ENGELS TO FRIEDRICH ADOLPH SORGE[1]
IN ROCHESTER
[London] 29 October 1887
Am sending you by today's post the Austrian calendar (Österreichischer Arbeiter-Kalender) with a biographical note,[2] ditto Commonweal. Bebel and Bernstein are here in order, amongst other things, to make preparations for next year's international congress.[3] Bebel most satisfied with the St Gall congress and likewise with the state of affairs in Germany.
Faced with spontaneous agitation on the part of the unemployed, both parliamentary groups[4] in this country have shown how very much out of touch they are with the masses. Commonweal, as you will see, is completely at its wits' end.
- ↑ Engels wrote this letter on a post card. He indicated the address on the back - F. A. Sorge Esq., Rochester N.Y., U.S. America.
- ↑ Apparently this refers to the biography of Engels, written by Karl Kautsky for the Osterreichischer Arbeiter-Kalender of 1888.
- ↑ The German Social Democrat Congress held at St. Gallen adopted a decision (along with other resolutions (see note 174)) on convening an international labour congress to consider the issue of labour legislation. Almost simultaneously, a similar decision was passed by the British Trades Unions Congress (see note 165). The trade unions convened their congress in London in November 1888; the German Social Democrats abandoned theilan and took part in the convening and holding of an international socialist labour congress in Paris on 14-20 July 1889, first suggested by the French Workers' Party (see note 33); it stood at the beginnings of the Second International (see note 473).
- ↑ The reference is to the Social Democratic Federation (See note 62) and the Socialist League (see note 21).