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fountain of all these disasters. Thiers denounced it as the despot of labour, pretending to be its liberator. Picard ordered that all communications between the French Internationals and those abroad should be cut off; Count Jaubert, Thiers's mummified accomplice of 1835, declares it the great problem of all civilized governments to weed it out. The Rurals roar against it, and the whole European press joins the chorus. An honourable French writer, completely foreign to our Association, speaks as follows:—"The members of the Central Committee of the National Guard, as well as the greater part of the members of the Commune, are the most active, intelligent, and energetic minds of the International Working Men's Association; . . . . men who are thoroughly honest, sincere, intelligent, devoted, pure, and fanatical in the good sense of the word." The police-tinged bourgeois mind naturally figures to itself the International Working Men's Association as acting in the manner of a secret conspiracy, its central body ordering, from time to time, explosions in different countries. Our Association is, in fact, nothing but the international bond between the most advanced working men in the various countries of the civilized world. Wherever, in whatever shape, and under whatever conditions the class struggle obtains any consistency, it is but natural that members of our association should stand in the foreground. The soil out of which it grows is modern society itself. It cannot be stampedout by any amount of carnage. To stamp it out, the Governments would have to stamp out the despotism of capital over labour—the condition of their own parasitical existence.

Working men's Paris, with its Commune, will be for ever celebrated as the glorious harbinger of a new society. Its martyrs are enshrined in the great heart of the working class. Its exterminators history has already nailed to that eternal pillory from which all the prayers of their priests will not avail to redeem them.

The General Council.

M. T. Boon, Fred. Bradnick, G. H. Buttery, Caihil, William Hales, Kolb, Fred. Lessner, George Milner, Thomas Mottershead, Charles Murray, Pfander, Roach, Rühl, Sadler, Cowell Stepney, Alf. Taylor, William Townshend.

Corresponding Secretaries.

Eugène Dupont, for France.
Karl Marx, for Germany and Holland.
Fred. Engels, for Belgium and Spain.
Hermann Jung, for Switzerland.
P. Giovacchini, for Italy.
Zévy Maurice, for Hungary.
Anton Zabicki, for Poland.
James Cohen, for Denmark.
J. G. Eccarius, for the United States.
Hermann Jung, Chairman.
John Weston, Treasurer.
George Harris, Financial Sec.
John Hales, General Sec.

Office—256, High Holborn, London, W.C.,
May 30th, 1871,