Suppose we should examine a city in a stake of Zion conducted after
the order of Enoch! We would like to look, for a few moments, upon the
facts as they would exist. If a people were gathered together, were
they many or few, who would follow out the instructions given them in
the Bible and in the other revelations that we have, they would have
to be very obedient, and probably many would feel to say, "I wish to
manage my own affairs, I wish to dictate myself, I wish to govern and
control my labor, I cannot submit to have anybody else dictate me.
This is servitude, and is nothing more nor less than slavery!" I
suppose there are some who would feel thus. When I look at the
Latter-day Saints I think how independent they are. They have been
very independent, there is no question of it. When they have heard the
Gospel, though, perhaps, in the flood of persecution, and the finger
of scorn pointed towards them, they have said, "The Gospel is true,
and if my friends will not believe it, it makes no difference to me, I
am independent enough to embrace the truth, and to gather out from the
midst of Babylon and to make my home with the Saints." There are plenty
of such people here in this house—men and women, old and young. There
are young people here who have left their parents and everything they
had on the face of the earth for the sake of the Gospel. Middle-aged
men have left their wives and their children, saying, "I am going to
live according to the plan that has been laid down in the Scriptures
for the salvation of the human family." This certainly exhibits as
much independence as mortal beings can manifest, and yet we have said
we will yield strict obedience to these requirements, preparatory to
enjoying the glory that the Lord has for the Saints. I will ask, Is
there liberty in this obedience? Yes, and the only plan on the face of
the earth for the people to gain real liberty is to yield obedience to
these simple principles. Not but that we should find a great many who
do not exactly understand how to yield obedience, strictly, to the
requirements of heaven for their own salvation and exaltation; but no
person can be exalted in the kingdom of heaven without first
submitting himself to the rules, regulations, laws and ordinances of
that kingdom, and being perfectly subject to them in every respect. Is
this the fact? It is even so. Consequently, no person is fit to be a
ruler until he can be ruled; no one is fit to be the Lord of all until
he has submitted himself to be servant of all. Does this give the
people liber ty? It is the only thing in the heavens or on the
earth that can do so. Where is the liberty in subjecting ourselves
strictly to the requirements of heaven and becoming one in all our
operations to build up the kingdom of God upon the earth? By strict
obedience to these requirements, we prove ourselves faithful to our
God; and when we have passed through all the ordeals necessary, and
have proved perfectly submissive to all the rules and regulations
which give life eternal, he then sets us free and crowns us with
glory, immortality and eternal lives; and there is no other path that
we can walk in, no other system, no other laws or ordinances by which
we can gain exaltation, only by submitting ourselves perfectly to the
requirements of heaven.
Now suppose we had a little society organized on the plan I mentioned
at the commencement of my remarks—after the Order of Enoch—would we
build our houses all alike? No. How should we live? I will tell you
how I would arrange for a little family, say about a thousand persons.
I would build houses expressly for their convenience in cooking,
washing and every department of their domestic arrangements. Instead
of having every woman getting up in the morning and fussing around a
cookstove or over the fire, cooking a little food for two or three or
half a dozen persons, or a dozen, as the case may be, she would have
nothing to do but to go to her work. Let me have my arrangement here,
a hall in which I can seat five hundred persons to eat; and I have my
cooking apparatus—ranges and ovens—all prepared. And suppose we had a
hall a hundred feet long with our cooking room attached to this hall;
and there is a person at the farther end of the table and he should
telegraph that he wanted a warm beefsteak; and this is conveyed to him
by a little railway, perhaps under the table, and he or she may take
her beefsteak. "What do you want to take with it?" "A cup of tea, a
cup of coffee, a cup of milk, piece of toast," or something or other,
no matter what they call for, it is conveyed to them and they take it,
and we can seat five hundred at once, and serve them all in a very few
minutes. And when they have all eaten, the dishes are piled together,
slipped under the table, and run back to the ones who wash them. We
could have a few Chinamen to do that if we did not want to do it
ourselves. Under such a system the women could go to work making their
bonnets, hats, and clothing, or in the factories. I have not time to
map it out before you as I wish to. But here is our dining room, and
adjoining this is our prayer room, where we would assemble perhaps
five hundred persons at one time, and have our prayers in the evening
and in the morning. When we had our prayers and our breakfast, then
each and every one to his business. But the inquiry is, in a moment,
How are you going to get them together? Build your houses just the
size you want them, whether a hundred feet, fifty feet or five, and
have them so arranged that you can walk directly from work to dinner.
"Would you build the houses all alike?" Oh no, if there is any one
person who has better taste in building than others, and can get up
more tasteful houses, make your plans and we will put them up, and
have the greatest variety we can imagine.
What will we do through the day? Each one go to his work. Here are the
herdsmen—here are those who look after the sheep—here are those who
make the butter and the cheese, all at their work by themselves. Some for the canyon, perhaps, or for the plow or harvest, no
difference what, each and every class is organized, and all labor and
perform their part.
Will we have the cows in the city? No. Will we have the pig pens in
the city? No. Will we have any of our outhouses in the city? No. We
will have our railways to convey the food to the pig pens, and
somebody to take care of them. Somebody to gather up the scraps at the
table, and take them away. Somebody to take the feed and feed the
cows, and take care of them out of the city. Allow any nuisance in the
city? No, not any, but everything kept as clean and as nice as it is
in this tabernacle. Gravel our streets, pave our walks, water them,
keep them clean and nicely swept, and everything neat, nice and sweet.
Our houses built high, sleep upstairs, have large lodging rooms, keep
everybody in fresh air, pure and healthy. Work through the day, and
when it comes evening, instead of going to a theater, walking the
streets, riding, or reading novels—these falsehoods got up expressly
to excite the minds of youth, repair to our room, and have our
historians, and our different teachers to teach classes of old and
young, to read the Scriptures to them; to teach them history,
arithmetic, reading, writing and painting; and have the best teachers
that can be got to teach our day schools. Half the labor necessary to
make a people moderately comfortable now, would make them
independently rich under such a system. Now we toil and work and
labor, and some of us are so anxious that we are sure to start after a
load of wood on Saturday so as to occupy Sunday in getting home. This
would be stopped in our community, and when Sunday morning came every
child would be required to go to the school room, and parents to go to
meeting or Sunday school; and not get into their wagons or carriages,
or on the railroads, or lounge around reading novels; they would be
required to go to meeting, to read the Scriptures, to pray and
cultivate their minds. The youth would have a good education, they
would receive all the learning that could be given to mortal beings;
and after they had studied the best books that could be got hold of,
they would still have the advantage of the rest of the world, for they
would be taught in and have a knowledge of the things of God.
Bring up our children in this way and they would be trained to love
the truth. Teach them honesty, virtue and prudence, and we should not
see the waste around that now is witnessed. The Latter-day Saints
waste enough to make a poor people comfortable. Shall I mention one or
two instances? I will mention this one thing anyway, with regard to
our paper mill. Can you get the Latter-day Saints to save their rags?
No, they will make them and throw them out of doors. Is there a family
in this community but what are too well off in their own estimation to
take care of paper rags? I think a good many of them would rather
steal their beef and what they want than stoop to pick up paper rags
to make paper to print our paper on. Not all would do this, but a few;
and the majority are so well off that they have not that prudence
which belongs to Saints; and I feel sometimes a little irritated, and
inclined to scold about it, when I see women who were brought up
without a shoe to their foot, or a second frock to their back perhaps,
and who lived until they were young women in this style, without ever
stepping on to an inch of carpet in their lives, and they know no more
how to treat a carpet than pigs do. Do they know how to treat
fine furniture? No, they do not; but they will waste, waste—their
clothing, their carpets and their furniture. I hear them say
sometimes, "Why, I have had this three years, or five years." If my
grandmother could have got an article such as you wear, she would have
kept it for her daughters from generation to generation, and it would
have been good. But now, our young women waste, waste.
This is finding fault, and I wish I could hurt your feelings enough to
make you think of it when you get home. If I could make you a little
mad, when you get home if you see a pretty good piece of carpet,
thrown out of doors you will go, perhaps, and shake it and lay it up,
thinking that it may be serviceable to somebody or other; and if you
cannot do anything else with it, give it to somebody who has not a bed
to lie upon, to put under them to help to make a bed.
If we could see such a society organized as I have mentioned, you
would see none of this waste. You would see a people all attending to
their business, having the most improved machinery for making cloth,
and doing every kind of housework, farming, all mechanical operations,
in our factories, dairies, orchards and vineyards; and possessing
every comfort and convenience of life. A society like this would never
have to buy anything; they would make and raise all they would eat,
drink and wear, and always have something to sell and bring money, to
help to increase their comfort and independence.
"Well, but," one would say, "I shall never have the privilege of
riding again in a carriage in my life." Oh what a pity! Did you ever
ride in one when you had your own way? No, you never thought of such a
thing. Thousands and thousands of Latter-day Saints never expect to
own a carriage or to ride in one. Would we ride in carriages? Yes, we
would; we would have them suitable for the community, and give them
their proper exercise; and if I were with you, I would be willing to
give others just as much as I have myself. And if we have sick, would
they want a carriage to ride in? Yes, and they would have it too, we
would have nice ones to carry out the sick, aged and infirm, and give
them exercise, and give them a good place to sleep in, good food to
eat, good company to be with them and take care of them.
Would not this be hard? Yes, I should hope so. If I had the privilege
and the power, I would not introduce a system for my brethren and
myself to live under unless it would try our faith. I do not want to
live without having my faith and patience tried. They are pretty well
tried. I do not know how many there are who would endure what I endure
with regard to faith and patience, and then be persevering in the
midst of it all. But I would not form a society, nor ask an individual
to go to heaven by breaking all the bones in his body, and putting him
in a silver basket, and then, hitching him to a kite, send him up
there. I would not do it if I had the power, for if his bones were not
broken he would jump out of the basket, that is the idea. I see a
great many who profess to be Latter-day Saints, who would not be
contented in heaven unless their feelings undergo a great change, and
if they were there and you wanted to keep them there, you would have
to break their backs, or they would get out. But we want to see
nothing of this in this little society.
If I had charge of such a society as this to which I refer, I would
not allow novel reading; yet it is in my house, in the houses of my
counselors, in the houses of these Apostles, these Seventies and High
Priests, in the houses of the High Council in this city, and in other
cities, and in the houses of the Bishops, and we permit it; yet it is
ten thousand times worse than it is for men to come here and teach our
children the a b c's, good morals, and how to behave themselves, ten
thousand times worse! You let your children read novels until they run
away, until they get so that they do not care—they are reckless, and
their mothers are reckless, and some of their fathers are reckless,
and if you do not break their backs and tie them up they will go to
hell. That is rough, is it not? Well, it is a comparison. You have got
to check them some way or other, or they will go to destruction. They
are perfectly crazy. Their actions say, "I want Babylon stuck on to
me; I want to revel in Babylon; I want everything I can think of or
desire." If I had the power to do so, I would not take such people to
heaven. God will not take them there, that I am sure of. He will try
the faith and patience of this people. I would not like to get into a
society where there were no trials; but I would like to see a society
organized to show the Latter-day Saints how to build up the kingdom of
God.
Do you think we shall want any lawyers in our society? No, I think
not. Do you not think they will howl around? Yes, you will hear their
howls going up morning and evening, bewailing one another. They will
howl, "We can get no lawsuits here; we cannot find anybody that will
quarrel with his neighbor. What shall we do?" I feel about them as
Peter of Russia is said to have felt when he was in England. He saw
and heard the lawyers pleading at a great trial there, and he was
asked his opinion concerning them. He replied that he had two lawyers
in his empire, and when he got home he intended to hang one of them.
That is about the love I have for some lawyers who are always stirring
up strife. Not but that lawyers are good in their place; but where is
their place? I cannot find it. It makes me think of what Bissell said
to Paine in Kirtland. In a lawsuit that had been got up, Bissell was
pleading for Joseph, and Paine was pleading for an apostate. Paine had
blackguarded Bissell a good deal. In his plea Bissell stopped all at
once, and, turning to Mr. Paine, said he: "Mr. Paine, do you believe
in a devil?" "Yes," said Mr. Paine, who was a keen, smart lawyer. Said
Bissell, "Where do you think he is?" "I do not know." "Do you not
think he is in hell?" said Bissell. "I suppose he is." "Well," said
Bissell, "do you not think he is in pain [Paine]?" They almost act to
me as if they were in pain. They must excuse me if there are any of
them here today. I cannot see the least use on the face of the earth
for these wicked lawyers who stir up strife. If they would turn
merchants, cattle breeders, farmers or mechanics, or would build
factories, they would be useful; but to stir up strife and quarrels,
to alienate the feelings of neighbors, and to destroy the peace of
communities, seems to be their only business. For a man to understand
the law is very excellent, but who is there that understands it? They
that do and are peacemakers, they are legitimate lawyers. There are
many lawyers who are very excellent men. What is the advice of an
honorable gentlemen in the profession of the law? "Do not go to law with your neighbor; do not be coaxed into a lawsuit, for
you will not be benefited by it. If you do go to law, you will hate
your neighbor, and you will finally have to pick some of your
neighbors who hoe potatoes and corn, who work in the cabinet shop, at
the carpenter's bench, or at the blacksmith's forge, to settle it for
you. You will have to pick ten, twelve, eighteen or twenty-four of
them, as the case may be, to act as a jury, and your case goes before
them to decide. They are not lawyers, but they understand truth and
justice, and they have got to judge the case at last." Why not do this
at first, and say we will arbitrate this case, and we will have no
lawsuit, and no difficulty with our neighbor, to alienate our feelings
one from another? This is the way we should do as a community.
Would you want doctors? Yes, to set bones. We should want a good
surgeon for that, or to cut off a limb. But do you want doctors? For
not much of anything else, let me tell you, only the traditions of the
people lead them to think so; and here is a growing evil in our midst.
It will be so in a little time that not a woman in all Israel will
dare to have a baby unless she can have a doctor by her. I will tell
you what to do, you ladies, when you find you are going to have an
increase, go off into some country where you cannot call for a doctor,
and see if you can keep it. I guess you will have it, and I guess it
will be all right, too. Now the cry is, "Send for a doctor." If you
have a pain in the head, "Send for a doctor;" if your heel aches, "I
want a doctor;" "my back aches, and I want a doctor." The study and
practice of anatomy and surgery are very good; they are mechanical,
and are frequently needed. Do you not think it is necessary to give
medicine sometimes? Yes, but I would rather have a wife of mine that
knows what medicine to give me when I am sick, than all the
professional doctors in the world. Now let me tell you about
doctoring, because I am acquainted with it, and know just exactly what
constitutes a good doctor in physic. It is that man or woman who, by
revelation, or we may call it intuitive inspiration, is capable of
administering medicine to assist the human system when it is besieged
by the enemy called Disease; but if they have not that manifestation,
they had better let the sick person alone. I will tell you why: I can
see the faces of this congregation, but I do not see two alike; and if
I could look into your nervous systems and behold the operations of
disease, from the crowns of your heads to the soles of your feet, I
should behold the same difference that I see in your physiognomy
—there would be no two precisely alike. Doctors make experiments, and
if they find a medicine that will have the desired effect on one
person, they set it down that it is good for everybody, but it is not
so, for upon the second person that medicine is administered to,
seemingly with the same disease, it might produce death. If you do not
know this, you have not had the experience that I have. I say that
unless a man or woman who administers medicine to assist the human
system to overcome disease, understands, and has that intuitive
knowledge, by the Spirit, that such an article is good for that
individual at that very time, they had better let him alone. Let the
sick do without eating, take a little of something to cleanse the
stomach, bowels and blood, and wait patiently, and let Nature have
time to gain the advantage over the disease. Suppose, for
illustration, we draw a line through this congregation, and
place those on this side where they cannot get a doctor, without it is
a surgeon, for thirty or fifty years to come; and put the other side
in a country full of doctors, and they think they ought to have them,
and this side of the house that has no doctor will be able to buy the
inheritance of those who have doctors, and overrun them, outreach
them, and buy them up, and finally obliterate them, and they will be
lost in the masses of those who have no doctors. I know what some say
when they look at such things, but that is the fact. Ladies and
gentlemen, you may take any country in the world, I do not care where
you go, and if they do not employ doctors, you will find they will
beat communities that employ them, all the time. Who is the real
doctor? That man who knows by the Spirit of revelation what ails an
individual, and by the same Spirit knows what medicine to administer.
That is the real doctor, the others are quacks.
But to the text. We want to see a community organized in which every
person will be industrious, faithful and prudent. What will you do
with the children? We will bring them up until they are of legal age,
then say, "Go where you please. We have given you a splendid
education, the advantage of all the learning of the day, and if you do
not wish to stay with the Saints, go where you please." What will you
do with those who apostatize after having entered into covenant and
agreement with others that their property shall be one, and be in the
hands of trustees, and shall never be taken out? If any of these
parties apostatize, and say we wish to withdraw from this community,
what will you do with them? We will say to them, "Go, and welcome,"
and if we are disposed to give them anything, it is all right.
Where are we going to find the greatest difficulty and obstruction
with regard to this organization? In the purse of the rich? No, not by
any means. I have got some brethren who are just as close, tight and
penurious as I am myself, but I would rather take any moneyed man in
this community, and undertake to manage him, than some men who are not
worth a dollar in the world. Some of this class are too independent.
They would say, "I'll go a fishing," or "I guess I'll go a riding,
where I please." Well, if I were to give out word, and say to the
community, Send in your names, I want to see who are willing to go
into an organization of this kind, who do you suppose would write to
me first? The biggest thieves in the community. Do not be shocked at
that, any of you, whether you are strangers or not, for we have some
of the meanest men that ever disgraced God's footstool right in the
midst of the Latter-day Saints. Do not be startled at that, because it
is true. I have told the people many a time, if they want anything
done, no matter how mean, they can find men here who can do it, if
they are to be found on the earth. I cannot help this. You recollect
that Jesus compared the kingdom of heaven to a net which gathered all
kinds. If our net has not gathered all kinds, I wonder where the kinds
are that we have not got. I say that some of the worst men in the
community would be the first ones to proffer their names to go into
such an association. I do not want them there. Is this the fact? Yes
it is. I understand it exactly. But if such a community could be
organized, to show the Latter-day Saints how to build up the kingdom
of heaven on the earth, I would be glad to see it—would not you?
If this could be done I want to say to the Latter-day Saints, that I
have a splendid place, large enough for about five hundred or a
thousand persons to settle upon, and I would like to be the one to
make a donation of it, with a good deal more, to start the business,
to see if we can actually accomplish the affair, and show the
Latter-day Saints how to build up Zion. Not to make a mock of it. Not
go and preach the Gospel without purse and scrip, and gather up the
poor and needy, and have them bring Babylon with them. Leave Babylon
out of the question. Make our own clothing, but do not put seventeen
or twenty-one yards in a single dress, neither be attired so as to
look like a camel. It is not comely, it does not belong to sensible
people, nor to any people who wish to carry themselves justly and
correctly, before the heavens and intelligent men.
If the ladies want silks, we have the mulberry here of all kinds; we
have the silkworm eggs here, and we have made the silk. Go to work now
and raise worms, and wind the silk, and weave it and make all the
satin ribbons you wish for. We have men and women here, who did
nothing in their lives before they came here but weave satin ribbons
and satin cloth. This is their business, they know how to get it up.
If you will raise the silk, dress yourselves just as beautifully as
you please.
By and by when this people learn the value of the mulberry and the
silkworm, you will see the women with their few trees in their yards
and around their lots, and for shade trees in the streets; and the
children will be picking the leaves and feeding the worms, and they
will get up silk dresses here like those in the East Indies. The silk
dresses they make there you can put them on and wear them until you
are tired of them, and almost from generation to generation. We can
make them here just as good. And we can have coats and vests and pants
made of our homegrown material, which a man would wear for his best
suit, and hand down to his posterity. When we have learned the worth
of silk we will make it and use it instead of linen. We have a
splendid country for raising silk, but not a good country to raise
flax in; splendid for raising wool, grain, fruit, vegetables, cattle,
milk, butter and cheese, and here we are importing our cheese. We
ought to be making cheese by the hundreds of tons. We ought to export
it in quantities; but instead of that we are sending to the States for
it.
Where are your cows? Have you taken care of them? If you see a
community organized as they should be, they will take care of their
calves; they will have something to feed them on in the winter, and
they will take care of their stock and not let it perish. What a sin
it is to the Latter-day Saints, if they did but know it, to abuse
their stock—their cattle, milk cows and horses! Through the summer
they will work and use them, and in the winter turn them out to live
or die as they can, taking no care of that which God has given them.
Were it not for the ignorance of the people, the Lord would curse them
for such things.
We ought to learn some of these facts, and try to shape our lives so
as to be useful. Let the men make their lives useful. Let the women
make their lives useful. Mothers, teach your daughters how to keep
house, and not how to spend everything they can get hold of. I will
just say a few words on this subject. We have hundreds of young men
here who dare not take girls for wives. Why? Because the very first
thing, they want a horse and buggy, and a piano; they want
somebody to come every day to give them lessons on the piano; they
want two hired girls and a mansion, so that they can entertain
company, and the boys are afraid to marry them. Now mothers, teach
your girls better things than these. What are the facts in the case?
If you had been brought up to know what property—fine furniture,
carpets, and so on, was worth, you would take care of it, and be
prudent in the use of it, and teach your girls to take care, instead
of wasting it. Do you believe it? This does not hit all, but too many.
I wish you would hearken to these things. I am taking up the time, and
not giving to others an opportunity to address you. We have not said
what we want to say to the Latter-day Saints. We ought to have a house
four times as large as this, and we ought to fill it; and we ought to
sit together not only four days, but a week and perhaps two weeks, and
leave home at home, leave Babylon in Babylon—leave everything and come
here to worship the living God, and learn of his ways, that we may
walk in his paths. This is our duty, and what we should do. But there
are so many who can hardly spend time to go to meeting on the Sabbath
day; and they can hardly spend time to go to Conference. They have so
much business on hand, so many cattle to take care of; they have money
to let out, or money to borrow; they have men to see to, or something or
other, and it seems as if the affections of the people are hankering
after the things of this world too much, too much! Stop, Latter-day
Saints, and reckon with yourselves, and find whether you are actually
in the path of obedience to the requirements of heaven or not. Some
suppose that they are serving God and are on the road to eternal life,
but many will find they are mistaken if they are not careful. We had
better reckon with ourselves and look over our accounts, and see how
we stand before the Lord. See if we are doing good, if we are
bestowing our substance on the poor, that they may have food to eat
and habitations to dwell in, and be made comfortable: see if we are
sending our means for the poor in foreign lands, and aiding to send
the Elders to preach to the nations and gather up the people and make
them happy and comfortable. Instead of doing this I fear that many are
wandering away from the commandments of the Lord. "O fools, and slow
of heart to believe!" We can get rich a great deal quicker by serving
God than by serving ourselves, do a great deal better, and do a great
deal more good. The earth is the Lord's and the fullness thereof. He
is anxious, and is waiting with extended arms and hands,
comparatively, to pour the wealth of the world into the laps of the
Latter-day Saints, if they will not give it away to their enemies. But
now, just as soon as anything is given to the Latter-day Saints they
are looking from east to west, and from north to south, to see where
they can strew that that God gives them among their enemies—those who
spurn the things of God, and would destroy his kingdom from the earth.
I say, let the Lord keep us poor rather than forsake our religion and
turn away from it! Why cannot a man serve God with his pockets full
of greenbacks, and not lust after them one particle? If he cannot do
it, he is lacking in wisdom, faith, and knowledge, and does not
understand God and his ways. The heavens and the earth are full of
blessings for the people. To whom do they belong? To our Father in
heaven, and he wishes to bestow them upon his children when they can receive and dispose of them to his name's glory.
We shall have to stop here. We are going to adjourn our Conference,
though we have not said half what we wish to say to you and to
ourselves, for we want to be co-workers together. Now let me say to
the First Presidency, to the Apostles, to all the Bishops in Israel,
and to every quorum, and especially to those who are presiding
officers, Set that example before your wives and your children, before
your neighbors and this people, that you can say: "Follow me, as I
follow Christ." When we do this, all is right, and our consciences are
clear.
God bless you.