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.

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

opinion which differed from his own did he accord the honour of even<br />

condescending consideration. Everyone who contradicted him he treated<br />

with abject contempt; every argument that he did not like he treated either<br />

with biting scorn at the unfathomable ignorance that had prompted it,<br />

or with opprobrious aspersions on the motives of him who advanced it. I<br />

remember most distinctly the cutting disdain with which he pronounced<br />

the word bourgeois: and as a bourgeois - that is, as a detestable example<br />

of the deepest mental and moral degeneracy - he denounced everyone<br />

who dared oppose his opinions.<br />

The Reminiscences of Karl Schurz<br />

(London, 1909) 1 138 f.<br />

The Down-and-out Prussian Lieutenant<br />

First we drank port, then claret which is red Bordeaux, then champagne.<br />

After the red wine Marx became completely drunk. That was exactly what<br />

I wanted, because he became at the same time much more open-hearted<br />

than he probably would have been otherwise. I found out the truth about<br />

certain things which would otherwise have remained mere suppositions.<br />

In spite of his drunkenness Marx dominated the conversation up to the<br />

last moment.<br />

The impression he made on me was that of someone who possessed a<br />

rare intellectual superiority, and he was evidently a man of outstanding<br />

personality. If his heart had matched his intellect, and if he had possessed<br />

as much love as hate, I would have gone through fire for him, even<br />

though at the end he expressed his complete and candid contempt for<br />

me, and had previously indicated his contempt in passing. He was the<br />

first and only one among us all to whom I would entrust leadership, for<br />

he was a man who never lost himself in small matters when dealing with<br />

great events.<br />

Yet it is a matter for regret in view of our aims that this man with his<br />

fine intellect is lacking in nobility of soul. I am convinced that a most<br />

dangerous personal ambition has eaten away all the good in him. He<br />

laughs at the fools who parrot his proletarian catechism, just as he laughs<br />

over the communists a la Willich and over the bourgeoise. The only<br />

people he respects are the aristocrats, the genuine ones, those who are<br />

well aware of their aristocracy. In order to prevent them from governing,<br />

he needs his own source of strength, which he can find only in the<br />

proletariat. Accordingly he has tailored his system to them. In spite of all<br />

his assurances to the contrary, personal domination was the aim of all his<br />

endeavours.<br />

E[ngels] and all his old associates, in spite of their very real gifts, are

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

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!