21.05.2018 Views

KARL MARX

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

126 <strong>KARL</strong> <strong>MARX</strong>: A BIOGRAPHY<br />

was to be the constant, if often unmentioned, companion to the family<br />

until Marx's death. 2 Marx at first found difficulty in obtaining a residence<br />

permit: the Belgian authorities were afraid that he would publish a resuscitated<br />

version of Vorwiirts and also the Prussian police were applying<br />

pressure. Marx had to show the authorities the contract he had signed<br />

for a book on Economics and Politics and declared that he was living off<br />

his wife's money while waiting for the royalties. Only after signing a<br />

promise to abstain from all political activity did he finally obtain permission<br />

to stay. In October 1845 Marx thought of emigrating to the<br />

United States and even applied to the mayor of Trier for a permit. When<br />

the Prussian police continued to demand his extradition Marx abandoned<br />

Prussian nationality in December 1845.<br />

Nevertheless, the years in Brussels were probably the happiest ever<br />

enjoyed by the Marx family. There was a comfortable source of income<br />

from the sale of the furniture and linen in Paris and the 1500 francs<br />

advance that Marx received for his forthcoming book. In addition, on<br />

learning of his expulsion from Paris, Engels, together with Hess and Jung,<br />

had organised a subscription for him 'in order to spread your extra<br />

expenses among us all communistically'.' This appeal yielded almost 1000<br />

francs, mainly from friends in the Rhineland, and Engels also put at<br />

Marx's disposal the royalties from his own book The Condition of the<br />

Working Classes in England. When Engels moved to Brussels he rented a<br />

house next to the Marx family and Hess and his wife Sibylle soon moved<br />

in next door to Engels. Sibylle acted as an 'auntie' to the Marx children.<br />

They had an agreeable circle of friends, including the poet Ferdinand<br />

Freiligrath and a socialist journalist Karl Heinzen, and Jenny remembered<br />

with pleasure their evenings in the gay cafes of the city. 4 Joseph<br />

Weydemeyer, an artillery officer with socialist leanings, who was to<br />

become a lifelong friend of Marx, described one of their outings in early<br />

1846: 'To crown our folly, Marx, Weitling, Marx's brother-in-law and<br />

myself spent the night playing cards. Weitling was the first to tire. Marx<br />

and I spent some hours on a sofa and the next day, in the company of<br />

his wife and brother-in-law, we vagabonded in the most agreeable manner<br />

imaginable. Early in the morning we went to a cafe, then we took the<br />

train to Villeworde, a nearby village, where we had lunch. We were madly<br />

gay, and came back on the last train.' 5<br />

The sorties were only reliefs from long periods of intense intellectual<br />

activity. On the day he left Paris Marx had signed a contract with Karl<br />

Leske, a progressive Darmstadt publisher, for a book to be entitled A<br />

Critique of Economics and Politics to be finished by the summer of 1845.<br />

The economic side would no doubt have been a reworking of the 'Paris<br />

Manuscripts'. Marx got as far as sketching out a table of contents for the

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!