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KARL MARX

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

articles for 'he can handle language like no one else on earth'. 28 The issue<br />

intended for January with a printing of 2500 eventually appeared early in<br />

March and the three ensuing numbers followed fairly quickly until mid-<br />

May. However, relations with Schuberth swiftly deteriorated: he was slow<br />

in sending information about the sale of the journal; he altered the text<br />

without consultation; and did not distribute it according to instructions.<br />

The revenue from sales was very small and in May Jenny Marx wrote to<br />

Weydemeyer saying bitterly that it was impossible to tell which was the<br />

worst, 'the delays of the publisher or those of the managers and friends<br />

in Cologne or the whole general attitude of the democrats'. 29 The charges<br />

against Schuberth were certainly justified, but the tone of the Revue was<br />

too intellectual to have any wide impact. One of the leading members of<br />

the Cologne group, Roland Daniels, wrote to Marx: 'Only the more<br />

intelligent from this party and the few middle-class people who have<br />

some knowledge of history will be interested in the revolution by the<br />

publication of your monthly.'<br />

During the summer the Revue was in abeyance and the final number<br />

(a double issue) appeared in November. Marx considered Schuberth to<br />

have been so negligent that he (unsuccessfully) took steps to prosecute<br />

him. He also had plans to continue the Revue as a quarterly in Cologne<br />

or, alternatively, to publish it in Switzerland. These plans came to nothing.<br />

It is difficult to see how the Revue - or indeed the Communist League<br />

to which it was intended to give an intellectual orientation - could have<br />

been successful in the circumstances: both depended on the enthusiasm<br />

generated by the revolutions of 1848-49 and the expectation of the<br />

imminence of a similar wave of unrest. These hopes were common to all<br />

the refugees including Marx who, before he left Paris, had told Lassalle<br />

that he expected a fresh revolutionary outbreak there early in the following<br />

year. In fact Marx's contributions to the Revue (whose declared aim<br />

was 'to provide a complete and scientific treatment of the economic<br />

relationships that form the basis of the whole political movement' 50 )<br />

document his progressive realisation that the economic prerequisites for<br />

his political aims were just not there.<br />

In the original publicity for the Revue Marx had stated that: '... a<br />

time of apparent truce like the present must be used to shed light on the<br />

period of revolution that we have lived through.' 31 This was the intention<br />

of one of Marx's main contributions to the Revue, a series of articles<br />

entitled '1848 to 1849'. These articles were republished later by Engels<br />

under the title The Class Struggles in France and described, with justification,<br />

as 'Marx's first attempt to explain a section of contemporary history<br />

by means of his materialistic conception'. 52<br />

The Class Struggles in France was a brilliant and swift moving account

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