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KARL MARX

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LONDON 209<br />

which we had sold were taken out and put on a cart. What was<br />

happening? It was well after sunset. We were contravening English law.<br />

The landlord rushed up to us with two constables, maintaining that<br />

there might be some of his belongings among the things, and that we<br />

wanted to make away abroad. In less than five minutes there were two<br />

or three hundred persons loitering around our door - the whole Chelsea<br />

mob. The beds were brought in again - they could not be delivered to<br />

the buyer until after sunrise next day. When we had sold all our<br />

possessions we were in a position to pay what we owed to the last<br />

farthing. I went with my little darlings to the two small rooms we are<br />

now occupying in the German hotel, 1 Leicester St, Leicester Square.<br />

There for £5 per week we were given a humane reception. 4<br />

On expulsion from their house in Chelsea in April 1850 they found a<br />

permanent lodging in two rooms in 64 Dean Street, a house belonging<br />

to a Jewish lace dealer where Heinrich Bauer, treasurer of the refugee<br />

committee, also lived. Jenny described the summer there with the four<br />

children as 'miserable'. 5 Prospects in London were so bleak that Marx<br />

considered emigrating to the United States together with Engels. He<br />

prepared the ground for a continuation of his publishing projects there<br />

and went as far as to find out the price of the ticket; but this was 'hellishly<br />

expensive' 6 and instead the Marx family merely moved up the street to<br />

number 28, while Engels departed to work in his father's firm in Manchester.<br />

The move was prompted by the death of Guido, born just a year<br />

previously, who died suddenly from convulsions caused by meningitis -<br />

the first of the three children to die in Dean Street.<br />

In spite of these difficulties, Marx was very active politically. His first<br />

few months in London were taken up by three interrelated activities: his<br />

work on behalf of refugees in the framework of the German Workers'<br />

Educational Association; 7 the reorganisation of the Communist League;<br />

and his efforts to start a monthly journal on the pattern of the Neue<br />

Rheinische Zeitung. He regarded all three as means of rebuilding the 'Marx<br />

party' as it had existed in Cologne in 1848. 8<br />

The day after Jenny's arrival in London, a Committee for the Assistance<br />

of German Political Refugees was elected by a general assembly of<br />

the Association to which it was to present monthly accounts. Marx was<br />

one of the chosen members along with Blind, Bauer, Pfander and Fuster.<br />

The committee immediately began to collect money through personal<br />

contacts and newspaper appeals, both mainly in Germany. After only two<br />

months, however, the committee had to be reconstituted. For with the<br />

departure of Blind and Fuster and the arrival of Willich in London,<br />

the orientation of the committee became too extreme for radical republicans<br />

such as Struve and Heinzen who tried to form (separate from the

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