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KARL MARX

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

Jahrbiicher. With Herwegh's expulsion from Zurich in March 1843 an<br />

obvious gap was waiting to be filled, Ruge was all the more attracted to<br />

Zurich as it was (together with Paris) the main centre of German expatriates.<br />

Given that these exiles comprised both intellectuals and workers, it<br />

was sensible that any new review should combine the theory of the<br />

Deutsche Jahrbiicher with the more immediately political ideas of the Rheinische<br />

Zeitung. Ruge had a great admiration for Marx and wrote to his<br />

brother, Ludwig: 'Marx has great intelligence. He is very worried about<br />

his future and particularly his immediate future. So in continuing with<br />

the Jahrbiicher it is quite natural to ask for his assistance." So when Ruge<br />

proposed in January 1843 that he and Marx be co-editors, Marx accepted<br />

with enthusiasm.<br />

Naturally Marx's conception of the review was conditioned by his<br />

estimate of Germany's political future which he regarded as revolutionary.<br />

In March 1843 he wrote: 'You could probably let a shipload of fools sail<br />

before the wind for a good while, but it would run into its fate just<br />

because the fools did not believe in it. This fate is the revolution which<br />

stands before us.' 2 In a letter to Ruge, written two months later for<br />

publication in the forthcoming review, Marx took him to task for his<br />

pessimistic view of Germany's future. 'It is true', he wrote, 'that the old<br />

world is in the possession of the philistine; but we should not treat him<br />

as a scarecrow and turn back frightened. Let the dead bury and mourn<br />

their dead. In contrast, it is enviable to be the first to go alive into the new<br />

life; and this shall be our lot.' 3 After a lengthy analysis of the 'Philistine'<br />

nature of contemporary Germany, Marx declared that 'it is only its own<br />

desperate situation that fills me with hope'. He was already beginning to<br />

envisage the possibility of revolution as consisting in an alliance of<br />

'thinkers' and 'sufferers':<br />

The system of profit and commerce, of property and human exploitation,<br />

leads much more quickly than an increase of population to a rift<br />

inside contemporary society that the old society is incapable of healing,<br />

because it never heals or creates, but only exists and enjoys. The<br />

existence of a suffering humanity which thinks and a thinking humanity<br />

which is oppressed must of necessity be disagreeable and unacceptable<br />

for the animal world of philistines who neither act nor think but merely<br />

enjoy.<br />

On our side the old world must be brought right out into the light<br />

of day and the new one given a positive form. The longer that events<br />

allow thinking humanity time to recollect itself and suffering humanity<br />

time to assemble itself the more perfect will be the birth of the product<br />

that the present carries in its womb. 4<br />

In view of his revolutionary optimism Marx was definitely against

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