The Anarchists

The Anarchists:

A Picture of Civilization at the Close of the Nineteenth Century.

by

John Henry Mackay.


Translated from the German by

George Schumm.

A poet’s prose contribution to the literature of philosophic and egoistic Anarchism. The author traces his own mental development in London amid the exciting events of 1887,—the manifestations of the unemployed, the rioting at Trafalgar Square, and the executions at Chicago. The antagonism between Communism and Anarchism sharply brought out. One of the world’s great artists places his pen at the service of Anarchism.

Contents.

Frontispiece portrait of the author. Introduction. I.—In the heart of the World-Metropolis. II.—The Eleventh Hour. III.—The Unemployed. IV.—Carrard Auban. V.—The Champions of Liberty. VI.—The Empire of Hunger. VII.—The Tragedy of Chicago. VIII.—The Propaganda of Communism. IX.—Trafalgar Square. X.—Anarchy. Appendix.—Study of Mackay’s Works, by Gabriele Reuter.


315 Pages.

Price, cloth, $1.00; paper, 50 cents.


Address:

BENJ. R. TUCKER, Box 1312, New York, N. Y.

This article appeared in Liberty, Vol. IX. No. 19.