The New Moral World No. 19, November 4, 1843

http://marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1843/10/23.htm

It has always been in some degree surprising to me, ever since I met with 
English Socialists, to find that most of them are very little acquainted with 
the social movement going on in different parts of the continent. And yet there 
are more than half a million of Communists in France, not taking into account 
the Fourierists, and other less radical Social reformers; there are Communist 
associations in every part of Switzerland, sending forth missionaries to Italy, 
Germany, and even Hungary; and German philosophy, after a long and troublesome 
circuit, has at last settled upon Communism.

Thus, the three great and civilised countries of Europe — England, France, and 
Germany, have all come to the conclusion, that a thorough revolution of social 
arrangements, based on community of property, has now become an urgent and 
unavoidable necessity. This result is the more striking, as it was arrived at 
by each of the above nations independently of the others; a fact, than which 
there can be no stronger proof, that Communism is not the consequence of the 
particular position of the English, or any other nation, but that it is a 
necessary conclusion, which cannot he avoided to be drawn from the premises 
given in the general facts of modern civilisation.

It must, therefore, appear desirable, that the three nations should understand 
each other, should know how far they agree, and how far they disagree; because 
there must be disagreement also, owing to the different origin of the doctrine 
of Community in each of the three countries. The English came to the conclusion 
practically, by the rapid increase of misery, demoralisation, and pauperism in 
their own country: the French politically, by first asking for political 
liberty and equality; and, finding this insufficient, joining social liberty, 
and social equality to their political claims: the Germans became Communists 
philosophically, by reasoning upon first principles. This being the origin of 
Socialism in the three countries, there must exist differences upon minor 
points; but I think I shall be able to show that these differences are very 
insignificant, and quite consistent with the best feeling on the part of the 
Social reformers of each country towards those of the other.
 The thing wanted is, that they should know each other; this being obtained, I 
am certain, they all will have the best wishes for the success of their foreign 
brother Communists.
I
FRANCE

France is, since the Revolution, the exclusively political country of Europe. 
No improvement, no doctrine can obtain national importance in France, unless 
embodied in some political shape. It seems to be the part the French nation 
have to perform in the present stage of the history of mankind, to go through 
all the forms of political development, and to arrive, from a merely political 
beginning, at the point where all nations, all different paths, must meet at 
Communism. The development of the public mind in France shows this clearly, and 
shows at the same time, what the future history of the English Chartists must 
be.

The French Revolution was the rise of democracy in Europe. Democracy is, as I 
take all forms of government to be, a contradiction in itself, an untruth, 
nothing but hypocrisy (theology, as we Germans call it), at the bottom. 
Political liberty is sham-liberty, the worst possible slavery; the appearance 
of liberty, and therefore the reality of servitude. Political equality is the 
same; therefore democracy, as well as every other form of government, must 
ultimately break to pieces: hypocrisy cannot subsist, the contradiction hidden 
in it must come out; we must have either a regular slavery — that is, an 
undisguised despotism, or real liberty, and real equality — that is, Communism. 
Both these consequences were brought out in the French Revolution; Napoleon 
established the first, and Babeuf the second. I think I may be short upon the 
subject of Babouvism, as the history of his conspiracy, [written] by Buonarroti 
[Ph. Buonarroti, Conspiration pour l\'égalité dite de Babeuf
 , suivie du procès auquel elle donna lieu, et des pièces justificatives, etc], 
has been translated into the English language. [153] The Communist plot did not 
succeed, because the then Communism itself was of a very rough and superficial 
kind; and because, on the other hand, the public mind was not yet far enough 
advanced.

The next French Social reformer was Count de Saint-Simon. He succeeded in 
getting up a sect, and even some establishments; none of which succeeded. The 
general spirit of the Saint-Simonian doctrines is very much like that of the 
Ham-Common Socialists, in England [154]; although, in the detail of the 
arrangements and ideas, there is a great difference. The singularities and 
eccentricities of the Saint-Simonians very soon became the victims of French 
wit and satire; and everything once made ridiculous is inevitably lost in 
France. But, besides this, there were other causes for the failure of the 
Saint-Simonian establishments; all the doctrines of this party were enveloped 
in the clouds of an unintelligible mysticism, which, perhaps, in the beginning, 
attract the attention of the people; but, at last, must leave their 
expectations disappointed. Their economical principles, too, were not 
unexceptionable; the share of each of the members of their communities in the 
distribution of
  produce was to be regulated, firstly, by the amount of work he had done; and, 
secondly, the amount of talent he displayed. A German Republican, Boerne, 
justly replied to this principle, that talent, instead of being rewarded, ought 
rather to be considered as a natural preference; and, therefore, a deduction 
ought to be made from the share of the talented, in order to restore equality.

Saint-Simonism, after having excited, like a brilliant meteor, the attention of 
the thinking, disappeared from the Social horizon. Nobody now thinks of it, or 
speaks of it; its time is past.

Nearly at the same time with Saint-Simon, another man directed the activity of 
his mighty intellect to the social state of mankind — Fourier. Although 
Fourier’s writings do not display those bright sparks of genius which we find 
in Saint-Simon’s and some of his disciples; although his style is hard, and 
shows, to a considerable extent, the toil with which the author is always 
labouring to bring out his ideas, and to speak out things for which no words 
are provided in the French language — nevertheless, we read his works with 
greater pleasure; and find more real value in them, than in those of the 
preceding school. There is mysticism, too, and as extravagant as any, but this 
you may cut off and throw it aside, and there will remain something not to be 
found among the Saint-Simonians — scientific research, cool, unbiased, 
systematic thought; in short, social philosophy; whilst Saint-Simonism can only 
be called social poetry. It was Fourier, who, for the first time, es
 tablished the great axiom of social philosophy, that every individual having 
an inclination or predilection for some particular kind of work, the sum of all 
these inclinations of all individuals must be, upon the whole, an adequate 
power for providing for the wants of all. From this principle, it follows, that 
if every individual is left to his own inclination, to do and to leave what he 
pleases, the wants of all will be provided for, without the forcible means used 
by the present system of society. This assertion looks bold, and yet, after 
Fourier’s mode of establishing it, is quite unassailable, almost self-evident — 
the egg of Columbus. Fourier proves, that every one is born with an inclination 
for some kind of work, that absolute idleness is nonsense, a thing which never 
existed, and cannot exist: that the essence of the human mind is to be active 
itself, and to bring the body into activity; and that, therefore, there is no 
necessity for making the people active by f
 orce, as in the now existing state of society, but only to give their natural 
activity the right direction. He goes on proving the identity of labour and 
enjoyment, and shows the irrationality of the present social system, which 
separates them, making labour a toil, and placing enjoyment above the reach of 
the majority of the labourers; he shows further, how, under rational 
arrangements, labour may be made, what it is intended to be, an enjoyment, 
leaving every one to follow his own inclinations. I cannot, of course, follow 
Fourier through the whole of his theory of free labour, and I think this will 
be sufficient to show the English Socialists that Fourierism is a subject well 
worthy of their attention. [155]

Another of the merits of Fourier is to have shown the advantages — nay, the 
necessity of association. It will be sufficient only to mention this subject, 
as I know the English to be fully aware of its importance.

There is one inconsistency, however, in Fourierism, and a very important one 
too, and that is, his nonabolition of private property. In his Phalanstères or 
associative establishments, there are rich and poor, capitalists and working 
men. The property of all members is placed into a joint stock, the 
establishment carries on commerce, agricultural and manufacturing industry, and 
the proceeds are divided among the members; one part as wages of labour, 
another as reward for skill and talent, and a third as profits of capital. 
Thus, after all the beautiful theories of association and free labour; after a 
good deal of indignant declamation against commerce, selfishness, and 
competition, we have in practice the old competitive system upon an improved 
plan, a poor-law bastile on more liberal principles! Certainly, here we cannot 
stop; and the French, too, have not stopped here.

The progress of Fourierism in France was slow, but regular. There are not a 
great many Fourierists, but they count among their numbers a considerable 
portion of the intellect now active in France. Victor Considérant is one of 
their cleverest writers. They have a newspaper, too, the Phalange, published 
formerly three times a week, now daily. [156]

As the Fourierists are now represented in England also by Mr. Doherty, I think 
I may have said enough concerning them, and now pass to the most important and 
most radical party in France, the Communists.

I said before, that everything claiming national importance in France must be 
of a political nature, or it will not succeed. Saint-Simon and Fourier did not 
touch politics at all, and their schemes, therefore, became not the common 
property of the nation, but only subjects of private discussion. We have seen 
how Babeuf’s Communism arose out of the democracy of the first revolution. The 
second revolution, of 1830, gave rise to another and more powerful Communism. 
The “great week” of 1830 [That is, from July 27 to August 20, the peak of the 
July revolution] was accomplished by the union of the middle and working 
classes, the liberals and the republicans. After the work was done, the working 
classes were dismissed, and the fruits of the revolution were taken possession 
of by the middle classes only. The working men got up several insurrections, 
for the abolition of political monopoly, and the establishment of a republic, 
[157] but were always defeated; the middle class hav
 ing not only the army on their side, but forming themselves the national guard 
besides. During this time (1834 or 1835) a new doctrine sprang up among the 
republican working men. They saw that even after having succeeded in their 
democratic plans, they would continue [to be] the dupes of their more gifted 
and better educated leaders, and that their social condition, the cause of 
their political discontent, would not be bettered by any political change 
whatsoever. They referred to the history of the great revolution, and eagerly 
seized upon Babeuf’s Communism. This is all that can, with safety, be asserted 
concerning the origin of modern Communism in France; the subject was first 
discussed in the dark lanes and crowded alleys of the Parisian suburb, 
Saint-Antoine, and soon after in the secret assemblies of conspirators. Those 
who know more about its origin are very careful to keep their knowledge to 
themselves, in order to avoid the “strong arm of the law”. However, Com
 munism spread rapidly over Paris, Lyons, Toulouse, and the other large and 
manufacturing towns of the realm; various secret associations followed each 
other, among which the “Travailleurs Egalitaires”, or Equalitarian Working Men, 
and the Humanitarians,\"” were the most considerable. The Equalitarians were 
rather a “rough set”, like the Babouvists of the great revolution; they 
purposed making the world a working-man’s community, putting down every 
refinement of civilisation, science, the fine arts, etc., as useless, 
dangerous, and aristocratic luxuries, a prejudice necessarily arising from 
their total ignorance of history and political economy. The Humanitarians 
[158], were known particularly for their attacks on marriage, family, and other 
similar institutions. Both these, as well as two or three other parties, were 
very short-lived, and the great bulk of the French working classes adopted, 
very soon, the tenets propounded by M. Cabet, “Père Cabet” (Father
  C.), as he is called, and which are known on the continent under the name of 
Icarian Communism.

This sketch of the History of Communism in France shows, in some measure, what 
the difference of French and English Communism must be. The origin of Social 
reform, in France, is a political one; it is found, that democracy cannot give 
real equality, and therefore the Community scheme is called to its aid. The 
bulk of the French Communists are, therefore, republicans besides; they want a 
community state of society, under a republican form of government. Now, I do 
not think that the English Socialists would have serious objections to this; 
because, though they are more favourable to an elective monarchy, I know them 
to be too enlightened to force their kind of government upon a people totally 
opposed to it. It is evident, that to try this would involve this people in far 
greater disorders and difficulties than would arise from their own democratic 
mode of government, even supposing this to be bad.

But there are other objections that could be made to the French Communists. 
They intend overthrowing the present government of their country by force, and 
have shown this by their continual policy of secret associations. This is true. 
Even the Icarians, though they declare in their publications that they abhor 
physical revolutions and secret societies, even they are associated in this 
manner, and would gladly seize upon any opportunity to establish a republic by 
force. [159] This will be objected to, I dare say, and rightly, because, at any 
rate, secret associations are always contrary to common prudence, inasmuch as 
they make the parties liable to unnecessary legal persecutions. I am not 
inclined to defend such a line of policy, but it has to be explained, to be 
accounted for; and it is fully done so by the difference of the French and 
English national character and government. The English constitution has now 
been, for about one hundred and fifty years, uninterruptedly, the
  law of the land; every change has been made by legal means, by constitutional 
forms; therefore the English must have a strong respect for their laws. But, in 
France, during the last fifty years, one forced alteration has followed the 
other; all constitutions, from radical democracy to open despotism, all kinds 
of laws were, after a short existence, thrown away and replaced by others; how 
can the people then respect their laws? And the result of all these 
convulsions, as now established in the French constitution and laws, is the 
oppression of the poor by the rich, an oppression kept up by force — how can it 
be expected that the oppressed should love their public institutions, that they 
should not resort to the old tricks of 1792? They know that, if they are 
anything, they are it by meeting force by force, and having, at present, no 
other means, why should they hesitate a moment to apply this? It will be said 
further: why do not the French Communists establish communities,
  as the English have done? My reply is, because they dare not. If they did, 
the first experiment would be put down by soldiers. And if they were suffered 
to do so, it would be of no use to them. I always understood the Harmony 
Establishment to be only an experiment, to show the possibility of Mr. Owen’s 
plans, [160] if put into practice, to force public opinion to a more favourable 
idea of the Socialist schemes for relieving public distress. Well, if that be 
the case, such an experiment would be of no avail in France. Show the French, 
not that your plans are practical, because that would leave them cool and 
indifferent. Show them that your communities will not place mankind under an 
“ironbound despotism”, as Mr. Bairstow the Chartist said, in his late 
discussion with Mr. Watts. [161] Show them that real liberty and real equality 
will be only possible under Community arrangements, show them that justice 
demands such arrangements, and then you will have them all on your
 side.

But to return to the social doctrines of the Icarian Communists. Their “holy 
book” is the Voyage en Icarie (Travels in Icaria) of Father Cabet, who, 
by-the-by, was formerly Attorney-General, and Member of the Chamber of 
Deputies. The general arrangements for their Communities are very little 
different to those of Mr. Owen. They have embodied in their plans everything 
rational they found in Saint-Simon and Fourier; and, therefore, are very much 
superior to the old French Communists. As to marriage, they perfectly agree 
with the English. Everything possible is done to secure the liberty of the 
individual. Punishments are to be abolished, and to be replaced by education of 
the young, and rational mental treatment of the old.

It is, however, curious, that whilst the English Socialists are generally 
opposed to Christianity, and have to suffer all the religious prejudices of a 
really Christian people, the French Communists, being a part of a nation 
celebrated for its infidelity, are themselves Christians. One of their 
favourite axioms is, that Christianity is Communism, “le Christianisme c\'est 
le Communisme”. This they try to prove by the bible, the state of community in 
which the first Christians are said to have lived, etc. But all this shows 
only, that these good people are not the best Christians, although they style 
themselves so; because if they were, they would know the bible better, and find 
that, if some few passages of the bible may be favourable to Communism, the 
general spirit of its doctrines is, nevertheless, totally opposed to it, as 
well as to every rational measure.

The rise of Communism has been hailed by most of the eminent minds in France; 
Pierre Leroux, the metaphysician; George Sand, the courageous defender of the 
rights of her sex; Abbé de Lamennais, author of the Words of a Believer [F. R. 
de Lamennais, Paroles d\'un croyant, 1833] and a great many others, are, more 
or less, inclined towards the Communist doctrines. The most important writer, 
however, in this line is Proudhon, a young man, who published two or three 
years ago his work: What is Property? (Qu\'est ce que la Propriété?) where he 
gave the answer: “La propriété c\'est le vol”, Property is robbery. This is the 
most philosophical work, on the part of the Communists, in the French language; 
and, if I wish to see any French book translated into the English language, it 
is this. The right of private property, the consequences of this institution, 
competition, immorality, misery, are here developed with a power of intellect, 
and real scientific research, which
 I never since found united in a single volume. Besides this, he gives very 
important remarks on government, and having proved that every kind of 
government is alike objectionable, no matter whether it be democracy, 
aristocracy, or monarchy, that all govern by force; and that, in the best of 
all possible cases, the force of the majority oppresses the weakness of the 
minority, he comes, at last, to the conclusion: “Nous voulons l\'anarchie!” 
What we want is anarchy; the rule of nobody, the responsibility of every one to 
nobody but himself.

Upon this subject I shall have to speak more, when I come to the German 
Communists. I have now only to add, that the French Icarian Communists are 
estimated at about half a million in number, women and children not taken into 
account. A pretty respectable phalanx, isn’t it? They have a monthly paper, the 
Populaire, edited by Father Cabet; and, besides this, P. Leroux publishes a 
periodical, the Independent Review, in which the tenets of Communism are 
philosophically advocated.

Manchester, Oct. 23, 1843
II
Germany and Switzerland
The New Moral World No. 21, November 18, 1843

Germany had her Social Reformers as early as the Reformation. Soon after Luther 
had begun to proclaim church reform and to agitate the people against spiritual 
authority, the peasantry of Southern and Middle Germany rose in a general 
insurrection against their temporal lords. Luther always stated his object to 
be, to return to original Christianity in doctrine and practice; the peasantry 
took exactly the same standing, and demanded, therefore, not only the 
ecclesiastical, but also the social practice of primitive Christianity. They 
conceived a state of villainy and servitude, such as they lived under, to be 
inconsistent with the doctrines of the Bible; they were oppressed by a set of 
haughty barons and earls, robbed and treated like their cattle every day, they 
had no law to protect them, and if they had, they found nobody to enforce it. 
Such a state contrasted very much with the communities of early Christians and 
the doctrines of Christ, as laid down in the Bible. Therefore
  they arose and began a war against their lords, which could only be a war of 
extermination. Thomas Münzer, a preacher, whom they placed at their head, 
issued a proclamation, [162] full, of course, of the religious and 
superstitious nonsense of the age, but containing also among others, principles 
like these: That according to the Bible, no Christian is entitled to hold any 
property whatever exclusively for himself; that community of property is the 
only proper state for a society of Christians; that it is not allowed to any 
good Christian to have any authority or command over other Christians, nor to 
hold any office of government or hereditary power, but on the contrary, that, 
as all men are equal before God, so they ought to be on earth also. These 
doctrines were nothing but conclusions drawn from the Bible and from Luther’s 
own writings; but the Reformer was not prepared to go as far as the people did; 
notwithstanding the courage he displayed against the spiritual aut
 horities, he had not freed himself from the political and social prejudices of 
his age; he believed as firmly in the right divine of princes and landlords to 
trample upon the people, as he did in the Bible. Besides this, he wanted the 
protection of the aristocracy and the Protestant princes, and thus he wrote a 
tract against the rioters disclaiming not only every connection with them, but 
also exhorting the aristocracy to put them down with the utmost severity, as 
rebels against the laws of God. “Kill them like dogs!” he exclaimed. The whole 
tract is written with such an animosity, nay, fury and fanaticism against the 
people, that it will ever form a blot upon Luther’s character; it shows that, 
if he began his career as a man of the people, he was now entirely in the 
service of their oppressors. The insurrection, after a most bloody civil war, 
was suppressed, and the peasants reduced to their former servitude.

If we except some solitary instances, of which no notice was taken by the 
public, there has been no party of Social Reformers in Germany, since the 
peasants’ war, up to a very recent date. The public mind during the last fifty 
years was too much occupied with questions of either a merely political or 
merely metaphysical nature — questions, which had to be answered, before the 
social question could be discussed with the necessary calmness and knowledge. 
Men, who would have been decidedly opposed to a system of community, if such 
had been proposed to them, were nevertheless paving the way for its 
introduction.

It was among the working class of Germany that Social Reform has been of late 
made again a topic of discussion. Germany having comparatively little 
manufacturing industry, the mass of the working classes is made up by 
handicraftsmen, who previous to their establishing themselves as little 
masters, travel for some years over Germany, Switzerland, and very often over 
France also. A great number of German workmen is thus continually going to and 
from Paris, and must of course there become acquainted with the political and 
social movements of the French working classes. One of these men, William 
Weitling, a native of Magdeburg in Prussia, and a simple journeyman-tailor, 
resolved to establish communities in his own country.

This man, who is to be considered as the founder of German Communism, after a 
few years’ stay in Paris, went to Switzerland, and, whilst he was working in 
some tailor’s shop in Geneva, preached his new gospel to his fellow-workmen. He 
formed Communist Associations in all the towns and cities on the Swiss side of 
the lake of Geneva, most of the Germans who worked there becoming favourable to 
his views. Having thus prepared the public mind, he issued a periodical, the 
Young Generation,’ for a more extensive agitation of the country. This paper, 
although written for working men only, and by a working man, has from its 
beginning been superior to most of the French Communist publications, even to 
Father Cabet’s Populaire. It shows that its editor must have worked very hard 
to obtain that knowledge of history and politics which a public writer cannot 
do without, and which a neglected education had left him deprived of. It shows, 
at the same time, that Weitling was always st
 ruggling to unite his various ideas and thoughts on society into a complete 
system of Communism. The Young Generation was first published in 1841; in the 
following year, Weitling published a work: Guarantees of Harmony and Liberty, 
in which he gave a review of the old social system and the outlines of a new 
one. I shall, perhaps, some time give a few extracts from this book.

Having thus established the nucleus of a Communist party in Geneva and its 
neighbourhood, he went to Zurich, where, as in other towns of Northern 
Switzerland, some of his friends had already commenced to operate upon the 
minds of the working men. He now began to organise his party in these towns. 
Under the name of Singing Clubs, associations were formed for the discussion of 
Social reorganisation. At the same time Weitling advertised his intention to 
publish a book, — The Gospel of the Poor Sinners. [163] But here the police 
interfered with his proceedings.

In June last, Weitling was taken into custody, his papers and his book were 
seized, before it left the press. The Executive of the Republic appointed a 
committee to investigate the matter, and to report to the Grand Council, the 
representatives of the people. This report has been printed a few months since. 
It appears from it, that a great many Communist associations existed in every 
part of Switzerland, consisting mostly of German working men; that Weitling was 
considered as the leader of the party, and received from time to time reports 
of progress; that he was in correspondence with similar associations of Germans 
in Paris and London, and that all these societies, being composed of men who 
very often changed their residence, were so many seminaries of these “dangerous 
and Utopian doctrines”, sending out their elder members to Germany, Hungary, 
and Italy, and imbuing with their spirit every workman who came within their 
reach. The report was drawn up by Dr. Bluntschli,
 a man of aristocratic and fanatically Christian opinions, and the whole of it 
therefore is written more like a party denunciation, than like a calm, official 
report. Communism is denounced as a doctrine dangerous in the extreme, 
subversive of all existing order, and destroying all the sacred bonds of 
society. The pious doctor, besides, is at a loss for words sufficiently strong 
to express his feelings as to the frivolous blasphemy with which these infamous 
and ignorant people try to justify their wicked and revolutionary doctrines, by 
passages from the Holy Scriptures. Weitling and his party are, in this respect, 
just like the Icarians in France, and contend that Christianity is Communism.

The result of Weitling’s trial did very little to satisfy the anticipations of 
the Zurich government. Although Weitling and his friends were sometimes very 
incautious in their expressions, yet the charge of high treason and conspiracy 
against him could not be maintained; the criminal court sentenced him to six 
months’ imprisonment, and eternal banishment from Switzerland; the members of 
the Zurich associations were expelled the Canton; the report was communicated 
to the governments of the other Cantons and to the foreign embassies, but the 
Communists in other parts of Switzerland were very little interfered with. The 
prosecution came too late, and was too little assisted by the other Cantons; it 
did nothing at all for the destruction of Communism, and was even favourable to 
it, by the great interest it produced in all countries of the German tongue. 
Communism was almost unknown in Germany, but became by this an object of 
general attention.

Besides this party there exists another in Germany, which advocates Communism. 
The former, being thoroughly a popular party, will no doubt very soon unite all 
the working classes of Germany; that party which I now refer to is a 
philosophical one, unconnected in its origin with either French or English 
Communists, and arising from that philosophy which, since the last fifty years, 
Germany has been so proud of.

The political revolution of France was accompanied by a philosophical 
revolution in Germany. Kant began it by overthrowing the old system of 
Leibnitzian metaphysics, which at the end of last century was introduced in all 
Universities of the Continent. Fichte and Schelling commenced rebuilding, and 
Hegel completed the new system. There has never been, ever since man began to 
think, a system of philosophy as comprehensive as that of Hegel. Logic, 
metaphysics, natural philosophy, the philosophy of mind, the philosophy of law, 
of religion, of history, all are united in one system, reduced to one 
fundamental principle. The system appeared quite unassailable from without, and 
so it was; it has been overthrown from within only, by those who were Hegelians 
themselves. I cannot, of course, give here a complete development either of the 
system or of its history, and therefore must restrain myself to the following 
remarks. The progress of German philosophy from Kant to Hegel was so cons
 istent, so logical, so necessary, if I may say so, that no other systems 
besides those I have named could subsist. There are two or three of them, but 
they found no attention; they were so neglected, that nobody would even do them 
the honour to overthrow them. Hegel, notwithstanding his enormous learning and 
his deep thought, was so much occupied with abstract questions, that he 
neglected to free himself from the prejudices of his age — an age of 
restoration for old systems of government and religion. But his disciples had 
very different views on these subjects. Hegel died in 1831, and as early as 
1835 appeared Strauss’ Life of Jesus, the first work showing some progress 
beyond the limits of orthodox Hegelianism. Others followed; and in 1837 the 
Christians rose against what they called the New Hegelians, denouncing them as 
Atheists, and calling for the interference of the state. The state, however, 
did not interfere, and the controversy went on. At that time, the New, or
  Young Hegelians, were so little conscious of the consequences of their own 
reasoning, that they all denied the charge of Atheism, and called themselves 
Christians and Protestants, although they denied the existence of a God who was 
not man, and declared the history of the gospels to be a pure mythology. It was 
not until last year, in a pamphlet [Frederick Engels, Schelling and 
Revelation], by the writer of these lines, that the charge of Atheism was 
allowed to be just. But the development went on. The Young Hegelians of 1842 
were declared Atheists and Republicans; the periodical of the party, the German 
Annals[Deutsche Jahrbücher für Wissenschaft und Kunst], was more radical and 
open than ever before; a political paper [Rheinische Zeitung für Politik, 
Handel und Gewerbe] was established, and very soon the whole of the German 
liberal press was entirely in our hands. We had friends in almost every 
considerable town of Germany; we provided all the liberal papers with. th
 e necessary matter, and by this means made them our organs; we inundated the 
country with pamphlets, and soon governed public opinion upon every question. A 
temporary relaxation of the censorship of the press added a great deal to the 
energy of this movement, quite novel to a considerable part of the German 
public. Papers, published under the authorisation of a government censor, 
contained things which, even in France, would have been punished as high 
treason, and other things which could not have been pronounced in England, 
without a trial for blasphemy being the consequence of it. The movement was so 
sudden, so rapid, so energetically pursued, that the government as well as the 
public were dragged along with it for some time. But this violent character of 
the agitation proved that it was not founded upon a strong party among the 
public, and that its power was produced by the surprise, and consternation only 
of its opponents. The governments, recovering their senses, put a
 stop to it by a most despotic oppression of the liberty of speech. Pamphlets, 
newspapers, periodicals, scientific works were suppressed by dozens, and the 
agitated state of the country soon subsided. It is a matter of course that such 
a tyrannical interference will not check the progress of public opinion, nor 
quench the principles defended by the agitators; the entire persecution has 
been of no use whatever to the ruling powers; because, if they had not put down 
the movement, it would have been checked by the apathy of the public at large, 
a public as little prepared for radical changes as that of every other country; 
and, if even this had not been the case, the republican agitation would have 
been abandoned by the agitators themselves, who now, by developing farther and 
farther the consequences of their philosophy, became Communists. The princes 
and rulers of Germany, at the very moment when they believed to have put down 
for ever republicanism, saw the rise of Communism f
 rom the ashes of political agitation; and this new doctrine appears to them 
even more dangerous and formidable than that in whose apparent destruction they 
rejoiced.

As early as autumn, 1842, some of the party contended for the insufficiency of 
political change, and declared their opinion to be, that a Social revolution 
based upon common property, was the only state of mankind agreeing with their 
abstract principles. But even the leaders of the party, such as Dr. Bruno 
Bauer, Dr. Feuerbach, and Dr. Ruge, were not then prepared for this decided 
step. The political paper of the party, the Rhenish Gazette [Rheinische 
Zeitung], published some papers advocating Communism, but without the 
wished-for effect. Communism, however, was such a necessary consequence of New 
Hegelian philosophy, that no opposition could keep it down, and, in the course 
of this present year, the originators of it had the satisfaction of seeing one 
republican after the other join their ranks. Besides Dr. Hess, one of the 
editors of the now suppressed Rhenish Gazette, and who was, in fact, the first 
Communist of the party, there are now a great many others; as Dr. Ruge, ed
 itor of the German Annals, the scientific periodical of the Young Hegelians, 
which has been suppressed by resolution of the German Diet [164]; Dr. Marx, 
another of the editors of the Rhenish Gazette; George Herwegh, the poet whose 
letter to the King of Prussia was translated, last winter, by most of the 
English papers [165], and others: and we hope that the remainder of the 
republican party will, by-and-by, come over too.

Thus, philosophical Communism may be considered for ever established in 
Germany, notwithstanding the efforts of the governments to keep it down. They 
have annihilated the press in their dominions, but to no effect; the progress 
parties profit by the free press of Switzerland and France, and their 
publications are as extensively circulated in Germany, as if they were printed 
in that country itself. All persecutions and prohibitions have proved 
ineffectual, and will ever do so; the Germans are a philosophical nation, and 
will not, cannot abandon Communism, as soon as it is founded upon sound 
philosophical principles: chiefly if it is derived as an unavoidable conclusion 
from their own philosophy. And this is the part we have to perform now. Our 
party has to prove that either all the philosophical efforts of the German 
nation, from Kant to Hegel, have been useless — worse than useless; or, that 
they must end in Communism; that the Germans must either reject their great 
philoso
 phers, whose names they hold up as the glory of their nation, or that they 
must adopt Communism. And this will be proved; this dilemma the Germans will be 
forced into, and there can scarcely be any doubt as to which side of the 
question the people will adopt.

There is a greater chance in Germany for the establishment of a Communist party 
among the educated classes of society, than anywhere else. The Germans are a 
very disinterested nation; if in Germany principle comes into collision with 
interest, principle will almost always silence the claims of interest. The same 
love of abstract principle, the same disregard of reality and self-interest, 
which have brought the Germans to a state of political nonentity, these very 
same qualities guarantee the success of philosophical Communism in that 
country. It will appear very singular to Englishmen, that a party which aims at 
the destruction of private property is chiefly made up by those who have 
property; and yet this is the case in Germany. We can recruit our ranks from 
those classes only which have enjoyed a pretty good education; that is, from 
the universities and from the commercial class; and in either we have not 
hitherto met with any considerable difficulty.

As to the particular doctrines of our party, we agree much more with the 
English Socialists than with any other party. Their system, like ours, is 
founded upon philosophical principle; they struggle, as we do, against 
religious prejudices whilst the French reject philosophy and perpetuate 
religion by dragging it over with themselves into the projected new state of 
society. The French Communists could assist us in the first stages only of our 
development, and we soon found that we knew more than our teachers; but we 
shall have to learn a great deal yet from the English Socialists. Although our 
fundamental principles give us a broader base, inasmuch as we received them 
from a system of philosophy embracing every part of human knowledge; yet in 
everything bearing upon practice, upon the facts of the present state of 
society, we find that the English Socialists are a long way before us, and have 
left very little to be done. I may say, besides, that I have met with English 
Sociali
 sts with whom I agree upon almost every question.

I cannot now give an exposition of ‘this Communist system without adding too 
much to the length of this paper; but I intend to do so some time soon, if the 
Editor of the New Moral World [G. A. Fleming] will allow me the space for it. 
[166] I therefore conclude by stating that, notwithstanding the persecutions of 
the German governments (I understand that, in Berlin, Mr. Edgar Bauer is being 
prosecuted for a Communist publication [167]; and in Stuttgart another 
gentleman has been committed for the novel crime of “Communist 
correspondence\"!), notwithstanding this, I say, every necessary step is taken 
to bring about a successful agitation for Social Reform, to establish a new 
periodical, and to secure the circulation of all publications advocating 
Communism.

 
Bwanika 
________

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