isure for self culture
during the years of their State service and they will have the
additional recommendation that their congregation will not be required
to pay anything for their services.
'Another way: If a congregation wished to retain the full-time services
of a young man whom they thought specially gifted but who had not
completed his term of State service, they could secure him by paying
the State for his services; thus the young man would still remain in
State employment, he would still continue to receive his pay from the
National Treasury, and at the age of forty-five would be entitled to
his pension like any other worker, and after that the congregation
would not have to pay the State anything.
'A third--and as it seems to me, the most respectable way--would be for
the individual in question to act as minister or pastor or lecturer or
whatever it was, to the congregation without seeking to get out of
doing his share of the State service. The hours of obligatory work
would be so short and the work so light that he would have abundance of
leisure to prepare his orations without sponging on his
co-religionists.'
''Ear, 'ear!' cried Harlow.
'Of course,' added Barrington, 'it would not only be congregations of
Christians who could adopt any of these methods. It is possible that a
congregation of agnostics, for instance, might want a separate building
or to maintain a lecturer.'
'What the 'ell's an agnostic?' demanded Bundy.
'An agnostic,' said the man behind the moat, 'is a bloke wot don't
believe nothing unless 'e see it with 'is own eyes.'
'All these details,' continued the speaker, 'of the organization of
affairs and the work of the Co-operative Commonwealth, are things which
do not concern us at all. They have merely been suggested by different
individuals as showing some ways in which these things could be
arranged. The exact methods to be adopted will be decided upon by the
opinion of the majority when the work is being done. Meantime, what we
have to do is to insist upon the duty of the State to provide
productive work for the unemployed, the State feeding of
schoolchildren, the nationalization or Socialization of Railways; Land;
the Trusts, and all public services that are still in the hands of
private companies. If you wish to see these things done, you must
cease from voting for Liberal and Tory sweaters, shareholders of
companies, lawyers, aristocrats, and capitalists; and you mu
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