The Spectator: Engels sang German folk-songs or drunkenly recited ‘The Vicar of Bray’

Engels left Manchester in 1870 and moved to Primrose Hill, London, where he held parties on most Sundays
In 1890 Friedrich Engels, co-author of The Communist Manifesto, celebrated his 70th birthday. ‘We kept it up till half past three in the morning,’ he boasted to Laura Lafargue, daughter of his old friend Karl Marx, ‘and drank, besides claret, sixteen bottles of champagne — that morning we had had 12 dozen oysters.’

This was not an isolated act of indulgence. During the 1870s his Primrose Hill home had become a popular venue for socialist excess. ‘On Sundays, Engels would throw open his house,’ recalled the communist August Bebel. ‘On those puritanical days when no merry men can bear life in London, Engels’s house was open to all, and no one left before 2 or 3 in the morning.’ Pilsner, claret, and vast bowls of Maitrank — a May wine flavoured with woodruff — were consumed while Engels sang German folk-songs or drunkenly recited ‘The Vicar of Bray’.

source: archived

note: Smithsonian* and Britannica* articles on Engels are less entertaining but more thorough

Friedrich Engels and the Cheshire Hunt (!?)



*a link – see a note on notes and links
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