Biography of Marx by F. Engels (1868)
Chapter 1. Biography of Marx by F. Engels (1868)
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Marx was both a revolutionary scientist who discovered the materialist laws of history and surplus value, and a lifelong fighter for the overthrow of capitalism and the liberation of the working class.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- Marx's dual identity: he was both a rigorous scientist (discovering laws of history and economics) and a passionate revolutionary activist.
- The materialist theory of history: material conditions (food, shelter, production) come first and shape politics, law, art, and religion—not the other way around.
- Discovery of surplus value: Marx revealed the hidden mechanism by which capitalists extract value from workers under the capitalist mode of production.
- Common confusion: Marx was not just a theorist writing books; he spent his life actively organizing workers, editing radical newspapers, and co-founding the International Working Men's Association.
- Why it matters: his work provided the first scientific foundation for socialism and made him both the most hated and most beloved figure of his time.
📖 Marx's life and work
🎓 Early years and intellectual development
- Born May 5, 1818 in Trier, Germany; studied law at Bonn and Berlin but turned to philosophy.
- In 1841, after five years in Berlin (the "metropolis of intellectuals"), he returned to Bonn to earn his PhD but instead became involved in radical journalism.
- His work on a radical newspaper ran afoul of Prussian censorship; he resigned in protest in 1843.
🔄 From Hegel to materialism
- While criticizing local government deliberations, Marx began focusing on "questions of material interest" that neither law nor philosophy had addressed.
- Starting from Hegelian philosophy of law, he concluded:
- Not the state (which Hegel called the "top of the edifice") but "civil society" (which Hegel had regarded with disdain) held the key to understanding historical development.
- This shift marked his move toward materialism.
🌍 Years of exile and activism
- 1843: Married Jenny Von Westphalen and moved to Paris; studied political economy and the French Revolution.
- 1845: Expelled from France for radical journalism; moved to Brussels and wrote the Communist Manifesto for "The League of the Just."
- 1848: Expelled from Belgium during the revolutionary panic; returned to Paris, then moved to Cologne to resurrect his radical newspaper.
- After the newspaper was shut down, he fled to London, where he remained for the rest of his life.
📚 London years and Capital
- In London, Marx withdrew into the British Museum to work through its vast, largely unexamined library on political economy.
- He was a regular contributor to the New York Tribune, acting as editor for European politics until the American Civil War.
- 1867: Published the first volume of Capital: A Critique of Political Economy.
Capital is "the political economy of the working class, reduced to its scientific formulation."
- The work is not "rabble-rousing phrase-mongering" but "strictly scientific deductions."
- It presents socialism for the first time in a scientific manner; anyone wishing to challenge socialism must deal with Marx's arguments.
🏭 Practical relevance of Capital
- The book describes the actual relations between capital and labor in their classical form (as developed in England).
- It includes the history of English factory legislation, which by Marx's time had limited working hours:
- 60 hours per week for women and young people under 18.
- 39 hours per week for children under 13.
- From this perspective, the book is of great interest even to industrialists.
🌐 Organizing the working class
- Marx was one of the founders of the International Working Men's Association, which became a significant force in Europe.
- He remained active in the workers' movement throughout his life.
💔 Personal life and family tragedy
💍 Karl and Jenny: a lifelong partnership
- Karl became engaged to Jenny Von Westphalen at age seventeen; they waited seven years to marry.
- Married June 19, 1843; they "went hand in hand through the battle of life."
- Their life together was marked by "years of bitter pressing need" and "years of brutal suspicion, infamous calumny and icy indifference."
- Despite hardship, they remained faithful to each other unto death.
- Marx "not only loved his wife, he was in love with her" his whole life.
👶 Children and loss
- Jenny gave birth seven times; only three daughters survived to adulthood: Jenny, Eleanor ("Tussy"), and Laura.
- A fourth child, a son named Edgar (nicknamed "Moosh"), almost reached adolescence but died after a protracted illness.
- Edgar was "very gifted, but ailing from the day of his birth, a genuine, true child of sorrow."
- The boy had "magnificent eyes and a promising head that was, however, much too heavy for the weak body."
- In the life of exile, "in the chase from place to place, in the misery of London," it was impossible to provide the care needed to save him.
😢 The death of Edgar
- At Edgar's death, the scene was heartbreaking:
- Jenny silently weeping, bent over the dead child.
- Lenchen (the household maidservant) sobbing beside her.
- Marx "in a terrible excitement vehemently, almost angrily, rejecting all consolation."
- The two girls clinging to their mother, crying quietly.
- At the burial, Marx sat in the carriage "dumb, holding his head in his hands."
- When a friend tried to console him, Marx groaned: "You cannot give me back my boy!"
- Marx was so excited at the graveside that a friend feared he might jump into the grave after the coffin.
🪦 Later losses
- Thirty years later, when Jenny was buried at Highgate Cemetery, Marx nearly fell into the grave; Engels had to grasp his arm.
- Fifteen months after Jenny's death, Marx followed her.
🔬 Marx's scientific discoveries
🧬 The materialist theory of history
Marx discovered "the law of development of human history: the simple fact, hitherto concealed by an overgrowth of ideology, that mankind must first of all eat, drink, have shelter and clothing, before it can pursue politics, science, art, religion, etc."
- What it means: the production of immediate material means and the degree of economic development form the foundation upon which state institutions, legal conceptions, art, and religious ideas are built.
- How to understand it: these ideas must be explained in light of material conditions, "instead of vice versa, as had hitherto been the case."
- Don't confuse: this is not saying ideas don't matter; it's saying ideas arise from material conditions, not the other way around.
💰 The law of surplus value
Marx "discovered the special law of motion governing the present-day capitalist mode of production, and the bourgeois society that this mode of production has created."
- The discovery of surplus value "suddenly threw light on the problem, in trying to solve which all previous investigations, of both bourgeois economists and socialist critics, had been groping in the dark."
- This was the hidden mechanism by which capitalists extract value from workers.
⚔️ Marx as revolutionary
🔥 Fighting as his element
- Marx was "before all else a revolutionist."
- His real mission: "to contribute, in one way or another, to the overthrow of capitalist society and of the state institutions which it had brought into being."
- He aimed "to contribute to the liberation of the modern proletariat, which he was the first to make conscious of its own position and its needs, conscious of the conditions of its emancipation."
- "Fighting was his element. And he fought with a passion, a tenacity and a success such as few could rival."
🎯 The paradox of hatred and love
| Perspective | How Marx was seen |
|---|---|
| Governments and bourgeoisie | "The best hated man of his time"; absolutist and republican governments deported him; conservatives and ultra-democrats heaped slanders upon him |
| Revolutionary workers | Died "beloved, revered and mourned by millions of revolutionary fellow workers—from the mines of Siberia to California, in all parts of Europe and America" |
- Why the paradox: those in power feared and hated him because he threatened their interests; workers loved him because he fought for their liberation.
- Marx "brushed aside" slanders "as though it were a cobweb, ignoring it, answering only when extreme necessity compelled him."
- Engels boldly claims: "though he may have had many opponents, he had hardly one personal enemy."
🌟 Legacy
- "His name will endure through the ages, and so also will his work."
- On March 14, at a quarter to three in the afternoon, "the greatest living thinker ceased to think."
- "An immeasurable loss has been sustained both by the militant proletariat of Europe and America, and by historical science."
🔑 Key concepts introduced
📜 Historical Materialism
- Also known as the materialist theory of history.
- The idea that material production and economic development form the base that shapes politics, law, culture, and ideas.
⚔️ Class Struggle
- Mentioned as part of Marx's broader work (not detailed in this excerpt).
💸 Exploitation and Surplus Value
- The mechanism by which capitalists extract value from workers under capitalism.
- This discovery illuminated what previous economists and socialists had struggled to explain.
🛠️ Labor Power
- Mentioned as a key concept (not detailed in this excerpt).