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KARL MARX

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2 54 <strong>KARL</strong> <strong>MARX</strong>: A BIOGRAPHY<br />

had a circulation of 200,000 throughout America. The policies advocated<br />

by the paper and inspired by Greeley were surprisingly radical: it gave<br />

much space to Fourierist ideas, favoured prohibition and protection (at<br />

least as a short-time measure) and opposed the death penalty and slavery.<br />

This rather curious mixture of causes often aroused Marx's contempt:<br />

The Tribune is of course trumpeting Carey's book with all its might.<br />

Both indeed have this in common, that under the guise of Sismondian<br />

philanthropic socialistic anti-industrialism they represent the Protectionists,<br />

i.e., the industrial bourgeoisie of America. This also explains<br />

the secret of why the Tribune in spite of all its 'isms' and socialistic<br />

humbug can be the 'leading journal' in the United States. 195<br />

Dana had met Marx in Cologne in 1848 and been very impressed. In<br />

August 1851 he asked Marx to become one of the Tribune's eighteen<br />

foreign correspondents and write a series of articles on contemporary<br />

events in Germany. Marx, who was still thinking of finishing his 'Economics'<br />

and could not yet write good English, wrote to Engels in the<br />

same letter that told him of the Tribune's offer: 'If you can manage to let<br />

me have an article on the German situation written in English by Friday<br />

morning, that would be a great beginning.' 196 A week later he wrote: 'In<br />

the matter of the New York Tribune, you must help me now as I have my<br />

hands full with my "Economics". Write a series of articles on Germany,<br />

from 1848 onwards. Witty and straightforward. The gentlemen in the<br />

foreign department are very outspoken.' 197 Engels complied and the first<br />

article appeared in the Tribune in October. In all, eighteen articles (all by<br />

Engels) were published and were a great success. 'It may perhaps give<br />

you pleasure to know that [your articles] are read with satisfaction by a<br />

considerable number of persons, and are widely reproduced.' 198 The secret<br />

of the authorship was very well kept and for years the articles were<br />

reprinted, under the title Revolution and Counter-Revolution in Germany,<br />

with Marx as their author. 199<br />

In April 1852 Dana asked Marx to write regularly for the Tribune on<br />

English affairs. Marx wrote in German and sent the manuscript to Engels<br />

to be translated. In January 1853, however, he wrote to Engels: 'For the<br />

first time I've risked writing an article for Dana in English.' 200 During<br />

the same year, as relations with Russia became tense, Marx enlarged his<br />

subject-matter and was soon writing about all aspects of world politics.<br />

His articles were highly appreciated and in January 1853 his fee was<br />

increased to £2 per article. A contemporary writer described Dana as<br />

regularly 'plunged in the reading of "Karl Marx" or "An American in<br />

Paris" '. At the beginning of 1854 Marx received through Dana an offer<br />

from an American magazine for articles on the history of German philo-

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