It is in this letter to Weydemeyer that Marx claims the revolutionary
dictatorship of the proletariat as his idea.

CB
________________________________


Marx-Engels Correspondence 1852


Marx to Joseph Weydemeyer
In New York

________________________________


Source: MECW Volume 39, p. 58;
First published: in full in Jungsozialistische Blätter, 1930.

________________________________


London, 5 March 1852, 28 Dean Street, Soho


Dear Weywy,

I am afraid there has been a bit of a muddle because, having misunderstood
thy last letter, I addressed the last 2 packages to: Office of the
Revolution 7 Chambers’ Street, Box 1817. What caused the confusion was that
damned ‘Box 1817’, since you had written telling me to append this to the
‘old address’ without drawing any distinction between the first address and
the second. But I hope the matter will have resolved itself before this
letter arrives, the more so since last Friday’s letter contained the very
detailed fifth instalment of my article. This week I was prevented from
finishing the sixth, which is also the last one. If your paper is appearing
again, this delay will not prove an obstacle since you have an ample supply
of material.

Your article against Heinzen, unfortunately sent to me too late by Engels,
is very good, at once coarse and fine, and this is the right combination for
any polemic worthy of the name. I have shown this article to Ernest Jones
and enclosed you will find a letter from him addressed to you, intended for
publication. Since Jones writes very illegibly and with abbreviations, and
since I assume that you are not yet an out-and-out Englishman, I am sending
you, along with the original, a copy made by my wife, together with the
German translation; you should print them both, the original and the
translation, side by side. Below Jones’ letter you might add the following
comment: As to George Julian Harney, likewise one of Mr Heinzen’s
authorities, he published our Communist Manifesto in English in his Red
Republican with a marginal note describing it as ‘The most revolutionary
document ever given to the world’, and in his Democratic Review he
translated the words of ‘wisdom brushed aside’ by Heinzen, namely my
articles on the French Revolution from the Revue der N. Rh. Z [The Class
Struggles in France, 1848 to 1850], and in a paper on Louis Blanc he refers
his readers to these articles as being the ‘true critical examination’ of
the French affair. By the way, in England there is no need to have recourse
only to ‘extremists’. If, in England, a Member of Parliament becomes a
minister, he must have himself re-elected. Thus Disraeli, the new
Chancellor, Lord of the Exchequer, writes to his constituents on 1 March:

* ‘We shall endeavour to terminate that strife of classes which, of late
years, has exercised so pernicious an influence over the welfare of this
kingdom.*'

Whereupon The Times of 2 March comments:

* ‘If anything would ever divide classes in this country beyond
reconciliation, and leave no chance of a just and honourable peace, it would
he a tax on foreign corn.'*

And lest some ignorant ‘man of character’ like Heinzen should suppose that
the aristocrats are for and the bourgeois against the Corn Laws because the
former want ‘monopoly’ and the latter ‘freedom’ — your worthy citizen sees
opposites only in this ideological form — we shall content ourselves with
saying that, in England, in the eighteenth century, the aristocrats were for
‘freedom’ (of trade) and the bourgeois for ‘monopoly’, — precisely the same
attitude as is adopted by the two classes in present-day ‘Prussia’ towards
the ‘Corn Laws’. There is no more rabid free trader than the Neue Pr. Z.

Finally, if I were you, I should tell the democratic gents en général that
they would do better to acquaint themselves with bourgeois literature before
they venture to yap at its opponents. For instance they should study the
historical works of Thierry, Guizot, John Wade and so forth, in order to
enlighten themselves as to the past ‘history of the classes’. They should
acquaint themselves with the fundamentals of political economy before
attempting to criticise the critique of political economy. For example, one
need only open Ricardo’s magnum opus to find, on the first page, the words
with which he begins his preface:

* ‘The produce of the earth — all that is derived from its surface by the
united application of labour, machinery, and capital, is divided among three
classes of the community; namely the proprietor of the land, the owner of
the stock or capital necessary for its cultivation, and the labourers by
whose industry it is cultivated.’*

Now, in the United States bourgeois society is still far too immature for
the class struggle to be made perceptible and comprehensible; striking proof
of this is provided by C. H. Carey (of Philadelphia), the only North
American economist of any note. He attacks Ricardo, the most classic
representative of the bourgeoisie and the most stoical opponent of the
proletariat, as a man whose works are an arsenal for anarchists and
socialists, for all enemies of the bourgeois order. He accuses not only him,
but also Malthus, Mill, Say, Torrens, Wakefield, MacCulloch, Senior,
Whately, R. Jones, etc. — those who lead the economic dance in Europe — of
tearing society apart, and of paving the way for civil war by showing that
the economic bases of the various classes are such that they will inevitably
give rise to a necessary and ever-growing antagonism between the latter. He
tries to refute them, not, it is true, like the fatuous Heinzen, by relating
the existence of classes to the existence of political privileges and
monopolies but by seeking to demonstrate that economic conditions: rent
(landed property), profit (capital) and wages (wage labour), rather than
being conditions of struggle and antagonism, are conditions of association
and harmony. All he proves, of course, is that the ‘undeveloped’ relations
in the United States are, to him, ‘normal relations.’

Now as for myself, I do not claim to have discovered either the existence of
classes in modern society or the struggle between them. Long before me,
bourgeois historians had described the historical development of this
struggle between the classes, as had bourgeois economists their economic
anatomy. My own contribution was 1. to show that the existence of classes is
merely bound up with certain historical phases in the development of
production; 2. that the class struggle necessarily leads to the dictatorship
of the proletariat;[1] 3. that this dictatorship itself constitutes no more
than a transition to the abolition of all classes and to a classless
society. Ignorant louts such as Heinzen, who deny not only the struggle but
the very existence of classes, only demonstrate that, for all their
bloodthirsty, mock-humanist yelping, they regard the social conditions in
which the bourgeoisie is dominant as the final product, the non plus ultra
[highest point] of history, and that they themselves are simply the servants
of the bourgeoisie, a servitude which is the more revolting, the less
capable are the louts of grasping the very greatness and transient necessity
of the bourgeois regime itself.

Select from the above notes whatever you think fit. By the way, Heinzen has
adopted our ‘centralisation’ in place of his ‘federative republic’, etc.
When the views on classes we are now disseminating have become familiar
objects of ‘sound common sense’ then the scoundrel will proclaim them aloud
as the latest product of his ‘own sagacity’ and yap his opposition to our
onward progress. Thus, in the light of his ‘own sagacity’, he yapped at
Hegelian philosophy so long as it was progressive. Now he feeds on its stale
scraps, spat out undigested by Ruge.

Herewith also the end of the Hungarian article. It is all the more essential
that you should try to make some use of this — assuming your paper exists —
because Szemere, the erstwhile prime minister of Hungary, now in Paris, has
promised me to write a long article for you, signed with his own name.

If your paper has come into being, send more copies so that it can he
distributed more widely.

Your
K. Marx

Kind regards to you and your wife from all your friends here, especially my
wife.

Apropos. I am sending you the Notes [to the People] and a few copies of my
Assizes speech (this last for Cluss, to whom I promised it) by the hand of
the ex-Montagnard Hochstuhl (an Alsatian). There’s nothing to the fellow.

Herewith the Rules. I would advise you to arrange them in more logical
order. London is designated as the district responsible for the United
States. Hitherto we have been able to exercise our authority only in
partibus.

If you have not already done so, do not accept ‘Hirsch’s’ statement. He’s an
unsavoury individual, although in the right where Schapper and Willich are
concerned.

________________________________

1.: On January 1, 1852, Weydemeyer had published an article in The New York
Turn-Zeitung entitled “Dictatorship of the Proletariat.”

 

________________________________

1851 Letters | 1852 Letters | 1853 Letters
1852 Works | Marx/Engels Archive 



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