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KARL MARX

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8 54 <strong>KARL</strong> <strong>MARX</strong>: A BIOGRAPHY<br />

My husband had to work the whole day right through into the<br />

night. The whole thing is now a battle between the police on one<br />

side and my husband on the other. He is credited with everything,<br />

the whole revolution, even the conduct of the trial. A whole office<br />

has been established in our house. Two or three do the writing,<br />

others run errands, others scrape together pennies so that the writers<br />

can continue to exist and bring against the old official world proof of<br />

the unheard-of scandal. In the middle of it all my three faithful<br />

children sing and pipe and often catch it from their dear father. Some<br />

business! 75<br />

Their efforts succeeded in exposing the forgeries of the prosecution but<br />

the jury nevertheless convicted the majority of the accused. 'A degrading<br />

and completely unjust sentence', 76 wrote the Prussian diplomat Varnhagen<br />

von Ense, who had no love for communists.<br />

The episode also had a frustrating sequel: during the trial Marx had<br />

begun to write an article putting the main facts of the case before the<br />

public. Typical of Marx's drafts, this had grown into a small book to<br />

which he gave the title Revelations about the Communist Trial in Cologne.<br />

As well as extensively documenting Prussian police methods, he publicised<br />

the split in the Communist League. For Marx felt compelled to dissociate<br />

himself from the plots and conspiracies of the Willich-Schapper faction.<br />

He explained that his group intended to build 'the opposition party of<br />

the future' 77 and would thus not have any part in conspiracies to produce<br />

immediate revolutionary overthrows. Two thousand copies, printed in<br />

Switzerland, were smuggled across the border into Prussia and stocked<br />

in a small village; but they were soon discovered and all confiscated by<br />

the police. The book was also published in America in a smaller edition<br />

but very few copies found their way back into Germany.<br />

With the arrest of the Cologne Committee the League ceased to exist<br />

in Germany in an organised form. The fifteen- to twenty-strong London<br />

group had met regularly during 1851 - first in Soho on Tuesday evenings,<br />

then in Farringdon Street in the City on Thursdays and finally (during<br />

1852) in the Rose and Crown Tavern, Crown Street, Soho, on Wednesdays.<br />

78 Marx presided and the group was referred to by its members<br />

as 'the Synagogue' or 'The Marx Society'. 79 Soon after the end of the<br />

Cologne trial, the League dissolved itself on Marx's suggestion with<br />

the declaration that its continued existence, both in London and on the<br />

Continent, was 'no longer opportune'. 80 Willich's branch of the League<br />

ceased to function shortly afterwards. For the next ten years Marx was a<br />

member of no political party.

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