London 1941. published by the author. 14x21.5 cm, pp. 23, softcover. Good condition (undated library stamps, paper sticker on back cover).
A pamphlet against Stanislaw Cat-Mackiewicz and his émigré publications.
"(...) for reasons unknown to me (...) official factors have for a number of months ignored Mackiewicz's nuttiness, failing even to straighten out his obvious lies and falsehoods, failing to refute the gravest and most baseless assaults and accusations against the person of the head of the government, and this at a time when General Sikorski, sparing no strength and hardships, is making a great and dangerous journey to Malta, Tobruk, Kuibyshev and Moscow. Mackiewicz has exceeded all permissible limits of honest journalism, and with his falsifications he not only deliberately aims at the dishonor of the National Government in the eyes of the émigré society, but with his lies he sows the most harmful confusion of notions, causing deep rifts among this society and poisoning the atmosphere of our political life." [excerpt]