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KARL MARX

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T W O<br />

Paris<br />

We are going to France, the threshold of a new world. May it live<br />

up to our dreams! At the end of our journey we will find the vast<br />

valley of Paris, the cradle of the new Europe, the great laboratory<br />

where world history is formed and has its ever fresh source. It is in<br />

Paris that we shall live our victories and our defeats. Even our<br />

philosophy, the field where we are in advance of our time, will only<br />

be able to triumph when proclaimed in Paris and impregnated with<br />

the French spirit.<br />

A. Ruge, Zwei Jahre in Paris (Leipzig, 1846) 1 4 ff.<br />

I. MARRIAGE AND HEGEL<br />

With the suppression of the Rheinische Zeitung, Marx found himself once<br />

again an unemployed intellectual. His immediate preoccupations were to<br />

lind a secure job and get married. As far as journalism was concerned,<br />

Marx's variety had become virtually impossible in Germany. The differences<br />

of opinion among the Young Hegelians, already manifest over their<br />

attitude to the Rheinische Zeitung, provoked a complete split following the<br />

decision of the Prussian Government to suppress the liberal Press. Those<br />

in Berlin, led by Bruno Bauer, tended more and more to dissociate<br />

themselves from political action. They had imagined their influence to<br />

be such that the suppression of their views would lead to a strong protest<br />

among the liberal bourgeoisie. When nothing of the sort happened,<br />

they confined themselves increasingly to purely theoretical criticism that<br />

deliberately renounced all hope of immediate political influence. The<br />

response of the group around Ruge was different: they wished to continue<br />

the political struggle - but in an even more effective manner. A review<br />

of their own still seemed to them the most promising means of political<br />

action, and their first ideas was to base themselves on Julius Froebel's<br />

publishing house in Zurich. Froebel was a Professor of Mineralogy at<br />

Zurich who had started his business at the end of 1841 in order to publish<br />

the radical poems of Georg Herwegh; he also published a review, edited<br />

by Herwegh, which looked for a moment like a successor to the Deutsche

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