MEIN KAMPF
HURST AND BLACKETT LTD.,
Publishers since 1812
LONDON • NEW YORK • MELBOURNE
This translation of the unexpurgated edition of "Mein Kampf"
was first published on March 21st, 1939

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Volume I: A RETROSPECT
INTRODUCTION
IN MEMORY OF
TRANSLATOR’S INTRODUCTION
EXCERPTS
CHAPTER I: IN THE HOME OF MY PARENTS
CHAPTER II: YEARS OF STUDY AND SUFFERING IN VIENNA
CHAPTER III: POLITICAL REFLECTIONS ARISING OUT OF MY SOJOURN IN VIENNA
CHAPTER IV: MUNICH
CHAPTER V: THE WORLD WAR
CHAPTER VI: WAR PROPAGANDA
CHAPTER VII: THE REVOLUTION
CHAPTER VIII: THE BEGINNING OF MY POLITICAL ACTIVITIES
CHAPTER IX: THE GERMAN LABOUR PARTY
CHAPTER X: WHY THE SECOND REICH COLLAPSED
CHAPTER XI: RACE AND PEOPLE
CHAPTER XII: THE FIRST STAGE IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE GERMAN NATIONAL
SOCIALIST LABOUR PARTY
Volume II: THE NATIONAL SOCIALIST MOVEMENT
CHAPTER I: WELTANSCHHAUUNG AND PARTY
CHAPTER II: THE STATE
CHAPTER III: CITIZENS AND SUBJECTS OF THE STATE
CHAPTER IV: PERSONALITY AND THE IDEAL OF THE PEOPLE’S STATE
CHAPTER V: WELTANSCHHAUUNG AND ORGANIZATION
CHAPTER VI: THE FIRST PERIOD OF OUR STRUGGLE
CHAPTER VII: THE CONFLICT WITH THE RED FORCES
CHAPTER VIII: THE STRONG IS STRONGEST WHEN ALONE
CHAPTER IX: FUNDAMENTAL IDEAS REGARDING THE NATURE AND ORGANIZATION OF THE
STORM TROOPS
CHAPTER X: THE MASK OF FEDERALISM
CHAPTER XI: PROPAGANDA AND ORGANIZATION
CHAPTER XII: THE PROBLEM OF THE TRADE UNIONS
CHAPTER XIII: THE GERMAN POST-WAR POLICY OF ALLIANCES
CHAPTER XIV: GERMANY’S POLICY IN EASTERN EUROPE
CHAPTER XV: THE RIGHT TO SELF-DEFENCE
EPILOGUE
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Foot Notes:
1) In order to understand the reference here, and similar references in later
portions of Mein Kampf, the following must be borne in mind:
From 1792 to 1814 the French Revolutionary Armies overran Germany. In 1800
Bavaria shared in the Austrian defeat at Hohenlinden and the French occupied
Munich. In 1805 the Bavarian Elector was made King of Bavaria by Napoleon and
stipulated to back up Napoleon in all his wars with a force of 30,000 men.
Thus Bavaria became the absolute vassal of the French. This was ‘The Time of
Germany’s Deepest Humiliation’, Which is referred to again and again by
Hitler.
In 1806 a pamphlet entitled ‘Germany’s Deepest Humiliation’ was published in
South Germany. Among those who helped to circulate the pamphlet was the
Nürnberg bookseller, Johannes Philipp Palm. He was denounced to the French by
a Bavarian police agent. At his trial he refused to disclose the name of the
author. By Napoleon’s orders, he was shot at Braunau-on-the-Inn on August
26th, 1806. A monument erected to him on the site of the execution was one of
the first public objects that made an impression on Hitler as a little boy.
Leo Schlageter’s case was in many respects parallel to that of Johannes Palm.
Schlageter was a German theological student who volunteered for service in
1914. He became an artillery officer and won the Iron Cross of both classes.
When the French occupied the Ruhr in 1923 Schlageter helped to organize the
passive resistance on the German side. He and his companions blew up a railway
bridge for the purpose of making the transport of coal to France more
difficult.
Those who took part in the affair were denounced to the French by a German
informer. Schlageter took the whole responsibility on his own shoulders and
was condemned to death, his companions being sentenced to various terms of
imprisonment and penal servitude by the French Court. Schlageter refused to
disclose the identity of those who issued the order to blow up the railway
bridge and he would not plead for mercy before a French Court. He was shot by
a French firing-squad on May 26th, 1923. Severing was at that time German
Minister of the Interior. It is said that representations were made, to him on
Schlageter’s behalf and that he refused to interfere.
Schlageter has become the chief martyr of the German resistancc to the French
occupation of the Ruhr and also one of the great heroes of the National
Socialist Movement. He had joined the Movement at a very early stage, his card
of membership bearing the number 61.
2) Non-classical secondary school. The Lyceum and Gymnasium were classical or
semiclassical secondary schools.
3) See Translator’s Introduction.
4) When Francis II had laid down his title as Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire
of the German Nation, which he did at the command of Napoleon, the Crown and
Mace, as the Imperial Insignia, were kept in Vienna. After the German Empire
was refounded, in 1871, under William I, there were many demands to have the
Insignia transferred to Berlin. But these went unheeded. Hitler had them
brought to Germany after the Austrian Anschluss and displayed at Nuremberg
during the Party Congress in September 1938.
5) The Phaecians were a legendary people, mentioned in Homer’s Odyssey. They
were supposed to live on some unknown island in the Eastern Mediterranean,
sometimes suggested to be Corcyra, the modern Corfu. They loved good living
more than work, and so the name Phaecian has come to be a synonym for parasite.
6) Spottgeburt von Dreck und Feuer. This is the epithet that Faust hurls at
Mephistopheles as the latter intrudes on the conversation between Faust and
Martha in the garden: Mephistopheles: Thou, full of sensual, super-sensual
desire, A girl by the nose is leading thee. Faust: Abortion, thou of filth and
fire.
7) Herodotus (Book VII, 213–218) tells the story of how a Greek traitor,
Ephialtes, helped the Persian invaders at the Battle of Thermopylae (480 B.C.)
When the Persian King, Xerxes, had begun to despair of being able to break
through the Greek defence, Ephialtes came to him and, on being promised a
definite payment, told the King of a pathway over the shoulder of the mountain
to the Greek end of the Pass. The bargain being clinched, Ephialtes led a
detachment of the Persian troops under General Hydarnes over the mountain
pathway. Thus taken in the rear, the Greek defenders, under Leonidas, King of
Sparta, had to fight in two opposite directions within the narrow pass.
Terrible slaughter ensued and Leonidas fell in the thick of the fighting.
The bravery of Leonidas and the treason of Ephialtes impressed Hitler, as it
does almost every schoolboy. The incident is referred to again in Mein Kampf (Chap.
VIII, Vol. I), where Hitler compares the German troops that fell in France and
Flanders to the Greeks at Thermopylae, the treachery of Ephialtes being
suggested as the prototype of the defeatist policy of the German politicians
towards the end of the Great War.
8) German Austria was the East Mark on the South and East Prussia was the East
Mark on the North.
9) Carlyle explains the epithet thus: "First then, let no one from the title
Gehoernte (Horned, Behorned), fancy that our brave Siegfried, who was the
loveliest as well as the bravest of men, was actually cornuted, and had horns
on his brow, though like Michael Angelo’s Moses; or even that his skin, to
which the epithet Behorned refers, was hard like a crocodile’s, and not softer
than the softest shamey, for the truth is, his Hornedness means only an
Invulnerability, like that of Achilles…"
10) Lines quoted from the Song of the Curassiers in Schiller’s Wallenstein.
11) The Second Infantry Bavarian Regiment, in which Hitler served as a
volunteer.
12) Schwabing is the artistic quarter in Munich where artists have their
studios and litterateurs, especially of the Bohemian class, foregather.
13) Here again we have the defenders of Thermopylæ recalled as the prototype
of German valour in the Great War. Hitler’s quotation is a German variant of
the couplet inscribed on the monument erected at Thermopylæ to the memory of
Leonidas and his Spartan soldiers who fell defending the Pass. As given by
Herodotus, who claims that he saw the inscription himself, the original text
may be literally translated thus:
Go, tell the Spartans, thou who passeth by,
That here, obedient to their laws, we lie.
14)Swedish Chancellor who took over the reins of Government after the death of
Gustavus Adolphus
15) When Mephistopheles first appears to Faust, in the latter’s study, Faust
inquires: "What is thy name?" To which Mephistopheles replies: "A part of the
Power which always wills the Bad and always works the Good." And when Faust
asks him what is meant by this riddle and why he should call himself ‘a part,’
the gist of Mephistopheles’ reply is that he is the Spirit of Negation and
exists through opposition to the positive Truth and Order and Beauty which
proceed from the never-ending creative energy of the Deity. In the Prologue to
Faust the Lord declares that man’s active nature would grow sluggish in
working the good and that therefore he has to be aroused by the Spirit of
Opposition. This Spirit wills the Bad, but of itself it can do nothing
positive, and by its opposition always works the opposite of what it wills.
16) The last and most famous of the medieval alchemists. He was born at Basle
about the year 1490 and died at Salzburg in 1541. He taught that all metals
could be transmuted through the action of one primary element common to them
all. This element he called Alcahest. If it could be found it would prove to
be at once the philosopher’s stone, the universal medicine and the
irresistible solvent. There are many aspects of his teaching which are now
looked upon as by no means so fantastic as they were considered in his own
time.
17) The Battle of Leipzig (1813), where the Germans inflicted an overwhelming
defeat on Napoleon, was the decisive event which put an end to the French
occupation of Germany.
The occupation had lasted about twenty years. After the Great War, and the
partial occupation of Germany once again by French forces, the Germans used to
celebrate the anniversary of the Battle of Leipzig as a symbol of their
yearning.
18) The flag of the German Empire, founded in 1871, was Black-White-Red. This
was discarded in 1918 and Black-Red-Gold was chosen as the flag of the German
Republic founded at Weimar in 1919. The flag designed by Hitler – red with a
white disc in the centre, bearing the black swastika – is now the national
flag.
19) After the debacle of 1918 several semi-military associations were formed
by demobilized officers who had fought at the Front. These were
semi-clandestine associations and were known as Freikorps (Volunteer corps).
Their principal purpose was to act as rallying centres for the old nationalist
elements.
20) Schiller, who wrote the famous drama of William Tell.
21) The reference here is to those who gave information to the Allied
Commissions about hidden stores of arms in Germany.
22) Before 1918 Germany was a federal Empire, composed of twenty-five federal
states.
23) Probably the author has two separate incidents in mind. The first happened
in 390 B.C., when, as the victorious Gauls descended on Rome, the Senators
ordered their ivory chairs to be placed in the Forum before the Temples of the
Gods. There, clad in their robes of state, they awaited the invader, hoping to
save the city by sacrificing themselves. This noble gesture failed for the
time being; but it had an inspiring influence on subsequent generations. The
second incident, which has more historical authenticity, occurred after the
Roman defeat at Cannae in 216 B.C. On that occasion Varro, the Roman commander,
who, though in great part responsible for the disaster, made an effort to
carry on the struggle, was, on his return to Rome, met by the citizens of all
ranks and publicly thanked because he had not despaired of the Republic. The
consequence was that the Republic refused to make peace with the victorious
Carthagenians.