


He founded his magazine, "The Free Comrade," which first ran from 1900 to 1902. This inspired his book, "Dawn-Thought on the Reconciliation: a Volume of Pantheistic Impressions and Glimpses of Larger Religion" (1900).

Bucke devoted a chapter to Lloyd in his 1901 book of that title). His life changed when in that year, reading Edward Carpenter while riding on a train to N.Y., he experienced " Cosmic Consciousness" (R.M. His work, "The Red Heart in a White World: A Suggestive Manual of Free Society Containing a Method and a Hope," formed the basis for it. He founded an anarchist group, The Comradeship of Free Socialists, in 1897. His first book, "Wind-Harp Songs" (poetry), was published in 1895 ("Anarchists' March," a printed musical score with words by Lloyd, had been issued by Tucker in 1888). He based his anarchism upon natural law, rather than on egoism as Benjamin Tucker did. He was born in Westfield, New Jersey he later moved to Kansas, then Iowa, then to experimental colonies in Tennessee and Florida, before returning to New Jersey in 1888. Lloyd later modified his political position to minarchism. William Lloyd (never using his given name John) (J– October 23, 1940) was an American individualist anarchist, mystic and pantheist.
