http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm

Vladimir Ilyich LeninFrederick Engels
------------------------------

Written: Written in autumn 1895
Published: First published in 1896 in the miscellany
*Rabotnik*,[3]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E001>
No.
1–2. Published according to the text in *Rabotnik*.
Source: *Lenin Collected
Works*<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/cw/index.htm#volume02>,
Moscow, Volume 
2<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/cw/volume02.htm#1895-misc-engels-bio>,
pages 15-28.
Translated: ... ...
Transcription: 
Zodiac<http://www.marxists.org/admin/intro/history/index.htm#zodiac>

Transcription\Markup: B.
Baggins<http://www.marxists.org/admin/volunteers/biographies/bbaggins.htm>
 and D. 
Walters<http://www.marxists.org/admin/volunteers/biographies/dwalters.htm>

Public Domain: Lenin Internet Archive. You may freely copy, distribute,
display and perform this work; as well as make derivative and commercial
works. Please credit “Marxists Internet Archive” as your source.
------------------------------
What a torch of reason ceased to burn,
What a heart has ceased to
beat![4]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E002>

On August 5 (new style), 1895, Frederick Engels died in London. After his
friend Karl Marx (who died in 1883), Engels was the finest scholar and
teacher of the modern proletariat in the whole civilised world. From the
time that fate brought Karl Marx and Frederick Engels together, the two
friends devoted their life’s work to a common cause. And so to understand
what Frederick Engels has done for the proletariat, one must have a clear
idea of the significance of Marx’s teaching and work for the development of
the contemporary working-class movement. Marx and Engels were the first to
show that the working class and its demands are a necessary outcome of the
present economic system, which together with the bourgeoisie inevitably
creates and organises the proletariat. They showed that it is not the
well-meaning efforts of noble-minded individuals, but the class struggle of
the organised proletariat that will deliver humanity from the evils which
now oppress it. In their scientific works, Marx and Engels were the first
to explain that socialism is not the invention of dreamers, but the final
aim and necessary result of the development of the productive forces in
modern society. All recorded history hitherto has been a history of class
struggle, of the succession of the rule and victory of certain social
classes over others. And this will continue until the foundations of class
struggle and of class domination – private property and anarchic social
production – disappear. The interests of the proletariat demand the
destruction of these foundations, and therefore the conscious class
struggle of the organised workers must be directed against them. And every
class struggle is a political struggle.

These views of Marx and Engels have now been adopted by all proletarians
who are fighting for their emancipation. But when in the forties the two
friends took part in the socialist literature and the social movements of
their time, they were absolutely novel. There were then many people,
talented and without talent, honest and dishonest, who, absorbed in the
struggle for political freedom, in the struggle against the despotism of
kings, police and priests, failed to observe the antagonism between the
interests of the bourgeoisie and those of the proletariat. These people
would not entertain the idea of the workers acting as an independent social
force. On the other hand, there were many dreamers, some of them geniuses,
who thought that it was only necessary to convince the rulers and the
governing classes of the injustice of the contemporary social order, and it
would then be easy to establish peace and general well-being on earth. They
dreamt of a socialism without struggle. Lastly, nearly all the socialists
of that time and the friends of the working class generally regarded the
proletariat only as an *ulcer*, and observed with horror how it grew with
the growth of industry. They all, therefore, sought for a means to stop the
development of industry and of the proletariat, to stop the “wheel of
history.” Marx and Engels did not share the general fear of the development
of the proletariat; on the contrary, they placed all their hopes on its
continued growth. The more proletarians there are, the greater is their
strength as a revolutionary class, and the nearer and more possible does
socialism become. The services rendered by Marx and Engels to the working
class may be expressed in a few words thus: they taught the working class
to know itself and be conscious of itself, and they substituted science for
dreams.

That is why the name and life of Engels should be known to every worker.
That is why in this collection of articles, the aim of which, as of all our
publications, is to awaken class-consciousness in the Russian workers, we
must give a sketch of the life and work of Frederick Engels, one of the two
great teachers of the modern proletariat.

Engels was born in 1820 in Barmen, in the Rhine Province of the kingdom of
Prussia. His father was a manufacturer. In 1838 Engels, without having
completed his high-school studies, was forced by family circumstances to
enter a commercial house in Bremen as a clerk. Commercial affairs did   not
prevent Engels from pursuing his scientific and political education. He had
come to hate autocracy and the tyranny of bureaucrats while still at high
school. The study of philosophy led him further. At that time Hegel’s
teaching dominated German philosophy, and Engels became his follower.
Although Hegel himself was an admirer of the autocratic Prussian state, in
whose service he was as a professor at Berlin University, Hegel’s *teachings
* were revolutionary. Hegel’s faith in human reason and its rights, and the
fundamental thesis of Hegelian philosophy that the universe is undergoing a
constant process of change and development, led some of the disciples of
the Berlin philosopher – those who refused to accept the existing situation
– to the idea that the struggle against this situation, the struggle
against existing wrong and prevalent evil, is also rooted in the universal
law of eternal development. If all things develop, if institutions of one
kind give place to others, why should the autocracy of the Prussian king or
of the Russian tsar, the enrichment of an insignificant minority at the
expense of the vast majority, or the domination of the bourgeoisie over the
people, continue for ever? Hegel’s philosophy spoke of the development of
the mind and of ideas; it was *idealistic.* From the development of the
mind it deduced the development of nature, of man, and of human, social
relations. While retaining Hegel’s idea of the eternal process of
development,[1]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02P021F01>
Marx
and Engels rejected the preconceived idealist view; turning to life, they
saw that it is not the development of mind that explains the development of
nature but that, on the contrary, the explanation of mind must be derived
from nature, from matter.... Unlike Hegel and the other Hegelians, Marx and
Engels were materialists. Regarding the world and humanity
materialistically, they perceived that just as material causes underlie all
natural phenomena, so the development of human society is conditioned by
the development of material forces, the productive forces. On the
development of the productive forces depend the relations into which   men
enter with one another in the production of the things required for the
satisfaction of human needs. And in these relations lies the explanation of
all the phenomena of social life, human aspirations, ideas and laws. The
development of the productive forces creates social relations based upon
private property, but now we see that this same development of the
productive forces deprives the majority of their property and concentrates
it in the hands of an insignificant minority. It abolishes property, the
basis of the modern social order, it itself strives towards the very aim
which the socialists have set themselves. All the socialists have to do is
to realise which social force, owing to its position in modern society, is
interested in bringing socialism about, and to impart to this force the
consciousness of its interests and of its historical task. This force is
the proletariat. Engels got to know the proletariat in England, in the
centre of English industry, Manchester, where he settled in 1842, entering
the service of a commercial firm of which his father was a shareholder.
Here Engels not only sat in the factory office but wandered about the slums
in which the workers were cooped up, and saw their poverty and misery with
his own eyes. But he did not confine himself to personal observations. He
read all that had been revealed before him about the condition of the
British working class and carefully studied all the official documents he
could lay his hands on. The fruit of these studies and observations was the
book which appeared in 1845: *The Condition of the Working Class in England.
* We have already mentioned what was the chief service rendered by Engels
in writing *The Condition of the Working Class in England.* Even before
Engels, many people had described the sufferings of the proletariat and had
pointed to the necessity of helping it. Engels was the *first* to say that
the proletariat is *not only* a suffering class; that it is, in fact, the
disgraceful economic condition of the proletariat that drives it
irresistibly forward and compels it to fight for its ultimate emancipation.
And the fighting proletariat *will help itself.* The political movement of
the working class will inevitably lead the workers to realise that their
only salvation lies in socialism. On the other hand, socialism will become
a force only when it becomes the aim of the *political*struggle   of the
working *class.* Such are the main ideas of Engels’ book on the condition
of the working class in England, ideas which have now been adopted by all
thinking and fighting proletarians, but which at that time were entirely
new. These ideas were set out in a book written in absorbing style and
filled with most authentic and shocking pictures of the misery of the
English proletariat. The book was a terrible indictment of capitalism and
the bourgeoisie and created a profound impression. Engels’ book began to be
quoted everywhere as presenting the best picture of the condition of the
modern proletariat. And, in fact, neither before 1845 nor after has there
appeared so striking and truthful a picture of the misery of the working
class.

It was not until he came to England that Engels became a socialist. In
Manchester he established contacts with people active in the English labour
movement at the time and began to write for English socialist publications.
In 1844, while on his way back to Germany, he became acquainted in Paris
with Marx, with whom he had already started to correspond. In Paris, under
the influence of the French socialists and French life, Marx had also
become a socialist. Here the friends jointly wrote a book entitled *The
Holy Family, or Critique of Critical Critique.* This book, which appeared a
year before *The Condition of the Working Class in England*, and the
greater part of which was written by Marx, contains the foundations of
revolutionary materialist socialism, the main ideas of which we have
expounded above. “The holy family” is a facetious nickname for the Bauer
brothers, the philosophers, and their followers. These gentlemen preached a
criticism which stood above all reality, above parties and politics, which
rejected all practical activity, and which only “critically” contemplated
the surrounding world and the events going on within it. These gentlemen,
the Bauers, looked down on the proletariat as an uncritical mass. Marx and
Engels vigorously opposed this absurd and harmful tendency. In the name of
a real, human person – the worker, trampled down by the ruling classes and
the state – they demanded, not contemplation, but a struggle for a better
order of society. They, of course, regarded the proletariat as the force
that is capable of waging this struggle and that is interested in it. Even
before   the appearance of *The Holy Family*, Engels had published in
Marx’s and Ruge’s*Deutsch-Franz\"osische
Jahrb\"ucher*[5]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E004>
his
“Critical Essays on Political
Economy,”[6]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E005>
in
which he examined the principal phenomena of the contemporary economic
order from a socialist standpoint, regarding them as necessary consequences
of the rule of private property. Contact with Engels was undoubtedly a
factor in Marx’s decision to study political economy, the science in which
his works have produced a veritable revolution.

>From 1845 to 1847 Engels lived in Brussels and Paris, combining scientific
work with practical activities among the German workers in Brussels and
Paris. Here Marx and Engels established contact with the secret German
Communist 
League,[7]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E006>
which
commissioned them to expound the main principles of the socialism they had
worked out. Thus arose the famous *Manifesto of the Communist Party* of
Marx and Engels, published in 1848. This little booklet is worth whole
volumes: to this day its spirit inspires and guides the entire organised
and fighting proletariat of the civilised world.

The revolution of 1848, which broke out first in France and then spread to
other West-European countries, brought Marx and Engels back to their native
country. Here, in Rhenish Prussia, they took charge of the democratic *Neue
Rheinische 
Zeitung*[8]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E007>
published
in Cologne. The two friends were the heart and soul of all
revolutionary-democratic aspirations in Rhenish Prussia. They fought to the
last ditch in defence of freedom and of the interests of the people against
the forces of reaction. The latter, as we know, gained the upper hand.
The *Neue
Rheinische Zeitung* was suppressed. Marx, who during his exile had lost his
Prussian citizenship, was deported; Engels took part in the armed popular
uprising, fought for liberty in three battles, and after the defeat of the
rebels fled, via Switzerland, to London.

Marx also settled in London. Engels soon became a clerk again, and then a
shareholder, in the Manchester commercial firm in which he had worked in
the forties. Until 1870 he lived in Manchester, while Marx lived in London,
but this did not prevent their maintaining a most lively interchange of
ideas: they corresponded almost daily. In this correspondence   the two
friends exchanged views and discoveries and continued to collaborate in
working out scientific socialism. In 1870 Engels moved to London, and their
joint intellectual life, of the most strenuous nature, continued until
1883, when Marx died. Its fruit was, on Marx’s side, *Capital*, the
greatest work on political economy of our age, and on Engels’ side, a
number of works both large and small. Marx worked on the analysis of the
complex phenomena of capitalist economy. Engels, in simply written works,
often of a polemical character, dealt with more general scientific problems
and with diverse phenomena of the past and present in the spirit of the
materialist conception of history and Marx’s economic theory. Of Engels’
works we shall mention: the polemical work against D\"uhring (analysing
highly important problems in the domain of philosophy, natural science and
the social 
sciences),[2]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02P025F01>
 *The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State*(translated into
Russian, published in St. Petersburg, 3rd ea.,
1895),[9]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E010>
 *Ludwig Feuerbach* (Russian translation and notes by G. Plekhanov, Geneva,
1892),[10]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E011>
an
article on the foreign policy of the Russian Government (translated into
Russian in the Geneva *Social-Demokrat*, Nos. 1 and
2),[11]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E012>
splendid
articles on the housing
question,[12]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E013>
and
finally, two small but very valuable articles on Russia’s economic
development *(Frederick Engels on Russia*, translated into Russian by
Zasulich, Geneva,
1894).[13]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E014>
Marx
died before he could put the final touches to his vast work on capital. The
draft, however, was already finished, and after the death of his friend,
Engels undertook the onerous task of preparing and publishing the second
and the third volumes of *Capital.*He published Volume II in 1885 and
Volume III in 1894 (his death prevented the preparation of Volume
IV).[14]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E015>
These
two volumes entailed a vast amount of labour. Adler, the Austrian
Social-Democrat, has rightly remarked that by publishing volumes II and III
of *Capital* Engels erected a majestic monument to the genius who had been
his friend, a monument on which, without intending it, he indelibly carved
his own name. Indeed   these two volumes of *Capital* are the work of two
men: Marx and Engels. Old legends contain various moving instances of
friendship. The European proletariat may say that its science was created
by two scholars and fighters, whose relationship to each other surpasses
the most moving stories of the ancients about human friendship. Engels
always – and, on the whole, quite justly – placed himself after Marx. “In
Marx’s lifetime,” he wrote to an old friend, “I played second
fiddle.”[15]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E016>
His
love for the living Marx, and his reverence for the memory of the dead Marx
were boundless. This stern fighter and austere thinker possessed a deeply
loving soul.

After the movement of 1848-49, Marx and Engels in exile did not confine
themselves to scientific research. In 1864 Marx founded the International
Working Men’s 
Association,[16]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E017>
and
led this society for a whole decade. Engels also took an active part in its
affairs. The work of the International Association, which, in accordance
with Marx’s idea, united proletarians of all countries, was of tremendous
significance in the development of the working-class movement. But even
with the closing down of the International Association in the seventies,
the unifying role of Marx and Engels did not cease. On the contrary, it may
be said that their importance as the spiritual leaders of the working-class
movement grew continuously, because the movement itself grew
uninterruptedly. After the death of Marx, Engels continued alone as the
counsellor and leader of the European socialists. His advice and directions
were sought for equally by the German socialists, whose strength, despite
government persecution, grew rapidly and steadily, and by representatives
of backward countries, such as the Spaniards, Rumanians and Russians, who
were obliged to ponder and weigh their first steps. They all drew on the
rich store of knowledge and experience of Engels in his old age.

Marx and Engels, who both knew Russian and read Russian books, took a
lively interest in the country, followed the Russian revolutionary movement
with sympathy and maintained contact with Russian revolutionaries. They
both became socialists after being *democrats*, and the democratic feeling
of *hatred* for political despotism was exceedingly strong in them. This
direct political feeling, combined   with a profound theoretical
understanding of the connection between political despotism and economic
oppression, and also their rich experience of life, made Marx and Engels
uncommonly responsive *politically.* That is why the heroic struggle of the
handful of Russian revolutionaries against the mighty tsarist government
evoked a most sympathetic echo in the hearts of these tried
revolutionaries. On the other hand, the tendency, for the sake of illusory
economic advantages, to turn away from the most immediate and important
task of the Russian socialists, namely, the winning of political freedom,
naturally appeared suspicious to them and was even regarded by them as a
direct betrayal of the great cause of the social revolution. “The
emancipation of the workers must be the act of the working class itself” –
Marx and Engels constantly
taught.[17]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E018>
But
in order to fight for its economic emancipation, the proletariat must win
itself certain *political* rights. Moreover, Marx and Engels clearly saw
that a political revolution in Russia would be of tremendous significance
to the West-European working-class movement as well. Autocratic Russia had
always been a bulwark of European reaction in general. The extraordinarily
favourable international position enjoyed by Russia as a result of the war
of 1870, which for a long time sowed discord between Germany and France, of
course only enhanced the importance of autocratic Russia as a reactionary
force. Only a free Russia, a Russia that had no need either to oppress the
Poles, Finns, Germans, Armenians or any other small nations, or constantly
to set France and Germany at loggerheads, would enable modern Europe, rid
of the burden of war, to breathe freely, would weaken all the reactionary
elements in Europe and strengthen the European working class. That was why
Engels ardently desired the establishment of political freedom in Russia
for the sake of the progress of the working-class movement in the West as
well. In him the Russian revolutionaries have lost their best friend.

Let us always honour the memory of Frederick Engels, a great fighter and
teacher of the proletariat!

Marx/Engels <http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/bio/index.htm> Biography
------------------------------
Notes

[1]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02P021F01>
 Marx and Engels frequently pointed out that in their intellectual
development they were much indebted to the great German philosophers,
particularly to Hegel. “Without German philosophy,” Engels says,
“scientific socialism would never have come into
being.”[18]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E003>
 —*Lenin*

[2]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02P025F01>
 This is a wonderfully rich and instructive
book.[19]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E008>
Unfortunately,
only a small portion of it, containing a historical outline of the
development of socialism, has been translated into Russian *(The
Development of Scientific Socialism*, 2nd ea., Geneva,
1892).[20]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#fwV02E009>
 —*Lenin*

[3]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E001>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]

[4]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E002>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]

[18]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E003>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]

[5]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E004>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]

[6]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E005>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]

[7]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E006>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]

[8]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E007>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]

[19]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E008>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]

[20]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E009>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]

[9]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E010>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]

[10]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E011>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]

[11]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E012>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]

[12]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E013>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]

[13]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E014>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]

[14]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E015>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]

[15]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E016>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]

[16]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E017>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]

[17]<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1895/misc/engels-bio.htm#bkV02E018>
 [PLACEHOLDER.]


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