had fired the shots. But at any rate I could see that my boys
renewed the attack with increased
fury until finally the last
disturbers were overcome and flung out of the hall.
About twentyfive minutes had passed since it all began. The hall
looked as if a bomb had exploded there. Many of my comrades
had to be bandaged and others taken away. But we remained
masters of the situation. Hermann Essen, who was chairman of
the meeting, announced: "The meeting will continue. The
speaker shall proceed." So I went on with my speech.
When we ourselves declared the meeting at an end an excited
police officer rushed in, waved his hands and declared: "The
meeting is dissolved." Without wishing to do so I had to laugh at
this example of the law's delay. It was real police pompousness.
The smaller they are the greater they must always try to appear.
That evening we learned a real lesson. And our adversaries never
forgot the lesson they had received.
Up to the autumn of 1923 the Münchener post did not again
mention the clenched fists of the Proletariat.