The Secret of the League - The Story of a Social War
First revised edition with later jacket, 1909
The Secret of the League: The Story of a Social War (Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1909) is the revised edition of Ernest Bramah's 1907 novel What Might Have Been, first issued anonymously by John Murray. The Nelson edition is nearly seven thousand words shorter than the original, with the more overtly satirical passages cut, giving the political plot greater weight and producing a darker, more disturbing text. Nelson published the book under Bramah's name for the first time, and the title was changed partly because the original had already been used by another author.
This copy carries two dust jackets: the standard Nelson jacket numbered 54 in the series sequence, priced at 2/- net, and a second jacket numbered 64, priced at 7d. net, from a later printing issued as part of Nelson's Sevenpenny series, a popular cheap reprint line developed under John Buchan's editorial direction. The lower price reflects its mass market positioning, at roughly one-tenth the cost of the standard edition. According to Aubrey Wilson's research into Bramah's royalty statements, some 360,000 copies of the Nelson edition were eventually sold across its various printings, though the period covered by that figure is not entirely clear.
Hardcover. First Revised Edition. Octavo, red cloth stamped in black. London: Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1909. Wilson, Aubrey. The Search for Ernest Bramah (90). #11433.
Very good copy with two dust jackets. The jacket numbered 54 is worn but presents very well for its age. The jacket numbered 64 is good, with chipping and splits; splits have been mended internally with archival tape.
This copy carries two dust jackets: the standard Nelson jacket numbered 54 in the series sequence, priced at 2/- net, and a second jacket numbered 64, priced at 7d. net, from a later printing issued as part of Nelson's Sevenpenny series, a popular cheap reprint line developed under John Buchan's editorial direction. The lower price reflects its mass market positioning, at roughly one-tenth the cost of the standard edition. According to Aubrey Wilson's research into Bramah's royalty statements, some 360,000 copies of the Nelson edition were eventually sold across its various printings, though the period covered by that figure is not entirely clear.
Hardcover. First Revised Edition. Octavo, red cloth stamped in black. London: Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1909. Wilson, Aubrey. The Search for Ernest Bramah (90). #11433.
Very good copy with two dust jackets. The jacket numbered 54 is worn but presents very well for its age. The jacket numbered 64 is good, with chipping and splits; splits have been mended internally with archival tape.
Additional Details
The Secret of the League (1907), originally published anonymously as What Might Have Been and later revised and reissued under Ernest Bramah’s name in 1909, is one of the earliest and most fascinating anti-socialist dystopian novels of the twentieth century. Long before Orwell or Huxley, Bramah imagined a Britain collapsing under the weight of a democratically elected socialist government whose taxation schemes and labor policies push the nation into economic ruin and civil unrest.
The novel follows Sir John Hampden and his brilliant ally George Salt, leaders of a clandestine anti-socialist organization known as the League or Unity League. In response to the Minimum Wage Bill, the Personal Property Tax, and the infamous Schedule B of the Unearned Incomes Act, they quietly build a membership of five million and spend two years preparing a nonviolent but devastating counter-revolution. Their principal weapon is an orchestrated national boycott of coal, designed to cripple the industries that support the ruling Socialist Labour Party. The resulting paralysis spreads through the entire economy, producing cascading shortages, mass unemployment, violent unrest, and finally famine. In Bramah’s imagined Britain, London becomes half-medieval and half-anarchic, with freezing canals, torchlit streets, roaming thieves, beggars, and new extremist sects promising utopia.
Once the government collapses under its own policies, the League seizes control and forces Parliament to adopt A Bill to Amend the Qualifications of Voters in Parliamentary Elections, effectively abolishing adult suffrage and replacing it with a property-weighted franchise. Even Hampden acknowledges that the measure is “wholly immoral,” but insists that authoritarian rule is necessary to pacify the working classes and restore national stability. The League openly describes itself as a “social autocracy” and expects to govern unopposed for twenty years. As one review noted, Bramah’s remedy for socialism is nothing less than an enlightened dictatorship.
Salt’s late-novel revelation about his background, which suddenly renders him heroic even in the eyes of starving, resentful workers, foreshadows how a charismatic leader might draw the masses into accepting an authoritarian settlement. The final chapters read today with an eerie anticipation of the rise of European fascism.
Contemporary critics recognized the book’s political boldness. The Clarion in 1909 called it “a brilliant novel” filled with “trenchant satire,” and the American Register deemed it “very able,” though strongly partisan. Later, George Orwell credited the novel with having “predicted with some accuracy the rise of Fascism,” noting that even a kindly, humorous writer like Bramah could imagine the middle class condoning harsh, repressive measures when feeling threatened by revolution.
The Secret of the League occupies an important yet under-recognized place in the evolution of dystopian fiction. It stands as an early and unusually explicit exploration of how a threatened middle class might embrace authoritarian solutions, not only anticipating later anti-democratic movements but offering a sharp counterpoint to contemporary utopias such as H. G. Wells’s A Modern Utopia (1905). Rather than imagining a benevolent technocratic elite, Bramah portrays a self-appointed ruling class willing to suspend democracy and impose order "for the public good." George Orwell later singled the novel out as a startlingly accurate prefiguration of the rise of fascism and an unvarnished glimpse into "the mentality of the middle classes" when faced with the specter of revolution. Bramah’s novel is a crucial early step toward the political dystopias of the twentieth century, revealing the uncomfortable truth that the authoritarian impulse can emerge not only from radical movements but also from those who fear them.
The novel follows Sir John Hampden and his brilliant ally George Salt, leaders of a clandestine anti-socialist organization known as the League or Unity League. In response to the Minimum Wage Bill, the Personal Property Tax, and the infamous Schedule B of the Unearned Incomes Act, they quietly build a membership of five million and spend two years preparing a nonviolent but devastating counter-revolution. Their principal weapon is an orchestrated national boycott of coal, designed to cripple the industries that support the ruling Socialist Labour Party. The resulting paralysis spreads through the entire economy, producing cascading shortages, mass unemployment, violent unrest, and finally famine. In Bramah’s imagined Britain, London becomes half-medieval and half-anarchic, with freezing canals, torchlit streets, roaming thieves, beggars, and new extremist sects promising utopia.
Once the government collapses under its own policies, the League seizes control and forces Parliament to adopt A Bill to Amend the Qualifications of Voters in Parliamentary Elections, effectively abolishing adult suffrage and replacing it with a property-weighted franchise. Even Hampden acknowledges that the measure is “wholly immoral,” but insists that authoritarian rule is necessary to pacify the working classes and restore national stability. The League openly describes itself as a “social autocracy” and expects to govern unopposed for twenty years. As one review noted, Bramah’s remedy for socialism is nothing less than an enlightened dictatorship.
Salt’s late-novel revelation about his background, which suddenly renders him heroic even in the eyes of starving, resentful workers, foreshadows how a charismatic leader might draw the masses into accepting an authoritarian settlement. The final chapters read today with an eerie anticipation of the rise of European fascism.
Contemporary critics recognized the book’s political boldness. The Clarion in 1909 called it “a brilliant novel” filled with “trenchant satire,” and the American Register deemed it “very able,” though strongly partisan. Later, George Orwell credited the novel with having “predicted with some accuracy the rise of Fascism,” noting that even a kindly, humorous writer like Bramah could imagine the middle class condoning harsh, repressive measures when feeling threatened by revolution.
The Secret of the League occupies an important yet under-recognized place in the evolution of dystopian fiction. It stands as an early and unusually explicit exploration of how a threatened middle class might embrace authoritarian solutions, not only anticipating later anti-democratic movements but offering a sharp counterpoint to contemporary utopias such as H. G. Wells’s A Modern Utopia (1905). Rather than imagining a benevolent technocratic elite, Bramah portrays a self-appointed ruling class willing to suspend democracy and impose order "for the public good." George Orwell later singled the novel out as a startlingly accurate prefiguration of the rise of fascism and an unvarnished glimpse into "the mentality of the middle classes" when faced with the specter of revolution. Bramah’s novel is a crucial early step toward the political dystopias of the twentieth century, revealing the uncomfortable truth that the authoritarian impulse can emerge not only from radical movements but also from those who fear them.
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