The Utopian Communist: A Biography of Wilhelm Weitling

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100 THE UTOPIAN COMMUNIST
munists at the Red Lion, but in his lectures to the assembled work­
men he spoke more often of the progress of his mechanical inven­
tions than of social revolution. Most of the time he sat peacefully
among his comrades, smoking a pipe, drinking his beer, and join­
ing in the singing of French and German songs. On one occasion
he attended a public debate between a minister of the gospel and
a woman who was an avowed atheist, and concluded that the lady
had failed in her effort to explain all creation by the simple term
"nature."
On September 22, 1845, Weitling spoke at a great "Festival of
the Nations" commemorating the birth of the French Republic in



  1. The program consisted of instrumental music, choral sing­
    ing in many tongues, and formal addresses. Representatives of the
    German, French, Italian, Polish, and Swiss colonies in London
    were present, plus a Hungarian and a Turk; and the speaking was
    done in English, French, and German. Thomas Cooper, a leader
    of the Chartists, presided, and the editor of the Chartist Northern
    Star spoke for the British. Dr. Berrier-Fontaine, a disciple of
    Cabet, spoke for the French and Weitling for the Germans. In­
    ternationalism was the theme which characterized all these ad­
    dresses. Each speaker denounced national rivalries and pledged, as
    part of a Young Europe movement, to work for the extermination
    of tyranny everywhere. Weitling was received warmly as the
    martyr from the Continent. He pleaded for brotherhood, de­
    nounced militarism, and maintained that if soldiers in opposing
    armies could only be given an opportunity to speak to each other
    across the battle line before the firing began, wars would turn into
    meetings of friends and brothers. No less a person than Friedrich
    Engels commented, in the Rheinische Jahrbücher, on the inter­
    national character of this fraternal demonstration.^8


Not much more is known about Weitling's London sojourn ex­
cept for his part in the lively debates in the London society of
communists, to be noted presently. He took credit for increasing


(^8) Buddensieg, Kultur des deutschen Proletariats, 21; Adler, Erste sozialpoliti¬
sche Arbeiterbewegung in Deutschland, 80-82.

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