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KARL MARX

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THE LAST DECADE 4ii<br />

It was all very positif, slightly cynical - without any appearance of<br />

enthusiasm - interesting, and often, as I thought, showing very correct<br />

ideas when conversing on the past and the present, but vague and<br />

unsatisfactory when he turned to the future. 121<br />

They talked for three hours - of Russia where Marx expected 'a great<br />

but not distant crash' and of Germany where there seemed to him a<br />

strong possibility of mutiny in the army. Marx further explained that the<br />

socialist revolution could be a very long-term affair and expressed his<br />

relief that the German Emperor's would-be assassin, Nobiling, had not,<br />

as he planned, visited him in London beforehand. Grant Duff's general<br />

conclusion was: 'It will not be Marx who, whether he wishes it or not,<br />

will turn the world upside down.' 122<br />

The English socialist with whom Marx had the closest contact in his<br />

later years was H. M. Hyndman, the founder of the Social Democratic<br />

Federation, and a man of considerable private means. 125 Having read the<br />

French version of Capital on a voyage to America he was eager to meet<br />

Marx, to whom he was duly introduced by Karl Hirsch early in 1880. 124<br />

Regularly during the following year Marx, accompanied by Eleanor, would<br />

go to dine with Hyndman in his elegant house in Devonshire Place; and<br />

I lyndman would in turn call on him (revering him as 'The Aristotle of<br />

die nineteenth century') 125 and talk for hours - both men striding up and<br />

down in Marx's study. Hyndman believed in a peaceful revolution in<br />

England and some of his views were distinctly jingoistic; but at least he<br />

understood (to some extent) the labour theory of value; and he was also<br />

violendy anti-Russian, which provided one of the most powerful links<br />

between the two men. The friendship ended, however, with a violent<br />

quarrel in June 1881. Hyndman had just published The Text Book of<br />

I democracy: England for All, which advocated a decentralised self-governing<br />

Empire in which reform would preferably be introduced by the rich and<br />

the powerful. The two chapters in the book dealing with labour and capital<br />

drew extensively on Capital and he duly acknowledged in the Preface his<br />

debt here 'to the work of a great thinker and original writer" 26 - but did<br />

not mention Marx by name. The book was distributed at the foundation<br />

meeting of the Democratic Federation. Marx was angry that Hyndman<br />

bad not made more specific acknowledgement of his work and was also<br />

annoyed that his ideas had appeared in a book with whose general<br />

approach he found himself out of sympathy. When Hyndman excused<br />

himself on the grounds that many Englishmen would have less sympathy<br />

lor the ideas if they knew they were Marx's and that anyway Englishmen<br />

did not learn easily from foreigners, Marx was even angrier and wrote -<br />

with great pleasure - a stinging rebuke which ended their association. 127

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