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KARL MARX

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LONDON 2 33<br />

his Revelations', to which Marx responded with a sarcastic pamphlet, The<br />

Knight of the Noble Mind. There the quarrel stopped. Willich became a<br />

journalist in Cincinnati, reviewed Marx's later writings favourably and<br />

studied Hegel. He was decorated during the Civil War, marched with<br />

Sherman to Atlanta and left with the rank of Major General. He finally<br />

settled in St Mary's, Ohio, where he became one of its most active and<br />

respected citizens, his funeral being attended by more than 2500 people.<br />

Marx was not a man to pursue a quarrel interminably. He hesitated before<br />

including the section on the Willich-Schapper faction in the second<br />

edition of the Revelations in 1875, and wrote in the Preface that 'in the<br />

American Civil War Willich demonstrated that he was something more<br />

than a weaver of fantastic projects'. 94<br />

Although the leaders of the different national refugee groups did (in<br />

contrast with the rank-and-file) mix quite freely with each other, Marx's<br />

contacts with them were very sparse. He had been in close touch with<br />

the Blanquists in 1850 but they sided with Willich when the Communist<br />

League split. Louis Blanc, whom Marx considered more or less an ally<br />

after 1843, had also gone over to Willich on the occasion of the February<br />

banquet. Marx did receive an invitation to a similar banquet the following<br />

year, but sent Jenny in his place. He was not impressed by her report of<br />

the 'dry meeting with the trappings of tea and sandwiches'. 95 The Italian<br />

refugee leader Mazzini was dubbed by Marx 'the Pope of the Democratic<br />

Church in partibus ,6 and he criticised his policies in a letter to Engels as<br />

follows:<br />

Mazzini knows only the towns with their liberal aristocracy and their<br />

enlightened citizens. The material needs of the Italian agricultural<br />

population - as exploited and as systematically emasculated and held in<br />

stupidity as the Irish - are naturally too low for the phraseological<br />

heaven of his cosmopolitan, neo-Catholic ideological manifestos. It<br />

needs courage, however, to inform the bourgeoisie and the aristocracy<br />

that the first step towards the independence of Italy is the complete<br />

emancipation of the peasants and the transformation of their semitenant<br />

system into free bourgeois property. 97<br />

As for the other prominent refugee leader, the Hungarian Kossuth, Marx<br />

considered him a representative of 'an obscure and semi-barbarous people<br />

still stuck in the semi-civilisation of the sixteenth century'. 98<br />

The only national group with which Marx had any prolonged contact<br />

were the Chartists. By 1850 the slow process of disintegration that had<br />

affected the Chartist movement after its climax and failure in 1848 was<br />

already well advanced. At the same time repressive government measures<br />

had radicalised Chartism; and among the two most influential of its radical<br />

leaders in the early 1850s were George Julian Harney and Ernest Jones.

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