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KARL MARX

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THE 'ECONOMICS' 297<br />

enough to live on, he considered, but his debts still amounted to £100.<br />

'It is astonishing', he remarked naively to Engels, 'how lack of income<br />

together with debts that are never completely cleared blows up the old<br />

shit in spite of all assistance in minor matters." 28<br />

The year 1862 marked the nadir of Marx's fortunes. He had to pretend<br />

not to have returned from a trip to Manchester in order to avoid creditors,<br />

and Jenny even tried to sell his books. In such circumstances Lassalle's<br />

visit in July could only be excruciating. Lassalle had come to the rescue<br />

with £60 but by the autumn Marx was thinking of taking a job in a<br />

railway office. He went as far as getting an interview but was turned<br />

down owing to his appalling handwriting. 129 In January 1863 he wrote to<br />

Kngels that the recent trouble had<br />

at last brought my wife to agree to a suggestion that I made a long<br />

time ago and which, with all its inconveniences, is not only the sole<br />

solution, but is also preferable to the life of the last three years, and<br />

particularly the last, as well as restoring our self-esteem.<br />

I will write to all my creditors (with the exception of the landlord)<br />

and say that, if they do not leave me in peace I will declare myself<br />

bankrupt.. . . My two eldest daughters will get positions as governesses<br />

through the Cunningham family. Lenchen will enter another service<br />

and I, with my wife and Tussy, will go and live in the same City Model<br />

Lodging House in which red Wolff and his family lived previously. 130<br />

It is not clear how serious Marx really was, but Engels read the letter as<br />

a cry for help and responded immediately by borrowing £100 at great<br />

risk to himself. Marx still had to go off to the British Museum to avoid<br />

his creditors, but in the summer Ernst Dronke lent Engels £250 for Marx,<br />

which lasted until December when he received the telegram that presaged<br />

substantial relief: his mother was dead.<br />

Borrowing the money from Engels, Marx rushed to Trier, but the<br />

administrative measures concerning the execution of the will took so long<br />

that Marx left to visit his uncle in Zaltbommel. During the week he spent<br />

in Trier, he wrote to Jenny, he went back to the old house of the<br />

Westphalens 'that was of more interest to me than all the Roman antiquities<br />

because it reminds me of the happiest time of my youth and housed<br />

my greatest treasure. Moreover, I was asked daily, left and right, after the<br />

former "prettiest girl in Trier" and the "queen of the ball". It is damned<br />

pleasant for a man when his wife lives on like that in the imagination of<br />

a whole city as an "enchanted princess"."" Most of the money (of which<br />

Marx's share was about £1000) was in the hands of Marx's uncle who was<br />

the executor of the will as well as being his chief creditor. Here also the<br />

legal processes were long but Marx only had time to visit two of his aunts

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