and carry out his will. And what was the product of
their toil that had given Goliah the wealth necessary to realise his plans?
Commercial radium, the newspapers proclaimed; and radiyte, and radiosole, and
argatium, and argyte, and the mysterious golyte (that had proved so valuable in
metallurgy). These were the new compounds, discovered in the first decade of
the twentieth century, the commercial and scientific use of which had become so
enormous in the second decade.
The line of fruit boats that ran from Hawaii to
San Francisco was declared to be the property of Goliah. This was a surmise,
for no other owner could be discovered, and the agents who handled the
shipments of the fruit boats were only agents. Since no one else owned the
fruit boats, then Goliah must own them. The point of which is: that it
leaked out that the major portion of the world's supply in these precious
compounds was brought to San Francisco by those very fruit boats. That the
whole chain of surmise was correct was proved in later years when Goliah's
slaves were liberated and honourably pensioned by the international government
of the world. It was at that time that the seal of secrecy was lifted from the
lips of his agents and higher emissaries, and those that chose revealed much of
the mystery of Goliah's organisation and methods. His destroying angels,
however, remained forever dumb. Who the men were who went forth to the high
places and killed at his bidding will be unknown to the end of time - for kill
they did, by means of that very subtle and then mysterious force that Goliah
had discovered and named "Energon."
But at that time Energon, the little giant that
was destined to do the work of the world, was unknown and undreamed of. Only
Goliah knew, and he kept his secret well. Even his agents, who were armed with
it, and who, in the case of the yacht Energon, destroyed a mighty fleet
of warships by exploding their magazines, knew not what the subtle and potent
force was, nor how it was manufactured. They knew only one of its many uses,
and in that one use they had been instructed by Goliah. It is now well known
that radium, and radiyte, and radiosole, and all the other compounds were
by-products of the manufacture of Energon by Goliah from the sunlight; but at
that time nobody know what Energon was, and Goliah continued to
awe and rule the world.
One of the uses of Energon was in wireless
telegraphy. It was by its means that Goliah was able to communicate with his
agents all over the world. At that time the apparatus required by an agent was
so clumsy that it could not be packed in anything less than a fair-sized
steamer-trunk. To-day, thanks to the improvements of Mendsoll, the perfected
apparatus can be carried in a coat-pocket.
It was in December, 1924, that Goliah sent out
his famous "Christmas Letter," part of the text of which is here
given:
So far, while I have kept the rest of the
nations from each other's throats, I have devoted myself particularly to the
United States. Now I have not given to the people of the United States a
rational social organisation. What I have done has been to compel them to
construct that organisation themselves. There is more laughter in the United
States these days, and there is more sense. Food and shelter are no longer
obtained by the anarchistic methods of so-called individualism, but are now
well-nigh automatic. And the beauty of it is that the people of the United
States have achieved all this for themselves. I did not achieve it for them. I
repeat, they achieved it for themselves. All that I did was to put the fear of
death in the hearts of the few that sat in the high places and obstructed the
coming of rationality and laughter. The fear of death made those in the high
places get out of the way, that was all, and gave the intelligence of man a
chance to realise itself socially.
In the year that is to come I shall devote myself
to the rest of the world. I shall put the fear of death in the hearts of all
that sit in the high places in all the nations. And they will do as they have
done in the United States - get down out of the high places and give the
intelligence of man a chance for social rationality. All the nations shall
tread the path the United States is now on.
And when all the nations are well along on that
path, I shall have something else for them. But first they must travel that
path for themselves. They must demonstrate that the intelligence of mankind
to-day, with the mechanical energy now at its disposal, is capable of
organising society so that food and shelter be made automatic, labour be
reduced to a three-hour day, and joy and laughter be made universal. And when
that is accomplished, not by me but by the intelligence of mankind, then I
shall make a present to the world of a new mechanical energy. This is my
discovery. This Energon is nothing more or less than the cosmic energy that
resides in the solar rays. When it is harnessed by mankind it will do the work
of the world. There will be no more multitudes of miners slaving out their
lives in the bowels of the earth, no more sooty firemen and greasy engineers.
All may dress in white, if they so will. The work of life will have become
play, and young and old will be the children of joy, and the business of living
will become joy; and they will compete, one with another, in achieving ethical
concepts and spiritual heights, in fashioning pictures, and songs, and stories,
in state-craft and beauty-craft, in the sweat and the endeavour of the wrestler
and the runner and the player of games - all will compete, not for sordid coin
and base material reward, but for the joy that shall be theirs in the
development and vigor of flesh and in the development and keenness of spirit.
All will be joy-smiths and their task shall be to beat out laughter from the
ringing anvil of life.
And now one word for the immediate future. On New
Year's Day all nations shall disarm, all fortresses and warships shall be
dismantled, and all armies shall be disbanded.
GOLIAH.
On New Year's day all the world disarmed. The
millions of soldiers and sailors and workmen in the standing armies, in the
navies, and in the countless arsenals, machine-shops and factories for the
manufacture of war-machinery, were dismissed to their homes. These many
millions of men, as well as their costly war machinery, had hitherto been
supported on the back of labour. They now went into useful occupations, and the
released labor giant heaved a mighty sigh of relief. The policing of the world
was left to the peace officers and was purely social, whereas war had been
distinctly anti-social.
Ninety per cent. of the crimes against society
had been crimes against private property. With the passing of private property,
at least in the means of production, and with the organisation of industry that
gave every man a chance, the crimes against private property practically
ceased. The police forces everywhere were reduced repeatedly and again and
again. Nearly all occasional and habitual criminals ceased voluntarily from
their depredations. There was no longer any need for them to commit crime. They
merely changed with changing conditions. A smaller number of criminals was put
into hospitals and cured. And the remnant of the hopelessly criminal and
degenerate was segregated. And the courts in all the countries were likewise
decreased in number again and again. Ninety-five per cent. of all civil cases
had been squabbles over property, conflicts of property-rights, lawsuits,
contests of wills, breaches of contract, bankruptcies, etc. With the passing
of private property, this ninety-five per cent. of the cases that cluttered the
courts also passed. The courts became shadows, attenuated ghosts, rudimentary
vestiges of the anarchistic times that had preceded the coming of Goliah.
The year 1925 was a lively year in the world's
history. Goliah ruled the world with a strong hand. Kings and emperors
journeyed to Palgrave Island, saw the wonders of Energon, and went away with
the fear of death in their hearts, to abdicate thrones and crowns and
hereditary licenses. When Goliah spoke to politicians (so-called
"statesmen"), they obeyed - or died. He dictated universal reforms,
dissolved refractory parliaments, and to the great conspiracy that was formed
of mutinous money lords and captains of industry he sent his destroying angels.
"The time is past for fooling," he told them. "You are
anachronisms. You stand in the way of humanity. To the scrap-heap with
you." To those that protested, and they were many, he said: "This is
no time for logomanchy. You can argue for centuries. It is what you have done
in the past. I have no time for argument. Get out of the way."
With the exception of putting a stop to war, and
of indicating the broad general plan, Goliah did nothing. By putting the fear
of death into the hearts of those that sat in the high places and obstructed
progress, Goliah made the opportunity for the unshackled intelligence of the
best social thinkers of the world to exert itself. Goliah left all the
multitudinous details of reconstruction to these social thinkers. He wanted
them to prove that they were able to do it, and they proved it. It was due to
their initiative that consumption was stamped out from the world. It was due to
them, and in spite of a deal of protesting from the sentimentalists, that all
the extreme hereditary inefficients were segregated and denied marriage.
Goliah had nothing whatever to do with the
instituting of the Colleges of Invention. This idea originated practically
simultaneously in the minds of thousands of social thinkers. The time was ripe
for the realisation of the idea, and everywhere arose the splendid institutions
of invention. For the first time the ingenuity of man was loosed upon the
problem of simplifying life, instead of upon the making of money-earning
devices. The affairs of life, such as house-cleaning, dish- and window-washing,
dust-removing and scrubbing and clothes-washing, and all the endless sordid and
necessary details, were simplified by invention until they became automatic. We
of to-day cannot realise the barbarously filthy and slavish lives of those that
lived prior to 1925.
The international government of the world was
another idea that sprang simultaneously into the minds of thousands. The
successful realisation of this idea was a surprise to many, but as a surprise
it was nothing to that received by the mildly-protestant sociologists and
biologists when irrefutable facts exploded the doctrine of Malthus. With
leisure and joy in the world; with an immensely higher standard of living; and
with the enormous spaciousness of opportunity for recreation, development, and
pursuit of beauty and nobility and all the higher attributes, the birth-rate
fell, and fell astoundingly. People ceased breeding like cattle. And better
than that, it was immediately noticeable that a higher average of children was
being born. The doctrine of Malthus was knocked into a cocked hat - or flung to
the scrap-heap, as Goliah would have put it.
All that Goliah had predicted that the
intelligence of mankind could accomplish with the mechanical energy at its
disposal came to pass. Human dissatisfaction practically disappeared. The
elderly people were the great grumblers; but when they were honourably
pensioned by society, as they passed the age-limit for work, the great majority
ceased grumbling. They found themselves better off in their idle old days under
the new régime, enjoying vastly more pleasures and comforts than they
had in their busy and toilsome youth under the old régime. The younger
generation had easily adapted itself to the changed order, and the very young
had never known anything else. The sum of human happiness had increased
enormously. The world had become gay and sane. Even the old fogies of
professors of sociology, who had opposed with might and main the coming of the
new régime, made no complaint. They were a score of times better
remunerated than in the old days, and they were not worked nearly so hard.
Besides, they were busy revising sociology and writing new text-books on the
subject. Here and there, it is true, there were atavisms, men who yearned for
the flesh-pots and cannibal-feasts of the old alleged
"individualism," creatures long of tooth and savage of claw who
wanted to prey upon their fellow-men; but they were looked upon as diseased,
and were treated in hospitals. A small remnant, however, proved incurable, and
was confined in asylums and denied marriage. Thus, there was no progeny to
inherit their atavistic tendencies.
As the years went by, Goliah dropped out of the
running of the world. There was nothing for him to run. The world was running
itself, and doing it smoothly and beautifully. In 1937, Goliah made his
long-promised present of Energon to the world. He himself had devised a
thousand ways in which the little giant should do the work of the world - all
of which he made public at the same time. But instantly the colleges of
invention seized upon Energon and utilised it in a hundred thousand additional
ways. In fact, as Goliah confessed in his letter of March, 1938, the colleges
of invention cleared up several puzzling features of Energon that had baffled
him during the preceding years. With the introduction of the use of Energon the
two-hour work day was cut down almost to nothing. As Goliah had predicted, work
indeed became play. And, so tremendous was man's productive capacity, due to
Energon and the rational social utilisation of it, that the humblest citizen
enjoyed leisure and time and opportunity for an immensely greater abundance of
living than had the most favoured under the old anarchistic system.
Nobody had ever seen Goliah, and all people began
to clamour for their saviour to appear. While the world did not minimise his
discovery of Energon, it was decided that greater than that was his wide social
vision. He was a superman, a scientific superman; and the curiosity of the
world to see him had become well-nigh unbearable. It was in 1941, after much
hesitancy on his part that he finally emerged from Palgrave Island. He arrived
on June 6th in San Francisco, and for the first time, since his retirement to
Palgrave Island, the world looked upon his face. And the world was
disappointed. Its imagination had been touched. An heroic figure had been made
out of Goliah. He was the man, or the demi-god, rather, who had turned the
planet over. The deeds of Alexander, Cæsar, Genghis Khan, and Napoleon
were as the play of babes alongside his colossal achievements.
And ashore in San Francisco and through its
streets stopped and rode a little old man, sixty-five years of age, well
preserved, with a pink-and-white complexion and a bald spot on his head the
size of an apple. He was short-sighted and wore spectacles. But when the
spectacles were removed, his were quizzical blue eyes like a child's, filled
with mild wonder at the world. Also, his eyes had a way of twinkling,
accompanied by a screwing up of the face, as if he laughed at the huge joke he
had played upon the world, trapping it, in spite of itself, into happiness and
laughter.
For a scientific superman and world-tyrant, he
had remarkable weaknesses. He loved sweets, and was inordinately fond of salted
almonds and salted pecans, especially the latter. He always carried a paper-bag
of them in his pocket, and he had a way of saying frequently that the chemism
of his nature demanded such fare. Perhaps his most astonishing failing was
cats. He had an ineradicable aversion to that domestic animal. It will be
remembered that he fainted dead away with sudden fright, while speaking in
Brotherhood Palace, when the janitor's cat walked out upon the stage and
brushed against his legs.
But no sooner had he revealed himself to the
world than he was identified. Old-time friends had no difficulty in recognising
him as Percival Stultz, the German-American who, in 1898, had worked in the
Union Iron Works, and who, for two years at that time, had been secretary of
Branch 389 of the International Brotherhood of Machinists. It was in 1901, then
twenty-five years of age, that he had taken special scientific courses at the
University of California, at the same time supporting himself by soliciting
what was then known as "life insurance." His records as a student are
preserved in the university museum. He is remembered by the professors he sat
under, chiefly for his absent-mindedness. Undoubtedly, even then he was
catching glimpses of the wide visions that later were to be his.
His naming himself "Goliah" and
shrouding himself in mystery was his little joke, he later explained. As
Goliah, or any other thing like that, he said, he was able to touch the
imagination of the world and turn it over; but as Percival Stultz, wearing
side-whiskers and spectacles and weighing one hundred and eighteen pounds, he
would have been unable to turn over a pecan - "not even a salted
pecan."
But the world quickly got over its disappointment
in his personal appearance and antecedents. It knew him and revered him as the
master-mind of the ages; and it loved him for himself, for his quizzical
short-sighted eyes and the inimitable way in which he screwed up his face when
he laughed; it loved him for his simplicity, and comradeship, and warm
humanness, and for his fondness for salted pecans and his aversion to cats.
And to-day, in the wonder city of Asgard, rises in awful beauty that monument
to him that dwarfs the pyramids and all the monstrous blood-stained monuments
of antiquity. And on that monument, as all know, is inscribed in imperishable
bronze the prophecy and the fulfilment: "ALL WILL BE JOY-SMITHS, AND THEIR
TASK SHALL BE TO BEAT OUT LAUGHTER FROM THE RINGING ANVIL OF LIFE."
EDITORIAL NOTE. - This remarkable production is the work of Harry Beckwith, a student in the Lowell High School, of San Francisco, and it is here reproduced chiefly because of the youth of its author. Far be it from our policy to burden our readers with ancient history; and when it is known that Harry Beckwith was only fifteen when the foregoing was written, our motive will be understood. "Goliah" won the Premier for high school composition in 2254, and last year Harry Beckwith took advantage of the privilege earned, by electing to spend six months in Asgard. The wealth of historical detail, the atmosphere of the times, and the mature style of the composition are especially noteworthy in one so young.
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