<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER I </h2>
<h3> MY EAGLE </h3>
<p>The soft summer wind stirs the redwoods, and Wild-Water ripples sweet
cadences over its mossy stones. There are butterflies in the sunshine, and
from everywhere arises the drowsy hum of bees. It is so quiet and
peaceful, and I sit here, and ponder, and am restless. It is the quiet
that makes me restless. It seems unreal. All the world is quiet, but it is
the quiet before the storm. I strain my ears, and all my senses, for some
betrayal of that impending storm. Oh, that it may not be premature! That
it may not be premature!*</p>
<p>* The Second Revolt was largely the work of Ernest Everhard,<br/>
though he cooperated, of course, with the European leaders.<br/>
The capture and secret execution of Everhard was the great<br/>
event of the spring of 1932 A.D. Yet so thoroughly had he<br/>
prepared for the revolt, that his fellow-conspirators were<br/>
able, with little confusion or delay, to carry out his<br/>
plans. It was after Everhard's execution that his wife went<br/>
to Wake Robin Lodge, a small bungalow in the Sonoma Hills of<br/>
California.<br/></p>
<p>Small wonder that I am restless. I think, and think, and I cannot cease
from thinking. I have been in the thick of life so long that I am
oppressed by the peace and quiet, and I cannot forbear from dwelling upon
that mad maelstrom of death and destruction so soon to burst forth. In my
ears are the cries of the stricken; and I can see, as I have seen in the
past,* all the marring and mangling of the sweet, beautiful flesh, and the
souls torn with violence from proud bodies and hurled to God. Thus do we
poor humans attain our ends, striving through carnage and destruction to
bring lasting peace and happiness upon the earth.</p>
<p>* Without doubt she here refers to the Chicago Commune.<br/></p>
<p>And then I am lonely. When I do not think of what is to come, I think of
what has been and is no more—my Eagle, beating with tireless wings
the void, soaring toward what was ever his sun, the flaming ideal of human
freedom. I cannot sit idly by and wait the great event that is his making,
though he is not here to see. He devoted all the years of his manhood to
it, and for it he gave his life. It is his handiwork. He made it.*</p>
<p>* With all respect to Avis Everhard, it must be pointed out<br/>
that Everhard was but one of many able leaders who planned<br/>
the Second Revolt. And we to-day, looking back across the<br/>
centuries, can safely say that even had he lived, the Second<br/>
Revolt would not have been less calamitous in its outcome<br/>
than it was.<br/></p>
<p>And so it is, in this anxious time of waiting, that I shall write of my
husband. There is much light that I alone of all persons living can throw
upon his character, and so noble a character cannot be blazoned forth too
brightly. His was a great soul, and, when my love grows unselfish, my
chiefest regret is that he is not here to witness to-morrow's dawn. We
cannot fail. He has built too stoutly and too surely for that. Woe to the
Iron Heel! Soon shall it be thrust back from off prostrate humanity. When
the word goes forth, the labor hosts of all the world shall rise. There
has been nothing like it in the history of the world. The solidarity of
labor is assured, and for the first time will there be an international
revolution wide as the world is wide.*</p>
<p>* The Second Revolt was truly international. It was a<br/>
colossal plan—too colossal to be wrought by the genius of<br/>
one man alone. Labor, in all the oligarchies of the world,<br/>
was prepared to rise at the signal. Germany, Italy, France,<br/>
and all Australasia were labor countries—socialist states.<br/>
They were ready to lend aid to the revolution. Gallantly<br/>
they did; and it was for this reason, when the Second Revolt<br/>
was crushed, that they, too, were crushed by the united<br/>
oligarchies of the world, their socialist governments being<br/>
replaced by oligarchical governments.<br/></p>
<p>You see, I am full of what is impending. I have lived it day and night
utterly and for so long that it is ever present in my mind. For that
matter, I cannot think of my husband without thinking of it. He was the
soul of it, and how can I possibly separate the two in thought?</p>
<p>As I have said, there is much light that I alone can throw upon his
character. It is well known that he toiled hard for liberty and suffered
sore. How hard he toiled and how greatly he suffered, I well know; for I
have been with him during these twenty anxious years and I know his
patience, his untiring effort, his infinite devotion to the Cause for
which, only two months gone, he laid down his life.</p>
<p>I shall try to write simply and to tell here how Ernest Everhard entered
my life—how I first met him, how he grew until I became a part of
him, and the tremendous changes he wrought in my life. In this way may you
look at him through my eyes and learn him as I learned him—in all
save the things too secret and sweet for me to tell.</p>
<p>It was in February, 1912, that I first met him, when, as a guest of my
father's* at dinner, he came to our house in Berkeley. I cannot say that
my very first impression of him was favorable. He was one of many at
dinner, and in the drawing-room where we gathered and waited for all to
arrive, he made a rather incongruous appearance. It was "preacher's
night," as my father privately called it, and Ernest was certainly out of
place in the midst of the churchmen.</p>
<p>* John Cunningham, Avis Everhard's father, was a professor<br/>
at the State University at Berkeley, California. His chosen<br/>
field was physics, and in addition he did much original<br/>
research and was greatly distinguished as a scientist. His<br/>
chief contribution to science was his studies of the<br/>
electron and his monumental work on the "Identification of<br/>
Matter and Energy," wherein he established, beyond cavil and<br/>
for all time, that the ultimate unit of matter and the<br/>
ultimate unit of force were identical. This idea had been<br/>
earlier advanced, but not demonstrated, by Sir Oliver Lodge<br/>
and other students in the new field of radio-activity.<br/></p>
<p>In the first place, his clothes did not fit him. He wore a ready-made suit
of dark cloth that was ill adjusted to his body. In fact, no ready-made
suit of clothes ever could fit his body. And on this night, as always, the
cloth bulged with his muscles, while the coat between the shoulders, what
of the heavy shoulder-development, was a maze of wrinkles. His neck was
the neck of a prize-fighter,* thick and strong. So this was the social
philosopher and ex-horseshoer my father had discovered, was my thought.
And he certainly looked it with those bulging muscles and that
bull-throat. Immediately I classified him—a sort of prodigy, I
thought, a Blind Tom** of the working class.</p>
<p>* In that day it was the custom of men to compete for purses<br/>
of money. They fought with their hands. When one was<br/>
beaten into insensibility or killed, the survivor took the<br/>
money.<br/>
<br/>
** This obscure reference applies to a blind negro musician<br/>
who took the world by storm in the latter half of the<br/>
nineteenth century of the Christian Era.<br/></p>
<p>And then, when he shook hands with me! His handshake was firm and strong,
but he looked at me boldly with his black eyes—too boldly, I
thought. You see, I was a creature of environment, and at that time had
strong class instincts. Such boldness on the part of a man of my own class
would have been almost unforgivable. I know that I could not avoid
dropping my eyes, and I was quite relieved when I passed him on and turned
to greet Bishop Morehouse—a favorite of mine, a sweet and serious
man of middle age, Christ-like in appearance and goodness, and a scholar
as well.</p>
<p>But this boldness that I took to be presumption was a vital clew to the
nature of Ernest Everhard. He was simple, direct, afraid of nothing, and
he refused to waste time on conventional mannerisms. "You pleased me," he
explained long afterward; "and why should I not fill my eyes with that
which pleases me?" I have said that he was afraid of nothing. He was a
natural aristocrat—and this in spite of the fact that he was in the
camp of the non-aristocrats. He was a superman, a blond beast such as
Nietzsche* has described, and in addition he was aflame with democracy.</p>
<p>* Friederich Nietzsche, the mad philosopher of the<br/>
nineteenth century of the Christian Era, who caught wild<br/>
glimpses of truth, but who, before he was done, reasoned<br/>
himself around the great circle of human thought and off<br/>
into madness.<br/></p>
<p>In the interest of meeting the other guests, and what of my unfavorable
impression, I forgot all about the working-class philosopher, though once
or twice at table I noticed him—especially the twinkle in his eye as
he listened to the talk first of one minister and then of another. He has
humor, I thought, and I almost forgave him his clothes. But the time went
by, and the dinner went by, and he never opened his mouth to speak, while
the ministers talked interminably about the working class and its relation
to the church, and what the church had done and was doing for it. I
noticed that my father was annoyed because Ernest did not talk. Once
father took advantage of a lull and asked him to say something; but Ernest
shrugged his shoulders and with an "I have nothing to say" went on eating
salted almonds.</p>
<p>But father was not to be denied. After a while he said:</p>
<p>"We have with us a member of the working class. I am sure that he can
present things from a new point of view that will be interesting and
refreshing. I refer to Mr. Everhard."</p>
<p>The others betrayed a well-mannered interest, and urged Ernest for a
statement of his views. Their attitude toward him was so broadly tolerant
and kindly that it was really patronizing. And I saw that Ernest noted it
and was amused. He looked slowly about him, and I saw the glint of
laughter in his eyes.</p>
<p>"I am not versed in the courtesies of ecclesiastical controversy," he
began, and then hesitated with modesty and indecision.</p>
<p>"Go on," they urged, and Dr. Hammerfield said: "We do not mind the truth
that is in any man. If it is sincere," he amended.</p>
<p>"Then you separate sincerity from truth?" Ernest laughed quickly.</p>
<p>Dr. Hammerfield gasped, and managed to answer, "The best of us may be
mistaken, young man, the best of us."</p>
<p>Ernest's manner changed on the instant. He became another man.</p>
<p>"All right, then," he answered; "and let me begin by saying that you are
all mistaken. You know nothing, and worse than nothing, about the working
class. Your sociology is as vicious and worthless as is your method of
thinking."</p>
<p>It was not so much what he said as how he said it. I roused at the first
sound of his voice. It was as bold as his eyes. It was a clarion-call that
thrilled me. And the whole table was aroused, shaken alive from monotony
and drowsiness.</p>
<p>"What is so dreadfully vicious and worthless in our method of thinking,
young man?" Dr. Hammerfield demanded, and already there was something
unpleasant in his voice and manner of utterance.</p>
<p>"You are metaphysicians. You can prove anything by metaphysics; and having
done so, every metaphysician can prove every other metaphysician wrong—to
his own satisfaction. You are anarchists in the realm of thought. And you
are mad cosmos-makers. Each of you dwells in a cosmos of his own making,
created out of his own fancies and desires. You do not know the real world
in which you live, and your thinking has no place in the real world except
in so far as it is phenomena of mental aberration.</p>
<p>"Do you know what I was reminded of as I sat at table and listened to you
talk and talk? You reminded me for all the world of the scholastics of the
Middle Ages who gravely and learnedly debated the absorbing question of
how many angels could dance on the point of a needle. Why, my dear sirs,
you are as remote from the intellectual life of the twentieth century as
an Indian medicine-man making incantation in the primeval forest ten
thousand years ago."</p>
<p>As Ernest talked he seemed in a fine passion; his face glowed, his eyes
snapped and flashed, and his chin and jaw were eloquent with
aggressiveness. But it was only a way he had. It always aroused people.
His smashing, sledge-hammer manner of attack invariably made them forget
themselves. And they were forgetting themselves now. Bishop Morehouse was
leaning forward and listening intently. Exasperation and anger were
flushing the face of Dr. Hammerfield. And others were exasperated, too,
and some were smiling in an amused and superior way. As for myself, I
found it most enjoyable. I glanced at father, and I was afraid he was
going to giggle at the effect of this human bombshell he had been guilty
of launching amongst us.</p>
<p>"Your terms are rather vague," Dr. Hammerfield interrupted. "Just
precisely what do you mean when you call us metaphysicians?"</p>
<p>"I call you metaphysicians because you reason metaphysically," Ernest went
on. "Your method of reasoning is the opposite to that of science. There is
no validity to your conclusions. You can prove everything and nothing, and
no two of you can agree upon anything. Each of you goes into his own
consciousness to explain himself and the universe. As well may you lift
yourselves by your own bootstraps as to explain consciousness by
consciousness."</p>
<p>"I do not understand," Bishop Morehouse said. "It seems to me that all
things of the mind are metaphysical. That most exact and convincing of all
sciences, mathematics, is sheerly metaphysical. Each and every
thought-process of the scientific reasoner is metaphysical. Surely you
will agree with me?"</p>
<p>"As you say, you do not understand," Ernest replied. "The metaphysician
reasons deductively out of his own subjectivity. The scientist reasons
inductively from the facts of experience. The metaphysician reasons from
theory to facts, the scientist reasons from facts to theory. The
metaphysician explains the universe by himself, the scientist explains
himself by the universe."</p>
<p>"Thank God we are not scientists," Dr. Hammerfield murmured complacently.</p>
<p>"What are you then?" Ernest demanded.</p>
<p>"Philosophers."</p>
<p>"There you go," Ernest laughed. "You have left the real and solid earth
and are up in the air with a word for a flying machine. Pray come down to
earth and tell me precisely what you do mean by philosophy."</p>
<p>"Philosophy is—" (Dr. Hammerfield paused and cleared his throat)—"something
that cannot be defined comprehensively except to such minds and
temperaments as are philosophical. The narrow scientist with his nose in a
test-tube cannot understand philosophy."</p>
<p>Ernest ignored the thrust. It was always his way to turn the point back
upon an opponent, and he did it now, with a beaming brotherliness of face
and utterance.</p>
<p>"Then you will undoubtedly understand the definition I shall now make of
philosophy. But before I make it, I shall challenge you to point out error
in it or to remain a silent metaphysician. Philosophy is merely the widest
science of all. Its reasoning method is the same as that of any particular
science and of all particular sciences. And by that same method of
reasoning, the inductive method, philosophy fuses all particular sciences
into one great science. As Spencer says, the data of any particular
science are partially unified knowledge. Philosophy unifies the knowledge
that is contributed by all the sciences. Philosophy is the science of
science, the master science, if you please. How do you like my
definition?"</p>
<p>"Very creditable, very creditable," Dr. Hammerfield muttered lamely.</p>
<p>But Ernest was merciless.</p>
<p>"Remember," he warned, "my definition is fatal to metaphysics. If you do
not now point out a flaw in my definition, you are disqualified later on
from advancing metaphysical arguments. You must go through life seeking
that flaw and remaining metaphysically silent until you have found it."</p>
<p>Ernest waited. The silence was painful. Dr. Hammerfield was pained. He was
also puzzled. Ernest's sledge-hammer attack disconcerted him. He was not
used to the simple and direct method of controversy. He looked appealingly
around the table, but no one answered for him. I caught father grinning
into his napkin.</p>
<p>"There is another way of disqualifying the metaphysicians," Ernest said,
when he had rendered Dr. Hammerfield's discomfiture complete. "Judge them
by their works. What have they done for mankind beyond the spinning of
airy fancies and the mistaking of their own shadows for gods? They have
added to the gayety of mankind, I grant; but what tangible good have they
wrought for mankind? They philosophized, if you will pardon my misuse of
the word, about the heart as the seat of the emotions, while the
scientists were formulating the circulation of the blood. They declaimed
about famine and pestilence as being scourges of God, while the scientists
were building granaries and draining cities. They builded gods in their
own shapes and out of their own desires, while the scientists were
building roads and bridges. They were describing the earth as the centre
of the universe, while the scientists were discovering America and probing
space for the stars and the laws of the stars. In short, the
metaphysicians have done nothing, absolutely nothing, for mankind. Step by
step, before the advance of science, they have been driven back. As fast
as the ascertained facts of science have overthrown their subjective
explanations of things, they have made new subjective explanations of
things, including explanations of the latest ascertained facts. And this,
I doubt not, they will go on doing to the end of time. Gentlemen, a
metaphysician is a medicine man. The difference between you and the Eskimo
who makes a fur-clad blubber-eating god is merely a difference of several
thousand years of ascertained facts. That is all."</p>
<p>"Yet the thought of Aristotle ruled Europe for twelve centuries," Dr.
Ballingford announced pompously. "And Aristotle was a metaphysician."</p>
<p>Dr. Ballingford glanced around the table and was rewarded by nods and
smiles of approval.</p>
<p>"Your illustration is most unfortunate," Ernest replied. "You refer to a
very dark period in human history. In fact, we call that period the Dark
Ages. A period wherein science was raped by the metaphysicians, wherein
physics became a search for the Philosopher's Stone, wherein chemistry
became alchemy, and astronomy became astrology. Sorry the domination of
Aristotle's thought!"</p>
<p>Dr. Ballingford looked pained, then he brightened up and said:</p>
<p>"Granted this horrible picture you have drawn, yet you must confess that
metaphysics was inherently potent in so far as it drew humanity out of
this dark period and on into the illumination of the succeeding
centuries."</p>
<p>"Metaphysics had nothing to do with it," Ernest retorted.</p>
<p>"What?" Dr. Hammerfield cried. "It was not the thinking and the
speculation that led to the voyages of discovery?"</p>
<p>"Ah, my dear sir," Ernest smiled, "I thought you were disqualified. You
have not yet picked out the flaw in my definition of philosophy. You are
now on an unsubstantial basis. But it is the way of the metaphysicians,
and I forgive you. No, I repeat, metaphysics had nothing to do with it.
Bread and butter, silks and jewels, dollars and cents, and, incidentally,
the closing up of the overland trade-routes to India, were the things that
caused the voyages of discovery. With the fall of Constantinople, in 1453,
the Turks blocked the way of the caravans to India. The traders of Europe
had to find another route. Here was the original cause for the voyages of
discovery. Columbus sailed to find a new route to the Indies. It is so
stated in all the history books. Incidentally, new facts were learned
about the nature, size, and form of the earth, and the Ptolemaic system
went glimmering."</p>
<p>Dr. Hammerfield snorted.</p>
<p>"You do not agree with me?" Ernest queried. "Then wherein am I wrong?"</p>
<p>"I can only reaffirm my position," Dr. Hammerfield retorted tartly. "It is
too long a story to enter into now."</p>
<p>"No story is too long for the scientist," Ernest said sweetly. "That is
why the scientist gets to places. That is why he got to America."</p>
<p>I shall not describe the whole evening, though it is a joy to me to recall
every moment, every detail, of those first hours of my coming to know
Ernest Everhard.</p>
<p>Battle royal raged, and the ministers grew red-faced and excited,
especially at the moments when Ernest called them romantic philosophers,
shadow-projectors, and similar things. And always he checked them back to
facts. "The fact, man, the irrefragable fact!" he would proclaim
triumphantly, when he had brought one of them a cropper. He bristled with
facts. He tripped them up with facts, ambuscaded them with facts,
bombarded them with broadsides of facts.</p>
<p>"You seem to worship at the shrine of fact," Dr. Hammerfield taunted him.</p>
<p>"There is no God but Fact, and Mr. Everhard is its prophet," Dr.
Ballingford paraphrased.</p>
<p>Ernest smilingly acquiesced.</p>
<p>"I'm like the man from Texas," he said. And, on being solicited, he
explained. "You see, the man from Missouri always says, 'You've got to
show me.' But the man from Texas says, 'You've got to put it in my hand.'
From which it is apparent that he is no metaphysician."</p>
<p>Another time, when Ernest had just said that the metaphysical philosophers
could never stand the test of truth, Dr. Hammerfield suddenly demanded:</p>
<p>"What is the test of truth, young man? Will you kindly explain what has so
long puzzled wiser heads than yours?"</p>
<p>"Certainly," Ernest answered. His cocksureness irritated them. "The wise
heads have puzzled so sorely over truth because they went up into the air
after it. Had they remained on the solid earth, they would have found it
easily enough—ay, they would have found that they themselves were
precisely testing truth with every practical act and thought of their
lives."</p>
<p>"The test, the test," Dr. Hammerfield repeated impatiently. "Never mind
the preamble. Give us that which we have sought so long—the test of
truth. Give it us, and we will be as gods."</p>
<p>There was an impolite and sneering scepticism in his words and manner that
secretly pleased most of them at the table, though it seemed to bother
Bishop Morehouse.</p>
<p>"Dr. Jordan* has stated it very clearly," Ernest said. "His test of truth
is: 'Will it work? Will you trust your life to it?'"</p>
<p>* A noted educator of the late nineteenth and early<br/>
twentieth centuries of the Christian Era. He was president<br/>
of the Stanford University, a private benefaction of the<br/>
times.<br/></p>
<p>"Pish!" Dr. Hammerfield sneered. "You have not taken Bishop Berkeley* into
account. He has never been answered."</p>
<p>* An idealistic monist who long puzzled the philosophers of<br/>
that time with his denial of the existence of matter, but<br/>
whose clever argument was finally demolished when the new<br/>
empiric facts of science were philosophically generalized.<br/></p>
<p>"The noblest metaphysician of them all," Ernest laughed. "But your example
is unfortunate. As Berkeley himself attested, his metaphysics didn't
work."</p>
<p>Dr. Hammerfield was angry, righteously angry. It was as though he had
caught Ernest in a theft or a lie.</p>
<p>"Young man," he trumpeted, "that statement is on a par with all you have
uttered to-night. It is a base and unwarranted assumption."</p>
<p>"I am quite crushed," Ernest murmured meekly. "Only I don't know what hit
me. You'll have to put it in my hand, Doctor."</p>
<p>"I will, I will," Dr. Hammerfield spluttered. "How do you know? You do not
know that Bishop Berkeley attested that his metaphysics did not work. You
have no proof. Young man, they have always worked."</p>
<p>"I take it as proof that Berkeley's metaphysics did not work, because—"
Ernest paused calmly for a moment. "Because Berkeley made an invariable
practice of going through doors instead of walls. Because he trusted his
life to solid bread and butter and roast beef. Because he shaved himself
with a razor that worked when it removed the hair from his face."</p>
<p>"But those are actual things!" Dr. Hammerfield cried. "Metaphysics is of
the mind."</p>
<p>"And they work—in the mind?" Ernest queried softly.</p>
<p>The other nodded.</p>
<p>"And even a multitude of angels can dance on the point of a needle—in
the mind," Ernest went on reflectively. "And a blubber-eating, fur-clad
god can exist and work—in the mind; and there are no proofs to the
contrary—in the mind. I suppose, Doctor, you live in the mind?"</p>
<p>"My mind to me a kingdom is," was the answer.</p>
<p>"That's another way of saying that you live up in the air. But you come
back to earth at meal-time, I am sure, or when an earthquake happens
along. Or, tell me, Doctor, do you have no apprehension in an earthquake
that that incorporeal body of yours will be hit by an immaterial brick?"</p>
<p>Instantly, and quite unconsciously, Dr. Hammerfield's hand shot up to his
head, where a scar disappeared under the hair. It happened that Ernest had
blundered on an apposite illustration. Dr. Hammerfield had been nearly
killed in the Great Earthquake* by a falling chimney. Everybody broke out
into roars of laughter.</p>
<p>* The Great Earthquake of 1906 A.D. that destroyed San<br/>
Francisco.<br/></p>
<p>"Well?" Ernest asked, when the merriment had subsided. "Proofs to the
contrary?"</p>
<p>And in the silence he asked again, "Well?" Then he added, "Still well, but
not so well, that argument of yours."</p>
<p>But Dr. Hammerfield was temporarily crushed, and the battle raged on in
new directions. On point after point, Ernest challenged the ministers.
When they affirmed that they knew the working class, he told them
fundamental truths about the working class that they did not know, and
challenged them for disproofs. He gave them facts, always facts, checked
their excursions into the air, and brought them back to the solid earth
and its facts.</p>
<p>How the scene comes back to me! I can hear him now, with that war-note in
his voice, flaying them with his facts, each fact a lash that stung and
stung again. And he was merciless. He took no quarter,* and gave none. I
can never forget the flaying he gave them at the end:</p>
<p>* This figure arises from the customs of the times. When,<br/>
among men fighting to the death in their wild-animal way, a<br/>
beaten man threw down his weapons, it was at the option of<br/>
the victor to slay him or spare him.<br/></p>
<p>"You have repeatedly confessed to-night, by direct avowal or ignorant
statement, that you do not know the working class. But you are not to be
blamed for this. How can you know anything about the working class? You do
not live in the same locality with the working class. You herd with the
capitalist class in another locality. And why not? It is the capitalist
class that pays you, that feeds you, that puts the very clothes on your
backs that you are wearing to-night. And in return you preach to your
employers the brands of metaphysics that are especially acceptable to
them; and the especially acceptable brands are acceptable because they do
not menace the established order of society."</p>
<p>Here there was a stir of dissent around the table.</p>
<p>"Oh, I am not challenging your sincerity," Ernest continued. "You are
sincere. You preach what you believe. There lies your strength and your
value—to the capitalist class. But should you change your belief to
something that menaces the established order, your preaching would be
unacceptable to your employers, and you would be discharged. Every little
while some one or another of you is so discharged.* Am I not right?"</p>
<p>* During this period there were many ministers cast out of<br/>
the church for preaching unacceptable doctrine. Especially<br/>
were they cast out when their preaching became tainted with<br/>
socialism.<br/></p>
<p>This time there was no dissent. They sat dumbly acquiescent, with the
exception of Dr. Hammerfield, who said:</p>
<p>"It is when their thinking is wrong that they are asked to resign."</p>
<p>"Which is another way of saying when their thinking is unacceptable,"
Ernest answered, and then went on. "So I say to you, go ahead and preach
and earn your pay, but for goodness' sake leave the working class alone.
You belong in the enemy's camp. You have nothing in common with the
working class. Your hands are soft with the work others have performed for
you. Your stomachs are round with the plenitude of eating." (Here Dr.
Ballingford winced, and every eye glanced at his prodigious girth. It was
said he had not seen his own feet in years.) "And your minds are filled
with doctrines that are buttresses of the established order. You are as
much mercenaries (sincere mercenaries, I grant) as were the men of the
Swiss Guard.* Be true to your salt and your hire; guard, with your
preaching, the interests of your employers; but do not come down to the
working class and serve as false leaders. You cannot honestly be in the
two camps at once. The working class has done without you. Believe me, the
working class will continue to do without you. And, furthermore, the
working class can do better without you than with you."</p>
<p>* The hired foreign palace guards of Louis XVI, a king of<br/>
France that was beheaded by his people.<br/></p>
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