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24743‘18bre sic 1855’ Wimbledon London. An interesting letter indicating the networks of sympathisers who assisted those fleeing to England in the years following the revolutions of 1848. In the July 1895 edition of the Atlantic the subject of this letter the Christian Socialist J. M. Ludlow in reviewing Nadaud’s memoirs described him as ‘a friend of my own of many years’ standing’. The present item was written in the seventh of the eighteen years of Nadaud’s English exile part of which was spent as a teacher in Wimbledon under the name ‘Henri Geo. Nadaud’. The identity of the recipient is not known. 4pp 16mo. Bifolium on grey paper. Worn and with a small part of one corner torn away but in fair overall condition. Folded once for postage. Sixty-six lines of text addressed to ‘Cher Mons Delabussière’ and signed ‘Martin’. He begins by explaining why he has not been able to return in person the ‘numéro’ of a periodical that Delabussière has sent him and that he has read with great pleasure. He had previously made arrangements about altered worktimes with a colleague. He goes on to ask whether Delabussière would like to dine with him the following Wednesday and whether he would like him to invite ‘Boura’ and another man as well. He states that he does not recall talking to Boura on the subject of a letter ‘écrite par le monsieur ou je suis à celui que je venais de quitter. / Le fait de votre réussite parle assez haut en lui même pour que aucun on dit ne puisse atteindre votre amore propre. Si on n’avait pas eu confiance en vous je n’y pourais pas été appele’ He hopes that Delabussière's ‘association’ brings him money as friends are rare and a man is placed in the scales of wealth rather than of honour. He has distributed Delabussière's prospectuses along with his own calling card and bids him visit ‘un de mes bons amis Mr Ludlow avocat anglais 3 Old Square Lincom-inn sic’ and tell him that he is ‘le professeur de Mechanics institution’ and ‘il aura peut être un collège à vous offrir’. It will be worth his while ‘car ces messieurs font des sacrifices énormes pour l’education du peuple anglais’. He gives a few further instructions regarding how to approach Ludlow ending ‘Il sait toute mon affaire je ne lui cache rien!’ ‘18bre [sic] 1855’ [Wimbledon, London]. unknown
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1995__3598112432De Gruyter 1995. Hardcover. New. reprint edition. 1804 pages. German language. 9.06x6.10x4.37 inches. De Gruyter hardcover
5305637Short description: In Russian. Exile Shalva. New garden. Moscow: Goslitizdat 1936: type 11. Mosoblpolygraph. The image is provided for reference only. It may reflect condition of one of the available copies or only help in identifying the edition. Please feel free to contact us for a detailed description of the copies available. SKU5305637 unknown
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20151-0996702016Exile Game Studio 2015. Hardcover. New. 224 pages. 9.13x6.57x1.11 inches. Exile Game Studio hardcover
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009511BBC "British Broadcasting Corporation" Distributed By 1986. Broadcast statements from various sympathetic radio stations edited and abridged by the B B C in the period between 1985 and 1986 when the military wing of the A N C was fully committed to the war on S African soil. Fully case-bound with gold titles on front and spine. No pagination. Unique. Very Fine./None. 303x14mm. Roneoed Sheets Staple Bound. BBC, "British Broadcasting Corporation" (Distributed By) hardcover
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1892mon0000037488Cassell Publishing Company 1892. Hardcover. Acceptable. in x in x in. Cassell Publishing Company hardcover
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190643217London: "Arbayter fraynd 1906. First Yiddish edition. Period boards 8vo xiii 426 pages 19 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates as “Words from a Revolutionary.â€<br> Translation of “Paroles d'un re´volte´.†Includes translation of the forewords by the author and Elise´e Reclus. Includes bibliographical references.<br> “During his long exile Kropotkin wrote a series of influential works the most important being ‘Paroles d’un révolté’ 1885; “Words of a Rebelâ€.Kropotkin’s aim as he often remarked was to provide anarchism with a scientific basis. In Mutual Aid which is widely regarded as his masterpiece he argued that despite the Darwinian concept of the survival of the fittest cooperation rather than conflict is the chief factor in the evolution of species. Providing abundant examples he showed that sociability is a dominant feature at every level of the animal world. <br> Among humans too he found that mutual aid has been the rule rather than the exception. He traced the evolution of voluntary cooperation from the primitive tribe peasant village and medieval commune to a variety of modern associations—trade unions learned societies the Red Cross—that have continued to practice mutual support despite the rise of the coercive bureaucratic state. The trend of modern history he believed was pointing back toward decentralized nonpolitical cooperative societies in which people could develop their creative faculties without interference from rulers clerics or soldiers.â€<br> SUBJECTS: Anarchism. OCLC: 19303211.<br> Ex-library with early 19th Century left-wing library markings see photos. Good- Condition YID-48-41-LXCCGG-’e. London: "Arbayter fraynd unknown
190643219London: "Arbayter fraynd 1906. First Yiddish edition. Period boards 8vo xiii 426 pages 19 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates as “Words from a Revolutionary.â€<br> Translation of “Paroles d'un re´volte´.†Includes translation of the forewords by the author and Elise´e Reclus. Includes bibliographical references.<br> “During his long exile Kropotkin wrote a series of influential works the most important being ‘Paroles d’un révolté’ 1885; “Words of a Rebelâ€.Kropotkin’s aim as he often remarked was to provide anarchism with a scientific basis. In Mutual Aid which is widely regarded as his masterpiece he argued that despite the Darwinian concept of the survival of the fittest cooperation rather than conflict is the chief factor in the evolution of species. Providing abundant examples he showed that sociability is a dominant feature at every level of the animal world. <br> Among humans too he found that mutual aid has been the rule rather than the exception. He traced the evolution of voluntary cooperation from the primitive tribe peasant village and medieval commune to a variety of modern associations—trade unions learned societies the Red Cross—that have continued to practice mutual support despite the rise of the coercive bureaucratic state. The trend of modern history he believed was pointing back toward decentralized nonpolitical cooperative societies in which people could develop their creative faculties without interference from rulers clerics or soldiers.â€<br> SUBJECTS: Anarchism. OCLC: 19303211.<br> Spine is taped.Tight binding but text block is clean and intact. Good Condition YID-48-40-LXCCGG-’e. London: "Arbayter fraynd unknown
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