Address of the Hon Frank S Black At Carnegie Hall New York October 30 1908

Cover Address of the Hon Frank S Black At Carnegie Hall New York October 30 1908
Address of the Hon Frank S Black At Carnegie Hall New York October 30 1908
Frank Swett Black
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We have long taken counsel of that discontent with a patience and docility that make us marvel.
We have belabored wealth until there is no phrase known to incontinent speech we have not applied to it. Reaction has 4 become a hardly less ferocious word than treason. But our re- forms have all been oral ; we have punished no one. And during this protracted carnival the price of many of the necessities of our daily life has mounted higher and higher. Meat, grain, clothes, have all gone steadily up
.... We have set our traps and covered them with vituperation and been caught in them our- selves. We have danced long and boisterously, but no man can truly say that we have not paid the fiddler.
These harsh conditions bear not alone upon the poor but most heavily on him. The indirect and shadowy rebuke to the wrong- doer which comes to him only as one of the populace punished as a whole, is trivial and hardly felt. Such wrongdoer is often powerful and intrenched, and the loss to him is comparatively slight, while the weak and unoffending suffer losses they never can repair.


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