THE STORMING OF VIENNA
121
garians came across the Leitha, in the latter end of October, 1848, was not this quite as illegal as any immediate and resolute attack would have been?
We are known to harbor no unfriendly feeling toward Hungary. We stood by her during the struggles; we may be allowed to say that our paper, the Neue Rheinische Zeitung,[1] has done more than any other to render the Hungarian cause popular in Germany, by explaining the na-
- ↑ “Die Neue Rheinische Zeitung” (The New Rhenish Gazette). After the March revolution, 1848, Marx returned from Paris to Germany, and settling down—for the time being—at Cologne, founded this paper. Although the “Neue Rheinische Zeitung” never went in for propounding “Communist schemes,” as Mr. Dawson, e. g., says it did, it became a very nightmare to the Government. Reactionaries and Liberals alike denounced the “Gazette,” especially after Marx’s brilliant defence of the Paris Insurrection of June. The state of siege being declared in Cologne, the “Gazette” was suspended for six weeks—only to appear with a bigger reputation and bigger circulation than before. After the Prussian “coup d’état” in November, the “Gazette” published at the head of every issue an appeal to the people to refuse to pay taxes, and to meet force by force. For this and certain other articles the paper was twice prosecuted. On the first occasion the accused were Marx, Engels, and Korff; on the second and more important trial, they were Marx, Schapper, and Schneider. The accused were charged with “inciting the people to armed resistance against the Government and its officials.” Marx mainly conducted the defence, and delivered a brilliant speech. “Marx refrains” (in this speech) “from all oratorical flourish; he goes straight to the