At meetings of the Table Society, the members would eat and drink and hold discussions on various topics together. Clemens Brentano gave his "Philistine speech" () at the society, in which he associates
Philistinism with
Judaism; he describes Jews as "flies left over from the Egyptian plagues", that could be caught on "the stock exchange with mortgage bonds". He published the speech anonymously in 1811 as
The Philistine before, during and after history (). Such
antisemitism was common amongst the members of the German Table Society, and both Achim von Arnim and Adam Müller gave antisemitic speeches. == References ==