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Title: A Letter Author: Emma Goldman Date: June 1906 Language: en Topics: letter, Libertarian Labyrinth, Mother Earth Source: Retrieved on 25th April 2021 from http://wiki.libertarian-labyrinth.org/index.php?title=A_Letter Notes: Published in Mother Earth 1, no. 4 (June 1906): 13–14.
Chicago, June 2^(nd), 1906.
Dear Editor:—I hope you have not been trying to relieve your feelings by
using language dangerous to your soul’s salvation. I can sympathize with
you, though. However, it was impossible for me to send the promised
article for “M. E.” Who, indeed, could expect a bride of two weeks to
waste time upon magazine articles?! I hope you have read the reports of
my marriage, though your silence would indicate that you have either
neglected to read the important news, or that your usual lack of faith
in the truth and honesty of the press has not permitted you to credit
the story.
It is high time, dear friend, that you get rid of your German
skepticism; you know, I esteem your judgment, but when it comes to
doubting anything the newspapers say, I draw the line. What reporters do
not know about Anarchists, and especially about your publisher, is not
worth knowing. According to their great wisdom I not only incited men to
remove the crowned heads of various countries, but I have done worse—I
have incited them to marry me, and when they proved unwilling to love,
honor and obey the order of our secret societies to blow up all sacred
institutions, I sent them about their business.
Much as I realize the importance of my articles for Mother Earth, you
cannot expect me to sacrifice my wifely duty to my lord and master for
Earth’s sake.
I have always held to the opinion that there must be absolute confidence
between publisher and editor on all matters except the receipts;
therefore I have to confess that my newly-wedded husband, who has just
graduated from the University of the Western Penitentiary—the curriculum
of which is lots of liberty, leisure and enjoyment—objects to the
drudgery of an agitator and publisher. In justice to him, I dare not do
more than write letters all day, address meetings every evening, and
enjoy the love and kindness of the comrades till early morning hours.
Where, then, shall I find time to write articles for “Mother Earth?”
But to be in keeping with the serious and dignified tone of our valuable
magazine, and especially with you[14] dear Editor, I want to say that my
meetings were very successful, and that Mother Earth is being received
with great favor in every city. Nearly 500 copies were sold here.
After reading the brilliant reports in the Chicago papers and seeing the
handsome, refined policemen at the various meetings, I am not surprised
that our magazine is being appreciated. Apropos of the Chicago police,
just fancy, I have actually forced them out of their uniforms. I hope
this will not conjure up the horrible picture of Chicago’s finest
parading the city in Adam’s costume. Not that! Only, Chief of Police
Collins was so outraged over my gentle criticism of his dear little boys
at one of the woodworkers’ meetings, that he gave strict orders, “No
officer should again appear at a public meeting in uniform where that
awful Emma Goldman is humiliating and degrading the emblem of authority
and law.”
After this, I hope you will never again doubt the importance of public
meetings and the great and far-reaching influence of my speaking.
I shall soon be with you, if I survive my tour, the police, and the
press. I shall then try to make up for my sins, in the July number of
Mother Earth, provided you will let me recuperate in your editorial care
and affection.
Emma Goldman.