Prisoner for Blasphemy
hinker, with the avowed object of waging "relentless war against Su
y the resources of Science, Scholarship, Philosophy and Ethics against the claims of the Bible as a Divine Revelation," and that it woul
amazing rapidity. True, this was largely due to the fact that the Freethought party had immensely increased in numbers; but much of it was also due to the policy of the paper, which supplied, as the advertising gentry say, "a long-felt want." Although the first clause of its original programme was never wholly forgotten, we gradually paid the greatest attention to the second, indulging more and more in Ridicule and Sarcasm, and more and more cultivatingthe period of combat was ended, that the liberty of platform and press was finally won, that Supernaturalism was hopelessly scotched although obviously not slain, and that Freethinkers should now devote themselves to cultivating the fields they had won instead of raiding into the enemy's
ton's advice, Do not
al conflicts against
background of resour
enemy, and the peace
he evil in dispute nea
by guaranteeing the
ffence more difficul
on to wrong
d Divine Revelatio
kind, which has wasted in the chase of chimeras very much of the world's best intellect, fatally perverted our moral sentiments, fomented discord and division, supported all the tyranny of privilege a
sclose. Although not ostensibly, it was actually, the first of those Comic Bible Sketches for which the Freethinker afterwards became famous; and from that date, with the exception of occasional intervals due to difficulties there is no need to explain, my little paper was regularly illustrated. During the whole twelve months of my imprisonment the illustrations were discontinued by my express order. I was not averse to th
La Bible Amusante," issued by the Anti-Clerical publishing house in the Rue des Ecol
attacking Christiani
ethinkers. They rega
s questions in a sp
e who know that iron
their faith. Supersti
er. Nimble and far-
than the slow dull
ists and wits of th
ead and sweeten its
hers from Aris
Comic Histories, C
a Comic Bible would
mble would stand agh
rror. But Bumble and
in France, and so t
what we are unable t
ders, and, if possible, we shall reproduce in the Freethinker some of the raciest plates. We
ladly avow that he showed no hesitation; on the contrary, he heartily fell in with the project. He frankly left the editorial conduct of our paper in my hands, despised the accusation of Blasphemy, and defied its law. His half-pr
to my literary ventures, and those who ever turn over a file of the Secularist or the Liberal will see with what activity he wielded his trenchant pen. When he became my paid sub-editor, our relations remained un
of the regular staff. It also referred to the policy of the Freethinker, and to another subject of the gravest interest-namely, the threats of
t journal has none?)
e Christians, disguste
ilure. The wish was f
ets were just as false
our indisputable suc
ance, mutter somethin
rom our evil ways. On
sh, have threatened t
w. We defy them to d
martyr, but we shoul
onster of persecution
s. As the Freethinker was intended to be a
aise. We mean to inc
th superstition shou
and we shal
d to encounter the di
ant omelettes witho
hout shedding of bl
o say that twice two
atement that twice t
a half a very fair
th, and therefore t
by the half-hearted
and shun paltering
, can dispense with
to personal slander
tenderness or mercy.
t potent weapon aga
scruple
the peculiar policy of the Freethinker was not adopted in a moment of levity, but was from the first deli
est defamation; and containing, as it did, garbled extracts from Mr. Bradlaugh's writings, and artfully-manipulated quotations from books he had never written or published, it undoubtedly did him a serious injury. The new circular was worthy of the author of the first. It was addressed "To the Members of the House of Commons," and was "for private circulation only." The indignant butcher, for that is his trade, wished "to submit to their notice the horrible blasphemies that are appended, and quoted from a new weekly publication issued from the office where Mr. Bradlaugh's weekly journal,
rikes at Freethinkers with a poisoned dagger. More than once he has flooded Northampton with the foulest libels on Mr. Bradlaugh, invariably issued without the printer's name, in open violation of the law. He is liable for a fine of f
embled in February, Mr. C. K. Freshfield, member for Dover, asked the Ho
court gave the
my attention has be
the Freethinker, publ
ing can be more perni
e than publications
k it has been the v
responsible in thes
is produced to publi
es of this kind. (H
to the reprobation
all decent members
to "public morals" and "decent members of society" are further evidence in the same direction. The Freethinker was accused of blasphemy, but until Sir William Harcourt gave the cue not even its worst enemies
Freethinker if you tried. The martyr spirit of Freethought is not dead, and the men who suffered imprisonment for liberty of speech a generation ago have not left degenerate s
ily suppress newspapers which they considered pernicious to public morals; and, if so, why that power was not exercised in the case of the Freethinker and other papers now published and circulate
of the vehicles that brought people to Holloway Gaol to welcome me on the morning of my release. The total population of New Ross, including men, women and children, is less than seven thousand; a number that fell far sho
e police, who refused to interfere. Finally the police called on all the local bill-posters and warned them against exhibiting the Society's placards. Stung by these disgraceful tactics, Mr. Seymour issued a jocular programme of an evening's entertainment at the Society's hall, one profane sentence of which, while it in no way disturbed the peace or serenity of the town, aroused intense indignation in the breasts of the professional guardians of religion and morality. They therefore cit
r of the Freethought party, and I challenged them to attack its leaders before they assailed the rank and file. This challenge was cited against