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Voltairine de Cleyre

All Quotes by Voltairine de Cleyre

“Written in red their protest stands, Written-in-red.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“Gods of the World! Their mouths are dumb! Written-in-red.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“Bear it aloft, O roaring flame! Written-in-red.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“The moonlight rolls down like a river, My farewell goes floating to thee.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“And sometimes when I am weary, And keep me, and hold me fast.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“For the way is not strown with petal soft, Than you will ever know.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“But the world moves on, and the piteous Earth Though the red drops fall like rain!”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“Ah, not to a blaze of light I go, I shall pause not though it be far.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“Though a crucified life or an agonized death, The pitiful "might have been."”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“Ay, gather your petals and take them back And a better friend to me.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“The paramount question of the day is not political, is not religious, but is economic. The crying-out demand of today is for a circle of principles that shall forever make it impossible for one man to control another by controlling the means of his existence.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“Government is as unreal, as intangible, as unapproachable as God. Try it, if you don't believe it. Seek through the legislative halls of America and find, if you can, the Government. In the end you will be doomed to confer with the agent, as before.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“I think it can be shown that the law makes ten criminals where it restrains one. On that basis it would not, as a matter of policy merely, be an economical institution.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“When America passed the fugitive slave law compelling men to catch their fellows more brutally than runaway dogs, Canada, aristocratic, unrepublican Canada, still stretched her arms to those who might reach her. But there is no refuge upon earth for the enslaved sex. Right where we are, there we must dig our trenches, and win or die.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“This, then, is the tyranny of the State; it denies, to both woman and man, the right to earn a living, and grants it as a privilege to a favored few who for that favor must pay ninety per cent toll to the granters of it. These two things, the mind domination of the Church, and the body domination of the State are the causes of sex slavery.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“We are permitted to ride, providing we sit in a position ruinous to the horse; providing we wear a riding-habit long enough to hide the obscene human foot, weighed down by ten pounds of gravel to cheat the wind in its free blowing, so running the risk of disabling ourselves completely should accident throw us from the saddle. Think how we swim! We must even wear clothing in the water, and run the gauntlet of derision, if we dare battle in the surf minus stockings!”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“No one can hate petitions worse than I, and no one has less faith in them than I. But for my champion I am willing to try any means that invades no other's right, even though I have little hope in it.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“Humanity can not be made equal by declarations on paper. Unless the material conditions for equality exist, it is worse than mockery to pronounce men equal. And unless there is equality (and by equality I mean equal chances for every one to make the most of himself) unless, I say, these equal chances exist, freedom, either of thought, speech, or action, is equally a mockery.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“Private enterprise manages better all that to which it is equal. Anarchism declares that private enterprise, whether individual or cooperative, is equal to all the undertakings of society.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“We arrive at the point where we, looking over the hundred and twenty five years of independence, can see that the simple government conceived by the revolutionary republicans was a foredoomed failure. It was so because of: 1) the essence of government itself; 2) the essence of human nature; 3) the essence of Commerce and Manufacture.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“As to the essence of human nature, what our national experience has made plain is this, that to remain in a continually exalted moral condition is not human nature. That has happened which was prophesied: we have gone down hill from the Revolution until now; we are absorbed in "mere money-getting."”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“There is not upon the face of the earth today a government so utterly and shamelessly corrupt as that of the United States of America. There are others more cruel, more tyrannical, more devastating; there is none so utterly venal.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“It is an American tradition that a standing army is a standing menace to liberty; in Jefferson's presidency the army was reduced to 3,000 men. It is American tradition that we keep out of the affairs of other nations. It is American practice that we meddle with the affairs of everybody else from the West to the East Indies, from Russia to Japan; and to do it we have a standing army of 83,251 men.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“If you choose the liberty and pride and strength of the single soul, and the free fraternization of men, as the purpose which your life is to make manifest then do not sell it for tinsel. Think that your soul is strong and will hold its way; and slowly, through bitter struggle perhaps the strength will grow. And the foregoing of possessions for which others barter the last possibility of freedom will become easy.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“Workers, the most absolutely necessary part of the whole social structure, without whose services none can either eat, or clothe, or shelter himself, are just the ones who get the least to eat, to wear, and to be housed withal — to say nothing of their share of the other social benefits which the rest of us are supposed to furnish, such as education and artistic gratification.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre
“There is one common struggle against those who have appropriated the earth, the money, and the machines.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre