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A.B.
A vivid memoir opens with the author recalling his own role in the heated political atmosphere of 1863‑64 Germany. He describes secret conversations with figures such as Hermann Wagener, the Countess Hatzfeldt, and the rising socialist leader Ferdinand Lassalle, hinting at how those exchanges shaped his understanding of emerging socialist ideas.
The narrative then moves to the bustling meetings of workers’ associations in Leipzig, where the author delivered a controversial speech against universal secret ballot. The scene shifts to Lassalle’s polarising appearance at the Odeon hall, his theatrical podium piled with heavy tomes, and the clash of voices between liberal merchants and passionate workers. The author’s keen eye captures the split within the Leipzig committee and the tentative spread of the movement to other German cities.
Through personal anecdotes and detailed observations, the memoir offers listeners a window into the early struggles of the German labour movement, the clash of ideologies, and the author’s own conflicted stance on political reform.
Language
de
Duration
~5 hours (295K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1840–1913
A master speaker and organizer, he helped build Germany’s socialist movement from the ground up and became one of its best-known public voices. His life traced the rise of working-class politics in Europe during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
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