The Utopian Communist: A Biography of Wilhelm Weitling

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116 THE UTOPIAN COMMUNIST
and antirent, and Kriege defended vigorously his program of op­
portunism and piecemeal reform on the ground that the demo­
cratic United States presented a very different problem from
autocratic Europe. Unfortunately, the Volkstribun was written
in the extravagant style of the sentimentalist who loved all hu­
manity, and before long Kriege was charged with making com­
munism laughable by the methods of a crackpot. By the end of
1846, the paper had suspended publication. Thereafter its editor
became a Democrat, published three volumes on the "Fathers of
the Republic," went back to Europe to participate in the Revolu­
tion of 1848 in Berlin, returned to the United States to edit the
Illinois Staatszeitung in Chicago for a short period, and died, in­
sane, in New York at the age of thirty-one. In accordance with
his specific request, Kriege was buried with an American flag
draped across his breast,^15 and the New York Tribune eulogized
him as "one of the most sincere, upright and generous men with
whom it was ever our fortune to be acquainted."^16


To the Marxians, however, Kriege was nothing but a source of
embarrassment for the party. There had been a time when Engels
considered him a "splendid agitator" and had sent him material to
use as an official emissary of the League of the Just, but before
long, Engels repudiated his co-worker in communism, though he
was inclined to blame his eccentricities on "the crazy Harro
Harring," a veteran of the Greek and Polish wars of liberation who
had migrated to the United States in 1834 and later had written
articles for Kriege's Volkstribun.^11 Marx was convinced that the
renegade from orthodox communism must be called to account,
and in this light, Kriege's case was presented to the party confer­
ence in Brussels.


(^15) Belleviller Zeitung, January 23, 1851.
(^16) New York Tribune, January 1, 1851.
(^17) Engels to Marx, February 22, 1845, in A. Bebel and Ed. Bernstein (eds.),
Briefwechsel zwischen Friedrich Engels und Karl Marx, 1844 bis 1883 (Stutt­
gart, 1921), I, 15, 18, 39, 43, 49; also Quarck, Die erste deutsche Arbeiterbewegung, 324; and B. A. Uhlendorf, "German-American Poetry: A Contribution to
Colonial Literature," Jahrbuch der Deutsch-Amerikanischen Historische Gesell¬
schaft von Illinois (Chicago, 1912-1913), XXII-XXIII, 214.

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