21.05.2018 Views

KARL MARX

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

45 2<br />

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

When I was so very ill at Brighton (during the week I fainted 2 or<br />

3 times a day) L came to see me, each time left me stronger and<br />

happier, and more able to bear the rather heavy load laid on my<br />

shoulders. It is so long since I saw him, and I am beginning to feel so<br />

very miserable notwithstanding all my efforts to be merry and cheerful.<br />

I cannot much longer. - Believe me, dear Mohr, if I could see him now<br />

and then it could do me more good than all Mrs Anderson's 17 prescriptions<br />

put together - I know that by experience. 18<br />

By the end of the year she had recovered from her ill health (which Marx<br />

attributed in large part to hysteria 19 ), and continued a lively correspondence<br />

with Lissagaray who liked to address her as 'ma petite femme'. 20<br />

Marx seems later to have relaxed his restrictions on Eleanor, for in 1875<br />

and 1876 she was assisting Lissagaray with his journalism and publishing<br />

projects. She translated into English the whole of Lissagaray's classic<br />

History of the Commune, which had been published in French in 1876;<br />

Marx himself helped considerably in revising the translation. But when<br />

an amnesty enabled Lissagaray to return to Paris in 1880, Eleanor did<br />

not follow him. During these years, the affair estranged Eleanor from her<br />

father; with her mother it was even worse:<br />

For long miserable years there was a shadow between myself and my<br />

father . .. yet our love was always the same, and despite everything, our<br />

faith and trust in each other. My mother and I loved each other<br />

passionately, but she did not know me as father did. One of the bitterest<br />

of many bitter sorrows in my life is that my mother died, thinking,<br />

despite all our love, that I had been hard and cruel, and never guessing<br />

that to save her and father sorrow I had sacrificed the best, freshest<br />

years of my life. But father, though he did not know till just before the<br />

end, felt he must trust me - our natures were so exactly alike! ...<br />

Father was talking of my eldest sister and of me, and said: 'Jenny is<br />

most like me, but Tussy... is me'. 21<br />

For distraction, Eleanor threw herself into political activities: writing<br />

articles - particularly on Russia; and canvassing for firee-thinking candidates<br />

in the London School Board elections. She also undertook translation<br />

and precis work and spent long hours in the British Museum where<br />

she met George Bernard Shaw. And as her mother moved more and more<br />

into the background, Eleanor began to act as hostess to the visitors,<br />

several of whom have left admiring accounts of her appearance, vivacity<br />

and political understanding. Hyndman, the founder of the Social Democratic<br />

Federation, wrote of her that:<br />

Eleanor herself was the favourite of her father, whom she resembled in<br />

appearance as much as a young woman could. A broad, low forehead,<br />

dark bright eyes, with glowing cheeks, and a brisk, humorous smile,

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!