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Title: The End of Anarchism?
Author: Luigi Galleani
Date: 1925
Language: en
Topics: anarcho-communist, insurrectionist
Source: Galleani, Luigi (1982).The end of Anarchism? ( M. Sartin & R. D’Attilio , Trans.). Sanday, Orkney: Cienfuegos Press. (Original work published 1925).
Notes: Translated from Italian by Max Sartin and Robert D’Attilio. First English Language edition published by Cienfuegos Press, Sanday, Orkney, U.K., 1982.  Original title: La Fine Dell’Anarchismo, Luigi Galleani. *Edizione Curata da Vecchi Lettori di Cronaca Sovversiva*. First Italian edition published Newark, New Jersey, 1925. Retrieved on 2020-04-14 from https://archive.elephanteditions.net/library/luigi-galleani-the-end-of-anarchism

Luigi Galleani

The End of Anarchism?

A few words...

The end of anarchism? An odd question perhaps at a time when just about

everybody one meets is ‘an anarchist in their heart of hearts’. No

enlightened person would ever admit to being in favour of authority or

hierarchy today, and even many of the marxist-leninists of once upon a

time would never admit to being in favour of a State.[1]

And the anarchists? There are anarchists everywhere, in the four corners

of the earth. More than a few are giving the power structure a sting,

inspiring others to do likewise, and some are magniloquently paying a

high price for it.

There are anarchists—and not only—present in focal points of the

struggle such as that against high speed railways and nuclear power, in

large demonstrations and confrontations with the police—while there are

also those who silently light up the darkness of the night with the

irridescent glow of freedom.

Anarchists defend immigrants against racist attacks and support

rebellions and riots in the concentration camps of fortress Europe.

There are anarchists locked up in prisons, and anarchists who act in

solidarity with them. In the UK, following their spirited presence in

the student demos of last year and a quantity of diffused attacks

elsewhere over a period of time anarchists were given the status of

public bug-bear by the police and media, who invited the populace to

‘shop an anarchist’.[2]

There are anarchist individualists—and anarchist individuals.

There are anarchists who are against society and anarchists who

participate in neighbourhood assemblies. There are even anarchists who

vote in elections, although they are not making a song and dance about

it. There are anarchist academics and academic anarchists. And then

there are the anarchist punks, activists, organizationalists and all

manner of libertarians in the great zoological park generally considered

the ‘movement’ ‘against’.

Without a doubt there are anarchists everywhere—but is there anarchism?

Is there, that is, a sense of the totality of the struggle, a struggle

that always tends towards the absolute destruction of the existent and

the experience of freedom, wherever one is, in whatever manifestation of

the partial struggle we are involved in at a given moment?

The totality of the struggle is not a global vision of the enemy setup

in all its forms, it is the totality of freedom without limits or

impediments of any kind, therefore something in movement, that grows to

infinity, always in act, yet totally present when we think it,

destroying limits and domestication.[3]

How many anarchists consciously transport this sense of the totality of

the struggle into the ardor of their attack against the enemy?

Once we grasp it it never leaves us, it is our compass whether we are in

the stormy seas of revolt or in the stagnant waters of babylon, whereas

to ignore it leads us into the dead end of ecumenism, frontism,

illusions of quantity, or simply being swept into oblivion by the great

tsunami of the excluded in revolt.

Galleani doesn’t talk about the totality of the struggle in this little

book, but he does talk about something without which the latter could

never materialise. He talks about anarchist communism, that which

‘implies that the material and moral needs of everyone be satisfied

without any restriction other than that which is imposed by nature’ and

that the contribution to production ‘should be given voluntarily by

everyone, according to their capacity and aptitude’.

As well as implying the destruction of government in all its

manifestations, the non-existence of authority means the freedom of the

autonomous individual, all individuals, within the free society (or

absence of society, in whatever forms this would take).

Even if allusions are made to anarchist communism today, the

implications of what this signifies are rarely if ever gone into by

anarchists, as the immediacy of the struggle is what interests us and

fear of drawing up a ‘blueprint of the future society’ terrorises us

with its seeming implication of imposing a model, therefore authority.

In response to his old comrade Merlino’s statement that what is

essential in anarchism has been absorbed by socialism, Galleani

elaborates the clear distinction between anarchist communism and the

socialist model of collectivism. Collectivism, common ownership of the

means of production involving ‘from each according to their ability, to

each in proportion to their work’, is based on an evaluation of the

finished product, whereas anarchist communism implies full satisfaction

of the needs of the individual regardless of the value of the product.

Surely this must be the essential foundation of the ‘world without

measure’ that we often refer to, yet rarely think through. If we did,

this would affect our choices and eliminate dubious ‘alliances’. We

repeat ad nauseam that the means we use condition the ends we achieve.

By the same token the ends—intended as embarking on the road of freedom,

which as we have said is infinite and never actually ‘ends’—we desire

should affect the means we use, and never losing sight of the latter

might prevent some unfortunate, when not disastrous, undertakings.

We are living in times of ‘crisis’ and this often leads comrades down

the blind alley of pragmatism and compromise, verging on political

realism. The arrogant upsurge of nazis, sadistic cops or whatever other

enemies of freedom can lead to a unidimensional stance in alliance with

those who define themselves in oppositional terms, thereby losing sight

of the revolution, the splendor of its beckoning and the vicissitudes of

creative diffused insurgency and attack.

Galleani repudiates in total any struggle for partial gains or reforms,

‘the ballast of the bourgeoisie’ that the latter throws out under the

violent pressure of the masses, making some ‘inane concessions’. If the

socialist aims at the conquest of parliament (albeit without the State),

or at least some form of administrative bodies, the most ardent desire

of the anarchist—and all the ‘excluded’— is to see parliament in flames

as part of the self-organisation of the attack. ‘..instead of the mere

passive and polite resistance so fervently recommended by the

socialists, the anarchists prefer boycott, sabotage and, for the sake of

struggle itself, immediate attempts at partial expropriation, individual

rebellion and insurrection.’ To the horror of the socialists.

For Galleani the consequences of anarchist abstentionism ‘are far less

superficial than the inert apathy ascribed to it by the sneering

careerists of ‘scientific socialism’. By stripping the State of the

constitutional fraud with which it presents itself it exposes its

essential character as representative, procurer and policeman of the

ruling classes’. In the name of what ‘greater cause’ can any anarchist

put that self-evident truth aside, thereby liquidating themselves

instantaneously, reducing being an anarchist to some kind of identity

that can vascillate under the pressure of lack of perspective and the

abject principle of ‘necessary evil’? At a distance of over a century,

Galleani reminds us that ‘Anarchism rejects authority in any form: to

the principle of representation, it opposes the direct and independent

action of individuals and masses: to egalitarian and parliamentarian

action, it opposes rebellion, insurrection, the general strike, the

social revolution.’ For any of us who might have forgotten.

Galleani denounces the supreme cowardice of rejecting individual acts of

rebellion when it is we ourselves to have sown the first seed. ‘The

propaganda of the anarchists creates the psychological climate among the

people....our responsibility in all acts of rebellion is more precise,

more specific and undeniable where our propaganda has been energetic,

vigorous and has left a deep impression...’

There is no incompatibility or contradiction between communism and

individualism in the context of a free united co-operation of all people

for production based on solidarity. Communism is simply the foundation

by which the individual has the opportunity to regulate himself and

carry out his functions.

Every anarchist who is faithful to his denial of privilege and aspires

to an economic reality where land, mines and all the tools of production

are indivisible common property is, in his aspirations, a communist. At

the same time if he denies authority and is part of the realisation of

complete independence and autonomy of the individual from any economic,

political and moral boss, he is inevitably an individualist.

Antithesis? No, integration.

It would no doubt be interesting to make an in depth analysis of

Galleani’s thesis, his use of language, his unqualified belief in

progress, etc., but here we have preferred to give the reader just a few

sparks from what might otherwise seem to present itself as an historical

document, and end with Galliani’s unadorned home truth: The anarchist

movement and the labour movement [read leftism] follow two parallel

lines, and it has been geometrically proven that parallel lines never

meet.

Let’s fight with all those who have no place in this execrable world,

for the conquest of life and the realization of our dreams. JW

Introduction

The first decade of the twentieth century seemed to be quite promising.

We were being told at school and on the streets that a new era of

democratic freedom and social justice had opened. Criticism of the old

institutions was encouraged by politicians, and the hopes of working

people were raised by the labour unions’ promises of protection. The

vanguards of political and social thought were spreading the seeds of

new ideas among the workers of the world about ways and means to bring

about a thorough emancipation from the oppression of political power and

from the exploitation of land and capital by private ownership.

Rulers and employers had not changed, of course, and used violence and

terror from time to time. But their brutality was beginning to provoke

tentative efforts at resistance. In the industrial centres, the mining

fields, and agrarian communities, sporadic explosions of rebellion were

registered. In Russia a serious revolutionary movement shook the old

order of things during the years 1905–1906. The movement was finally

defeated, but it had badly destroyed the myth of the Czar’s absolute

authority, and, even more important, it had deeply hurt the old regime

at its roots, the countryside.

In Western Europe working people were in motion. The class struggle was

in full development, and no police or military bloodshed seemed able to

stop it. Governments use jails and guns against dissent, but there are

not enough jails and guns to silence all dissenters when they are

determined to speak out and fight for their rights. Everywhere dissent

had found ways to express itself. In Italy alone, more than eighty

anarchist periodicals were published — with varying success — during the

first seven years of the century. And many, many more were, of course,

being published elsewhere, in Europe and the Americas.

At the beginning of the year, 1907, some Belgian and Dutch comrades

proposed an International Anarchist Congress to be held some time in the

following Summer. It was considered the first truly international

Anarchist Congress, and it took place in Amsterdam from the 23^(rd) to

the 31^(st) day of October 1907.

During this period, one of the most absorbing debates among the

anarchists was about the attitude they would take on the subject of

syndicalism. [4] Born in France, syndicalism was substantially a

rebellion against the submissive character the trade unions and similar

labour organizations had assumed under the leadership of the legalist

socialists. Regional and national conventions were promoted in all

countries. In Italy, one such congress was held in Rome from the 16^(th)

to the 20^(th) day of June 1907, with the participation of more than one

hundred militants from all parts of Italy.

It was the first public gathering of anarchists in Italy since the

beginning of the century, and the conservative circles, the

faint-hearted and the fanatics, informed by an alarmist press, could not

help noticing it and brooding over it. How great and how imminent could

the danger of such ‘subversive’ activities be? Mr Cesare Sobrero, the

Roman correspondent of a Turin daily newspaper, La Stampa, remembered

that a Roman lawyer, Francesco Saverio Merlino, [5] who had been for

many years a capable and learned anarchist militant and a competent

writer on social matters, might be of exceptional help in searching for

an answer to these questions.

Merlino consented to be interviewed, and the result was published by La

Stampa on 18 June under the sensational title, ‘La Fine Dell Anarchismo’

(The End of Anarchism). Other orthodox newspapers, such as L’Ora in

Palermo and L’Unione in Tunis reprinted it verbatim for the benefit of

their middle-class readers.

Obviously, the more than one hundred anarchists gathered in Rome — as

well as their comrades scattered throughout all parts of Italy and the

world — felt that the offensive statement was unwarranted, that

anarchism was very much alive in their hearts, in their minds, and above

all, in their words and deeds.

Luigi Fabbri,[6] who was then co-editor with Pietro Gori [7] of the

fortnightly review Il Pensiero (Thought) and a personal friend of

Merlino, couldn’t believe his eyes. He wrote to Merlino, asking if the

‘strange’ published text of the interview was really a faithful

presentation of his opinions. A reply came to him promptly, saying that

everything in the published interview, except for the title, reflected

his opinions on anarchism. Both Merlino’s letter and Fabbri’s commentary

were later published in Il Pensiero in Rome and in Cronaca Sovversiva,

the Italian language weekly Luigi Galleani had been publishing in Barre,

Vermont, since 1903.

Luigi Galleani had been, like Merlino, a well known militant in the

Italian movement since the eighteen-eighties. Both were then passionate

fighters for freedom and social justice against the brutal repressions

of the Italian Government. In 1884 Merlino was tried for ‘conspiracy’

and sentenced by a Roman tribunal to four years in prison. On appeal,

the sentence was reduced to three years, but by then Merlino had gone

abroad. For ten years he travelled through Western Europe and North

America, spreading everywhere, by word of mouth, by books, articles and

essays, his competent criticisms of the existing order of things. In

1892, while in New York City, he, with other Italian comrades, founded

the journal, Il Grido degli Oppressi, (The Cry of the Oppressed), which

existed until November 1894. But, by that time, Merlino had returned to

Italy where he was arrested in Naples and imprisoned to serve his old

sentence.

Galleani was also in prison, having been arrested in Genoa at the end of

1893, tried for conspiracy with 35 other comrades and sentenced to three

years in prison.

But, at the end of that period, while Galleani, was more resolute than

ever in his convictions, was forced to take up residence on an island

under police supervision (domicilio coatto), Merlino was set completely

free at the end of his term. And at the beginning of 1897, having

established himself in Rome, he sent a letter to the conservative

newspaper, Il Messaggero declaring that his opinions had changed. This

provoked a debate with Errico Malatesta,[8] a debate that continued

until 1898, when Malatesta was arrested. In conclusion, Merlino stated

that he no longer considered himself an anarchist, but that he would

rather define himself a ‘libertarian socialist’. Furthermore, he now

approved of parliamentary action, so much so, that, in agreement with

other friends, he proposed to present Galleani (who was then confined to

the island of Pantelleria, situated between Sicily and Tunisia) as a

candidate for Parliament on the Socialist Party ticket as a protest

against political detention and as a means to set him free by popular

request.

Galleani refused the offer, publicly and most emphatically, and sent to

the anarchist paper L’Agitazione (of Ancona) a signed statement to that

effect. After this, a collective proposal from the anarchist prisoners

on Pantelleria was sent to all other anarchist prisoners, either in

Italian jails or in domicilio coatto. It was an appeal to publish a

special paper, edited and paid for by themselves, for the purpose of

asserting once and for all their firm refusal to compromise, or in any

way distort, their opposition to the State — a fundamental tenet of

their convictions as anarchists

Their proposal was accepted by all. The comrades from Ancona agreed to

publish the prisoners’ declarations, and a four-page newspaper appeared

on the second day of November 1899 under the title, I Morti (The

Deceased). It carried the byline, “Edited and published by the political

prisoners”. Articles and statements were signed individually or

collectively by the detained anarchists. The front page carried an

editorial by Galleani entitled, Manet Immota Fides (The faith remains

unshaken), stating that the hostages of reaction were very much alive

and determined to save the dignity of their principles. They would

rather remain in the squalor of their jails or their islands of

confinement, at peace with themselves, than return to the so-called free

world by bowing to their jailers — whom they despised — with concessions

they knew to be false and shameful.

The paper was confiscated by the police, but enough copies were saved

and circulated all over Italy and abroad to secure it an enduring place

in the hearts and memories of militants and concerned people.

Shortly after this, Galleani escaped from the island of Pantelleria. He

landed in North Africa and tried to settle in Egypt, but without

success. In fact, he found himself facing the danger of extradition to

Italy. So he moved to London with his family and from there embarked for

the United States, where he had been offered editorial responsibility

for La Questione Sociale, an Italian language weekly which had been

published in Paterson, NJ since 1895.

Arriving in Paterson in October 1901, he found thousands of weavers and

dyers of the textile industry in turmoil against their employers and

exploiters. Of course, he was soon involved in their struggle and he

contributed unsparingly, not only with the spoken and written word, but

also with his personal solidarity. So much so, that on 18 June 1902, on

the occasion of a sharp clash, he was wounded in the shooting. He saved

himself from arrest by crossing the Slate line. Comrades William McQueen

and Rudolf Grossman (Pierre Ramus),[9] although not involved in the

clash, were arrested, tried, and sentenced to live years in prison.

Galleani found refuge in the State of Vermont, where under the name of

Luigi Pimpino he started with the help of the local anarchist group the

weekly Cronaca Sovversiva, which continued until the year 1918 when it

was suppressed by the US Federal Government for its stand against the

war.

Merlino’s interview was duly noted in Cronaca Sovversiva, as was the

text of Merlino’s letter to Fabbri. Once the authenticity of the

interview had been established, Galleani felt that something else had to

be said. And he said it in a very interesting way.

Under the headline ‘La Fine del’Anarchismo?’ — Galleani turned the title

of Merlino’s interview into a question — a series of ten articles was

published from 17 August 1907 to 25 January 1908. Then the series

stopped never to reappear on the pages of Cronaca Sovversiva.

To be sure, Galleani never resigned himself to leave the essay on

anarchism unfinished, but things were happening in the world which

attracted his immediate attention. He was a fighter, an agitator, if you

prefer, and he conceived of anarchism as a way of life, a method

intended to open and expand a coherent way to the eventual emancipation

of mankind. He felt that his time and energies should be dedicated to

the immediate tasks and problems of the daily struggle that are

necessary to assert the vitality of anarchism and pave the way to the

future.

Those, the pre-World War One years, were dynamic times. There was the

world-wide awakening of the toiling masses to the consciousness of their

place in society and to their right to be free from capitalist

exploitation and political oppression. There were strikes on an

unprecedented scale and violent repressions; military conquests,

warmongering and intrigues among capitalists and rulers. In the United

States it was the time of the truculent T. Roosevelt regime that, in the

name of freedom, conquered alien territories in the Caribbean Sea and in

the Pacific Ocean, and introduced at home the inquisitorial crusade

against anarchism. Then came the First World War. Cronaca Sovversiva was

suppressed — as were hundreds of other more or less radical newspapers

and reviews, accused of heresy or treason; Galleani was deported to

Italy — as were hundreds of others deported to their respective native

lands, marked as undesirable for their unorthodox opinions.[10]

Such were the reasons that compelled him to give priority to the daily

struggle against the immediate evils. When, at the beginning of the year

1924, he was released from a Turin prison (he had spent a fourteen month

sentence imposed on him by the local criminal court for some

anti-militaristic articles), he found himself alone, old, ill and under

the constant police surveillance of the fascist regime. His mind

returned to his unfinished works. One was the translation of the last

chapters of Clement Duval’s autobiography.[11] The essay on anarchism

was the other. Both were published by L’Adunata dei Refrattari The Call

of the Refractaires) the Italian language weekly that had started its

publication in New York City, 15 April 1922.

‘La Fine dell’Anarchismo?’ appeared in its entirety lor the first time

in twenty-four installments from 11 October 1924, to 11 April 1925.

Later, in the same year, the whole series was issued in book form by the

editors of L’Adunata; a book of one hundred and thirty pages, fifty-two

of which cover the text written and first published in 1907 and the

remaining seventy-eight pages, the section which was written in its

definitive form in 1924.

The text was preceded by a six-line inscription, handwritten and signed

by Luigi Galleani. It was dedicated to his old comrades, living in

America, in memory of the many years they had spent side by side,

working, hoping and struggling for their mutual cause of freedom and

justice. This was followed by a preface, written by the first editor of

L’Adunata, Costantino Zonchello.[12] In the second edition these two

items do not appear. In their place, instead, was a ‘presentation’ by G

Rose.[13] who added a considerable number of footnotes to the essay,

many of which are translated for the present edition.

The book was well received by the movement on both sides of the Atlantic

Ocean. Errico Malatesta, who received one of the few copies that passed

through the thick wall of fascist censorship, wrote favourably about it

in Pensiero e Volontà (the review he was publishing in Rome) — saying

that it was not only, “A clear presentation of anarchist communism”, it

was also “A lucid statement of the ever-present problems of anarchism in

relation to the would-be revolutionary movements”. He deplored the fact

that very few Italians had the opportunity to read it.[14]

That anarchism is neither dead nor dying is — in these final decades of

the twentieth century — better proved by facts than words. The

chronicles of the Russian and the Spanish Revolutions have documented

beyond any reasonable doubt the great importance of the anarchist ideas

and activities in the struggle for the overthrowing of the old feudal

and militaristic regimes. No less important have been the anarchists’

experimentations with new forms of social existence, production and

distribution.

Equally impressive is the fact that, even where the self-styled

socialist revolutionaries have managed to impose their party’s rule,

they have failed to live up to their original promises of freedom and

justice for all their subjects. Where they rule alone, they inflict on

their peoples the yoke of a political and economic tyranny that has no

equal except in fascist dictatorships. And where they have entered into

a partnership with the old politicians of capitalism and the privileged

classes, they function more as custodians and guardians of the common

people who vote for them, than as defenders of their rights and freedom.

In these circumstances, men and women, endowed with heart and brains,

concerned about the future of mankind, feel they have nowhere to turn

for hope and inspiration except to the ideas, experience, and history of

the anarchist movement. And that is where Galleani’s little book will be

of great help today, tomorrow and forever, until the total emancipation

of mankind from the scourges of oppression, exploitation and ignorance

are erased from the face of the earth.

It is, of course, one man’s conception of anarchism, its meaning, its

history and its hopes for the future. But that man has knowledge,

experience, integrity and a whole life of struggle, suffering and

courage’ It is worth seeing what he has to say.

Galleani’s book was well-received by his friends and comrades, but, as a

result, he was increasingly persecuted by his enemies. Immediately after

the publication of La Fine dell’Anarchismo?, in America the Italian

police began to intensify their harassments with more frequent invasions

of his house, with arrests and imprisonments for receiving ‘dangerous’

newspapers from abroad. Before the end of the year 1927, he was finally

arrested and sent back to confino in the Tyrrhenian Archipelago of

Lipari, off the northern coast of Sicily, where he remained until 28

February 1930. Even there he was arrested again and sent to Messina,

where he was formally tried — and sentenced to six months and six days

in prison on a trumped-up charge of having insulted... Mussolini. In a

small mountain village, still under police surveillance, he died on 4

November 1931, at the age of seventy.

M.S. November 1981

Chapter 1. The Interview with Merlino

Let us begin by giving the complete text of the interview. Our own

modest considerations will follow.

The Congress held in Rome and attended by 37 groups from the more

important centres in Italy, has led me to undertake an investigation

that I consider of interest; that is, to get acquainted with the

anarchist party of today and to try to foresee its probable future.

For this purpose I have turned to the wisest mind the anarchist party

had in Italy up to a few years ago, Saverio Merlino, the lawyer who

defended Bresci[15] at his trial in Milan.

The name of Merlino evokes a whole past of struggle and, let us say it,

of persecution. Saverio Merlino was, for a certain period of time, among

the most active internationalists in Italy at a time when this could

mean arrest, jail, exile, ‘domicilio coatto’ [enforced residence].

In 1884 he was a member of the famous armed rebels of Benevento and

everybody remembers his sensational arrest, when he was discovered in

the robes of a priest, while he was trying to save himself from serving

a three-year sentence in jail for political crimes.[16]

Later, the combative spirit of Saverio Merlino turned to writing, and,

as the socialist star was rising on the horizon of Italian politics, he,

the anarchist no longer militant, published two books which have taken a

durable place in the literature of its kind. Socialism: Pro and Con and

The Utopia of Collectivism.[17]

Saverio Merlino separated from the anarchists when their activity turned

more towards individualism. He then joined the Socialist Party, but,

since the recent division of that party, he has kept to himself. He has

remained, however, a scholar, an observer, and he has especially

dedicated himself to the legal profession (he comes from a family of

lawyers) which he practices with great success.

I found him in his well-lit study on a steep Roman street, au saut du

lit, amidst a mountain of legal papers. His face, which exudes

intelligence and has the expressiveness of the southern Italians,

appeared a little troubled when I asked him for an interview. Saverio

Merlino seemed hesitant to express an opinion about a party of which he

had been a member — an opinion which, as the reader will see, is not at

all optimistic. But he was kind enough to consent to answer my

questions,which were at times quite provocative.

“What do you think of the present conditions of the anarchist movement?”

“For me, the anarchist movement has no importance today.”

“Why?”

“Because those anarchist principles which had permanent value have been

adopted and are being diffused by socialism, while the Utopian part has

been recognized as such and has been dropped as useless. There has been

a process of absorption in favour of socialism.”

“What is your opinion about anarchist congresses in general, and, in

particular, about the coming International Congress to be held in

Luxemburg?”

“In my opinion”, replied Merlino. “the international, as well as local

congresses, are mere attempts to give life to a dead body. As I have

said, socialism has absorbed what was essential in the anarchist

programme, and so today, anarchism is only one of the aspects through

which socialist propaganda presents itself. Therefore the anarchist

party no longer has a meaningful political function.”

“But”, I remarked, “hasn’t the anarchist party still an organization at

its disposal?”

“Yes, there do exist anarchist federations and groups, and party

newspapers as well. Actually, in some regions of Italy, one can still

find remnants of the old anarchist organizations, for it should not be

forgotten that socialism was born anarchist in Italy. But, in its

present condition, the anarchist party is divided by the partisans of

two different tendencies; that is, between the individualists and the

organizationalists”.

“The organizationalists are unable to find a form of organization

compatible with their anarchist principles. The individualists, who are

opposed to organization in any form, can’t find a clear way to action.”

“One must remember”, added Merlino, “the strange position the

individualists find themselves in. They arose out of the theory of

propaganda by deed, and so, violent action was a necessity for them. But

when the idea of reprisal — which was at first the root of anarchist

action against the capitalist class — failed, even the individualist

anarchists felt that their survival depended upon organization, which

they had been striving to reject.”

“Would you tell me now what are, in your opinion, the present conditions

of anarchism in Italy?”

“In Italy”, said Saverio Merlino, “we have now the remnants of the old

internationalist party, a party which was anarchist in contradistinction

to state socialism. It survives because our working class is reluctant

to participate in any kind of disciplined party activity and is against

any kind of parliamentary life, so much so, that even the socialist

party itself has an anti-parliamentary faction — the syndicalist

faction. Thus, anarchism in Italy is reduced to these splinters of the

internationalist party”.

At this point, touching upon a sensitive issue, I asked: “What place do

you see for the anarchist party in the future?” “I believe”, he replied

in all sincerity and not without a little bitterness, “I believe that

the anarchist party is bound to end. It is my personal impression that

the anarchist party hasn’t any more men of high calibre. Reclus and

Kropotkin[18] were the last. Furthermore the anarchist party is no

longer intellectually productive; no scientific or political work of

notable value has come from the anarchist party. In fact, it has not

even proliferated. At the time when the anarchist mind was inspiring

vigorous manifestations in the United States, in Germany, even in Great

Britain, the anarchist movement seemed on its way to prevail. Now not

only has it stopped, it is finished”.

“Then you are sceptical about the results of the International Congress

in Luxemburg?”

“It will leave things as they are. After all, it will not be the first

congress that this happens to. The importance assumed by the first

congresses of the international movement was exceptional, as was the

importance attained by some of the farmworkers’ congresses. After all

what is to be expected, as a general rule, from a congress?”

“Then what do you think of the present Congress in Rome?”

“This Congress is debating, as usual, the question of organization and

individualism, a question which, I dare say, is the scandal of the

party.”

“Are the Paterson groups still alive?”

“Yes, the Paterson groups in the United States are still in existence.

They are made up of immigrants in transit, mostly Italians and Germans.

They also publish papers. But they are artificial entities, they are not

spontaneous. Thanks to the emphasis of the labour movement, these and

other anarchist groups continue to live — in part because of tradition

and in part through inertia — but they amount to nothing really

vital...”[19]

I wanted to close the interview with the question that I was most

curious about, and so I asked Merlino:

“How do you explain the obvious and comforting decrease of anarchist

attempts?”

“The reasons for such an undeniable decrease are complex.

“In the first place, one must remember that many anarchist attempts of

the past had their source in the oppressive policies followed by certain

governments. Everybody knows by now that the governments understood

nothing about the internationalist movement. They saw the anarchists as

ferocious animals and persecuted them mercilessly. The anarchists, to

protect themselves from the persecutions of their national police,

sought refuge abroad, where, embittered by the violence they had

suffered, they would organize groups (like, for instance, the Italian

group in Paterson, New Jersey), from which the anarchist point of view

would be propagated with renewed intensity. However, the European

governments, after the international congresses held by the

representatives of their police forces, came to understand the

uselessness of persecutions. They served no purpose at all, because no

one can foresee or prevent the individual act of a possessed mind.

Moreover, the police have almost always arrived too late, even when they

have had the opportunity to do something. Consequently, the illusion

that the anarchist attempts, which originate from the impulse of a

solitary person, could be prevented has vanished. And so, the anarchist

attentat is now considered like any other act committed by the

individual will and even, at times, provoked by causes other than

political. Now, for instance, it is revealed that Moral,[20] after a

disappointment in love, may have chosen his attempt to kill the king of

Spain as a means to end his own life... As I was saying, once the police

persecutions in their more severe forms had ceased and the oppressive

measures, at first adopted by governments against the anarchists, had

abated, a decrease in attacks logically followed...”

At this point it appeared to me that my inquiries concerning

contemporary anarchism had been exhausted and I closed the interview

which contained the remarkable statement that the anarchist party is

finished.

Cesare Sobrero

So! Merlino says that, “The anarchist movement has no longer any

importance, because that portion of anarchist principles which is

lasting has passed into socialism and is being propagated by it, while

the Utopian part has been recognised as such and no longer has any

value.

“As the essential part has been absorbed by the socialist movement,

anarchism is nothing more than one of the many aspects through which the

more forceful socialist propaganda presents itself.”

Conclusion: “Anarchists no longer have a specific political function to

fulfill”.

De profundis... “Not only has the anarchist movement stopped, it is

finished”.

His evidence? Here it is: “The anarchist movement no longer has men of

prime importance; the last were Elisée Reclus and Peter Kropotkin; from

its womb, once so fertile, no works of notable scientific or political

value are issuing forth; no new offspring coming into the world”.

Furthermore: “The movement is divided by the internal struggles between

individualists and organizationalists: the latter cannot find an

organization that is compatible with anarchist principles; the former,

after the idea of reprisal, which had been the soul of anarchist

activity, ceased to exist, cannot find a manner of acting and cannot

exist without the organization they strive to reject”. This, in short —

though with strict adherence to his meaning — is the argument of

Francesco Saverio Merlino.

But if we could prove that the enduring portion of anarchist principles

has never been absorbed by socialism:

far from being the essence of the anarchist philosophy, is only the

residue of ancient Jacobinism, and that, through the selective process,

anarchist ideas have asserted themselves better and with greater

precision than all other socialist trends;

compared to all other trends of socialism, is the slow but persistent

forerunner of a different and more advanced society than has been

conceived by any other doctrine and by any other political party, and

has its own good reason to exist, its own specific function to perform;

rank; that, in these last years, it has not only produced works of

inestimable value in science and in politics, but it has also put its

mark upon the whole intellectual movement of modern times;

movement has nothing to deplore but... an excesssive proliferation;

organizationalists are an inevitable crisis of development, an

inevitable process of selection: they are evidence of vitality, of

energy and progress rather than symptoms of exhaustion and anguish;

What would remain of the sinister sophisms, the dark prophecies, and the

distressing lamentations of Jeremiah... Merlino?

Upon the ruins of his unfortunate thesis would remain this victorious

conclusion: that anarchism, as a doctrine and as a movement, has never

had more than today its own good reason to exist, and it never has

asserted itself more than at present with such intensity and such

dimension; that far from being moribund, it lives, it develops and it

goes forward.

Chapter 2. The Anarchism of Merlino

We believe that such a demonstration is easy, even face to face with

Francesco Saverio Merlino, who is a a formidable debater, wise, versed

in dialectics, learned — provided that two essential terms of the debate

are defined with precision.

If we agree — and I am almost certain that we do — on the notion of

progress and if we agree on the fundamental and characteristic meaning

of anarchism, then we have only to test the content of anarchism as a

doctrine, the multiple aspects and scope of its manifestations as a

movement, on the touchstone of our mutual notion of progress in order to

deduce — perhaps again in agreement — whether it still contains the

basis of a positive progressive aspiration (even if it lies in the

distant future), whether it carries the vigorous throbs of exuberant

vitality, or the incoherent convulsions of distress and agony.

Hoping to reach the desired and necessary harmony of these premises, we

will refer for the notion of progress to Leon Metchnikoff,[21] a

philosopher as great as he is unknown, in whom Merlino has undoubtedly

the greatest regard and confidence. We find his definition of progress

most positive and clear. For the notion of anarchism we shall refer to a

man of whose competence Merlino has the highest opinion, for that man

is... F. S. Merlino himself. In the noted pamphlet Perche siamo

anarchici? [Why are we anarchists?] and in the incisive presentation of

our principles, written by him many years ago for the ponderous Journal

des Economistes, he outlines with brief but simple clarity the nature

and character of our aspirations.[22]

In his splendid study of La Civilization el Les Grands Fleuves

Historiques, [Civilization and the Great Rivers of History] Leon

Metchnikoff writes about progress:

“In the field of pure science, ‘progress’ is understood as the sequence

of natural phenomena wherein, at each stage of evolution, energy

manifests itself with a growing variety and intensity. The series is

called ‘progressive’ when each one of its stages reproduces the

preceding ones plus some new trait that did not exist in the preceeding

phase, and, in its turn, it becomes the embryo of a new plus in the

following stage. A plant marks a ‘progress’ over the mineral world; it

represents the process of non-organized nature plus the specific

peculiarities of nutrition, growth, reproduction. The animal, in its

turn, shows a progress beyond vegetable life, because it adds its

peculiar faculties of movement and sensitivity to the acquisitions of

the plant. Man is a progress over all other vertebrates because his

sensitive and intellectual life make him capable of enjoying a wealth

unknown to his predecessors.”

Of anarchism as an aspiration and philosophy, Merlino writes: “The

essence of anarchism within the evolution of thought and society is the

total image of man, his integration, his needs, his unexplored energies,

his infinite capacity for development, his sociability, his many

relations with his fellow man and with the outer world.” Therefore, from

the point of view of the individual, the aims of anarchism are:

incomplete, either master or slave, mind or muscle, by combining the

qualities of both producer and consumer in every single person, by

making the tools and means of production available to all the workers.”

material and intellectual, industrial and agricultural work by means of

a variety of occupations, so that all the human faculties may be

activated (intensive cultivation of the human being).”

material needs; liberty and lack of coercion of the individual; security

of life; complete development of life for all human beings.”

But, in this society, which wants to make available to all workers all

means of production, and wants to assure everyone of its members the

satisfaction of all material and moral needs, liberty, lack of coercion

and integral development of each person —

managed?

Merlino replies:

interests.

solidarity of all interests and the mutual agreement among the workers.

to his or her ability and needs.

“Would there be need for a government, a parliament, a cabinet, a police

force, a judiciary?” Nothing of this kind would exist in the anarchist

system. “And how can all this come about?”

The first step towards the future society will be revolution, inevitable

because the ruling classes will yield only to force. The working man

must make his own revolution, take back what has been taken from him,

repossess everything he has produced and others have seized, in short:

expropriate the owners and the capitalists.

“Could not some good be accomplished, a few steps forward taken, by

participating in the elections with formal candidates?”

No. We know for certain that workers are deceived and cheated in

elections, that they will never be able to send their comrades to

Parliament and... that even if the majority in Parliament were workers,

they would be unable to do anything.

Instead of helping the workers, elections damage their own cause. Once

elected to office, even the more active and intelligent among their

comrades become renegades or idlers. The people are led to believe that

salvation will come from above, from the government, from the

Parliament, and they cease to fight.

---

This is anarchism, doctrine and tactic, according to Francesco Saverio

Merlino.

We could have been more concise and. at points, more explicit, by

drawing the fundamentals of anarchism from Kropotkin, from Malatesta.

Grave, Tcherkesoff or Faure.[23] But, as we said at the beginning, we

wanted to avoid any possible misunderstanding, which might misdirect the

debate, making it worthless, endless, or inconclusive; therefore, we

have restricted ourselves to Merlino’s own conception.

After all, his conclusions are the ones generally accepted: anarchism is

the political doctrine that aims to achieve a society wherein all means

of production, transformation, or exchange being common property, where

each member of society will find full satisfaction of his (or her)

material and moral needs and can spontaneously give his contribution

according to his (or her) capacity and ability. The security of each

individual in a free society lies in the universal solidarity of human

interests and in the free agreement of the interested people; all forms

of compulsion, of authority, of exploitation are rejected: these are the

fundamental tenets of the social order called Anarchy.

It is common knowledge that Merlino disowned these ideas ten years ago

[1897]. But that doesn’t mean that, if he has to speak about anarchism

as thought and action, he does not refer in a special way to the ideas

and the methods that he held for so many years with conviction, action

and unequalled self-denial. The characteristic aspirations of anarchism

are then, in the economic field, communism; in the political field, the

elimination of all forms of authority and compulsion.

But this two-fold aspiration of anarchism must be understood in a larger

and more complex manner than this summary might indicate at first sight.

Besides denoting common ownership of the means of production and

exchange (an expression that is generally used by all branches of

socialism), communism implies nowadays a whole series of relations; it

implies that the material and moral needs of everyone be satisfied

without any restriction other than that which is imposed by nature; and

it further implies that the contribution to the necessary task of

production should be given voluntarily by everyone, according to their

capacity and aptitude.

Thus, the absence of authority and coercion not only implies the

abolition of government, laws and constituted social orders; it implies

also — and above all — the abolition of all forms of centralization of

functions, even if merely administrative...; it implies the nonexistence

of authority, be it of the majority or of a minority; it means the

freedom of the autonomous individual — all individuals — within the free

society.

Chapter 3. The Characteristics of Anarchism

These aims are characteristic of anarchism, not only because the whole

anarchist doctrine rests upon them as a fundamental basis, but also

because anarchism alone promotes them and pursues their realization and,

therefore, they constitute the essence that distinguishes anarchism from

all the other schools of socialism.

If we reduce the antitheses existing in the various schools of socialism

to those that distinguish anarchist-communists from

socialist-collectivists (these being, after all, the only vital trends

of popular socialism, the only ones involved in this controversy,

because, according to Merlino, what is essential in anarchism has been

absorbed by socialist-collectivisim) this will expose in a much clearer

way the exact terms of their differences.

In the collectivist society, promoted (almost without exceptions) by the

International Socialist Party, work and satisfaction of needs will be

directed by the workers’ collective by means of representatives,

administrators, functionaries — in short, by what the socialists like to

call the ‘administration government’ — because, after the disappearance

of the existing division of society in classes, the political functions

of government would have no reason to exist, and the government would be

nothing but a council charged with the collective management of the

social estate.

In an anarchist society, the free individual within the free society

would proceed to take care of his interests personally. To conceive of a

government — even if it were a simple administrative government — one

must implicitly agree that ”All the interests of the whole people be

concentrated in the hands of a few; that a small number of people act

for the whole nation; that instead of letting the single individual

think for himself, he be forced to submit to the will of those who think

for all the people”.

Now all this is inconsistent with the free and egalitarian society of

which we are talking.

The contrast is even more violent if the standards with which a

collectivist society arranges each person’s participation in work and in

pleasure are compared to the standards which would prevail in an

anarchist-communist society.

The collectivist-socialists demand from each one, according to his

ability, rewarding each ability in proportion to its work.

The communist-anarchists say instead that anyone who, of his free will,

takes part in the productive process according to his capacity, will

receive according to his needs.

While the collectivist-socialists limit their demands to the finished

product of their work, the anarchists proclaim that regardless of the

value of the product, the individual worker will be entitled to the full

satisfaction of his needs.

---

The antithesis of the economic and political aims of the two schools

points again to a contrast of means.

While the socialist party promotes “A struggle by trades to obtain

immediate improvements in the working conditions — hours, wages, shop

rules, etc (reforms) and a wider struggle that aims to conquer political

power, state and local administrations, charitable institutions for the

purpose of transforming them from tools of oppression into tools capable

of expropriating the ruling class (political and administrative

electoral competition)”[24] — the anarchists believe that no effective

conquest in the economic field is possible so long as the means of

production remain the personal property of the capitalists. Reforms can

appear to be beneficial for a short time. The worker who used to work

ten hours a day in the past and works now only eight hours, the worker

who used to earn three lire a day and now earns four lire, feels that he

has gained something until he realizes that the high cost of living —

inevitable consequence of the reduction of working time and raise of pay

— has re-established the equilibrium to the exclusive advantage of

the... capitalist. But the anarchists believe that to solicit these

reforms is not and cannot be a function pertaining either to the

proletariat or themselves.

The anarchists, like the socialists, want and urge the expropriation of

the bourgeoisie, but they do not hope at all for its generosity nor its

philanthropy and justice. Confronted with the violent pressure of the

masses trying to overthrow it, the bourgeoisie throws out each day a

little of its ballast; it gives up some of its arrogance or it makes

some inane concession — paid holidays, laws protecting women and working

children, state medicine, etc, but only for the purpose of saving its

bankrupt privileges.

That is their business: reforms remain — and should remain — a concern

and a function of the ruling class, not of the anarchists, nor of the

socialists either, if they are sincerely convinced that the

expropriation of the ruling class is an inevitable condition of their

economic emancipation.

Consequently, anarchists believe that rather than short-range

ineffectual conquests, tactics of corrosion and continuous attack should

be preferred, which demand from strikes of an openly revolutionary

character more than shorter hours or paltry wage increases; which

demand, instead, the experience of a more extensive solidarity and an

ever deeper awareness as an indispensable condition for the realization

of the general economic strike of a whole trade, of all the trades, in

order to obtain, through the inevitable use of force and violence, the

unconditional surrender of the ruling classes. Merlino, himself, knows

that they yield only to force. Thus, instead of the mere passive and

polite resistance so fervently recommended by the socialists, the

anarchists prefer boycott, sabotage, and, for the sake of struggle

itself, immediate attempts at partial expropriation, individual

rebellion and insurrection — actions which usually reap so much

socialist horror and cursing, but which exert the most spirited

influence over the masses and resolve themselves in a moral advantage of

the highest order.

The different standards by which socialists and anarchists evaluate

reforms lead to a different and divergent political action.

The socialists believe that reforms are an indispensable and inevitable

way to the gradual elevation of the proletariat, and so they delude

themselves about the advantages they may realize. They consider the

winning of reforms as a specific function of their party, and for this

they have given up the most important and characteristic part of their

economic aims. Undertaking a whole series of political struggles and

conquests, they have had to retreat from the course which they had so

courageously taken at first, and they have ended by confusing themselves

with the old radical democracy that they had violently broken away from

a score of years before.

Their trust in immediate improvements, in gradual gains, and in

legislative reforms, was bound to reconcile them with parliamentary

activity, since these reforms could be initiated, approved and

proclaimed only as laws of the State. This, in turn, had to reconcile

them to the State, which would be entrusted with the application and

compliance of such reform laws. And this would inevitably reconcile them

with the hated bourgeoisie, since only with the co-operation of its less

backward sectors could they hope to attain the parliamentary sanction

for the desired reforms.

Not only has this deviation led the Socialist Party to disavow many of

its original tenets, but it has pushed the party down the slope of

systematic concessions, rejecting the action and essence of socialism

itself.

For direct pressure put against the ruling classes by the masses, the

Socialist Party has substituted representation and the rigid discipline

of the parliamentary socialists, who have always sacrificed the general

interest of the proletariat to the advantage of their own political and

parliamentarian function. And instead of fostering the class struggle,

which was, in the past, the characteristic mark of socialist

organization and activity; it has adopted class collaboration in the

legislative arena, without which all reforms would remain a vain hope.

Thus, the need to gain the trust of the ruling classes, whose

collaboration was necessary for this work of reform, and of the State,

which was to supervise its application, compelled the Socialist Party to

renege on the essential aims of socialism; ie, the expropriation of the

bourgeoisie and the social revolution. These became on the part of

‘scientific socialism’ the favourite target for the sarcastic laughter

and ferocious ironies of its bemedalled prophets.

---

Since the anarchists value reforms for what they are — the ballast the

bourgeoisie throws overboard to lighten its old boat in the hope of

saving the sad cargo of its privileges from sinking in the revolutionary

storm — they have no particular interest in them except to discredit

their dangerous mirage, for they are sure that social reforms will come

anyway, faster, more often and more radically, as attacks against the

existing social institutions become more forceful and violent.

Hence, they have always firmly resisted appeals that favour legal

action, especially electoral and parliamentary action, because

anarchists are convinced that: “In the electoral process, the working

people will always be cheated and deceived; that they will never succeed

in sending their own comrades to Parliament, but even if they did manage

to send one, or ten, or fifty of them there, they would become spoiled

and powerless. Furthermore, even if the majority of Parliament were

composed of workers, they could do nothing. Not only is there the

senate, the king, the court, the ministers, the chiefs of the armed

forces, the heads of the judiciary and of the police, who would be

against the parliamentary bills advanced by such a chamber and who would

refuse to enforce laws favouring the workers (it has happened); but

furthermore laws are not miraculous; no law can prevent the capitalists

from exploiting the workers; no law can force the owners to keep their

factories open and employ workers at such and such conditions, nor force

shopkeepers to sell at a certain price, and so on.”[25]

Contrary to electoral and parliamentary action, which requires

disciplined authoritarian organizations, anarchists favour direct action

by the workers and abstention from political activity.

The anarchists’ electoral abstentionism implies not only a conception

that is opposed to the principle of representation (which is totally

rejected by anarchism), it implies above all an absolute lack of

confidence in the State. And this distrust, which is instinctive in the

working masses, is for the anarchists the result of their historical

experience with the State and its function, which has, at all times and

in all places, resulted in a selfish and exclusive protection of the

ruling classes and their privileges. Furthermore, anarchist

abstentionism has consequences which are much less superficial than the

inert apathy ascribed to it by the sneering careerists of ‘scientific

socialism’. It strips the State of the constitutional fraud with which

it presents itself to the gullible as the true representative of the

whole nation, and, in so doing, exposes its essential character as

representative, procurer and policeman of the ruling classes.

Distrust of reforms, of public powers and of delegated authority, can

lead to direct action in the struggles of demolition and vindication. It

can determine the revolutionary character of this two-fold action; and,

accordingly, anarchists regard it as the best available means lor

preparing the masses to manage their own personal and collective

interests; and, besides, anarchists feel that even now the working

people are fully capable of handling their own political and

administrative interests, and, made conscious by the experience of past

mistakes, they are advancing towards the ultimate forms of liberation —

social revolution, economic communism, anarchy!

The antithesis between socialists and anarchists is also evident in the

means of propaganda and action.

The socialists need authoritarian organizations, centralized and

disciplined, for their legal and parliamentarian activities. Their

action lies in the ceding of power by all to someone, the delegate, the

representative, individual or group, and their action is therefore

condemned to be circumscribed within the choking confines of the

existing laws.

Anarchism rejects authority in any form: to the principle of

representation, it opposes the direct and independent action of

individuals and masses: to egalitarian and parliamentarian action, it

opposes rebellion, insurrection, the general strike, the social

revolution.

Having thus briefly defined the traits that distinguish anarchist theory

and the anarchist movement from those of the socialists, we have only to

relate them to the notion of progress.

According to Metchnikoff — and we refer to him because we think that

nobody else has defined progress in a better way — progress means a

continuous succession of phenomena in which energy manifests itself at

each stage of evolution with an ever-growing variety and intensity; the

series is called ‘progressive’ when, at each one of its stages, it

reproduces all its previous traits plus a new one that did not exist in

the preceding phases, and which becomes, in its turn, the germ of a new

plus in the following stages.

Now, in the succession of those social phenomena which mark the

evolutionary steps of property and the State, of economic and political

forms, what place do anarchist-communism and socialist-collectivism

occupy? Which of these two doctrines and movements reproduces all the

traits of the preceding phases, adding a new trait non-existent in

preceding phases, and will be the embryo of a new trait appearing in all

subsequent stages?

By solving this first point we will arrive at the solution of the main

problem.

Obviously, if it can be proven that anarchist-communism conforms to this

definition of progress much more than does socialist-collectivism, one

could no longer speak about decadent and moribund anarchism; one would

conclude instead that socialism is decadent and moribund. As vitality,

energy, and the possibility of realization, are the conditions of

progress, so inertia, stillness and death are its contradiction and

denial.

For us this demonstration seems to be easy. A mere glance at the

historical evolution of property is enough to see the progressive

succession of the steps marking the way from slavery to economic

freedom.

Greedy and autocratic at its origins, which were fraud and violence,

property; ie, the right to use and misuse one’s own things without

restraint (and it is well to remember that at that time human beings

were among the things owned), knew no opposition nor limitations, not

even the need to explain or justify it. It was the right sanctioned by

the well-known aphorism: “Blessed be the owners, for asked why they own,

they can reply simply: ‘Because we do!’”

But insolent, arrogant abuse arouses anger, instigates protests, ignites

rebellion, and dispels the curse from the hearts of the resigned serfs.

The gospels, the holy fathers of the church the christian doctrine,

brand wealth as a crime, the rich as god’s enemies, admonishing that a

camel can more easily pass through the eye of a needle than a rich

person through the gates of heaven; Christianity opposes the absolute

right of property with charity, as a prize for renunciation, as a token

of grace.

Human rights — barely dawning on the horizon of Rome — will, through

Hadrian and Marcus Aurelius,[26] take from property as a first conquest,

the right of life and death over slaves, and then, reaching maturity,

will require that it live with honesty, not offend anyone, and give each

person his own due.

Notwithstanding the bloody rebellion of the Anabaptists, property will

remain privileged, feudal, lordly during the middle ages, but it will

humble itself and will seek to justify itself. Therefore, the fief is

the due and fitting reward for bravery in war, or for the political

wisdom one’s forebears have displayed in the service of king’s cause, or

the church, or the country. It is, above all, the reward for the

continued loyalty and devotion of their descendants.

After the rights of man and citizen, the equality of rights and

obligations have been proclaimed upon the ruins of the Bastille, a much

more profound revolution than the one that sprouted from the

Encyclopaedists begins, one that is based upon the substitution of

individual effort with mechanical and collective means. And property no

longer seeks its justifications from investiture, legal gifts, or

rights, but from genius, from savings, from the indispensable

co-operation that the bourgeoisie and the capitalists have given to the

revolution, from the indisputable improvement of the general condition

of life.

Though in real life things have remained unchanged in their essence,

what a distance has been travelled in the ethical and juridical field

from the old Roman concept of property, which gave the owner absolute

right of life and death over his slaves, to the laws now existing in the

more developed of our nations, which, by recognizing the workers’ right

to security and pensions, sanction the social function of property!

The social function of property, which is after all the pure and plain

negation of the right to private properly, was perceived by the Jacques,

who rose under Caillet’s leadership in the fourteenth century, crying,

“Fire to the castles!”; by Thomas Muentzer’s anabaptists, in the

sixteenth century, who in their proclamation of faith advocated “The

perfect community of property, redeemed by the spirit”;[27] by Babeuf’s

and Buonarroti’s egalitarians who — after the French Revolution had been

usurped with impunity by the bourgeoisie, “... mainly because it had

wanted to impose one form of government over another, without caring

about the conditions of those for whom any government that considers

itself legitimate is supposed to look after and provide for” —

proclaimed that the “... main sources of all the evils that harass

mankind are the inequality of fortunes and private property”;[28] and by

the English Levellers, who in the nineteenth century maintained that

“The land owners are thieves and murderers who must be destroyed and

proclaimed that all land is the common property of mankind.[29]

It was the task of modern socialism — the clear diagnosis and the

implacable criticism of Godwin and Owen, Saint-Simon and Fourier,

Proudhon, Marx and Bakunin[30] — to point out the horrible symptoms from

which all kinds of miseries and pains spring; to search deeply for their

causes; to identify and define the social function of property; and to

draw from this bold premise the unbiased conclusion that everything must

belong to everybody and must present the hypothesis of a world without

god, without king, without government, without masters.

But the tendency to blunt the insolence of private property (a tendency

that is nothing but the longing of those who produce to be free from

capitalist oppression) is not extinguished nor abated by the State and

the law agreeing to and accepting some symbolical concessions that say

property must have a social function.

Indeed, in the second half of the nineteenth century, from this

concession, strictly theoretical and formal, begins a slow and

relentless investigation of the institution of private property,

concluding with its unavoidable condemnation. Proudhon is the main

unrelenting investigator, and, although he has later been repudiated by

his disciples in almost all the branches of socialism, the proofs and

the elements of guilt collected by him, arise mockingly every time the

criticism of private property resumes its destructive task.[31] From

Proudhon’s tragic conclusions, the ideal and the movement of socialism

were born to present a new concept and to bring to the series of

phenomena that mark the progressive evolution from slavery to freedom in

the field of economy a new characteristic that did not exist in the

preceding phase and that will be the germ of a new evolutionary period

in the following phases.

The Socialist theory reached the conclusion that “Being itself the

result of the mind and energy of men and women from all times and all

nations, capital, a property which renews itself perpetually only by

virtue of this universal activity, cannot be a source of personal power

but should be a social force that therefore must lose its class

character and become the social property of every human being.”

Chapter 4. Socialist-Collectivism and Anarchist-Communism

This new characteristic has not yet appeared within the thought of

classical democracy, which, following in the footsteps of Ledru-Rollin

and Mazzini[32], is still raving about the Utopia of an impossible

alliance between capital and labour, an impossible harmony between the

exploited and the exploiters. Socialist philosophy expressed it as the

social ownership of all means of production and exchange.

So, the socialist movement represents a progress over the old democratic

doctrine, which used to lull us to sleep with its old nursery songs

about alliances and harmony.

Such progress becomes more and more evident as the huge proletariat of

all nations, called to action and insurrection by the new social

theories, inspires and hastens the selective processes within the

socialist party itself.

Because, even if there is no disagreement, generally speaking, on the

main point (the abolition of private ownership of the means of

production and exchange), nor on the ultimate aim (the social ownership

of such means of production and exchange), even if there is no

disagreement, generally speaking, about the means necessary for

accomplishing the great transformation, even if it is generally agreed

that the emancipation of the working people must be the result of the

workers’ own effort and that the expropriation of the bourgeoisie can

only be brought about“... by the violent destruction of the present

social orders”; yet differences of opinion and frictions will emerge,

sharp and numberless at every step, just as soon as one passes from

theory to practice and experiment, as soon as a hypothesis is put forth

concerning the relations that might bind together the dwellers of the

happy city that the revolution will erect upon the ruins of private

property.

So, at the International Workers Association, when the problem arose of

how to translate the generic formula ‘social ownership’ of all means of

production and exchange into terms describing with precision what

everyone wanted, many said ‘collectivism’, many others ‘communism’, some

said the ‘socialist state’ and others wanted ‘anarchy’; some preferred

‘conquest of power’ and some ‘social revolution’.

Hence, disagreement over the economic and the political aims,

disagreement about the means of propaganda and action. And we have

already pointed out that the initial disagreements became in time

irreconcilable antagonisms.

The two main opposing schools were in perfect agreement about the

illegitimacy of private property and in favour of socializing all means

of production and exchange, and, together, they brought into the

struggles for economic emancipation a new concept and brought into the

continuum of evolutionary phenomena a more progressive phase. Now the

problem is to find out if and to what extent each of the two schools has

remained faithful to this notion of progress immediately following the

period of broad generalizations; if, in their hurry to apply principles

to reality, each has retained any, and how much, of the old systems

condemned by history, criticism and reason; how much does each one of

them carry along that is inert, dead, or Utopian; and, finally, which of

them is entitled to speak in the name of life and of the future.

Now those who said ‘collectivism’, meant socialization limited to the

means of production and exchange. “We do not want to abolish in any

manner the private appropriation of the product of labour... what we

want to abolish is the wretched way appropriation is done, whereby the

worker lives only to increase capital and lives only so long as and

because the interest of the ruling class demands it”.

This same thought was expressed even with more precision by Andrea

Costa,[33] after his conversion to parliamentary socialism. At the

Italian Socialist Party Congress in Mantua, on September 26, 1886, he

defined collectivism as “... communalization of the means of production,

reserving for the individual as private property his work’s production,

thus assuring the rights of the community, on one side, and those of the

worker, on the other.”

In his Quintessence of Socialism Shaffle said the same thing with less

clarity but more explicitly: “Substituting collective for private

capital means that, instead of the system of private production, there

is a system based on the collective ownership of all means of

production. Besides obtaining a more unified, a more social, a more

collective organization of labour, this system of production would

eliminate day-to-day competition; it would place that part of production

which is susceptible to collective operation under the direction of

professional entities and corporations, and would also direct the

division or distribution of the collective products according to the

social value of each worker’s labour.”[34]

Then, it is clear that in collectivism, the socialization of property —

the new trait that elevates socialist thought and movement to a level of

progress unknown to all preceding theories and schools — is limited to

the means of production, while it reserves for the individual worker all

rights to the fruits of his work.

The collectivist premise of socializing the means of production is

revolutionary insofar as it displaces all the old relations, all the old

forms and, in so doing, counters private property with collective social

ownership of all means of production. But it remains the conservator of

the old absurd irrational bourgeois criterion of compensation, insomuch

as it regulates everyone’s share of the products of common work, even if

such compensation should be extended to the final product of each one’s

work.

Of course, the conclusion that socialist-collectivism derives from its

revolutionary socialization of all means of production is irrational,

absurd and Utopian, because it does not resolve the political problem of

equality and freedom; because it confirms, rather than removes, the

hypothesis of the State, against which the socialist critique has

struggled for half a century; because it is not supported by a logical

and positive criterion; because it will never find practical means of

explanation, unless they are based on gross iniquity, stupid privileges,

strident inequalities and contradictions.

The demonstration is implicit in the very form that collectivism

assumes. It proposes a society based on the common ownership of all

means of production and exchange and the private ownership of one’s own

work, a formula which creates an initial inequality that would turn out

to be a Pandora’s box, out of which would come all kinds of rivalries,

hatreds, and competitions, worse and deadlier than the social

inequalities existing in our times.

The socialists say that each will receive the value of each one’s work

from the product of the collective work. But we know, even now, that

intelligence, strength, activity, aptitude and physical capability vary

from person to person, so that the quantity and quality of their

production is bound to vary from person to person, and each worker will

be entitled to receive a different quota of the product. Thus, it has to

be admitted that the citizens of the collectivist city will satisfy

their needs in an unequal measure, since it appears obvious that those

who produce more and better will be entitled to receive more of the

product of the social work than the unlucky ones who, being less strong

and less capable, will produce less or with more strenuous effort.

And one will have to admit, willingly or not, that this is the first

absurdity, the first inequality and the first injustice.

An absurdity, because no labour union, were it the most intelligent and

bold within international collectivism, will ever find the standard with

which to evaluate the effort and the strain which its members — varying

and differently developed — are forced to exert in order to give their

necessary contribution to the collective production. Nor will it find

the means to evaluate the raw manual labour requiring a minimal effort

from a strong, intelligent young man, but causing great pain for a weak,

less intelligent, and awkward person who, nevertheless, will be called

to show the total of his work done before he opens the account of his

needs. Beyond sheer manual labour, it will be even harder to determine

the value of the wages due for work less measurable in its nature and in

its processes, but no less useful in its results — when, for instance,

one must determine the use value of Pascal’s theorem, or of Newton’s law

of gravitation, or of Marconi’s wireless telegraphy.[35]

---

Even if this impossible evaluation criterion were found, the injustice

would not be less evident and real. Those who by nature or a fortunate

environment have been endowed with a powerful body, or a sharp mind, or

with a more pronounced disposition to undertake any difficult endeavour,

will be able to produce abundantly without effort, without pain, while

he who has received from an unjust nature or a less fortunate

environment a feebler body, a lesser mind, or less varied aptitudes,

will produce with pain and in smaller quantities.

It is obvious that, if there has to be some consideration, this should

be in favour of those who arc below average, because their needs are

more numerous and more urgent, needs that are less numerous and less

pressing in healthy and normal people, who find pleasure and

satisfaction in their work.

Contrariwise, with a Malthusianism that couldn’t be more idiotic or

ferocious, collectivism reserves for the less-endowed all the pains of a

social hell; and it assures those who had from nature all the blessings

of intelligence and the ability to perform a great variety of work, all

the joys of life from the beginning.

Thus, from the marriage of the absurd with injustice, we have

socialist-collectivism reconsecrating the division of society in two

classes: the class of the strong, of the quick, of the fortunate to whom

all satisfactions are guaranteed; and the class of the feeble, the slow,

the inept whose perpetual inheritance will be deprivations, disgrace and

poverty.

Hatred, rivalry and unhealthy jealousy will spring from the unequal

private ownership of labour’s product in a more furious way than those

inequalities that are fomented in our times by the private ownership of

all means of production and exchange.

Even now, socialist-collectivism forsees such inequality and the

consequent division of society into two enemy classes; and it tries to

avoid it by means of a state administration, created to supervise

production and distribution and to re-establish, where necessary, the

social equilibrium where imperiled or disturbed by the social

inequalities.

True, the collectivists hasten to add that the new State would have mere

administrative functions and that, keeping an eye on things, it would

scrupulously abstain from being a ruler of men. But the more orthodox

exponents of socialist collectivism, like Morgari, are arising against

this oblique sophism. He writes, “It is impossible to understand what

the distinction between government of people and management of things

could mean in practice. In our times the State does both: it governs the

citizens and manages directly one-fifth of the country’s wealth.

Equally, under socialism, we would have the management of things and the

government of the people, and these would be bound by law to even more

social duties, both in number and in depth, than there are today”.[36]

As opposed to a bourgeois regime, which, in spite of its constitutional

lies, is the rule of a minority over the majority,

socialist-collectivism may be the rule of the majority over the

minority, and, even supposing that it might be a mitigated form of

tyranny, it would still represent a denial of freedom, so much so, that

the same Morgari, who foresees man armed with education and the vote,

but controlled by social covenants; ie laws that the majority will

approve from time to time, is forced to admit that collectivism will, of

necessity, maintain... the authoritarian principle; that is to say, the

coercive means regulating labour and other social institutions, and that

therefore collectivism is a lower stage of social evolution compared to

anarchism.

It had to be just our good old Merlino to vindicate the charm of

socialist-collectivism among the woolly-minded and to rehabilitate its

reputation among the masses as the ultimate stage of the social progress

in comparison to, and much to the confusion and mortification of,

libertarian communism.

---

Meanwhile, in contrast to the tortuous and contradictory premise of

common ownership of all means of production and exchange — tempered by

the private ownership of the product of one’s own labour — that is waved

about by socialist-collectivism, libertarian communism begins with two

logical terms much more correlative and positive: the common ownership

of all means of production and exchange, and the equal right of all to

receive from the total production of collective work according to his or

her needs. This means that from a revolutionary premise (socialization

of the means of production) collectivism draws a reactionary conclusion

(compensation according to one’s work rather than according to one’s

needs) and re-establishes within the collectivist city the same economic

and political inequalities, all the old and discredited legal and moral

relations. Instead, libertarian communism from a revolutionary premise

(common ownership of all means of production and exchange) draws a

conclusion equally revolutionary: to each according to his or her needs,

which shifts, at the same time, the axis of all the old relationships,

legal, political and moral, and, in so doing, proclaims a new idea,

revealing also in the ethical and the political field, the new trait,

the plus missing until most recently, which will be the embryo of the

new revolutionary period that will assert the ungovernability of man,

autonomy and anarchy.

As a matter of fact, in shunning the absurd and arbitrary notion of

compensation (which, together with its opposite poles, reward and

punishment, reproduces in the collectivist world the catholic contrast

between vice and virtue, the catholic predestination to heaven or hell,

according to whether its future citizens reveal themselves good or bad

at the necessary task of production), libertarian communism rejects the

Utopia, the incoherence, and the injustice implicit in the collectivist

pretense of measuring the effort and the energy of each worker in order

to compensate him or her according to the use-value of his or her

labour, and, in so doing, it resolves the problem of each and everyone’s

sharing the product of the collective work, without arbitrary

limitations, without odious controls, without offense to justice or

liberty.

Libertarian communism does not feel that the rights and limits of such

participation should be dictated by merit or demerit, by the greater or

lesser aptitude and productivity of the single worker. It should be

inspired by the unsuppressible right of each organism to go all the way

and under the best possible conditions in its ascent from the most

elementary to superior and more complex forms; it should be the

unsuppressible right of every person to grow, to develop his faculties

in every way, to achieve his full and integral development.

Now, this ascent of the organism from a rudimentary to a fully developed

state is marked by a series of ever-more, growing and varied needs

claiming satisfaction, and its progressive development results from the

more or less complete satisfaction of those numberless and infinitely

diverse needs.

The newborn baby, who at his first contact with air and light protests

with his first cry, warns us that the change of temperature is too

sudden and that he cannot adapt himself to the new environment without

danger, without pain, and without many precautions. The newly-delivered

mother, who even in the lower stages of the animal kingdom has foreseen

these dangers, has softened the nest with the finest feathers or hair,

pulled tuft after tuft from her own aching bosom, and will cover her

offspring with her warm body as soon as it has been born in order to

protect it from the rude fondlings of the wind and of the sun.

It is the first step, signalled by the urgency of purely animal, purely

physiological needs. But, once out of the nest, once out of the cradle,

the new citizen stumbles upon a whole chain of experiences, each one

more challenging than the last, calling on new organs that have not been

used before or have been neglected, to move and to function in order to

gain successes and victories, to ward off dangers, to sense

satisfactions, and to attain the enjoyment they promise.

It is a whole series of psychological needs that demand satisfaction

through this storm-like activity; it is an endless series of whys?,

persistently curious and fortunately inexhaustible, with which children

exasperate us. In so doing they let us know their need to understand, to

know, to learn, and we try to satisfy that need with our personal

knowledge, with schools and books, with the educational work which

reflects and epitomizes the heritage of experience arduously accumulated

during centuries of sufferings and mistakes.

Another step. Others will follow later. But the more we advance, the

more complicated and extensive becomes the series of needs, which is the

index of the progress realized by the individual as well as the

community. A farmer who lives in an Alpine valley, in the present

conditions of his development, may have satisfied all his needs—eaten,

drunk, and rested to his heart’s content; while a worker who lives in

London, in Paris, or in Berlin, may willingly give up a quarter of his

salary and several hours of his rest, in order to satisfy a whole

category of needs totally unknown to the farmer stranded among the

gorges of the Alps or the peaks of the Apennine mountains — to spend an

hour of intense and moving life at the theatre, at the museum or at the

library, to buy a recently published book or the latest issue of a

newspaper, to enjoy a performance of Wagner or a lecture at the

Sorbonne.

Since these needs vary, not only according to time and place, but also

according to the temperament, disposition and development of each

individual, it is clear that only he or she who experiences and feels

them is in a position to appreciate them and to measure adequately the

satisfaction they may give.

Therefore, in drawing the measure of each person’s share in the total

social production from need, from the complex and infinite needs of each

organism, rather than from the social use-value of each one’s labour,

anarchist-communism is inspired not only by a logical motive, but also

by an eminently practical criterion of equality and justice.

The very bourgeois objection that the total production is insufficient

for the full satisfaction of everybody’s needs belongs to those

objections which have been triumphantly defeated by the

socialist-collectivists as well as by the anarchist-communists.

Furthermore, they are even now easily defeated, daily, on the basis of

undeniable facts aligned in opposition to all laudatores temporis

nostri,[those who praise our times (ie the ‘good old days’)].

There is no reason, therefore, to repeat here for the thousandth lime

the same refutation. [L. Galleani; who greatly admired Kropotkin, was

probably referring to his many writings on this topic; eg The Conquest

of Bread, Modern Science and Anarchism, Fields, Factories and

Workshops].

As the ways and measure of the satisfaction of needs vary from person to

person, according to their development and to the particular environment

in which they live, while the right to satisfy them in the manner which

each person, the sole judge, deems convenient, remains equal for

all;equality and justice could not receive a more real and sincere

sanction than that which is given by the libertarian communist

conception of society. All have an equal right to live a full life — the

strong and the weak, the intelligent and the dull, the capable and the

inept; and, without regard to the contribution each one may have given

to the total production of society, they all have the same right to

satisfy their needs and to reach the superior forms of higher

development.

“But does this anarchist-communist premise to freedom, to individual

liberty, give an equally logical and trustworthy warranty? Suppose among

the dwellers of the future society there were some who liked to

dissipate and refused to do any kind of work? Wouldn’t you, out of

necessity, be induced to compel them to do something? Wouldn’t that mean

the return of authority with its savage retinue of coercive

institutions?”

This objection is less serious than it may appear at first sight. From

the economic relationships ruling bourgeois society we can deduce the

causes for which some refuse to work at certain kinds of labour and for

which a few refuse to do any work at all.

At present, work has a servile character; it is not chosen freely

according to one’s aptitudes; it does not give any satisfaction

whatever, material or moral; it offers only risks, deprivations,

humiliations; it is uncertain, painful, excessive, paid in inverse

proportion to its duration- it is sought reluctantly, executed with

disgust; it is endured, in short, as a punishment, as a curse. The

aversions it arouses at the present time are understandable as is

understandable the horror with which work, this inevitable condition of

life, is looked at by the unfortunates who bear on their faces, on their

eyes, on their tortured flesh, the stigma of all the aberrations and

degenerations caused by centuries of slavery, of deprivations, of

poverty, of grief, of brutality — all compressed into a state of

arrested development, which makes them incapable of any fertile function

or of any original action.

However, transplant that rickety progeny of sclerotics, drunkards,

arthritics and prostitutes to a healthier social climate, to a world of

equals where production is ruled by collective interest, not by whim and

speculation; where it is limited to what is necessary and pleasant,

excluding all that is stupid, useless, or harmful, from miser’s safes to

monstrous battleships; make room within the ranks of redeeming labour

for all the energies that now lie stagnant, tricked by all kinds of lies

and frauds, by all the evil doings of usury, inquisition and murder — in

monasteries, barracks, jails, in the endless circles of bureaucracy;

look at the progress of the last fifty years, and calculate the progress

that is bound to take place during the next fifty years through the

application of science to industry; open to everyone the theatres and

the schools, the gymnasiums and the academies; let there be air and

bread for everyone, sun and joy, life and love — and then tell us if

work, short in hours, varied in kind, freely chosen by every worker

according to his own preference, in whom security of intellectual and

physical life will have accumulated and kept alive all kinds of energy;

tell us then, if any one will refuse to participate in a work which has

become a source of joy to the spirit, a physiological necessity and a

universally acknowledged condition of life and of universal progress.

Everyone will work according to one’s aptitudes and energies.

“Another if, as usual” — whispers a stubborn dissenter... without

thinking that his objection (that there will always be somebody, in the

new society, unwilling to work) is, again, a supposition — with this

difference; however, it lacks the positive and scientific basis which

supports the anarchist-communist prediction.

Let us make sense. Inertia is the property whereby an object persists in

the state in which it finds itself unless and until an outside cause

operates on it, but nobody has ever thought to define it or imagine it

as a cessation of activity in matter. It would be nonsense.

Thus, it would be nonsense to suppose that blood refuses to circulate,

the heart refuses to beat, the brain to feel and reflect, that all the

body organs collectively revolt against their respective functions. It

would be death.

But so long as the constant processes of assimilation, of elimination,

of nourishment of replacement, of development, of reproduction, of

decrease — which are the condition and character of our life — take

place in our body, all our vital energies will be active.

Our opponents are obsessed by the many and profound perversions with

which the regime of authority and private property — the regime of

exploitation of men by other men — has corrupted every ethical human

relation and sentiment. And, forgetting or neglecting the fact that man,

his progress, his intelligence and his morality are intimately related

to the environment in which he lives, they may fear that many of the

citizens of the future city will feel the strongest aversion for certain

kinds of work, and that, encouraged by the lack of any coercive force,

may revolt against it. But this is an objection that resolves itself

through everybody’s freedom to choose the job or the profession, the

occupation most suitable to one’s own capacity or inclination.

It cannot be seriously argued that the unruly persons who are unwilling

to work at certain occupations will refuse to work at any job and will

let themselves go adrift like brutalized opium smokers, or like the

blessed of the buddhist Nirvana, eliminating any and all activities by

the total annihilation of their own selves.

To satisfy our needs, to nourish ourselves physically and

intellectually, means that we must accumulate a treasure of strength,

bend the arc of our energy, sharpen the spur of our will, compel our

vital exuberance to seek in action, any action, its outlet, its exhaust

valve. The young ones who, regardless of fatigue and dangers, expose

their youth every day to all kinds of risks, are the true index of that

exuberance, of that selfless impetuousness which is nothing but the

result of the easy and constant process of assimilation, a process which

in old people — whose body, having reached its maximum development,

begins to decline — becomes slow, painful, faulting, barely sufficient

to conserve the failing energy, the stiffening activity, the slipping

life. It is the struggle of exuberance against deterioration: the former

is altruism, fearlessness, selflessness, generosity; the latter is

egoism, meanness, calculation, fear, conservative distrust.

In order to believe in the possibility, in the realization of a society

without private property and without government, it is not necessary

that men be angels. It will be enough that this society be capable of

satisfying the needs of all its members on the land which has become

again the great mother of us all, made fertile by human labour, redeemed

from all humiliations and yokes. The bourgeois, who are in a position to

satisfy these needs in large measure are the best witnesses to the fact

that if energy can be diverted, it cannot be constrained, so that our

opponents fears of inertia and vagrancy are plainly absurd: fencing,

horsemanship, boating, motoring, mountain-climbing, oceanic cruising,

politics, diplomacy, philanthropy, tropical and polar expeditions are

nothing but the different aspects, physical or intellectual, frivolous

or noble, of the energy and vital exuberance which burst forth from the

full satisfaction of needs enjoyed by rhe ruling classes

When everyone’s physical, intellectual and moral needs arc fully

satisfied, we shall have in every human being the exuberance of energy

that is at present the exclusive privilege of the ruling classes.

Once the field of education, of science and of the arts — now barred to

the majority of mankind — is opened, it will be filled by an immense

torrent of gushing energy, seeking out its most useful function, its

highest aims. With the fall of the barriers dividing humanity in classes

and with the joining of all human interests in the struggle against the

forces of nature and external threats, the association for struggle will

be a much more effective support for civilization, progress, and

evolution than is the struggle for existence with its savage daily

competitions.

This is a logical deduction, supported by incontrovertible proofs, and

to deny it, our adversaries take refuge behind the ironic presumption

that, in order to live without government, without private property and

without masters, men will suddenly have to have wings, halos and the

seraphic goodness of mythical angels.

But the ideal is human and men are sufficient to realize it.

Against this unshakable belief of ours in economic emancipation and

political autonomy, our adversaries might oppose only one argument: that

men do not change, that in spite of any progress, of any noticeable

improvement of individual and social life, workers will persist in being

slaves without dignity, ferocious barbarians, degenerates deprived of

conscience, indecent idlers who, through thousands of years of privilege

and tyranny, ignorance and superstition, have been lovingly raised by

the ruling oligarchies.

But, in that case, our adversaries would be the Utopians, the apostles

and heralds of an impossible stasis, instead of which, we, without being

Utopians, without accepting the legend of angels and demigods, believe

in the unceasing evolution and the constant progress of peoples and

society.

We have eliminated the vulgar objection that once out of the inferno of

present-day society — where work is not freely elected according to the

worker’s inclinations, but is imposed by the privileged interests of the

ruling classes, where no satisfaction of his material and moral needs is

assured — the individual, once having attained, through the epic events

of the equalizing revolution, the free society where he can work,

according to his ability, at the trade he has freely selected, under the

sole influence of a clear conscience of his task, and with the knowledge

of the generally accepted necessity of contributing to the security and

to the fullness of social life in which lies the greatest, the only

warranty of everybody’s security and freedom), and once having received

the certainty that all of his physical and intellectual needs will be

adequately satisfied, this individual, even in spite of the irresistible

stimulations of his physiological exuberance, will deliberately refuse

to work and be totally useless. We have rejected this vulgar objection

and we believe we have achieved the most interesting, if not the most

decisive, part of our demonstration.

We have demonstrated — and we believe with success — to our sneering

adversaries, as well as to our timid, uncertain allies, that once the

full satisfaction of every need is assured to everyone, the hypothesis

that each person will spontaneously choose and execute his task

according to the collective welfare and his own ability is not absurd;

and that, therefore, the aspiration to a society without masters and

without government is neither absurd nor Utopian.

---

As proponents of the broadest individual autonomy, we have shown that

this absolute independence from any domination by either a majority or a

minority, from any human oppression, cannot find a better or more

vigilant security than in anarchist-communism: unlimited freedom in the

satisfaction of needs; unlimited freedom in the choice of work.

Exceptional conditions of the moment or of the situation might require

that we limit our inclinations as well as increase our work. In the

future, as it happens at present, might we not, we who are in good

health, tighten our belt a little in order to help people afflicted by

an epidemic with food and medicine? Do we not, even now, if a sudden

fire develops act as firemen?... As nurses, if an epidemic occurs?... As

diggers in cases of flood or landslide? And doesn’t this happen without

command or coercion?... Without regard to individual inclinations or

unusual risks?... All this is only in obedience to the voice surging

from the depth of every conscience, calling in the name of life, of

preservation and solidarity with the species. And is not that voice the

automatic and irresistible stimulus to the highest and noblest of our

actions?

And is not that call valid? Is it not received with an outburst of love

and concern such as has never greeted a commandment of god, an edict of

a king, a law of parliament?

Let them call us Utopians as much as they want — those who remember only

one phrase of Darwin’s doctrine and revive, under the shining sun of

this twentieth century, the maxim homo homini lupus[man is wolf to man].

As for us — even in a society where the interests of the species might

be joined together for the noblest struggle of all, the one against

nature and the environment land this ‘association for the struggle’ will

be the main factor of future evolution) — we cannot accept even here the

domination of intellectual aristocracy.

We find this dominance in old as well as in contemporary civilizations.

Based on privilege and prompted by the wildest competition, it triumphs

and delights in ignorance and in the resignation, fear and universal

subjection that follow. In this climate of privilege, Moses and Mohammed

can lure millions of people to any adoration and sacrifice. And, just as

easily, Galileo and Bruno can become the victims of their wrath, of

their curses and contempt.[37] In this climate of competition, Nobel and

Krupp[38] can ascend through golden arches and clouds of incense into

the Olympus of national heroes, while Gorini, Bovio and Reclus can die

of starvation[39].

There are, on one hand, a fortunate few destined by chance to enjoy

everything; on the other, a multitude of outcasts condemned by those few

to experience nothing. But destroy the existing economic inequalities,

recompose a now-divided humanity upon a reclaimed Earth, and the last

traces of hideous inequality will disappear, together with the

hierarchies that today perpetuate them. The farmer and the agronomist,

who are now separated by a chasm, will be reconciled as equals because

their respective functions will be equally valued. Because, in the

future while it may be the agronomist who discovers a new method of

cultivation, it is the farmer who will make it work well in practice.

And this, in a society not based on privilege and competition, means

that in the different areas of their skills and in the different

application of their energies, they are both equally necessary to new

forms of production. One equals the other; both are equally

indispensable to a necessary co-operation, which has no place for savage

competitions nor for absurd and wicked privileges.

We have given sufficient elements for the lunatics of the State to

arrive, on their own, at the conclusion that, if government is necessary

or, rather, a ‘condition sine qua non’ [a necessity] for the existence

of a regime which is dedicated, like a bourgeois regime, to economic

inequality and the political subjection of the great majority of the

people constituting the so-called society; government has no

justification whatever and, therefore, no reason to exist in a real and

true society where the economic interests of all its components are

united and mutual. Disagreement and friction will always exist. In fact

they are an essential condition of unlimited progress. But once the

bloody arena of sheer animal competition — the struggle for food — has

been eliminated, problems of disagreement could be solved without the

slightest threat to the social order and individual liberty.

Merlino knows and teaches us that the State (which is a bankrupt and

perpetual failure as administrator) has a precise and essential

political function: the preservation of the economic ‘status quo’, the

protection of the economic privileges of the ruling class, whose agent

and gendarme it is and around which it has created a threefold barrier —

the political, the judicial and the military. These barriers, with their

diversified functions, pursue one single aim: to reassure the fortunate

wealthy that no one will spring forth from the immense, angry crowd of

the disinherited to curse, threaten, or destroy their vineyard or their

comfort. Parliament and the police have expected all kinds of threats

and curses, and they have scrupulously catalogued everyone of them.

Educational and cultural institutions, from kindergarten to university;

the judicial system, from magistrates to the supreme courts, are all

there to avert devastation. And, if and when, during times of upheaval,

their measures should appear insufficient or belated, the military

institutions, ruthless guardians of order at any cost, will intervene

with their laws of war, their martial courts and mass executions. Things

must remain as they are; social relations cannot be disturbed; the

ruling minority must luxuriate in wealth and idleness, while ruthlessly

governing the immense majority, who have only one duty to toil without

relief in a state of servitude, to remain, alter having produced wealth,

in a state of blind ignorance and squalid poverty for as long as they

live.

What is there for such an institution as the State to do in a society

where all class privileges have disappeared, where class distinctions

are eliminated; where hatred, revenge, and armed rebellion have vanished

under the sun of absolute economic equality?

Could it direct social relations or protect public order? But isn’t it

common knowledge, even now, that the State’s intrusion into the private

relations of individuals and groups is not only ineffective, but utterly

disastrous for the relations and initiatives it pretends to manage?

Concerns conducted by private initiative offer a security, an income,

and an efficiency that cannot be expected from the services that have

been assumed by the State. Furthermore, even those who avail themselves

of the services of the State, admit that, in its function as protector

of order and the security of its citizens, the State arrives too late to

forestall the consequences of disturbances and injuries that have

already happened despite its vigilance. Is it possible to wish, in

social relations, for a more alert,a more competent, a more even-minded

and reliable regulator than the concern of the interested parties?

The recent scandals concerning the distribution of the money collected

for the earthquake victims in Calabria [l908] testify that, while

millions of dollars could be collected in just a few hours among

thousands of citizens, moved by a spontaneous, noble impulse of

solidarity, the State, entangled by its rickety bureaucracy, does not

know how to distribute them, and when it does do so (two or three years

after the catastrophe), it gives them out the wrong way.

And then, what threats to public order can be feared in a society where

the fundamental causes of any public disturbance have been eliminated by

the reconciliation of the economic interests of each individual with the

economic interests of the whole community?

Non solo pane vivit homo [man does not live by bread alone], object our

adversaries. After food is assured, men will fight over something else.

Have you forgotten the religious wars, the national struggles, the

hopeless and bloody struggles for the conquest of political freedom?

We haven’t forgotten anything, and we are very far from believing that,

after having reached equality, the inhabitants of the future city will

give up any assertion of individual energy, of every independent action

and every competitive activity. On the contrary.

But we also know (and this is a truth that is largely supported by the

world of science) that there are two basic needs, food and reproduction,

to which all living creatures are subject. The first pushes them to

ferocious struggles, even to mutual destruction, while the second draws

them together and tends to unify them.

If the need that leads to ferocity and mutual destruction has been

satisfied, other forms of competition can be developed without violent

collisions that will threaten public order or individual freedom,

because, in certain fields and competitions, brutal violence and

majority pressure are fundamentally ineffective. For instance, there is

a profound disagreement concerning the prevention of smallpox in the

field of sanitation. Some believe the smallpox inoculation is absolutely

useless if not outright dangerous; others, on the contrary, consider it

a real salvation. This conflict of opinion has been going on for many

years without a bad word from either side to alarm the guardians of

public order. On the contrary, so many facts have been certified, so

many observations, experiences and results have been gathered, that

confer the character of a real blessing upon these theoretical

disagreements, these civilized forms of competition.

As the average intellectual level rises, many diverse energies will

participate in debates of this kind, and we can readily assume that the

new society will be the most active, the most daring, the most

persevering imaginable in the field of research, without having to

conclude that these discussions, these theoretical and philosophical

disagreements must end in tragedy.

Those who recall the religious wars, the wars for national independence

or for political freedom, ignore or forget that those were rebellions

against tyranny, a cause that would have no reason to exist in a

libertarian society and that, beneath the theological, nationalist or

political surfaces, existing economic interests were being threatened by

new economic interests, struggling to assert themselves in a convulsed

world.

---

At this point, we can sum up and reply to the first question we have

posed: “Of the two trends, both denying the legitimacy of private

property and both promoting the socialization of all means of production

and exchange in the struggle for economic emancipation, which one has

voiced the new idea that marks the inception of a more advanced phase in

the series of evolutionary phenomena, which one has remained rigorously

faithful to the criterion of progress?”.

In furthering the socialization of the means of production and exchange,

socialist-collectivism seeks, on one hand, to guarantee the rights of

the community, while recognizing, on the other, the private property of

each worker’s production. It barely whispers — and immediately repents

doing it — the new idea which, in the evolution of the economic

institutions says: abolish private property and means: everything

belongs to everybody! And this initial contradiction, stretching out

from the economic to political and moral areas, prevents

socialist-collectivism from asserting the new idea of equality, of

justice, of freedom, which could open an era of a new civilization and

begin a new phase in the series of evolutionary phenomena that

reproduces all its preceding traits and adds the plus that was not yet

in the preceding phase, which will become the germ of a new trait in the

following phase, and is, as we have seen, according to Metchnikoff, the

condition of every progressive step.

Now, if in comparing libertarian communism with socialist-collectivism,

we have proven successfully that by taking the finished product of each

worker as the basis of all economic relations, the equality proclaimed

at first by socialist-collectivism is upset as soon as methods and

measures to evaluate each worker’s share in the total production are

considered, because these measures are unequally dependent upon and

related to each worker’s effort; it becomes evident that

socialist-collectivism is actually promoting a flagrant economic

inequality in defiance of its own premises.

We have proven also that social injustice and authority will be grafted

onto this fundamental economic inequality, because they are consequences

of the same cause, the scourge of the bourgeois society against which

socialist-collectivism revolted with the best of intentions. And we have

also pointed out an element that has its own value — how the

collectivist pretence, to gauge each worker’s right to satisfy his needs

according to the production of his own labour, would not only be unjust,

unequal and authoritarian, but would be Utopian and absurd, because it

is practically impossible to find a scale capable of weighing the effort

and measuring the individual energy used in the production process — the

length of work, the importance of the product, its use and exchange

value, represent criteria not only insufficient for such evaluation, but

absolutely arbitrary, since they cannot have any relation with the

physical activity of the individual, nor with the mechanical effort

required from him, nor with the physiological needs that press him, the

satisfaction of which is conditioned by the preservation and development

of his own personality.

With its conception of a new society and of its citizens’ relations with

each other, socialist-collectivism lessens the consequences, but does

not eliminate the causes of the inequality, of the injustice, of the

oppression that it deplores and fights in the existing bourgeois regime,

and, in so doing, it carries along too many of the inherited relics, too

much ballast of immobility, of superstition, of the absurd, to be

qualified to speak in the name of progress and of the future.

And, if it is permitted to draw an omen from the ethical content of a

doctrine on the basis of evolutionary lessons and experiences, it is not

foolhardy to foresee that, passing from concession to concession,

socialist-collectivism will end by mingling with the democratic

radicalism of the more advanced factions of the bourgeoisie — and will

never find the time and season for the realization of its dreams.

The immediate responsibilities have terrified it; the haste to arrive

and to accomplish, the obsession to be practical, have pushed it back

towards the outdated forms of the old political democracy it had once

violently divorced; and so its task is finished!

Just the opposite is true for anarchist-communism. It remains faithful

to its original tradition and to its understanding of the meaning of

progress, of which it is, without a doubt, in the economic, political

and moral field, the final and most formidable expression.

We have seen, in the economic field, how it denies that the conquest of

observation, research and collective labour may be privately

appropriated. Everything that has been produced, is being produced, and

will be produced by everybody’s thought and labour, belongs to

everybody. And, of all that has been accumulated during the centuries

and generations to enable humanity to survive in its perennial struggle

against the adverse forces of nature, anarchist-communism wants to

destroy only those barriers that prevent the great majority of people,

who are also the most deserving, from enjoying it freely: All that

everybody’s genius and labour have created in pain must be the source

and the means of existence and enjoyment for everybody.

Thus, having established that private property is the main cause of

economic dependence and of the political and moral submission of the

great majority to the little but fraudulent minority of hoarders, and,

having established that common ownership of all means of production and

exchange is the main condition for the return of mankind to justice, to

brotherhood and liberty, all of which had been banished by the ferocious

rivalries of class interests; anarchist criticism boldly faces the

political and moral problems that have plagued and frustrated scholars

and philosophers up to the first half of the nineteenth century:

“According to what principles will it be possible, without offence to

equality, justice and liberty, to regulate the participation of everyone

in the indispensable task of production?”: “According to what principles

will it be possible, without offence to equality, justice and liberty,

to regulate the participation of everyone in the satisfaction of

needs?”.

Anarchism rejects the arrogant claim of capital (which is, in itself,

unproductive) to gain, rent and profit, and disapproves of the naive

reliance of labour (which is an unavoidable necessity and indispensable

condition for the preservation and development of life) on remuneration

and wages. And, considering this difficult phenomenon that is life, it

has developed the notion that the rights of both the individual and the

community find their consecration and their most secure protection in

the full triumph of equality, justice and of freedom.

The organism which lives can have but one aspiration: to attain its full

development in the most favourable environment possible (and the

economic-levelling revolution will have opened it for him). It has also

only one function: to transform into active energies, useful to it as

well as to others, the strength that its own work and the work of

co-operating others will have contributed to its rising from the most

elementary forms to the highest forms. Hence: the spontaneous

participation of everyone in the task of production according to their

energy and abilities; the free and unlimited sharing of everyone in

satisfactions and pleasures; the indisputable solidarity of interests

among the inhabitants of the redeemed city; the absolute uselessness of

coercive power; the disappearance of privilege and exploitation; the end

of slavery and authority; the autonomy of the individual within free

social groupings! This will be anarchy!

Here, in short, is the progressive series. It reproduces every trait of

its preceding period, but at the same time it carries in its womb the

plus — the economic and moral relations of the new society, which, from

the successful events of its initial liberation, will generate more

advanced and civilized forms of the freedom it has won.

Chapter 5. Anarchist-Communism and Individualism

This conclusion is so far from being rash that it is shared, more or

less sincerely, by even the most qualified exponents of

socialist-collectivism. In addition to Morgari, who, as we have seen,

admits that socialist-collectivism represents a lower stage in social

evolution than anarchist-communism, there is no other apostle of

socialism who, when pressed, would not be willing to call himself a

communist[40], even if, in so doing, he forgets that every premise

implies a deduction and that only anarchism can correspond to the

economic premise of communism.

No, if we pay attention to the text of the Merlino interview, and, if we

remember his repeated criticisms of collectivism, and remember the

cordial antipathy he has persistently expressed for the programme and

action of the Socialist Party, we would have to conclude that he too

would agree with our theoretical deductions. In fact, he bases his

judgments and funereal prophecies more upon the outward manifestations

of anarchism ‘as a movement’, rather than on the essential substance of

anarchist doctrine.

We think this irremediably undermines his own thesis.

For Merlino to be right, it would be necessary to conclude that the

doctrine which has the greater content of logic, of truth, of progress,

of future, is fated to perish ignominiously from starvation, while the

other, with the florid complexion of a sudden — too sudden — growth

(pars major saepe pejor [the greater part is often the worst part], as

old Seneca used to say), the one cuddling the worms of the most putrid

conventionalisms and the most absurd contradictions, is fated to

survive.

And Merlino, who is an intelligent man, knows that this hypothesis is

worse than nonsense: it is a downright aberration.

---

One, among others, of Merlino’s arguments deserves special

consideration: “ The anarchist movement is divided by the internal

struggle between individualists and organizationalists. The latter

cannot find an organization compatible with anarchist principles; the

former, after the idea of reprisal, which had been the soul of anarchist

action, ceased to exist, cannot find a manner of acting, and cannot

exist without the organization they strive to reject” .

This statement by Merlino contains something downright absurd: it is

that the soul of anarchist action was the notion of reprisal and that

this has ceased to exist.

The soul of anarchist action (and no one has understood this better than

Merlino in the good old times, when he believed in anarchy and anarchism

and was proud to suffer persecution for his faith and with us throughout

the jails of Europe) is not reprisal, which is a mere episode and whose

causes are far from having ceased to exist. The soul of the anarchist

movement is the ardent desire for a society of free and equal people,

which the anarchists know cannot be attained without the inevitably

violent destruction of the existing order of things, without the social

revolution which, in spite of their limited forces, they foster by their

criticism of the iniquitous existing social order and by their work in

educating the masses to a clear comprehension of the economic and

political organisms responsible for their bondage. In supporting the

masses against the abuses of capitalism and State as well as against the

superstitions and prejudices in which the tyranny of the bourgeoisie

finds its most powerful stronghold, they are preparing them for the

revolution which is the indispensable way to the final redemption of the

proletariat.

There are, along with these previously mentioned absurdities, some

shallow truths in Merlino’s statement; among them, the disagreement

between anarchists, so-called ‘individualist’ anarchists, and the

presumed ‘organizational’ anarchists. But does this disagreement have a

really important basis, or is it only the result of incomprehension and

equivocation, caused more often by inaction and indolence than by bad

faith, and which hard experience is bound to dispel?

What is anarchism by definition?

It is the struggle for a condition of society where the only link among

individuals is solidarity, basically the solidarity of material and

moral interests, which leads to the elimination of the vicious daily

competitions between individuals and among peoples. (A very sad era, and

one that, except during periods of famine or of love, the so-called

inferior animals have surpassed a long time ago, to our shame.) And it

calls upon them to unite for a greater and more noble struggle against

the adverse forces of nature in order to realize superior, more complete

and more secure forms of social life.

The condition and character of solidarity are spontaneity and freedom.

But whereas the bourgeois regime is the domination of a majority over

the minority, we aspire to realize the autonomy of the individual within

the freedom of association, the independence of his thought, of his

life, of his development, of his destiny, freedom from violence, from

caprice and from the domination of the majority, as well as of various

minorities; and when we refer to libertarian communism, a term which our

descendants will take care to amend, we are trying to find an economic

ubi consistam [where should I stand] in which this political autonomy of

the individual may find an enlightened and happy reality.

It seldom happens that our comrades stop to consider this dual aspect,

economic and political, of every institution in all the eras of history.

---

Is property unstable, wandering, fortuitous — like crops and herds,

exposed to all kinds of dangers? Then it can be protected only by god —

the god who thunders in the storm and shines in the sun and glitters in

the stars, which are the compass of the tribes migrating into the

unknown. Only god commands, or in his name, the high priest, the

prophet, the wizard; that is, hieratic despotism.

Does property present itself as omnipotent. legalistic, exacting,

sanctum jus [the letter of the law] even if summa injuria [the greatest

injustice]? Then the political advocates of this economic regime will

require harsh laws, general dependence upon a single supreme power,

which will long for expansion and colonies, which will live for war, and

will be forced to carry it to the last corners of the world: this will

be empire, or better. Roman imperialism, arrogant, voracious,

insatiable.

Is it aristocratic? Then the economy, the whole economy of the middle

ages will flow into the political organization of feudalism and serfdom

with the inevitable servitude of the massses.

Will property free itself from the thick net of bondage, tributes,

barriers, frontiers, with no other limit but the competition of other

economic forces, equally unchecked? Then, the corresponding political

regime can only be the modern State, the constitutional and

representative regime where, with god’s grace confined to the attic and

the nation’s will under its feet, the bourgeoisie, empowered by its sole

ownership of the national wealth, will seize the reins of the State,

make and enforce all the laws by every means.

Will the common ownership of all the means of production and exchange be

the economic substratum of the social life of the future?

Having realized, through the fundamental solidarity of interests, the

suspension of the rivalries which have torn mankind asunder for

centuries, the first experiment of a society understood to mean a union

of individuals united by the same interests for the same purpose’) will

set as its corresponding goal, the first opportunity to realize a social

order, one that has been looked for in vain up to this day by the wisdom

of legislators, the shrewdness of laws, or the violence of the police —

in sum the uselessness of the State with its coercive and monstrous

hierarchies. And then we shall have anarchy.

Between communism (of course, understood, not as another aspect of the

State, compelled to reproduce in itself all the iniquities of the

preceding governments, but as a free, united co-operation of all people

for production) and individualism (in the sense that no institutional

authority, neither that of the majority nor of a minority, can interfere

with the development and freedom of the individual or in any way

diminish his autonomy) there is no contradiction, no incompatibility.

Communism is simply the;foundation by which the individual has the

opportunity to regulate himself and carry out his functions.

They are two terms which complement each other.

Every anarchist who is faithful to his denial of any privilege,

especially of the most fundamental and nefarious of all privileges, that

of the private ownership of the means of production and exchange, and

who, for this reason, aspires to realize an economic regime where land,

mines, factories and every other Labour or exchange tool, all means of

production, will be indivisible common property, is, in his economic

aspirations, a communist. Likewise, if he is faithful to his denial of

authority and supports a regime which will realize the complete

independence and autonomy of the individual from any economic, political

and moral boss, he is inevitably an individualist.

Antithesis? No, integration.

Anarchy is not a metaphysic abstraction. The anarchist idea did not

spring alive, complete, perfect from the minds of Babeuf, Proudhon, or

Bakunin, the way Minerva, according to the myth, is said to have sprung

from Jove’s brain. It has budded, grown, ripened, slowly and painfully

by the experience of centuries, during which the common people have

besought from time to time, god, the State, the law, or universal

suffrage to give them a good master, a good judge, a little piece of

bread, a little compassion, a little rest, a little light and love —

always in vain.

As their trust in gods and demigods was fading, under continual mocking

and repulsions, into the twilight of disenchantment and defeat; as their

strength was revealing itself in their heroic and glories, but

unfortunate struggles, and as they were gaining solidarity — instinctive

at first, then through sacrifices and disaster — the common people came

to understand that the faith they had spent in vain on the threshold of

temples, thrones, parliaments and masters was to be revived in their own

right and in their own strength. They began to believe in themselves and

could see themselves freed from their chains.

They alone knew how to create wealth; and they alone, with the

inexhaustible fertility of their labour and sweat, were seeking,

protecting, supporting life... for the others, for those who, conceited

as they were useless, were degrading it in idleness and orgy.

Since the social wealth was growing and increasing only because of and

in proportion to this patient, courageous and necessary human effort;

the idle, the indolent and the poltroons, many and superfluous, had no

right to that wealth. Thus the propertied class came to be considered by

the common people, or at least by the peoples vanguard, not only as

iniquitous and shameful, but also as a monstrously parasitic, hateful

and expensive class, from which it was urgent to be freed.

This judgment was taking form early, even while the bourgeoisie was

still unsure on its newly-conquered throne and needed the common people

in order to defeat the aristocracy’s repeated attempts to regain its

lost power. It was ready to pay for that alliance by acknowledging the

right and the competence of the people to select their own rulers, even

from those outside the dubious sanctions of divine right.

But whoever has the political competence to choose his own rulers is, by

implication, also competent to do without them, especially when the

causes of economic enmity are uprooted. Likewise the bitterness, hatred,

discord and disorder that branch out from that fatal trunk must yield

before the ever more conscious and widespread solidarity that renders

the role of the state and its hierarchies totally superfluous, and

confers on everybody the full consciousness and the incontestable right

of self-rule.

Thus, in the mind of the proletarian vanguard, the rejection of private

property became enmeshed with and completed by the rejection of

authority in all its varied and unfortunate forms. At the same time, the

first libertarian aspiration based on experience and critical thought

was asserted as a doctrine which foresaw libertarian communism as the

indispensable condition for the development and security of the

individual’s autonomy in a free society. “ Isn’t it so?” If it were so,

there would be no disagreement. But in the real world the

interpretations of communism as well as of individualism, are quite

different and arbitrary, varying without end, a confusion! “

Clarification is needed, and then agreement will find its guarantees,

its sources, and its basis in an honest and mutual comprehension. Shall

we try?”

Let us begin by making an uncontested point: anarchy is the antithesis

of authority. Among anarchists, at least, there is no possibility of

disagreement on this point.

And now, let us ask ourselves if communists, on the one hand, and

individualists, on the other, can deviate from this fundamental

definition to the point of forgetting it, placing themselves against

this first tenet, against their own conscience, against all the

positions it implies, and finally against themselves.

In the field of economics, individualists are inconceivable.

We must bear in mind that work is an unavoidable necessity, because

nature does not yield the abundance of its products without the strong

and productive grip of labour. And since it is necessary to work in

order to live, and the act of living physically is the indispensable

condition for attaining the higher life of knowledge, beauty, harmony;

work must be performed with all possible economy, without pain, without

strain, without the humiliations and degradation which are now its sad

fate and paltry wage.

If the sheer craving for speculation, large interest rates, fast and

fabulous profit, has prompted the bourgeoisie to adopt mechanical means

of production, substituting, wherever it was possible, the steel-lunged

machine operating at a rhythmic tireless pace, for the frail arms of

man; it is certainly believable that when production — instead of being

at the mercy of a bunch of entrenched pirates, who have sunk their

ferocious claws into the land, its crops and herds, its mines and

treasures, its factories, railroads and ships — is steered with more

concern and eagerness by all the workers, arisen from vile servitude to

the full consciousness of their worth and destiny, discoveries,

inventions, new economy of physical energy in production will be gained,

and more of the day will be left for scientific, technical, literary, or

aesthetic culture.

Is it conceivable that where it is possible to obtain maximum

satisfaction with minimum effort, some eccentric will persist in

choosing to live outside of society and, terrified by the fear of social

contact and the tyranny of regimentation, he will want to do everything

by himself, only for himself: house, clothes, library, cooking? And

under the illusion of living individualistically, he will sacrifice the

twenty-four hours of each day (which would not be enough) for the

satisfaction of the most elementary needs, without taking a minute for

recreation, rest or respite?

There have always been eccentrics, and most probably they will also

exist in an anarchist regime... but such a society will have no reason

for apprehension, since it will be able to provide odd and eccentric

persons, who are generally intelligent, a place to live in and a work

space with all the instruments and tools for study, observation,

research and work they might want to perform in their disdainful and

misanthropic solitude.

But this is not an issue involving economic individualism; a limb, a

member cannot, except under pain of immediate death, be cut off from the

main organism.

The only economic individualism we know is the one erected upon the

private ownership of the means of production and exchange; ie, the

bourgeois regime, with which we are now so blessed and from which we are

trying to find refuge and safety in communism and anarchy, by means of

the social revolution.

In theory I do not find any other individualist tendency...

“Bravo! And what about those who proclaim the inevitability of power?

And those who yell that tomorrow, if urged by need, they would, without

a moment’s hesitation, snatch from a mother’s hand the last bite of

bread meant for her hungry child?”

Some of these I have heard also, but I am sorry to have to admit that I

was not impressed at all.

I know, and you know as well, that whatever we do, however much we try

to sharpen our insight and our wisdom in order to reach the new society

— redeemed from the master and exploitation, from the state and

oppression, from superstition and humiliation — and want to be worthy of

it, we succeed only to a very small degree. We are the offshoots of the

bourgeois trunk, and we carry its vicious and malignant stigma. At best,

we carry inside us only the intention, the aim to be better, to wish

that those who surround us, suffering, unhappy, wild, or wicked, should

be better off.

But, to these people, whom we love and to whom we would like to give our

most serious and assuring trust, we can offer only a magnificent profile

of the free society, drawn from hope, imagination, and some positive

logical deduction, rather than a certain mathematical reality. Besides,

we could not produce a more accurate and complete architecture without

being arbitrary and ridiculous. The most ideal construction might appear

shabby or even grotesque to our descendants, who would have to live in

it — and who will be able to build their own houses, suitable to their

own needs, according to their own taste, worthy of the more advanced and

superior civilization in which they will live.

Our task is more modest and even more peremptory. We must leave them a

clear ground, without the gloomy ruins, the filthy jails, the greedy

privileges, the predatory monopolies, the eunuch fears, and the poisoned

prejudices among which we roam like shadows in pain. We must leave them

an earth clear of churches, barracks, tribunals, brothels and, above

all, clear of ignorance and fear, which preserve these establishments

much more faithfully than the sanctions of laws and police forces

We can look at the future only through the prism of the present, and our

vision is obscured by the muddy reality that surrounds us. So, is it

surprising that any one of the poor wretches who have known foodless

days, sleepless nights and the bitterness of ever-increasing unsatisfied

desires, should suppose that even in anarchy the same hunger may exist

that turns the citizen of the twentieth century into a savage

troglodyte, a blind puppet of his bestial instincts? But, if tomorrow

people should still slaughter one another for a crust of bread, this one

single truth, however sad, would have to be admitted: that not only have

we failed to make the social revolution, but we have also turned many

centuries backward. And then certain survivals could be explained.

However my experience — and perhaps even better for you, your own

experience — tells me that certain big words, uttered pour epater le

bourgeois, to stun the clumsy crowd, are generally contradicted by the

whole activity of these innocuous matamoros,[41] who know, perhaps more

profoundly than anybody else, the satisfaction of having restored the

smile on the lips of their suffering neighbour, by offering him their

own piece of bread.

It is seldom, in fact, that the wealthy give more than crumbs, while the

chronicles of poverty have never told of a strong healthy but poor man

who has snatched a crust of bread from a child. Generally speaking, the

poor who have only rags and torments, who know only hunger and pain,

give their penny without regret for any worthy cause and are inclined to

bend mercifully and delicately over any anguish or wound.

Only the poor give in such a manner — by impulse, with generosity and

gentle kindness. At least, I have seen them this way during my whole

life, always. All the rest is sophistry — original, witty, stunning at

times — but sheer sophistry.

No less sophistical is the tendency of those who, under the comfortable

cloak of anarchist individualism, would welcome the idea of domination.

They stretch Rabelais’s aphorism: fais ce que veux! beyond its

reasonable meaning, and they ignore that he did not suggest his merry, “

Do what you wish” to a few rich people or loafers, but to everybody,

with no exceptions.[42] He was certain that nothing but co-operation and

harmony can result from the free play of initiatives, attitudes and

multiform energies (like the natural cohesion of the cells of an

organism, vigorously carrying out their unceasing function of nourishing

and renewing tissues and organs. Thus, they keep the torch of life

ignited, with no incentive other than their chemistry). But the heralds

of domination presume to practice individualism in the name of their

ego, over the obedient, resigned, or inert ego of others.[43]

And against such pretence — which might encounter more than one obstacle

at the time of its practice — we would have nothing to oppose, if it did

not claim from anarchy its right, its investiture, its justification.

No! In anarchy only one domination is justifiable, legitimate and

desirable, and it is the domination each one exerts on himself. To

exceed this is authority, command, despotism and, as anarchy is by

definition absence of authority, anyone who calls for or sustains

domination, that is authority, places himself, by his own action,

against and outside anarchy, without the bother of excommunication or

anathema by councils or popes.

We do not excommunicate anybody. We acknowledge anybody’s right to seek

power if he has a taste for it, to obtain it if he can, and to wield it

if there are eunuchs who submit to it. We only find the disguise unfair

and grotesque. But what pleasure can there be in masking such desire — a

devout, perhaps perpetual desire for power and authority — as anarchism?

Alas! Fundamentally there is always the soul of the slave who despairs

of emancipation, who carries in his memory and, even more, in his scars,

the experience of his suffering, a tragedy in which he sees only two

characters — himself, chained to the millenarian column of serfdom, and,

in front of him, his master, dull, herculean, bestial, scourging and

choking him.

When we mention to our peasants — the old ones, especially — the radiant

hypothesis of a brotherly society of equals, where they will be able to

rest, their women be able to smile and their children can grow-free,

enlightened and strong, the old peasants shake their heads perplexed.

Their look, which had been for a moment enlivened by hope, fades and

vanishes as they murmur, “There have always been rich and poor, and

there always will be”. And because being rich or poor is the fatal

crossroad of life, they don’t eat, and they yoke their women and

children into a servitude even worse than their own in order to save the

few coins which, they ingeniously hope (a hope that will die with the

dream in a squalid hospital bed), will place them some day on the side

of the blessed possidentes, the wealthy and from where they will, in

turn, exert the same savage exploitation of which they are now the

victims.

They cannot realize that the master does not have to exist. In the same

way, the proponents of power are unable to conceive of a society without

government. Called to choose between being governed and governing, they

dream of aligning themselves with the latter, not now, because nobody in

government has any use for them, but when anarchy has come into

existence, when each one will be able to do anything he pleases. They

suppose, of course, that the masses, having rejected the refined and

progressive political wisdom of the bourgeoisie, will want to submit to

their will and to their rod — in vain, if the social revolution has

prevailed and anarchy has been realized. One can only smile and go on!

Yet, we have met some who were able to cover their sophisms with a less

vulgar appearance and with more ingenious tricks — they object that

personalities emerge from the masses, who are endowed by nature with an

extraordinarily powerful mind, or are favoured with special means of

education and learning, keenness in study, perseverance in research. As

a result they succeed in penetrating enigmas, in discovering natural

laws which were unknown before, drawing from them applications of great

and uncontested value for the advancement of civilization as well as for

the well-being of mankind. They succeed in grasping a truth which

surpasses not only all usual and normal knowledge, but also that which,

pertains to the specialized technology of a particular branch of

learning, becoming the teachers of it, pioneers, masters, if you please,

because no one else can compete with them or share in their eminence.

When Galileo, for instance, or Pascal, or Newton enuniciated the law

concerning universal gravitation, the equilibrium of fluids, or the

immobility of the sun at the centre of its system with the Earth and

other planets circling around it and reflecting its light, where could

they find competent, conscientious and worthy opponents? — With the

exception of the Holy Inquisition, which has the special, unenviable

task and mission of defending the dogmatic absurdity of the Genesis

against the rights of reason.

We are compelled to believe in and to swear in verba magistri [in the

words of the master] to the truths they have revealed and which we

cannot verify nor contest. Isn’t this, in many branches of the human

knowledge, an absolute and incontestable authority?

The authority of genius? Well, one is almost tempted to accede. But, if,

according to Bovio (and so far no one has said it with more seriousness

and clarity), genious is the highest degree of synthesis with which

human thought discovers truth in an original manner and in remote

relationships, how much will this synthesis (ie, the method which in

philosophy as well as in chemistry proceeds from causes to effects, from

principles to consequences, from the elements to the whole) owe to

analysis and to those who, with their labour, with their persistence

and, equally, with their intuition, have collected the elements,

discovered and arranged the causes, established the fundamental

principles from which the new discovery has taken its start, and without

which the new relationship could never have been grasped, nor the

superior truth been able to reveal and assert itself? How much does

Marconi owe Galvani, Volta, Righi, Hertz, Maxwell, Crookes, for his

wireless telegraphy?[44]

The thought, which uncovers a new truth in an original manner and in a

remote relationship, has arisen from the thought, the study, the work,

the pain, the tragic disenchantment of all those who took the first

steps on the harsh road of research, who dissipated the first clouds of

darkness, who overcame the first and most arduous obstacles, boldly

challenging mockery, contempt, the angry conservatism of the vulgar, and

the even more furious hatred of the entrenched interests, and who, in so

doing, opened a gleam into the future.

Who can say, that he, alone, equipped exclusively with his limited

knowledge, has gone very far on the steep path of progress? That he has

created something from nothing, without using the work of his

forerunners, the pioneers who proceeded him?

So, it appears that the right to command begins to lose some of its

absolute and autocratic character. At the very least, we are on the

level of a constitutional regime!

Here again — everything belongs to everybody

But here we do not intend to deal with genius, the debate would take us

too far.

Our subject is more modest: does the person who has a wealth of

knowledge unknown to most people exert a real and exclusive domination

over ignorant laymen? Or does he not?

Our answer is, categorically and without hesitation, no! Even if it be

Galileo, Pascal, or Newton, who in the darkness of past centuries raised

the torch of hope, of truth, of redemption.

Against the biblical tradition of creation, which claimed that the Earth

is the centre of the universe, Galileo affirmed and proved (and his

demonstration has since then been validated by many clear proofs which

are now accessible to the unskilled in astronomy) that the sun is the

immobile centre of our planetary system, and that Earth is only one of

many satellites which revolve around the sun at a rhythm that can now be

calculated exactly to the second.

Now! Either Galileo has convinced me that his theory is right, and, if

so, he has ceased to dominate me because I am able to understand and

verify it — and today, even with the help of data and means that were

not known in his time. Then, as far as the relationship between the sun

and its satellites is concerned, there is such complete agreement

between Galileo and me — pardon the comparison that it excludes any form

of hierarchy, supremacy, or domination.

Or Galileo has not convinced me. And then, as far as I am concerned, the

sun continues to revolve as it did in the time of Joshua, who allowed

himself the pleasure of stopping it in order to give him time to destroy

A-do-ni-ze-dec, king of Jerusalem. The Earth stands still (and it must

stand still — as some peasants I was trying to persuade to the Galilean

theory used to say — because otherwise all of us would go upside down),

and the Bible and Moses are right.

But, then, what kind of power would Galileo have over my belies, my

ideas and my education, if I remain unmoved in my prejudice, and if he

hasn’t the slightest influence or mental jurisdiction over me? I’d

remain a stranger, outside his dominion.

And, sadly, that such is the case is proved by the general allegiance,

(thanks to the ignorance and superstition cultivated with relish among

the common people by those inseparable accomplices, the State and the

church) that the great majority continues to pay to Genesis and the

Mosaic tradition. And by the rather thin ranks of suspicious

‘characters’ and ‘reprobates’ who accept and trust Galileo’s scientific

theory.

One might, with some success, carry the debate into a wider field; ie,

the relationship between those who discover a new scientific approach to

industry and life, itself, and those who, with the necessary

intelligence and co-operation, make possible its realization and

benefit. We arrive then at the conclusion of the equivalence of

functions, which we have mentioned before, and in which the sources and

the security of libertarian equality are found.

But we feel that we have spent too much time arguing about an objection

that refutes itself automatically from the anarchist standpoint the

rejection of all authority.

Yet, in our opinion, Merlino sees the disintegration, the agony of the

anarchist movement, not in these quarrels, but in the struggle between

the organizationalists and the individualists on the grounds of

immediate action, and in the two trends’ respective internal

contradictions:“... the former, the organizationalists, are unable to

find a form of organization compatible with their anarchist principles”

; the latter, the individualists,

“.. with the failure of the idea of reprisal, which had been the soul of

anarchist action, cannot find a way to action and cannot exist without

the organization they strive to reject” .

That the organizationalists cannot find a form of organization

compatible with their anarchist principles is perfectly natural and

logical, and, on this point, we are in total agreement with Merlino.

But, we do not understand why the individualists cannot exist without an

organization, since, according to Merlino himself, an organization

compatible with anarchist principles is not to be found.

Still, it seems to us that a distinction should be made concerning this

designation of organizationalist anarchists, when we consider the

frequent statements and the practical attitudes they express and adopt.

Organizationalists are, if we do not err, those anarchists who deem it

desirable, necessary and possible to organize systematically, on the

basis of previously agreed programmes, as a political party,

distinguishable from all other proletarian parties, and able, whenever

the opportunity appears, to make itself heard in bargainings, alliances

and coalitions that might be suggested by the necessities of the moment,

the circumstances of the struggle against the ruling class, against any

intolerable misdeed that might have occurred.

Other anarchists call themselves organizationalists, not only because

they promote the specific establishment of a political party, but also

because they believe that the basis of anarchist movement should be the

existing labour organizations and, even more, those that would arise

under their auspices, with their stimulus, and have an open

revolutionary character.

To these two trends, which differ only by degree, and whose action

should always be collective in character, Merlino — if we do not

misunderstand his thought — opposes those anarchists who prefer

individual activity both in the field of propaganda and revolutionary

action.

Modestly, but firmly, we are opposed to those anarchists who call

themselves organizationalists, whether they wish to organize an

anarchist party politically, or whether, in order to strengthen it, they

aim to base it on labour organizations as they exist now, or on other

ones they might organize that correspond more to their aims.

A political party, any political party, has its programme; ie, its

constitutional charter: in assemblies of group representatives it has

its parliament: in its management, its boards and executive committees,

it has its government. In short, it is a graduated superstructure of

bodies a true hierarchy, no matter how disguised, in which all stages

are connected by a single bond, discipline, which punishes infractions

with sanctions that go from censure to excommunication, to expulsion.

The anarchist party cannot help but be a party like the others. Worse! A

government like any other government, enslaved, like all the others, by

its constitution which, like all other constitutions, laws and codes,

would be overtaken, on the day after its promulgation, by events and

needs, by the pressing necessities of the struggle. A government, absurd

and illegitimate like the others, based on delegation and

representation, though it would be only too clear and obvious,

especially from the experience of the anarchists, that every delegate

and deputy could represent only his own ideas and feelings, not those of

his constituents, which are infinitely variable on any subject. A

government, intrusive and arbitrary, like any other government, because

its preoccupation with directorial responsibility will, at every

development, in every stage of its hierarchy, push it to adopt — always

moved, of course, by the most noble and generous purpose — provisions,

decisions, measures to which the card-carrying members will submit for

the sake of discipline, even though they may be contrary to their

opinion and their interest. A government, all-absorbing like any other,

because it wants and has an organ for every function, of little or no

use, but through which everybody must pass, against which all

initiatives will have to collide, and before which all original and

unorthodox projects will appear suspicious, if not outright subversive.

Is it necessary to do this or that for propaganda? A committee exists

for that purpose and will take care of it. Is it urgent to do this or

that for solidarity? What does this appropriate committee exist for, if

not for that purpose? Is there an initiative for affirmation or action?

Isn’t there a committee charged with these tasks and mustn’t you go

through it, under the threat of repudiation, blame, or punishment for

lack of discipline?

Many who have been with an organization of any kind have had the bitter

occasion to watch its indolence and its negligence. They end up doubting

whether the organization is set up to defend the workers and support

their aspirations, wondering whether it isn’t at the critical moment, an

obstacle or impediment, instead. They can tell you if we are

exaggerating.

It would not help to object that here we deal with anarchists, selected

people, who know what they want, who are able to choose their road, and

who have the good legs and strength to climb it. Like the members of all

the vanguard parties, anarchists are children of bourgeois society,

carrying its stigma, and, understandably, the crowds that join them are

not better and expect the maximum result from the least effort. We have

been forced into too many compromise arrangements to be willing to seek

more. As we accept wages, as we pay for the house we rent, our

revolutionary claims and our anarchist aspirations notwithstanding, we

recognize and we legitimize in the most concrete and painful way,

capital, rent, profit — the tribute that our exploiters impose on our

labour and on our despised sweat.

Compromise, renunciation, betrayal! but there is no other way out; the

yoke is on our necks and our hands are tied.

But, wherever possible, we must avoid, we must shun, we must reject

compromise and renunciation. We must be ourselves, according to the

strict character outlined by our faith and our convictions. These

certainly would not draw forth a good omen for the libertarian future if

we could not proceed on our own, without the proxies and the tutors,

which are inseparable from the notion of organization, be it either the

political organization of the anarchist party or the organization of the

craft and trade unions.

Chapter 6. Workers’ Organization

“Against the workers’ organizations, also?”

It is not a question of pro or con. The anarchist movement and the

labour movement follow two parallel lines, and it has been geometrically

proven that parallels never meet.

It is presumed that through experience, research, learning, meditation,

the anarchist, at least, has reached the conviction that the social

malaise, in general and, in particular, poverty, serfdom and the

involuntary, imposed ignorance of the working people who produce

everything that gives life its fullness and the splendour they will

never enjoy, but which is and will be enjoyed by those who have never

done a day’s work anywhere) derive from a primitive and fundamental

monopoly — from the hoarding, by a greedy and cunning minority, of the

land, fields and mines and their products; of the factories and forges,

where the earth’s products are transformed into the elements of life,

security, and pleasure; of the railroads and ships, carrying such

products to all parts of the world, there to be exchanged for other

goods or shining gold, which is the tool of the wealth, power, and of

the tyranny which the privileged minority practices with impunity over

the rest of mankind. The church consecrates this usurpation as a special

blessing of god; the State legitimizes it in its parliaments, codes,

tribunals, protected by its laws, police and armies. And hypocritical

morality surrounds this thievish hoarding with religious devotion.

The anarchist impugns this monopoly, but since a mere denial is of no

use, he strikes with all his might at the roots of the accursed tree,

trying to cut it down and destroy it together with its branches and its

fruits: everything belongs to everybody. No more private ownership of

means of production and exchange, nor of any other institution that

guards the injustice and the inequality, which are the inevitable issue

of that initial privilege.

And since our good burghers, even those who pretend philanthropy redeems

usury, will never stop being exploiters or give back what they have

unjustly taken; the anarchists, including those who abhor violence and

bloodshed, are compelled to conclude that the expropriation of the

ruling class will have to be accomplished by the violent social

revolution. And they dedicate themselves to this, seeking to prepare the

proletariat with every means of education, propaganda and action at

their disposal.

Do not forget and do not delude yourselves! The proletariat is still a

mass, not a class. If it were a class, if it had a clear, full

consciousness of its rights, of its function, of its strength, the

egalitarian revolution would be a thing of the past, freeing us from

these melancholy and bitter musings.

The great mass is bourgeois non natione sed moribus [not by birth but by

custom] — not by origin, for nothing was found in its cradle, but by

habit, superstition, prejudice and by interest, too, because it feels

its own interests are tied to and dependent upon the masters’, who,

therefore, become providence itself, providing job, wages, bread, life

for father and children. And for job, life and security, the great mass

is grateful to the master who has always existed and will exist forever:

blessed be he — and blessed be the institutions, the laws, the policemen

who defend and protect him.

In other words, while the anarchist makes a sharp, severe positive

diagnosis, and sinks the scalpel deep to remove the main source of the

social malaise at its root (not hiding the long and painful duration of

the treatment) the great mass remains empirical. It does not contest

property, let alone reject it; it wishes only it were less greedy. It

does not repudiate the master; it desires only that he be better. It

does not reject the State, law, tribunals and the police; it wants only

a fatherly State, just laws and honest courts, police that are more

humane.

We do not argue about whether property is greedy or not, if masters are

good or bad, if the State is paternal or despotic, if laws are just or

unjust, if courts are fair or unfair, if the police are merciful or

brutal. When we talk about property, State, masters, government, laws,

courts and police, we say only that we don’t want any of them. And we

pursue with passion, patience and faith, a society incompatible with

these monstrosities. And meanwhile, with all the means we can muster, we

contest and oppose their arbitrary and atrocious functions, quite often

sacrificing our freedom, our well-being, even our loved ones for many

long years, sometimes forever.

As you can see, we follow different roads, and it is unlikely that we

will ever meet.

---

However, labour organizations are a fact; they exist. And even it their

rusty and blind conservatism is an obstacle and oftentimes a danger,

they deserve our consideration and careful attention.

If we find ourselves facing an ignorant child, a devout woman, or a

blockhead who doesn’t see, or doesn’t want to see, we do not react with

derision or contempt to the immaturity of one, the ingenuousness of the

other, nor to the blindness of most.

We treat them with the same kindness and assist them all with care,

because we are proud to uncover the shining metal hidden beneath the

rude and rash exterior, to transform a primitive being into a person who

has value, individually and socially, because we know above all the task

we have chosen is too important to neglect any energy that might

contribute to the success of our ideal and, finally, because we know

that our own freedom, security, and individual well-being would be

precarious and ephemeral — even in an egalitarian society — if they did

not find their basis and protection in the freedom and welfare of those

around us. If freedom is knowledge, if well-being is solidarity; then

the educational work to be performed among proletarians, organized or

not appears not only as a pressing need but one which cannot be delayed

“Well then, would you be willing to join any organizations? To remain

outside them prevents you from exerting any influence or action ”

Certainly! We should enrol in labour organizations whenever we find it

useful to our struggle and wherever it is possible to do so under well

defined pledges and reservations.

Pledge number one! As we were anarchists outside the organization so we

shall remain anarchists inside it. First reservation! We shall never be

part of the leadership; we shall be always in the opposition and never

assume any responsibility in running the union.

This is for us an elementary position of coherence.

It has been firmly established that the labour organizations, those that

are managed by somnolent conservatives, as well as the red ones led by

the so-called revolutionary syndicalists, recognize and consent to the

existing economic system in all its manifestations and relations. They

limit their demands to immediate and partial improvements, high

salaries, shorter hours, old-age pensions, unemployment benefits, social

security, laws protecting women’s and children’s working conditions,

factory inspections, etc, etc... They are the main purpose for which the

organization was established, and it is clear that an anarchist cannot

assume the responsibility for sponsoring aspirations of this kind. He

knows that every conquest of such improvements is deceitful and

inconsistent, since, in the increased cost of food, rent and clothes,

the worker, as a consumer will pay more to live no matter how much more

he earns as a producer. No comrade of ours, therefore, can assume the

management of such an organization, nor any role implying any solidarity

whatever with its programme or action, without denying all his anarchist

and revolutionary convictions, without aligning himself with the

reformist crowds whose spearhead he pretends to be.

Our place is in opposition, continually demonstrating with all possible

vigilance and criticism the vanity of such aims, the futility of such

efforts, the disappointing results; relentlessly pointing out, in

contrast, the concrete and integral emancipation that could be achieved

quickly and easily with different ways and other means.

The outcome of every agitation, of every union struggle would confirm

the foresight and the fairness of our criticism. Even if it is not easy

to hope that an organization might soon follow our suggestions, it is

nevertheless believable that the more intelligent and bold among its

members would be inclined to favour our point of view. They would form a

nucleus ready to fight with passion in the struggles of the future,

attracting their fellow workers to shake the authority of their union

leaders.

“If you join an organization with ideas like this and mean to keep them,

you’ll be gagged and expelled as a provocateur at the first opportunity.

That is something you have had occasion to see not long ago.”[45]

That is why those of our comrades who undertake such an arduous task

must possess the qualities of seriousness, coherence, humility and great

patience that are required to gain, first the liking, then the esteem

and finally the trust of the best of their fellow workers. They must be

in the front line where there is danger; last in line always, where

there is ambition or persona] gain; they must be bitter opponents when

faced with deals and compromises that are inconsistent with their faith

and dignity as workers and revolutionists.

And if they fail, if they have to pack up and go, there will be no

regrets. They will have sown the good seed of independence, of

consciousness and of courage. Their work will be remembered and invoked

whenever leaders waver or manoeuver, whenever the hard, fruitless

struggle is followed by renewed pain and disillusionment, whenever the

fortunes of battle end in disaster for want of the boldness and

self-denial they always practiced.

The sympathy and the trust that go beyond the personal, into the action

and the ideal which inspired it; the sympathy and trust in revolutionary

action and in the anarchist ideal; the sympathy and trust which will end

by transforming themselves into passionate and persistent co-operation;

isn’t this all that we can expect from our modest but earnest work of

propaganda, education, and renovation?

We have no dogmatic pretence whatsoever. Modestly, we have said what we

think about a controversial question, conscious of the fact it has the

consent of a considerable number of comrades — and we have expressed it

in all sincerity without hate or contempt.

Furthermore, hate and contempt would be misplaced, since action, either

within or without a labour organization, should imply neither merit nor

demerit. Everyone should choose the ways, means, and field more suited

to his ability and preference.[46] In any case, it doesn’t seem to me

that this question involves elements of such disparity as to make

Merlino foresee the agony of anarchism.

We shall have to look for it elsewhere.

Chapter 7. Propaganda of the Deed

I am beginning to suspect that Merlino may see in the individual acts of

rebellion — rebellion against the church, against the State, against

property or morality — and in the iconoclasts who commit themselves to

them, almost always losing their freedom or their lives — the essential

source of disagreement and the insurmountable obstacle to a cordial and

productive understanding among the various tendencies of anarchism.

If that were the case, I would be very sorry... for a long series of

reasons.

Because, if I remember the disdainful and bitter attitude Merlino

assumed in Paris a quarter of a century ago against the ‘Intransigent

Groups’ (in these, side by side with some scoundrels who exploited the

fervour and generosity of some comrades and, in the name of anarchism,

thought only of piling up money for themselves, becoming capitalists as

greedy as all the others, sincere and courageous men were to be found

working only to provide adequate means for action — propaganda of the

deed — as it was then called. It is enough to remember Vittorio Pini[47]

was one of them); I also remember Merlino’s gesture, (which was

considered heroic and was certainly unusually courageous in that moment

of white terror) when he assumed the defence of Gaetano Bresci at his

trial in Milan, a task he performed with great dignity and determination

before a public cowed by the bullying police and their spies, the

insidious provocations of the prosecutor, and the stern admonishments of

an impatient judge.

For that gesture of courage, loyalty and honesty — a gesture that had to

be inspired, if not by a feeling of true political and moral solidarity,

certainly by a deep and sincere understanding of the causes which made

the Monza tragedy an act of vindication and retribution — I have in the

inmost recess of my heart the deepest gratitude and admiration for

Francesco Saverio Merlino.

The purity of Gaetano Bresci’s sacrifice must have told him something

that he could not reject.

I would regret it, too, because Saverio Merlino has such a wide

knowledge of history and the philosophy of history, as well as economy

and jurisprudence, that it must be sooner envied than equalled even

among the better informed. And therefore, he cannot separate the

individual act of rebellion from the political climate in which it

strikes, from the causes, remote or near, complex in any case, by which

it is almost fatalistically determined, from the particular psychology

of the medium Nemesis has chosen for its ends of atonement, reparation,

justice, from the consequence, from the admonitory impact it puts on

everybody’s memory and experience.

The church, of course, aborret a sanguine (abhors the spilling of blood)

and anathametizes any attempt... that doesn’t serve its interests and,

so, finds rewards, indulgence and beatifications for Dominic Guzman,

Clement and Ravaillac, for the Dragonnades and the St Barthelmys.[48]

The State sees only a criminal in anyone who breaks a law and, by

delivering him to a dozen bigots or butchers, is certain to have him

committed to the executioner, to the penitentiary, to hell in any case.

The conventionally-minded cry out contradictorily that “Human life is

sacred and inviolable, and whoever attacks it offends both divine and

human laws”; while they are fattening their wallets and their bellies

without the least scruple; condemning the helots toiling in the fields,

the factories and the mines to starvation, despair and early death,

their women to prostitution and their children to the gutter. Or else,

they push them over frontiers into monstrous slaughter tor the sake of a

killing in the stock market.

The clowns and spellbinders of self-serving politics, who only yesterday

proclaimed the martyrdom of Sophia Perowskaya and Albert Parsons,[49]

having hardly wiped their obscene mouths, now spit upon our own rebels

because they have suddenly thrown into the web of their plans and

machinations the carcass of the tyrant they had been cursing the day

before. They shed their crocodile tears over the royal victim; they

sententiously declare that political assassination is sheer folly, that

“When a pope dies, another takes his place”, and that the world

continues without a tremor on its immutable way.

Even in our own ranks there are short-sighted persons who, looking at

the immediate consequences of shock and reactionary fury caused by

violence, hesitate and wonder whether the rebellious act, by provoking

wild, unexpected repressions and by corroding our already scanty

liberties, may not have compromised our slow, but persistent and

certainly beneficial, work of propaganda, organization and preparation.

Whatever our doctrinal and tactical disagreements may be, we have too

much respect for F S Merlino to assign him to any of the above-mentioned

categories.

He never would, nor could, separate the individual act of rebellion from

the revolutionary process of which it is the initial phase — not an

episode — and whose following phases are, in their turn, inevitable

consequences and developments.

The Ideal, a solitary aspiration of poets and philosophers, is embodied

in the martyrdom of its first heralds and sustained by the blood of its

believers. Their sacrifice raised as a sacred standard leads the first

heroic but doomed insurrections and triumphs in the end through

revolutionary deeds, the joy and glory of all.

Without going far from home, doesn’t the history of the last Italian

revolution offer a clear outline of this process?

Who said first;

Was it Vittorio Alfieri, with the impetuous rumble of his tragedies? Or

Gaetano Filangeri, who, in his Declaration of the Rights of Man, first

revealed and spread among the young the idea of the fatherland and the

dignity of the citizen? Or was it Melchiorre Gioia who, towards the end

of the century, discoursing on the best form of government under which

the Italian people might live in freedom and happiness, concluded that

“... everything invites us to unite in the best possible way under one

indivisible republic”?[50]

We are not concerned with these details. But certainly here we are in

the first phase of the revolutionary process where protest has no other

means of expression but faith and word.

The second period will come: the time of the believers when thought

becomes flesh and action, and Zamboni, De Rolandis, Carafa, Pagano,

Cirillo, Luisa Sanfelice, daring both the wrath of the powerful and the

apathy of the masses, unsheath the arms of their faith, putting on the

halo of a martyrdom devoted to victory.[51]

What Bloodshed! Against a gloomy background of anguish and grief, the

dawn of redemption — the second phase of the revolution — is all blood.

However, the day comes when the executioner can no longer cope with his

shameful task. There are no jails big enough to stifle the expanding

insurrection of the subjects. The palladium crumbles, the army conspires

and then rises in Alessandria, Pinerolo, Brescia, Nola, Palermo. A storm

of perdition shocks the world and upsets the peninsula; it rocks the

Holy Alliance, which can only stem the torrent in Troppau, in Laibach,

in Verona with the terror of bayonets, but these are too fragile a

barrier against the irresistible press of the insurrectionists in

Venice, Palermo, Rome, and Milan [1848–1849], who savour the joy of

victory — ephemeral, yes — but a tremendous spur to the final desperate

conquest.

But we are not here to write the history of the Piedmont conquest of

Italy... with all due respect for the rights of the Holy See.

It is sufficient for us to deduce from this quick foray — which could,

with a little more effort and patience, be repeated for any other

historical cycle — that the individual act of rebellion is a necessarily

intermediary phenomenon between the sheer ideal or theoretical

affirmation and the insurrectionary movement which follows it and

kindles the torch of the victorious revolution.

A necessary and inevitable medium; it is what it is, that which the

circumstances command or consent to, above and beyond any preference of

ours. Can you reject or condemn it? You may as well reject a

thunderbolt, an earthquake, or any unlucky meteor; you can only endure

them, for they originate from causes acting beyond the will and power of

man.

And it is what it is, not only because of the intricate convergence of

the causes, which demand it at a certain time, in a certain way and not

otherwise; but also because of the instrument called upon to accomplish

it.

The paid journalistic hacks of the ruling class, the police and their

informers, the cowardly and reactionary magistrates may still believe in

the legends of plots, of drawing lots to choose the instrument of the

revolutionary act, the avenger. But F S Merlino has lived long enough

among or near bomb-makers (uncontaminated, of course) to be able to

testify that in most cases the individual act of rebellion comes even

more as a surprise to the comrades than to the enemies.

Who, for instance, would have thought that Michele Angiolilo,[52] calm

kind and gentle as a girl, could have grasped a gun and coldly shot

Canovas del Castillo in Santa Agueda, that filthy and ferocious hyena,

who renewed and intensified all the horrors of the Holy Inquisition

against the anarchists in the prison of Alcala del Valle, though their

innocence had even been recognized by tribunals? And, among those of us

who knew Sante Caserio[53] intimately as an excellent youngster, modest,

reserved, sober in words and in deeds, who could have foreseen that, one

day, armed with a formidable knife, he, on a street in Lyon, crowded

with delirious vassals, would leap impetuously and render justice to

Sadi Carnot, the sponsor of the lois scelerates, [the anti-anarchist

laws] passed for the purpose of choking off freedom of thought on the

threshold of the twentieth century?

And why did Kropotkin, who had been a member of the Tchaickowsky Group,

which had produced the most audacious iconoclasts — why did Elisée

Reclus, who had survived two blood-baths and barely escaped the

Cavaignac and Gallifet slaughters — why did they seek to fight the enemy

without respite, to disconcert him in other ways, with other means, on

an altogether different field?[54]

Why do those who attack the church, property, State, morality and

destroy their symbols — why do these avengers, with few exceptions,

almost always arise from the twilight of oppression and suffering, from

the proletariat? And, far from being stigmatized by rickets, idiocy, or

even worse, degeneration (which would please the police of Sernicoli’s

ilk,[55] or some wiseacres of the new school of penology) why are they,

out of all the proletarian multitude, among the foremost in normality,

equilibrium, education and intelligence?

This is a problem of elementary mechanics. And since our readers are

more at home in this field than the present writer, it will not be

difficult to come to an understanding.

In order to function in a normal way, every boiler must have a gauge

indicating the steam pressure and two essential valves, one registering

any excess of pressure, the other the water level. An excess of heat

could produce too great a volume of steam for the capacity of the boiler

and bring about a corresponding danger of explosion.

The same danger would be incurred if the water level was lowered

excessively, causing the walls of the boiler above the water level to

become red hot to the point where careless contact with water would

cause an explosion.

Furthermore, when the walls of the boiler are dirty (ie covered by a

chalky sediment that accumulates between the water and the boiler’s

wall), this forms a crust which slows the heating of the water so that,

when the metallic walls become red hot and the water is still much

colder, the least crack in the crust again creates the danger of an

explosion. Hence the need for safety and warning mechanisms to keep the

engineer on guard: pressure gauges, water level and venting valves, feed

and discharge pipes.

An episode of unusually cruel ferocity (in the prison of Alcala del

Valle the anarchists waiting trial underwent testicles distortion, brain

compression, insertion of wedges between finger nails and flesh), the

mass slaughter on an unarmed crowd (as happened in Milan during the

month of May 1898 under the command of Bava Beccaris,[56] for the

purpose — now clear to everyone — of a coup d’Etat), or the legal murder

of a rebel, even though no one is known to have died as a consequence of

his act (as was the case of Vaillant’s[57] attempt against the French

Parliament, which gave rise to Caserio’s act), provoke the same

indignation, the same violent shock on a cold, balanced, experienced

mind as on pure minds and primitive souls. With different results,

however! Because... because the boilers are different.

One has all its valves in full working order. Scholars, writers,

speakers and poets react promptly to the shock and relieve the enormous

pressure by means of the discharge valves of their many faceted

activities. They confront the fulminations that crash from Olympus when

public powers are endangered, when vested interests are disturbed, when

hypocritical morality is subverted; and they throw the awful

responsibility for the rebellious act back into the face of the

exploiters who squeeze out the last drop of sweat and blood from the

common people, back into the face of the cops holding the bag open for

the crooks, the judiciary winking indulgently and conniving impunity for

oppressors, exploiters, corruptors. And they courageously denounce all

these with vehemence and passion, in the name of right, justice,

civilization or humanity, in vibrant public meetings, in relentless

articles and from every forum, pouring out to their audience the

fullness of the noblest feelings, hopefully arousing enthusiasm and

sympathy for the fallen rebel, and a deep active solidarity with the

ideal that inspired the rebellion.

Relentlessly they strike right and left; they work; they give vent to

their feelings; they discharge their excessive steam through many open

valves... the pressure, dangerous for a moment, returns to normal; the

boiler regains its breath, its usual rhythm, and its regular function.

When Reclus or Kropotkin are at the wheel there will be no explosion

except in absolutely exceptional circumstances.

---

The other... the other alas! functions in an altogether different

condition. It has no safety valves, no discharge pipes, no gauge to

register the sudden pressures, which swell it to the point where its

rhythm is upset and its function and safety are threatened. And its

walls are all encrusted with dangerous superstitions.

This is the proletarian soul. Although our propaganda has barely begun

to touch it, still our criticism of the vicious social order has

received a profound approval, confirmed by their experience and their

reasoning: the gluttons leave for the poor, who create wealth and joy

with their hands, no bread, no peace, no love, no future! How true! How

terribly true!

Thus, the poor living in despair have been deeply enraptured by our

vision of an egalitarian society, together with the hope that a

coalition (even if temporary or accidental) of all the proletarian

forces could, on a daily basis, abolish abuses, avoid misfortunes,

restrain the injustice and violence of the exploiters and the

oppressors, and start humanity on the path of security, well-being and

happiness that is its destiny. Although it lacks a precise and clear

consciousness of its own right and even more, of the irresistible

strength it could attract to the defence of its sacred cause, the

proletariat has a deep faith (and this is perhaps rooted in the

evangelical idea of punishment for evil and reward for good) in the

final triumph of truth and justice.

But, partly because of this persistent evangelism, and more because of

the millennial resignation which has for centuries paralyzed its

initiative and its confidence, the proletariat believes that the

revolution will be realized by some strange, distant force and it will

be propelled by the enigmatic and fatal weight of things, undermining

events and men. It harbours an ambiguous, almost religious mix of

reverence and terror in this belief.

And the humble people wait for it to come and try to hasten it with all

their wishes: “How great if the revolution breaks out some day”! And to

that day, to that revolution which will finally destroy every obstacle,

they turn their hearts, their energy, their hates and their longings for

revenge... far, very far away from thinking that we, ourselves, have to

start the revolution from within ourselves, by discarding old

superstitions, selfishness, self-imposed ignorance, foolish vanities and

moral deficiencies.

We are children of the bourgeois regime, heirs to all its degradations,

materially and actually incapable of shedding its bestial yoke at this

time, except for a few, and we are revolutionary only when and insofar

as we know how to resist and react against the wickedness, corruption

and violence of our environment. And, when, through experience, we have

become worthy of the cause, we will be able to arouse the same need of

moral elevation and freedom that will spread in an ever-widening

concentric movement, reaching those groups farthest from us, like the

effect of a stone cast into a pond.

The revolution cannot be made by the anarchists alone, at a

pre-established time and by pre-arranged movements; but if a movement

should burst out tomorrow — no matter where — they could place

themselves in the forefront, or near it, with the sole aim of pointing

it towards decisive positions or solutions, and in so doing,

counteracting the usual intriguers who take advantage of the good faith

and sacrifices of the proletariat to foster their own interests and

political fortune

But the proletariat doesn’t think of it. Didn’t a great anarchist writer

state many years ago that the revolution is inevitable? One must only

wait for it; it knocks on the door; the glittering announcement says

it’ll be here tomorrow. No return to the past is possible; after so many

years of anti-religious propaganda, the Inquisition is no more than a

sad memory of an age that has been overcome; after so many years of

anti-militarist propaganda, war is only a sterile wish of a handful of

stock market manipulators; after the workers’ strikes that, starting

from the modest borders of a province, have invaded a whole nation and

even dare to form coalitions of the international proletariat; the

bourgeoisie is compelled to moderation and discretion.

And so on. But while they are navigating full of hope, towards their

happy Atlantis, a clash of arms at the frontier, a machine-gun volley in

the foul ditch of a castle tower, the flash of an axe in the sleepy

dawn, a hurried gallop of dragoons through the streets and squares to

the sound of trumpets and death rattles, plunges them back again into

reality. The Inquisition is still alive and unrelenting; war is more

insane, paradoxical, and horrible than ever; massacres of the

proletariat are daily occurrences everywhere.

The shock is tragic; the pressure intolerable; even more intolerable

because, in disillusion and defeat, in the limbo of despair,

imprecations and invectives come from every side.

Swollen by the shock, the soul is embittered by its shameful defeat and

lives with a throbbing pain that only revenge, a tremendous, exemplary

revenge can soothe. And revenge stands as the only purpose, the only

possible reparation for the anguish that torments it every living day.

No discharge is possible. He who is lost when among books, he who as a

child was compelled to leave school for the factory or the mine, how can

he write, speak, or hope to gain the attention of others?

Where can the militants be found for a sweeping agitation, when the

reaction has banished or imprisoned them?

This old boiler has no discharge valve; the pressure rises; the level of

resignation drops; the slightest touch breaks through the crust of

prejudice and convention that had been acting as a restraint, and the

explosion roars dreadful, deadly.

Isn’t it so?

The individual act of rebellion is what it is, caused by a long series

of predisposing conditions, which has suddenly met an imponderable

accidental cause.

Of what value is repudiation?

---

“And, after this, you would conclude that we must unconditionally

approve any act of individual rebellion, even those acts that are

disgusting and harmful, even Duval’s or Ravachol’s or Luccheni’s?”[58]

Let us clear up quickly a misunderstanding which has been cleared up

many times before, but which arises now and then with the qualms and

bigotry of a certain respectable anarchism.

It is the misunderstanding concerning revolutionary expropriation,

usually called theft by others, although the noun does not fit the deed.

Everyone agrees on one point: in an egalitarian society, where all means

of production and exchange are common property and where the products of

work have only one purpose — to assure the satisfaction of everyone’s

needs — theft has no meaning. It is impossible, absurd.

Therefore, among anarchists, no question of principle concerning theft

exists.

When it comes to action, or tactics as it is usually called, there was a

time when some comrades believed (and some still do) that in order to

develop our propaganda, to equip vanguards, to arm them for action,

boldly to initiate attacks, or to repel violence by force of arms,

financial means would be needed that could not be provided by poor

militants with more energy and courage than weapons: so they

expropriated, as they used to say, with rigorous precision.

They took wherever they found it.

What does expropriation mean?

It means to take from somebody the goods or real estate that he owns,

claiming he has no right to them.

From Saint Clement[59] to Babeuf, Proudhon, Bakunin and the most modest

of our comrades, the invalidity of all property titles has never been

questioned: expropriation is legitimate unless it ends as its opposite,

appropriation.

To make myself better understood: if Tom takes Harrys wealth for his own

enjoyment, we say that he has appropriated it. The property in question

has only changed its titular owner, but as an institution it remains

just what it was before. Tom is getting rich, as Harry did in the past,

on the shoulders and the labour of harnessed slaves.

Nothing has changed, and there is no reason why we should congratulate

Tom for having taken Harry’s wealth.

But suppose, as it recently happened, a band of revolutionaries attack a

bank; they immobilize the guards, empty the safes and, weapons in hand,

defend their retreat. Then, having secured it, they deliver their loot

to insurrectionary committees to further the revolutionary movement in

their community, to provide the necessary means for attaining victory.

Do you disapprove?

No, you cannot disapprove. There has been expropriation, the very

expropriation you have invoked a thousand times as a revolutionary

necessity. There has been no appropriation in the sense that the

confiscated wealth has been used to re-establish some other private

property with all its consequences. Not at all. We are faced exactly

with an initial, partial act of revolutionary expropriation. Besides the

material advantages for the movement, it initiates, enables and

encourages the multitude to proceed to the final expropriation of the

ruling class for the benefit of every one. This has been our desire and

our aim.

How can we curse, condemn, or reject?

Clement Duval, Vittorio Pini, Ravachol have never taken for themselves a

single penny of the loot that they obtained with the constant risk of

death or life imprisonment. You may say that they have used that money

for questionable propaganda means and action and even conclude that it

could have been used in a better way. But you can’t condemn.

We stand with Severine[60] and Reclus, who, without reservations, have

extolled the courage, the heart and the self-abnegation of these lost

sentinels.

Furthermore, to be completely frank and to close this parenthesis we

confess that we can’t even rage against the petty thief who, pressed by

need, reaches for a loaf of bread, a herring or a tempting slice of ham

in the shop window.

Even before Lino Ferriani, the royal prosecutor, extenuated these

pariahs from a theoretical point of view, and before President Magnaud,

the good judge, acquitted them, disturbing and horrifying the wealthy, a

German philosopher, named Johann Gottlieb Fichte[61] in his Principles

of Natural Right delivered the impartial sentence: “He who has no means

of subsistence, has no duty to acknowledge or respect other people’s

property, considering that the principles of the social covenant have

been violated to his prejudice”.

We agree that, face to face with the enemy’s brutal, overwhelming

preponderance, vanguard minorities cannot gain respect nor inspire

confidence without an exemplary and transparently austere way of life.

And, again, we agree that in order to avoid ugly suspicions of personal

material advantage, those who proclaim the necessity of the final

expropriation and justify partial expropriation in certain specified

cases, must surround themselves with a voluntary and evocative poverty,

a holy dread of other people’s property. But that we should submit to

Origen’s[62] operation — no! At this juncture there is no third

solution. If we are forced to choose between private property and its

supporters, or against private property and its attackers, we cannot and

will not align ourselves with the former, and certainly it is not we who

will try to revoke the decisions of Magnaud and Fichte. No!

And then... to hell with it! Surrounded with strong-boxes, ignoring and

despising the sufferings of the world, the bourgeoisie and its

misfortunes do not move us one bit.

A few more words, before closing this chapter.

We do not believe there are useless or harmful acts of rebellion. Every

one of them, together with the accidents inseparable from any violent

change of the monotonous routine of life, has deep echoes and lasting

gains, which compensate abundantly for them.

Let us be understood: we are not being nostalgic for unneeded brutality

nor for vulgar coarseness. We too would prefer that every act of

rebellion had such sense of proportion that its consequences would

correspond perfectly to its causes, not only in measure, but also in

timeliness, giving it an irresistible automatic character. Then every

act would speak eloquently for itself with no need for glosses or

clarifying comments. Furthermore, we would like this unavoidable

necessity to assume a highly ethical — and even an aesthetic — attitude.

Michele Angiolillo, after attacking Canovas, the despicable organizer of

the inquisitorial torments in the Alcala prison, found himself face to

face with the latter’s wife. Letting his revolver fall from his hand, he

took off his hat and bowed, saying, “Madam, I am sorry for the grief I

am causing you, but your husband was a monster unworthy of any pity”.

There is something noble and chivalrous in Angiolillo’s gesture that

illuminates the profound humanity and civility inspiring his rebellion.

It would be pleasing if such sentiments were always present in our

actions, for anarchism, being truth and kindness, is, above all, beauty.

Unfortunately (and we have at length stated why), the individual act of

rebellion, due to intrinsic and extrinsic causes, due to the pressures

of the moment, the environment and the subject’s own psychology, cannot

be different from what it is, no matter what our preference may be.

Then it follows that it would be absurd and ridiculous for us to think

of compiling a new calendar of saints, the saints of the social

revolution, as it would be to think of condemning them posthumously.

No act of rebellion is useless; no act of rebellion is harmful.

Philosophasters of the quiet life may declaim, for instance, that

Gaetano Bresci’s act was a pointless folly, immediately rendered

senseless by the constitutional aphorism: “Le roi est mort, vive le

roi.” When one king dies, another king is crowned; and the death of

Umberto I leaves the throne for Vittorio Emanuele III. It was hardly a

prediction that Gaetano Bresci couldn’t make beforehand and better than

those cheap salesmen of political common sense. But, after an atrocious

chain of proletarian massacres, after the slaughters of May 1898 in

Milan, after the years of imprisonment that the sinister monarch thought

would forever disperse the revolutionary movement in Italy, after the

acclaim and decorations this majesty had bestowed on underlings and

rogues (beginning with Bava Beccaris) thereby proving that the king,

despite the constitutional fiction, both reigns and rules and assumes

all the responsibilities and risks of government; after this repression

had been endured by all with a resignation even worse than the outrage —

the humble weaver from Prato rose alone above the general indolence, and

alone faced the symbols of so much infamy. With a stroke he put back

history, wayward and arrested, back on the path of its future, towards

its destiny. That gesture spoke to the confused masses. It said

something that neither silence nor indifference can erase: “The king you

fear, the king who was picked by the grace of god, the king who

oppresses and bleeds you, the king who commands everyone and can be

commanded by none, the king who judges everyone and can be judged by

none, the king who is glory, myth, power — is like any other man, only a

miserable bag of fragile flesh and bones. A single revolver shot can

reduce him to litter the way he did with you, your aged, your children,

the way he did in Conselice, in Milan, for an evil whim, for an obscene

lust for power. Your dependence is a shame from which you can redeem

yourselves; your devotion is unworthy of you and is wasted. Stand up on

your feet, slaves, you resigned, cowardly slaves who could free

yourselves from the millennial yoke with a shrug of your shoulders and

reach the pinnacle of freedom”.

Isn’t this what the Monza tragedy means?

From the ashes at the foot of the stake in Campo di Fiori,[63]

Angiolillo gathers the tradition of free thought and warns that the

blazing dawn of the twentieth century will tolerate neither the shadow

nor the shame of the Inquisition. Vaillant exposes those who, under the

anonymous mask of the representational system, are responsible for the

same infamies and exploitation and slashes their obscene faces. (The Sun

King, at least, had the courage to present himself before his subjects

and History, shouting, “I am the State!”) Luccheni, himself a bastard,

warns that priests try to throw out the fruits of their inadmissable

loves in vain. Duval, Ravachol, Stellmaker,[64] all those who have

attacked private property for the sake of revolution reveal that the

sovereignty of money can’t be so sacred, nor so enviable, after all, if

it gets slapped around every day. All, all of them scourge cowardice,

rebel against submission, engrave a lesson; they do the work of

revolution.

A king dies and another takes his place. But the king who picks up the

crown with his father’s blood on it learns prudence, moderation, wisdom.

He restores the national covenant and refrains from violence and abuse.

It is enough to recall that, opening the new Parliament, immediately

after Bresci’s attempt, Saracco not only abstained from proposing

emergency laws, but he also declared that the anarchist idea should be

opposed with civilized debate and that there was sufficient restraint in

the penal code for illegal anarchist activities. And this doesn’t

consider the renewed courage of the common people and the stronger

consciousness of their strength, the firmer faith they have attained in

their own emancipation.

Thus! None of the apologetic fanaticism that would indicate a religious

state of mind incompatible with the slightest anarchist conviction, and

no frenzied diatribes which might be suspected of opportunism,

preoccupation, or more unworthy sentiments.

Salvation lies always in a free, objective and conscientious

examination, in the investigation and explanation of the causes, social

context) the age, the immediate and remote repercussions of events;

these are the elements for a correct evaluation of the individual acts

of rebellion.

But everybody should understand that any such free examination, using

reasonable criteria, cannot leave out of consideration the fact that the

first cause of all individual acts of revolt is the psychological

climate created by our propaganda among the people.

It seems unnecessary to point out that no revolutionary act is

conceivable where the rebel does not feel himself surrounded by a

certain spirituality of consent and by a broad-based consciousness which

is ready to receive him sympathetically.

When Bresci rendered justice to the august and unpunished butcher of

Italians, he felt that, though the bigoted and fainthearted rabble would

be shaken, shocked and scandalized by his act, many others would assent

to his act of justice, and he acted in the faith that the first spark

would start a more intense rebellion, a greater fire.

But our responsibility in all acts of rebellion is more precise, more

specific and undeniable, where our propaganda has been energetic,

vigorous, and has left a deep impression.

After all, did we not open the first breech in the devotion of the

faithful to constituted authorities, in their vassalage to the king, in

their submission to the law, in their respect for and in their holy fear

of the codes, the judiciary, the police?

With honest conviction and corrosive persistence, haven’t we proved the

futility of hopes in legal means of resistance, progress, or success?

In the camp opposed to socialism and its political activity, its

electoral or parliamentary victories, its supposed improvements in

economic affairs, have they ever found more convinced disbelievers, more

acrid critics, more unrelenting scoffers than us?

And in every circumstance, in our papers, all our lectures, in our

meetings shaking with empty stomachs or ill contained passions, haven’t

we underlined a thousand times over that since political and economic

privilege has no basis in equity or right, it could be justified only by

its own violence and our cowardice? And that therefore capitalism and

the state could not resist the impact of the working classes, whose

right and strength, together, would be sure warranty of final victory?

That, instead of wasting time chattering in town, provincial, or

national councils, searching for the philosopher’s stone of good law, or

for a good master, it would be better to start the revolution inside

oneself and realize it according to the best of our abilities in partial

experiments, wherever such an opportunity arises, and whenever a bold

group of our comrades have the conviction and the courage to try them?

What else was the goal of the armed bands in Romagna in 1874, or those

with Cafiero, Malatesta, and Stepniak in 1877?[65]

Now, we have been inciting, convincing, screaming at the people for half

a century: “Arise, revolt, attack, expropriate, strike! Strike without

pity, for there comes a point where revenge takes on the necessity and

the awesomeness of justice and hastens its triumph”. After fifty years

of having instilled the necessity of action among the suffering people,

as soon as the plebeian lion strikes the first blow (and perhaps it is

awkward, because it has been chained for centuries and has lost the

habit), and just as we should show our coolness and our resolve, we

become disturbed by problems of conscience, made uneasy about the threat

of reaction, distressed by residual evangelism, tormented by the burning

need, if not of confusing ourselves in the Umbo of common morality

certainly of lessening the contrasts. Too often, especially in the more

responsible circles, we rush to belittle, to shame the act of rebellion,

and, at times, are even inclined to classify it among the usual ‘police

frame-ups’.

Well, then, in plain words: it is supreme cowardice to reject acts of

rebellion when we, ourselves have sown the first seed and brought forth,

the first bud, it is supreme cowardice to add our cursing to the

indignant outcry of the paid journalistic hacks, professional mourners,

and evil cut-throats.

And like all cowardices, this one too must be paid for with the spasm of

impotence and the anguish of abandonment.

F S Merlino should remember the fervour of propaganda and action that

brightened the four years from May 1,1890, to June 24,1894. When we

would leave our garret in the morning, we never had the slightest

certainty of returning in the evening; arrests were made every day, at

any hour; trials and sentences followed; and in case of acquittal,

banishment was the rule. But it meant living! And inside the cells of

Mazas,[66] or in the sadness of exile, early in the morning we would

hear the echo of a dynamite blast, a judge’s chamber had blown up with

one of the accomplices still inside, and the unknown author of the

rebellious deed had accepted full responsibility for his act and was

walking with a song into the ‘widow’s’ arms [the guillotine]. And that

tragic wave of enthusiasm and of fervour, brightened by sacrifice,

filled everyone with an irresistible pride. Poets and men of letters,

impressed by that fervour for renewal, were paying daily homages of

sympathy and veneration to the fallen rebels, the Parisian newspaper

Figaro, frightened, dedicated one of its special issues to the ‘peril

anarchiste’ and, Octave Mirbeau[67], waved his anarchists appeal to

abstain from voting over the obscene electoral shows, a document which

to this day is unsurpassed for its fierceness of thought and beauty of

expression. That was living!

Compare that period with the one in which we live.

We have mocked, rejected, cursed revolutionary action because it

exceeded our canons, our expectations, the ethical and aesthetic lines

within which we wanted it contained. And we have dried up the sources

from which it could spring, we have cut the nerves anxiously stretching

to reach it, we have extinguished any flame that might nourish it. And

now we pay with humiliation and bruises.

Because here, in these too-frequent public repudiations, in these

insidious repudiations that are whispered about within certain coteries

that bristle with distrust and suspicion of the unruly and the

iconoclast, here, in particular, lies the cause of the atrophy that

makes us the laughing stock of ever reactionary whim, of every

reactionary bestiality.

Naturally!

Those who are eager for action find that we are very hard to please: “We

make faces at the good Lord and you grumble! We rise against the state

or its representatives, and you grumble; we revolt against property, and

you frown and look at your pockets; we rise against morality and you,

afraid of the scandal, retreat to your shell and excommunicate us! But

will you do us the great favour of stirring yourselves, once and for

all, you who know so well how revolution should take its first steps,

you who hold its strings and have learned the decalogue, and... you who

never move, not even under the lash?”.

They argue and then they leave us in the lurch.

But internal and profound causes of inertia and decay are to be found

here, not any doctrinal disagreement between the organizationalists and

the individualists of anarchism. These disagreements — neither many, nor

forceful, negligible in comparison to the immensity of the task and the

goals — will lead them under the sharp spur of experience and necessity

to find the appropriate way, the way to revolution, whose initial phase

must be the individual act of rebellion, inseparable from propaganda,

from the mental preparation which understands it, integrates it, leading

to larger and more frequent repetitions through which collective

insurrections flow into the social revolution.

This, then, is the result of this contempt for action.

Chapter 8. Anarchy Will Be!

I am unable to reply to one of Merlino’s statements with consideration

and breadth that it requires and that my opponent deserves.

I am sorry. But he who has had to live for about ten years in a small

mountain town, with only a small library for the needs of twelve

thousand inhabitants of least half-a-dozen nationalities, has only a

sparse and backward bibliography at his disposal.

And, unable to renew or increase his slender library with the scanty

compensation of his work (compensation susceptible to frequent eclipses

when Cronaca Sovversiva sails among the rocks of deficit), he can only

with uneasiness, contest F S Merlino — a walking library in himself —

when he states that, “Anarchism which was once so productive, can no

longer inspire any works of noticeable scientific and political value”;

and that “... since Kropotkin and Reclus it has had no other first-rate

names”.

Reclus is dead, true; and no one else is taking his place; but Merlino

will certainly admit that men of Reclus’ stature do not brighten the

records of the civil state every day, in any country.

Meanwhile, he has died, leaving us his last masterpiece, L’Homme et la

Terre, the synthesis of sixty years of research, study and meditation

which will be a source of wisdom for a long time. This means that the

good Reclus remains in the battle, still in the forefront.

But, then, Kropotkin is still alive, as always, vigorous, ardent, and

productive. Modern Science and Anarchism, his latest work, [1903]

belongs to yesterday, but we have good reason to state that he has other

works in the making, in no way inferior to the preceding ones that have

received so much credit and praise in the scientific world —

notwithstanding its fundamental heterodoxy.

He too remains in the forefront, and it seems to me excessive and

strange that Merlino should hurry to bury them in order to say that

anarchism has no more first-rate men and can no longer produce works of

considerable scientific and political value.

Confidentially, I would also like to ask him a question. When a new

movement dawns — and, from its ideals down to its tangled structure of

interests, it reflects, and also subverts, all of the social

relationships, the whole moral, legal, political and economic make-up of

society — is it possible that the theoretical articulation of its

aspirations, the first step in choosing a goal and determining the ways

and means of achieving it, can immediately be followed by the sprouting

of a complete philosophical, scientific and literary structure of the

system? As if, for example, the first spreading of the gospels was

followed the day after by the Summa Theologiae of Saint Thomas

Aquinas.[68]

Doesn’t the dazzling announcement to the deprived of a totally new

world, totally different from the one that afflicts them — a world of

equality, brotherhood, freedom, well-being and joy — have to be followed

by a long and painful daily apostolate in partibus infidelium [in the

land of the unbelievers], against fierce opposition, so that its echo

may reach to the ends of the nation or of the globe, recruiting the

phalanxes to whom will be entrusted the banners of the burning faith,

the secret of victory?

It was a long, long journey from the simple evangelism along the shores

of Lake Tiberias to Constantine’s edict, in 313 AD — and it was by way

of the Roman catacombs. And Christ — if he ever lived — never

reappeared; the apostolate was the work of humble, obscure and simple

minded fishermen — as the legend says.

Agreed that Reclus and Kropotkin will remain, together with Bakunin, in

the first rank of our history, unsurpassed in this period. They are and

remain the heralds.

But how many apostles they aroused! James Guillaume, who is now

constructing the history of the First International Workingmen’s

Association with indisputable documents and great patience — is he not

in the forefront a shining example of productivity and fervour? And

Anselmo Lorenzo, vigorous, straight and inflexible as an oak under the

fury of the wildest reaction? And Francisco Ferrer, just yesterday

felled by Bourbon lead in the Montjuich moats? And Edward Carpenter? And

Tarrida del Marmol? and William Tcherkesoff? And Max Nettlau, who has

erected the most beautiful monument to Bakunin, with his complete,

documented biography? Are they not names and men who, for wisdom and

propaganda and loftiness of the anarchist ideal, can properly face the

beat in the opposing parties? Don’t they with their assiduous vigilance,

provide the vanguard of the movement with the material and ammmunition

indispensable for bold incursions?[69]

And considering that the best dreams, the passion of superior minds,

intrepid hearts, heroic souls, would go up in smoke like all dreams if

they did not find their incarnation in the enthusiasm, the

self-abnegation and faith of the humble people, have not the members of

the vanguard, in the paradoxical intensity of that great trinity’s

thought, prepared the host for greater eucharists?

It is peculiar! Merlino believes in the good fortune and triumph of

anarchism so long as it remains the inspiration of prophets, of a few

thinkers who weigh the word in the almost inaccessible world of

metaphysics; but he doubts its destiny to the point of predicting its

agony when its word has become flesh and blood through the incorruptible

faith of several millions of followers spread all over the five parts of

the world.

According to the law of physics as well as the experience of history,

intensity is offset by dimension.

We gladly concede to Merlino that Bakunin, Reclus and Kropotkin remain

unsurpassed, and we are also ready to admit that we will never again

have forerunners as noble and great But let him concede, in turn (and he

can do so without effort or contradiction)that the intensity of thought

and life peculiar to the few superior spirits is inversely compensated

for by the greater and more industrious number of intelligent,

conscientious, devoted and fierce militants, who although stumbling

against all the snares of reaction — from the Bourbonic garrote to the

Tokyo imperial gallows — are always in arms, have hoisted the flag of

revolt, and roused the hope of emancipation in the oppressed all over

the world.

Kropotkin’s Mutual Aid sets forth the doctrine, the law of solidarity

among all living beings, to the mortification of those who insist on

misinterpreting Darwin; Elisée Reclus spells the alternate rhythm of

evolution and revolution with the same rigid synchronism of the

pendulum’s oscillations; and both are incisive winners in the world of

scholarship and thought. But how much harder is the struggle to instill

that same feeling of solidarity and faith in revolution into the masses,

to instill the denial of god among the superstitious herds so that they

may have faith in themselves and become the authors of their own

destiny, accomplishing this on the basis of equality and freedom. This

harder task has been sustained by the more modest and ardent propagators

of ideas!

Fra Contadini, by our good Errico Malatesta; The Religious Plague, by

old Johann Most; Dieu n’existe pas, by Sebastien Faure,[70] books

translated into twenty languages and spread among all kinds of people —

are they not the thoughts of Bakunin, Reclus and Kropotkin, continuing

to convince and to propagate? And are they not, in fact, the most

enthusiastic signs of the masses’ agreement with our aspirations, the

necessary road to any revolutionary experiment, to any initial

realization?

None of the Encyclopaedists led the people to the conquest of the

Bastille. At the Constitutional, Legislative and Convention assemblies,

the men who abolished the privilege of caste, shoved the king of France

under the guillotine and wrote the Declaration of Rights, were totally

unknown before July 14, 1789. In the crucible of revolution they

distinguished themselves as the pure metal from which the new order

emerged. None of them enjoyed the benefits of the revolution they had

started, supported or led it to its glorious success — a demonstration

that the events, themselves, of each historical period, forge men for

the purpose at hand; that, if the day before yesterday was the time for

Bakunin, Reclus and Kropotkin, if yesterday was the time for the martyrs

and apostles, today belongs to the proletariat, who perform their task

with ardour and conscious tenacity, a sign of triumph rather than a

symptom of anarchism’s decadence, as F S Merlino seems to believe,

strangely enough.

Strangely! He would have every reason to cry over the end of anarchism,

like Jeremiah or Cassandra, if the trunk had withered, if no ethical

value, no revolutionary activity, no faith had sprouted from the works

of Bakunin, Reclus and Kropotkin. But if the trunk is alive, he is all

wrong. Especially wrong for not having remained faithful to the ideal on

which he has spent so much of himself.

---

We are at the end!

Of all the reasons which led F S Merlino to infer the incurable

exhaustion and consequent death of anarchism, not one survives an

impartial examination or resists a conscientious critique.

1 What is essential in anarchism has not been absorbed by the socialist

movement, nor could it have been, if “... the essence of anarchism — in

terms of the evolution of thought and society — is a concept of man, the

integration of his needs, his yet-unexplored powers, his sociability,

his varied relations with his fellow-man and with the external world he

lives in; if (as F S Merlino, himself, declared in the serious and

austere Journal des Economistes[71] many years ago) his moral

integration requires the “... satisfaction of all his material and moral

needs, the freedom and incoercibility of the individual”; if “... the

anarchist system excludes the necessity for government, parliament,

police, and judiciary”; if (as Merlino, himself, wrote so clearly in his

pamphlet. Why We Are Anarchists[72]) “The first step towards the future

society will be inevitable revolution, inevitable because the ruling

classes will only surrender to a superior force”; and if anarchism

excludes elections and parliamentary action as means to revolution and

emancipation, for (again as Merlino once wrote with our full and

sincerest assent), “The workers will always be cheated and swindled in

elections, because even if the majority of elected representatives were

composed of workers, they would be powerless to do anything, for the

intelligent and active comrades, once elected, become renegades and

indolent; and, lastly, because the people learn to believe that

salvation can only come from above, from the government, from

parliament, and so cease to struggle for it”.

No such absorption could take place and none did. Just in the last

twenty years, the socialist movement has poured enough water onto its

socialism to drown even the last revolutionary spark of the Communist

Manifesto of 1848 and any subsequent work of Marx and Engels. At least,

in theory, they had foreseen the inevitably violent expropriation of the

ruling class and the destruction of the State. Now the socialist

movement aims at nothing more than the conquest of parliament by means

of the vote, the conquest of the government (and not of the State) by

the means of parliament, collaborating with radicals in the past, with

the liberals today, and with the clerical scoundrels tomorrow and

thereafter, as the class struggle, the revolution and the expropriation

of wealth are stored in the attic and kept under the seven seals.

Thus the socialist movement commits itself to all those means that

anarchism repudiates — this admitted repeatedly by Merlino himself — so

that the disagreement between those two tendencies of the proletariat

has grown into an ever deepening and irreconcilable conflict.

How can Merlino say that the socialist movement has absorbed what is

essential in anarchism?

Had he written that, since September 1892 (that is, since the Congress

of Genoa), having cast away from its bosom any revolutionary tendency

and having dedicated itself to the conquest of political power, the

socialist movement has been absorbed bit by bit by capitalist

parliamentarism until now it is little more than an advanced wing of it,

then Merlino would have rendered a more honest homage to the truth — and

given a more sober documentation to the history of the proletarian

movement, constantly confirmed by everyday reality.

2 The Utopian part of anarchism has been acknowledged as such and no

longer has any value.

The Utopian part is, of course, the aspiration to a society without

masters, without government, without law, without any coercive control —

a society functioning on the basis of mutual agreement and allowing each

member the freedom to enjoy absolute autonomy. Right?

Does Merlino really want to stroll with us, arm-in-arm through the work

of a great friend of ours, a man of learning who is as modest as he is

profound, the favourite collaborator of Elisée Reclus — Leon

Metchnikoff?

Let us reread together, Saverio. At this hearth our faith became

unshakable conviction. Who knows, it may rekindle yours!

“In nature’s biological progression, liberty may serve as a measure of

the progress of the social bond...”

“In the lower orders we have imposed groupings, based on coercion...

rudimentary colonies of cells united by exterior or mechanical ties.”

“In the intermediary orders we have subordinated groupings, based on

differentiation, on a division of work progressively more specialized

and intimate.”

“In the higher orders we have co-ordinated groupings based on personal

inclinations and on the ever more conscious communion of interests.”

So there is a continuous ascent from compulsion to autonomy.

In history we have corresponding phenomena:

“Enforced groupings: the oriental despotisms, the societies bound

together by coercion, the subservience of all to a symbolic and living

representative of cosmic fate, of deified power.”

“Subordinated groupings: corresponding to the era of feudal oligarchical

federations, of diversification resulting from armed struggle or

economic competition.”

“Co-ordinated groupings: a period that has barely begun and which

belongs to the future, but whose first thoughts have been: liberty — the

denial of coercion; equality — the denial of social or political

difference; brotherhood — the loyal co-ordination of individual powers

in place of the struggles and conflicts caused by mortal

competition.”[73]

In plainer words — the first authority was god-in heaven and the Incas

and the Pharaohs were nothing but his vicars on Earth.

The representatives of god, who are among the craftiest at any given

moment, had to share power with the strong; and so, after long and

bloody struggles, which smouldered for centuries, sovereign power and

divine authority set foot on Earth and were invested in the emperor or

in the king, who will be forced much later to submit to yet another

compromise, reconciling within himself the grace of god with the will of

the nation... as long as it lasts.

The Great Revolution divested divinity of all authority, which now took

root on Earth and found its repository and its sceptre in each and every

citizen.

Only one step remains to reach that Atlantis, where, as the poet used to

prophesy in the old days, everyone has within himself his law and his

power, and is his own sovereign.[74]

And property, which accompanies and gives character to the forms and the

historical institutions through which we have rapidly passed; property,

which was the jus utendi et abutendi [law of use and abuse], the

absolute and odious Roman law that allowed the use and abuse of one’s

own property without having to answer to anyone; property, which has

lost much of its primitive arrogance, which tries by means of

self-serving philanthropy to earn forgiveness for its past excesses and

abuses, which has juridically acknowledged and assumed some social

duties (as we have described in its proper place) — will property, with

revolution at its heels, ever take the last step? Will it ever be some

day the social instrument for well-being, liberty and happiness for all?

When all information in the fields of biology, history and economics is

converging to indicate a continuing and endless progression, a constant

evolution from slavery to liberty, from coercion to autonomy, who could

consider the uprising of the proletariat and the realization of anarchy

Utopian? Only Joshua Merlino — for whom the sun ought to stop for ever,

hovering over the agony of every human being who yearns for liberty,

justice and emancipation.

And he remains alone!

3 We have shown with some success (unless we sin by boasting) that

anarchism has now and has always had first rate men; that it receives

testimonials of the greatest interest and merit quite often in the field

of scholarship, as these substantial works (besides those already

mentioned) bear witness — Anarchisme by Eltzbacher (a judge at the Hall

Court) and Anarchia by Ettore Zoccoli (a high functionary in the

Department of Public Education).[75] And we have also shown that, even

if the contrary were true, it would be arbitrary to deduce symptoms of

decadence and exhaustion in anarchism, when the hopes and ideals of its

heralds have become the thought and action of numberless legions of

rebels all over the world, who are rising in solidarity across all

frontiers, struggling for the their mutual and total emancipation.

4 No one denies that there may be disagreement, even fierce dissension,

at times, between anarchists who believe in party organization and

prefer above all other means a systematic propaganda and educational

action and anarchists who prefer individual initiative and, above all,

individual action. But this difference arises from a misunderstanding

which is bound to become clarified under the spur of experience and

necessity, though it is often embittered by the fervour of competition

and is basically superficial. Far from indicating decay, it points out

two different approaches to action, diverse manifestations of activity,

of consciousness, of energy which will be synthesized eventually for the

better fortune of the revolution and for the ultimate triumph of our

ideals.

5 If progress is to be understood as the “... succession of phenomena in

which force manifests itself at each stage of evolution with an

everincreasing variety and intensity; and the series is called

progressive when, at each one of its stages, it reproduces all its

previous traits plus a new one that did not exist in the preceding

phases, and which becomes in its turn, the germ of a new plus in the

following stages”, then no other ideal corresponds more closely to this

law of progress than the anarchist ideal.

In the field of economics — in contrast to the radical movements which

do agree in rejecting private property, in advocating collective

ownership of the means of production and exchange, in the remuneration

of each according to his aptitude and his labour — libertarian communism

— once individual property is abolished, the land and means of

production made the communal and indivisible property of all — rejects

the theory of remuneration, even if it were to involve the total product

of labour; it rejects the principle of compensation as irrational,

unjust and dangerous in so far as it necessarily engenders the authority

and the tyranny that make the bourgeois regime infamous; and it

proposes, instead, that every member of society, regardless of his

aptitudes or work, be entitled to the full satisfaction of his needs, of

all his needs. Such satisfaction not only assures the participation of

each person in production according to his capacities, but also

eliminates the danger of falling once again into a regime of inequality,

of authority, of disorder and violence that the social revolution would

have abolished.

In the political field, in contrast to the authoritarian goals of the

socialists, collectivists, or communists which, because of the

foreseeable economic inequalities implicit in their systems, are

obliged, even now, to posit a coercive power that contains and appeases

their inequities, or, at least, an administration-state which rules and

regulates production, distribution and consumption; anarchism proposes,

instead, the absolute and irrevocable rejection of government and

authority in any form, and in place of the principle of good, fair,

brotherly government, it proclaims the ungovernability of the individual

who possesses within himself the means, the right and the power for

self-government.

In either case, then, there is a plus which the earlier phases had not

yet uncovered, which carries within itself the seeds of new traits which

will permit future generations to proceed towards higher and more

enlightened forms of co-existence and civilization. Anarchy does not

claim to be the last word, but only a new, more enlightened, more

advanced and more human step along the ascending path of the endless

future.

Anarchism is still vigorous, impassioned, active, irrepressible.

Anarchy will be.

F S Merlino stands midway, alone, or, worse than alone, in the bad

company of the hesitant. Merlino, who, after many years spent with us

bold and undaunted, and also with the pains which are the reward of

courage and heresy, has been unable to save his soul from the frost of

discouragement and disenchantment.

It is sad! Sad for him and sad for us. But his case was not unforeseen

and it was neither new nor hopeless. For each herald that falls along

the slopes of progress, hundreds arise, valiant and confident, raising

the standard and carrying it high and undaunted from trench to trench,

erecting it in triumph over the ruins of an old world condemned both by

reason and by history, a symbol of resurrection and of liberation.

All that is needed in this immutable task is to persist: to kindle in

the minds of the proletariat the flame of the idea: to kindle in their

hearts faith in liberty and in justice: to give to their anxiously

stretched out arms a torch and an axe.

The purest and noblest exaltation of our ideal in the hearts of the

people is a constant and intrepid education; a cautious but vigorous

preparation for the armed insurrection.

“A program?”

A purpose — perhaps only a condition. But with this condition: Anarchy

will be!

[1] In fact, Lenin himself preferred the slogans of the anarchists until

the ‘dictatorship of the proletariat’ and his own personal dictatorship

were firmly established. Read The Guillotine at Work by Gregory P.

Maximoff, Cienfuegos Press.

[2] ...next to an image of the anarchist emblem, the City of Westminster

police’s “counter terrorist focus desk” called for anti-anarchist

whistleblowers [snitches] stating: “Anarchism is a political philosophy

which considers the state undesirable, unnecessary, and harmful, and

instead promotes a stateless society, or anarchy. Any information

relating to anarchists should be reported to your local police. (press

report 31 July 2011)

[3] These words have been stolen from Alfredo M. Bonanno’s introduction

to Feral Revolution, Feral Faun.

[4] Syndicalism is defined in the Encyclopedia Britannica as “the name

given to a form of socialist doctrine elaborated by and born from the

experience of the French Syndicats or trade Unions.

[5] Francesco Saverio Merlino (1856–1930) was a militant anarchist from

1877 to 1897. He wrote many pamphlets and books on anarchism and

libertarian socialism and edited newspapers and essays. A lawyer, he

defended the 26 insurgents of the ‘Matese Band’ (April 5 1877) at their

trial in Benevento (August 29, 1878) and all his life continued to

defend — in court and in the press — anarchists who had been accused of

subversive or revolutionary acts or words.

[6] Luigi Fabbri (1877–1935). When very young he began writing for

anarchist papers and reviews — and started to be persecuted by the

police. In 1898 he was arrested and sent to the Island of Ponza (off the

Gulf of Naples) then to the Island of Favignana (in the Egadi

Archipelago, off the westernmost coast of Sicily). He spent his life

working for the movement from four to eight in the morning and at his

job as a teacher the rest of the day. In 1926, having refused to take

the oath of allegiance to the Fascist dictatorship, he lost his position

as a teacher and went to France from where he was expelled in 1929.

Allowed to land in Uruguay, he started publication of a review called

Studi Sociali (Social Studies), which he continued until death snatched

him from his conscientious world. Malatesta — The Man and his thought,

Dittatura e Rivoluzione, Contrarivoluzione preventiva are just a few of

his best books.

[7] Pietro Gori (1856–1911). Lawyer, poet and compelling orator, he

dedicated his life to anarchism and its aspirations. He was persecuted

and imprisoned for his activities and had to roam around Europe and the

two Americas. His works were published in 12 volumes by Cromo-Tipo La

Sociale, Spezia (1911–12) and again, in 13 volumes, by Editrice Moderna,

Milano (1948). Two large volumes of Selected Works, were published by

Edizioni L’Antistato, Cesena, with a presentation by Guiseppe Rose

(1968).

[8] Errico Malatesta (1853–1932). It may be said that the story of

Malatesta’s life is intimately woven with the story of the first sixty

years of the international anarchist movement. From his first trip to

Switzerland, in 1872 to his last return from London in December 1919, he

lived more abroad than in Italy and spoke to workers and people of all

nations. His essays and pamphlets have been translated and published in

many languages: in Italy, three volumes of Scritti (Writings) edited by

L Fabbri and printed in Bruxelles under the auspices of Geneva’s Il

Risveglio (1932–1934); a volume of Scritti Scelti (Selected Writings) Ed

R L Napoli, 1947; over a dozen pamphlets, one of which, Fra Contadini

has been translated into a score of languages and published in no one

knows exactly how many editions and copies. In English it was first

published in instalments by Freedom and then in pamphlet by Freedom

Press in 1891, under the title: A talk about Anarchist-Communism. The

book Errico Malatesta — His Life and Ideas by Vernon Richards (London,

Freedom Press, 1965) is certainly worthy of its subject.

[9] William McQueen a young militant writer and public speaker, from

Scotland, was an enthusiastic supporter of the strikers’ cause. He was

arrested and charged with being one of the instigators of the Paterson

disorders of June 18, 1902. He was tried and condemned in abstentia for

conspiracy, with Galleani and Rudolf Grossman, to five years of hard

labour. After the sentence was confirmed by the higher courts, McQueen

returned from Scotland, where he had gone to join his family, and

surrendered to the New Jersey authorities who kept him in prison for

three years. He was released after a Paterson jury refused to condemn

Galleani, who was tried on the same charges in April 1907.

Rudolf Grossman (1882–1942), better known by his pen-name Pierre Ramus,

was a non-violent anarchist, born in Austria and well-known

internationally for his zeal and writings. He was pitilessly persecuted

by governments. He was not in Paterson on June 18, 1902. Nevertheless he

was arrested, tried and condemned to five years hard labour. The higher

Court of New Jersey voided the Paterson verdict for procedural reasons.

[10] For information consult: The Deportations Delirium of

Nineteen-Twenty — A personal narrative of an Historic Official

Experience by Louis F Post, Chicago, Charles N Kerr & Co.

[11] Clement Duval (1850–1935) was a French anarchist who favoured

direct action by means of expropriation. He had been sentenced to

capital punishment, having been arrested for burglary and wounds

inflicted on a police agent in 1885, but in 1887 the sentence was

changed to hard labour for life. In 1901 he escaped from the Cayenne

Island penitentiary and reached the United States where he rejoined the

anarchist movement and died in 1935. Those of us who knew him well had

the opportunity to appreciate the physical and moral strength of the man

and the depth of his convictions. He wrote his autobiography, which was

translated in Italian by Galleani and published in one volume by

L’Adunata dei Refrattari.

[12] Costantino Zonchello (1883–1967) came to America from his native

Sardinia in 1907. Happening to meet some comrade in Cincinnati, Ohio, he

became a supporter and collaborator of “Cronaca Sovversiva”. He was also

an enthusiastic speaker. The difficulties in which the paper and the

movement found themselves, made him more interested and active than

ever. And when “Cronaca Sovversiva” was suppressed in 1918, he edited

several underground papers, “Il Diritto”, and “L’ Inevitabile”. In the

spring of 1922, as the result of the efforts of old militants from all

parts of the country, “L’Adunata dei Refrattari” started its

publications as a fortnightly, becoming a weekly the following year.

Zonchello was its first editor, and remained a frequent collaborator

till the end of his active life

[13] Giuseppe Rose (1921–1975) a teacher by profession, he was a capable

writer for our Italian anarchist press. He edited the review “Volontà”

after the death of Giovanna Berneri from 1962 to the end of his life.

Among his better writings are:“Le Aforie del Marxismo Libertario” and

“Bibliografia di Bakunin” (Bakunin’s bibliography).

[14] Two recent editions of this book have been announced sometime ago:

one by the publishers of the review “Anarchismo” in Catania; the other

by Luigi Assandri, in Turin.

[15] Gaetano Bresci was an Italian weaver who emigrated to Paterson, NJ.

He returned to Italy and on July 29,1900 he killed the King Umberto I in

Monza. At his trial, in Milan he explained his act as a necessary

consequence of the State’s cruel repressions of the people. The text of

Merlino’s courageous defense is still in circulation in pamphlet form.

Bresci died in jail in 1902.

[16] F S Merlino was not a member of the famous “Matera Band” which was

active during year 1877. He participated, instead, in the defense of its

26 members at their trial in Benevento, from the 14^(th) to the 25^(th)

of August 1878.

[17] “Pro e contro il Socialismo. Esposizione critica dei principi e dei

sistemi socialisti” (Fratelli Treves. Milano. 1897). “L’Utopia

collettivista e la crisi del socialismo scientifico” (Fratelli Treves,

Milano 1896).

[18] Elisée Reclus (1830–1905) was a French anarchist thinker of high

merits and an eminent geographer, the author of “Nouvelle Geographie

Universelle — La Terre et les Hommes” (19 Vol.) and “L’Homme el la

Terre” (6 Volumes). There is an important work on Reclus by Max Nettlau:

“Elisée Reclus, La Vida de un sabio, justo y rebelde” (Ed. Revista

Blanca, Barcelona 1928,2 vol, 294,312 pages): there is also the recent

work by Paul Reclus: “Les Frère Reclus” (Paris, 1964, 209 pages).

Peter Kropotkin (1842–1821). One of the most important anarchist

thinkers and the author of many interesting books on history, science,

philosophy: “Paroles d’un Revolté” (autobiographical), “Modern Science

and Anarchism”, “Mutual Aid”, “Ethics”, “Revolutionary Pamphlets” Ed.

Roger Baldwin.

[19] There may have been some excuse for a statement of this kind in

1894, the last time Mr Merlino saw the United States. It could have been

successfully contradicted in 1907 when he made it in Rome, for “La

Questione Sociale”, a weekly begun and regularly published in Paterson,

was in its 17^(th) year of uninterrupted life, and vital enough to be

suppressed by order of the Federal Government in 1908... only to be

replaced — by the same people, in the same place with “L’Era Nuova” (The

New Era) which lived a normal life until it was suppressed in its turn

by the delirium raised by World War I. Nowadays all those newspapers and

reviews that Merlino scorned as inane are considered an integral part of

this country’s culture. So much so, that the newspaper Merlino himself

founded and directed in New York from 1892 to 1894, has been carefully

saved by the Columbia University Librarians, and can be read by anyone

who cares to ask — or bought for a few dollars, in microfilm, by

whomsoever, near or far, wishes to own it. And so are later papers as

“Cronaca Sovversiva” the complete collection of which has been

microfilmed by the Boston Public Library. So was “L’Adunata dei

Refrattari” (1922–1971) and, I suppose, the “Freie Arbeiter Stimme”, the

periodical in Yiddish language, that our comrades published from 1890 to

1977 in New York.

Merlino came and departed, but their passage left marks that cannot be

erased nor neglected.

[20] Mateo Moral, learned scholar and polyglot, used to translate books

for the Ferrer School. On May 31, 1905, in Madrid, he tried to kill the

King of Spain, Alphonse XIII. Two days later he killed himself in order

to avoid arrest.

[21] Leon Metchnikoff (1838–1888). Born in Petersburg of Ukrainian

extraction, he was expelled from Kharkow University in 1856 for

participation to a student demonstration. Two years later, for the same

reason he was expelled from the University of Petersburg. A student of

Oriental Languages, he was enrolled by a diplomatic mission to the

Middle East, in 1858, as an interpreter. But he soon quit the Mission

and went to Italy, in I860, where he joined the Garibaldi expedition in

Calabria. He was wounded at Volturno and remained in Italy where be met

Bakunin and participated in revolutionary activities in Spain and

elsewhere. His political writings were published in Herzen’s “Kokol”,

his scientific ones in Russian reviews and papers. In 1874 Metchnikoff

went to Japan as teacher of the Russian Language. Two years later he was

in Switzerland with a manuscript on the “Japanese Empire” which was

received by Elisée Reclus who incorporated it in his lifework.

Metchnikoff settled in Switzerland where he died in 1888 leaving to the

care of Elisée Reclus the text of his book “La Civilization et les

Grands Fleuves Historiques” (Civilization and the Great Historical

Rivers). It was published in 1889 by Librairie Hachette et Cie, Paris,

with an extensive and informative Preface by E Reclus containing a

friendly sketch of the author’s eventful life. (Quotation, from original

edition, page 11).

A more recent biography of Leon Metchnikoff was written by James D White

of the University of Glasgow and published by S.E.E.R., Vol. LIV. No. 3,

July 1976 under the title “Despotism and Anarchy: The Sociological

Thought of L I Mechnikov”.

[22] F S Merlino wrote two essays for the Paris “Journal des

Economistes”. The first: “Integration Economique — Expose’ des doctrines

anarchistes” (December 1889); the second: “Le caracter pratique de

l’Anarchisme” (1890). Galleani refers to the first one which was

translated into Italian in 1892 (Tip. dell’ Etruria, Grosseto).

[23] Jean Grave (1854–1939) French militant. Editor of historical

papers: “Le Revolte” — “Temps Nouveaux”.

Varlaan Tcherkesoff — Russian from Georgia, was one of the Tchaikovsky

Circle in St Petersburg, a lifelong friend of Kropotkin.

Sebastien Faure (1858–1939). For over sixty years a passionate anarchist

militant in France. Writer, essayist, publisher and, above all effective

orator. Besides books and pamphlets he left a monumental “Encyclopédie

Anarchiste” in four volumes 2894 pages Ed Li [rest unreadable, OCR-note]

[24] Statute of the Italian Socialist Party.

[25] From F S Merlino’s essay: “Perche Siamo Anarchici?”

[26] Two Roman Emperors: Publius Aelius Hadrianus, from 117 to 138 AD;

Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, from 161 to 180 AD.

[27] Jacques Bonhomme was the name ironically given by the landowner

aristocracy to the peasants, in the XIV Century. Jacquerie was called

the insurrection against feudalism, exploded in France, headed by

Guillaume Caillet or Jacques Bonhomme. From the XIV to the XVI Century,

“Jacqueries” appeared in Italy, England and Germany, besides France.

Anabaptism was a Protestant sect arisen in Zurich in 1523. They were,

among other things, a consequence of the people’s dissatisfaction and of

the more radical elements concern about the problem of property. They

were called Anabaptists because they claimed that baptism should be

administered at the age of reason. Concerning Thomas Muentzer’s

anabaptists see the excellent Soviet essay by Soviet historian M M

Smirin: “The popular Thomas Muenzer Reform and the great peasant war”

(Moscow-Leningrad, 1947).

[28] Francois Noel Babeuf (1760–1797) and Philippe Michel Buonarroti

(1761–1837) forerunners of the economic revolution, were arrested by the

Directoire — then ruling in France. Babeuf was executed as a traitor of

the French Republic.

[29] “Levellers” were the extremist of the revolutionary movement in the

British Civil War of the Seventeenth Century. In a letter dated November

1^(st), 1647, they were described as follows: “They have given

themselves a new name, viz: Levellers, for they intend to sett all

things straight, and raise a parity and community in the Kingdom”

(Gardner: “Great Civil War”).

[30] William Godwin (1756–1836), Robert Owen (1771–1858), Claude

Saint-Simon (1760–1825), Charles Fourier (1772–1837), Pierre-Joseph

Proudhon (1809–1865), Karl Marx (1818–1883) and Mikail Bakunin

(1814–1876): all of them contributed in the attempt to carry theoretical

socialism from vague and Utopian aspirations to more concrete and

precise conceptions.

[31] This is a reference to P-J Proudhon’s essay: “Qu’est-ce que la

Propriété?” (What is Property?).

[32] Alexandre-Auguste Rollin (1807–1874) a spokesman in Parliament for

the French Democratic-Republican opposition, who had as a press organ

“La Presse”.

Guisenne Mazzini (1805–1872) Italian standard-bearer of Republican Demo-

[rest unreadable, OCR-note]

[33] Andrea Costa (1851–1910).

[34] Albert Shaflle (1831–1903) His “Quintessence of Socialism” was

published in the Spring of 1874.

[35] Blaise Pascal (1623–1662). Isaac Newton (1642–1727). Guglielmo

Marconi (1875–1937).

[36] Oddino Morgari (1865–1929) Socialist Party Deputy. He was a

Secretary of the Italian Socialist Party, and, for a short time, editor

of its organ, “Avanti!”

[37] Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) Mathematician, Astronomer and

Physicist, was persecuted by the Roman Catholic Church for his theories

conflicting with the biblical legends.

Giordano Bruno (1548–1600) convinced that Copernicus was right in

refusing to believe that Earth is at the centre of the Universe, was

convicted of heresy by the Holy Office of the Roman Catholic Church and

burnt at the stake on a Public Square in Rome, on February 17, 1600.

[38] Alfred Bernhard Nobel (1833–1896) Inventor of dynamite and founder

of the Nobel Prize.

Friedrich Krupp (1787–1826) founder of the Krupp steel corporation and

arms producer for the German Imperial armies.

[39] Paolo Gorini (1813–1896) Italian Naturalist and Philosopher, author

of a book on the Origins of Vulcans.

Giovanni Bovio (1841–1903) Philosopher and politician, author of

“Sistema di Filosofia Universale”, “Fiosofia del Diritto in Italia” and

many other literary and philosophical works.

Elisée Reclus, see p. 129.

[40] The collectivists of the past display, nowadays, the communist

label. But where they have dared, for the first time, to realize their

“communism” they have confirmed our obvious and melancholy premonitions.

The Soviet State outdoes the Dominicans of the Holy Inquisition in their

despotism and intolerance. The obscene dictatorship of the handful of

scoundrels ruling over the Muscovite proletariat, the consequent

persecution of those who proudly dare to refuse to bow to the clumsy

arrogance of a Zinovieff, or a Trotsky; the contempt for farmworkers and

the systematic fawning over the worst and most corrupt foreign

capitalism, make further illustration superfluous.

When people like Zinovieff, Trotsky, Tchicherin, Krassin call themselves

“communists”, it, of course, takes a very deep conviction and a lot of

courage for us to continue to call ourselves by that name. We need a new

word that makes a differentiation. Words have their fortune, as the

Romans would say. They also have their misfortune. And we believe it

indispensable to write this footnote precisely in order to reject any

possible relationship with Soviet “communism” (C.Z.)

[41] Matamoro — Spanish for bully, blusterer

[42] Francois Rabelais (1494–1553) French monk, writer, physician...

author of “Gargantua” and “Pantagruel”.

[43] To those who are intoxicated by Nietsche but would also like to

have Stirner on their side, we dedicate the following lines from “The

Ego and His Own” (Ed Stock Paris, 1900, p.234), which is not only a

vivid appeal to rebellion, but a categorical and resolute denial that

anyone may treat his neigbors as he pleases:

“What is the remedy for all this?”

“Only one: to not admit any duty, which meant I am not duty bound to

restrict myself, nor to consider myself restricted. If I have no duties,

I don’t have any law”

“Will they handcuff me?”

“No one can bind my will. I shall always be free to not will.”

“But everything would be topsy-turvy if everyone did anything he

pleased.”

“But who says that everyone would be free to do everything he wants? Do

you yourself count for nothing, then? Are you bound to let anyone do

anything he wants to you? Defend yourself and no one will touch you. If

millions of people are behind you, supporting you, then you are a

formidable force and you will win without difficulty.”

Max Stirner(1806–1856), pen name of German writer Kaspar Schmidt, author

of a book published in 1845 under the title: “Der Einzige und sein

Eigentum” — “The Ego and his own” or, according to the Encyclopedia

Britannica: “The Unique Man and his Own”!

[44] Luigi Galvani (1737–1798); Alessandro Volta (1745–1827); Augusto

Righi (1850–1920); Heinrich Rudolf Hertz (1857–1894); James Clark

Maxwell (1831–1879); William Crookes (1832–1919): all physicists whose

previous work and research on electricity, made Guglielmo Marconi’s

discoveries and inventions possible. As a matter of fact, A Righi was

Marconi’s teacher at the University of Bologna.

[45] This is a reference to a strike of the granite workers in Barre,

Vermont, where the Italian workers — radicals in their majority — had so

notably prevailed that their enthusiasm scared the flabby leaders of the

American Federation of Labor even more than the bosses of the Industry.

So much so that at the AFL Convention for the Constitutional Revision,

an amendment was proposed and approved, making it mandatory to use the

English language exclusively in Union assemblies, denying aliens the

right to express themselves in their own language. Of course, the

amendment was totally ignored wherever the Union members were strong

enough to prevent the leaders from talking in English.

[46] Nowadays, it is impossible for the workers of any trade to remain

independent from their union. In the United States, at least, those who

remain separate are considered “scab”, even if they are respected for

their ability and are already paid above the union scale. But above all,

the employers claim that all their employees belong to the union, so

they discharge those that cannot show a union card.

Employers have learned from experience that it is easier to bargain with

the union committee, which is composed of intelligent workers, generally

well placed and jealous of their privileged positions but, after all,

still pliant and corruptible than it is to quarrel with a rough,

variable and restless crowd of individuals who have no legal standing to

establish a long term, comfortable agreement, and are more easily

blinded by their delegates’ stories than bought by shining coin. It

would take too much money to deal with them, and the quarrel would have

to be repeated every day.

[47] Vittorio Pini, anarchist partisan of immediate expropriation by

direct action. Founder with Parmeggiani and others, (in Paris on or

about 1887) of the anarchist Group “Intransigents”. In 1890 he was

condemned to deportation to the “Safety Islands” of French Guyana, where

he died in December 1903. On this occasion Galleani published (in

Cronaca Sovversiva January 16, 1904) a “medallion” saying: “His

activities may be disputed, one may dissent from his methods, but no one

who has known Vittorio Pini will ever dare say of him that he was a

vulgar thief or malefactor”. On Pini consult: “La Gazette des Tribunaux”

(Paris, 5–6 Novembre 1889); “Le Revolte’” (Novembre 1889); “Le

Crapouillot” (January 1938, page 32–33); J. Maitron: “Historie du

Mouvement Anarchiste en France” (1830–1914 — Paris 1955 pl77-179); L

Galleani: “Aneliti e Singulti” (Newark, NJ 94–96). (G.R.)

[48] Domingo de Guzman (1170–1221) founder of the Dominican Order and

instigator to the slaughter of the religious dissenters of Southern

France. He was

sanctified by Pope Gregory IV. Jacques Clement (1567–1589) a Dominican

friar who killed Henry III King of France.

Francois Ravaillac (1578–1610) another monk, killed Henry IV, another

king of France.

Dragonnades: violent repressions ordered by King Louis 14 against the

Protestants of Southern France.

Saint-Barthelemy: Name given by popular tradition to the slaughter of

religious dissenters — Huguenots — perpetrated on the night of August

24, 1572. Started in Paris on the orders of king Charles IX and his

mother, it spread all over France.

[49] Sofia Perowskaia (1853–1881) Russian militant member of the

revolutionary Club founded in 1869 by Nicolas Tchaikovsky. She was

executed in St Petersburg on April 1^(st) 1881 during the repression

that followed the death of Czar Alexander II.

Albert R. Parsons, Editor of the Chicago anarchist paper “The Alarm” and

one of the Chicago Martyrs, executed on November 11, 1887 with August

Spies, Adolf Fischer and George Engel. Luis Lingg, sentenced with them,

committed suicide rather than let the hangman murder him.

[50] Harbingers of the National Italian Revolution: Vittorio Alfieri

(1749–1803) poet; Gaetano Filangeri (1752–1788) Jurist; Melchiorre Gioia

(1795–1865) Historian and Philosopher.

[51] Patriots of the XVIII Century who have their blood and lives in the

struggle against the old regimes: Luigi Zamboni (1772–1795); Giovanni De

Rolandis (1774–1796); Ettore Carafa (1763–1799); Mario Pagano

(1740–1799); Domenico Cirillo (1730–1799); Luisa Monti Sanfelice

(executed in 1800 after having given birth — in Naples).

[52] Michele Angiolillo, born in Foggia in 1871, anarchist. To save

himself from the severity of the special laws against “press-crimes” he

went abroad in 1895. Two years later, from London he went to Spain where

he killed the dictator Canovas del Castillo on August 8, 1897. He was

arrested and executed nine days later, August 17, 1897.

[53] Sante Caserio, from Motta Visconti (Milano) where he was born in

1873, baker by trade and anarchist by conviction, had been sentenced to

prison for “anarchist propaganda”. To spare himself a term in prison, he

passed the Swiss border and then went in France. On June 24, 1894, in

Lyon he killed Sadi Carnot, President of the Republic. Sentenced to die,

he was executed on August 16, 1894.

[54] Eugène Cavaignac (1802–1857) a French General, violently repressed

the June 1848 insurrection.

Gaston Alexandre Auguste Gallifet (1830–1909) French General responsible

for the massacre of the Paris Commune 1871.

[55]

E. Sernicoli, a Judge of hostile views, author of a book “L’Anarchia e

gli Anarchici” (Anarchy and Anarchists) Ed. Treves. Milano, 1894, 2

volumes.

[56] Fiorenzo Bava Beccaris (1831–1924) General of the Royal Italian

Army sent to Milan to crush the popular demonstrations in May 1898. He

executed his orders without restraint causing many casualties (90 dead

officially admitted) and was publicly commended and rewarded by the king

himself.

[57] Auguste Vaillant (1861–1894) French anarchist who threw a bomb in

the Chamber of Deputies on December 9, 1893, and was condemned to death

although no one had been killed by it. The sentence was executed on

February 5, 1894.

[58] Clement Duval — see page viii.

François Claudius Koenigstein (1859–1892) better known as Ravachol, was

a French anarchist arrested for acts of dynamite explosions and

expropriation. Sentenced to die, he was executed on July 11, 1892.

Luigi Luccheni, a “bastard”, killed the Empress of Austria Elisabeth, in

Geneva (Switzerland) on September 10, 1898. He died in the Vescovado

Prison in 1910. (See: J. Fehmi in “Cronaca Sovversiva” Sept. 14, 1912).

[59] Saint Clement is reported to have expressed the opinion that: “In

good Justice everything should belong to everybody. Iniquity has made

private property” (Almanacco Libertario for the year 1938 — Ginevra).

[60] Sévérine — Madame Sévérine as she was called in Paris for many

years — was the pen-name of Caroline Remy (1855–1929). She was a writer

and a speaker who, since the beginning of her career, had assigned to

herself the role of public defender, from the press, from the public

rostrum, and face to face with the dispensers of official justice, of

all the victims of social injustice.

[61] Lino Ferriani (1852–1921). Lawyer, Sociologist, student of

delinquency among minors.

Johann Gottlieb Fichte (1762–1814) German philosopher author of “Science

of Knowledge”, “Talks to the German Nation” and many other books.

[62] Origen (185–254?) A Christian theologian who castrated himself in

order not to be distracted by sexual problems.

[63] Spot in Rome where Giordano Bruno was executed in 1600.

[64] Hermann Stellmacher and Anton Kammerer, tried in Austria for the

killing of several police agents, were given the death penalty and

executed respectively on August 8 and September 29, 1884.

[65] Carlo Cafiero (1846–1892). One of the first Italian

Internationalists, close friend of Bakunin, a member of the “Matese

Band” (1877). Also the first Italian translator of Karl Marx’ “Das

Kapital”.

Stepniak, pseudonym used by the Russian Anarchist Serge Kravcinski, who

participated in the preparation of the “Matese Band” but was arrested

before he joined the group of the rebels among which were Malatesta and

Cafiero.

[66] Mazas was a Parisian prison, long ago demolished.

[67] Octave Mirbeau (1848–1917). Writer of novels, dramas, essays,

fascinated, at that time, by the Anarchists’ logic, devotion, and

courage.

[68] Saint Thomas Aquine, a Dominican friar who lived from about 1227 to

1274, that is, almost thirteen centuries after the birth of the supposed

founder of Christianism, and more than one thousand years after the

writing of the “New Testament”.

[69] James Guillaume (1844–1916) author of “L’Internationale: documents

et souvenirs”. Anselmo Lorenzo (1841–1914), Tarrida del Marmol

(1861–1915), Francisco Ferrer (1859–1909). Edward Carpenter (1844–1929).

William Tcherkesoff (1846–1925). Max Nettlau (1865–1944): all

Internationalists and Anarchists of importance for their writings, their

feelings and activities.

[70] Errico Malatesta (1853–1932) See p. 126, Johann Most (1846–1906),

Sebastian Faure (1858–1939) See p. 131.

[71] FS Merlino: “L’Internazionale Economica” (Economic Internationale)

Grosseto. Tip. Etruria, 1902.

[72] FS Merlino: “Perche’ siamo anarchici” (Why we are anarchists)

Buenos Aires, Tip. Sociologica, 1900.

[73]

L. Metchnikoff: “La Civilization et les Grands Fleuves Historiques”

Librairie Hachette, Paris 1889. Pag. 34–35.

[74] The poet was Gabriele D’Annunzio (1863–1938) in his poem “La Nave”

(The Ship) — Odi Navali — 1892–93, pag.735–738.

[75] Paul Eltzbacher: Anarchism (L’Anarchisme — Ed. Giard, Paris, 1923).

Ettore Zoccoli: “L’Anarchia — Gli agitatori, Le idee, I fatti” —

Fratelli Bocca, Milano, 1907.