- Page 7 and 8: 3nate official about his promotion.
- Page 9 and 10: 5did not help one to become a State
- Page 11 and 12: 7Bavarians pleased him more than th
- Page 13 and 14: 9had a good day and that night in b
- Page 15 and 16: 11wheedle fortune out of its hiding
- Page 17 and 18: 13time by the forelock. Perhaps he
- Page 19 and 20: 15monotony of years which went by w
- Page 21 and 22: CHAPTER II.A H U M A N Z E R O D E
- Page 23 and 24: 19House of Bavaria appeared in the
- Page 25 and 26: 21river. He sang with the others at
- Page 27 and 28: 23ion about the war, it might have
- Page 29 and 30: 25thinking. The future success of A
- Page 31 and 32: 27ing sound as they climbed the low
- Page 33 and 34: 29Deutschland ueber Alles” and on
- Page 35 and 36: 31into it? He would have liked to h
- Page 37 and 38: 33fection of destruction. In the fi
- Page 39 and 40: 35longer heard the cannons but hear
- Page 41 and 42: CHAPTER III.THE T O W N G O E S B O
- Page 43 and 44: 39halls after sunset. The majority
- Page 45 and 46: 41Kurt Eisner, versed in party work
- Page 47 and 48: 43boasting of his record as a trait
- Page 49 and 50: 45currences in the Bavarian capital
- Page 51 and 52: 47fervour to save the world, kept h
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49Ernst Toller was delegated to tak
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CHAPTER IV.S E V E N M E N A T A T
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53they were Communists or merely So
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55took issue with the Jew baiters.
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57ing about these hackneyed thought
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59movements with amused interest. O
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61leum was expensive. Besides, he d
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63about the mass meeting? Of course
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65attention. The man on the platfor
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GOTTFRIED FEDER
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68labourers and employers. The pres
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70doings. The number of friend and
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72audiences, the party organization
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74In August, 1921, a palace revolut
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76to the authorities; not to the to
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78desirable things she coveted. Sho
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80von Kahr General State Commissary
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82the dragon‟s embrace. The world
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84and a sprinkling of police. Hitle
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86five months later. “There were
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88“His Highness,” Herr Kahr add
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90lin began. At the Ludwig Bridge t
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92Amidst the shrieking mob, Hitler
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94The day before the trial began th
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96rupted. The defendants clicked th
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98the court was interested and offe
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100“When Herr Hitler tackled us w
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102pear on the balcony of the Milit
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CHAPTER VII.AN I N T E R M E Z Z O
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106any other human beings? This was
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108to hold each other in embrace, w
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110was right in describing humanity
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112Writing came to Hitler easily an
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114all Germany lustily joined the c
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116National Socialist Party. “The
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118fed for that and his cheeks were
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120If Hitler had not taken himself
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122Could Hitler tolerate such rebel
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124gold. The Bamberg program sugges
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126world war, to Austria with which
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128America was credited with having
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130“This is the last battle ... t
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132in review. Michael‟s heart lea
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134Minister of Interior in the Thur
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136fered no inducement, except that
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138ler‟s stock in trade are the J
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140ised Land. Not a Jewish Moses, t
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142place of Alfred Hilgenberg, the
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144orders because there was no one
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146me because they know I want to c
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148flies, are flashed in peasant wi
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149“Verflucht,” the young man w
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151small band of men, 3 to 15, and
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153are trying to apply these princi
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155should advance more rapidly and
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157On the platform, in the press, i
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1591812 must be considered Jews, ev
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161its anti-Jewish program. Gottfri
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163Herr Hitler explained that what
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165knows they do so because they ar
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167farmer under Nazi rule. He is in
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169able Program, has no provisions
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171collapse of the economic system
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173More than one effort has been ma
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CHAPTER XII.“BY T H E I R W O R K
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177rected partly against brewers ac
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179Exchange transactions from Janua
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181Erzberger, martyred leader of th
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183the other parties they feel free
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185Today the police of Thuringia is
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187on in the Chancery as well as ou
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189became a hum. National Socialist
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191Hitler now took it upon himself
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193and 150,000 being the Shupos, Ge
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195clave and pumped him for informa
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197and it is not his hobby to colle
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199syndicates and trusts, with the
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201the machine age with the mentali
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203als, and more often praised by G
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205under his leadership the Nationa
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207Industry invested heavily in the
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CHAPTER XV.T H U R S D A Y A N D F
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211Faust it was because, as Heine s
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213tained control or decisive influ
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215in those parts, he controlled no
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217was miscast in the rôle of gene
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CHAPTER XVI.W I L D O A T S“Bald
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221their political views a forceful
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DEMONSTRATIONOF FEMALE NAZI ORGANIS
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224Love yields precedence to party
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226defilement. Catholics may be mem
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228schoolmaster in Steglitz, a subu
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230headway among the inhabitants of
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C H A P T E R X V I IT H R E E D I
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234what it is to be a human zero. B
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236of rapturous delight, the gargan
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238That Hitler has not gained in de
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CHAPTER XVIII“A MAN TO P O W E R
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242Herr Hitler keep an appointment
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245“Undoubtedly,” says a Nation
- Page 255 and 256:
247Gruber wrote. “Obviously, he i
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249shows that the post-war era has
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251of millions of individuals in th
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253the idol of millions. His indivi
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255the debauchee that the peasant a