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KARL MARX

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45 2 <strong>KARL</strong> <strong>MARX</strong>: A BIOGRAPHY<br />

back to the hotel to change and have a nap before lunch, which was<br />

preceded every other day by a bath. After lunch there was further walking<br />

or longer organised tours followed by a light meal and early bed, all<br />

entertainments ending at 9.00 p.m. Marx enjoyed the life very much,<br />

particularly the long walks among the pine-clad granite foothills of the<br />

Erzgebirge. He also liked to pursue his habit of conferring witty nicknames<br />

on the more conspicuous passers-by. Franziska Kugelmann recalled<br />

a visit to a porcelain works at which they observed a man supervising an<br />

intricate turning machine.<br />

'Is this always your job?' Marx asked him, 'or have you some other?'<br />

'No,' the man answered, 'I have not done anything else for years. It is<br />

only by practice that one learns to work the machine so as to get the<br />

difficult shape smooth and fauldess.' 'Thus division of labour makes<br />

man an appendage of the machine,' Marx said to my father as we went<br />

on. 'His power of thinking is changed into muscular memory.' 56<br />

In the afternoon and evening, in general company, Marx preferred light<br />

conversation with such men as Otto Knille (a well-known painter) and<br />

Simon Deutsch (an Austrian journalist whom Marx remembered from his<br />

Paris days). Father and daughter were inseparable whether on walks or<br />

writing letters on the terrace behind their hotel. According to Eleanor,<br />

still embarrassingly forthright in her reactions to people and smoking<br />

almost continuously, she and her father got on very well in Carlsbad and<br />

'his immense knowledge of history made every place we went to more<br />

alive and present in the past than in the present itself. 57<br />

For Marx, the only drawback to Carlsbad was Kugelmann. From the<br />

start of his stay he annoyed Marx by his 'carping criticisms with which<br />

he quite needlessly embitters his own life and that of his family'. 58 Unfortunately,<br />

Kugelmann had chosen for Marx a room between his own and<br />

Eleanor's. The upshot was that<br />

I had the pleasure of his company not only when I was with him, but<br />

also when I was alone. I put up patiently with the continual flow of his<br />

solemn chatter uttered in a deep voice .. . but my patience at last broke<br />

down when he began to bore me too utterly with domestic scenes.<br />

This arch-pedant, this bourgeois hair-splitting philistine, imagines that<br />

his wife does not understand or comprehend his Faust-like nature,<br />

which is struggling to some higher conception of the world; and he<br />

torments the poor woman, who is in all respects his superior, in the<br />

most revolting manner. It came to an open quarrel between us. I moved<br />

to a higher floor and so was completely quit of him (he had seriously<br />

spoiled the cure for me). We were only reconciled just before his<br />

departure, which took place last Sunday. But I said positively that I<br />

would not visit his house in Hanover. 59

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