| Sir James Marchant - Sermons, English - 1928 - 318 pages
...born in chains, but our faith is that the heavenly powers are on the march to set him free. " Workers of the world, arise. You have nothing to lose but your chains! " So shouts Karl Marx. St. Paul's language is quite different and it is ultimately more respectful... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Un-American Activities - 1954 - 198 pages
...No, not in 1848, but it advocated the overthrow of constitutional governments everywhere — "Workers of the world, arise ; you have nothing to lose but your chains." Mr. WALLER. That is right. Mr. CLARDY. And that was followed through in the literature you had, in... | |
| Robert A. Heinlein - Fiction - 2004 - 328 pages
...international relations. Box 107 How do you do that in a sports car? One was ominous — Hermaphrodites of the World, Arise! You have nothing to lose but your chains. Tel. Opera 59-09 The next one started: ARE You A COWARD? Well, yes, certainly. If possible. If allowed... | |
| Michael P Tremoglie - Fiction - 2006 - 326 pages
...thrown in jail are in there because they are poor and black," Foster said, contemptuously. "Workers of the world arise, you have nothing to lose but your chains," said Barnett mockingly. "A great Marxist criminogenic theory. It isn't true though." "Mr. Foster,"... | |
| State University of New York at Buffalo - 1927 - 364 pages
...oppressors. That is the policy that was talked about between 1848 and 1914. Its motto was "Workers of the world arise: you have nothing to lose but your chains." That is impossible. They are not strong enough to do it, and they will be beaten every time they try... | |
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