Louis Ling, Address to the Court, Famous
Speeches of the Chicago Anarchists (Chicago: 1912). Reprinted in Dave
Roediger and Franklin Rosemont, ads., Haymarket Scrapbook (Chicago:
Charles H. Kerr Publishing Company, 1986), 4647.
Carpenter Louis Lingg stuck to his anarchist principles to
the end in his final address before the court that convicted him of
participating in the infamous Haymarket Square bombing in Chicago in 1886.
Court of
Justice! With the same irony with which you have regarded my efforts to win in
this "free land of America,' a livelihood such as humankind is worthy to
enjoy, do you now, after condemning me to death, concede me the liberty of
making a final speech.
I accept your concession; but it is only for the purpose of
exposing the injustice, the calumnies and the outrages which have been heaped
upon me.
You have accused
me of murder, and convicted me: What proof have you brought that I am guilty?
In the first place, you have brought this fellow Seliger to testify against me.
Him I have helped to make bombs, and you have further proven that with the
assistance of another, I took those bombs to No. 58 Clybourne avenue, but what
you have not proven - even with the assistance of your bought
"squealer," Seliger, who would appear to have acted such a prominent
part in the affair - is that any of those bombs were taken to the Haymarket.
A couple of
chemists also, have been brought here as specialists, yet they could only state
that the metal of which the Haymarket bomb was made bore a certain resemblance
to those bombs of mine, and your Mr. Ingham has vainly endeavored to deny that
the bombs were quite different. He had to admit that there was a difference of
a full half inch in their diameters, although he suppressed the fact that there
was also a difference of a quarter of an inch in the thickness of the shell.
This is the kind of evidence upon which you have convicted me.
It is not
murder, however, of which you have convicted me. The judge has
stated that much only this morning in his resume of the
case, and Grinnell has repeatedly asserted that we were being tried not for
murder, but for anarchy, so the condemnation is--that I am an anarchist!
What is
anarchy? This is a subject which my comrades have explained with sufficient
clearness, and it is unnecessary for me to go over it again. They have told you
plainly enough what our aims are. The state's attorney, however, has not given
you that information. He has merely criticized and condemned, not the doctrines
of anarchy, but our methods of giving them practical effort, and even here he
has maintained a discreet silence as to the fact that those methods were forced
upon us by the brutality of the police. Grinnell's own proffered remedy for our
grievances is the ballot and combination of trades unions, and Ingham has even
avowed the desirability of a six-hour movement! But the fact is, that at every
attempt to wield the ballot, at every endeavor to combine the efforts of
workingmen, you have displayed the brutal violence of the police club, and this
is why I have recommended rude force, to combat the ruder force of the police.
You have charged me with despising "law and order." What does your
"law and order' amount to? Its representatives are the police, and they
have thieves in their ranks. Here sits Captain Schaack. He has himself admitted
to me that my hat and books have been stolen from him in his office - stolen by
policemen. These are your defenders of property rights! The detectives again,
who arrested me, forced their way into my room like housebreakers, under false
pretenses, giving the name of a carpenter, Lorenz, of Burlington street. They
have sworn that I was alone in my room, therein perjuring themselves. You have
not subpoenaed this lady, Mrs. Klein, who was present, and could have sworn
that the aforesaid detectives broke into my room under false pretenses, and
that their testimonies are perjured.
But let us go further. In Schaack we have a captain of the police, and
he also has perjured himself. He has sworn that I admitted to him being present
at the Monday night meeting, whereas I distinctly informed him that I was at a
carpenters' meeting at Zepf's Hall. He has sworn again that I told him that I
also learned to make bombs from Herr Most's book. That also is a perjury.
Let us go still
a step higher among these representatives of law and order. Grinnell
and his associates have permitted perjury, and I say that they have done it
knowingly. The proof has been adduced by my counsel, and with my own eyes I
have seen Grinnell point out to Gilmer, eight days before he came upon the
stand, the persons of the men whom he was to swear against.
While I, as I have stated above, believe in force for the
sake of winning for myself and fellow-workmen a livelihood such as men ought to
have, Grinnell, on the other hand, through his police and other rogues, has
suborned perjury in order to murder seven men, of whom I am one. Grinnell had
the pitiful courage here in the courtroom, where I could not defend myself, to
call me a coward! The scoundrel I A fellow who has leagued himself with a
parcel of base, hireling knaves, to bring him to the gallows. Why? For no
earthly reason save a contemptible selfishness - a desire to "rise in the
world" - to "make money," forsoothe.
This wretch - who, by means of the perjuries of other wretches
is going to murder seven men - is the fellow who calls me "coward"!
And yet you blame me for despising such "defenders of the law" such
unspeakable hypocrites!
Anarchy means no domination or authority of one man over
another, yet you call that "disorder." A system which advocates no
such "order" as shall require the services of rogues and thieves to
defend it you call "disorder."
The Judge himself was forced to admit that the state's
attorney had not been able to connect me with the bomb-throwing. The latter
knows how to get around it, however. He charges me with being a
"conspirator." How does he prove it? Simply by declaring the
International Working People's Association to be a "conspiracy." I
was a member of that body, so he has the charge securely fastened on me.
Excellent! Nothing is too difficult for the genius of a state's attorney!
It is hardly incumbent upon me to
review the relations which I occupy to my companions in misfortune. I can say
truly and openly that I am not as intimate with my fellow prisoners as I am
with Captain Schaack.
The universal misery, the ravages of the capitalistic hyena
have brought us together in our agitation, not as persons, but as workers in
the same cause. Such is the "conspiracy" of which you have convicted
me
I protest against the conviction, against the decision of
the court. I do not recognize your law, jumbled together as it is by the
nobodies of bygone centuries, and I do not recognize the decision of the court.
My own counsel have conclusively proven from the decisions of equally high
courts that a new trial must be granted us. The state's attorney quotes three
times as many decisions
from perhaps still higher courts
to prove the opposite, and I am convinced that if, in another trial, these
decisions should be supported by twenty-one volumes, they will adduce one
hundred in support of the contrary, if it is anarchists who are to be tried.
And not even under such a law - a law that a schoolboy must despise - not even
by such methods have they been able to "legally" convict us.
They have
suborned perjury to boot. I tell you firmly and openly, I am for force. I have
already told Captain Schaack, "if they use cannons against us, we shall
use dynamite against them."
I repeat that I am the enemy of
the "order" of today, and I repeat that with all my powers, so long
as breath remains in me, I shall combat it. I declare again, frankly and
openly, that I am in favor of using force. I have told Captain Schaack, and I
stand by it, "if you cannonade us, we shall dynamite you." You laugh!
Perhaps you think, "you'll throw no more bombs"; but let me assure
you I die happy on the gallows, so confident am I that the hundreds and
thousands to
whom I have spoken will remember
my words; and when you shall have hanged
us, then - mark my words - they
will do the bombthrowing! In this hope do I say
to you: I despise you. I despise
your order, your laws, your force-propped authority. Hang me for it!