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قراءة كتاب Solaris Farm: A Story of the Twentieth Century
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The Project Gutenberg eBook, Solaris Farm, by Milan C. Edson
Title: Solaris Farm
A Story of the Twentieth Century
Author: Milan C. Edson
Release Date: February 23, 2010 [eBook #31373]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOLARIS FARM***
E-text prepared by David Clarke, Martin Pettit,
and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
(http://www.pgdp.net)
from page images generously made available by
Internet Archive/American Libraries
(http://www.archive.org/details/americana)
Note: | Images of the original pages are available through Internet Archive/American Libraries. See http://www.archive.org/details/solarisfarm00edsorich |
SOLARIS FARM;
A Story of the Twentieth Century.
BY
MILAN C. EDSON.
Published by the Author
AT
1728 New Jersey Ave., N. W., Washington, D. C.
In the Year 1900.
Press work by Byron S. Adams.
Captain Milan C. Edson.
Copyright, 1900
By MILAN C. EDSON.
All Rights Reserved.
DEDICATION.
This book, is dedicated to the sons and daughters of the farms of the Republic as an expression of the author's realization, that Agricultural people constitute a large majority of its working units: That as such, its destiny is in the hands of their boys and girls, as its future guardians, fathers and mothers: That for the reasons stated, they should become its dominant thinkers and leaders: That Agriculture is the true basis of industrial and commercial success; hence, it should be made the most noble and pleasing of all occupations: That the alarming encroachments of land monopoly, and the inability of the small farm to meet the expense of using the latest and best machinery, threatens the total extinction of all land-owning farmers, and of their consequent reduction to the dependent caste of farm laborers: That the isolated life and the severe toil of the small farm, has a dangerously depressing effect on the minds of its people: That all of these things, seem to demand the changes suggested by the contents of this book.
PREFACE.
Strong in my convictions that all civilizations are false, which do not civilize the lowest units of any social order, I have written Solaris Farm as my contribution towards the improvement of agriculturists as a class, of the race as a whole; towards the establishment of a truer civilization, organized for the purpose of securing the same degree of progress for the lowest orders of humanity, which have been or can be attained by the highest. In any social or political fabric, wide differences of wealth, of education, of refinement in its sub-divisions are dangerous, they swiftly lead to the introduction of caste. Caste is the dry rot, which, when once established, will surely destroy all progress, all vitality, by slowly eating away the social, industrial and political life of the nation.
In preparing this book for the press, I wish to acknowledge my obligations to the following authors, for much valuable information and inspiration: To Elmer Gates, the discoverer of new domains in Psychology, the inventor and discoverer of the art of Mentation, the founder of the Elmer Gates Laboratory, at Chevy Chase, Maryland: To Henry George, the author of "Progress and Poverty:" To Edward Bellamy, the author of "Equality," and "Looking Backward:" And lastly to that greatest of living Frenchmen, M. Godin, the author of "Social Solutions," and the founder of the "Familistere," with its famous industrial enterprise, located at the city of Guise, France; the grandest co-operative success of the age!
A last word to my readers: Do you wish to join forces with the humanitarians? If so, always strive so to educate the people, that they may fully understand the true object and purpose of human life; and the necessity for the upbuilding of social, industrial and political institutions, in harmony with the demands of that purpose. This will require unselfish, persistent, co-operative effort and thought. In no other way, can you so greatly aid the cause of progress.
MILAN C. EDSON.
No. 1728 N. J. Ave., N. W.
Washington, D. C., Sept. 1st, 1900.
CONTENTS.
Chapter | Page | |
1. | A Farmer's Son With Progressive Tendencies | 1 |
2. | The Outlines of a Great Problem | 4 |
3. | An Advertisement Introduces the Heroine | 9 |
4. | The Story of a Stone and What Came After | 10 |
5. | Fairy Fern Cottage | 27 |
6. | Fennimore Fenwick | 34 |
7. | An Alaska Kindergarten | 37 |
8. | An Interview With the "Fairies" | 41 |
9. | The Problem vs. A Good Man Who Is As Rich As He Is Noble | 49 |
10. | The |