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William
Ogilvie -- Decentralist |
[Reprinted from the
Henry George News, April, 1956]
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There is a legend (or a record of interest to psychical
researchers, if you prefer) that when a member of the great Scottish
faimily of Ogilvie is about to pass from the world, the drummer of
Cortachy is heard. The Ogilvies themselves never heard the music -- it
was always someone else, perhaps a visitor. Even the Ogilvie ghost in
this clan of gentlefolk was considerate. It is not known whether the
musical notes were heard at the passing of Professor William Ogilvie (a
valiant precursor of Henry George), but surely no soul more truly
deserved such a fitting accompaniment to his departure.
In a previous article "Wm. Ogilvie -- Landlord and Scholar" [Henry
George News, Dec. 1955], it was pointed out that though he was a
landholder his sympathies were with the common people. In fact he became
openly a Land Leaguer from the year 1776, though this took great
courage. Like Henry George, he was no mere theorist. He believed in
practising his principles, whether in the capacity of teacher, landlord
or --friend. As a master in Kings College, for instance, he waged a
hard-fought battle to keep the college property from being pilfered away
by the other masters, and led a reform aimed at having "the
emoluments of the professors arise chiefly from the fees of their
classes."
Before 1747 the great landlords of Scotland held not only power of
military tenure but the right to hang miscreants according to their own
verdict. When, in 1747, these powers were removed, the Duke of Argyle
alone was awarded £21,000 compensation for loss of these
privileges. But was his power greatly diminished? In 1890 his
descendant, with other dukes, lairds, etc. had control of the church to
the extent that they received tithes amounting to £3,700,000. Of
this they paid the clergy a little more than £240,000, and divided
the test up among themselves. The Duke of Argyle possessed the patronage
of 30 churches. The clergy, whose crumbs came from this source, usually
preached as though the landlords were a chosen race unconnected with the
rest of humanity, who in that day were largely considered tainted with
Original Sin.
Puzzled by all this, a Highland boy in the neighborhood of Inverary
Castle, whose logic suggests an older mind sagely concealing its
identity, is reported to have asked his mother "who gave birth to
the immaculate and uncursed family of the Lord of the Manor."
'Whisht !" [Hush] the mother answered. 'It was the devil that
tempted Eve to eat the forbidden fruit,' continued the boy.
"'Yes, my dear,' replied the much-relieved mother, on finding that
her son was coming back to things which she could easily explain.
'But,' said the boy, 'if the devil is a Land Leaguer, as the minister
said last Sunday, why does he not tempt that other woman, Whisht, also?
Then all landlords would be like other men; and father would get a piece
of land to plough and sow, instead of having to go to the fishing, or to
Glasgow to work in coal-pits; and we should be able to keep a cow, or
perhaps two, and some sheep, and I should keep a dog, and you would not
require to work so hard at washing clothes for the servants of the
castle. The castle might be turned into a great school, and the duke
himself might teach in it and have many teachers there, instead of
flunkies and other servants who, like the Duke himself, do no good
now.. .
"The nonplussed mother was now obliged to admit that the devil was
not a Land Leaguer at all.
"'I was thinking that,' replied the youthful logician, 'because if
lie were, he never would have done anything to bring about the eviction
of Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden, with the wrath and curse of God
upon all their children, and condemned to serve the children of Whisht,
as slaves and rent-earners.'
William Ogilvie, having sold the ancestral home, later bought "the
barren fields of Old-fold and Stonegavel." He then proceeded to
improve them, stating "there is no natural obstacle to prevent the
most barren ground from being brought by culture to the same degree of
fertility with the kitchen garden of a villa." If the professor
were alive today he would no doubt be welcomed as much by the
decentralist movement, led by Ralph Borsodi, as by the Geotgists. A sort
of inverted Hedonist, he believed the increase of public happiness to be
the primary object of the state and he thought the happiness of men was
"nearly in proportion to their virtue and their worth."
Quotations like the following, from the biographical notes of D. C.
MacDonald, show that while he did not define virtue he knew where it
could be found.
"Men employed in cultivating the soil, if suffered to enjoy a
reasonable independence, and a just share of the produce of their toil,
are of simpler manners, and more virtuous, honest dispositions, than any
other class of men. The testimony of all observers, in every age and
country, concurs in this, and the reason of it may be found in the
nature of their industry, and its reward. Their industry is not like
that of the laboring manufacturer, insipidly uniform, but varied, it
excludes idleness without imposing excessive drudgery, and its reward
consists in abundance of necessary accommodations, without luxury and
refinement.
"Those who are employed in agriculture, if not oppressed by the
superior orders, if permitted to enjoy competent independence and rustic
plenty, remote from the contagion of intemperance, are known to excel in
strength, comeliness and good health, every other class of men in
civilized nations."
Without caviling as to whether there are any statistics on the rural or
urban origin of the "best people," can one not see here a
parallel to the normal, balanced life taught by the decentralists in
their new School of Living in Florida? In a mechanized world which often
stultifies the creative urge, these people have withdrawn ("escaped,"
if you will), to a partially self-sustaining private universe where "a
man can be a man for a'that." Decentralists defer to reality by
working part time in a cash-producing job, but by aid of special plans,
they build their houses at half the usual cost, raise most of their food
on a few subsistence acres, enjoy better milk from the goat, and make
their bread from grains ground at home (with electric motor). In some
instances they weave cloth from wool gathered from their own sheep.
Patterns vary but the idea is for the family to live more creatively,
developing more skills and keeping a closer Contact with the whole
process of production. Machines are not frowned upon; they are brought
into the home. Parents and children share the labor of producing food
and clothing needed. About one hour a day is estimated for such work per
person. Here is a "back to nature" movement that carries its
machine along as it goes.
As Georgists know from the amount of space given in The Interpreter to
Henry George's ideas, these people, although "decentralized have
absorbed and supported George's political theory. Henry George was not a
decentralist in his appreciation of the division of labor, but who knows
how he would view the deadening monotony of our present large-scale
division of labor?
The decentralists have a singular facility for embracing other
movements, in whole or in part. They operated a small consumers'
cooperative in their Suffern (New York) venture, at the same time
embracing bio-dynamic agriculture for their subsistence farms.
Considering the coexistence of the Justice party and the cooperative
movement in Denmark, one wonders if those Georgists who tend to a single
purpose of a single tax might perhaps be more effective proponents if
they expanded or "decentralized" themselves a little.
Georgists and decentralists alike will agree with Professor Ogilvie,
when in the chapter on "The Right of Property in Land, as founded
on public Utility," he wrote, "The labor of men applied to the
cultivation of the earth tends more to increase the public wealth, for
it is more productive of things necessary for the accommodation of life,
wherein all real wealth consists, than if it were applied to any other
purpose; and all labor applied to refined and commercial arts, while the
state can furnish or procure opportunities of applying it to the
cultivation of the soil, may be said to be squandered and misapplied
unless insofar as it is given to those liberal arts whose productions
operate on the mind and rouse the fancy or the heart.
At least the Georgists who hold the quantitative view of wealth as
opposed to the value theory, will agree, and all will appreciate the
recognition of the earth as the source of all wealth. Perhaps the
thought that "labor applied to commercial arts is misapplied, will
seem unrealistic. How many of our gadgets might Ogilvie have relegated
to the commercial arts of misapplied energy, and how many would he have
welcomed as contributing to man's higher nature?
The beautiful painting of a suburban home with a prestige car in the
driveway, or of the richly panelled interior in which charming old
gentlemen testify to historic Bourbon-do these "operate on the mind
and rouse the fancy or the heart?" Bread and butter they do put on
the artist's table, yes, and he must eat, even if a non-producer.
Advertisements for many goods, if truly informative, (e.g. travel,
literature and possibly a new recipe for an old dish associated with a
pleasant culture), may well arouse the fancy. But this cigarette. this "enriched"
(devitalized) bread, more than any other? Hardly so.
To close reluctantly this report on an extraordinary man, we quote from
a letter written by a former student of Ogilvie after his death: 'Myself
alone could know the full extent of his goodness, the sense of which has
continued to increase. From him I imbibed principles and tastes which
will abide with me through life, and always prove as they have hitherto
done, their own reward."
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