They Call Me Carpenter eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 221 pages of information about They Call Me Carpenter.

They Call Me Carpenter eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 221 pages of information about They Call Me Carpenter.

He waited for an answer, and the chairman, upon whom his gaze was fixed, cried, “No!” Others also cried, “No!” and the audience took it up with fervor.  Carpenter turned to them.  “Then I say to you:  Break down in your hearts and in the hearts of your fellows the worship of those base things which mastership has brought into the world.  If a man pile up food while others starve, is not this evil?  If a woman deck herself with clothing to her own discomfort, is not this folly?  And if it be folly, how shall it be admired by you, to whom it brings starvation and despair?

“Before me sit young women of the working class.  Say to yourselves:  I tear from my fingers the jewels which are the blood and tears of my fellow-men; I wash the paint from my face, and from my head and my bosom I take the silly feathers and ribbons.  I dare to be what I am.  I dare to speak truth in a world of lies.  I dare to deal honestly with men and women.

“Before me sit young men of the working-class.  I say to you:  Love honest women.  Do not love harlots, nor imitations of harlots.  Do not admire the idle women of the ruling class, nor those who ape them, and thereby glorify them.  Do not admire languid limbs and pouting lips and the signs of haughtiness and vanity, your own enslavements.

“A tree is known by the fruit it gives; and the masters are known by the lives they give to their servants.  They are known by misery and unemployment, by plague and famine, by wars, and the slaughter of the people.  Let judgment be pronounced upon them!

“You have heard it said:  Each for himself, and the devil take the hindmost.  But I say to you:  Each for all, and the hindmost is your charge.  I say to you:  If a man will not work, let him be the one that hungers; if he will not serve, let him be your criminal.  For if one man be idle, another man has been robbed; and if any man make display of wealth, that man has the flesh of his brothers in his stomach.  Verily, he that lives at ease while others starve has blood-guilt upon him; and he that despises his fellows has committed the sin for which there is no pardon.  He that lives for his own glory is a wolf, and vengeance will hunt him down; but he that loves justice and mercy, and labors for these things, dwells in the bosom of my Father.

“Do not think that I am come to bring you ease and comfort; I am come to bring strife and discontent to this world.  For the time of martyrdom draws near, and from your Father alone can you draw the strength to endure your trials.  You are hungry, but you will be starved; you are prisoned in mills and mines, but you will be walled up in dungeons; you are beaten with whips, but you will be beaten with clubs, your flesh will be torn by bullets, your skin will be burned with fire and your lungs poisoned with deadly gases—­such is the dominion of this world.  But I say to you, resist in your hearts, and none can conquer you, for in the hearts of men lies the past and the future, and there is no power but love.

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They Call Me Carpenter from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.