abor"
are perhaps worth mentioning.
I have not attempted to give an exhaustive list of references, but only
to call attention to a few books and pamphlets which have found their
way into my library.
[47] Quoted by August Bebel in _Attentate und Sozialdemokratie_, p. 12.
[48] Limiting Federal Injunctions: Hearings before a Subcommittee of the
Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, 1913, Part I, p. 8.
CHAPTER XII
[1] Sombart, Socialism and the Socialist Movement, p. 176.
[2] Liebknecht, Karl Marx: Biographical Memoirs, p. 46.
[3] _Idem_, p. 85.
[4] _L'Alliance de la Democratie Socialiste_, etc., p. 132 (Secret
Statutes of the Alliance).
[5] Communist Manifesto, p. 37.
[6] _Idem_, p. 32.
[7] _Idem_, p. 38.
[8] Engels' introduction to Struggle of the Social Classes in France;
quoted by Sombart, _op. cit._, pp. 68-69.
[9] Liebknecht, No Compromise, No Political Trading, p. 28; my italics.
[10] Frederic Harrison, quoted in Davidson's Annals of Toil, p. 273 (F.
R. Henderson, London, n.d.).
[11] Engels in _L'Allemagne en 1848_, p. 269.
[12] Communist Manifesto, p. 30.
INDEX
A
Adam, Paul, quoted concerning case of Ravachol, 81-82.
_Agents provocateurs_, work of, in popular uprisings and socialist
and labor movements, 110-120, 203-204, 264;
use of private detectives as, in United States, 290-292, 312-314.
Alexander II of Russia, assassination of, 56, 221.
America. _See_ United States.
Anarchism, introduction of doctrines of, in Western Europe by
Bakounin, 5 ff.;
secret societies founded in interests of, 11-14;
insurrections under auspices of, 28-39;
criticism of, by socialists, 40;
uprisings in Italy fathered by, 41-44;
unbridgeable chasm between socialism and, 47-48;
with the Propaganda of the Deed becomes synonymous with violence
and crime, 55;
foothold secured by, in Germany, 55-57;
in Austria-Hungary, 57-58;
agitation in France, 58-60;
doctrines of, carried to America by Johann Most, 64-68;
the Haymarket tragedy, 68-70;
defense of, by Benjamin R. Tucker, and disowning of terrorist
tactics, 70-74;
responsibility for deeds of leaders of, laid at Bismarck's
door, 74-75;
assassination of President McKinley and shooting of H. C. Frick, 75;
failure of, to take firm root in America any more than in Germany
and England, 75-76;
in the Latin countries, 76;
acts of violence in name of, in Europe, 77-89;
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