| Author(s) | Friedrich Engels |
|---|---|
| Written | 16 June 1879 |
ENGELS TO J. GUGENHEIM
IN LONDON
[Draft]
[London,] 16 June 1879
I beg to acknowledge receipt of your esteemed letter of 29 May and regret that under present circumstances I cannot comply with the wish expressed in the same that I deliver a lecture to your Society.[1]
The organ of that Society, the Freiheit, has thought fit publicly to attack the attitude of Social-Democratic deputies in the Reichstag.[2] Now even though statements have been made in the Reichstag by certain of our members which I, too, regard as inept (and about which I have not hesitated to express my views privately and in an appropriate place),[3] I can in no way declare myself in agreement with the kind of criticism chosen by the Freiheit and still less with its having felt obliged to pursue this kind of criticism in public.
You will understand that if I were willing to deliver a lecture to the Society under these circumstances, this would inevitably give rise to the view in Germany and elsewhere that I condoned the attitude adopted by the Freiheit.