Marx
Chapter 1: LIFE
Karl Marx was born on 5th
May 1818 in the small German town of Trier, near the Luxembourg border. Trier is the oldest town in Germany, and in 334 or thereabouts
had been the birthplace of another man who changed European history, St.Ambrose. The town was part of the Rhineland, had been ruled by
Napoleon, and in some ways had benefited by his rule. Though incorporated into Prussia in 1815, it was rather
more liberal than most Prussian lands. Karl’s father, Heinrich Marx, was a
lawyer, and an admirer of the French Enlightenment and Rousseau. His mother
Henrietta, of whom we know rather little, was Dutch. Both parents were Jewish,
and there were many Rabbis in Karl Marx’s ancestry, on both sides of the
family. However Heinrich (whose name had been Hirschel)
Marx had converted to Protestantism shortly before Karl’s birth, though Karl
was not baptised until he was six. The conversion was a matter of convenience
rather than conviction, and like most people with a background in such
conversions, Karl Marx was never deeply affected by religion. In his school
essays he expressed a conventional rationalistic Protestantism, but as an adult
was a lifelong atheist.
Marx
was educated in the Frederick William High School in Trier, and went to university
at Bonn and later Berlin, initially to study law,
though he later moved over to philosophy. Having been brought up by his father
on Enlightenment writers, and introduced by Baron von Westphalen,
the father of his future wife, to the romantics, at university he encountered
Hegel, whose philosophical system dominated German universities at that time.
In Hegel’s thought, many apparent opposites are reconciled, for instance the
French Revolutionary belief in the sovereignty of reason and the romantics’
belief in organic community. Hegel’s political philosophy is not a compromise
between reason and organic community, it is, in intention, rationalist through
and through and organic through and through. The same could be said, in a
different way, of the society Marx was to aim for.
There
is a longstanding academic debate on how much Hegel’s philosophy influenced
that of the mature Marx, which debate I shall avoid introducing into this book
wherever possible. But I think Hegel’s influence on Marx’s cultural attitudes is profound, and left Marx with a far broader
outlook and more balanced judgement in these matters than most revolutionaries.
I think it would be true to say that what is best in Marx is what is original
to him, what is second best is derived from Hegel, and what is mistaken is
derived from the Jacobin tradition inherited from the French Revolution.
After
obtaining a PhD on the rather obscure topic of the relation between the ancient
Greek atomist philosophers Democritus and Epicurus, Marx might have entered an
academic career, but his opinions, while not yet socialist, were already
democratic and anti-clerical, and this was well enough known to make academic
employment unlikely. He began to work for a Cologne-based liberal journal, the Rheinische Zeitung, of
which he soon became editor. This was his first engagement in serious politics.
It lasted only a few months, since the journal was suppressed by the censors at
the request of the Russian Tsar, whom it had attacked. Marx decided to move to Paris to work with Arnold Ruge on a projected new journal, the Deutsche-Französische Jahrbucher.
While working for the Rheinische Zeitung one
experience had influenced Marx deeply. He had to consider the issue of ‘thefts
of wood’ by the peasants of the Moselle wine growing
area - thefts according to the property owners, the exercise of their
traditional right of gathering wood according to the peasants. This alerted
Marx to the roots of politics in the social and economic conditions of the
people.
Before
leaving Germany, Marx married Jenny von Westphalen, to whom he had been engaged for seven years.
They were married in Kreuznach, and stayed there for
the summer of 1943, until everything was ready for them to go to Paris. In Paris their first child, also
called Jenny, was born. She also nearly died of convulsions there, and was
saved by the presence of mind of the poet Heinrich Heine,
one of the few friends with whom Marx never quarrelled.
In Paris too, Marx encountered not
only socialist writers, but the urban wage-earning class, the proletariat, for
the first time. He also began to study and criticise the Scottish and English
economists, Adam Smith and David Ricardo. From this time
dates Marx’s conversion to socialism, marked by his writing the Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts,
which starts with criticism of these economists and continues to make a case
against the dehumanisation of people under capitalism. This I shall
discuss in the next chapter.
While
in Paris, Marx had his first prolonged
meeting with Frederick Engels, who was to be his
lifelong friend and co-worker. Engels, while his own
judgement that ‘Marx was a genius, the rest of us merely talented’ was no doubt
true, had a much more practical knowledge of capitalism. His father was a
textile manufacturer with a factory in Manchester as well as Wuppertal, and Engels
had spent some time in England - the only major country
where the proletariat was a majority. His first book was The Condition of the Working Class in England, as empirical and
practical as Marx’s early writings were speculative and theoretical. During
their common exile after the defeat of the German revolution, he worked as a
manager in his father’s factory, which enabled him to help out the Marx family
financially. It has become customary in many circles to blame everything wrong
about later Marxism on Engels, but this is wholly
unfair. He was as committed to democracy and to an open approach to science as
was Marx, and rather more aware than Marx of environmental issues and the
oppression of women.
Early
in 1845, there occurred the first of a series of expulsions of Marx from
countries where he lived. He had been contributing to a journal called Vorwärts which
acted as a forum for German radicals in Paris. The journal was closed
by the French Minister of the Interior, and writers Marx, Arnold Ruge and Heinrich Heine were
expelled from France. Marx moved to Belgium where his family lived
for the next three years at Brussels. Here they were joined by
Helene Demuth, a family servant of the von Westphalens, who afterwards stayed with the Marxes for the rest of their lives, following them into
exile in England. It was in Brussels that Marx’s second
daughter Laura was born. Several other socialist friends and acquaintances
moved to Brussels too, including most importantly
Frederick Engels, with whom Marx began to work on
their book The German Ideology. They
could not find a publisher for this book, and eventually abandoned it ‘to the
gnawing criticism of the mice’, as they said - and when it was exhumed and published
in the twentieth century, parts had actually been destroyed by mice. The first
section of this book, on the German humanist philosopher Feuerbach,
who had influenced them profoundly but whom they now found it necessary to go
beyond, is a classic statement of their programme for a science of history, and
will be discussed later in this book. The later sections of The German Ideology are rambling
polemics, which have lost much of their interest with the decline in interest
in their targets. Marx’s other most important work of this period is his
brilliant, pithy Theses on Feuerbach, which were intended
for self-clarification not publication, but which Engels
later published. These eleven theses, each only a sentence or a paragraph long,
contain some of Marx’s most quoted words, such as the much misunderstood
eleventh thesis: ‘The philosophers have only interpreted the world in different
ways; the point is to change it’.
Apart
from writing and studying the economists, Marx became involved with various socialist
groups at this time, meeting - and quarrelling with - the German utopian
socialist Weitling, and eventually, in 1847, joining
the League of the Just, a German group of socialist workers in exile in various
countries, and in a dozen cities of Germany itself. This league, partly due to
the influence of Marx and Engels, reorganised itself
in this year, replacing conspiratorial by democratic forms of organisation,
re-naming itself the Communist League, and adopting as its slogan ‘Proletarians
of all Countries - Unite’ instead of ‘All men are brothers’; apparently Marx
(despite his admiration for Robert Burns’s poetry) said that there were many
men whose brother he did not wish to be. They also commissioned Marx and Engels to write a manifesto, which was published early in
1848 as The Manifesto of the Communist
Party - though the Communist League was not really a party. It is the first
statement of Marx’s mature political position, and is normally known as The Communist Manifesto.
1848
has gone down in history as the Year of Revolutions, and almost simultaneously
with the Manifesto’s publication, the French monarchy fell, and movements for
democracy began in many European countries. In England the Chartist Movement,
which had been dormant for a few years, revived with its demands for manhood
suffrage, annual parliaments and other democratic reforms. Marx regarded this
as the first real working class party. But in Germany too the demands for a
parliamentary constitution and for national unity were made. Marx, wanting to
be where the action was, moved first to Paris, and then in June to Cologne,
where he became editor of the Neue Rheinische Zeitung, a journal
whose programme was a unified democratic republic of Germany, and the
liberation of Poland from Russia - which would have involved war with Russia.
The journal was not run by the Communist League, and had liberal as well as
socialist backers. In fact throughout the German revolution, Marx, though he by
no means abandoned his socialist aims, concentrated on what he saw as the next
step, the democratic republic, and his main criticism of the bourgeois parties
was not that they were not socialist but that they were cowardly and
compromising in their pursuit of democracy. Towards the end of the revolutionary
period, he saw that the bourgeoisie was too scared to lead a revolution, and
turned to more explicitly communist agitation, but by this time the revolution
was in retreat.
The German revolution
never got as far as bringing down any monarchies, and even the moves towards
parliamentary government were half measures and soon lost. In May 1849, the Neue Rheinische Zeitung was suppressed, and Marx was once more
subjected to an expulsion order. At first he went to France, where he acted in some
official capacity on behalf of the German democrats. However the revolution was
in retreat in France too,
and Marx was expelled from Paris again, sailing for England in August. For the rest
of his life, he lived in London, at first in Soho, in considerable hardship
- though Marx’s income was irregular rather than low by working class
standards, and both generosity and mismanagement contributed to the hardship.
In the next six years three Marx children died; two (Guido and Franziska), who were born in London, died as babies, the
other, Edgar, who had been born in Brussels, died at the age of eight. Marx’s
daughter Eleanor (always known as Tussy), was born
while the Marxes lived in Soho. She was to survive her
father and become active in the English labour movement. Also in this Soho period a son Frederick
was born to Helene Demuth, and according to a
document which came to light in 1962, Marx was the father. Frederick was not brought up by the
Marxes or by his mother, though he maintained contact
with his mother, and became friendly with Marx’s daughters later. Frederick also became active in the
English labour movement, and was a founder member of Hackney Labour Party; he
survived all the others and died in 1929. Engels is
said to have accepted paternity to save the Marxes
embarrassment. Helene Demuth remained part of the
Marx household, and seems to have been as close to Jenny Marx as to Karl in
later years. It is quite possible that the document implicating Marx as Frederick’s father is a forgery -
see Terrell Carver’s biography of Engels for the
evidence.
In an attempt to get a
regular income, Marx applied for a job as a railway clerk at one time, but was
turned down because his handwriting was unreadable (it was).
At first during his exile, Marx engaged in the
unedifying politics of the exiled communists and other German democrats, but
soon tired of the sectarianism, and after the dissolution of the Communist
League in 1852, took no part in active politics until the foundation of the
First International in 1864. During this time, Marx spent a great deal of time
in the library of the British Museum, doing research for his
greatest work, Capital. He did not
expect his work on economics to take so long, and in 1851 told Engels that ‘in five weeks I will be through with the whole
economic shit’; but he left huge boxes of unfinished manuscripts on economics
when he died, even though it is reported that his last words were ‘go away,
last words are for those who have not said enough already’. He also, to make a
living, wrote numerous articles for the New
York Tribune, some of which were mere potboilers, though his enthusiasm for
the anti-slavery North in the American Civil War - and for President Lincoln -
was completely genuine.
Aside from this source of
income, he was always dependent too on Engels’s
generosity. However, a legacy from Baroness von Westphalen,
Jenny’s mother, enabled the family to move from their rooms in Soho to a house near Hampstead
Heath, where they loved to walk and picnic.
Marx
became involved in active politics again when the International Working Men’s
Association (the ‘First International’) was founded in 1864. It was founded not
by Marx but by groups of French and English workers who saw the need for
international solidarity, partly for the practical reason that employers broke
strikes by importing workers from one country to another as blacklegs. The
founders were not Marxists: the English ones were Liberal Trade Unionists, the
French ones mostly followers of the co-operative anarchism of Proudhon. But Marx joined the Association straight away,
and became its leading figure, writing the Inaugural Address and Provisional
Rules. He retained this position throughout the International’s existence,
although Marxists were never more than a minority of its members, partly
because he had something in common with each of the other factions, and they
had little in common with each other. The German socialists, among whom he
already had some followers, could not play a full part in the life of the
International due to the laws in Germany. The main threat to his
leadership came from Bakunin, a revolutionary Russian
anarchist with considerable support in the Mediterranean sections of the
International. Bakunin wanted to abolish the state at
once, while Marx, as we shall see, thought that a workers’ state was necessary
until classes had disappeared, when the state would ‘wither away’. Bakunin presented himself as a libertarian against Marx’s
authoritarianism, and opposed centralisation in the International. But he was
not consistently more libertarian, for on the other hand he wanted to make
atheism a condition of membership of the International, which Marx regarded as
imposing a dogma (albeit one with which he agreed) on the working class. It
would probably have excluded most of the English members. The split between
Marx and Bakunin, which may partly have been based on
personal suspiciousness on both sides, was one of the reasons why the
International was so shortlived (it petered out after
Marx got Bakunin expelled and had its centre moved to
New York in 1872). But a quarrel between these two was more or less inevitable
given Bakunin’s addiction to cloak-and-dagger
conspiracies, fantasies of powerful organisations which had no existence in
reality, and indeed his virulent anti-semitism.
But
one extraordinary event took place during the lifetime of the International,
though not at its instigation: the Paris Commune. After the defeat of France in
the Franco-Prussian war and the abdication of Napoleon III, the provisional government
tried to disarm Paris: the National Guard resisted, taking over the city and
holding elections on manhood suffrage; the resultant council of 92 members
included 17 members of the International, but the International was in no way
in control of it, as the press and governments later claimed. In fact a
majority of its members were lower middle class rather than working class, and
harked back to the Great French Revolution of 1789, though there were notable
minorities of Proudhonian anarchists and Blanquists (these latter were revolutionary workers who,
unlike Marx, worked in a conspiratorial manner, and looked for a dictatorship
by a revolutionary elite after the revolution, rather than the broader
democratic workers’ state proposed by Marx). The measures of the Commune were
quite moderate reforms - abolition of nightwork for
bakers, a law against reducing wages and so on. The only socialistic measure
was the handing over of enterprises whose bosses had abandoned Paris, to the workers to run as
co-operatives, under reserve of compensation. The Commune used terror
relatively little, and only in response to greater terror on the part of its
enemies. Those Communards who were members of the International, though
‘extremists’ in terms of class politics, were ‘moderates’ so far as terror was
concerned. The worst outrage committed under the Commune was the massacre of
fifty hostages, which was not ordered by the Commune, but carried out by a
lynch mob, in the last days of the Commune when its supporters were being
massacred in thousands. The leading Internationalist in the Commune, Varlin, tried unsuccessfully to rescue the hostages. He
himself was brutally murdered by anti-Commune government soldiers soon
afterwards. The numbers of Commune supporters executed after its defeat ran
into tens of thousands - several times as many as those guillotined in the
Great French Revolution.
Marx
was initially sceptical about the Commune’s chances of success - a scepticism
that was borne out by the fall of the Commune after just over two months. But
he not only defended the Communards’ courage and their right to self defence,
but saw it as the first intimation of what a workers’ state would be like. This
view will be discussed later.
After
the fall of the Commune and the decline of the International, Marx’s main
political attentions turned to Germany, where there were two working class
political parties, one following Lassalle, and
tending to favour German unity even under Prussian domination, the other (the ‘Eisenachers’) with more support in south Germany where
Prussia was regarded with suspicion, and with more willingness to make
alliances with liberal bourgeois parties. Marx supported the Eisenachers, one of whose leaders, Liebknecht,
he had known for a long time. In 1875 the two parties merged at a conference in
Gotha, and became the German
Social Democratic Party (SPD) which, much changed in a rightwards direction,
still exists. Marx found a fair bit to object to in the Gotha
Programme adopted by the party, which he saw as too Lassallean.
Among other things he objected to the statement that all classes but the
proletariat were ‘one reactionary mass’. Marx wanted to make a distinction
between the landed aristocracy who supported Bismarck and the liberal
bourgeoisie who should be supported against them, and
more particularly the lower middle class and peasantry who needed to be won
over to the workers’ side. He suspected - what later turned out to be true -
that Lassalle had been willing to make a deal with Bismarck. However Marx maintained
good if sometimes uneasy relations with the SPD leaders, and at the theoretical
level, his influence in the party grew and became paramount. At the practical
level, the SPD was much more a party of moderate reform than he, or its own members,
realised.
Towards
the end of the 1870s, Marx’s health and that of his wife Jenny were
increasingly bad. McLellan writes that ‘By the turn of the decade the topics of sickness and climate
pervaded Marx’s letters to the virtual exclusion of all else’. [Karl Marx, p.430] Jenny had cancer of
the liver, and their daughter Jenny Longuet had
cancer of the bladder. Marx himself was suffering from chronic bronchitis and
an ulcer on the lung. When he became well enough to go into his wife’s room,
their daughter Eleanor reports ‘They were young again together - she a loving
maid and he a loving youth, who were entering life together - and not an old
man devastated by illness and an dying old woman who were taking leave of one
another for life.’ [Selected Works in Two
Volumes, vol.1, p.127]. But she died on December
2nd 1881; when Engels saw Marx after this,
he told Eleanor ‘Moor [Marx] is also dead’, and indeed he did not recover his
will to live. In January 1883 Jenny Longuet died aged
38, and two months later Marx himself died, aged 64. He was buried in Highgate
Cemetery, London, where he shares his grave with his wife Jenny, Helene Demuth, his grandson Harry Longuet,
who died a few days after Marx, aged four, and his daughter Eleanor (Tussy), who died by her own hand in 1898, after her lover
deserted her. The large black bust of Marx which now adorns the grave would not
have been to his taste, but has become something of a local landmark.
It is
natural that anyone with as strong political opinions as Marx would provoke
strong and opposite reactions among different people. But people’s reactions at
a more personal level could be opposite as well, ranging from an American
Senator who said ‘I have never seen a man whose bearing was so provoking and
intolerable’ to his daughter Eleanor who calls him ‘a man brimming over with
humour and good humour … the kindliest, gentlest, most sympathetic of
companions’[McLellan Karl Marx, pp.453-455]. Yet a coherent picture does emerge. In
political relations he was a hard man to have against you. When attacking an
opponent, he loaded his pen with vitriol. But he did not, I think, confuse the
emotions appropriate to politics with those appropriate to personal relations,
as so many political activists do. He was devoted to his wife and children;
despite his alleged affair with Helene Demuth, his
love for his wife - and hers for him - was passionate and lifelong, though Marx
later advised that a revolutionary ought not to marry and bring a family into
such an insecure existence, and indeed Jenny was often at her wits’ end during
their long exile. He loved playing with his children; a Prussian spy who
visited him during the hard years at Dean Street, Soho, reported that ‘As
father and husband, Marx, in spite of his wild and restless character, is the
gentlest and mildest of men’, and that the only chair with four legs, which he
as a visitor was offerred, was being used by the
children to play at cooking, and ‘if you sit down you risk a pair of trousers’.
Later Marx was a good friend to his grown up daughters. He took the early
deaths of three of his children very badly, commenting when eight year old
Edgar died ‘Bacon says that really important men have so many relations with
nature and the world that they recover easily from every loss. I do not belong
to these important men’ [Quoted by Alex Callinicos, The Revolutionary Ideas of Karl Marx,
p.26].
He was a loyal and
generous friend once he had given his friendship, but he did not suffer fools
gladly, and thought that rather a lot of the people he met were fools. He had a
caustic wit, and people feared his criticism, yet according to his daughter
Eleanor he could discuss and criticise Heine’s
unfinished poems with Heine in friendship and good
humour, though Heine was in general hypersensitive to
criticism. Liebknecht says that as a teacher, Marx
had the rare quality of being stern without being discouraging. His sometimes
excessively polemical style was an unfortunate legacy to the socialist
movement, yet the socialist advocacy by means of objective reporting and
explanatory science in Capital is
unequalled in the literature of politics and social science. What Lessner said about his speech is also true of his writing:
‘He never said a superfluous word; every sentence contained an idea and every
idea was an essential link in the chain of his argument.’ Despite what is
sometimes said about him, he was not a snob - though of course he was from the
professional middle class by background and education - and made friends easily
among the proletarian members of the Communist League and the International.
Outside
working hours, he was a great student of world literature. He spoke a number of
languages, ancient and modern, and admired Aeschylus, Dante, Cervantes,
Shakespeare, Goethe and Burns, all of whom he knew in their original languages.
He read Aeschylus every year, and drew inspiration from the story of
Prometheus, stealing the fire of the gods for the benefit of humankind. His
daughters knew several Shakespeare plays by heart, and they would be performed
in the house. Among moderns, he particularly admired Balzac. He also kept
abreast of scientific developments, and was enough of a ‘technological
determinist’ to believe at one time that the discovery of the electric motor
would eventually bring the downfall of capitalism. His interest in applied
science extended to the critique of new agricultural practices which were
impoverishing the soil - an early example of ecological concern [see John
Bellamy Foster in International Socialism
Journal 96, pp. 71-86, October 2002]. Aside from intellectual pursuits, his
main recreations seem to have been his walks and picnics on Hampstead Heath. He
enjoyed wine and beer, and one visitor reports that he was often drunk; but the
quantity and quality of his literary output is proof enough that this was not
so often as to interfere with his work.