3750332The Black Man's Burden — End MatterEdmund Dene Morel

MANCHESTER:
AT THE NATIONAL LABOUR PRESS, LTD.
ALSO AT LONDON.


28778

BOOKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR


AFFAIRS OF WEST AFRICA. (Heinemann.)

"There is no one who has, in recent years, done so much to explain West African problems to the British public."—Sir Charles Dilke.

(French edition: "Problèmes de l'ouest Africain" (Hachette). Translated by A. Duchéne, Chief of Staff of the African Department of the French Colonial Office).

THE BRITISH CASE IN FRENCH CONGO. (Heinemann.)

"A more remarkable story has never been related."—Liverpool Courier.

"Were it not that the facts cannot be, and indeed are not disputed, they would be incredible."—Morning Post.

KING LEOPOLD'S RULE IN AFRICA. (Heinemann.)

"An amazing book to be written in the dawn of the twentieth century of the Christian era."—Morning Post.

RED RUBBER. (T. Fisher Unwin.)

" To the author, more than to any man alive, is due the ventilation of this crime against civilisation. He has fought a long, up-hill battle against apathy, misrepresentation and the power of an unscrupulous purse. And he has been successful. He has made Congo Reform a part of the sworn creed of our chief public men."—Spectator.

GREAT BRITAIN AND THE CONGO. (Smith, Elder & Co.)

"Mr. Morel's untiring industry has been by far the most important factor in awakening both public and official opinion to the monstrous iniquity which for the last eighteen years has been perpetrated with ever-increasing cynicism and effrontery in the Congo Basin."—Times.

NIGERIA: ITS PEOPLES AND ITS PROBLEMS.

(Smith, Elder & Co. John Murray.)

"Mr. Morel's book is not only a vivid picture of a possession second only to India among our tropical dependencies but an eloquent plea for the only policy which can make the partition of Africa a blessing and not a curse to the African. It will, we feel sure, rank in the future as a standard authority on tropical administration."—Economist.

TEN YEARS OF SECRET DIPLOMACY. (National Labour Press; originally published in 1912 by Smith, Elder & Co., under the title of "Morocco in Diplomacy.")

"This book should be in the hands of every member of Parliament, every journalist, whose duty it is to instruct public opinion, and every citizen who desires to form an independent judgment upon a very critical passage in the life of the English State."—Daily News (1912).

TRUTH AND THE WAR. (National Labour Press.)

"I am very much concerned about Mr. Morel. I have read his book with considerable disagreement, with a conviction that he is a perfectly honest as well as a very able man, but above all with a growing apprehension. I am afraid lest, in an essential point of his criticism of our policy, Mr. Morel will be proved to be right."—H. W. M. in the Nation.

AFRICA AND THE PEACE OF EUROPE.

(National Labour Press.)

"Mr. Morel's constructive proposals have a large sweep, but they are nowhere Utopian, and to them or to something very near them every mind, I believe, will come which studies the problem of Africa in its bearings on European peace."—H. N. Brailsford in the Herald.

"No living man has, by pen and voice alone, done so much to influence the destinies of Africa."—The Nation.