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KARL MARX

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BRUSSELS<br />

H5<br />

meeting agreed to disagree and Moll continued his trip to other German<br />

towns but with little success.<br />

Meanwhile pressure on the Neue Rheinische Zeitung mounted. Marx's<br />

paper - and Marx himself - came in for attention from the military as<br />

well as the civil authorities. On 2 March two NCOs called on Marx in<br />

his home to ask for the name of the author of an article reporting on the<br />

conviction of an officer for the illicit sale of army material. Marx described<br />

the encounter in a subsequent letter of complaint to the Cologne<br />

Commandant:<br />

I answered the gendemen (1) that the article had nothing to do with<br />

me as it was an insertion in the non-editorial part of the paper; (2) that<br />

they could be provided with free space for a counterstatement; (3)<br />

that it was open to them to seek satisfaction in the courts. When the<br />

gentlemen pointed out that the whole of the Eighth Company felt itself<br />

slandered by the article, then I replied that only the signatures of the<br />

whole of the Eighth Company could convince me of the correctness of<br />

this statement which was, in any case, irrelevant. The NCOs then told<br />

me that if I did not name 'the man', if I did not 'hand him over', they<br />

could 'no longer hold their people back', and it would 'turn out badly'.<br />

I answered that the gentlemen's threats and intimidation would achieve<br />

absolutely nothing with me. They then left, muttering under their<br />

breath. 76<br />

Engels, in a much later letter, made it plain that it was not only Marx's<br />

bitter irony that made the soldiers leave so fast: 'Marx received them<br />

wearing a dressing gown in whose pocket he had placed an unloaded<br />

pistol with the handle showing. The sight of this was enough to make<br />

the NCOs stop asking for any further explanation. In spite of the sabre<br />

bayonets with which they were armed, they lost their self-possession and<br />

departed.' 77 Engels also recounted later that many wondered<br />

how we were able to conduct our business so unhampered in a Prussian<br />

fortress of the first rank in face of a garrison of 8000 men and right<br />

opposite the main guard post; but the eight bayonets and the 250 sharp<br />

cartridges in the editorial room and the red Jacobin hats of the typesetters<br />

made our building also look like a fortress to the officers and one<br />

that could not be taken by any mere surprise attack. 78<br />

But the days of the Neue Rheinische Zeitung were evidently numbered.<br />

One month before the end Marx took the most dramatic step of his year<br />

in Cologne: he broke the ties with the Democrats that he had, till then,<br />

been so eager to foster. On 15 April the Neue Rheinische Zeitung carried<br />

the brief announcement, signed by Marx, Schapper, Anneke, Becker and<br />

Wolff:

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