In recent years polish historians have become increasingly interested in the history of the Polish socialist movement. This interest, though undoubtedly stimulated by the political and economic changes which have taken place in their country since the last war, has been shared alike by opponents and supporters of the present regime. So far, however, the main emphasis has been placed on the later stages of the movement's development. The history of the first Polish socialist organization, Lud Polski (The Polish People), founded in 18 3 5 by a group of emigre peasant soldiers in the English seacoast town of Portsmouth, has not hitherto received adequate treatment.
The theories of this organization were, indeed, based on the peasantry and were concerned almost exclusively with the organization of agriculture, for Poland still had a predominantly agrarian structure. With industry only in its infancy, “the people” for these early Polish socialists, as for Herzen and the Russian narodniki of the seventies, could in fact mean only the peasantry.