Memoirs of Bertha von Suttner: The Records of an Eventful Life (Vol. 1 of 2)
Transcriber’s Note:
The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.
MEMOIRS OF BERTHA VON SUTTNER
PUBLISHED FOR THE INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL OF PEACE
GINN AND COMPANY, BOSTON AND LONDON
1910
COPYRIGHT, 1910, BY GINN AND COMPANY
ENTERED AT STATIONERS’ HALL
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
The Athnæum Press
GINN AND COMPANY · PROPRIETORS BOSTON · U.S.A.
It is a great gratification to me that the story of my life—which I cannot suppose to be of general interest except in so far as it is linked with the story of a world-wide movement—is now put before the great community of the English-speaking nations; for it is in these very nations that the origin of that movement is to be sought, and by them its final victory is being most efficiently hastened. I have been brought to a clear recognition of this fact especially by the days I have spent in the United States and in England in recent years. There I perceived with astonishment and admiration how in these two countries (especially in America) the peace problem, still largely antagonized or ignored on the continent of Europe, has not only met with widespread comprehension but also received already a positive and practical working out. Little of this is told in the present book; yet in it I have set down the fact that the reading of English scholars and thinkers (Herbert Spencer, Henry Thomas Buckle, etc.) was what opened my mind to take in the peace cause, and furthermore that a tract of the London Peace Association presided over by Hodgson Pratt, accidentally coming to my knowledge, gave the initial occasion for all that I have endeavored to do as a helper in the peace movement.