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KARL MARX

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9<br />

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

how glad 1 am that you are happy, that my letter exhilarated you, that<br />

you long for me, that you live in well-papered rooms, that you have<br />

drunk champagne in Cologne, that there are Hegel clubs there, that you<br />

have dreamed and, in short, that you are my darling, my own dark little<br />

savage.' 144 But the high life in Cologne turned out to be too much for<br />

him as 'the life here is too noisy and good boisterous friends do not make<br />

for better philosophy'. 145 So Marx returned to Bonn where he was able<br />

to relax with Bauer. 'Marx has come back here,' his friend wrote: 'Lately<br />

we went out into the open country to enjoy once again all the beautiful<br />

views. The trip was marvellous. We were as gay as ever. In Godesberg<br />

we hired a couple of donkeys and galloped on them like madmen around<br />

the hill and through the village. Bonn society gazed at us as amazed as<br />

ever. We halloed and the donkeys brayed.' 146 But their ways soon parted<br />

for good when Bauer went to Berlin to try and get his dismissal rescinded.<br />

Marx meanwhile continued with his journalism. At the end of April he<br />

already had four articles to propose to Ruge. His visits to Cologne did<br />

not only consist in drinking champagne: he was gradually becoming<br />

involved in the city's liberal opposition movement, an involvement in<br />

practical politics that eventually led to his breaking with the Young Hegelians<br />

and taking over the editorship of the Rheinische Zeitung. In spite of<br />

Jenny's warning against getting 'mixed up' in politics (an activity she<br />

described as 'the riskiest thing there is'), 147 it was an almost inevitable<br />

step for a young Rhineland intellectual of progressive views.<br />

The political atmosphere in the Rhineland was quite different from<br />

Berlin: Rhineland-Westphalia, annexed by France from 1795 to 1814, had<br />

had the benefit of economic, administrative and political reforms. What<br />

had before been 108 small states were reorganised into four districts;<br />

feudalism was abolished, and various administrative anomalies - as regards<br />

the political, juridical and financial systems - were eliminated. The corporations<br />

and customs barriers were done away with, much could be<br />

exported to France and producers were protected against competition<br />

from England. Expansion, led by the textile industry, was so rapid that<br />

by 1810 the Prefect of the Ruhr plausibly claimed that it was the most<br />

industrial region in Europe. The majority of progressive figures in Germany<br />

of that time came from the Rhineland: the leaders of the liberal<br />

opposition, and many future activists in the 1848 revolutions, and poets<br />

such as Heine and Boerne.<br />

One of the focal points of this political activity was the 'Cologne<br />

Circle' the Rhineland's more down-to-earth equivalent of the Doctors'<br />

(Hub which Marx joined as soon as he established himself in Bonn. In<br />

many ways the central figure of the Cologne Circle was Georg Jung who<br />

hud also been a member of the Berlin Doctors' Club. He quickly became

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