From the November 13th, 1909 issue of The Western Clarion
How will you vote, fellow-worker?
Have you given the matter a thought?
Will you prove befooled when the last votes polled,
By bribe or promise bought?
Will you vote for the same old parties
By whom you’re bought and sold?
Will you bow once more, as you’ve oft before,
To the cursed rule of Gold?
Will you vote to be saddled and bridled
And rode by a grafting crew?
Will you say that what was your father's lot
Is good enough for you?
Will you vote to be human cattle?
For your babes to be the same?
Will you throw away your vote today
To their wrong and your shame?
Will you vote again for the master class,
For their right to rule and rob?
Will you vote that the best you can hope for the rest
Of life is (perhaps) a Job?
A job that is merely lent to you,
At your master's will to lose;
Thraldom for'you and your children, too,
Is this the lot you'll choose?
Will you vote for a life uncertain.
Which constant cares annoy?
To suffer need, to sweat and bleed,
That Idlers may enjoy?
Or will you vote for a grand new right?
The right to be really free,
The right to produce for the workers' use,
The right to security.
Will you vote for the Socialist demand?—
THE WORLD FOR THOSE WHO WORK;
The means of wealth and comfort and health,
And "naught for those who shirk.”
Think of these things well, brother,
And it will come to pass
That your vote will be a vote. to be free,
A vote for the working class!
Wilfrid Gribble
Blogger's Note:
As well as being a member of the Socialist Party of Canada, Gribble was a founder member of the Workers' Socialist Party of United States in Detroit in 1916. (He was the WSPUS' first organiser.) He was one of the Canadian-based socialists who migrated south at the outbreak of World War 1, finding work in the burgeoning car industry.
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