HARDIE’S rest-time at
Cumnock did not last long. He was not in good health, and never was
again; but while any capacity for work, mental or physical, remained, he
could not lie idle, a mere onlooker at the new phases of the conflict in
which he had spent his life, the conflict between war and peace, between
Capitalism and Socialism. The forces of evil had triumphed and were in
the ascendant. That was all the more reason for continuing to fight
against them. He had fought with his back to the wall before. He would
do so now, though it should prove to be the last fight of all.
On August 27th, he had an
article in the “Labour Leader” which showed no falling off in vigour of
expression or lucidity of statement. It was in answer to the specious
plea put forward on behalf of those Socialists who had become
aggressively pro-British and needed some plausible justification for
their lapse from the principles of Internationalism. Their plea was that
this country was not at war with the German people but with the Kaiser,
and that the overthrow of Kaiserdom would be in the interests of
Socialism in Germany. The victory of the Allies, in fact, would be a
victory for Socialism. Logically, though the apologists shrank from
committing themselves to the statement in so many words, the war, from
the British point of view, was a Socialist one. Hardie reminded the
people who argued in this fashion that one of the Allies was the
government of the Czar, and he wanted to know how Socialism would gain
by the substitution of Czardom for Kaiserdom. If he had lived, he might
have been able to show that it was only when Czardom ceased to be of any
value as an ally that Socialism was able to make headway in Russia. As
it was, he was able to show that it was this very fear of the supremacy
of Czardom that had made some German Socialists also forget their
Internationalism. One passage from this article should be quoted as it
gives the point of view which largely determined Hardie’s attitude
towards the war both before its outbreak and during its process in the
remaining months in which he was to be a spectator. “Let anybody take a
map of Europe and look at the position of Germany : on the one side
Russia with her millions of trained soldiers and unlimited population to
draw upon (its traditional policy for over a hundred years has been to
reduce Prussia to impotence, so that the Slav may reign supreme), and on
the other side France, smarting under her defeat and the loss of her two
provinces, Alsace and Lorraine, in 1870. For a number of years past
these two militarisms have had a close and cordial alliance. What was it
that brought the Czardom of Russia into alliance with the free Republic
of France? One object, and one alone, to crush Germany between them.
German armaments and the German navy, were primarily intended to protect
herself and her interests against these two open enemies. If this
reasoning be correct, it follows that our being in the war is a matter
of the free choice of our rulers who appear to prefer that Russia should
become the domineering power of Europe. I do not write these words in
order to say that we should now withdraw from the conflict. That is
clearly an impossibility at present. But if we can get these facts
instilled into the mind and brain of our own people, and of the working
class generally, we shall be able to exert a much greater influence in
bringing the war to a close much more speedily than the military element
contemplates at present.”
In this same article he
pointed out that Lord Kitchener’s new army scheme involved the raising
and training of not merely one hundred thousand men, but of five hundred
thousand, and that the final outcome thereof would be, and was intended
to be, Conscription, a prediction which the Socialist patriots
pooh-poohed as being the one thing from which their voluntary recruiting
campaign was going to save the country! Hardie’s prediction, much to his
own sorrow, was just on the verge of fulfilment when death took him away
from it all. He was at least spared from seeing this humiliation and
enslavement of his class, for whose independence he had fought all the
days of his life.
The article concluded:
“Some British Socialists are unfortunately ranging themselves on the
side of militarism, and we shall require to take the strongest possible
action to make it clear to our comrades on the Continent that the hands
of the I.L.P., at least, are clear, and that when the conflict is over,
and we have once again to meet our German, French, Belgian and Russian
comrades, no part of the responsibility for the crime that has been done
in Europe can be laid at our door.” .
By this time it had
become evident that the I.L.P. would be the only political party or
section in this country refusing to accept any share of responsibility
for the prosecution of the war. The Government started a great
recruiting campaign and called upon all political and Labour
organisations to assist. A majority of the Labour Party Executive
accepted the invitation, as did also the Parliamentary Labour Party, and
both placed their organising machinery at the service of the War Office.
The I.L.P.
representatives on the Labour Party Executive opposed this decision and
reported to their own Head Office, while MacDonald had resigned from the
position of Chairman of the Labour Party, actions which were endorsed by
the National Council and by the entire I.L.P. movement. The reasons for
this line of conduct must have been evident to all who had any knowledge
of the origin and history of the Independent Labour Party. To have
joined with the other parties would have been equivalent to ceasing to
be an Independent Labour Party, and neither the leaders nor the rank and
file were prepared to commit moral suicide in support of a war which
they had for ten years back strenuously striven to obviate. The National
Labour Party might, if it choose, merge itself with its bitterest
opponents, but the I.L.P. could not do that. Even if Hardie and
MacDonald had favoured such a policy—an unimaginable supposition—they
could not have carried the Party with them. Most of the Divisional and
Federation and Branch officials would have resigned, and there would
have been an end of the I.L.P., a consummation which would doubtless
have gladdened the hearts of the orthodox party politicians.
The National Council, in
its recommendations to Branches, declared: “If advice has to be given to
the workers, we hold it should come from our own platforms, preserving
the character and traditions of our movement, and we refuse to take our
stand by militarists and enemies of Labour with whose outlook and aims
we are in sharpest conflict, and who will assuredly seize this
opportunity to justify the policy leading up to the war. Now that the
country has been drawn into a deadly and desperate war, which may
involve, in the end, our existence as a nation, it is not a matter for
speech making, least of all from those who will not themselves be called
upon to face the horrors of the trenches.”
We can well understand
that the spectacle of the Labour Party (in the creation and fostering of
which he had given so much of his life) transforming itself into a War
Office annexe was a mortifying and painful spectacle to Hardie. Even
more poignant were the emotions evoked by the consequent estrangement
between men who had been his intimate friends and comrades, some of whom
owed whatever endowment of political prestige and opportunity they
possessed to their association with himself. A violent onslaught in the
press by H. G. Wells affected him not at all, but parting company with
George Barnes and some others hurt him deeply and permanently. He was
stricken not only by the world, but from within his own household.
The steadfastness of the
I.L.P. was the one sustaining fact proving that all was not lost, and
giving to life still some zest and comfort. But even here there were
individual defections that cut him to the heart. In the same week in
which the already quoted article appeared, he, with James Maxton,
Chairman of the Scottish I.L.P. Council, and the present writer,
attended a district conference at Edinburgh to explain and discuss the
Party’s policy. From Glasgow he telegraphed to a trusted Edinburgh
friend to meet him at the station. This friend was one of those who had
kept an open door for Hardie, who had pressed always to be nearest to
him on public occasions : a most devoted follower. At the station the
friend was not. Instead, there was a messenger to say that he had
another engagement. Hardie understood. Another personal tie was broken
never to be renewed. There were others. It was all part of the price.
There were more war-wounds than those of the battlefield, and just as
deadly.
This conference at
Edinburgh, and one the following day at Glasgow, endorsed fully the
policy outlined by the National Council, which was indeed simply a
reflection of the will of the Party in general. At both conferences
Hardie spoke with vigour and clearness and seemed to be the same man he
had always been, save for a slight tendency to irritability, most
unusual with him, and probably indicating some nervous derangement due
to his recent trying experiences.
That his mental powers
were unimpaired was shown in a strong and uncompromising reply to the
critics of the I.L.P. in the “Labour Leader” of September 10th. Amongst
these critics were included Mr. H. G. Wells, of whom and his friends in
the controversy Hardie said they “must make up their own minds as to
what they must do. That is their own affair. But one thing they must not
do. They must not lie about those who differ from them. When Mr. Wells
writes that I am ‘trying to misrepresent the negotiations which took
place before the war/ he writes an untruth. Mr. Wells is shouting with
the multitude and it is unworthy of the man to speak of either Mr.
Ramsay MacDonald or myself as having whined in our criticism of the
policy of the Foreign Secretary. But, after all, Mr. Wells has a
reputation, not only in newspaper articles, but in his books, of taking
a mean advantage of those whom he does not like.55 The manner of Mr.
Wells’ retort proved that Hardie had not lost his old faculty for making
his opponents very angry while he himself remained perfectly cool. In
this article, on the question of recruiting, he had a query for Trade
Union leaders. “It was in the year 1911 that the British army was last
mobilised—and two men were shot dead at Llanelly. Would any railway man
have touted for recruits for the army then? And is not the enemy of the
worker the same now as then? The most prominent of the South African
exiles has been to Germany and comes back with the declaration that ‘the
only attitude for the British Empire to adopt, I am convinced, is to
fight with every available man until the Prussian military despotism is
beaten. I am pleased to learn that South Africa is rising to the
occasion.’ Now, is was not ‘Prussian military despotism’ that sent
troops to massacre striking miners in Johannesburg, or that sent into
exile, where they still are, the writer of that passage and his
colleagues.”
What was wrong with
Hardie and the I.L.P. was that their memories were too retentive. They
could not forget that there was a capitalist system and a capitalist
class, or that there was a British policy which openly labelled itself
“Imperialism,” nor could they forget history and its story of how all
wars began—and how they ended.
During the month of
September, similar conferences to those at Edinburgh and Glasgow were
held all over the country, those at Ipswich, Leeds, Liverpool,
Manchester and Eccles being addressed by Hardie who continued to show
the same energy which had characterised his propaganda work all through
life, so that there seemed some justification for the belief amongst
those who were not in close touch with him that his leadership would be
available for many years to come, and that the end of the war, which it
was hoped would come soon by means of negotiation, would find him still
in the van of the progressive movement.
In October, he was back
in his own constituency where the reception given him (the meeting to
which reference has already been made) was in striking contrast to the
organised hooliganism at Aberdare in the first week of the war. With him
were MacDonald and Glasier, and to an audience of three thousand in the
skating rink at Merthyr the trio of the I.L.P. champions explained and
defended the policy of the Party. They were well received and loudly
cheered, and the indications were that Hardie had not lost his hold on
the constituency, and that any defection there may have been was more
than counterbalanced by new adherents won by his courage and
straightforwardness. He also held meetings of the I.L.P. branches in the
constituency, at Merthyr, Mountain Ash, Aberdare and Penrhiwceiber,
receiving votes of confidence in each place. This was at a time when the
war fever was mounting and the recruiting campaign was in full swing. He
was still continuing his weekly articles in the “Merthyr Pioneer,” which
circulated all through the constituency, and the people in the district
were thoroughly familiar with his views and opinions on the war, his
attitude towards recruiting and his general outlook. The fact that there
were no manifestations of hostility during this visit might have been an
indication of the existence of a spirit of fair play in the Merthyr
community sadly lacking in most other districts, or it might have been
due to the personal respect which his past services had won from them.
Probably both influences were at work.
In the “Labour Leader” of
November 5th, Hardie had a review of Brailsford’s book, “The War of
Steel and Gold,” written before the outbreak of war, but as readers of
the book know, substantiating both by fact and argument the Socialist
analysis of the causes which produced the war. As was to be expected,
Hardie gave the book high praise. The opponents of the war, standing
against overwhelming odds, with the entire British press against them
and a Defence of the Realm Act already looking for sedition in every
pacifist utterance, were naturally glad to avail themselves of every
intellectual contribution which might fortify them in the defence of
their convictions. At the outset of the war the withdrawal from the
Government of such men as Lord Morley, Lord Loreburn, Mr. John Burns,
and Mr. C. P. Trevelyan was of itself a comforting though silent
witnessing on their behalf, while the searching criticism of foreign
policy by Bertrand Russell, Gilbert Cannan, E. D. Morel, and Arthur
Ponsonby, M.P., none of whom could at that time be described as
Socialists in their outlook, was also of great value. In the same
category was Mr. Brailsford’s book, and it was eminently satisfactory to
Hardie because it emphasised the sinister influence of Russia, upon
which he had insisted so strongly in all his platform and press
declarations. He urged that it should be widely circulated by all I.L.P.
branches and propaganda agencies.
George Bernard Shaw’s
pamphlet, “Common Sense about the War,” which first appeared as an
article in “The New Statesman,” and was the cause of much controversy
and the subject of hostile criticism in “The Citizen,” a paper
originally promoted as the organ of the Labour movement, gave Hardie
much satisfaction, chiefly because it tore to shreds that British
selfrighteousness which saw motes in the diplomatic German eye, but
never a beam in that of the British or the Allies. He wrote the
following letter to Shaw:—
“House of Commons,
“November 26th, 1914.
“Dear Bernard Shaw,
“As my disgust with the
‘Citizen’s’ attitude over the war is great, I have not even looked at it
for some weeks. Thus it comes that I knew nothing about its attack on
your ‘New Statesman’ article until someone told me of your letter in
to-day’s issue. I am sending for the issue containing the attack and
shall see what can be done to raise the Socialist and Labour unions to
make protest. The paper is making rapidly for the void. The circulation,
after going up to 70,000 [a great under-estimate] a day, is now less
than it was before the war broke out. A big effort is now about to be
made to raise more funds to keep it going, but nothing can save it so
long as the present bumptious and reactionary cad is in the chair.
“May I now say that which
I failed to muster enough courage to say when first I felt the thrill of
your article, that its inspiration is worth more to England than this
war has yet cost her—in money I mean. When it gets circulated in popular
form and is read, as it will be, by hundreds of thousands of our best
people of all classes, it will produce an elevation of tone in the
national life which will be felt for generations to come. In Scottish
ploughman phrase, ‘God bless ye, and send ye speed.’
“I prohibit any reply to
this, or even acknowledgement. It is the expression of a heart which now
throbs towards you with almost feelings of devotion.
“Sincerely,
“J. KEIR HARDIE.
“P.S.—Only a Celt could
have done it.”
Shaw’s article did not
produce “an elevation of tone in the national life.” All the angelic
hosts could not have done that. It only added to the volume of damning.
The tone-producers were Northcliffe, Hulton, Bottomley, and such-like,
and their combined output was the reverse of elevating.
The fervour of gratitude
in the closing words of Hardie’s letter gives some indication of how
much he was feeling the need for sympathy and support. With all his
courageous facing of the situation on the platform and in the press, so
far as it was available, the conditions growing up around him were such
as to make life for a man of his temperament and principles, almost
unbearable. He could hardly move without coming in contact with the
things that were hateful to him. The very colour scheme of the streets
had now militarist khaki for its dominant note. The noises in the
streets were militarist noises, even the cries of the newsboys were
“shouts of war.” The marching and drilling of men, the drum-beatings and
bugle-calls, the open training of young boys in bomb-throwing and in
bayonet exercise with dummy figures to represent Germans, and with
accompanying obscene expletives to stimulate hate and blood-lust, were
rehearsals of the foul sport deliberately calculated to brutalise the
public mind. The overbearing vulgar swagger of many of the officer
class, the steady supersession of civic authority by military rule, the
abdication of Parliament itself in favour of the militarists, and, added
to all, the news and ever more news, of colossal bloody murder on the
battlefield, made the world into an inferno for him. He could not get
away from it. Wherever he turned it was there. In the House of Commons,
in the House of God; in the streets, in the railway stations and the
train compartments ; amongst the hills and glens and valleys, on the
open highway—everywhere omniscient and omnipresent, ruthless in the
lusty day of its power. The thing he had fought, Militarism, was
triumphant. Perhaps worst of all, he saw in this the coarsening of the
public mind, the swamping of its intelligence, and, in spite of fine
words, the lowering of its ideals. If these things read hard, they must
stand here as they were Hardie’s thoughts, and time has already begun to
deliver its verdict upon them.
In the midst of all this,
Shaw’s “Common Sense about the War,” even with its acceptance of the war
as a fact which could not now be run away from, was to Hardie like a
gleam of sunshine through the darkness— like a drop of water to a very
thirsty man.
In the last week of
November, he went to Blackburn, Philip Snowden’s constituency, and spoke
three times in the district. Snowden was at the time in New Zealand, but
he had found means, by speech and interview, to let his constituents and
the world in general know that he was at one with his I.L.P. colleagues
at home in their policy on the war. It was necessary, in his absence, to
have that policy made clear, and to give the fullest encouragement to
his supporters. Hardie evidently succeeded in doing so, for the
“Northern Daily Telegraph” declared that, “both at the Trades Hall and
the I.L.P. Institute, Mr. Hardie was greeted in a most cordial manner,
his reception possibly being warmer because of the way he has been
attacked during recent weeks.”
He had, however, for the
time being at least, exceeded the; limit of his powers and had once more
to turn his face homeward suffering from what appeared to his friends to
be a very dangerous nervous breakdown. During the greater part of
December he rested at home, but "did not show much sign of improvement.
It was this illness which gave rise to a rumour that he had been
attacked by paralysis, a rumour which travelled far, as we shall see.
The trouble was quite serious enough, and it would have been good for
him if he could have been prevailed upon to continue resting. It was
perhaps part of the trouble that he could not do so. He was restless and
unsettled, and could not stay quietly as a looker-on at events. He had
to be faithful in his storm-tossed world.
On the first Saturday of
the New Year, he was in Glasgow addressing the annual Scottish
Divisional Conference of the I.L.P. Here an incident occurred of a kind
not calculated to be helpful to a man suffering from nervous trouble. It
was a conference of delegates to which the public had no right of
admission, but it was found that four persons had obtained entrance to
the ante-room of the hall without the necessary credentials and were
known to be detectives. They were asked to withdraw, and did so. The
Defence of the Realm Act was now in full operation, but the officers of
the law had not yet fully realised the powers which it conferred upon
them. Otherwise they might have insisted upon remaining, in which case
there would probably have been serious trouble arising not out of any
words spoken by Hardie, but out of the resentment of the delegates to
the presence of spies. Hardie was not informed of the incident till
after he had spoken, but it annoyed him and rankled in his mind. He was
accustomed to open opposition and to press misrepresentation. But to be
spied upon in his own country was a new experience, and too much akin to
Russian and German methods. It troubled him greatly and preyed upon him.
His speech was simply in
the nature of advice to the delegates to hold fast to the I.L.P.
organisation during the troublous times through which they were passing.
He counselled them to continue their propaganda for Socialism, and to
seek representation on Citizen Committees and all other bodies through
which it might be possible to safeguard the rights and interests of the
common people without taking responsibility for the conduct of the war.
He also advised them to associate with other agencies and movements
working for the speedy restoration of peace.
On the following
night—Sunday—he spoke in Hamilton, making his last public appearance in
the district where, thirty-five years before, he had started out as an
agitator. There were men there who had worked in the pits with him, and
who still worked in the pits. They were proud of the record of the
comrade of their youth, but some of them perturbed and doubtful of the
wisdom of his attitude on the war. His speech was a vindication of that
attitude as being in conformity with the whole of his past career. He
showed that the Liberal Party had held the same attitude as himself
towards the war, but had changed in a single day. His own principles, as
they knew, had never been of that flexible quality, and he held that
because the Foreign Office secret alliance with Russia had involved the
country in an unnecessary war, that was no reason why he, or the Party
to which he belonged, should approve of the war, but rather the reverse.
He spoke argumentatively and clearly, but without passion. Mrs. Hardie
was with him on the platform, and few in the audience could have guessed
that she had wished to keep him away from the meeting and that her one
concern was that it should come to an end quickly that she might get him
away safely to the place where he ought to be, in bed, and within call
of medical attendance.
After a week’s rest he
began to regain strength, so much so, that by the end of January his
colleagues of the N.A.C. sent him congratulations on his recovery. The
re-assembling of Parliament drew him up again to London as by a magnet,
to live again lonely in the Nevill’s Court lodgings and to attend to his
Parliamentary work.
On February 25th, he
spoke in opposition to the proposal to relax the educational by-laws to
enable children under twelve to be employed in agricultural work, the
alleged reason being the shortage of men caused by the war. He contended
that working-class children should not have their educational
opportunities curtailed because of the war, and declared that the real
object aimed at was to enable the farmers to obtain cheap labour. “The
by-laws,” he said, “issued to protect our children are being practically
swept out of existence. I think it can be demonstrated that they are
being swept aside, not because of any special necessity for child labour,
but very largely as a means of perpetuating uneducated sw.eated labour
in the agricultural districts.” He had a partial alternative, in the
suggesting of which there came out some personal reminiscences of an
interesting kind. “There is one proposal upon which I do not know
whether my colleagues would be unanimous, but which I think might be
used to great account in solving this problem during the war period.
I refer to the employment
of women. I can remember in Scotland, my own mother, who was a farm
servant, often at work after she was married, with her family growing
up. I have seen her employed in the fields at kinds of work which I
would not like to see women employed at now : but there is much work
about a farm which is perfectly respectable and clean, and which calls
for a certain amount of intelligence, such as milking, the handling of
milk, the making of butter, and many other occupations which a woman can
do with advantage' to herself and to others. But the average woman
brought up in the town has lost all instinct for, and all contact with,
the life of the farm.”
On this occasion, for the
first time in his life, he claimed indulgence from his fellow Members of
the House of Commons on the ground of ill-health, giving that as the
reason for lack of energy in his treatment of the subject. It was
fitting that his last recorded parliamentary utterance should have been
on behalf of working-class children.
About this time it would
be that he met by chance Lord Morley. His note on the incident in the
“Merthyr Pioneer” has for us even a deeper pathos than it had then. Not
Lord Morley, the octogenarian, was the first to pass from the scene, but
Hardie the much younger man. “Passing along the Lobby the other day, I
met a familiar figure, the outstanding figure of the trio who resigned
from the Ministry rather than soil their consciences by the
bloodshedding in which we are now engaged. He stopped and shook hands
with me. ‘You have been ill/ he said; ‘what was the matter? Was it the
war which so weighed upon your soul and spirit that it made your body
sick?’ I had to smile a vague assent to the question. ‘The war,’ he
said, ‘when will it end? If we lose, we shall pay an awful penalty; if
we win, the penalty may be greater still.’ He sighed as he walked away
with the weight of eighty years bending his shoulders. I stood and
watched the retiring figure, and thought to myself, there goes the last
of England's great statemen. To-day, it is not statesmanship or
principle which actuates those who hold office. They are as completely
under the power of the capitalist as any ordinary member of the Stock
Exchange.”
And thus these two
sincere men, diametrically opposed to each other in political and
philosophical outlook, met now on common moral ground. To both, the war
was a crime, and Britain’s part in it wicked and foolish. And both were
helpless to prevent it or to stop it.
On March 25th, he had an
article in the “Labour Leader,” the last he ever wrote for that paper,
though, as we shall see, not his last press utterance. There was nothing
valedictory about this article, nothing to indicate that he had come to
the limit of his power or that he himself felt conscious that the end
was near. The title of the article was “Patriotism Measured in
Millions.” Therein he traced the growth of the Imperialist idea in
British foreign policy, synchronising with the growth of capital
investments in the colonies and in foreign countries, and, in order to
show to what this had led, he quoted Lloyd George’s reply to a question,
on March 13th. “The total British capital invested abroad amounts to
four thousand million pounds (£4,000,000,000), and the income from
interest on colonial and foreign investments is two hundred million
pounds (£200,000,000) a year.”
The following passage
from this article is well worth producing now. “Very many millions will
be needed to finance our allies, and to induce some to join in the
murderous melee who now stand aloof. When the war is over these will
require large sums for the renewal of their navies, and the creation of
new, and the repair of war-destroyed, railways and the like. There will
also be unlimited scope for new companies to open out the great mineral,
oil and other industries of Russia, Persia, and the Balkans, which are
yet in their infancy, and the British investor will be the only man left
with money to float them. France and Germany will alike be bankrupt, and
only the United States will remain as a possible competitor with Lombard
Street.”
He did not foresee the
Bolshevik intervention to spoil sport for the British financiers, but,
had he lived, he would have had no difficulty in explaining the
malignant attempts to prevent the Socialist regime from establishing
itself in Russia.
Withal his realistic
vision of the dread consequences of the war, he had not lost hope in
humanity, nor faith in Socialism. “When the war is only a stinking
memory of a bloodstained nightmare, and we are again face to face with
the real things of life, then surely there will be a great and mighty
agitation for complete enfranchisement of democracy, man and woman
alike, who will then be able to win control over both domestic and
foreign policy, and break the rule of those to whom Imperialism and
Militarism mean wealth and power, and to instal all the peoples of all
lands in authority, and thus bring plenty, peace and concord to a
long-suffering race.”
This was his last “Labour
Leader” article, but it might have been written in his prime, so
vigorous was it, so clear in the marshalling of fact and argument, so
dignified in diction. It was not to be wondered at that the movement was
deceived into believing that the end of the war would find Keir Hardie
still guiding and inspiring it, especially as during all this time he
had, by an extraordinary exercise of will power, or else by sheer force
of habit, been contributing almost without a break his weekly article to
the “Merthyr Pioneer,” and did so up till as late as April 17th.
Curiously enough, on the
same date as this final “Labour Leader” article, March 25th, the
“Merthyr Pioneer,” reproduced from an American paper, the “Boston
Evening Transcript,” an obituary sketch of Keir Hardie’s career, the
rumour of the attack of paralysis having evidently been accepted as
true. The sub-heading of the sketch, “Another of England’s Picturesque
Figures Passes from the Scene,” though premature, was not inapt. Keir
Hardie had not passed, but he was passing. He had made his last speech
in Parliament; he had written his last article in the “Labour Leader”;
and now he was going to attend his last I.L.P. Conference.
It was held at Norwich
under conditions unprecedented in British history. Great Britain was
governed as if it were a beleaguered country. There had been nighttime
Zeppelin raids on the Norfolk coast, and when, on Easter eve, the I.L.P.
delegates, many of whom had been travelling for twelve hours in crowded
trains, reached Norwich, they entered a city of dreadful night, and had
to be piloted through utter darkness to their hotels and lodgings. When
Easter morn came, and with it the blessed sunshine, it revealed a city
full of soldiers, with officers billeted in all the hotels, and with
bugle-calls and drum-beats mocking the peaceful message of the chiming
Eastertide bells. An attempt had been made to prevent the I.L.P.
Conference being held, through the cancelling of the halls engaged for
the Conference and the public meeting. In the interests of free speech
the Primitive Methodist Church placed its Schoolroom at the disposal of
the Conference; and it has to be recorded—and remembered—that two other
religious organisations, the Scott Memorial Church and the Martineau
Unitarian Church, had also offered the use of their meeting places.
At the Conference, Hardie,
who was looking very ill, spoke only once, and just at the close, in
support of a special resolution protesting strongly against severe
sentences passed upon fifty-three members of the Russian Seamen’s Union
and on the five Socialist Members of the Duma, and asking the British
Government to bring pressure to bear on the Russian Government with a
view to their ultimate freedom. In his speech he declared that the
fifty-three seamen were in prison for no offence except membership of a
trade union. Their secretary was illegally arrested in Egypt, he was
sent to Russia, and there sentenced to Siberia. “Some of us tried in the
House of Commons to get Sir Edward Grey to intervene, or at least to
have him tried in Egypt. Grey then said that this country could not
interfere with the political affairs of another country.
One of the biggest risks
we run is being allied to a nation whose past and present record is a
disgrace to civilisation and progress. The alliance with Russia is not
to help Belgium. It is to open up fresh fields for exploitation by
capitalists. We register our protest against all the infamies of the
bloody cruelty of Russia.” These were the last words of Keir Hardie at a
Conference of the Independent Labour Party. Never again would the
delegates hear the voice or grasp the hand of the man who for twenty-two
years had been their leader, comrade and friend.
Yet he was not finished,
nor his fighting quite done. His speech at the public meeting on the
Saturday evening brought him once again into public conflict with
authority. The circumstances are within memory, but Hardie’s own words
which ruffled Mr. Lloyd George to anger, will best recall the situation.
“In time of war, one would have thought the rich classes would grovel on
their knees before the working classes, who are doing so much to pile up
their wealth. Instead, the men who are working eighty-four hours a week
are being libelled, maligned and insulted; and, on the authority of
their employers, the lying word, accepted without inquiry by Lloyd
George, went round the world that the working class were a set of
drunken hooligans. That is the reward they got. The truth is, that the
shifts could be arranged so as to overtake all the work in hand. Mr.
John Hill, the Secretary of the Boilermakers, has shown that if the
shipbuilders would reduce their contracts ten per cent., the Government
could get all their work done, but the shipbuilders will not do that
because ships were being sold at two and three) times their value before
the war.”
Popularity was then, as
always, essential to Mr. Lloyd George; loss of it, a thing to be
dreaded. At that moment especially it was needful for him to stand well
in the opinion of the working classes. He hastened to essay the task of
clearing himself from the charge involved in Hardie’s remarks. On Monday
he sent a telegram to Hardie, quoting the offending passage, and
concluding with a query for which the quotation afforded no basis
whatever. “Would you kindly let me know where and when I am supposed to
have uttered such words or anything that would justify so monstrous a
deduction.” Hardie’s telegram in reply was as follows: “I pointed out
that the employers, when before you, concerning output of armaments,
etc., had put the whole blame on the drinking habits of the workers, and
that you, by accepting this statement without challenge, had given world
currency to the fiction that the workers were drunken wasters. I never
said ‘bullies’ nor have I seen the report from which you quote.—Keir
Hardie.”
Mr. Lloyd George,
notwithstanding this explanation, sent a denunciatory letter to the
press accusing the I.L.P. leader of “reckless assertion,” “wild
accusation,” “mischievous statement,” “excited prejudice,” but at the
same time found it necessary to explain that he himself had referred
only to a small section of the working classes, a qualifying excuse
which would probably never have been given but for Hardie’s public
protest on behalf of the reputation of his class. Lloyd George’s letter
received the fullest prominence in the press. Hardie’s letter in reply
was relegated to the back columns, and in some cases sub-edited to
distortion.
With this incident the
public career of Keir Hardie came to a close. He ended, as he had begun,
standing up for the working people. The British public heard no more of
Keir Hardie until the closing days of September, when the newspapers
announced his death. During the intervening months it was borne in upon
his intimate friends and colleagues that the days of their leader were
numbered. Indeed, early in May it seemed as if the end had come. The
illness from which he had been suffering intermittently since the
previous August reached an acute stage, producing what looked like
complete collapse. He was in London at the time, and after a week, at
the end of which it had become evident that the necessary care and
attention was not possible in the Nevill’s Court lodgings, and that in
his physical condition travelling home to Scotland was also out of the
question he was removed to Caterham Sanatorium, where he had alike the
benefit of skilled medical and nursing attendance, and the devoted
service of personal friends, chief amongst these being the ever faithful
Frank Smith and Tom Richardson, M.P. Mr. Smith took charge of his
correspondence and warned all inquirers, of whom there were hundreds,
against addressing any letters to Hardie himself, such letters being
more disturbing than helpful. At the end of the first month he was still
unfit for railway travelling, and Mrs. Hardie came up from Cumnock and
remained with him until he was able to face the homeward journey four
weeks later. During all this time there had been alternating periods of
oblivion, acute physical suffering, and apparently normal alertness. It
was during one of the normal intervals that he, with the consent of the
medical advisers, determined to make for Cumnock. He broke the journey
at Newcastle and stayed for a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Richardson,
arriving home in Cumnock at the end of July, Frank Smith and Tom
Richardson being his travelling companions. A week or two of rest in the
home circle seemed to bring him some renewal of strength, and he
ventured to cross over to Arran where his son Duncan was having a brief
holiday—the elder son, James, had been settled in America for some years
and was therefore unable to be with his father during these last weeks.
From Arran, after a few days, he went on a visit to hisi brother George
at Clarkston, Glasgow, where the utmost care and attention awaited him.
Neither the breezes of Arran, nor the comforts of home,* nor the
solicitude of friends could now ward off the approach of that “White
Herald” of whom he had once spoken as a welcome friend rather than a foe
to be dreaded.
On Wednesday, September
22nd, a change for the worse took place, and on the advice of the
doctors, who still seemed to think that some partial recovery was
possible, removal to a home for special treatment was decided upon. On
the Saturday a great weakness overcame him, and in the evening pneumonia
set in. On Sunday at noon, September 26th, he passed peacefully away in
the presence of his wife and daughter.
Thus, in his sixtieth
year, in the second month of the second year of the Great War, which he
had tried to avert and of which he was unquestionably one of the
victims, died Keir Hardie. Next morning, when the newspapers announced
his death, they carried heartfelt sorrow into many thousands of British
homes, sorrow, not alone for the loss of a great agitator and Labour
leader, but for that of a dear personal friend. Probably never was any
public man so sincerely and deeply loved by so many people as was Keir
Hardie.^
On the following
Wednesday, a great concourse of mourners of all classes, but mostly of
the working class, joined the funeral procession which followed his
remains through the streets of Glasgow to the Crematorium at Maryhill,
where eight years before he had said farewell to his father and mother.
Some were there who had accompanied him through the greater part of his
public life, Robert Smillie, Bruce Glasier, Sandy Haddow, George Carson,
William M. Haddow, Alex. Gilchrist3
James Neil, Cunninghame
Graham, and others, recalling memories of the early days of struggle ere
fame or even the promise of success had come as a stimulus to labour and
self-sacrifice. His colleagues of the I.L.P. National Council were, of
course, there, as many as could attend, Ramsay MacDonald, T. D. Benson,
W. C. Anderson, Fred Jowett and the others, serious and sad at this last
parting with the comrade of so many years of ceaseless endeavour for the
betterment of the common people. Delegates came all the way from Merthyr
Tydvil, members of the election committee who had fought side by side
with him in those never-to-be-forgotten political battles and who now
realised sorrowfully that never again would Keir Hardie lead them to
victory.
At the funeral there were
no delegates from foreign lands to lay wreaths upon the bier of the man
who had striven so resolutely for international unity of purpose among
Socialists, and who had refused to join in a struggle which he held to
be fratricidal and unnatural. The war which had slain Jaures of France,
and Franck of Germany, had now claimed Keir Hardie of Great Britain, and
had made it impossible for any of the men and women with whom he had
fraternised in the common efforts for international Socialist
achievement to manifest in person their respect for him and his work.
A simple burial service
was conducted by the Rev. A. M. Forson, of London, whose associations
with Hardie dated back to the early evangelising days. A few words from
Bruce Glasier calling upon those present to honour the memory of their
lost leader by preserving his ideals and continuing his work. A brief
exhortation in a similar strain to the multitude outside from W. C.
Anderson—both have since followed him into the unknown country of which
Hardie used to speak as the “Beyond”—and the mourners dispersed.
Here ends the work of the
present writer. He has tried to tell as fully as possible the story of
Keir Hardie’s life, and leaves it to others to estimate the value of his
work and example. Time itself will probably prove to be the truest
commentator, and it is the firm belief of the writer that the passing of
the years will establish Keir Hardie as one of the permanently historic
figures in that great age-long progressive movement which must find its
complete realisation in the establishment of human equality on a basis
of mutual service by all members of the human family. An essential part
of that process is the struggle of the working class in all countries
for the abolition of class. In directing that struggle Keir Hardie
played an important part during an important period. In future years,
whatever may be the prevailing form of society, men and women will have
to turn their thoughts back to that period, and will find James Keir
Hardie to have been one of its outstanding characters. Perhaps even this
imperfect account of his life will help them to know the kind of man he
was, and to visualise the environment amidst which he lived. That his
worth and the nature of his rendered service is already beginning to be
understood is apparent. The monument which the Ayrshire miners are
erecting is only one of the signs of that recognition. The annual Keir
Hardie celebrations held by the Independent Labour Party is another.
These organisations themselves stand as a proof of his courage,
foresight and resolute energy. But the time will come when miners’
unions and political Labour Parties will be unnecessary, and even then
there may linger some dim memory— traditional it may be—of an
incorruptible man of the common people, who, in his own person,
symbolised the idea of independence, and in his message proclaimed the
practicability of Brotherhood. |