COLOGNE 199
fortnight in a first-class hotel in Hamburg laying plans for further com-
munist activity with Karl von Bruhn and Konrad Schramm, both members
of the Communist League.^84 While Marx was in Hamburg, revolution
broke out in Germany for the last time for many years. The Frankfurt
Assembly had at length drafted a Constitution, but the King was in a
strong enough position to reject it and coined at this time the famous
phrase: against Democrats the only remedy is soldiers. In early May street
fighting broke out in Dresden and lasted for a week with such colourful
figures as Bakunin and the young Richard Wagner behind the barricades.
There were also shortlived revolts in the Ruhr, but it was only in Baden
that there was any extensive insurgency.
The renewed confidence of the authorities led to the expulsion of
Marx. The military authorities in Cologne had already in March applied
to the police for his expulsion. The request had gone so far as Manteuffel,
the Minister of the Interior, but was not immediately implemented as the
civil authorities in Cologne thought it would be unduly provocative to
expel Marx without any particular reason. By May, however, they felt
strong enough to do just that: on his return to Cologne on 9 May Marx
learnt that he was to be expelled; the authorities in Hamburg had already
issued him with a passport valid for Paris only. On the sixteenth he
received the order to leave Prussian soil within twenty-four hours 'because
of his shameful violation of hospitality'.^85 All the other editors of the Neue
Rheinische Zeitung were either expelled or threatened with arrest. The
paper could not continue. The last number appeared on 18 May, printed
in red. On the first page there appeared a poem by Freiligrath of which
the first stanza ran:
No open blow in an open fight,
But with quips and with quirks they arraign me,
By creeping treacherous secret blight
The Western Kalmucks have slain me.
The fatal shaft in the dark did fly;
I was struck by an ambushed knave;
And here in the pride of my strength I lie,
Like the corpse of a rebel brave!^86
Also on the first page was a message to the workers of Cologne from the
editors which warned them against any attempt at a putsch in Cologne
and finished: 'the last word of the Neue Rheinische Zeitung will always and
everywhere be: emancipation of the working class'.^87
Marx himself contributed a defiant article claiming - rather implausibly
- that the paper had always been revolutionary and had made no attempt
to conceal its views: