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Works of Karl Marx, 1844
Critical Notes on the Article
"The King of Prussia and Social Reform.
By a Prussian" [1]
by Karl Marx
Vorwarts!, No.63, August 7 1844
An article has appeared in the 60th issue of the Vorwarts!
with the "The King of Prussia and Social Reform" and it is signed by "A
Prussian."
This so-called Prussian begins by reporting the contents of the
Royal Prussian Order in Council on the subject of the workers’ uprising
in Silesia [2] and goes on to give the opinion of
the French journal La Reforme [3] of the same
Prussian Order in Council. The Reforme, he says, discerns the origins
of the Order in Council in the King’s "panic and his religious sentiments."
It even hails this document as a presentiment of the great reforms
imminent in bourgeois society. The "Prussian" delivers the following lecture
to the Reforme.
Neither the King nor German society has had any "presentiment of its
reform" [4]; not even the uprisings in Bohemia and Silesia
have managed to arouse such feelings. In an unpolitical country
like Germany it is not possible to represent the sporadic misery of the
factory districts as a matter of universal concern, let alone as a disaster
to the whole civilized world. As far as the Germans are concerned, these
events belong in the same category as any local shortage of food
or water. In accordance with this the King views it as a failure
of the administration or of charitable institutions. For this reason
and because but few troops were needed to deal with the feeble weavers
the destruction of factories and machines does not make the King and the
authorities "panic." Nor were religious sentiments responsible for
the Order in Council; it was instead a very sober expression of Christian
statesmanship and of a doctrine which does not permit any obstacles to
stand in the way of its only remedy: the "good intentions of Christian
hearts." Poverty and crimes are two great evils; who can provide a cure
for them? The state and the authorities? By no means. But the union of
all Christian hearts can do so.
Our so-called Prussian denies that the King "panicked" for a number of
reasons, among them being the fact that few troops were needed to deal
with the feeble weavers.
This means that in a country where banquets with liberal toasts
and liberal champagne froth provoke Royal Orders in Council (as we saw
in the case of the Dusseldorf banquet [5]), where the
burning desire of the entire liberal bourgeoisie for freedom of the press
and a constitution could be surpassed without the aid of a single soldier,
in a country where passive obedience is the order of the day, can it be
anything but an event and indeed a terrifying event when
armed troops have to be called out against feeble wavers? And in the first
encounter the feeble weavers even gained a victory. They were only suppressed
when reinforcements were brought up. Is the uprising of a mass of workers
less dangerous because it can be defeated without the aid of a whole army?
Our sharp-witted Prussian should compare the revolt of the Silesian weavers
with the uprisings of English workers. The Silesians will then stand revealed
as strong weavers.
A consideration of the general relationship between politics
and the defects of society will enable us to explain why the weavers
could not induce any great "panic" in the King. For the present, however,
we will only point out that the uprising was directed in the first instance
not against the King of Prussia but against the bourgeoisie. As an aristocrat
and an absolute monarch the King of Prussia can have no love of the bourgeoisie;
even less can he feel any anxiety if the submissiveness and impotence of
the bourgeoisie is increased by its tense and difficult relationship with
the proletariat. Similarly, an orthodox Catholic will feel a greater hostility
towards an orthodox Protestant than towards an atheist, just as a legitimist
will dislike a liberal more than a communist. This is not because atheists
are closer to Catholics or communists closer to legitimists than they are
to Protestants or liberals respectively, but, on the contrary, because
they are more remote from t hem, because the latter do not impinge on their
sphere of interests. The direct political antagonist of the King of Prussia,
in his role as politician, is to be found in liberalism. For the King,
the antagonism of the proletariat exists no more than does the King for
the proletariat. This means that if the proletariat has contrived to eliminate
such antipathies and political antagonisms, and to attract the entire hostility
of the political powers towards itself, it must have acquired a very definite
power. Lastly, the King’s appetite for interesting and significant
phenomena is well known and it must have been a very pleasant surprise
for him to discover such an "interesting" and "much discussed" pauperism
within his very own frontiers and thus to find yet another opportunity
to appear in the public eye. How he must have rejoiced to hear the news
that he too now possessed his "own" Royal Prussian pauperism!
Our "Prussian" is even less fortunate when he denies that
"religious sentiment" was responsible for the Royal Order in Council.
Why is "religious sentiment" not the source of this Order in Council?
Because the latter "was the very sober expression of Christian statesmanship,"
a "sober" expression of the doctrine whose "only remedy, the good intentions
of Christian hearts... does not permit any obstacles to stand in its way."
Is not religious sentiment the source of Christian statesmanship?
Is it not true that a doctrine which possesses a universal panacea in the
good intentions of Christian hearts is founded on religious sentiments?
Is it true that the expression of religious feelings ceases to be the expression
of religious feelings ceases to be the expression of religious feelings
if it is sober? I would go even further! I would maintain that any
religious feelings that contest the ability of "the state and the authorities"
to "remedy great evils" while they themselves seek a cure in the "union
of Christian hearts" must be conceited and drunk in the extreme.
Only very drunk religious feelings could locate the course of the
evil – as does our "Prussian" – in the absence of the Christian spirit.
Such feelings alone could suggest that the authorities should resort to
"exhortation" as the only means whereby the Christian spirit might be fortified.
According to the "Prussian" Christian sentiment is the sole end
aim of the Order in Council. Religious sentiment, when it is drunk, of
course, not when it is sober, considers itself to be the only good. Whenever
it comes across evil it attributes it to its own absence, for, if
it is the only good, then it alone can create the good. Therefore, an Order
in Council, dictated by religious feelings, logically enough itself decrees
religious feelings. A politician with sober religious feelings would
not attempt to find a "cure" for his own "perplexity" in the "exhortations
of the pious Preacher to cultivate Christian sentiments."
How then does out so-called "Prussian" demonstrate to the Reforme
that the Order in Council is not an emanation of religious feeling? By
describing it as an emanation of religious feeling. What insight into social
movements can be expected from such an illogical mind? Let us listen
to him gossiping about the relationship of German society
to the workers’ movement and social reform in general.
Let us distinguish – as our "Prussian" fails to do –
let us distinguish between the various categories subsumed by the expression
"German society"; government, bourgeoisie, the press and finally the workers
themselves. These are the various masses we are concerned with here.
The "Prussia" merges them all into one mass and condemns them en masses
from his exalted standpoint. According to him German society has
"not even had a presentiment of its reform."
Why is it so lacking in this instinct? Because, the Prussian explains,
In an unpolitical country like Germany it is not possible to
represent the sporadic misery of the factory districts as a matter of universal
concern, let alone as a disaster to the whole civilized world. As far as
the Germans are concerned, these events belong in the same category as
any local shortage of food or water. In accordance with this the
King views it as a failure of the administration or of charitable
institutions.
The "Prussian thus explain this absurd interpretation of the plight
of the workers with reference to the peculiar nature of an unpolitical
country.
It will be granted that England is a political nation.
It will further be granted that England is the nation of pauperism;
the work itself is English in origin. An examination of the situation in
England is thus the most certain way whereby to discover the relation
of a political nation to pauperism. In England the misery
of the workers is not sporadic but universal; it is not confined
to the factory districts but extends to country districts too. Workers’
movements are not in their infancy but have recurred periodically for close
on a century.
What then is the view of pauperism taken by the English bourgeoisie
and the government and the press concerned with it?
In so far as the English bourgeoisie regards pauperism as the
fault of politics, the Whigs put the blame on the Tories and the
Tories put it on the Whigs. According to the Whigs, the chief cause of
pauperism is to be discovered in the monopoly of landed property property
and in the laws prohibiting the import of grain. In the Tory view, the
source of the trouble lies in liberalism, in competition and the excesses
of the factory system. Neither party discovers the explanation in politics
itself but only in the politics of the other party. Neither party would
even dream of a reform of society as a whole.
The most decisive expression of the insight of the English into
pauperism – and by the English we mean the English bourgeoisie and the
government – is to be found in English Political Economy – i.e.,
the scientific reflection of the state of the economy in England.
MacCulloch, a pupil of the cynic Ricardo and one of the best and
most celebrated of the English economists, is familiar with the present
state of affairs and has no overall view of the movement of bourgeois society.
In a public lecture, amidst applause, he had the temerity to apply to political
economy what Bacon had said of philosophy:
The man who suspends his judgment with true and untiring wisdom, who
progresses gradually, and who successively surmounts obstacles which impede
the course of study like mountains, will in time reach the summit of knowledge
where rest and pure air may be enjoyed, where Nature may be viewed in all
her beauty, and whence one may descend by an easy path to the final details
of practice. [6]
The pure air of the pestilential atmosphere of English basement
dwellings! The great natural beauty of the fantastic rags in which
the english poor are clothes and of the faded, shrivelled flesh of the
women worn out by work and want; the children lying on dung-heaps; the
stunted monsters produced by overwork in the mechanical monotony of the
factories! The most charming final details of practice: prostitution,
murder, and the gallows!
Even that section of the English bourgeoisie which is conscious
of the dangers of pauperism regards both the dangers and the means for
remedying them not merely as particular problems, but – to put
it bluntly – in a childish and absurd manner.
Thus, for example, in his pamphlet "Recent Measures for the Promotion
of Education in England", Dr Kay reduces the whole question to the neglect
of education. It is not hard to guess the reason! He argues that the
worker’s lack of education prevents him from understanding the "natural
laws of trade", laws which necessarily reduce him to pauperism.
For this reason, the worker rises up in rebellion. And this rebellion may
well "cause embarrassment to the prosperity of the English manufactures
and English commerce, impair the mutual confidence of businessmen
and diminish the stability of political and social institutions."
This is the extent of the insanity of the English bourgeoisie
and its press on the subject of pauperism,the national epidemic of England.
Let us assume for the moment that the criticism levelled by our
"Prussian" at German society are justified. Is it true that their
explanation is to be found in the unpolitical nature of Germany?
But if the bourgeoisie of an unpolitical Germany is unable to achieve
clarity about the general significance of universal misery, of misery whose
general meaning has become apparent partly by virtue of its periodic recurrence
in time, partly by its extension in space and partly by the failure of
every attempt to eliminate it.
The "Prussian" heaps further obloquy on the unpolitical
nature of Germany because the King of Prussia has located the cause of
pauperism in "failures of the administration or of charitable institutions"
and has therefore looked to administrative or charitable measures
to provide a cure for pauperism.
Is this analysis peculiar to the King of Prussia? Let us again
look briefly at England, the only country where these has been any large-scale
action against pauperism worth mentioning.
The present English Poor Laws date from Act 43 of the reign of
Elizabeth. [7] how does this legislation propose to deal
with pauperism? By obliging the parishes to support their own poor workers,
by the Poor Rate, by legal charity. Charity dispensed by the administration:
this has been the method in force for two centuries. After long and painful
experiences what view is adopted by Parliament in its Bill of Amendment
in 1834?
It begins by explaining the frightening increase in pauperism
as the result of a "defect in the administration."
It therefore provides for a reform of the administration of the
Poor Rate by officials of the different parishes. Unions of about
20 parishes are to be set up under a central administration. On a specified
day, the Board of Guardians, consisting of officials elected by t he tax-payers,
are to assemble at the headquarters of the union and decide on eligibility
for relief. These Boards are presided over and controlled by government
representatives from the Central Commission at Somerset House, the Ministry
of Pauperism, to use the phrase aptly coined by a Frenchman [Eugen
Buret]. The capital so administered is almost equal to the sum required
by the War Office in France. The number of local offices thus maintained
amounts to 500 and each of these local offices keeps at least 12 official
busy.
The English Parliament did not rest content with the formal
reform of the administration.
The chief cause of the acute condition of English pauperism
was found to lie in the Poor Law itself. It was discovered that
charity, the legal method of combating social evils, itself fostered social
evils. As for pauperism in general, it was held to be an eternal
laws of nature in accordance with Malthus’ theory:
Since the population threatens unceasingly to exceed the available
means of subsistence, benevolence is folly, an open encouragement to misery.
The state, therefore, can do nothing but leave misery to its fate, and,
at best, facilitate the death of those in want.
The English Parliament combined this philanthropic theory with the view
that pauperism is a state of misery brought on by the workers themselves,
and that in consequence it should not be regarded as a misfortune to be
prevented but as a crime to be suppressed and punished.
In this way, the system of the workhouse came into being – i.e.,
houses for the poor whose internal arrangements were devised to deter
the indigent from seeking a refuge from starvation. In the workhouses charity
has been ingeniously combined with the revenge of the bourgeoisie
on all those wretched enough to appeal to their charity.
Initially England attempted to eliminate pauperism by means of
charity and administrative measures. It then came to regard
the progressive increase in pauperism not as the inevitable consequence
of modern industry but rather as the consequence of the English
Poor Law. It construed the state of universal need as merely a particular
feature of English law. What was formerly attributed to a deficiency
of charity was now ascribed to the superabundance of charity.
Lastly, need was regarded as the fault of the needy and punishable as such.
The general lesson learnt by political England from its experience
of pauperism is none other than that, in the course of history and despite
all administrative measures, pauperism has developed into a national
institution which has inevitably become the object of a highly ramified
and extensive administrative system, a system however which no longer
sets out to eliminate it, but which strives instead to discipline
and perpetuate it. This administrative system has abandoned all
attempts to stop pauperism at its source through positive measures; it
confines itself to preparing a grave for it with true police mildness as
soon as it erupts on the surface of officialdom. Far from advancing beyond
administrative and charitable measures, the English state has regressed
to a far more primitive position. It dispenses its administrative gifts
only to that pauperism which is induced by despair to allow itself
to be caught and incarcerated.
Thus far the Prussian" has failed to show that the procedure adopted
by the King of Prussia has any features peculiar to it. But why,
our great man now exclaims with rare naivety: "Why does the King
not decree the education of all deprived children at a stroke?"
Why must he turn first to the authorities with requests for their plans
and proposals?
Our all-too-clever "Prussian" will regain his composure when he
realizes that in acting thus the King of Prussia is just as unoriginal
as in all his other actions. In fact, he has taken the only course of action
open to the head of a state.
Napoleon wished to do away with begging at a single stroke.
He instructed his officials to prepare plans for the abolition of beggary
throughout the whole of France. The project was subject to delay; napoleon
became impatient, he wrote to Cretet, his Minister of the Interior; he
commanded him to get rid of begging within a month. He said,
One should not depart this life without leaving traces which commend
our memory to posterity. Do not ask me for another three or four months
to obtain information; you have young advocates, clever prefects, expert
engineers of bridges and roads. Set them all in motion, do not fall into
the sleepy inactivity of routine office work.
Within a few months, everything was ready. On July 5, 1808, the law to
suppress begging was enacted. By what means? By means of the depots
which were so speedily transformed into penal institutions that in a short
time the poor man could gain access to one only via a police court.
Nevertheless, M. Noailles du Gard, a member of the legislative body, was
able to declare,
Eternal gratitude to the hero who has found a refuge for the needy
and the means of life for the poor. Childhood will no longer be abandoned,
poor families will no longer lack resources, not will workers go without
encouragements and employment. Nos pas ne seront plus arretes par l’image
degoutante des infirmites et de la honteuse misere. [We will no longer
be hampered by the disgusting sight of illness and shameful misery.]
This last cynical statement is the only truth contained in this eulogy.
If Napoleon can turn to his advocates, prefects, and engineers
for counsel, why should not the King of Prussia turn to his authorities?
Why did not Napoleon simply decree the abolition of beggary at
a stroke? This question is just as valid as that of our "Prussian"
who asks: "Why does the King not decree the education of all deprived children
at a stroke?" Does the "Prussian" understand what the King would have to
decree? Nothing over that the abolition of the proletariat. To educate
children it is necessary to feed them and free them from the need
to earn a livelihood. The feeding and educating of the entire future
proletariat, would mean the abolition of the proletariat and pauperism.
For a moment the Convention had the courage to decree
the abolition of pauperism, not indeed "at a stroke", as the "Prussian"
requires of his King, but only after instructing the Committee of Public
Safety to draw up the necessary plans and proposals and after the latter
had made use of the extensive investigation by the Constituent Assembly
into the state of poverty in France and, through Barer, had proposed the
establishment of the "Livre de la beinfaisance nationale" [Book of national
charity], etc. What was achieved by the decree of the Convention? Simply
that there was now one decree more in the world and that one year
later starving women besieged the Convention.
The Convention, however, represented the maximum of political
energy, political power and political understanding.
No government in the whole world has issued decrees
about pauperism at a stroke and without consulting authorities.
The English Parliament even sent emissaries to all the countries in Europe
in order to discover the different administrative remedies in use. But
in their attempts to come to grips with pauperism every government has
struck fast at charitable and administrative measures or
even regressed to a more primitive stage than that.
Can the state do otherwise?
The state will never discover the source of social evils
in the "state and the organization of society", as the Prussian expects
of his King. Wherever there are political parties each party will attribute
every defect of society to the fact that its rival is at the helm
of the state instead of itself. Even the radical and revolutionary politicians
look for the causes of evil not in the nature of the state but in
a specific form of the state which they would like to replace with
another form of the state.
From a political point of view, the state and the
organization of society are not two different things. The state
is the organization of society. In so far as the state acknowledges the
existence of social grievances, it locates their origins either
in the laws of nature over which no human agency has control, or
in private life, which is independent of the state, or else in malfunctions
of the administration which is dependent on it. Thus England finds
poverty to be based on the law of nature according to which the
population must always outgrow the available means of subsistence. From
another point of view, it explains pauperism as the consequence
of the bad will of the poor, just as the King of Prussia explains
it in terms of the unchristian feelings of the rich and the Convention
explains it in terms of the counter-revolutionary and suspect attitudes
of the proprietors. Hence England punishes the poor, the Kings of
Prussia exhorts the rich and the Convention heheads the proprietors.
Lastly, all states seek the cause in fortuitous
or intentional defects in the administration and hence the cure
is sought in administrative measures. Why? Because the administration
is the organizing agency of the state.
The contradiction between the vocation and the good intentions
of the administration on the one hand and the means and powers at its disposal
on the other cannot be eliminated by the state, except by abolishing itself;
for the state is based on this contradiction. It is based on the contradiction
between public and private life, between universal
and particular interests. For this reason, the state must confine
itself to formal, negative activities, since the scope of its own
power comes to an end at the very point where civil life and work begin.
Indeed, when we consider the consequences arising from the asocial nature
of civil life, of private property, of trade, of industry, of the mutual
plundering that goes on between the various groups in civil life, it becomes
clear that the law of nature governing the administration is impotence.
For, the fragmentation, the depravity, and the slavery of civil society
is the natural foundation of the modern state, just as the civil
society of slavery was the natural foundation of the state in antiquity.
The existence of the state is inseparable from the existence of slavery.
The state and slavery in antiquity – frank and open classical antitheses
– were not more closely welded together than the modern state and
the cut-throat world of modern business – sanctimonious Christian
antithesis. If the modern state desired to abolish the impotence
of its administration, it would have to abolish contemporary private
life. And to abolish private life, it would have to abolish itself,
since it exists only as the antithesis of private life. However,
no living person believes the defects of his existence to be based
on the principle, the essential nature of his own life; they must
instead be grounded in circumstances outside his own life. Suicide
is contrary to nature. Hence, the state cannot believe in the intrinsic
impotence of its administration – i.e., of itself. It can only
perceive formal, contingent defects in it and try to remedy them. If these
modification are inadequate, well, that just shows that social ills are
natural imperfections, independent of man, they are a law of God,
or else, the will of private individuals is too degenerate to meet the
good intentions of the administration halfway. And how perverse individuals
are! They grumble about the government when it places limits on freedom
and yet demand that the government should prevent the inevitable consequences
of that freedom!
The more powerful a state and hence the more political
a nation, the less inclined it is to explain the general principle
governing social ills and to seek out their causes by looking at
the principle of the state – i.e., at the actual organization
of society of which the state is the active, self-conscious and official
expression. Political understanding is just political understanding
because its thought does not transcend the limits of politics. The sharper
and livelier it is, the more incapable is it of comprehending social problems.
The classical period of political understanding is the French
Revolution. Far from identifying the principle of the state as the
source of social ills, the heroes of the French Revolution held social
ills to be the source of political problems. Thus Robespierre regarded
great wealth and great poverty as an obstacle to pure democracy.
He therefore wished to establish a universal system of Spartan frugality.
The principle of politics is the will. The more one-sided – i.e.,
the more prefect – political understanding is, the more completely it
puts its faith in the omnipotence of the will the blinder it is
towards the natural and spiritual limitations of the will,
the more incapable it becomes of discovering the real source of the evils
of society. No further arguments are needed to prove that when the "Prussian"
claims that "the political understanding" is destined "to uncover the roots
of social want in Germany" he is indulging in vain illusions.
It was foolish to expect the King of Prussia to exhibit a power
not possessed by the Convention and Napoleon combined; it was foolish to
expect him to possess a vision which could cross all political frontiers,
a vision with which our clever "Prussian" is no better endowed than is
his King. The entire declaration was all the more foolish as our "Prussian"
admits:
Fine words and fine sentiments are cheap, insight and successful
actions are dear; in this case they are more than dear, they
are quite unobtainable.
If they are quite unobtainable then we should acknowledge the efforts of
everyone who does what is possible in a given situation. For the rest I
leave it to the reader’s tact to determine whether the commercial jargon
of "cheap", "dear", "more than dear", "unobtainable", are to be included
in the category of "fine words" and "fine sentiments."
Even if we assume then that the "Prussian’s" remarks about the
German government and the German bourgeoisie – the latter is presumably
to be included in "German society" – are well-founded, does this mean
that this segment of society is more perplexed in Germany than in England
and France? Is it possible to be more perplexed than in England, for example,
where perplexity has been erected into a system? If workers’ uprisings
were to break out today all over England, the bourgeoisie and the government
would not have any better solutions than those that were open to them in
the last third of the 18th century. Their only solution is physical force
and since the efficacy of physical force declines in geometric proportion
to the growth of pauperism and of the proletariat’s understanding, the
perplexity of the English necessarily increases in geometric proportion,
too.
Lastly, it is false, factually false, that the German bourgeoisie
wholly fails to appreciate the general significance of the Silesian revolt.
In a number of town, the masters are making attempts to associate themselves
with the journeymen. All the liberal German papers, the organs of
the liberal bourgeoisie, are overflowing with statements about the organization
of labor, the reform of society, criticism of monopolies and competition,
etc. All as a result of the workers’ movements. The newspapers of Trier,
Aachen, Cologne, Wesel, Mannheim, Breslau, and even Berlin are publishing
often quite sensible articles on social questions from which our "Prussian"
could well profit. Indeed, letters from Germany constantly express surprise
at the lack of bourgeois resistance to social ideas and tendencies.
If the "Prussian" were more conversant with the history of the
social movement, he would have asked the opposite question. Why does the
German bourgeoisie attribute such relatively universal significance to
sporadic and particular problems? How are we to explain why the proletariat
should be shown such animosity and cynicism by the political
bourgeoisie and such sympathy and lack of resistance by the
unpolitical bourgeoisie?
Critical Notes on the Article: "The King of Prussia and Social Reform. By a Prussian"
Vorwarts!, No.64, August 10 1844
Now for the oracular utterances of the "Prussian" concerning the german workers.
The German poor (he observes wittily) are no cleverer than
the poor Germans, i.e., they never look beyond their
hearth, their factory or their district: they remain as yet untouched by
the all-pervading spirit of politics.
In order to compare the situation of the German workers with that of the
English and French workers, the "Prussian" should have compared the first
formation, the beginnings of the French and English workers’
movement with the new-born German movement. He fails to do this.
Hence his entire argument amounts only to the trivial observation that,
e.g., industry in Germany is less advanced than in England, or that
the start of a movement looks different from it later development. He had
wished to speak of the specific nature of the German workers’ movement,
but does not say a single word on the subject.
He should consider the matter from the correct vantage-point.
He would then realize that not a single one of the French and English
insurrections has had the same theoretical and conscious
character as the Silesian weavers’ rebellion.
This first of the Weaver’s Song [by Heinrich Heine], that
intrepid battle-cry which does not even mention hearth, factory, or district
but in which the proletariat at once proclaims its antagonism to the society
of private property in the most decisive, aggressive, ruthless and forceful
manner. The Silesian rebellion starts where the French and English
workers’ finish, namely with an understanding of the nature of the
proletariat. This superiority stamps the whole episode. Not only
were machines destroyed, those competitors of the workers, but also the
account books, the titles of ownership, and whereas all other movements
had directed their attacks primarily at the visible enemy, namely the industrialists,
the Silesian workers turned also against the hidden enemy, the bankers.
Finally, not one English workers’ uprising was carried out with such courage,
foresight and endurance.
As for the German workers’ level of education or capacity for
it, I would point to Weitling’s brilliant writings which surpass
Proudhon’s from a theoretical point of view, however defective they
may be in execution. What single work on the emancipation of the bourgeoisie,
that is, political emancipation, can the bourgeoisie – for all their philosophers
and scholars – put beside Weitling’s Guarantees of Harmony and Freedom?
If we compare the meek, sober mediocrity of German political literature
with this titanic and brilliant literary debut of the German workers;
if we compare these gigantic children’s shows of the proletariat
with the dwarf-like proportions of the worn-out political shoes of the
German bourgeoisie, we must predict a vigorous future for this German Cinderella.
It must be granted that the German proletariat is the theoretician
of the European proletariat just as the English proletariat is its economist
and the French its politician. It must be granted that the vocation
of Germany for social revolution is as classical as its incapacity
for political revolution. For just as the impotence of the German
bourgeoisie is the political impotence of Germany, so too the capacity
of the German proletariat – even apart from German theory – is the social
capacity of Germany. The disparity between the philosophical and political
development of Germany is nothing abnormal. It is a necessary disparity.
Only in socialism can a philosophical nation discover the praxis consonant
with its nature and only in the proletariat can it discover the
active agent of its emancipation.
For the moment, however, I have neither time nor the will to lecture
the "Prussian" on the relationship between German society and the social
revolution and to show how this relationship explains, on the one hand,
the feeble reaction of the German bourgeoisie to socialism and, on the
other hand, the brilliant talents of the German proletariat for socialism.
He can find the first rudiments necessary for an understanding of this
phenomenon in my Introduction to the Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy
of Right (in the Franco-German Yearbooks).
Thus the cleverness of the German poor stands in inverse
ration to the cleverness of the poor Germans. But people who make
every object the occassion for stylistic exercises in public are misled
by such formal activities into perverting the content, while for
its part the perverted content stamps the imprint of vulgarity upon the
form. Thus the "Prussian’s" attempt to discuss the workers’ unrest in Silesia
in formal antithesis has led him into the greatest antitheses to the truth.
Confronted with the initial outbreak of the Silesian revolt no man who
thinks or loves the truth could regard the duty to play schoolmaster
to the event as his primary task. On the contrary, his duty would rather
be to study it to discover its specific character. Of course, this
requires scientific understanding and a certain love of mankind, while
the other procedure needs only a ready-made phraseology saturated in an
overweening love of oneself.
Thy does the "Prussian" treat the German workers with such disdain?
Because he believes the "whole problem" – namely the plight of the workers
– "to have been as yet untouched by the all-pervading spirit of politics."
He dilates on his platonic love for the spirit of politics as follows:
All rebellions that are sparked off by the disasterous isolation
of men from the community and of their thoughts from social principles
are bound to be suppressed amid a welter of blood and incomprehension.
But once need produces understanding and once the political understanding
of the German discovers the roots of social need then even in Germany these
events will be felt to be the symptoms of a great upheaval.
First of all, we hope that the "Prussian" will permit us to make a stylistic
comment. his antithesis is incomplete. The first half asserts: Once need
produces understanding. The second half states: Once the political
understanding discovers the roots of social need. The simple
understanding of the first half of the antithesis becomes political
understanding in the second, just as the simple need of the first
half becomes the social need of the second. Why has out master of
style weighted the two halves of his antithesis so unequally? I do not
think that he has reflected on the matter. I shall reveal his correct instinct
to him. Had he written: "Once social need produces political
understanding and once political understanding has discovered the
roots of social need" no impartial reader could have failed to see
that this antithesis was nonsensical. To begin with, everyone would
have wondered why the anonymous author did not link social understanding
social need and political understanding with political need as the most
elementary logic would require? But let us proceed to the issue itself!
It is entirely false that social need produces political
understanding. Indeed, it is nearer the truth to say that political
understanding is produced by social well-being. Political understanding
is something spiritual, that is given to him that hath, to the man who
is already sitting on velvet. Our "Prussian" should take note of what M.
Michael Chevalier, a French economist, has to say on the subject:
In 1789, when the bourgeoisie rose in rebellion the only thing lacking
to its freedom was the right to participate in the government of the country.
Emancipation meant the removal of the control of public affairs, the high
civic, military, and religious functions from the hands of the privileged
classes who had a monopoly of these functions. Wealthy and enlightened,
self-sufficient and able to manage their own affairs, they wished to evade
the clutches of arbitrary rule.
We have already demonstrated to our "Prussian" how inadequate political
understanding is to the task of discovering the source of social need.
One last word on his view of the matter. The more developed and
the more comprehensive is the political understanding of a nation,
the more the proletariat will squander its energies – at least in the
initial stages of the movement – in senseless, futile uprisings that will
be drowned in blood. Because it thinks in political terms, it regards the
will as the cause of all evils and force and the overthrow
of a particular form of the state as the universal remedy. Proof: the
first outbreaks of the French proletariat. [8] The workers
in Lyons imagined their goals were entirely political, they saw themselves
purely as soldiers of the republic, while in reality they were the soldiers
of socialism. Thus their political understanding obscured the roots of
their social misery, it falsified their insight into their real goal, their
political understanding deceived their social instincts.
But if the "Prussian" expects understanding to be the result of
misery, why does he identify "suppression in blood" with "suppression in
incomprehension"? If misery is a means whereby to produce understanding,
then a bloody slaughter must be a very extreme means to an end.
The "Prussian" would have to argue that suppression in a welter of blood
will stifle incomprehension and bring a breath of fresh air to the understanding.
The "Prussian" predicts the suppression of the insurrections which
are sparked off by the "disasterous isolation of man from the community
and of their thoughts from social principles."
We have shown that in the Silesian uprising, there was no separation
of thoughts from social principles. That leaves "the disasterous isolation
of men from the community." By community is meant here the political
community, the state. It is the old song about unpolitical Germany.
But do not all rebellions without exception have their
roots in the disasterous isolation of man from the community? Does not
every rebellion necessarily presuppose isolation? Would the revolution
of 1789 have taken place if French citizens had not felt disasterously
isolated from the community? The abolition of this isolation was its very
purpose.
But the community from which the workers is isolated is
a community of quite different reality and scope than the political
community. The community from which his own labor separates him
is life itself, physical and spiritual life, human morality, human
activity, human enjoyment, human nature. Human nature is the true community
of men. Just as the disasterous isolation from this nature is disproportionately
more far-reaching, unbearable, terrible and contradictory than the isolation
from the political community, so too the transcending of this isolation
and even a partial reaction, a rebellion against it, is so much
greater, just as the man is greater than the citizen and human life
than political life. Hence, however limited an industrial revolt may be,
it contains within itself a universal soul: and however universal
a political revolt may be, its colossal form conceals a narrow
split.
The "Prussian" brings his essay to a close worthy of it with the
following sentence:
A social revolution without a political soul (i.e., without
a central insight organizing it from the point of view of the totality)
is impossible.
We have seen: a social revolution possesses a total point of view
because – even if it is confined to only one factory district – it represents
a protest by man against a dehumanized life, because it proceeds from the
point of view of the particular, real individual, because the community
against whose separation from himself the individual is reacting, is the
true community of man, human nature. In contrast, the political
soul of revolution consists in the tendency of the classes with no
political power to put an end to their isolation from the state
and from power. Its point of view is that of the state, of an abstract
totality which exists only through its separation from real
life and which is unthinkable in the absence of an organized antithesis
between the universal idea and the individual existence of man. In accordance
with the limited and contradictory nature of the political
soul a revolution inspired by it organizes a dominant group within society
at the cost of society.
We shall let the "Prussian" in on the secret of the nature of
a "social revolution with a political soul": we shall thus confide to him
the secret that not even his phrases raise him above the level of
political narrow-mindedness.
A "social" revolution with a political soul is either a
composite piece of nonsense, if by "social" revolution the "Prussian" understands
a "social" revolution as opposed to a political one, while at the
same time he endows the social revolution with a political, rather than
a social soul. Or else a "social revolution with a political soul" is nothing
but a paraphrase of what is usually called a "political revolution" or
a "revolution pure and simple." Every revolution dissolves the old order
of society; to that extent it is social. Every revolution brings
down the old ruling power; to that extent it is political.
The "Prussian" must choose between this paraphrase and
nonsense. But whether the idea of a social revolution with a political
soul is paraphrase or nonsense there is no doubt about the rationality
of a political revolution with a social soul. All revolution – the overthrow
of the existing ruling power and the dissolution of the old order – is
a political act. But without revolution, socialism cannot be made possible.
It stands in need of this political act just as it stands in need of destruction
and dissolution. But as soon as its organizing functions begin and its
goal, its soul emerges, socialism throws its political mask aside.
Such lengthy perorations were necessary to break through the tissue
of errors concealed in a single newspaper column. Not every reader possesses
the education and the time necessary to get to grips with such literary
swindles. In view of this does not our anonymous "Prussian" owe it
to the reading public to give up writing on political and social themes
and to refrain from making declamatory statements on the situation in Germany,
in order to devote himself to a conscientious analysis of his own situation?
NOTES
1. Marx note: Particular circumstances make
it necessary for me to declare that the present article is my first contribution
to Vorwarts!.
This two-part article was a reply to Marx’s former co-editor Arnold
Ruge, who was the anonymous "Prussian" who, in Vorwarts! No.60 had
written a piece generally playing down the Silesian weavers’ revolt and
calling for state-initiated reform to address their problems. Marx wrote
this to clarify his break with Ruge, criticize Ruge’s ideas of state reform,
and to make it very clear he was not the anonymous "Prussian." (The area
of the Rhine on which Marx was born had been ceded to Prussia after the
Napoleonic Wars.) Both parts were written in Paris, July 1844.
2. On June 4-6, 1844, Silesian weavers
rose up in the first historic worker-capitalist struggle Germany had ever
seen.
3. La Reforme: Parisian democratic
republican paper, from 1843-50.
4. Marx: Note the stylistic and grammatical
nonsense. "Neither the King nor German society has had any presentiment
of its reform." (To whom does "its" refer?)
5. Dusseldorf banquet: Prussian government
employees attended a sumptuous banquet held in Dusseldorf by liberals to
celebrate the Seventh Flemish Parliament. On July 18, 1843, Prussian king
Frederick William IV decreed state employees were now forbidden from attending
such Rhenish events.
6. Max is quoting bacon from t he French
translation (Geneva, Paris, 1825, pp.131-2) of John Ramsay MacCulloch’s
A Discourse on the Rise, Progress, Peculiar Objects and Importance of
Political Economy (Edinburgh, 1824).
7. Marx note: It is not necessary for
our purposes here to go back to the laborers’ Statute of Edward III.
8. First outbreaks of the French proletariat:
reference to the uprisings of the Lyons workers in November 1831 and April
1834.
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