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KARL MARX

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

so that I can review it. This question must be discussed dispassionately.<br />

General and theoretical considerations on the constitution of the state<br />

are more suitable for learned reviews than for newspapers. The true<br />

theory must be expanded and developed in relation to concrete facts<br />

and the existing state of affairs. Therefore striking an attitude against<br />

the present pillars of the state could only result in a tightening of the<br />

censorship and even in the suppression of the paper... in any case we<br />

are annoying a large number, perhaps even the majority, of liberals<br />

engaged in political activity who have assumed the thankless and painful<br />

task of conquering liberty step by step within limits imposed by the<br />

Constitution, while we, comfortably ensconced in abstract theory, point<br />

out to them their contradictions. It is true that the author of the articles<br />

on the juste-milieu invites us to criticise, but (i) we all know how the<br />

Government replies to such provocations; and (2) it is not sufficient to<br />

undertake a critique . .. the true question is to know whether one<br />

has chosen an appropriate field. Newspapers only lend themselves to<br />

discussion of these questions when they have become questions that<br />

closely concern the state - practical questions. I consider it absolutely<br />

indispensable that the Rheinische Zeitung should not be directed by its<br />

contributors but on the contrary that it should direct them. Articles like<br />

these afford an excellent opportunity of showing the contributors the<br />

line of action to follow. An isolated writer cannot, like a newspaper,<br />

have a synoptic view of the situation. 169<br />

In mid-October, as a result of this letter, Marx, who had already effectively<br />

been running the paper for some months, was made editor-in-chief.<br />

Under Marx's editorship, the circulation of the paper more than<br />

doubled in the first months. His personality was so predominant that the<br />

censorship official could call the organisation of the paper simply 'a<br />

dictatorship of Marx'. 170 In the last months of 1842 the Rheinische Zeitung<br />

began to acquire a national reputation. Robert Prutz, himself a contributor<br />

and later a prominent liberal politician, subsequently wrote of the paper:<br />

All the young, fresh, free-thinking or (as the friends of the government<br />

complained) revolutionary talent that Prussia and Germany possessed<br />

took refuge here. Fighting with a great variety of weapons, now earnest,<br />

now mocking, now learned, now popular, today in prose, tomorrow in<br />

verse, they formed a phalanx against which the censorship and police<br />

struggled in vain . . , 171<br />

And the editor appears to have been no less impressive than the paper.<br />

Mevissen left the following vivid description of Marx at this time:<br />

Karl Marx from Trier was a powerful man of 24 whose thick black hair<br />

sprung from his cheeks, arms, nose and ears. He was domineering,<br />

impetuous, passionate, full of boundless self-confidence, but at the same<br />

time deeply earnest and learned, a restless dialectician who with his

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