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KARL MARX

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THE 'ECONOMICS' 301<br />

woman had to face the music although it was no fault of hers in as<br />

much as women are accustomed to demand the impossible. Naturally<br />

she had no idea of what I wrote but her own reflexion could have told<br />

her what the outcome would be. Women are funny creatures - even<br />

those endowed with much intelligence. 14 ''<br />

The children were also a cause of much concern to Marx and Jenny.<br />

In i860, the year of Jenny's smallpox, the three girls were aged sixteen,<br />

fifteen and four years old. Jenny found their poverty all the harder to<br />

bear as 'the sweet girls, now blooming so lovelily, have to suffer it as<br />

well'. 150 At the beginning of 1863 Jenny gave the following description<br />

of her daughters to one of her friends:<br />

Even if the word 'beautiful' is not fitting for them, I must still say,<br />

even at the risk of being laughed at for my maternal pride, that all<br />

three of them look very neat and interesting. Jennychen is strikingly<br />

dark in hair, eyes and complexion and, with her childishly rosy cheeks<br />

and deep, sweet eyes, has a very attractive appearance. Laura, who is<br />

in everything a few degrees lighter and clearer, is in fact prettier than<br />

the eldest sister as her features are more regular and her green eyes<br />

under her dark brows and long lashes shine with a continual fire of<br />

joy.. . . We have made every effort we could towards their education.<br />

Unfortunately we could not do so much for them in music as we would<br />

have hoped, and their musical accomplishments are not distinguished,<br />

although they both have particularly pleasant voices and sing with a<br />

very pretty expressiveness. But Jenny's real strong point is elocution;<br />

and because the child has a very beautiful voice, low and sweet, and<br />

from childhood had studied Shakespeare with fanaticism, she would in<br />

fact long ago have been on the stage had not regard for the family etc.<br />

held her back.. .. Neither would we have placed any obstacle in her<br />

way if her health were sounder. . . . The third one, the baby, is a true<br />

bundle of sweetness, charm and childish frenzy. She is the light and<br />

life of the house. All three children are attached body and soul to<br />

London and have become fully English in customs, manners, tastes,<br />

needs and habits, - and nothing frightens them more than the thought<br />

of having to exchange England for Germany.... and I myself would<br />

find the prospect frightening.. .. Above all London is so colossal that<br />

one can disappear into nothing... . 151<br />

But things were not always so sunny. Marx had to ask Engels urgently<br />

to spend some days with them as 'it is absolutely necessary that my<br />

daughters see a "man" again in the house. The poor children have been<br />

shaken too early by the bourgeois shit.' 152 Jenny's health was particularly<br />

bad as she suffered continually from chest ailments. This, too, Marx<br />

considered was attributable to their poverty: 'Jenny is now old enough to

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