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KARL MARX

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LONDON 211<br />

which eventually found its way to the British Foreign Office via the<br />

British Ambassador in Berlin:<br />

One of the German Societies under Marx, Wolff, Engels, Vidil, meets<br />

at No. 20 Great Windmill Street on the first storey. It is divided again<br />

into three Sections. The Society B, is the most violent. The murder of<br />

Princes is formally taught and discussed in it. At a meeting held the<br />

day before yesterday at which I assisted and over which Wolff and<br />

Marx presided, I heard one of the Orators call out 'The Moon Calf<br />

will likewise not escape its destiny. The English Steel Wares are the<br />

best, the axes cut particularly sharp here, and the guillotine awaits<br />

every Crowned Head.' Thus the murder of the Queen of England is<br />

proclaimed by Germans a few hundred yards only from Buckingham<br />

Palace. The secret committee is divided again into two Sections, the<br />

one composed of the Leaders and the other of the so-called 'Blindmen'<br />

who are from 18 to 20 in number and are men of great daring and<br />

courage. They are not to take part in disturbances, but are reserved for<br />

great occasions and principally for the murder of Princes. 10<br />

That this report is remarkable chiefly for the imaginative capacities of<br />

its author is shown by the surviving minutes of such meetings.<br />

In general the refugees were ignored by the British Government. In<br />

March 1851, for example, the Prussian Minister of the Interior pressed<br />

for a joint approach with Austria and Prussia to the British Government<br />

for 'decisive measures against the chief revolutionaries known by name'<br />

and for 'rendering them innocuous by transportation to the colonies'. 11<br />

The previous year the Austrian ambassador had already raised the question<br />

with Sir George Grey, the British Home Secretary, pointing out that 'the<br />

members of the Communist League, whose leaders were Marx, Engels,<br />

Bauer and Wolff, discussed even regicide', but got the reply: 'under our<br />

laws, mere discussion of regicide, so long as it does not concern the<br />

Queen of England and so long as there is no definite plan, does not<br />

constitute sufficient grounds for the arrest of the conspirators'. 12 The<br />

most the Home Office was prepared to do in answer to these demands<br />

was to give financial assistance to those refugees wishing to emigrate to<br />

the United States. 13<br />

Although when still in Cologne Marx had rejected the advances of the<br />

London Central Committee of the Communist League (resurrected by<br />

Schapper and Moll early in 1849), he now began to devote great energy<br />

to the League's work. It is not entirely clear how Marx became a member<br />

of the Central Committee: official election is unlikely; probably he was<br />

co-opted by Bauer and Eccarius as later were Engels and Willich. At any<br />

rate he attended its fortnightly meetings and eventually became its President.<br />

The League had been far from inactive during 1849, although the

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