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Title: John Most
Author: Max Nettlau
Date: 1906
Language: en
Source: Freedom Vol. XX, Nos. 205-207, April-June 1906

Max Nettlau

John Most

The sad news of the death of John Most came to us early last month from

Cincinnati. An indefatigable propagandist of Socialism and Anarchism for

nearly forty years, one of the-most persecuted and maligned men of our

time, and a good comrade, working hard for his ideas up to the last, we

will tell something of his life and his work.

Johann Most was born in the old Bavarian town of Augsburg on February

6th, 1846. A bookbinder by trade, he delighted in breaking spells of

work by tramping from town to town and country to country in the

interval, and thus saw a good deal of Central Europe in his early years.

This brought him into contact with the working class movement, and he

eagerly adopted Socialism, Republicanism, and Atheism. He spent some

time in the Swiss Jura, at Locle, in 1868, when the International

Working Men’s Association was already established there, but not yet

separated from politics. Had he known enough French to participate in

that movement, and had he stayed there a few months longer, he would

have met Bakunin on his first visit there in February 1869; and an

independent spirit like Most’s would have embraced Bakunin’s ideas with

full ardor, and German Anarchist propaganda might have been begun by him

at that time. As it was, he knew nothing of the ideas, inaccessible to

him at the time; but he was always far in advance of the average Social

Democrat, and was the enfant terrible of his party from the beginning,

for he had not the slightest leaning towards compromise and diplomacy,

and as he then considered Social Democracy to mean Socialism,

Republicanism, Atheism, triumphing by means of the Social Revolution, he

said so whenever he could, to the dismay of cautious party politicians.

Besides, he had the right sense of humor and immense pluck, and knew how

to hit hard in the right place. His habitual place of residence soon

became the prison cell, with intervals of liberty during which he

committed over and over again the heinous crime of free speech, for

which nearly ten years of his life were stolen from him by condemnations

in various countries.

From the Jura, he went to Vienna (1869), where just then a very active

Socialist movement was going on, though the energy of the young party

was piteously wasted on demanding a reform of the franchise. Most had

indulged in some plain talk about the Republic, and spent his first

months in prison. Then he took part in preparing the demonstration of

December, 1869, by which about 20,000 working men, marching before the

House of Parliament, demanded manhood suffrage. They got nothing, and

their leaders were tried for high treason, among them J. Most and

Andreas Scheu. By the way, in November, 1905, not 20,000 but 200,000

working men and women marched before that Parliament for the same

purpose, and this time got fine Ministerial promises. There leader, Dr.

Adler, declared shortly afterwards at a meeting that they were now, for

the first time being, a Government party (Regierungs partei), and just

no the Austrian parliament is debating the caricature of manhood

suffrage which the Government offers them. It was not for this that the

men of 1869 had worked, and after a long trial (June 1870) there were

sentenced to long terms of imprisonment. Most, whose pluck and humor

were conspicuous at the trial, received a sentence of six years, and

went to Luben, where he was relatively well treated as a political

prisoner. In February next an unexpected amnesty liberated the victims

of that trial; Most was, of course, expelled from Austria!

He went to Leipzig, where he had his first encounter with official

Parliamentarian Social Democracy in the form of Liebknecht, who

instinctively abhorred the fresh enthusiasm of Most. He told him coolly

that in that country they had adopted scientific Socialism, and would

have nothing to do with revolutionary phraseology. Most, always detested

by these leaders, whose little game of moderation and statesmanship he

continually upset, was immensely liked by the workers wherever he went,

as he expressed their wants in plain language. He was invited to come to

Chemnitz to edit the Chemnitz Free Press. In this Saxonian industrial

town he spent some years in prison and out of prison, if we may say so;

and when he had, perhaps, had enough of Saxonian prisons, he went to

Mainz to edit the Social Democratic paper there. The workers wanted him

to become a member of the German Parliament, and he accepted, believing

he could do some plain talking there before new and large audiences. He

has told himself in his ‘’Recollection” how utterly disappointing

Parliament was to him—a feeling which some of our new Labour Members may

also experience some day, Parliament is like a huge machine, full of

cogs and cranks, directed by Government and the party wire-pullers, who

themselves are directed by money and other vested interests. There is no

place for an independent Member, and Most, who entered it believing he

could speak up for Socialism and explain the misery of the workers,

never got a word in, and was permitted to speak only once or twice, when

he had to pretend to speak on some very practical subject, perhaps the

twenty-second amendment to a Bill for the vaccination of dogs or the

like, and then the Speaker forced him to stick to the subject! So he

himself experienced the futility of Parliament as a revolutionary

platform—in Parliamentary reform—work he never, I imagine, believed.

A speech on the Paris Commune (Berlin, March, 1874) meant for him nearly

two years in the Prussian prison of Ploetzensee, near Berlin. Later he

edited the Berlin Free Press, the largest organ of German Socialism,

which was not much liked at Leipzig, where Liebknecht published the

official organ, Volksstaat, afterwards Vorwaerts. The Berlin movement

had been given up to the struggle between the Lassalleans and the group

of Bebel and Liebknecht. Most was the right man there, being affiliated

to neither of these sects. A so-called Christian Socialist movement had

begun there, the inevitable forerunner of Antisemitism and Conservative

corruption of the Labour movement. Most replied by a determined

Freethought propaganda among Socialists, an idea the neglect of which

largely explains, the great hold which priests of all sorts still have

on the workers under pretext of Christian Socialism! At that time Eugen

Duehring had challenged Marxist Socialism, and was replied to by F.

Engels in interminable articles spread over the Vorwaerts for years.

Most did not believe that Marx and Engels had said the last word on

Socialism, and that henceforth we all have but to learn their catechism

by heart and cease to doubt or discuss even. He saw dogmas in it. He

kept his mind open in regard to Duehring’s heresy, not accepting it

either, as it was certainly not revolutionary. But all this showed to

the official leaders that he was not one of their own kind, who would

say white or black at their dictation. One may ask, Did he not hear of

Anarchism during these years? I sincerely believe he did not; the little

paper, published at Berne (1876-77) may never have reached him, and the

very few propagandists, who came from Switzerland, like Reinsdorf and

Werner, seem not to have known him then. Besides this, Marx, Engels,

Liebknecht, Hirsch, and others had published the vilest anti-Anarchist

tracts distorting everything, so he had no chance to know.

The Anti-Socialist Law of 1878, was passed when he was in prison again.

After his liberation he was expelled from Berlin, and he could see at

once that for years no word of Socialism would be permitted to be

printed or spoken in public in the whole country. The official party met

this brutal repression by their famous so-called tactics. (Taktik); they

started papers with inoffensive names (e.g., “The Little Lamp’’) which,

contained not a word on Socialism, but as the editors, writers, and

printers got their living by them, everything was all right for them,

and many have indeed lived for years as Labour parasites of this

description. Most was not one of them; he never had been. He went to

London, where the German Communistic Working Men's Club soon enabled him

to publish that paper which became his real life’s work, the Freiheit

(Freedom), issued regularly since January 4th, 1879.

The Freiheit began as a Social Democratic paper, and was written with

verve, energy, enthusiasm, in strong, graphic language, which gave it at

once a first place in German Socialist literature. It was strictly

prohibited in Germany, but was smuggled into the country with so much

greater diligence. The German workers liked it immensely. It had to

record, besides the infamous police persecutions, no small number of

acts of cowardice and wavering on the part of some Social Democrats.

Besides, Most came into close contact with revolutionists of other

countries, and soon the Social Democratic organ paper became a Social

Revolutionary paper. It is said that Karl Marx himself was disgusted

with the famous tactics of feigned submission, and was glad to see Most

stand up and speak freely. But the official party —Liebknecht, Bebel,

Hasendener, etc.—put their heads together to find a remedy for the

growth of revolutionary Socialism, which upset their tactics. They had

denounced Most as speaking with impunity from a safe asylum (we shall

soon see how safe this asylum was); they now did the same thing,

founding the Socialdemokrat (Zurich, September 28th, 1879), opposing

that Swiss paper, edited by von Vollmar, later by Edward Bernstein, to

the Freiheit. Then began a royal fight between Most and his friends and

the official party. Most’s commonsense, good humour, and real

indignation are in striking contrast to the lame, impotent defence of

his opponents, who, however, felt safe in relying on the desire for

peace and quietness of the majority of their electors, who still wielded

the party machinery and held the funds, and who, as old Marxists and

Lassalleans, were past masters in the underhand, warfare of intrigues

and slanders. Wherever Most could personally speak to the workers, he

carried the day; but the police made his agitation on the Continent

impossible for him. He had to leave Paris immediately after his speech

at a German meeting there; he could stay but a short time in

Switzerland, and was expelled from Belgium on arriving there. The

official party meanwhile held a Congress at Wyden, Switzerland (1880),

which was managed in such a way that Most and the delegates who might be

in his favour had no chance of being there. Of course, this Congress

excommunicated him.

The real reason why Most and his friends could not vanquish the official

party, which just then was at its worst period, was that their own ideas

were rapidly developing from Revolutionary Socialism to something very

near Anarchism, and by-and-by to real Anarchism. This evolution, which

was clear enough to them—in the absence of all direct means of

propaganda, when only here and there a smuggled copy of the Freiheit

could with difficulty reach them—this evolution, then, could not be made

sufficiently clear to the Socialists in Germany, who knew nothing

whatever about Anarchism, and had only heard or read the Marxist

calumnies against Bakunin and the like. Anarchism was first mentioned in

the Freiheit in some letters written by A. Reinsdorf (decapitated in

Halle, 1885), who had been a member of the Jurassian Federation. Most

was hitting hard against enemies all round, and could not at the same

time theoretically propagate ideas which were new also to him. In this

way the greater part of the German and Austrian readers could no longer

follow the paper, and took no further interest in it. They wanted a

thoroughgoing Social Democratic party, and were disgusted with the

waverers and cowards; —but they had no desire to go further; and

gradually joined again the old flock.

A small number of men, however, enthusiastically accepted Anarchism, and

in Austria during the years 1882 to 1884 the great majority of the party

instinctively followed them, though any theoretical propaganda was

almost impossible. They believed in a Social Revolution in the near

future, and endeavoured to rouse the people by individual acts of

violence, preceding by nearly ten years Ravachol and his comrades in

France. The people did not follow them, and their small numbers were

almost exterminated in batches—the gallows, long terms of penal

servitude, or some escapes to England and America.

Most had found in London some excellent comrades who helped the Freiheit

with enthusiastic determination. The best of all was John Neve,

indefatigably devoted to Anarchist propaganda, until his arrest in 1887,

when he entered a German prison which he never left alive. Later, in

1886, J. Trunk, V. Dave, and others from Paris. There was life and

spirit in this propaganda as seldom in a movement, and all seemed going

well when the English Government came to the help of Bismarck, put Most

in jail, and in 1882 made the further publication of the Freiheit in

London impossible.

A spirited article headed “At Last!” (Endlich!) which Most had written

on hearing of the execution of Alexander II of Russia by the Executive

Committee of the Narodnaya Volya, served as pretext. Most was arrested

and charged with inciting to the murder of kings in general (March,

1881). The indignation of English Radicals and Socialists at this Press

persecution will still be remembered. An English paper called Freiheit

was started (April 4th—June 15th, seven numbers), and our old comrade F.

Kitz will perhaps, give us a more graphic account of the trial the

pamphlet, “The ‘Freiheit’ Prosecution: The Trial of Herr John Most”

(London, 1881, 30 pp.), might be read containing Mr. A. M, Sullivan,

M.P.’s, speech for the defence. Lord Coleridge sentenced Most to

eighteen months hard labour, and the legend of English free speech and

Press, upheld by English juries, was destroyed.

When, at the time of Orsini, Palmerston had Simon Bernard tried, the

London jury acquitted him (1858). The most compromised refugees of the

Commune were let alone in England. But John Most went to hard labour, a

task which never had been imposed on him in his years of prison as a

political offender in Austria and Germany. Since that time the trials of

the printers of the Freiheit in 1882, of Cantwell and Quinn in 1894, of

V. Bourtzeff in 1897, and of the Italian comrades of the Insurrezione in

1905, did away with the last remnants of the the beautiful legend.

Most’s imprisonment (April, 1881—October 1882) no more Interrupted the

regular publication of the Freiheit by the comrades who set up the

paper, and others whose names scarcely came before the public, than did

his years of prison life in America; moreover, he always succeeded in

remaining the principal contributor by smuggling his copy through the

prison bars. He was an expert in prison life, so to speak, always

keeping his spirits up, and by gymnastics and mental exercise evading

physical degradation. Thus he left prison, as a rule, in full vigour,

and immediately took his place on the platform and in the editor’s

office.

Anarchism made further progress in the Freiheit of 188l and 1882; but in

1882 new persecutions taxed the determined devotion of the publishing

group to the utmost. An article approving the killing of Cavendish and

Burke in Phoenix Park, Dublin, was the cause of the prosecution (April,

1882), and this time the compositors of the paper, Schwelm and Merten,

were sentenced to long terms, of hard labour. After this, the English

police, seeing that they could not, kill the paper, felt that they were

hampered by the formalities of “mere law” and adopted arbitrary measures

throughout, giving out that all who took any part whatever in printing

and distributing further issues of the Freiheit would be arrested. After

keeping front for months to these continuous vexations, an opportunity

offered itself to have the paper printed at Schaffhausen, in

Switzerland, and by the intermediary of Stellmacher, an Anarchist who in

1884 was hanged in Vienna, this was done (summer, 1882). The fact that

in these transactions—details of which the London group could not, of

course, regulate from a distance—an individual took part in Switzerland

whom the German Social Democrats five years later found out to have been

a police spy—this fact still serves Social Democratic historians as the

basis of their assertion that the Freshet was a police paper!

When Most left prison (autumn, 1882) he did the best thing that could be

done under the circumstances: he accepted the invitation of Justus

Schwab and the New York German comrades to come to America, and to

publish the Freiheit at New York. That this temporary measure had to

become a permanent one is the tragedy of his life. He then, and, I

believe, for many years, perhaps until his death, dreamed that he should

never more return to his real field of action, Europe.

The native American Socialist movement of the epoch of the International

had become almost extinct in the early eighties; only in Chicago and in

California new efforts began to be made. The German movement had been

discredited by the quarrelsome pedantry of Sorge and others to whom Karl

Marx had confided the care of the remnant of the remnant of his

followers in the International. The German expulsions of Socialists in

l878 and 1879 brought many Social Democrats over to the States, and the

numerous local societies all took sides and mostly split over the

differences between and the Freiheit and the official party. The Chicago

Socialists, A. Spies, the editor of the Arbeiter-Zeitung, and others of

the murdered of November, 1887, and many New York Socialists, Justus

Schwab, etc., took part with Freiheit, and Most stepped at once on to

well-prepared ground. When in Austria and Germany, his appearances on

the platform were but few and far between, as each speech usually led to

a spell of imprisonment; when in London in 1879-80 much of the time was

taken up by polemics, personal questions, embittered encounters with

tenacious opponents. In America in those early years he really enjoyed

free speech on his large lecturing tours, he came into contact with

numerous comrades, and had reasons to believe a hopeful, growing

movement ahead. At first all went well; the Pittsburgh Convention, in

the autumn of 1883 formed a federation of existing groups, the

International Working People’s Association, and adopted a platform

worded by Most. The Chicago movement made rapid progress, and Parson’s

Alarm restarted the English movement, this time as a revolutionary and

Anarchist one. Most himself now first formulated his ideas on Anarchism

in a series of articles, reprinted as a pamphlet (“Free Society”).

The early eighties were, like the early seventies and the early

nineties; periods of growing Anarchist agitation and action until brute

force, that highly intellectual weapon of modern as well as primitive

society, repressed once more the then but small numbers of those who

rose for freedom. As no idea was ever crushed by repression, and no

progress was ever won save by overthrowing hosts of brutal and stupid

obstacles, these early defeats are but inevitable episodes and stepping

stones. The French and Swiss Governments meant to stamp out Anarchism in

the early eighties by expelling Anarchists from Switzerland, rendering

the publication of the Revolte impossible in Geneva; hunting down the

Lyons Anarchist papers and imprisoning the Lyons Anarchisms, P.

Kropotkin and others. The real result of these persecutions was, however

that the Revolte was boldly transplanted to Paris and from this centre

made Anarchism more firmly rooted in France than the Geneva propaganda

could have done. The Freiheit, which in London might not have been able

to live after the years of excitement were over, was driven to America

where it prospered for many years. In Austria, since 1883, the whole

German and Bohemian speaking party—a small clique excepted—was in favour

of Most, and evolving towards Anarchism, though their papers, Zukunft

(“The Future”) and others, could scarcely print a line on the subject

that was not confiscated, and the fate meted out to those who read

Most’s papers was ten years, or even more, of penal servitude. This led

to a series of acts of violence, and early in 1884 a period of savage

repression crushed all external manifestations of propaganda in Austria

and Hungary for years. In Germany the friends of Most were hunted down

to such a degree by police and Social Democrats that they could not keep

their ground; there also a few of the best perished after violent

attempts (Reinsdorf and others). For some time refugees from Germany and

Austria swarmed to Switzerland, but persecutions and numerous expulsions

(1883-85) destroyed this new centre of propaganda. Thus London and the

United States only remained where Most’s paper could be openly supported

by subscribers; everywhere else it had to be circulated as a secret

paper, at great personal risk.

During these years, 1882-85, the Freiheit, to my impression, was at its

best. It is really stirring reading. Most, ever cheerful, ever bold hits

hard. Then came times of disappointment. American “liberty” suddenly,

threw off the mask, and the infamous horrors of the Chicago hunt for

Anarchists’ blood followed (1886-87); on the other side, internal

dissensions paralysed the movement; of the latter I will speak first.

Most’s Anarchism, as expressed in the edition of his “Free Society” was

entirely home-made; it was Federalist Socialism, hardly anything else.

He had hardly any access at that, I believe, to real Anarchist

literature, which was not so readily accessible then as it is to-day.

Some German Anarchists, like Rinke, who had lived in Switzerland as

members of the Jurassian Federation, and who had closely followed the

elaboration of Communist Anarchism in the Revolte, looked, of course,

askance at the uncouth authoritarian Communism of Most in 1882-83. If

only they had been patient enough to explain matters to Most in a quiet

way! For the latter by-and-by

modified his views, and accepted Communist Anarchism fully the moment he

really knew it from its proper sources. But they made their better

knowledge a means of correcting and reproving, and Most’s temper was too

Anarchistic to stand this. Moreover, he had reason at the time to

believe that these theoretical polemics were but a pretext and the outer

form of a deeper intrigue against his influence in Germany and Austria.

For in 1884 a great number of refugees from Austria, expelled from

Switzerland, had come to London, and centered round Joseph Peukert, and

Austrian Anarchist, the editor of Die Zukunft, and the uncontested

leader of the Austrian revolutionary revival of 1882-84. Driven to

London, surrounded by friends and admirers, used to power, so to speak,

by the past years in Austria, he became a rival to Most, and instead of

finding a way to co-operate with him, endeavored to crust him and to

step into his place. His prestige with the Austrians served him for this

purpose as well as the better theoretical knowledge of Anarchism which

he, Rinke, and others had picked up in France and in Switzerland. Under

these circumstances Der Rebell was restarted (1884-86) and continued by

Die Autonomie (1886-92). They certainly made Communist Anarchism better

known by means of translation of P. Kropotkin’s and other pamphlets and

articles, but Peukert and his friends themselves did not know how to

write; dulness and absolute lack of humor characterize them; Most’s

verve, humor, common sense, irrepressible cheerfulness,—all the are

sadly absent. If they had not interfered, who knows whether Most in the

early nineties—when Anarchism was first propagated in Germany by

publication published in the country itself (Der Socialist, Berlin,

etc.)—would not have found means to take a more direct part in this new

movement, and might have returned to Europe, which was always so much

nearer to him than America. As it was, this London opposition against

the Freiheit took the most hateful forms, and was also the cause of the

drama the victim of which was Most’s truest friend and best of comrades,

John Neve, arrested in Belgium in 1887, handed over to Germany, and

deceased in a prison cell nine years later. The sequel of Neve’s arrest

was that Peukert was discredited to the utmost degree with Most and his

friends, that Peukert’s friends stuck to him the more, and the struggle

was embittered. Finally, also, Peukert left London and edited the New

York Anarchist. In the end things ended well in this way, that part of

the independent Socialists who in 1890 had left the official German

party, accepted Anarchism, and began to replace secret by public

propaganda in Berlin since 1891. Most welcomed this movement, and the

Autonomie ceased publication. Since that time the scope of the Freiheit

was limited to the Germans in the United States.

But here the Chicago tragedy had destroyed all illusions. As to Most he

scarcely ever had any illusions about the Americans. Their mechanical

skill is indeed immense; San Francisco will be rebuilt before the ashes

are swept away from the alleys of Naples! But the hunt for the almighty

dollar absorbs all other faculties, arid that immense continent, the

invaluable natural resources of which fell after the splendid War of

Independence into the hands of the sturdy free citizens of those days,

is now under the control of trusts and millionaires, assisted by the

vilest press on earth and by the fullest bloom, of religious cant.

Civilisation is but skin-deep, freedom a mockery, human feeling totally

absent as negro lynching, the immigration laws and the Gorki incident

show up to date. The Labour movement has always suffered by this general

disposition of minds; successful trade unions think no further of

solidarity, but establish monopolies of their own; successful labour

leaders use their position often as the political “bosses” do, and their

action in the labour struggle is but a stepping stone for their future

advancement. In the days of Most’s arrival the Powderleys and Van

Pattens were at the head of the unionist and Socialist movements, what

has become of them? Most, who, with all his cynical way of talk, in

which he often indulged, was a German idealist of the old days which are

gone for that country too, was disgusted at what he saw in America.

Those who come from a country where a great part of the labour and

political struggle is waged to obtain free speech, the full right of

association; etc, overrate the power of these factors, and think that in

England or the the United States, where these liberties obtain, they

would be continually used by all to the utmost for revolutionary

propaganda until the people is roused to action. But in reality

capitalism decrees in these free countries that these beautiful

liberties are written in golden letters in the statute books, but must

not be used by the people, or they will be imprisoned or hanged just as

in despotic countries. Thus the real difficulties of popular movements

are the same in every country, and Most, who had had a warning of this

in London soon got other warnings in the United States.

Had he been found anywhere in Illinois in May, 1886, the time of the

Haymarket meeting, he would have been hanged like Spies, Parsons and

their comrades. He happened to have delivered at that time a lecture at

New York, and a lying press report of that lecture supported by the

testimony of journalist scoundrels, served to send him for a year to the

New York Penitentiary. On one or two other occasions he was sent there

again; for the last time he was thrown into prison after the death of

McKinley. Whenever a revolutionary act was committed in the United

States, the New York press called for the imprisonment or hanging of

Most, and a pretext for another prosecution was soon found. But the old

man treated all this with scorn and indifference, and kept his good

humour.

It is to be regretted that this shameful treatment by the mass of the

Americans, and the unfavourable impression which he obtained of the

Labour movement on the whole, made him overlook the one redeeming factor

in American life—the existence of numbers of independent, free men and

women who work for their ideas by their example and by their serious

discussion; it is those who began the Abolitionist, the early Anarchist,

and many other progressive movements. Most, a born agitator, had no

patience for their methods, which imply a degree of toleration towards

opponents, whilst his natural impulse was to hit hard. In this way he

remained separated from the American progressive elements who endeavour

to convince individuals to act for themselves, whilst he strove to rough

the masses to destroy the system. It must be said, however, that the

fault was not entirely on his side, that these Americans did nothing to

meet him, nay, did worse—witness the “firebug ” article of Liberty.

Most fell out with a great many people, but, a few instances excepted,

his opinion was usually justified some time later by facts. He welcomed

all genuine efforts of American propaganda, e.g., John Turner’s first

American tour. It was touching, to read. P. Kropotkin’s personal visit

had delighted him. We all regret that he could never find the means to

visit Europe again. He made many lecturing tours all over America, and

the Freiheit was regularly published until his death. in 1886-7 it had

to migrate to New Jersey; in the nineties it went for a short time to

Rochester, NY, where Most then edited the daily German paper of that

town, but soon found that a daily paper is a money matter and cannot be

a propagandist paper. All the rest of the time the Freiheit was

published at New York, and with the Revolte (Temps Nouveaux, born also

in 1879); Tucker’s Liberty (1881), Worker’s Friend (1885), and Freedom

(1886), it was one of the oldest Anarchist papers.

Most was the author of Socialist songs which are still popular in

Germany and Austria; he is said to have been impressive as an actor in

“The Weavers,” etc. and when he began to tell of his early of other less

abstract subjects in the Freiheit, a poetic vein will not be denied him,

I believe. His pamphlets are numerous; the “Deistic Pestilence and

Religious Plague of Man” is translated into many languages; in religious

matters he was from first to last uncompromisingly atheistic and

materialistic, and set his foot on all those modern humbugging efforts

which in a roundabout way lead back to religious mental enslavement. His

life work cannot be guessed from the inspection of these pamphlets, but

is before us in the twenty-seven volumes of the Freiheit; some day a

couple volumes of well selected articles will make him better and more

lastingly known than he was of late years.

For the Freiheit, which had come to America as a refugee paper and had

been unable to leave when many of its original supporters left or

retired, had been too uncompromising to cater for local American

popularity, and Most and his friends had to strive hard to keep together

those who enabled the paper to live through all these years. It is, in

face of the untimely death of Most, an item of consolation to me that he

died before the Freiheit, and that his life’s work has not died before

him.

Death at barely sixty is untimely indeed, and with him a comrade died of

uncompromising tenacity and purpose, plenty of good sense, real

intellectual faculties, and good humor to boot; we have not many to lose

like him.