21.05.2018 Views

KARL MARX

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

*<br />

4IO <strong>KARL</strong> <strong>MARX</strong>: A BIOGRAPHY<br />

tail of the great liberal party, i.e. their enslavers, the capitalists'. 117<br />

And<br />

Engels, in spite of his temporary enthusiasm for working-class radicals<br />

such as Joseph Cowen, had to warn Bernstein that 'there is here at the<br />

moment no real working-class movement in the continental sense'. 118<br />

Nevertheless, Marx persisted in his view that in Britain a peaceful transition<br />

to socialism was possible.<br />

My party [he wrote in 1880] considers an English revolution not necessary,<br />

but - according to historic precedents - possible. If the unavoidable<br />

evolution turn into a revolution, it would not only be the fault of the<br />

ruling classes, but also of the working class. Every pacific concession<br />

of the former has been wrung from them by 'pressure from without'.<br />

Their action kept pace with that pressure and if the latter has more<br />

and more weakened, it is only because the English working class know<br />

not how to wield their power and use their liberties, both of which<br />

they possess legally. 119<br />

Particularly after the Commune, Marx began to be better known in<br />

English society. During the Eastern crisis of 1877, he claimed to have<br />

placed many unsigned pieces in 'the fashionable London press' attacking<br />

Gladstone's Russian policy, all through the agency of Maltman Barry, his<br />

old acquaintance from the International. He was also using Barry to work<br />

on Members of Parliament who 'would hold up their hands in horror if<br />

they knew that it was really the "Red-Terror-Doctor", as they like to call<br />

me, who was whispering in their ears'. 120 In early 1879, the 'Red-Terror-<br />

Doctor' attracted the attention of no less a person than Queen Victoria's<br />

eldest daughter, who was married to the German Crown Prince. She<br />

requested Sir Mountstuart Grant Duff, a liberal MP who had been Under-<br />

Secretary for India, to meet Marx and give her his opinion of him;<br />

accordingly, he arranged a lunch with Marx at the Devonshire Club in<br />

St James's Street. Grant Duff's general impressions, as he related them to<br />

the Crown Princess, were as follows:<br />

He is a short, rather small man with grey hair and beard which contrasts<br />

strangely with a still dark moustache. The face is somewhat round; the<br />

forehead well shaped and filled up - the eye rather hard but the whole<br />

expression rather pleasant than not, by no means that of a gentleman<br />

who is in the habit of eating babies in their cradles - which is I daresay<br />

the view which the police take of him. His talk was that of a wellinformed,<br />

nay learned man - much interested in Comparative Grammar<br />

which had led him into the Old Slavonic and other out-of-the-way<br />

studies and was varied by many quaint turns and little bits of dry<br />

humour, as when speaking of Hezechiall's 'Life of Prince Bismarck' he<br />

always referred to it, by way of contrast to Dr Busch's book, as the Old<br />

Testament.

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

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!