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SLAVERY EXISTS AMONG US

CHAPTER VIII.

SLAVERY EXISTS AMONG US.

IMAGINE a man from a country quite different to our own, with no idea of our history or of our laws, and suppose that, after showing him the various aspects of our life, we were to ask him what was the chief difference he noticed in the lives of people of our world? The chief difference which such a man would notice in the way people live is that some people -a small number-who have clean, white hands, and are well nourished and clothed and lodged, do very little and very light work, or even do not work at all, but only amuse themselves, spending on these amusements the results of millions of days devoted by other people in severe labour; but other people, always dirty, poorly clothed and lodged and fed, with dirty, horny hands, toil unceasingly from

morning to night, and sometimes all night long, working for those who do not work, but who continually amuse themselves.

If between the slaves and slave owners of to-day it is difficult to draw as sharp a dividing line as that which separated the former slaves from their masters, and if among the slaves of to-day there are some who are only temporarily slaves and then become slave owners, or some who, at one and the same time, are slaves and slave owners, this blending of the two classes at their points of contact does not upset the fact that the people of our time are divided into slaves and slave owners as definitely as, in spite of the twilight, each twentyfour hours is divided into day and night.

If the slave owner of our times has no slave John whom he can send to the cesspool, he has five shillings, of which hundreds of such Johns are in such need that the slave owner of our times may choose any one out of hundreds of Johns and be a benefactor to him by giving

him the preference, and allowing him, rather than another, to climb down into the cesspool.

The slaves of our times are not all those factory and workshop hands only who must sell themselves completely into the power of the factory and foundry owners in order to exist, but nearly all the agricultural labourers are slaves, working, as they do, unceasingly to grow another's corn on another's field, and ́ gathering it into another's barn; or tilling their own fields only in order to pay to bankers the interest on debts they cannot get rid of. And slaves also are all the innumerable footmen, cooks, porters, housemaids, coachmen, bathmen, waiters, etc., who all their life long perform duties most unnatural to a human being, and which they themselves dislike.

Slavery exists in full vigour, but we do not perceive it, just as in Europe at the end of the eighteenth century the slavery of serfdom was not perceived.

People of that day thought that the position

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