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KARL MARX

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3I8 <strong>KARL</strong> <strong>MARX</strong>: A BIOGRAPHY<br />

feel the whole pressure and hastiness of our situation and that, I think,<br />

is one of the principal causes of her ill health.' 1 "<br />

V. 'CAPITAL'<br />

In the summer of 1861, with the Vogt affair at last behind him, Marx<br />

began to work in earnest on the '3rd chapter' on Capital in General. For<br />

a year progress was very slow, though Marx considered that he had<br />

managed to popularise his style. By April 1862 he felt in a position to<br />

tell Lassalle that his book would not be ready for two months and added<br />

revealingly: 'I have the peculiar characteristic that when I see something<br />

that I have written out four weeks later, I find it unsatisfactory and<br />

re-work the whole thing. In any case the work doesn't lose anything<br />

thereby.' 154<br />

Two months later he was 'working like the devil', 155 not on the third<br />

chapter, but on the history of economic theory - and particularly theories<br />

of surplus-value - that he wished to add to the chapter on Capital just as<br />

he had added a historical account of theories of money and circulation<br />

to the Critique of Political Economy. He was padding his work out as 'the<br />

German wretches measure the value of a book by its cubic content'. 156 It<br />

was Marx's usual practice when domestic worries disturbed his concentration<br />

- and 1862 and 1863 were among the most troubled years of<br />

Marx's life - to turn to the historical part of his work. By the end of the<br />

summer he was getting depressed and expressed the wish to Engels to<br />

engage in some line of business: 'Grey, dear friend, is all theory and only<br />

business is green. Unfortunately, I have come too late to this insight.' 157<br />

He reread Engels' Condition of the Working Classes in England and was<br />

filled with nostalgia for the past: 'How freshly, passionately and boldly is<br />

the matter dealt with here, without learned and scientific considerations!<br />

And even the illusion that tomorrow or the day after history will bring<br />

to light the result gives the whole a warmth and lively humour, compared<br />

with which the later "grey in grey" is damned unpleasant.' 158 A few years<br />

later he told one of his daughters that he felt himself to be 'a machine<br />

condemned to devour books and then throw them, in a changed form,<br />

on the dunghill of history'. 159 By the end of 1862 he told Kugelmann<br />

that 'the second part is now at last finished', though with the inevitable<br />

qualification that this was 'apart from the copying out and final polishing<br />

for the printer'. It would contain, he continued, 'only what was intended<br />

as the third chapter of the first part, i.e. "Capital in General" It is<br />

(together with the first bit) the quintessence, and the development of<br />

what follows would be easy to complete, even by others, on the basis

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