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KARL MARX FREDERICK ENGELS
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COLLECTED WORKS VOLUME
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COLLECTED WO S
Volume 19
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KARL MARX FREDERICK ENGELS
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COLLECTED WORKS VOLUME
19
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,
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•
• •
•
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COLLECTED WO S
Volume 19
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MARX AND ENGELS: 1 86 1 -64
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INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS
I NTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS
NEW YORK
NEW YORK ,
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•
This volume has been prepared jointly by Lawrence & Wishart Ltd., London, International Publishers Co. Inc., New York, and Progress Publishers, Moscow, in colla boration with the Institute of Marxism-Leninism, Moscow. Editorial commissions:
I
GREAT BRITAIN : Eric Hobsbawm, John Hoffman, Nicholas Jacobs, Monty Johnstone, Martin Milligan, Jeff Skelley, Ernst Wangermann. USA: Louis Diskin, Philip S. Foner, James E. Jackson, Leonard B . Levenson, Betty Smith, Dirk J . Struik, William W. Weinstone USSR: for Progress Publishers - A. K. Avelichev, N . P. Karmanova, V . N . Sedikh, M . K. Shcheglova; Marxism-Leninism of Institute the for P. N . Fedoseyev, A. I . Malysh, L. I . Golman, M . P. Mchedlov, A . G. Yegorov. .
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C o n te n t s
Copyright © Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1 984 All rights reserved. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, electrical, chemical, mechani cal, optical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner.
Preface
WORKS January 1861-June 1864
•
1. F. Engels. German Movements ......................................................
..
2. K. Marx. The American Question in England ..............................
.
3. K. Marx. The British Cotton Trade ..............................................
.
4. K. Marx. The London Times and Lord Palmerston ....................
1 . Socialism -Collected works. 2. Economics Collected works. I . Engels, Friedrich, 1 820- 1 895. Works, English. 1975. I I . Title. H X 39.5. A 1 6 1 975 73-8467 1 335.4 ISBN 0-7 1 78-0 5 1 9-0 (v. 1 9)
7 17 21 27
6. K. Marx. The North American 'Civil War .....................................
.
32
.
43
.
53
.
57
8. K. Marx. The Crisis in England ..................................................... 9. K. Marx. British Commerce ...........................................................
1 988
.
3
5. K. Marx. The London Times on the Orleans Princes in America 7. K. Marx. The Civil War in the United States ...............................
•
Printed in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics in
XI-XX-VTIII
KARL MARX AND FREDERICK ENGELS
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Marx, Karl, 1 8 1 8- 1 883. Karl Marx, Frederick Engels: collected works.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10. K. Marx. Economic Notes ...............................................................
62
11. K. Marx. Intervention in Mexico ....................................................
66
12. K. Marx. The Intervention in Mexico ............................................
71
13. K. Marx. Monsieur Fould ...............................................................
79
1 4. K. Marx. France's Financial Situation .............................................
82
15. K. Marx. The Dismissal of Fremont ...............................................
86
16. K. Marx. The Trent Case ................................................................
89
17. K. Marx. The Anglo-American Conflict ......................................
92
..
18. K. Marx. The News and Its Effect in London ..............................
.
19. K. Marx. The Principal Actors in the Trent Drama ......................
95 101
VI
20. K. Marx. Controversy over the Trent Case ......................................
105
21. K. Marx. Progress of Feeling in England .......................................
110
22. K. Marx. The Crisis over the Slavery Issue ...................................
115
23. K. Marx. American Matters
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
117
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
120
25. K. Marx. The Washington Cabinet and the Western Powers .......
124
24. K. Marx. A Slander Trial
26. K. Marx. The Opinitm of the Newspapers and the Opinion of the People ........................................................................................
127
27. K. Marx. French News Humbug.-Economic Consequences of
� (3L]['
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
131
28. K. Marx. A Pro-America Meeting ....................................................
134
29. K. Marx. English Public Opinion ....................................................
137
30. K. Marx. More on Seward's Suppressed Dispatch ......................... ,
31. K. Marx. A Coup d'Etat by Lord John Russell .................................
32. K. Marx. Statistical Observations on the Railway System ............ : .
33. K. Marx. A London Workers' Meeting ..........................................
143 145 149 153
34. K. Marx. Anti-Intervention Feeling ................................................
157
35. K. Marx. On the Cotton Crisis
• • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
160
36. K. Marx. English ..............................................................................
163
37. K. Marx. The Parliamentary Debate on the Address .................... 38. K. Marx. The Mexican Imbroglio .................................................. 39. K. Marx. American Affairs 40. K. Marx. The
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Secessionists'
Friends
41. K. Marx and F. Engels. The American Civil War ...........................
178
186 186
II
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191 196
43. K. Marx. The English Press and the Fall of New Orleans ............
199
44. K. Marx. A Treaty Against the Slave Trade ..................................
202
45. K. Marx and F. Engels. The Situation in the American Theatre • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
204
46. K. Marx. English Humanity and America .....................................
209
Rams
Civil War
and the
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48. K. Marx. Chinese Affairs 49. K. Marx. A Scandal
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Ironclads
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216
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219
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
223
51. K. Marx. A Criticism of American Affairs .....................................
226
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K. Marx. Abolitionist Demonstrations in America .........................
K. Marx. A Meeting for Garibaldi ..................................................
57. K. Marx. Garibaldi Meetings.-The Distressed Condition of C:otton War kers ...............................................................................
58. K. Afarx. Comments on the North American Events ....................
-q. K. 1\larx. Bread Manufacture ......................................................... 60. K. Marx. The Situation in North America ..................................... :)
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()1. K. Marx. Symptoms of Disintegration in the Southern Confederacy " .............. ................. " ....................... '
' "
. ............... ... ... ... ......... ,
62. K. 1Vfarx. The Election Results in the Northern States .................... 63. K. Marx. The Dismissal of McClellan ............................................. 64.
K. Marx. English Neutrality.- The Situation in the Southern Stcltes ............... ...... ............. .............. ........................ . .. ... .............. . ' "
(is. K. A1arx. Letter to the Editors of the Berliner Reform ......................
66. F. Engels. Kinglake on the Battle of the Alma ............................... I ................................................................................... . ..... ........... ,
I II]
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
III ... ........... ........... ......... .......... ............ ...... .. .. ..... .............. .............. •
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67. F. Engels. Artillery News from America ....................................... ..
I .. ...... ... .. ...... ......... ..... .. .... .. ... ... ...... ............... ............ ............... ... ...
II
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68. K. JVJarx. Proclamation
on Poland by the German Workers'
Ed ucational Society in London ........................................................
69. F. Engels. The English Army .......................................................... I
II III
233 236 239 243 245 248 252 256 260 263 26G 270 273 274 275 278 281 289 289 293 296 298
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
301
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303
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
309
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• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
70. F. Engels. The Strength of the Armies in Schleswig ..................... •
•
71. K. Marx and F. Engels. Obituary ..................................................... ') ,_.
230
F. Engels. England's Fighting Forces as against Germanv ................ .
,
317 320 321
213
50. K. Marx. A Suppressed Debate on Mexico and the Alliance with France • • • •
Rise in the Price of Grain.-On the Situation in Italy ..................
55. K. Marx. Workers' Distress in England .......................................... :16. K. Marx. A Note on the Amnesty ..................................................
-
and
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
54.
182
• • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
47. F. Engels. The American
-"
�).').
172
I
42. K. Marx. An International Affaire Mires .......................................
:12. K. lHarx. Russell's Protest Against American Rucleness.-The
167
in the Lower House.-
Recognition of the American Blockade .......................................... .
of War
VII
Contents
Contents
•
FROM THE PREPARATORY "'fATERIALS
73. K. lWarx. Ground Rent ....................................................................
,129
74. K. Marx. Biographical Notes on Wilhelm Wolff .............................
335
Contents
VIII
A PPENDICES
75. Application by Marx for Restoration of His Prussian Citizen..................... ship . . . . . . . . . . ....................................................................
76. Marx's Statement on the Restoration of His Prussian Citizen. SIp h· ..................................................................................................
.
77. Marx's Statement on the Rejection of His Application for Restoration of His Prussian Citizenship
.........................................
78. Answer to Marx's Application for Restoration of His Prussian . C·Itlzensh'lp ......................................................................................
.
79. Marx's Application for Naturalisation and Right of Domicile in Berlin ....................................................................................... ........
80. Letter from Marx to Police President von Zedlitz
.........................
8l. Power of Attorney Given by Marx to Ferdinand Lassalle for the Restoration of His Prussian Citizenship
................... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
82. F. Engels. To the Directorate of the Schiller Institute
. . . ................
83. Power of Attorney Issued by Marx to Engels to Take Over Wilhelm Wolff's Estate
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ............
339
341
345
353
355
RODNEY LIVINGSTONE: Items 56, 73
359
PETER and BETTY ROSS: Items 8 1 , 82
357
360
363
NOTES AND INDEXES N otes
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .................................... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .............
Name Index
. . . . . . . ............. . . ......
..................................................................
Index of Quoted and Mentioned Literature Index of Periodicals Subject Index
. . . . ............................................
. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . ...... . . . .
. . ..........................................
. . . . . . . . . .. . . . .............. . . . . . . . . . ................ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..................
365 406
430
445 450
ILLUSTRATIONS United States of America on the eve of the Civil War of 1861-65 (map) 32-33
The course of military operations in the USA in 1861-1862 (map)
......
256-57
First page of Engels's manuscript of "The English Army" ....................
Beginning of Marx's notes for a lecture on ground rent ....................
TRANSLATORS:
299
331
-
H ENRY MINS: Items 1 3, 14, 23, 24, 32, 36, 47-49, 52, 54, 55, 57, 59, 6 1 , 62, 65, 66, 68, 69, 72, 75-80 SALO RYAZANSKAY A : Items 22, 58 VICTOR SCHNITTKE: Items 7 1 , 74 BARRIE SELMAN: Item 67
XI
Preface ,
Volume 1 9 of the Collected Works of M arx and Engels contains articles, letters and documents written between the end of January 1 861 and the beginning of June 1 864, except for Engels' articles for The Volunteer Journal, for Lancashire and Cheshire, which are published in Volume 1 8 with other works of his on military subjects . The first half of the 1 860s saw the continued rise of the bourgeois-democratic and national liberation movements that began in Europe and America after the world economic crisis of IH5 7 . In Germany and I taly, which had yet to complete their bourgeois revolutions, the movement for national unity gained fresh impetus; in Russia peasant unrest continued, and revolu tionary ideas spread in progressive circles after the abolition of serfd om in February 1 86 1 ; in the USA civil war broke out betw een North and South ( 186 1 -65); there was growing opposition to the regime of the Second Empire in France; centrifugal tendencies intensified in the Austrian monarchy; in Mexico the bourgeois revolution triumphed; in China the Taiping peasant uprising entered its closing stage. The industrial revolution in the economically advanced coun tries led to a great increase in the numerical strength of the proletariat and far-reaching changes in its composition and class,
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Preface
consciousness. The world economic crisis of 1857, the first of such magnitude in the history of capitalism, and the strikes that followed, vividly demonstrated the opposing economic and political interests of proletariat and bourgeoisie. The working-class movement began to pursue an independent struggle and this created conditions for its liberation from the ideological influence of the bourgeoisie. I n the first half of the 1860s this showed itself in the growth of the British trade-union movement and the awakening of political activity of the British proletariat, in particular its demonstrations in defence of the national liberation movements and its opposition to the attempts by the British and French ruling classes to intervene in the US Civil War on behalf of the slave-owning Southern states. This process of working-class emancipation from bourgeois ideology was also expressed in the awakening of class consciousness among the French proletariat; in the attempts by the German workers to shake off the influence of the liberal bourgeoisie, and the foundation in 1 863 of the General Association of German Workers; and in the active support by workers of various nationalities of the struggle for greater freedom and democracy in the USA (against the South in the Civil War) and of Garibaldi in Italy. The workers' realisation that their interests were in opposition to those of the ruling classes, an increased sense of proletarian solidarity, and the strengthening of international contacts, finally led to the foundation of the International Working Men's Association (the First International) on September 28, 1 864. Marx's and Engels' theoretical work and political activities during these years were many-sided. As before, Marx's main concern was political economy. From August 1 86 1 to July 1 863 he wrote A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy; from the end of July or beginning of August 1 863, to the summer of 1864, he worked on Book I of Capital "The Process of Capitalist Production". Meanwhile, Engels continued with the theoretical development of the proletarian party's military strategy and tactics. At the same time they both pursued their interests in problems of philosophy and world history. At the end of the 1 850s, Marx and Engels began their attempts to restore old contacts and to establish new ones -with German, French, Polish and I talian revolutionary democratic emigrants in London , and above all with the working-class and democratic movements in Britain, Germany, France, Austria and the USA. These efforts, both to consolidate the forces of the working class and to establish contacts with progressive
Preface
XIII
dem ocratic circl es, were dictated by the gene ral revolutionary ups urge. Marx and Enge ls were above all guided by the objective inter ests ation of ) f the proletariat: the bourgeois-democratic transform legal of tion the crea and rica, Ame and pe Euro of s trie coun he con ditions for the deve lopm ent of the working-class and dem?crat . ( move men t. The revolution of 1 848- 1 849 had shown that m the nore econ omi cally dev elop ed capi talis t countries of Eur ope , the liberal bourgeoisie did not wan t, whi le the dem ocra tic and radical n utio evo � s geoi r bour the y to carr t, unfi ed prov sie geoi bour y pett . . . throu gh to the end . So in the 1 860 s the fulfI lmen t of thI� histonc s. clas kmg wor the of e the caus e mor and e mor g min beco was task Mar x and Eng els favoured the unification by revolutionary mea ns of Ger man y and I taly, and the tran sitio n to revo lutio nary met h ?ds of cond ucti ng the US Civi l War . They attached particular lm pOl'tance to the revolutionary �ovem ent in �rance and Russ ia, regarding Bon apa rtism and tsan sm as the ChIe f obstacles to the national liberation of the opp ress ed peo ples of Eur ope . The man y-sid ed activity by Mar x and Eng els duri ng this period is partly reflected in this volu me. Their journal! stic wor� . is represented mos t fully . Unti l Mar ch 1 862 Marx contmued wntmg for the progressive American bourgeois news pape r, the New York Tribune; from October 186 1 to December 1 862 he contributed to the Vien nese liber al news pape r Die Presse. Enge ls helped Marx in his work as corre spon dent for these news pape rs; furth ermo re, as has been ment ioned above, Enge ls wrote a great deal about military matters for the Engli sh magazine The Volunteer Journal, for Lancashire and Cheshire, and for the Germ an news pape r A llgemeine Militiir-Zeitung. A theme central to the journalistic writings of Marx and Engels during these years was the US Civil War, which they saw as a crucial turning-point in the history of the USA, and of overall progressive significance. Their articles provided the first systematic account of its history, its political and social ramifications, its economic consequences, and the diplomatic struggles that resulted not only in America, but in Europe and especially in Britain. Most of the works on this subject were written by Marx and published in Die Presse and the New- York Daily Tribune in IH61-62. For the American paper, Marx wrote mainly about the impact of the Civil War on Great Britain's economy, foreign policy and public opinion. Die Presse, which was read not only in Austria, but in Germany, carried articles mainly about the Civil War itself, its
� :
•
XIV
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Preface
character, motive forces and historical significance. Marx en deavoured to give the European reader more exact information, based on American sources. He wrote to Engels on April 28, 1 862 about the need to "disseminate correct views on this important matter in the land of the Teutons" (this edition, Vol. 4 1 ). In the very first articles for European readers- "The North American Civil War" and "The Civil War in the United States"-and in his article for the Tribune, "The American Question in England" , Marx demonstrated the groundlessness of the claims by the British bourgeois press ( The Times and other newspapers) that the war between North and South was not a war over slavery, but over tariffs, the political rivalry of North and South for supremacy in the Union and the like. For Marx the conflict between the Northern and Southern states was the struggle between " two social systems"- slavery and wage labour (p. 50). He regarded the Civil War as an inevitable consequence of the long struggle of the industrial North and the slave-owning South, a struggle which "was the moving power of its [America's] history for half a century" (p. 1 1 ). Marx saw this war as a form of bourgeois-democratic revolution, the inevitability of which was conditioned by economic and political factors and, above all, by the "growth of the North-West, the immense strides its population has made from 1 850 to 1 860" (p. 1 0). Analysis in depth of social-political relations in the United States throughout the first half of the 1 9th century enabled Marx to reveal in his articles the contradictory essence of American plantation slavery. A pre-capitalist form of exploitation, slavery was also closely linked with the world capitalist market; cotton produced by slave labour became one of the " monstrous pivots" of British indu stry (p. 1 9). Studying the conditions under which plantation slavery and its primitive technology could exist, Marx wrote: "The cultivation of the Southern export articles, cotton, tobacco, sugar, etc., carried on by slaves, is only remunerative as long as it is conducted with large gangs of slaves, on a mass scale and on wide expanses of a naturally fertile soil, which requires only simple labour" (p. 39) . Given the extensive nature of a plantation economy based on slave labour, unlimited reserves of free land were necessary, which resulted in the "continual expansion of territory and continual spread of slavery beyond its old limits" (p. 39). Analysis of the economic structure of the plantation economy and the conditions for its survival enabled Marx to expose the groundlessness of the claims by the bourgeois press about the
Southern al the (the of withdraw Secession the of ' nature ul f , e peac portray t to h e attempts from the Union), and to rebuff . , ales 'il . . h a ng ts h e f ' d" d IVI I u g m ua defend t as South the of ners e-ow : slav 's from the encroachments of the Federal Government. Marx " SI,ltC. stre ssed that it was the Southern Can fed eracy th at " assumed t he ;)ffensive in the Civil War" (p. 43). He repeatedly no�ed that the Sec ession was a form of aggression by the slave-ownmg planters . '11st the lawful governm ent, that the "war of the Southern :,If·';,11 c ; o nfederacy is in the true sense of the word a war of conquest . f'or warned agamst He . 49) (p. t IH' sj>read and perpetua tion of slavery" . g he real danger of slavery spreadm all over t he Repu bl'Ie: "Th e � lave system would infect the whole .union" (p. 50). Marx showed that the perpetuation and further spread of slavery would have fatal social consequences. " In the Northe:n States, where Negro slavery is in practice unworkable, the whIte working class would gradually be forced down t.o the level of helotry" (p. 50). In the Southern states, he pomted out, the numerically small slave-owning oligarchy was opposed by the disadvantaged "poor whites", whose numbers "have been constantly growing through concentration . of landed property" (p. 40). Th �se declasse groups of the populatIOn, corrupted by the slave-�wnmg ideology, coul? only be kept in subjection by flattery of theIr own hopes of obtaining new territory and by "the prospect of one day becoming slaveholders themselves" (4 1). Marx and Engels repeatedly emphasised that th� existenc� of slavery was retarding the development of t�e Amenca� Wor�I�1g class movement, was serving as a foundatIOn for the mtenslfred exploitation of the free workers of the North, and was a threat to the constitutional rights of the American workers. Marx showed that although slavery partially facilitated the development of capitalism in the USA as some of t�e huurueoisie in the North were living off the trade m cotton and other products of slave labour-it was becommg more and more incompatible with the capitalist development of the Northern states. It was the problem of slavery, as Marx emphasised, that was at the root of the US Civil War: "The whole movement was and is based ... on the slave question. Not in the sense of whether the slaves within the existing slave states shou ld be emancipated outright or not, but . . . whether the vast Territories of the republic should be nurseries for free states or for slavery' " (p. 4�). C sing a wealth of factual material, Marx was already pointing out in his first articles on the US Civil War that the more '
'
.
to
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advanced social system, namely, that of the Northern States, must win. While noting the progressive nature of the war as fought by the North, he also condemned the indecision and vacillation shown in the war by U nion bourgeois circles in proclaiming the abolition of slavery. In his articles "The Dismissal of Fremont", "A Criticism of American Affairs" and others, Marx showed the·, reluctance of the bourgeois Republican Government to make it a popular and revolu·tionary war. This, in his opinion, showed up the limitations of American bourgeois democracy. The Lincoln government "fights shy of every step that could mislead the 'loyal' slaveholders of the border states" (p. 87), as a result of which the war as a struggle against slavery was being blunted (p. 227). It was this policy of the Northern government during the initial stages of the war that Marx saw as the main reason for the military failures of the U nionists, in spite of their superiority in economic potential and in manpower reserves. In a series of articles written in 1 862, Marx indicated the process of differentiation in the ruling Republican Party under the . influence of the growth and consolidation of the forces favouring ; the immediate abolition of slavery ("Abolitionist Demonstrations in ' America", "The Election Results in the Northern States"). He noted changes in the balance of forces within the Republican Party, forced under pressure from the general public to take a more decisive stand over the emancipation of the slaves. After analysing the results of the voting in the states, Marx demon strated that the failure of the Republicans at the elections was caused above all by the discontent of the farmers in the North with the former methods of conducting the war and by a shift to the left of the masses who followed the Republicans: "They came out emphatically for immediate emancipation, whether for its own sake or as a means of ending the rebellion" (p. 264). Summing up the first stage of the war, Marx wrote: "So far, we have only witnessed the first act of the Civil War-the constitutional waging of war. The second act, the revolutionary waging of war, is at hand" (p. 228). Marx and Engels followed the increasingly revolutionary nature of the Civil War closely and noted the revolutionary-democratic measures to which the Lincoln government was compelled to resort and which ultimately led to the victory of the North. Marx attached special importance to two social measures: the Homestead Act, which gave a great many American farmers the chance of acquiring land, and the Proclamation that the black slaves of the rebellious 'planters were free. Marx valued the latter as "the most .
XVII
f o t en � m s li b ta es e th ce n si ry to erican his .m portant document in Am f o p u g n an te e th to t n u o m ta an "t as Ihe Union",pointing out.that. it w p. 25 0 ). ( t " n o tl tu su n . co an . . ic er . m A ld o e h r fo ln c n L ed Cl tl cn x ? ar M � � , ar t In the initial period of the w r the bourgeOIs h.mltatlons of fo d an , n io is ec d in d an n io at \'acill s e It ). 7 8 . p ., g e. e, (s ts en tm ac en al � g � le d an s re su ea m is h f o in certa s t en m rn ve o g ln c m L e th at th , er ? ev w o h , w o sh e m lu vo e th i d n x ar M f o e d tu ti at � e th ed g an ch n ly revolutionary measures graduallf. In October 1 862 , Marx gav? hIgh E n rels to the President himse e th m ce la p 's ln co in "L at th g n ri � e to Lincoln's activity, decla f o at th t to ex n e b . .. l il w d in k an m f o d h���ry of the United States an Washington" (p. 2 5 0 ). . cIes, the ti ar se es Pr . te D d an e n bu ri In their New-York Daily .T e th � o le g g ru st e th p el h to d ie tr at ri ta le ro p e th f o s er lead t en st SI n co re o m d a er ll fu a r o � � revolutionary-democratic for�es ncal tasks durm e h T . a w e th g � to is h g in ss re p e th to n o ti solu as w h IC h w y, ac cr o em d y ar n o ti lu consolidation of the forces of revoft, was regarded ?y Marx and le e th to is eo rg u o b e th .can workmg class. The g in ush en m A e th r fo sk ta t an rt o p im an kngels as a d la p h rt o N e th f o n o ti la u farming and working-class pop nst slavery. Marx wr te: ��New ai ag le g g ru st e th in � body of . ded the mam le ro r o aj m VI ro p e av h h ic h w t, es w h rt o N England and the a t en m rn ve o g e th n o e rc fo to the army are determined of an g o sl etl at b e th e b ri sc in to evolution�ry kind of warfare andpan x ar M ). 8 2 2 . (p ' er n an b d le g -s �Abolition of Slav�ry' on the star n of : 'the p rt:l s of the �orth noted that although the consolidatioof prmCl. ple� , �I.e. onhr�ed �, are bemg which are consistent in point s es el th er ev n a �� ey th , ly ow sl ry ve ce la Abolitionists, takes p . ) 23 . (I? ts � en ev y b d n ou pushed .. . into the foregr ck I B e th f o n t p CI � tI ar p e th y b � re � o � Marx and Engels set great st y IC O p e th ed Cl tl cn ly � re ve se d masses in the liberation struggle an "Negro questi�on". Fearmg of the Northern states over the at ot n l u co t en n er ov g ? an ic � revolutionary disturbances, the Amer t to admIt e th to m s ck la B o n r o first make up its mind whether h rt o N e th f o m ar e th to y army. The recruitment of Blacks in e th n o ce en lu � m s u o d n em tr a � would, in Marx's opinion, have had e th d se ea cr m ly ab er d SI n co e av h . course of the war; it would le g sm A . th u o S e th f o ar re e North's chances b y weakening th a ve ha ld ou ' : , 62 1 7, t us � ug � A Black regiment, he wrote on . 1) � . ol V , n Io It ed IS h (t s" ve er .mto bemg remarkable effect on Southern n t h g u ro b rs ce fi of ew n e th of n io at m Marx had a high esti ly al tu ac es on e th e er w ey th ce in the course of the Civil War, sin d an ee fr es av sl e th g n ri la ec d , n io it solving the problem of abol
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dem and ing that they be a rme d (see this volume, pp. 1 1 5- 1 6). Even early in the Civil W ar, Mar x perceived the sQcial-economic factors that sl��sequently, after the victory of the Republicans an � th� �bo.htlO.n of slav ery , favoured the preservati�:m ?f raCIal cliscnmmatlOn and of national and social oppressIOn m the USA . Marx stressed th e dire ct interest of the com mercial and finance bourgeoisie in preservin g the rem nan ts of slave own ersh ip. In his article, "The Election Res ults in the Nor ther n Stat es", he wrote that it was New York, "th e seat of the Am erican money market and full of hol der s of mortgages on Southern plantations", a city "actively engaged in the slave trade until recently", that had been, immediately before and during the Civil War, the mai n bulwark of the. Democratic party (p. 263 ). Much space. m ��rx's and Eng els' articles on the Civil W�� is taken up by Its mIlI tary as pec ts. Eng els pointed out the deCISIVe role of the masses an d the interrelation of economic, political and mor al factors in t�e l1lilitary operations. "Th e Am erican Civil War," he wrote, "gIven the inventive spirit of the nation and the high technical level of engineering in America, would lead to great advances . . . in the technical side of warfare . . . " (p. 289 ). At the sam e time, while acknowle dgi ng the role of war in technical development, Marx and Enge ls condemned the social role of the "hu ma n slaughter industry " (see letters fro m Marx to Eng els, July 7, 1 866, and Engels to Marx, July 1 2 , 1 866, this edition, Vol. 42) . In his article, "A:tilI�ry New s from America", after analysing, on the evidence of mdlv id ual operations, the forms and methods of conducting. . the wa r, Eng els demonstrated the natural tendency of m.lhtary equipm ent to becom e obsolete very quic�ly . continual improvement. Study of the CIvil and the necessIty for ItS War enabled Engels to plot the ma in trends in the dev elo pm ent of artillery, in the art of fortification and especially in the develop �en � of th� navy,. and �() specify and elaborate certain points ma d.e m hIS ear lIer artIcles In The New American Cyclopaedia (see thIS edition, Vol . 1 8). Fundamentally sig.nificant, in particular, was Engels' forecast of the Predominance in future naval armed forces of armo�re� �esse ls �ith g un turrets (p. 291 ). In theIr Jomtly wntten articles, "The American Civil War", "The Situation in the American Theatre of Wa r" and oth ers , Marx and Engels developed the idea, important for military science, of the i.nfl�e�ce exerted by the character of a war on the methods by whICh It IS conduc ted . Ma rx and Eng els pointed out the negative role of the cadre officers und er Mc Cle llan who were
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etic Sym path
to the South. Marx wrote that there was a strong esprit de corps among them and that th�y were more or le�� close�y enemy camp. the In theIr des m with their old comra (OnI1ect ed . . . . : ,, the war must be waged m a stnctly busmess 1 e f as h'lon, wIth ' . I'k \le\\ . . ' regard to the restoration of the U mon on Its 0ld . baSlS, C()nstan t .'iIl I therefo re must above all be kept free from revolutio nary le" of (p. 1 79). princip s tendencies affecting matter tel �denci es and . . :\Iarx and Engels considered that the dlsmlss aI from t he N orth ern �r J11Y of reactionary officers sympathetic to the South was a military 1easure of the utmost priority. They also demonstrated that the :� rategic plan of the McClellan command (the North's "Anaconda Plan" envisaged a slowly contracting ring of troops round the rebellious slave-owning states) was not only intended to avoid a true reyolutionary war of the people, but was untenable in military terms (pp. 193-95). In the article "The American Civil War", Marx and Engels put forward their own strategic plan, taking into consideration the class content, the political and social aims of the war, and demanding re\"Olutionary methods of conducting it. This consisted of a decisive blow by concentrated forces against the vitally im portant ene�y centres and envisaged first and foremost the occupatIOn of Georgia, as a result of which the territory of the Confederation would be cut into two parts (pp. 1 94-95). The subsequent course of the war showed that this plan was the only right one. A turning point in military operations occurred and the North achieved final victory in 1865, but only after the Northern command had carried out a similar plan (General Sherman's "march to the sea") in the second half of 1 864 and had taken revolutionary measures the necessity of which Marx and Engels had been indicating all through 1 86 1 and _
.
1862.
The denunciation of bourgeois diplomacy and the reactionary designs of the ruling classes against the revolutionary democratic and national liberation movements were regarded by Marx and Engels as one of the most important tasks of the proletarian revolutionaries. The events of the US Civil War gave Marx the opportunity to denounce in his articles the foreign policy of the British ruling oligarchy which, in spite of B ritain's declared neutrality, was secretly supporting the Southern rebels and was preparing an armed intervention to help the slave-owners. In connection with the seizure in November 1 86 1 by an American warship of the British packet boat Trent with emissaries of the Confederacy on board, there was a real threat of armed conflict bet wee n Britain and the United States. In his articles "The " -
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Anglo-American Conflict", "Controversy over the Trent Case", "The Washington Cabinet and the Western Powers" and others, Marx irrefutably demonstrated the groundlessness of the argu ments put forward by British ruling circles and their allies on the continent, who were trying to use this incident as a pretext for unleashing a war on the side of the slave-owners. Marx and Engels considered that the attitude of the European and American proletariat to the US Civil War should be determined by the prospects of the revolutionary movement in Europe and America and that the war against slavery in the U. SA would increase the political activity of the working class. Regardmg an active influence on the foreign policy of the ruling classes as one of the most important tasks of the revolutionary proletariat, and as part of its general struggle for the liberation of the working people, Marx and Engels set great store by the demonstrations of the English workers against their government's intention to create a coalition of reactionary European states to provide armed help to the Sout? These demonstrations, in Marx's opinion, played a large part m educating the proletarian masses in the spirit of international solidarity and as a counterweight to the chauvinistic propaganda of the ruling classes, and, above all, of the Palmerston press. Marx demonstrated that the masses in Britain, France, Germany and, indeed, all Europe, considered the defence of the North as their cause the cause of freedom "now to be defended sword in hand, from the sordid grasp of the slaveholder" (p. 29). Marx's articles "The Opinion of the Newspapers and the Opinion of the People", "English Public Opinion", "A London Workers' Meeting", "Anti-Intervention Feeling" and others, taught the workers how to work out their own revolutionary line and stand up for it in international conflicts. Marx was particularly delighted by the actions of the British proletariat; he considered that "the English working class has won immortal historical honour for itself", hav�ng by means of mass protest meetings foiled the attempts of the rulmg classes to organise an intervention on behalf of the South, although the continuation of the US Civil War and also the crisis in the cotto� industry connected with it subjected "a million English workers to the most fearful sufferings and privations" (p. 297). Marx described the appalling poverty of the Lancashire weavers left unemployed by the closure of many cotton mills. He denounced the attempts by the ruling classes (the articles "On the Cotton Crisis", "Workers' Distress in England", etc.) to attribute the stagnation in the British cotton industry exclusively to th.e .cessation of the import of cotton from the USA as a result of the CIvIl War, to
measures of the North and to its blockade of the onist tecti o p the � Marx showed that the disastrous plight of this South. nist cesSiO . . se ' foremost caused by a cnsls. 0f overproductlOn .iD d ustrY was first and sy t�m condemned the path 0f socia tIC He ' 1 239). , � 62 160� . (P P . . tlon about 't' in Britain (pp. 241-42). Marx wrote With mdlgna c han) the inhuman selfishness of the . rul'mg. c1as�es, 0f the "stra�ge mdustnal and anstocracy " as to whICh · te" between the landed dISpU . class down the most, and wh'I:h �f the� of t hem grinds the workmg . is least obliged to do somethmg about the workers distress (p. 241). . . . . . The position of the Bntlsh workers dun?g the . US C�vIl �ar, their demonstrations in defence of the � tahan natronal hberatlOn movement and their stand on other Issues, enable? Marx to onclude that in the political life of Britain the actions of the �orking class were acquiring national significance for the first time since the defeat of Chartism. In his article, "Garibaldi Meetings ..The Distressed Condition of Cotton Workers", Marx wrote: "Anyone who has the slightest knowledge of English conditions and the attitude prevailing here knows, in addition, that any interfer�nce on the part of the present cabinet with the popular demonstratiOns can only end in the fall of the government" (p. 246). . Marx also noted that in its political demonstrations the workmg class was beginning to play an increasingly independent role, pursuing its aims and not acting simply as members of "the chorus" (p. 153). The demonstrations of the British proletariat in connection with international conflicts enabled Marx and Engels further to develop the theory of class struggle, to substantiate the position of the proletariat in problems of foreign policy and to define the strategic and tactical tasks of the proletarian party. Marx became still more convinced of his conclusion that even before the winning of political power, the working class, by influencing the foreign policy of the government of its own country, could compel it to renounce an aggressive course aimed at the enslavement of other peoples. As is known, this conclusion found expression in one of the first programme documents of the International, the Inaugural Address of the Working Men's International Association, written by Marx in October 1864 (see this edition, VoJ. 20). The problems of international relations and the colonial policy of the European powers are discussed in a group of articles about �he beginning of the Anglo-French-Spanish intervention in Mexico In 1861. ("The Intervention in Mexico", "The Parliamentary � ebate on the Address" and others). Marx disclosed the true alms of the participants in the "Mexican Expedition" and
,
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denounced its colonial character. Describing the intervention in Mexico as "one of the most monstrous enterprises ever chronicled in the annals of international history" (p. 7 1 ) , Marx stressed that the real purpose of the intervention was to render assistance to' the Mexican reactionaries in the struggle against the progressive ] uarez government, to consolidate the anti-popular party of the clericals with the aid of French and Spanish bayonets, and once again to provoke a civil war. In articles filled with deep sym pathy for the Mexican people and its liberation struggle, Marx sternly condemned the actions of the interventionists, who had per fidiously started a war against a peace-loving country under' the false pretence of a struggle against anarchy. The articles on the intervention in Mexico are a vivid manifestation of the irreconcilable struggle waged by Marx and Engels against colonialism and national oppression, against exploitation and the enslavement of economically backward and dependent countries by European states more developed in the capitalist sense. Interference by the "European armed Areopagus" in the internal affairs of American countries was seen by Marx as an attempt at the "transplantation of the H oly Alliance to the other side of the Atlantic" (p. 77). Marx also pointed out another danger associated with the Anglo-French-Spanish intervention. For Palmerston and Napoleon I I I , the Mexican intervention was a means of provoking an armed conflict with the United States. I n his articles " Progress of Feeling in England" , "The Mexican Imbroglio" and others, Marx denounced the efforts of the British ruling circles to use the events in Mexico as a pretext, and the territory of Mexico as a base of operations, for the interference of Britain and France in the US Civil War on the side of the Southern slave-owning states. "Decembrist France, bankrupt, paralysed at home, beset with difficulty abroad, pounces upon an Anglo-American War as a real godsend and, in order to buy English support in Europe, will strain all her power to support 'Perfidious Albion' on the other side of the Atlantic" (p. Ill). I n his articles "The London Times and Lord Palmerston" , "The I ntervention in Mexico" and others, Marx strips the mask off British diplomacy. Marx and Engels noted during this period an undoubted intensification of the counter-revolutionary role which bourgeois-aristocratic Britain had long played in international affairs. Britain's conversion in the 1 9th century into the "work shop of the world " , and her efforts to preserve her industrial and
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ly made her ruling classes a bulwar k of inevitab poly, mono J al ' . CO 011 . the world but over 'all pe Euro m only not n ,tio e J x posi ng the ag!?ressi ve fore ign p olicy of the Euro pean pow . . iOn ppress of cted at the_su -dIre France and a Austn , ritain ers-B other ement of the enslav and ents movem n io liberat l )/1a ,tl'( . na copies, Marx demon� trated .rhe grave. consequen ces of the les of the fo peop nsiOn l expa s loma c nt rnme gove ston � <;> 11er alJ Chin a, India, Persia , Afghamstan and other countnes (pp. 18-20,23, 7H 209, 2 1 6). �Iarx also paid attention to the social and political movements i n these countr ie s, especi ally i n his article "Chin ese Affair s" , i n which he discussed the causes and the contradictory nature of the Taiping movement. .I n this, M.a:x noted a combinatio n of revolu tionary tenden Cles- the stnvmg for the overthrow of the reactionary system and the domination of the alien Manchu rian dynasty-with conservative tendencies, the latter becoming especial ly pronounced in the last years of the Taiping state, within which a bureaucratic top layer had grown. Marx associated the conservative features of the movement with religious fanaticism, cruel customs inculcated in the army, the aggrandisement and even deification of the leaders, and "destruction without any nucleus of new construction " (p. 2 1 6). A large part of the volume is made up of newspaper articles which Marx and Engels wrote on European problems. The articles about the economic position of Britain and France show that i n analysing the internal and foreign policy of the European powers (and also of the USA), Marx and Engels were invariably guided by the principles of historical materialism. In analysing the state of industry in Britain and its prospects of further development and influence on the world market, Marx �ook into account the situation that had developed i n the cotton lI1du stry as a result of the blockade of the Southern states, the stopp ing of shipments of American cotton , and also the internal law s of capitalist production ("The Crisis in England" , "British Commerce", "Economic Notes", "On the Cotton Crisis" and others). Marx noted the growth of economic contradictions bet wee n the metropolitan country and its colonies, the attempts of the latter to resort for the defence of their economy to protection ism, which they " find . . . better suited to their interests" (p, I W). Examining the condition of the British working class, Marx not only disclosed the horrors of u nemployment among the cotton w orkers, but also described the ruthless capitalist exploitation of ,
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the workers, including children, in other branches of industry, and the inhuman working conditions in the baking industry (p. 254). He showed how in Britain, the country of machines and steam, there were branches of industry that had hardly experienced the influence of large-scale industry and in which obsolete techniques and heavy manual labour still predominated. Touching on the contradictory nature of technical progress under capitalism, Marx stressed that one of its positive sides was the supplanting of archaic, semi artisan forms of production organisation. "The triumph of machine made bread," he wrote, "will mark a turning point in the history of large-scale industry, the point at which it will storm the hitherto doggedly defended last ditch of medieval artisanship". (p. 255). Marx drew on various examples to illustrate the disgraceful relics of domination by the landed aristocracy in the social life of England (his article" A Scandal"), and the true essence of bourgeois democracy. In his article "A Suppressed Debate on Mexico and the Alliance with France", he disclosed the voting procedure in the House of Commons, which allowed it not to put to the vote any motion that was "equally irksome to both oligarchical factions, the Ins and the Outs (those in office and those in opposition)..." (p. 223). In his articles, "Economic Notes", "France's Financial Situation" and others, Marx analysed France's economic plight, revealing the causes of the financial, commercial and agricultural crisis and the growth of corruption; he demonstrated that the Bonapartist regime, with its predatory interference in the economy, was the cause of disruption in French finance and economy (pp. 83-84). In the autumn of 1861 Marx forecast that Napoleon III would seek a way out of his internal difficulties in foreign policy escapades (pp. 62-63, 83-84); the very next year, France took an active part in the punitive expedition against the Mexican Republic. In April 1861, in his article "An International Affaire Mires", Marx explained the participation of France in the military intervention as a necessity for sup porting "the gambling operations of certain rouge-et-noir politicians" (p. 198), i.e. the direct interest of the financial circles of the Second Empire, to extricate themselves by means of the Mexican escapade from the increasingly critical SItuation. During the period covered by this volume, Marx and Engels wrote a number of articles about the struggle for national unity in Germany and in Italy ("German Movements", "A Meeting for Garibaldi", "Garibaldi Meetings.-The Distressed Condition of
Cotton Workers" and others), advocating its pursuit by revolutio nary-democratic means. The struggle for unification in Germany and Italy by revolutionary means came up against resistance from reactionary forces in Germany itself, especially in Prussia and Austria, and also against countermeasures by the governments of other European powers, particularly Bonapartist France, which was endeavouring to keep Germany disunited and was actively obstructing the final unification of Italy. In his articles "The Strength of the Armies in Schleswig", "Artillery News from America", "England's Fighting Forces as against Germany", written in connection with the exacerbation of the conflict between Denmark and the German Confederation in 1863-1864, Engels analysed the military aspects of the country's unification from the viewpoint of the revolutionary camp's interests. Marx and Engels also regarded the Polish national liberation movement as closely associated with that in Germany. Written in connection with the Polish national liberation uprising of 1863-64, the "Proclamation on Poland by the German Workers' Educational Society in London" disclosed the significance of the uprising for the future of Germany. Marx's work on the theory of political economy is only indirectly represented in this volume in the articles on the economic position of Britain, France and the USA, and also in the manuscript, "Ground Rent". This is evidently a draft plan for one of the lectures on political economy that Marx delivered to the London German Workers' Educational Society at the end of the 1850s and the beginning of the 1860s. In it, Marx treated ground rent as the excess of the market price of the agricultural product over the cost of production. This definition echoes the corresponding formulations of the Theories of Surplus-Value (part of the above-mentioned ma�1Uscript of A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy on whICh Marx worked from August 1861 to July 1863) and Volume III of Capital, which he began writing at the end of summer, 1864. . In addition to the above-mentioned articles on military matters �y .Engels, the present volume contains his unfinished manuscript Kmglake on the Battle of the Alma". He attacks the nationalistic t�ndencies and prejudices typical of bourgeois military histo nography, expressed in the exaggerated portrayal of the arm�� forces of one's own country and in minimising the fighting quahtIes of the armies of other states. Engels debunked the myth, created by British military writers, about the invin cibility of the
•
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British troops during the Crimean War. The ultimate aim of Kinglake's book, writes Engels, was the "glorification, carried to absurdity, of the English army", for the sake of which he filled his work with "embellishments, rodomontades and conjectures" (p. 274). I n his manuscript "The English Army" , Engels, discussing the organisation, recruitment and training of the British armed forces, highlighted the conservative features of the British military system. He noted, in particular, the caste spirit prevalent in the officers' corps, the pernicious practice of selling commissions, the archaic forms of recruitment and the barbaric use of corporal punishment for breaches of discipline by the soldiers. Engels concluded that the customs of the British army were typical of the obsolescent regime of a bourgeois-aristocratic oligarchy and testified to the necessity for profound reforms, including radical military changes, in the country's social and political system. The Appendices to this volume include applications by Marx for the restoration of his Prussian citizenship after the 1861 Amnesty. These steps were taken by him in connection with the rise of the working-class movement and the approaching revolutionary crisis in Germany, so that he could return at the necessary moment to active political work in his homeland. The Berlin Police President rejected Marx's applications (p. 353). *
*
*
The volume contains 82 works by Marx and Engels, of which 52 were printed in Die Presse and 11 in the New-York Daily Tribune. Engels' article "England's Fighting Forces as against Germany" was published in the German Allgemeine Militiir-Zeitung, and three more works by Engels, "Artillery News from America " , " Kinglake on the Battle of the Alma" and "The English Army", also included in this volume, were intended for the same newspaper. Twenty-eight items are being published in English for the first time. Two items, "German Movements" and "British Commerce" , have never been reproduced in English since their publication by the New- York Daily Tribune. English publications of individual articles by Marx and Engels in various editions, especially in the collection The Civil War in the United States, London, 1937 and New York, 1937, are mentioned in the notes. Most of the articles in this volume were published unsigned in the New- York Daily Tribune; the articles in Die Presse were also
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blis hed anonym ously but, as a rule, with a special note -l ig . -Corr . " , "Von unserem Londoner Correspondenten " . The , t h�rshi p of the unsigned articles is confirmed by the correspon n ce between Marx and Engels, by cross references and also by docu ments. er th o W hen the articles were in prepara tion, the dates were checked ' nd most of the sources used by the authors were identified. The and each at in the end of article found be will work this of lts esu ;: the editorial notes. Headi ngs given by the editors of the volum e ets. ck ra b re a u sq in e 'Ir , Obvious errors discovered in the text, in personal and geo graph ical names, figures, dates and so on, have been silently �orrected, by reference to sources used by Marx and Engels. The perso nal and geographical names in the English texts are reprod uced as spelled in the originals, which were checked with 1 9th-ce ntury reference books; in translated articles, the modern spelling is given. The use of English words in the German text is indicated in the footnotes. In quoting from newspape rs and other sources, Marx sometimes gives a free rendering rather than the exact words . In this edition quotations are given in the form in which they occur in Marx's text. The volume was compiled, the greater part of the texts prepared and the preface and notes written by Yevgenia Dakhina. The articles from the New-York Daily Tribune were prepared and notes to them written by Alexander Zubkov. The volume was edited by Valentina Smirnova except the articles " Kinglake on the Battle of the Alma" , "The English Army" and "England's Fighting Forces as against Germany" which were prepared by Tatyana Vasilyeva and edited by Lev Golman. The name index and the index of periodicals were prepared by Tatyana Nikolayeva; the index of quoted and mentioned literature by Alexander Zubkov and the subject index by Marlen Arzumanov (Institute of Marxism-Leninism of the CC CPSU). The translations were made by Henry Mins (International Publishers), Rodney Livingstone, Peter and Betty Ross and Barrie � elrn �lI1 ( Lawrence & Wishart) and Salo Ryazanskaya and Victor ;hn:tt�e (Progress Publishers). Items 8, 10, 11, 19, 25-28, 30, 31, , 3- 3::> , 37, 40, 42, 46, 50 and 64 were reproduced from the ol!e ctio n The Civil War in the United States, International _ bli : hers, N. Y . , 1937. Items 6, 7, 15-17, 20, 39, 41, 43-45, 51, 60 and 63 were reproduced from the ' collection Marx and ngels on the United States, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1979. The tr a nsla tio ns, including those from the two collections, were ·
p.�; ��
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checked with the German and edited for the present edition by James S. Allen (International Publishers), Nicholas Jacobs (Law rence & Wishart) and Richard Dixon, Glenys Ann Kozlov, Tatiana Grishina and Victor Schnittke (Progress Publishers) and Norire Ter-Akopyan, scientific editor (USSR Academy of Sciences). The volume was prepared for the press by editors N adezhda Rudenko, Anna Vladimirova, and assistant editor Tatyana Ban nikova.
KARL M ARX and FREDERI C K EN GELS •
WORKS January 1861 -June 1 864
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Frederick Engels GERMAN MOVEMENTS I
The year 1 86 1 , it appears, has not yet troubles enough to bear. We have our Secessionist Revolution in America; there is the Rebellion in China 2 ; the advance of Russia in Eastern and Central Asia; the Eastern question, with its corollaries of the French occupation of Syria and the Suez Canal; the breaking up of Austria, with Hungary in almost open insurrection; the siege of Gaeta,3 and Garibaldi's promise of liberating Venice on the first of March; and last, but not least, the attempt to restore Marshal MacMahon to his ancestral throne of I reland.4 But all this is not enough. We are now promised, besides, a fourth Schleswig Holstein campaign." The King of Denmark,a in 1 85 1 , voluntarily entered into certain obligations to Prussia and Austria with regard to Schleswig. b He promised that the Duchy should not be incorporated with Denm ark; that its Representative Assembly should remain distinct from that of Denmark; and that both the German and Danish nationalities in Schleswig should receive equal protection. Beside , so far as regards Holstein, the rights 'o f its Representative thIS, Assembly were expressly guaranteed. U pon these conditions, the federal troops which had occupied Holstein were withdrawn. The Danish Government executed its promises in a most evasive Way, In Schleswig, the southern half is exclusively German ; in the northern half, all the towns are German, while the country people
;: }�rederick
V Il .- Ed, Frede nk R " Proclamation du roi de Danemark relative a I'organisation de la ro;archie danoise y compris les Duches de Schleswig, de Holstein et de Lauenbourg, signee e 8 jan v i er 1 852,- Ed, ,
4
Frederick Engels
speak a corrupted Danish dialect, and the written language, frorn time immemorial, has almost everywhere been German. By the ', consent of the population, a process of Germanization has been ' going on there for centuries; so much so that, with the exception ' of the most northerly border districts, even that portion of the ; peasantry who speak a Danish dialect (which is, however, so far distant from the written Danish as to be easily intelligible to the German inhabitants of the South), understand the written High German better than the written Danish language. After 185 1 , the . Government divided the country into a Danish, a German, and a : mixed district. In the German district, German; in the Danish district, Danish was to be the exclusive official language of the ' Government, the courts of law, the pulpit, and the schools. In mixed districts, both languages were to be equally admissible. '" This looks fair enough, but the truth is that, in establishing the Danish district, the written Danish language was forced upon a population the great majority of whom did not even understand it, and only desired to be governed, tried, educated, christened, ' and married in the German language. However, the now opened a regular crusade for the weeding out of all traces of ' Germanism from the district, forbidding even private tuition in " families in any other than the Danish language; and sought at the " same time, by more indirect means, in the mixed district to give the Danish language the preponderance. The opposition .ted by these measures was very violent, and an attempt was made put it down by a series of petty acts of tyranny. In the small tOlArll of Eckernforde, for instance, about $4,000 fines were at inflicted for the crime of unlawfully petitioning the Assembly; and all the parties fined were, as convicts, declared to deprived of their " right of voting. Still, the population and Assembly persisted and now persist in their opposi�ion. In Holstein, the Danish Government found it impossible make the Representative Assembly vote any taxes unless they granted concessions in a political and national sense. This they would not do; neither would they do without the revenues of the ', Duchy. In order, therefore, to manufacture some legal ground on ' which to levy them, they convoked a Council of the Kingdom, an . assembly without any representative character, but supposed to ' represent Denmark proper, Schleswig-Holstein, and Lauenburg. Although the Holsteiners refused to attend, this body voted the taxes for the whole monarchy, and, based upon this vote, the Government assessed the taxes to be paid in Holstein. Thus Holstein, which was to be an independent and separate Duchy, i
rrp,
•
5
German Movements
an to subject and made dence, indepen l politica all of rived dep was . . mentIy Damsh . A ss embly preem . The se are the grounds on which the German press, for fIve or .SIX )''ears past have called on the German Governments to employ lves, in ds, themse groun The rk. Denma t agains ures � mea ',,'e coero . h was press whIC that pressn are certainly good . But the Germa . ' I mere y 1849after penod nary reactio the during exist to wed O II a . d I ee d m was t Ianty. ' popu of means a as tein wig-Hols Schles d use , the Danes t very cheap to hold forth in high indignation agains . wh en the Governments of Germany allowed It those Govern' petty tyranny. nts which at home tried to emulate Denmark m �:r against Denmark was the cry when the. Crimean wa.r broked out. War against Denmark again, when �OUls N�poleon mvade Austrian Italy. Now, then, they will have It all their own way. The "new era" in Prussia,6 hitherto so coy when called upon �y the liberal press, in this instance chimes in with it. The �ew K�ng of Prussia proclaims to the world tha� h� must brmg thIS old complaint to a settlement;" the decrepIt DIet at F�ankfort puts all its clumsy machinery in motion fO.r the salvatIOn of . German nationality,b and the liberal press tnumphs? � o such thlI� g. The liberal press, now at once put to the test, eats Its word� , cnes �)Ut, Caution ! discovers that Germany has no fleet wherewIth to fIght the ships of a naval power, and, especially in Prussia, shows all the symptoms of cowardice. What a few months �go .was. an urg�nt patriotic duty, is now all of a sudden an Austnan mtngue, whICh Prussia is warned not to give way to, That the German Governments, in their sudden enthusiasm for the cause of Schleswig-Holstein, are in the least sincere, is, of course, out of the question. As the Danish Dagbladet says: .
"We all know that it is one of the old tricks of the German Governments to take up the Schleswig-Holstein question as soon as they fe�l themselv�s to e in want of a little popularity, and to cover their own manifold sms by drawmg bills upon the fanaticism against Denmark."
�
This has been decidedly the case in Saxony, and to a certain extent it is now the case in Prussia. But in Prussia the sudden starting of this question also signifies, evidently, a? allianc� with Austria. The Prussian Government behold Austna breakmg to pieces from within, while she is menaced from without by a war
William I [Speech to the Chambers, January 14, 1 861], The Times, No. 23832, J a n uary 1 7 , 1 8 6 1 - E d. . b A report on the subject appeared under the heading "Frankfort-on-the-Main, Thu rsday " , The Times, No. 23833, January 18, 1 86 1 .-Ed. a
3 - 1 1 34
Frederick Engels
6
with Italy. It certainly is not the interest of the Prussian ; Government to see Austria annihilated. At the same time , the · Italian war, to which Louis Napoleon would not long remain an · . impartial spectator, would scarcely again come off touching the territory of the German Confederation, in which case Prussia is bound to interfere. Then the war with France on Rhine would certainly be combined with a Danish war on the Eider; and while the Prussian Government cannot afford to have· Austria broken down, why wait till Austria is again defeated? Why · not engage in the quarrel of Schleswig-Holstein, and thereby interest in the war all North Germany which would not fight for . the defence of Venetia? If this be the reasoning of the Prussian·. Government, it is logical enough, but it was quite as logical .• 1859, before Austria was weakened by Magenta and Solferino,' and by her internal convulsions. Why was it not then acted upon? .. It is not at all certain that this great war will come off Spring. But if it does come off, although neither party deserves ' any sympathy, it must have this result, that whichsoever be beaten in the beginning, there will be a revolution. If Louis Napoleon be defeated, his throne is sure to fall; and if the King of Prussia and the Emperor of Austria ' be worsted, they will have to give way, before a German revolution. Written on January 23, 1 86 1 First published in the New-York Daily Tribune, No. 6 1 78, February 1 2 , 1 8 6 1 as a leader
Reproduced from the newspaper ·
7
Karl Marx THE AMERICAN QUESTION IN ENGLAND
London, Sept. 18, 1861 Mrs. Beecher Stowe's letter to Lord Shaftesbury,8 whatever its intrinsic merit may be, has done a great deal of good, by forcing the anti-Northern organs of the London press to speak out and lay before the general public the os�en.sible reasons for th�ir hostile tone against the North, and theIr III-concealed sympathIes with the South, which looks rather strange on the part of people affecting an utter horror of Slavery. Their first and main grievance is that the present American war is "not one for the abolition of Slavery," and that, therefore, the high-minded Britisher, used to undertake wars of his own, and interest himself in other people's wars only on the basis of "broad humanitarian principles," cannot be expected to feel any sympathy with his Northern cousins. "In the first place [, .. J," says The Economist, "the assumption that the quarrel between the North and South is a quarrel between Negro freedom on the one side and Negro Slavery on the other, is as impudent as it is untrue. ' " "The North," says The Saturday Review, "does not proclaim abolition, and never pretended to ftgh t for Anti-Slav ery. The North has not hoisted for its oriflamme the sacred �:m ol of j ustice to the Negro; its cri de guerreb is not unconditional abolition. " C If, says The Examiner "we have been deceived about the real significance of the ' subr e m ovement, who but the Federalists themselves have to answer for the d ec I mtion?"
�
ep
d
3 A meri can Complaints against England", The Economist, No. 942, September 14, 186 I .- Ed. "
b W ar-cry._ Ed. c
Sep�e�b •
Francis Joseph.- Ed,
1 86 1
"
Mrs . er Mrs.
·- Ed.
.
Beecher Stowe's Wounded Feelings", The Saturday Review, No. 307, 1 4 , 1 86 1 .- Ed. Stowe on the American War", The Examiner, No. 2798, September 14,
8
The American Question in England
Karl Marx
Now, in the first instance, the premiss must be conceded. war has not been undertaken with a view to put down Slavery, the United States authorities themselves have taken the pains to protest against any such idea. But then, it ought to remembered that it was not the North, but the South, w•.., undertook this war; the former acting only on the defense. I f it true that the North, after long hesitations, and an exhibition forbearance unknown in the annals of European history, drew . last the sword, not for crushing Slavery, but for saving the U the South, on its part, inaugurated the war by loudly nrc "the peculiar institution" as the only and main end of rebellion. It confessed to fight for the liberty of enslaving At], people, a liberty which, despite the Northern protests, it to be put in danger by the victory of the Republican party the election of Mr. Lincoln to the Presidential chair. Confederate Congress boasted that its new-fangled constitution, as distinguished from the Constitution of the W hi']llg:tc Jeffersons, and Adams's,1 1 had recognized for the first Slavery as a thing good in itself, a bulwark of civilization, and divine institution.a I f the North professed to fight but for Union, the South gloried in rebellion for the supremacy Slavery. I f Anti-Slavery and idealistic England felt not attracted the profession of the North, how came it to pass that it was violently repulsed by the cynical confessions of the South? The Saturday Review helps itself out of this ugly dilemma disbelieving the declarations of the seceders themselves. It deeper than this, and discovers "that Slavery had very little to do Secession; " the declarations of Jeff. Davis and company to contrary being mere "conventionalisms" with "about as meaning as the conventionalisms about violated altars desecrated hearths, which always occur in such proclamations.'" The staple of argument on the part of the anti-Northern is very scanty, and throughout all of them we find almost the sentences recurring, like the formulas of a mathematical certain intervals, with very little art of variation or
9
nH'
"Why," exclaims The Economist, "it is only yesterday, when the movement first gained serious head, on the first announcement of Mr. election, that the :\Tortherners offered to the South, if they would remain in Union, every conceivable security for the performance and inviolability of obnoxious institution-that they disavowed in the most solemn manner
the
M arx is giving the burden of the speech A. H . Stephens, Vice-President of the Confederacy, made at a meeting in Savannah on March 2 1 , 1 86 1 .- Ed. a
9
with it-tha t their leaders proposed compromise after rfering inte of i n ten tiO n should not be ise in Congress, all based upon the concession that Slavery com "How happens it, " says The Examiner, "that the North was ready to with. " m ed rs by the largest concessions to the South as to Slavery? How was matte e mis comp m ain geographical line was proposed in Congress within which Slavery cert It th nized as an essential institution? The Southern States were not recog e was ' ." th iS with nt con te .
���: �� \
W hat The Economist12 and The Examiner had to ask was not only and other compromise measures were n Crittende the y wh why they were not passed ? They affect to but ress, Cong in d pose pro s as accepted by the Nor th osal prop ise prom com e thos r side con and rejec ted by the South , while , in point of fact, they were Lincoln the carried had that party, rn Northe the by led baff election. Proposals neve r matu red into reso lutio ns, but always rem aining in the embryo state of pia desideria: the South had of course never any occasion either of rejecting or acquiescing in. We come nearer to the pith of the question by the following remar k of
The Examiner:
"Mrs. Stowe says: 'The Slave party, finding they could no longer use the Union for their purposes, resolved to destroy it.' There is here an admission that up to that time the Slave party had used the Union for their purposes, and it would have been well if Mrs. Stowe could have distinctly shown where it was that the North began to make its stand against Slavery." •
One might suppose that The Examiner and the other oracles of public opinion in England had made themselves sufficiently familiar with the contemporaneous history to not need Mrs. Stowe's information on such all-important points. The progressive ab�se of the U nion by the slave power, working through its alhance with the Northern Democratic party,t 3 is, so to say, the general formula of the United States history since the beginning of this century. The successive compromise measures mark the successive degrees of the encroachment by which the Union became more and more transformed into the slave of the slave-owner. Each of these compromises denotes a new encroach � ent of the South, a new concession of the North. At the same tI e none of the successive victories of the South was carried but a ter a hot contest with an antagonistic force in the North, appearing under different party names with different watchwords and under different . colors. I f the positive and final result of each � gle contest told in favor of the South, the attentive observer of Istory could not but see that every new advance of the slave
r
�
a
Pious wishes ._ Ed.
10
Karl Marx
The American Question in England
power was a step forward to its ultimate defeat. Even at the of the Missouri Compromise the contending forces were so balanced that Jefferson, as we see from his memoirs,a appreh the Union to be in danger of splitting on that deadly antagonism. . The encroachments of the slaveholding power reached maximum point, when, by the Kansas-Nebraska bill,15 for the time in the history of the United States, as Mr. Douglas hir' confessed, every legal barrier to the diffusion of Slavery within United States territories was broken down, when, afterward, Northern candidate bought his Presidential nomination by ing the Union to conquer or purchase in Cuba a new field dominion for the slaveholder 16; when, later on, by the Dred decision/7 diffusion of Slavery by the Federal power proclaimed as the law of the American Constitution, and when the African slave-trade was de facto reopened on a scale than during the times of its legal existence. But, with this climax of Southern encroachments, carried by connivanc;e of the Northern Democratic party, there were unm takable signs of Northern antagonistic agencies having such strength as must soon turn the balance of power. The war/8 the formation of the Republican party, and the large cast for Mr. Fremont during the Presidential election of 1 856, . were so many palpable proofs that the North had sufficient energies to rectify the aberrations which United history, under the slaveowners' pressure, had undergone, for a century, and to make it return to the true principles of development. Apart from those political phenomena, there one broad statistical and economical fact indicating that the of the Federal Union by the slave interest had approached point from which it would have to recede forcibly, or de grace.b That fact was the growth of the North-West, the immense ; . strides its population had made from 1850 to 1860, and the and" reinvigorating influence it could not but bear on the of the United States. Now, was all this a secret chapter of history? Was "the admission" of Mrs. Beecher Stowe wanted to reveal to The Examiner and the other political illuminati 20 of the London press ; . the carefully hidden truth that "up to that time the Slave party ·. . had used the Union for their purposes?" Is it the fault of the " ; �Vf�r
n:
'nrr...
a
Th. Jefferson, Memoirs, Correspondence, and Private Papers. . , Vol. IV, London, 1 829, p. 333.- Ed. b Of its own accord.- Ed. .
11
e n quit take were n sme pres lish Eng the that th Nor . A men by the violent clash of the antagonIstIc ' e s, t f orce h s are , a u ,: ,: n of which was the moving power of its history for half a fnctIO ? ss lish pre Eng the that ans eric Am the of t faul the it Is . tU �� e? t was wha le day c a sing in hed hatc chet crot iful fanc the for sta very ? ggle The stru of s year long lt of resu ' red matu �ll the ty iO reaII the formation and the progress 0f the RepubI'lCan party ac that have hardly been noticed by the London press, speaks �10 �merica e, for es. Tak tirad ery -Slav Anti its of ess own holl the to as mes oIU �IOst on Lond The s, pres on Lond the of odes antip two the n , e a 0f an at org gre the one the er, spap New kly Wee s s' nold Rey and Tm t es table classes, and the other the only remaining organ of h respec class . The former, not long before Mr. Buchanan's �h: working orate apology for his reer drew to an end, published an elab l against the Republican �dministration and a defamatory libedur stay movement. Reynolds, on his part, was, ing Mr. Buchanran's . neve mIssed at London; one of his minions, and since that time rsar n. an occasion to write him up and to write his adve ies dowse How did it come to pass that the Republican party, who platform b was drawn up on the avowed antagonism to the encroachments of the Slaveocracy and the abuse of the Union by the slave interest, carried the day in the North? How, in the second instance, did it come to pass that the great bulk of the Northern Democratic party, flinging aside its old connexions with the leaders of Slaveocracy, setting at naught its traditions of half a century, sacrificing great commercial interests and greater poli�ical prejudices, rushed to the support of the present Repubhcan Administration and offered it men and money with an unsparing hand? Instead of answering these questions The Economist exclaims: . can
•
e
"Can we forget [ ... J that Abolitionists have habitually been as ferociously persecuted and maltreated in the North and West as in the South? Can it be denied that the testiness and half-heartedness, not to say insincerity, of the Governm ent at Washington, have for years supplied the chief impediment which has thwarted our efforts for the effectual suppression of the slave trade on the Coast of Africa; while a vast proportion of the clippers actually engaged in that trade have been built with Northern capital, owned by Northern merchants and manned by North ern seamen ?"
This is, in fact, a masterly piece of logic. Anti-Slavery England can not sympathize with the North breaking down the withering : As
US Minister to London in 1 853-56.- Ed. The elec tion platform of the Republicans was published in the article "The . PIatfor " In m the New-York Daily Tribune, No. 5950, May 1 9, 1 860.- Ed.
12
Karl Marx
influe nce of slaveocracy, because she cannot forget that the Nor. while bound by that influe nce, supported the slave-trade, m4 the Abolitionists, and had its Demo cratic institutions tainted by slavedriver's preju dices. She cannot sympathize with Mr. . Administration, because she had to find fault with Mr. Adm inistration. She must need s sullen ly cavil at the move ment of the Northern resurrection, cheer up the N sympathizers with the slave-trade, branded in the Repu platform, and coquet with the Southern slaveocracy, setting up empire of its own, because she cann ot forget that the North yesterday was not the North of to-day. The necessity of ' UL its attitude by such pettifogging Old Bailey 2 1 pleas proves than anything else that the anti-Northern part of the English nr, is instigated by hidd en motiv es, too mean and dastardly to openly avowed. As it is one of its pet maneuvers to taunt the prese nt Repu . Adm inistration with the doings of its Pro-Slavery predecessors, it tries hard to persu ade the English peop le that The N. Y. H ought to be considered the only authentic expositor of N opin ion. The London Times having given out the cue in direction, the servum pecusa of the other anti-Northern organs,'. great and smal l, persist in beating the same bush . So says Economist:
elected Mr. that it was the aim of the Republican party which ugh eno e tru . . . . s i "It ' nt Slavery from spreadmg mto th e unsettIed Terntones. . . . I t may ,e\e p' Lincoln to success of the North, if complete and . unconditional, would enable h e t t ha t e be trU ' within the fifteen States whlch h ave aIready adopted It, Slavery e f' , m con o . , th em t, to its eventual extmctlon-though th"IS IS rath er probable th an lead us h t t Igh m an d .
certaIll ,
1 5 years more," said Toombs "without a great ncrease in SI�ve territory, eithe r the slaves must be permitted to flee from the whites, or the whites must flee fro m th e sIaves. "
b
"Southampton, Friday" , The Times, No. 24032, September 7, 1 86 1 .- Ed.
The limitation of Slavery to its constitutional area, as pro�laimed b the Republicans, was the distinct ground upon whIch the enace of Secession was first uttered in the Hou�e ?f . Represe� ta tives on December 1 9, 1 859. Mr. Singleton (MISSISSIppI) havmg asked Mr. Curtis ( I owa), "if the Republican party would never let the South have another foot of slave territory while it remained in the Union " and Mr. Curtis having responded in the affirmative, Mr. Singl�ton said this would dissolve the Union. His advice to Mississippi was the sooner it got out of the Union the better "gentlemen should recollect that [ . . . ] Jefferson Davis led our forces in Mexico, and [ . . . ] still he lives, perhaps to lead the Southern army." b Quite apart from the e�onomical law which . . . makes the diffusion of Slavery a vital condItIOn for Its mamte nance within its constitutional areas, the leaders of the South had never deceived themselves as to its necessity for keeping up their political sway over the U nited States. John Calhoun, in the defense of his propositions to the Senate, stated distinctly on Feb. 1 9 , 1 847, "that the Senate was the only balance of power left to the South in the Government," and that the creation of new Slave States had become necessary " for the retention of the equipoise of power in the Senate. " Moreover, the Oligarchy of the 300,000
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"Wha t was at issue in Lincoln's election, and what has precipitated the ' . convulsion, was merely the limitation of the institution of Slavery to States where thaI ',' institution already exists. "
And The Economist remarks:
!
"In
" I n the height of the strife, New-York papers and New-York politicians not wanting who exhorted the combatants, now that they had large armies in field, to employ them , not against each other, but against Great , -1:0 compromise the internal quarrel, the slave question included, and invade British territory without notice and with overwhelming force."
The Economist knows perfectly well that The N. Y. efforts, which were eagerly supported by The London Times, at " embroiling the United States into a war with Engla nd,b only inte nded securing the succ ess of Secession and thwarting the, ',' mov eme nt of Northern regeneration. Still there is one concession made by the anti-Northern E nglish pres s. The Saturday snob tells us:
"
9 on the occasion of John. Brown's Harper's . Ferry In 1 85 '22 . very same Economzst publ'.ISh e d a senes . 0f the · , n ItIO x d e e p economzcaI with a view to prove that, by dmt . 0 f an articles te ora b . ela d to graduaI extmctIOn from the doome was Slavery erican m A laW, . . . a That nSIOn r f 0 expa powe ve d f ' ItS 0 depn be ld shou it nt ome m "economical law" was perfectly understood by the Slaveocracy.
,, ,
a Crowd of slaves.- Ed.
13
The American Question in England
,'
C
:
' Harp er's Ferry" , "The Impending Crisis in the Southern States ? f America" , English Sympathy with the Slavery Party in America", The Economtst Nos. 845, 8 52, 853, Novemb er 5, December 24, 3 1 , 1 859.- Ed. b O. Singleton [Speech in the House of Representatives on December 1 9 , 1 859] , New- York Daily Tribune, No. 5822, December 20, 1 859.- Ed. C J , C, Calhoun [Speech in the Senate on February 1 9, 1 847], Congressional lobe: Ne w Series : Containing Sketches of the Debates and Proceedings of the Second Session of wen tY-Ninth Congress, Washington, 1 847.- Ed. "
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a
,
14
The American Question in England
Karl Marx
er ought to know that the present rebellion Examin The n ye ot wait upon the passing of the M orrill tariff for breaking o t. I n point of fact, the .Southern�rs could not have been tired . of . g robbed of the frUlts of theIr slave labor by the ProtectIve be ering that from 1 846- 1861 a Free-Trade consid , North the of l� . tan ff ed. obtam had tariff characterizes in its last number the secret thought
slave-owners could not even maintain their sway at home save constantly throwing out to their white plebeians the bait prospective conquests within and without the frontiers of U nited States. If, then, according to the oracles ' of the press, the North had arrived at the fixed resolution of cumscribing Slavery within its present limits, and of extinguishing it in a constitutional way, was this not sufficient enlist the sympathies of Anti-Slavery England? But the English Puritans seem indeed not to be contented by an explicit Abolitionist war.
���� �
The Spectator of some of the Anti-Northern organs in the following striking m a nne r :
"This," says The Economist "therefore, not being a war for the emancipation the Negro race, [ . . . J on what other ground can we be fairly called upon to syrn so warmly with the Federal cause?" "There was a time," says The Examiner, our sympathies were with the North, thinking that it was really in earnest making a stand against the encroachments of the Slave States," and in "emancipation as a measure of justice to the black race."
However, in the very same numbers in which these papers us that they cannot sympathize with the North because its war is no Abolitionist war, we are informed that "the expedient of proclaiming Negro emancipation and summoning slaves to a general insurrection," is a thing "the mere COllcel of which [;;-1 is repulsive and dreadful, " and that "a compromise", would be far preferable to success purchased at such a cost "
stained by such a crime." a Thus the English eagerness for the Abolitionist war is all cant. . The cloven foot peeps out in the following sentences:
"Lastly, [ ... J" says The Economist, "is the Morrill Tariff,23 a title to our gratitude . •• and to our sympathy, or is the certainty that, in case of Northern triumph, . . Tanff should be extended over the whole Republic, a reason why we ought to clamorously anxious for their success?" "The North Americans," says Examiner, "are in earnest about nothing but a selfish protective Tariff. .' Southern States were tired of being robbed of the fruits of their slave-labor by the . protective tariff of the North."
The Examiner and The Economist comment each other. The ... latter is honest enough to confess at last that with him and his followers sympathy is a mere question of tariff, while the former •.. reduces the war between North and South to a tariff war, to a war between Protection and Free-Trade. The Examiner is perhaps not aware that even the South Carolina Nullifiers of 1 832,24 as Gen . . ' Jackson testifies, used Protection only as a pretext for secession; b .
a
"The Probable Continuance of the American Conflict", The Economist, No. 94 1 , September 7, 186 1 .- Ed. b President jackson's proclamation against the Nullification Ordinance of South Carolina, December I I , 1 832.- Ed.
15
"What , then, do the Anti-Northern organs really profess to think desi rable, under the j ustification of this plea of deferring to the inexorable logic of facts?" They argue that disunion is desirable, just because, as we have said, it is the only possible step to a conclusion of this "causeless and fratricidal strife; " and next, of course, only as an afterthought, and as an humble apology for Providence and "justification of the ways of God tei man," now that the inevitable necessity stands revealed -for further reasons discovered as beautiful adaptations to the moral exigencies of the country, when once the issue is discerned. It is discovered that it will be very much for the advantage of the States to be dissolved into rival groups. They will mutually check each other's ambition; they will neutralize each other's power, and if ever England should get into a dispute with one or more of them, more jealousy will bring th� antagonistic groups to our aid. This will be, it is urged, a very wholesome state of things, for it will relieve us from anxiety and it will encourage political 'competition,' that great safeguard of honesty and purity, among the States themselves. "Such is the case-very gravely urged-of the numerous class of Southern sympathizers now springing up among us. Translated into English-and we grieve that an English argument on such a subject should be of a nature that requires translating-it means that we deplore the present great scale of this "fratricidal" war, because it may concentrate in one fearful spasm a series of chronic petty wars and passions and jealousies among groups of rival States in times to come. The real truth is, and this very un-English feeling distinctly discerns this truth, though it cloaks it in decent phrases, that rival groups of American States could not live together in peace or harmony. The chronic condition would be one of malignant hostility rising out of the very causes which have produced the present contest. It is a�serted that the different groups of States have different tariff interests. These dI ffere nt tariff interests would be the sources of constant petty wars if the States �ere once dissolved, and Slavery, the root of all the strife, would be the spring of mn�merable animosities, discords and campaigns. No stable equilibrium could ever gam be established among the rival States. And yet it is maintained that this long . Utu re of incessant strife is the providential solution of the great question now at ue_ the only real reason why it is looked upon favorably being this, that whereas e present great-scale .conflict may issue in a restored and stronger political unity, . the alte rnative of infinitely multiplied small-scale quarrels will issue in a weak and . . . dIVlde " d Contment, th at England cannot fear. Now we do not deny that the Americans themselves sowed the seeds of this pet y and contemptible state of feeling by the unfriendly and bullying attitude they h pa\e so ofte n manifested to England, but we do say that the state of feeling on our . t IS petty and contemptible. We see that in a deferred issue there is no hope of a e p an d the me . enduring tranquillity for America, that it means a decline and fall of ncan nation into quarrelsome clans and tribes, and yet we hold up our
; ��
� ��
16 hands in horror at the present fmaI'tty. We ��hort them to look equally fratncldal �nd probably draw out of our SIde the thorn "
Karl Marx
17
"fratricidal " strife because it holds out hop es favorably on the indefinite future of smail far more demoralizing, because the latter of American rivalry. "
Written on September 1 8, 1 86 1 First published in the New-York Daily Tribune, No. 6403, October 1 1 , 1 86 1 , reprinted in the New-York Semi-Weekly Tribune, No. 1 7 1 0 , October 1 5 , 1861
Karl Marx
Reproduced from the New-Y ' ork , Daily Tribune
THE BRITISH COTTON TRADE 25
London, Sept.
2 1 , 1861
The continual rise in the prices of raw cotton begins at last to seriously react upon the cotton factories, their consumption of cotton being now 25 per cent less than the full consumption. This result has been brought about by a daily lessening rate of production, many mills working only four or three days per week, part of the machinery being stopped, both in those establishments where short time has been commenced and in those which are still running full time, and some mills being temporarily altogether closed. In some places, as at Blackburn, for instance, short time has been coupled with a reduction of wages. However, the short-time movement is only in its incipient state, and we may predict with perfect security that some weeks later the trade will have generally resorted to three days working per week, concur rently with a large stoppage of machinery in most establishments. On the whole, English manufacturers and merchants were extremely slow and reluctant in acknowledging the awkward position of their cotton supplies.
"The whole of the last American crop," they said , "has long since been forw arded to Europe. The picking of the new crop has barely commenced. Not a bale of cotton could have reached us more than has reached us, even if the war and the blockade 2 6 had never been heard of. The shipping season does not ommence till far in November, and it is usually the end of December before any arge exportation s take place. Till then, it is of little consequence whether the otton is retain ed on the plantations or is forwarded to the ports as fast as it is gged. If the blockade ceases any time before the end of this year, the probability is t at b March or April we shall have received just as fuil a supply of cotton as if y the blockade had never been declared ." a
� � �
-
a " The Probable Continuance of the American Conflict", N o. 94 1 , September 7, 1 86 1 .- Ed.
The Economist,
18
Karl Marx
. . In the innermost recesses of the mercantile mind the notion was . cherished that the whole American crisis, and, consequently, blockade, would have ceased before the end of the year, or that, Lord �almerston would forcibly break through the blockade . The l�tter Idea has been altogether abandoned, since, beside .all other. . . Circumstances, Manchester became aware that two vast �he m�netary int�rest having sunk an immense capital in . mdustnal enterpnses of Northern America, and the corn trade · relying on � orthern America as its principal source of supply: would �?mbme to check any unprovoked a,ggression on the part of' �he Brlt�sh Government. '.The hopes of the blockade being m due time, for the reqUIrements of Liverpool or Manchester' the A�e=ican war ?eing wound up by a compromise with the SeCeSSIOnIsts, have given way before a feature hitherto unknown in t�e English cotton market, viz., American operations in cotton at Liverpool, partly on speculation, partly for reshipment to America. ·, Consequently, for the last two weeks the Liverpool cotton market has been . feverishly excited, the speculative investments in cotton ': on the . pa.rt of the Liverpool merchants being backed by speculatlv� mvestments on the part of the Manchester and other '. manufacturers eager to provide themselves with stocks of raw ' material for the Winter. The extent of the latter transactions is ,: sufficiently shown by the fact that a considerable portion of the •' spare warehouse room in Manchester is already occupied by such stoc.ks, an? that througho�t t�e week beginning with Sept. 1 5 and endmg With Sept. 22, Mlddlmg Americans had increased 3/8d. per lb, and fair ones 5/8d. From the outbreak of the American war the prices of cotton · w�re steadily rising, but the ruinous disproportion between the pnces of the raw material and the prices of yarns and cloth was not .decl�red until. the last weeks of August. Till then, any serious . . dechne I ? the pnces of cotton. manufactures, which might have been anticipated from the conSiderable decrease of the American demand, had been balanced by an accumulation of stocks in first hands, and by speculative consignments to China and India. Those Asiatic markets, however, were soon overdone. �
!
"Stoc s," says The Ca cutta Price Current of Aug. 7, 1 86 1 , "are accumulating, the arn, :vals SInce our la�t bel? g no les� than 24,000,000 yards of plain cottons. Home advlces sh�� a contInuatIon of shIpments in excess of our requirements, and so long as thIS IS the case, improvement cannot be looked for.... The Bombay market. also, has been greatly oversupplied."
Some other circumstances contributed to contract the Indian · market. The late famine in the north-western provinces has been
19
The British Cotton Trade
t while Lower throughou cholera, the of ravages the by ded . ee . sUccga ' g th e country und er water, II f ram , Iaym a f ve SSi exce an l Ben sly damaged the nce crops. In letters from Calcutta, which ser�'ohued England last week, sales were reported giving a net return r�a l / d. per pound for 40s twist, which cannot be bought at g 4 gs, h of shirtin 40-inc sales d., 3/ 1 while 1 than less for s ster che � an red with present rates at Manchester, yield losses at 71/ d., 2 compa 12d. per piece. In the China market, prices were also gd ., and . er s rted the Und stock impo of tion mula accu the by n dow ced for circumstances, the demand for the British cotton manufac the se decreasing, their prices can, of course, not keep pace with tures ressive rise in the price of the raw material; but, on the the prog and printing of cotton must, in contrary, the spinning, weaving, Take, as an man y instances, cease to pay the costs of production.the greatest exam ple, the following case, stated by one of Manchester manufacturers, in reference to coarse spinning: .0
Per lb. Sept. 17, 1 860.
6 /4d. Cost of cotton ...................... 1 01/4d. 16s warp sold for . ............... Profit, ld. per lb. I
Sept. 17, 1 86 1 .
9d. Cost of cotton ...................... 16s warp sold for ................ 11 Loss, 1 1 /2d. per lb.
Cost of
Margin.
spmmng per lb
4d. ..
3d.
2d. ..
•
•
..
..
The consumption of Indian cotton is rapidly growing, and with � furt�er rise in prices, the Indian supply will come forward at Increasmg ratios; but still it remains impossible to change, at a few months' notice, all the conditions of production and turn the �urrent of commerce. England pays now, in fact, the 'penalty for �r protracted misrule of that vast Indian empire. The two main stades . she has now to grapple at attempts her in with . supplantmg American cotton by Indian cotton, is the want of . " means of com mUnICatIOn and the India, throughout transport an d m�' sera�le state of the Indian peasant, disabling him from i P ?�mg favorable circumstances. Both these difficulties the Eng�IS have themselves to thank for. English modern industry ' in general rerIed upon two pivots equally monstrous. The one was the Potat' as the only means of feeding Ireland and a great part of o
a
20
Karl Marx
21
the En �lish working class. This pivot was swept away by the potato disease and the subsequent Irish catastrophe. 27 A larger basis for the repl'oduc(ion and maintenance of the toiling millions had then to be <:tdopted. The second pivot of English industry was the slave-gl"ow n cotton of the United States. The present American crisis fG rces them to enlarge their field of supply and emancipate cotton from )Iave-breeding and slave-consuming oligarchies. As long as the E nglish cotton manufactures depended on slave-grown cotton , it could be truthfully asserted that they rested on a twofold slavery, the iJldirect slavery of the white man in England and the direct Slavery of the black men on the other side of the Atlantic.
Written �n September 2 1 , 1 86 1
First Pll �lished in the New-York Daily Tribune. "No. 64fj� October 14, 1 8 6 1 ,
Karl Marx THE LONDON TIMES AND LORD PALMERSTON 28
Reproduced from the newspaper
London, Oct.
5, 186 1
"English people participate in the government of their own country by reading The Times newspaper. " This judgment, passed by an eminent English author on what is called British self-government, is only true so far as the foreign policy of the Kingdom is concerned. As to measures of domestic reform, they were never carried by the support of The Times, but The Times never ceased attacking and opposing them until after it had become aware of its utter inability to any longer check their progress. Take, for instance, the Catholic Emancipation, the Reform bill, the abolition of the Corn laws, the Stamp Tax, and the Paper Duty. 29 When victory had unmistakably declared on the side of the Reformers, The Times wheeled round, deserted the reactionary camp, and managed to find itself, at the decisive moment, on the winning side. In all these instances, The Times gave not the direction to public opinion, but submitted to it, ungraciously, reluctantly, and after protracted, but frustrated, attempts at rolling back the surging waves of popular progress. Its real influence on the public mind is, therefore, confined to the field of foreign policy. In no part of Europe are the mass of the people, and especially of the middle-classes, more utterly ignorant of the foreign policy of their own country than in England, an ignorance springing from two great sources. On the one hand, since the glorious Revolution of 1688,30 the aristocracy has always monopolized the direction of foreign affairs in England. On the a
R. Lowe, "The Part of The Times in the Government of the Country", The Free Press, No. 8, August 7, 1 86 1 .- Ed. a
4 -- 1 1 34
Karl Marx
The London Times and Lord Palmerston
other hand, the progressive division of labor has, to a certain extent, emasculated the general intellect of the middle-class men by the circumscription of all their energies and mental faculties within the narrow spheres of their mercantile, industrial and professional concerns. Thus it happened that, while the aristocracy acted for them, the press thought for them in their foreign or international affairs; and both parties, the aristocracy and the press, very soon found · out that it would be their mutual interest to combine. One has only to open Cobbett' s Political Register to convince himself that, since the beginning of this century, the great London papers have constantly played the part of attorneys to the heaven-born managers of English foreign policy. Still, there were some intermediate periods to be run through before the present state of things had been brought about. The aristocracy, that had monopolized the management of foreign affairs, first shrunk together into an oligarchy, represented by a secret conclave, called the cabinet, and, later on, the cabinet was superseded by one single man, Lord Palmerston, who, for the last thirty years, has usurped the absolute power of wielding the national forces of the British Empire, and determining the line of its Foreign Policy. Concurrently with this usurpation, by the law of concentration, acting in the field of newspaper-mongering still more rapidly than in the field of cotton-spinning, The London Times had attained the position of being the national paper of England, that is to say, of representing the English mind to Foreign nations. If the monopoly of managing the Foreign affairs of the nation had passed from the aristocracy to an oligarchic conclave, and from an oligarchic conclave to one single man, the Foreign Minister of England, viz: Lord Palmerston, the monopoly of thinking and judging for the nation, on its own Foreign relations, and representing the public mind in regard to these relations, had passed from the press to one organ of the press, to The Times. Lord Palmerston, who secretly and from motives unknown to the people at large, to Parliament and even to his own colleagues, managed the Foreign affairs of the British Empire, must have been very stupid if he had not tried to possess himself of the one paper which had usurped the power of passing public judgment in the name of the English people on his own secret doings. The Times, in whose vocabulary the word virtue was never to be found, must, on its side, have boasted more than Spartan virtue not to ally itself with the absolute ruler in fact of the national power of the Empire. Hence, since the French coup d'etat:
when the Government by faction was in England superseded by the Government by the coalition of factions,3 l and Palmerston, therefore, found no longer rivals endangering his usurpation, The Times became his mere slave. He had taken care to smuggle some of its virtue into the subordinate posts of the cabinet, and to cajole others by their admission into his social circle. 32 Since that time, the whole business of The Times, so far as the foreign affairs of the British Empire are concerned, is limited to manufacturing a public opinion to conform to Lord Pa\mers�on 's Forei�n policy. I t has t? prepare the public mind for what he mtends domg, and to_ make It acquiesce in what he has done. The slavish drudgery which, in fulfilling this work, it has to undergo, was best exemplified during the last session of Parlia ment. That session proved anything but favorable to Lord Palmerston. Same independent members of the H . of C., Liberals and Conservatives, rebelled against his usurped dictatorship, and, by an exposure of his past misdeeds, tried to awaken the nation to a sense of the danger of continuing the same uncontrolled power in the same hands. Mr. Dunlop, opening the attack by a motion for a Select Committee on the Afghan Papers: which Palmerston had laid on the table of the House in 1 839, proved that Palmers ton had actually forged these papers. 33 The Times, in its Parliamentary report, suppressed all the passages of Mr. Dunlop' S speech which it considered most damaging to its master. Later on, Lord Montagu, in a motion for the publication of all papers relating to the Danish Treaty of 1 852, accused Palmerston of having been the principal in the maneuvers intended to alter the Danish succession in the interest of a foreign power, 34 and of having misled the House of Commons by deliberate misstate ments.b Palmerston, however, had come to a previous understand ing with Mr. Disraeli to baffle Lord Montagu's motion by a count-out of the House, which in fact put a stop to the whole proceeding. Still, Lord Montagu's speech had lasted o�e hour �nd a half before it was cut off by the count-out. The Tzmes havmg been informed by Palmerston that the count-out was to take place, its editor specially charged with the task of mutilating and cooking the Parliamentary reports had given himself a holiday, and thus
22
a
The reference is to the coup d'etat in France on December 2. 1851 .- Ed.
a A.
23
M. Dunlop's speech in the House of Commons on March 19, 1 86 1 . The Times, No. 23885, March 20, 1861 .- Ed. b R. Montagu's speech in the House of Commons on June 1 8 , 1 86 1 , The Times, No. 23963, June 1 9, 1 86 1 .- Ed. 4*
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24
Karl Marx
Lord Montagu's speech appeared unmutilated in The Times's columns. When, on the following morning, the mistake was discovered, a leader was prepared telling J ohn Bull that the count-out was an ingenious institution for suppressing bores, that Lord Montagu was a regular bore, and that the business of the nation could not be carried on if Parliamentary bores were not disposed of in the most unceremonious way: Again Palmerston stood on his trial last session, when Mr. Hennessy moved for a production of the Foreign office dispatches during the Polish revolution of 1 83 1 . b Again The Times recurred, as in the case of Mr. Dunlop' s motion, to the simple process of suppression. Its report of Mr. Hennessy' s speech is quite an edition in usum 35 delphini. If one considers how much painstaking it must cause to run through the immense Parliamentary reports the same night they are forwarded to the newspaper office from the House of Commons, and in the same night mutilate, alter, falsify them so as not to tell against Palmerston' s political purity, one must concede that whatever emoluments and advantages The Times may reap from its subserviency to the noble Viscount, its task is no pleasant one. If, then, The Times is able by misstatement and suppression thus to falsify public opinion in regard to events that happened but yesterday in the B ritish House of Commons, its power of misstatement and suppression in regard to events occurring on a distant soil, as in the case of the American war, must, of course, be unbounded. If in treating of American affairs it has strained all its forces to exasperate the mutual feelings of the British and Americans, it did not do so from any sympathy with the British Cotton Lords nor out of regard for any real or supposed English interest. It simply executed the orders of its master. From the altered tone of The LontWn Times during the past week, we may, therefore, infer that Lord Palmerston is about to recede from the extremely hostile attitude he had assumed till now against the United States. In one of its to-day leaders, The Times, which for months had exalted the aggressive powers of the Secessionists, and expatiated upon the inability of the United States to cope with them, feels quite sure of the military superiority of the North.c That this change of tone is dictated by the master, becomes quite a "W e are at last enjoying . . . ", The Times, No. 239 63, June 1 9, 1 86 I .- Ed. b J. P. Hennessy's speech in the House of Commons on July :'l, 1 86 1 , The Tim es, No. 239 75, July 3, 1 86 1 .- Ed. "The time is now approachin goo. The Times, No. 240 56, October 5, 1 8 6 1 .Ed. C
",
The London Times and Lord Palmerston
25
evident from the circumstance that other influential papers, known to be connected with Palmerston, have simultaneously veered round. One of them, The Economist, gives rather a broad hint to the public-opinion-mongers that the time has come for "carefully watching" their pretended "feelings toward the United States. " a The passage in The Economist which I allude to, and . which I think worth quoting as a proof of the new orders receIved by Palmerston' s pressmen, runs thus:
"On one point we frankly avow that the Northerners have a right to complain, and on one point also we are bound to be more upon our guard than perhaps we have uniformly been. Our leading journals have been too ready to quote and resent as embodying the sentiments and representing the position of the United States, newspapers notorious at all times for the r disrepu�able character and fee�le . . influence, and now more than suspected of bemg SeCeSSIOnists at heart, of sailIng under false colors, and professing extreme Northern opinions while writing in the interests and probably the pay of the South. Few Englishmen can, for exam�le, with any decent fairness, pretend to regard Th� N. Y. Herald as repres� ntmg . either the character or views of the Northern sectIon of the RepublIc. Agam: we ought to be very careful lest our just criticism of the Unionists shoul d�generate by insensible gradation' into approval and defense of the SeCeSSIOnistS. The tendency in all ordinary minds to partisanship is very strong. [00'] Now, however warmly we may resent much of the conduct and the language of th� Nort , [00'] we must never forget that the Secession of the South was for�ed on With deSigns and inaugurated with proceedings which have our hea�uest �nd most rooted . disapprobation. We, of course, must condemn the protecu�e tanff of the Union as . an oppressive and benighted folly. [00'] Of course, we reciprocate th� Wish of the South for low duties and unfettered trade. Of course, we are anXIous that the prosperity of States which produce so much raw material and want so many manufactured goods should suffer no interruption or reverse. [00.] But, at the sa�e time, it is impossible for us to lose sight of the indisput�ble fact that the real al� . and ultimate motive of secession was not to defend their nght to hold slaves m their own territory (which the Northerners were just as ready to concede as they to claim), but to extend Slavery over a vast, undefined district, hith�rto free from th�t curse, but into which the planters fancied they might hereafter WIsh to spread. ThIS object we have always regarded as unwise, unright� ou� a�d abhorrent. he s�te of society introduced in the Southern States by the msututIon of domestic serVitude appears to English minds more and more detestable and deplorable the mo�e they know of it. And the Southerners should be made aware that no pecuniary or commercial advantage which this country might be supposed to derive from the extended cultivation of the virgin soils of the planting States, and the new Territories which they claim, will ever in the slightest degree modify our views on these points, or interfere with the expressio� of those v e'."s, or w rp ?f ha�per our action whenever action shall become oblIgatory or fIttmg. [00.] It IS belIeved that they (the Secessionists) still entertain the extraordinary notion that by starving France and England-by the loss and suffering anticipated as the consequences of
�
�
�
�
�
a
" English Feeling towards America", The Economist, No. 944, September 28,
1 86 1 .- Ed. b
:
Thus far from the article. "English Feeling towards America.".- Ed.
...
Karl Marx
26
27
an entire privation of the American supply-they will compel those Governments to interfere on their behalf, and force the United States to abandon the blockade.... There is not the remotest chance that either Power would feel justified for a moment in projecting such an act of decided and unwarrantable hostility against the United States . . . . We are less dependent on the South than the South is upon us, as they will ere long begin to discover. [ . . . J a We, therefore, pray them to believe that Slavery, so long as it exists, must create more or less of a moral barrier between us, and that even tacit approval is as far from our thoughts as the impertinence of an open interference: that Lancashire is not England ; and, for the honor and spirit of our manufacturing population be it said also, that even if it were, Cotton would not be King." b
All I intended to show for the present was that Palmerston, and consequently the London press, working to his orders, is abandoning his hostile attitude against the United States. The causes that have led to this revirement,< as the French call it, I shall try to explain in a subsequent letter. Before concluding, I may still add that Mr. Forster, M.P. for Bradford, delivered last Tuesday,d in the theater of Bradford Mechanics' Institute,36 a lecture " On the ' Civil War in America," in which he traced the true origin and character of that war, and victoriously refuted the misstatements of the Palmerstonian press. e
Written on October 5, 1 86 1 First published in the New-York Daily Tribune, No. 64 1 1 , October 2 1 , 1 86 1
Reproduced from the newspaper
Karl Marx THE LONDON TIMES ON THE ORLEANS PRINCES IN AMERICA
London, Oct.
12, 1861
On the occasion of the King of Prussia's a visit at Compiegne,37 The London Times published some racy articles, giving great offense on the other side of the Channel.b The Pays, Journal de l'Empire, in its turn, characterized The Times writers as people whose heads were poisoned by gin, and whose pens were dipped into mud.c Such occasional exchanges of invective are only intended to mislead public opinion as to the intimate relations connecting Printing-House Square to the Tuileries. 38 There exists beyond the French frontiers no greater sycophant of the Man of December d t.han The London Times, and its services are the more invaluable, the more that paper now and then assumes the tone and the air of a Cato censor toward its Caesar. The Times had for months heaped insult upon Prussia. Improving the miserable Macdonald affair,39 it had told Prussia that England would feel glad to see a transfer of the Rhenish Provinces from the barbarous sway of the Hohenzollern to the enlightened despotism of a Bonaparte! It had not only exasperated the Prussian dynasty, but the Prussian people. It had written down the idea of an Anglo-Prussian alliance in case of a Prussian conflict with France. It had strained all its powers to convince Prussia that she had William 1 .- Ed. b Marx refers to the following leading articles: "The popularity of a Government. . . " , The Times, No. 24057, October 7, 1 86 1; "The King of Prussia is welcomed to Compiegne .. " , The Times, No. 24058, October 8, 1 86 1 ; "It is, perhaps, a mistake to attribute . .. ", The Times, No. 24059, October 9, 1 86 1 .- Ed. 10, 7 A. M . " , The Times, No. 2406 1 , October 1 1 , C "Paris, Thursday, Oct. a
Last Movements of the Northern and the Southern Confederation" The a "The . EconomlSt, No. 943, September 2 1 , 1 86 1 .- Ed. b "English Feeling towards America".- Ed. Radical change.- Ed. d October 1 , I 86 1 .- Ed. e W. E. Forster's lecture "On the Civil War in America" was reported in The Times, No. 24054, October 3 . 1 86 1 .- Ed. '
C
.
1 86 1 .- Ed.
.
Napoleon I11.- Ed. e "We trust we have now heard . .. ", The Times, No. 23928, May 9, 1 86 1 , leading article.- Ed. d
28
Karl Marx
nothing to hope from England, and that the, next best thing she could do would be to come to some understanding with France.a When at last the weak and trimming monarch of Prussia resolved upon the visit at Compiegne, The Times could proudly exclaim: "quorum magna pars fui; "b but now the time had also arrived for· obliterating from the memory of the B ritish the fact that The Times had been the pathfinder of the Prussian monarch. Hence the roar of its theatrical thunders. Hence the counter roars of the Pays, Journal de l'Empire. The !imes had no� recovered its position of the deadly �nta�omst of BonapartIsm, and, therefore, the power of lending Its aId to the Man of December. An occasion soon offered. Louis Bonaparte is, of course, most touchy whenever the renown of rival pretenders to the French crown is concerned. H e had covered himself with ridicule in the affair of the Duke d' Aumale's pamphlet 40 against PIon Plon,c and, by his proceedings, had done more in furtherance of the Orleanist cause than all the Orleanist partisans combined. Again, in these latter days, the French people were called upon to draw a parallel between PIon PIon and the Orleans princes.d When PIon PIon set out for America, there were c�ricatures circulated in the Faubourg St. Antoine representing . hIm as a fat man m search of a crown, but professing at the same time to be a most inoffensive traveler, with a peculiar aversion to the smell of powder. While PIon PIon is returning to France with no more laurels than he gathered in the Crimea and in Italy, the . Pnnces of Orleans cross the Atlantic to take service in the ranks of the N ational army: Hence a great stir �n the Bonapartist camp. It would not do to gIve vent to BonapartIst anger through the venal press of Paris. The Imperialist fears would thus only be betrayed, the pamphlet scandal renewed, and odious comparisons provoked bet�een exiled Princes who fight under the republican banner agamst the enslavers of working millions, with another exiled Prince, who had himself sworn in as an English special constable to share in the glory of putting down an English workingmen's movement.41 a
"Th e tone in which the outrage on Captain Macdonald . . . ", The Times, No. 239 26, May 7, 1 86 1 , leading article; "We trust we have now heard ... ", The Times, No. 239 28, May 9, 1 86 1 , leading article.- Ed. b "Mu ch of the credit for this belongs to me" , Virgil, Aen eid, II, 6.- Ed. C Jose ph Cha rles Paul Bonaparte, Prince Nap oleon.- Ed. d Fran�ois Ferdinand Philippe Louis Marie d'Orleans, Prince de Joinville; Robert Philippe Louis Eugene Ferdinand d'Orleans, duc de Chartres; Louis Philippe Albert d'Orleans, comte de Paris.- Ed.
The London Times on the Orleans Princes in America
29
Who should extricate the Man of December out of this dilemma? Who but The London Times? If the same London Times; which, on the 6th, 7th, 8th, and 9th of October, 1 86 1 , had roused the furies of the Pays, Journal de l'Empire, by its rather cynical strictures on the visit at Compiegne if that very same paper should come out on the 12th of October, with a merciless onslaught on the Orleans Princes, because of their enlistment in the ranks of the National Army of the United States,a would Louis Bonaparte not have proved his case against the Orleans Princes? Would The Times article not be done into French, commented upon by the Paris papers, sent by the Prefet de Police to all tbe journals of all the departments, and circulated throughout the �hole of France, as the impartial sentence passed by The London .Ttmes, the personal foe of Louis Bonaparte, upon the last proceedmgs of the Orl.eans Princes? Consequently, The Times of to-day has come out wIth a most scurrilous onslaught on these princes. . Louis Bonaparte is, of course, too much of a busmess man to . share the j udicial blindness in regard to the Amencan war of the · official public opinion-mongers. He knows that the true people of England, of France, of Germany, of Europe, consider t�e cause of the United States as their own cause, as the cause of lIberty, and that, despite all paid sophistry, they cons!d.er the soil of the Unite� States as the free soil of the landless mIllIons of Europe, as theIr land of promise, now to be defended swo�d in hand, from the sordid grasp of the slaveholder. LOUIS N apol�on knows, moreover that in France the masses connect the fIght for the maintena�ce of the Union with the fight of their forefathers for the foundation of American independence, and that with them every Frenchman drawing his sword for the N ational Government appears only to execute the bequest of Lafayett� .42 Bonaparte, therefore knows that if anything be able to wm the Orleans Princes ood opinions from the French people, it wi�l be their enlistment in the ranks of the national army of the Umted States. He shudders at this very notion, and consequently The L�ndon Times, his censorious sycophant, tells to-day �he
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"Perhaps there is no position which an erring mortal..." . The Times, No. 2406 2. October 1 2 . 1 86 1 . leading article.- Ed. a
Karl Marx
30
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America in es nc ri P ns ea rl O e th n o es The London Tim
the Italian war, not to speak of the piratical expeditions against China, Cochin-China,43 and so forth, never enlisted the sympathies of the French people, instinctively aware that both wars were carried on only with the view to strengthening the chains forged by the coup d'etat. The first grand war of contemporaneous history is the American war. The peoples of Europe know that the Southern slaveocracy commenced that war with the declaration that the continuance of slaveocracy was no longer compatible with the continuance of the Union. Consequently, the people of Europe know that a fight for the continuance of the Union is a fight against the continuance of the slaveocracy that in this contest the highest form of popular self-government till now realized is giving battle to the meanest and most shameless form of man's enslaving recorded in the annals of history. Louis Bonaparte feels, of course, extremely sorry that the Orleans Princes should embark in just such a war, so distin guished, by the vastness of its dimensions and the grandeur of its ends, from the groundless, wanton and diminutive wars Europe has passed through since 1849. Consequently, The London Times must needs declare:
l al h it w d an , ck o st t en m rn ve o G ch n re F ad ro ab n w a p to t, e k r ma s ie it il ab li st n ai ag 0 0 0 0 0 0 , , 2 1 f 0 e rv . se re a t u b w o sh to t a th I a IC m o n o ec f o e at . st a ch Su 0 0 0 0 0 0 , 40 " an th e r o m to . g n ti n amo.u t 0 st ak e . s er d n te re p l va n r fo n io at tu si e th t s JU s re a . p re . p s Ir a aff . St rg u bo au F e h t m ts o -n ad re b n e e . have b e er . th y d ea lr A le b u o d A te a n p ro p p a m st o m e th re o ef er th is es m ti ll a f o is th d n a , e ln to n e th ce en H °ty I an u p o p h tc a to s e c n ri P s n a e rl � O g in w o ll a r fo e tim o es tm T on d on L he T f o sh ru fierce forward 0
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Written on October 12. 1 86 1 First published in the New-York Daily Tribune. No. 6426. November 7. 1 86 1
"To overlook the difference between a war waged by hostile nations, and this most groundless and wanton civil conflict of which history gives us any account. is a species of offense against public morals." a
The Times is, of course, bound to wind up its onslaught on the Orleans Princes because of their "stooping to serve on such an ignoble field of action. " With a deep bow before the victor of Sevastopol and Solferino, "it is unwise, " says The London Times, "to challenge a comparison between such actions as Springfield and Manassas,44 and the exploits of Sevastopol and Solferino. " The next mail will testify to the premeditated use made of The Times's article by the Imperialist organs. A friend in times of need is proverbially worth a thousand friends in times of prosperity, and the secret ally of The London Times is just now very badly off. A dearth of cotton, backed by a dearth of grain; a commercial crisis coupled with an agricultural distress, and both of them combined with a reduction of Custom revenues and a monetary embarrassment compelling the Bank of France to screw its rate of discount to six per cent, to enter into transactions with Rothschilds and Baring for a loan of two millions sterling on the London a
"Perhaps there is no position "- Ed. . . .
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Reproduced from the newspaper
33
The North American Civil War
d n a w i ev R ay rd � u a! S h T , er in The Economist, The Exam : . ctenstIc of
discovery. r a ch IS It r. e h rt � fu e m e th e th d e d n u o p x e ti tutti quan . n o d n o L m t u b , n o st e rl a h C in t o n , e d a m s a w it t a th y er v co is d this a 1 6 8 1 to 6 4 8 1 m o fr t a th ew n k e . n yo er ev . ca ri e m A in , y ll ra u at N l! rn o M v tI ta n se re p e R t a th � d n a vailed, free trade system pre 1, 6 8 1 m ly n ss re g n o C h g u ro � th ff carried his protectionisdt atalrrieady broken out. SeceSSIOn , therefore, after the rebellion ha ause the Morrill tariff had gone through did not take place bec, the Morrill tariff went throug� Congr�ss Congress, but, at most taken place . W h e n South Carolma had Its because secession had in 1 8 3 1 /7 the protectionist tariff o f 1 82.8 first attack of secessio, nas a pretext, but only as a pretext, as IS served it to be sure nt of General Jackson.c This time, howe,,:er, known f;om a stateme fact not been repeated . In the SeceSSIOn the old pretext has inry 48 all reference t the t��if f question was Congress at Montgome ltivation of sugar ? L�)ulS1ana, one o f . the avoided, because the cuern states, depends entirely on protectl.on . most influential South ss pleads further, the w�r o f the U mted . le mamtena�ce �f the But, the London pre war for the forCIb . ds to stnk� fIfteen States is nothing but annot make u p their mm Union. The Yankees caard .49 They want to cut a colossal fIgure o n stars from their stand would b e different if the war was waged the world stage. Yes, itvery ! The questi.on of slavery, h o�ever, as for the abolition of slategorically declares among other thmgs, has The Saturday Review ca r. a w is th h . it w . o d . to g in th o n ly te absolu te a m g n o t o n id d r a w e th t a th d It is above all to be remtheemSboere e th n o lf se it s d n fi h rt o N e h T . th with the North, but wthitsh it hadu quietly looked on w�tl. e the defensive. For mon ed the Union's forts, arsenals, sh�pyard s, secessionists appropriatffices, ships and supph. es of arm� , msulted customs houses, pay orisoner bodie. s of ItS troops. Fmally t�e its flag and took p force the Union government o�t of Its secessio�ists resolved btolatant act of war, and solely for thts reason passive attitude by a bardment of Fort Sumter near C h arles.ton. proceeded to the bomtheir General Beauregard had learnt m a On April 1 1 ( 1 86 1 ) . a All such.- Ed. e T' Th . " , . . . ve gI to d e d en et ' pr . ve ha w Fe " s le tic ar e th ns ea m Marx erica Complamts agamst a
Karl Marx
THE NORTH AMERICAN CIVIL WAR 45 London, October 20, 1861 For months the leading weekly and daily papers of the London press hav.e been :eiterating the same litany on the American Civil War. WhIle they msult . the free states of the North, they anxiously defend themselves agamst the suspicion of sympathising with the slave st�tes �f the .South. In fact, they continually write two articles: on� artIcle, m whIch they attack the North, and another article, in whICh they excuse their attacks on the North. Qui s'excuse s'accuse. In essence the extenuating arguments read: The war between the North and South is a tariff war. The war is further not for any principle, does not touch the question of sl�very and in fact turns on. Northern lust for sovereignty. Finally, even if justice is on the SIde of the North, does it not remain a vain endeavour to want to. subjugate eight million Anglo-Saxons by force! Would not separatIOn of the South release the North from all connection �ith �egro slave:r and ensure for it, with its twenty million mhabItants and ItS vast territory, a higher, hitherto scarcely dreamt-of, development? Accordingly, must not the North wel come secession as a happy event, instead of wanting to overrule it by a bloody and futile civil war? Point by point we will probe the plea of the English press. The war between North and South so runs the first excuse is a mere tariff war, a war between a protectionist system and a free trade system, and Britain naturally stands on the side of free tra�e. S�all the slave-owner enjoy the fruits of slave labour in theIr e?tIr.ety or shall he be cheated of a portion of these by the prote.ctlomsts of the North? That is the question which is at issue thIs war. It was reserved for The Times to make this brilliant
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article; "Am g in ad le , �, 1 6 8 1 9, r be em pt Se the N o . 24 03 3, on e w to . rs M ; 1 6 18 , 14 r be 2, Septem 94 o. N t, is m no co E he T , M rs . Beecher ", nd la Eng ; 1 86 1 , 4 1 r be em pt Se , N o . 27 98 , er in m xa E he T ", ar W an ic 14 , er m r A be em pt Se 7, 30 o. N , w ie ev R The Saturday , " gs in el Fe ed nd ou W s e' ow St . . . 18 61 .- Ed. 0f South ce an ' m d r 0 n lO at tc hf ul N e th t ckson's proclamation agains C President ja 24 ).- Ed. e ot N e (se 2 83 1 , 1 1 r be em ec D Carolina,
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Karl Marx •
meeting with Major Anderso n, the commander f that the fort was only supplied with provisions for hr .
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rt Sumter,
P ace u surrender, the secessionists opened the bombard ment ea . rly on the following mornm . g (Apnl 1 2), which brought about the fall of . th e fort m a few hours. News of this had hardl been tel P d tO ��ntgomery, the seat of the Secession C ngress a r M mIster Walker publicly ' declared in the name o f the new Con federacy�' " N0 m a n c a n where the war opened today say . will end ' " a A t he same tIme he prophesied "that before the first o f May the flag of the Southern Confederacy will wave from th O e dorne of the old Capit ol in Washington and within a . short tIme perhaps a lso from the F aneml H all in B oston " 50 0 I now ensued the ' proclamation in which Lincoln called for 7 5 e n to defend the Union.b Th bombardment of Fort Sumt� e . r cu ?ff t e only possIb le constitu tional way out namely the a 0 a g e n e ral c ' the American people, as L �n�ention of . proposed m hIS maugural address.c For Lincoln ther . e now r e m a m . ' e d o n ly th e c h O lc fleemg from Washington e e of ' acua�ng Mar lan � and Dela ." ' ware a n d 'y . surrendering Kentucky , M ISsoun and VIrgInIa or 0f . . answenng war WIth war. ' The question of the prin . . . ci Ie of th m e n can ClVlI War is � answered by the battle sl oga with whIe the South broke the peace. Stephens, the Vice-P resident of the Southern C onfederacy, declared in the Secession C n ss t at what essentially distin guish ed the Constitution new a che t Montgomery from the C o n stitution of the Washin gt n � and Jef ersons was th at now for the first time slave s C I a s an institu ti�m good in itself and a s the found ti , . oie state edIfIce, whereas revolutionary fathers m e th e . n . s teeped m the pre]' udIc ' e s 0 f th e ' elghteenth century, had tre ated slavery as an evIl. I. llp � rted from England and to be elimin ! ated in the ourse of tIm e. Another � m atador of the South , M r. Spratt cned out · " For . . ' us I � IS a questIOn o f founding a gr eat slave r� public . I f, therefore, It was
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Quoted in the report " H o w h War News Is Rec eived " , New-York Daily Tri ne, o . 623 1 , Apri l 1 5 , 1 86 1 . d. A . L in coln, A Proclmnation [A . pn'1 1 5 , 1 86 1] , New-York D Issue.- Ed. aily Tribune, same C A. Lincoln, "The Inaugural Address " [M a rch 4 , 18 6 Tribune, N o . 6 1 96, Marc 1] , New- York Daily h 5 , 1 86 1 .- Ed. . d Steph e s' s speec h In Savannah on March 2 1 � 1 86 1 .-:-: Ed e M arx gives the English words " a grea . t sI ave ' repubhc , In German equivalent._ Ed. brackets after the a
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The North American Civil War
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indeed only in defence of the Union that the North drew the sword, had not the South already declared that the continuance of slavery was no longer compatible with the continuance of the Union? Just as the bombardment of Fort Sumter gave the signal for the opening of the war, the election victory of the Republican Party of the N orth, the election of Lincoln as President, gave the signal for secession. On November 6, 1 860, Lincoln was elected. On November 8, 1 860, a message telegraphed from South Carolina said: "Secession is regarded here as a settled thing" a ; on Novem ber 10 the legislature of Georgia occupied itself with secession plans, and on November 13 a special session of the legislature of Mississippi was convened to consider secession. But Lincoln's election was itself only the result of a split in the Democratic camp. During the election struggle the Democrats of the North concentrated their votes on Douglas, the Democrats of the South concentrated their votes on Breckinridge, and to this splitting of the Democratic votes the Republican Party owed its victory. Whence came, on the one hand, the preponderance of the Republican Party in the North? Whence, on the other, the disunion within the Democratic Party, whose members, North and South, had operated in conjunction for more than half a century? Under the presidency of Buchanan the sway that the South had gradually usurped over the Union through its alliance with the Northern Democrats attained its zenith. The last Continental Congress of 1 787 and the first Constitutional Congress of 1 789-90 had legally excluded slavery from all Territories of the republic northwest of the Ohio.b (Territories, as is known, is the name given to the colonies lying within the United States itself which have not yet attained the level of population constitutionally prescribed for the formation of autonomous states. 5 1) The so-called Missouri Compromise ( 1820), in consequence of which Missouri became one of the States of the Union as a slave state, excluded slavery from every remaining Territory north of 36°30' latitude and west of the Missouri.52 By this compromise the area of slavery was advanced several degrees of longitude, whilst, on the other hand, a geographical boundary-line to its future spread a
Quoted in the report "Columbia, S. C. Thursday, Nov. 8, 1 860", New-York Daily Tribune, No. 6098, November 9, 1 860.- Ed.
b
An Ordinance for the government of the territory of the United States, north-west of the River Ohio, adopted by the 1 787 Congress, and An Act to provide for the government of the territory north-west of the River Ohio, adopted by the 1 789-90 Congress.- Ed.
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Karl Marx
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seemed quite definitely drawn. This geographical barrier, in its turn, was thrown down in 1854 by the so-called Kansas-Nebraska Bill, the initiator of which was St[ephen] A. Douglas, then leader of the Northern Democrats. The Bill, which passed both Houses of Congress, repealed the Missouri Compromise, placed slavery and freedom on the same footing, commanded the Union government to treat them both with equal indifference and left it to the sovereignty of the people, that is, the majority of the settlers, to decide whether or not slavery was to be introduced in a Territory. Thus, for the first time in the history of the United States, every geographical and legal limit to the extension of slavery in the Territories was removed. Under this new legislation the hitherto free Territory of New Mexico, a Territory five times as large as the State of New York, was transformed into a slave Territory, and the area a of slavery was extended from the border of the Mexican Republic to 38° north latitude. In 1859 New Mexico received a slave code that vies with the statute-books of Texas and Alabama in barbarity. Nevertheless, as the census of 1 860 proves,b among some 100,000 inhabitants New Mexico does not count even half a hundred slaves. It had therefore sufficed for the South to send some adventurers with a few slaves over the border, and then with the help of the central government in Washington and of its officials and contractors in New Mexico to drum together a sham popular representation to impose slavery and with it the rule of the slaveholders on the Territory. However, this convenient method did not prove applicable in other Territories. The South accordingly went a step further and appealed from Congress to the Supreme Court of the United States. This Court, which numbers nine judges, five of whom belong to the South, had long been the most willing tool of the slaveholders. It decided in 1 857, in the notorious Dred Scott case,53 that every American citizen possesses the right to take with him into any Territory any property recognised by the Constitu tion.C The Constitution, it maintained, recognises slaves as property and obliges the Union government to protect this property. Consequently, on the basis of the Constitution, slaves could be forced to labour in the Territories by their owners, and
The North American Civil War
37
so every individual slaveholder was entitled to introduce slavery into hitherto free Territories against the will of the majority of the settlers. The right to exclude slavery was taken from the Territorial legislatures and the duty to protect pioneers of the slave system was imposed on Congress and the Union govern ment. If the Missouri Compromise of 1820 had extended the geographical boundary-line of slavery in the Territories, if the Kansas-Nebraska Bill of 1854 had erased every geographical boundary-line and set up a political barrier instead, the will of the majority of the settlers, now the Supreme Court of the United States, by its decision of 1857, tore down even this political barrier and transformed all the Territories of the republic, present and future, from nurseries of free states into nurseries of slavery. At the same time, under Buchanan's government the severer law on the surrendering of fugitive slaves enacted in 1850 was ruthlessly carried out in the states of the North.54 To play the part of slave-catchers for the Southern slaveholders appeared to be the constitutional calling of the North. On the other hand, in order to hinder as far as possible the colonisation of the Territories by free settlers, the slaveholders' party frustrated all the so-called free-soil a measures, i. e., measures which were to secure for the settlers a definite amount of uncultivated state land free of charge.55 In the foreign, as in the domestic, policy of the United States, the interests of the slaveholders served as the guiding star: Buchanan had in fact obtained the office of President through the issue of the Ostend Manifesto, in which the acquisition of Cuba, whether by purchase or by force of arms, was proclaimed as the great task of national policy. 56 Under his government northern Mexico was already divided among American land speculators, who impatiently awaited the signal to fall on Chihuahua, Coahuila and Sonora. 57 The unceasing piratical expeditions of the filibusters against the states of Central America were directed no l� ss fr�m the White House at Washington. In the closest connectIOn WIth this foreign policy, whose manifest purpose was conquest of new territory for the spread of slavery and of the slaveholders' rule, stood the reopening of the slave trade, 58 secretly supported by the Union government. St[ephen] A. Douglas himself declared in the American Senate on August 20, 1859: During the last year more Negroes have been imported from Africa than ever before in any single year, even at the time when the slave trade was still legal.
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Marx uses the English word.- Ed. b Its data were cited in a report date-lined " New York, March 26", The Times, No. 23903, April 1 0 , 1 86 1 .- Ed. C The ruling of the US Supreme Court on the Dred Scott case was quoted in the article "The Dred Scott Case Decided" , New-York Daily Tribune, No. 4955, March 7 , 1 857.- Ed. !
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a Marx uses the English term.- Ed.
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The number of slaves imported in the last year totalled fifteen thousand." Armed spreading of slavery abroad ;;as the avowed aim of national policy; the Union had ' fa e��m � th� slave �f the 300,000 s.laveholders who held s�ay ��er . e o�t . A senes of compromises, which the South �wed to Its alhance with the Northern Democrats had led t t�� :es�� ?n this al�iance all the i � i y repeate i c periodical to eslst the ever s, ttemp � � � ' m �reasmg encroachments of the slaveh Id�rs h ad hitherto come to ' pomt . gnef. At length there came a turnmg . For h ardly had the Kansas-Nebraska Bill gone through, whICh . wiped out the geographical bo. nd. ary-rI�� f slavery an? made its introduction into new Terrl��;�s su J �ct .to the wIll of the majority of the settlers when . ed emlssanes of the slavehold. k . ' th b � M' d oWlemfe ers, border rabble fro Issoun an Arkansas WI .m one hand and revolver in the th r, feII ' pon Kansas and � � g . sought by the most unheardbOf a:roc*�s to � Islod e its settlers from the Territory colonised Y th ' ese raids were supported by t�e central government in Wasr::ington. . Hence .a tremendous reaction. Throughout. the. North , but particularly m the N orthwest,59 a relief orgamsatlon was formed t support Kansas with men, arms and mone 60 f this r:hef .o�ganisation arose the Republican Party, whic� ' th��:o�e °wes itS ongm to the. struggle for Kansas. After the attempt t transform Kansas m t a slave Terntory by force of arms had f 1' 1 d �he �outh sought to achie�e , ' the �ame result by political intr� ;es . u� anan s gov�rnment, m particular, exerted its utmost efforts to �ve Kansas mcluded in the States of the Union as a slave state with a slave .constitution imposed on it. b Hence renewed strugg1 e, thIS' time mainly conducted in Congress at Washmgton. Even St[ephen] A. Douglas, ' the chief of the Northern Dem c��ts, �?W ( 1 857-58) entered the lists against the government �n� � �es o f the South , because imposition of a slave constitu on coul ave been contrary to the principle of sovereigntY f the s�ttlers passed in the Nebraska Bill of 1854 . Doug1as, senator for Ilhnois' a N orthwestern state, would naturally have lost all his influence if he had wanted to concede to the South the right to steal bY fo��e � arms or through acts of Congress Territories colonised by e orth . As the struggle for 0
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e th t a it , g in e b to in y rt a P n ca bli u ep R e th d e ll a c , e r fo e r e th . Kansas, lf se it y rt a P c ti ra oc em D e th in h it w t li sp st r fi e th d e n o si a c c e time o
e sam th r fo m r o tf la p st r fi s it rd a rw fo t u p ty r a P n a c li b u p e The R n h o J , te a id d n a c s it h g u o h lt A . 6 5 8 1 in n o ti c le e l ia t n e r presid fo st a c s te o v f o r e b m u n e g u h e th s, u io r to ic v t o n s a w Fremont, ly r la u c ti r a p , ty r a P e th f o th w o r g id p a r e th d e v o r p te a r y n e h him at a .t r fo n o ti n e v n o C l a n o ti a N d n o c se ir e th t A . st e w t in the N orth u p in a g a s n a c li b u p e R e th ), 0 6 8 1 , 7 1 y a (M s n o ti c le e l " s. presidentia n io it d d a e m so y b d e h ic r n e ly n o . 6 5 8 1 f o m r o tf la p ir e th forward sh e fr f o t o fo a t o N : g in w o ll fo e th e r e w ts n te n o c l a ip c in y c Its pr li o p g in r e st u b li fi e h T . y r e v a sl to d e d e c n o c r e th r fu t territory is a m ig st is e d a tr e v a sl e th f o g in n e p o e r e h T . se a e c st u e abroad m c n a r e th r fu e th r fo d te c a n e e b to re a b s w la il o -s e e fr ised. Finally, of free colonisation.tant point in this platform was that not a foot The vitally im por onceded to slavery ; rather it was to remain of fresh terrain was nced within the boundaries of the states where it once and for all confid . Slavery was thus to be formally interned ; but already legally existen of territory and continual spread of continual expansio limits is a law of life for the slave st. ates of the slavery beyond its old , o c U nion. c a b to , n o tt o c s, le c ti r a t r o p x e n r e th u so e th f o n o ti The cultiva it s a g n lo s a e v ti a r e n u m e r ly n o is s, e v a sl y b n o d ie r r a c n o sugar, etc., d n a le a sc ss a m a n o s, e v a sl f o s g n a g e g r la h it w d e ct ly is condu n o s e ir u q e r h ic h w , il so le ti r fe y ll a r tu a n a f o s ty li wide expanse ti r fe n o ss le s d n e p e d h ic h w , n o ti a iv lt u c e v si n te n I . r u o y g r simple lab e n e d n a e c n e ig ll te in l, a it p a c f o t n e m st e v in n o n a th il id p of the so a r e th e c n e H . y r e v a sl f o e r tu a n e th to y r a tr n o c h ic h of labour, is w , ia in g ir V d n a d n la y r a M e k li s te a st f o n o ti a s, le c transform ti r a t r o p x e f o n o ti c u d o r p e th in s e v a sl d e y lo p . th formerly em u o S p e e d e th to in m e th t r o p x e to s e v a sl e is a r h ic h f o s into states w th n e v e -s r u fo m r fo s e v a sl e th e r e h w , a n li o r a C th u o S te Even in le p m o c st o lm a n e e b s a h n o tt o c f o n o ti a iv lt u c e th , n y b , d the populatio e e d In . il so e th f o n io st u a h x e e th to e u d s r a e y r fo y r a s n ly s�ation a tr n e e b y d a e lr a s a h a n li o r a C th u o S s e c n a st m u s e v a force of circ sl s ll se y d a e lr a it e c n si , te a st g in is a -r e v a sl a to in t r a p e th formed in f o s te a st e th to ly r a e y s r a ll o d n o li il m r u fo f to the sum o d Southwest. As soon as this point is .reached, extreme South an ew Territories becomes necessary, so that one the acquisition of enholders with their slaves may occupy new fertile section of the slav rm " , New-York Daily .
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Karl Marx
lands and that a new market for slave-raising, therefore for the sale of sla�es, �ay be created for the remaining section. It is, for ex.ampl� , mdubItable that without the acquisition of Louisiana, MIssoun and Arkansas by the United States, slavery in Virginia and �1a�yland would have become extinct long ago. In the SeCeSSIOnIst Congress at Montgomery, Senator Toombs, one of the spokesmen of the South, strikingly formulated the economic law that commands the constant expansion of the territory of slavery.
"In fifteen years, " ' s�id he, "without a great increase in slave territory, either the slaves must be permitted to flee from the whites, or the whites must flee from the slaves."
As is known, the representation of the individual states in the Congr�ss House �f Representatives depends on the size of their respectIve populatIOns. As the populations of the free states grow far more quickly than those of the slave states, the number of Northern Repres�ntatives wa s bound to ou tstrip that of the Southern very rapIdly. The real seat of the political power of the South is accordingly transferred more and more to the Am erican ?enate, where every state, whether its population is great or small, IS represented by two Senators. In order to assert its influence in the Senate and, through the Senate, its hegemony over the Unite d States, the South therefore required a continual formation of ne w slav� states. This, however, was only possible through conquest of f?reIgn lands, as in the case of Texas, or through the transform a tIOn of the Territories belonging to the United States first into sl�ve T�rritories and later into slave states, as in the ca se of MIss�)Un , Arkansas, etc. John Calhoun, whom the slaveholde rs admIre as their statesman pa r excellence, stated as early as February 19 , 1 84 ? , in the Senate, that the Senate alone place d a balance o! power m the hands of the South, that extension of the slave terntory was necessary to preserve this equilibrium betwee n South and N orth in the Senate, and that the attempts of the So uth . �t �h.e creatIOn of new slave states by force were accordingly JustIfIed. �inally, the number of actual slaveholders in the South of the UnIO? does not amount to more than 30 0,0 00 , a narrow oligarch y that IS confronted with many millions of so-called poor white s: �hose numbers have been constantly growing through concentra tIon of lan �ed property and whose condition is only to be compared wIth that of the Roman plebeians in the period of � Marx gives the English words "poor whites" in parenthesis after their German
eqUlvalent.- Ed.
The North American Civil War
41
Rome's extreme decline. Only by acquisition and the prospect of ed eX g rin � s bu fili by as ll we as , ies tor rri Te I? new of n itio uis � acq � . tions, is it possible to square the mterests of .these poor �hItes with those of the slaveholders, to give theIr restless thIrst for of ct spe pro the h wit m the e tam to and ion ect dir ss mle har a action one day becoming slaveholders the?Is�lv� s. . A strict confinement of slavery wIthm ItS old terram, therefore, al du gra its to d lea to law c mi no eco to ing ord acc d un bo was extinction, in the political sphere to annihilate the .hegemony that the slave states exercised through the Senate, and fmally to exp?se mg e ea thr to te sta n ow its hin wit � hy � arc olig ing � old veh sla the perils from the "poor white s" . In acc<.>rd�nce WIth the pn�c�ple that any further extension of slave Terntones was to be prohIbIted the of le ru e � t d cke tta a ore ref the s can bli pu Re the , law by . . slaveholders at its root. The Repubhcan electIon VICtory was accordingly bound to lead to open struggle bet�een North . and lf Itse s wa ed, On ntI me y ead alr as y, tor vic n ctio ele s thi d An th. Sou conditioned by the split in the Democratic cam p. The Kansas struggle ha d already caused a split between the slaveholders' party and the Democrats of the Nort.h allied to it. With the presidential election of 1 860 , the sam e stnfe now broke , rth No the f ts cra mo De e Th m. for l era gen re mo ? a in in aga out . with Douglas as their candidate, made .the mtroductI?n . of slavery into Territories dependent on the WIll of the . m.aJonty of t�e Ir the as e dg mn eck Br h wit ty, par ' ers old veh sla e Th rs. settle candidate, maintained that the Co nstitution of the United States, as the Supreme Court had also declared: brought slavery l� gally all m al leg y ead alr s wa ery slav lf itse of and in in; tra its in Territories and required no special naturalisa�ion. Whilst, there r Te ave � s f IOn enS ext any d ite hib pro s can bli � pu Re fore, the ritories, the Southern party laid claim to all Terntones of the republic as legally warranted domains. What they had attempted a on ry v sla ce for to s, nsa Ka to ard reg h wit : le mp exa of y wa by . Territory through the central government agamst the w�ll o.f the of es ton rrI Te the all for law as up set w no y the es, elv ms the rs settle the Un ion . Such a concession lay beyond the power of the Democratic leaders and would only have occasioned the desertion of their army to the Republican cam p. �n the other hand ; Douglas'S "settlers' sovereignty" could not satIsfy the. sl�veholders xt ne the hm WIt ed ect eff be to d ha ect eff to d nte wa it at Wh . rty pa four years under the new President, could only be effected by the
�
a
In its ruling on the Dred Scott case.- Ed.
•
43 42
Karl Marx
resources of the central government and brooked no further delay. It did not escape the slaveholders that a new power had arisen, the Northwest, whose population, having almost doubled between 1850 and 1 860, was already pretty well equal to the white population of the slave states a power that was not inclined either by tradition, temperament or mode of life to let itself be dragged from compromise to. compromise in the manner of the old Northeastern states. The U nion was still of value to the South only so far as it handed over Federal power to it as a means of carrying out the slave policy. If not, then it was better to make the break now than to look on at the development of the Republican Party and the upsurge of the Northwest for another four years and begin the struggle under more unfavourable conditions. The slaveholders' party therefore played va banque ! When the Demo crats of the North declined to go on playing the part of the "poor whites" of the South, the South secured Lincoln's victory by splitting the vote, and then took this victory as a pretext for drawing the sword from the scabbard. The whole movement was and is based, as one sees, on the slave question. Not in the sense of whether the slaves within the existing slave states should be emancipated outright or not, but whether the 20 million free men of the North should submit any longer to an oligarchy of 300,000 �laveholders; whether the vast Territories of the republic should be nurseries for free states or for slavery; finally, whether the national policy of the U nion should take armed spreading of slavery in Mexico, Central and South America as its device. In another article we will probe the assertion of the London press that the North must sanction secession as the most favourable and only possible solution of the conflict. Written on October 20, 1861 First published in Die hesse, No. 293, October 25, 186 1
Printed according to the news paper
Karl M arx 6 1 S E T A T S D E T I N U E H T H E C I V I L W A R IN T
•
in a g a d n a a in a g A '" r ur y h wor t t n is he Lor � "Let him go, d :; � h of mou th .lp c <;> the g o t e r h s n a f o e ic v d English states;n a is th s te ta S : d e � it � n � U � � h � ili e th to th u o S e John Russell th ts , le th r o N e th If ' e V o i d te r e � e d s n a u J . s it m o r f Leporello to D o n y r e v a sl h it w n o ti la C o s s a y n a m o r f lf e s it s r e h ig h go. , it . then f.ree d � a w e n a f 0 ' S SI a b e h t s te a e r c d n a , ' n SI I a , m hlstoncaI ong t n e d n e p developm�nt. . e d in o tw d e m r o f th u o S d n a h t r o N If a r a p e I n reahty, s ir e th r e v o n a H d n a d I g E I e p m a x e f o n o ti a r c.ountries, like, for a p e 's e th s a w n a th �; U . IC 1'ff� ' d . e r o m o n e b a r e h lt e lIon wouId n IS r e v e w o h 2 " th u o S 6 h e T " . r e v o n a H a r o n , II y Eng.Iand and a IC h' p ' a r g o e g th r o N e th m o r f f f o d I e a e . n terntory �IoseIy .s a g lo s le tt a b a t u b ll a t a y U �) c a t o n 1; t I . t e th t a th moral u m � s e s o p p u s e r p n o � ti ; r � a p e s I a Ic rn a n a 0 e e th in The advIC e v si n e ff o e th d e m su 1't ugh h al y, derac � � d fe�sive purposes. It is believed Southern Confe I s g a w t s a le t a , g a in W it n il u iv f C o e n o : ly e r e m is ty r a p � � e fJ 0 � e a s e th � t n e d n e p that the ISSue for e d in n a to in d te a in m � to r e h lt h s a h it .mg t�em from the supreme authority the territories w a r d h it w d n a s te ta s s f it o s d ee n gro. up th u o S e h 'T' " . se I a . f e r o m e b ld u o c g m ' h t o e th y r -c le of the U mon. N . tt a b is th h it W " 't I e v a h · st u m d n a l Il w t I . y or it r y r e te · th " y r entire o it r r te e r ti n e " lr e h t y B . y k c tu n e K n o p u secessionists fell ,
� .
Giovanni. -Ed. Don opera s The Times, Mozart' in ed From Report 1 86 1 . 14, er b o ct O n o le st ca w e N in b Russell's speech S , 1 8 6 1 .- Ed. I r e b o ct O , 4 6 0 4 2 No. a
44
The Civil War in the United States
Karl Marx
understand in the first place all the so-called border statesa_ Delaw �re, M�ryland, Virginia, North Carolina, Kentucky, Tennes see, Missoun and Arkansas. Besides, they lay claim to the entire territory south of the line that runs from the nortwest corner of Missouri to the Pacific Oce�n. What the slaveholders, therefore, c �1I the South, �mbraces more �han three-quarters of the territory hItherto com pns�d by the U mono A large part of the territory . . thus claImed IS stIlI In the possession of the Union and would first have to be conquered from it . None of the so-called border states however, not even those in the possession of the Confederacy were ever actual slave states. Rather, they constitute the area of the U nited St�tes in whic� the system of slavery and the system of free . labour eXIst SIde by SIde and contend for mastery, the actual field of battle between South and North, between slavery and freedom. The war of the Southern Confederacy is, therefore, not a war of defence, but a war of conquest, a war of conquest for the spread and perpetuation of slavery. The chain of mountains that begins in Alabama and stretches northward � to the Hudson River the spinal column, as it were, of the Umte? States -cuts the so-called South into three parts. The mountaInous country formed by the Allegheny Mountains . . wIth theIr two parallel ranges, the Cumberland Range to the west and the Blue Mountains b to the east, divides wedge-like the lowlands along the western coast of the Atlantic Ocean from the lowlands in the southern valleys of the Mississippi. The two l<.>wlands separated by the mountainous country, with their vast nce swamps and far-flung cotton plantations, are the actual area of slavery. The long wedge of mountainous country driven into �he . hear� of sl�very, with its correspondingly clear atmosphere, an InVIgoratIn ? chmate and a soil rich in coal, salt, limestone, iron ?re, go!d, In short, every raw material necessary for a many-sided Industnal develo pm �nt, is �lready for the most part free country. In accordance WIth Its phYSIcal constitution, the soil here can only be cultivated with success by free small farmers. Here the slave system vegetates only sporadically and has never struck root. In t�e larger part of the so-called border states, the dwellers of these h �ghlands comp�ise the core of the free population, which sides WIth the North If only for the sake of self-preservation. . Let us consIder the contested territory in detail.
:
Marx gives the English words "border states" in parenthesis after their German equivalent.- Ed. b Marx uses the English names: "Cumberland Range" and "Blue Moun tains".- Ed. a
45
lly tua fac , is tes sta er rd bo the of n ter eas rth no st mo the , Delaware the of pts em att the l Al . ion U the of on ssi sse po the in ly ral ? mo and ve ha m the to le rab ou fav n tIo fac e on en ev ng mi for at secessionists the on k re ipw sh red ffe su r wa the of g � nin gin be the since s ha te sta S thI of nt me ele ve sla e Th . ion lat pu po the of ity im an un e th ne alo 86 1 to 0 85 1 om Fr t. ou ing dy of ess oc ? pr in long been al tot a th WI t tha so lf, ha by d she ini dim s ve sla of er numb s: population of 1 1 2 ,2 1 8 Delaware now numbers only 1,7 98 slave cy era ed nf Co ern uth So e th by ed nd ma de is are law De ss, Neverthele as n soo as rth No the for le ab ten un y ril lita mi be t fac in uld wo and the South possessed itself of M aryla�d. . . h hIg n ee tw be t lIc nf co d ne tIO en e-m ov ab e th elf its d In Marylan of ion lat pu po al tot a of t Ou ce. pla es tak ds lan low d an lands . Ing lm he erw ov the at Th s. ve sla 88 1 , 87 re he are re the 4 03 7 68 ain ag s ha io Un the of e sid the on is ion lat � pu po the maj�rity of he to s On ctI ele ral ne ge t en � rec the by ed ov pr ly ng iki str been . Ich wh s op tro on Um 0 ,00 30 of my ar e Th . ton ing ash W in ss re ng Co the ve ser to ly on t d no de en int is nt, me mo the at d lan holds Mary ld ho to o als , lar cu � rt pa in , ut � , ve ser re a as ac tom Po the army on ' . tr un co the of or en mt the In rs ne y -ow ve sla s iou ell in check the reb m see we at wh to r ila sim on en om en ph a ve ser ob we For here for s nd sta le op pe the of ss ma t ea gr the e er wh tes sta er rd bo other for rty pa rs' lde ho ve sla t an ific ign ins y all ric me nu a d an rth No the s ke ma rty pa rs' lde ho ve sla the s, er mb nu in ks lac it t ha W . the South te sta all of on ssi sse P ' r ea n">: ma t tha r we po of s an ? me � the y in up . tra en nc co � an ue ng mt l ca lItI po m nt me ge ga en ary offices, heredit . tion of great wealth in few hands have secured for It. . Virginia now forms the great cantonme?-t where the mam army . e oth ch ea nt ro nf co on Um the : of y arm in ma e th d an of secession IS ve sla of er mb nu e th a ini rg Vi � of s nd hla hig st we rth no the In . s Ist ns co IOn lat pu po e fre ge lar as es tim ty en tw the 1 5 00 0 ' whilst e th on a, ini g Vi of ds lan lo� rn ste ea e Th rs. � me far e fre m �stly of . s oe gr Ne g Ism Ra s. ve sla n llIo mi a lf ha igh ll-n we other ha nd , count e th rm fo tes sta rn he ut So e th to s oe gr Ne e th of e and the sal he as n soo As . ds lan low � ese th of e om inc of rce sou l ipa princ On ssI � sec e th h ug ro th � ed rr ca d ha ds lan low e th ringleaders of . d an nd mo ch RI at e u Isla leg te sta e th in s ue rig � int � by ce ordinan . had in all haste opened the gates of VIrgInia to . the Southern a ed rm fo , IOn eSS sec e th m fro ed ed sec a ini rg Vi st we rth army, no ort rep a in ed tain con sus cen US 860 1 the of a dat s cite rx Ma a Here and below 1 86 1 . - Ed. 10, ril Ap 03, 239 . No es. Tim e Th , 26" rch Ma rk, Yo datelined "N ew b On April 17, 1 86 1 .- Ed.
46
Karl Marx
new state, and under the banner of the Union now defends its territory arms in hand against the Southern in vaders. Tennessee, with 1 , 10 9, 84 7 inhabitants, 27 5, 78 4 of whom are slaves, finds itself in the hands of the Sout hern Confederacy, which has placed the whole state under martia l law and under a system of proscription which recalls the da ys of the Roman Triumvirates. When in the winter of 1 86 1 the slaveholders proposed a general convention of the people w hich was to vote for secessio� or �on-secession, the maj ority of th e people rejected any conventIOn, m order to remove any pretex t for the secession movement. Later, when Tennessee was alread y militarily overrun and �ubjected to a system of terror by the So uthern Confederacy, more than a third of the voters at the elections still declared themselves for the Union. H er e, as in mos t of the border states, the mountainous country, east Tennessee, fo rms the real centre of resistance to the slaveholders' party. On Ju ne 1 7, 1 86 1 , a General Convention of the people of east Ten nessee assembled in Greeneville, declared itself for the Union , deputed the former governor of the state, Andrew Johnson, on e of the most ardent U nionists, to the Senate in Washington an d published a "d eclara tion of grievanc es ", · which lays bare all th e means of deception, intrigue and . terror by which Tennessee was "voted out" of the Union.b Since then the secessionists have held east Tennessee in check by force of ar m s. Similar relationships to those in Wes t Virginia an d east Tennessee are found in the north of Alabama, in northwest Georgia and in the north of N orth Carol ina. Further w es t, in the border state of M issouri, with 1 , 1 73 ,3 1 7 inhabitants and 1 14 ,9 65 slav es - the latter mostly concentrated in the nort�west of the state the people' s convention of August 1 86 1 deCIded for the Union.c Jackson , the govern or of the state and the tool of the slaveholders' party, rebelled against the legislatUI;e of Missouri, was outlawed an d took the lead of the armed hordes that fell upon Missouri fr om Texas, Arkansas and Tennessee in order �o bring it o its knee s before the Confederacy : � a�d sev7r Its bond WIth the Umon by the sword. Next to Virginia, . Mlssoun IS at the present moment the m ain theatre of the Civil War.
� Marx
�
uses t e English expressior: and gives the German equivalent.- Ed. The resolutIons of the ConventIOn were reported by the New-York Daily . Tnbune, No. 6308, July 4, 1 86 1 , in the item "The Knoxville (Tenn.) Whig ... ".
Ed.
C
The convention actually adopted this decision on March 9, 1 86 1 .- Ed.
. I
•
The Civil War in the United States
47
New Mexico not a state, but merely a Territory, in�o which 25 slaves were imported during Buchanan' s presidency m order to . send a slave constitution after them from Washmgton had no craving for the South, as even the latter concedes. But the South has a craving for New Mexico and accordingly spewed an armed . gang of adventurers from Texas over the border. New � exlco has implored the protection of the Union government agamst these liberators. . It will have been observed that we lay partIc�lar em?h�s�' s on the numerical proportion of slaves to free men I� . the mdI:'Idual border states. This proportion is in fact deCISIve. It IS the thermometer with which the vital fire of the slave system ,?ust be measured. The soul of the whole secession movement .IS . S?ut� Carolina. It has 402,54 1 slaves and 30 1 ,27 1 free men. MtsstSstppt, . which has given the Southern Confederacy its dIctator, Jefferson Davis, comes second. It has 436,696 slaves and 354,699 free men . Alabama comes third, with 435 , 1 32 slaves and 529, 1 64 free �en. The last of the contested border states, which we have stII� �o mention, is Kentucky. Its recent history is particularly �haractenstlc of the policy of the Southern Confeder�cy. Among ItS 1 , 1 3 5 .7,1 3 inhabitants Kentucky has 225,490 slaves. In three succeSSIve general elections by the people in the winter of 1 86 � , when elections to a congress of the border states w� re held; m Jun� . 1 86 1 , when elections to the Congress m Was� mgton took place, finally, in August 1 86 1 , in elections �o �he leg� slature of the S�ate . of Kentucky- an ever increasmg maJonty deCIded for the Umon. On the other hand, Magoffin, the Governor of Kentucky, and all the high officials of the state are fanatical supporters of �he slaveholders' party, as is Brecki.nridge, . Kentucky' s rep:esentatIve in the Senate in Washington, VIce-PresIdent of the Umted States . under Buchanan and candidate of the slaveholders' party m the presidential elections of 1 860. Too weak to win over Kentucky for secession, the influence of the slaveholders ' p�rty was stro?-g . enough to make this state amenable to a declaratIon of �eutrahty on the outbreak of war. The Confederacy recogmsed the neutrality as long as it serve� its p�rposes, as . long �s the Confederacy itself was engaged m cr,ushmg the .reslstance m east Tennessee. Hardly was this end attamed when It knoc�ed at the gates of Kentucky .with the � utt of a gun to th� ��y of: The South , needs its entire tern tory. It WIll and must . have It . From the southwest and southeast ItS corps of free-booters simultaneously invaded the "neutral" state. K: ntucky awoke f�om its dream of neutrality, its legislature openly SIded WIth the U mon,
•
The Civil War in the United States
Karl Marx
48
surrounded the traitorous Governor with a committee of public ' 'd ge and safety, called the people to arms, outlawed B k rec mn . . ordered. th e se�esslOmsts to evacuate the invaded territo Immediately. This was the signal for war. An army of t{;e ' le voI unteers is moving on Louisville Southern Confederacy whl . ' from Ill" mOlS, ' Indiana and Ohio flock hither to save Kentucky from the armed missionaries of slavery. The attempts of the Confederacy to annex Missouri and Kentucky, for example, against the will of these states rove the �101!0�ness of the p:etext that it is fighting for the ri��ts of the v nd � � �dual states agamst the encroachments of the Union On the mdlvldual states that it . considers to belong to the "S�uth" it confers, to b� sure, the nght to secede from the Union , but by no means the nght to remain in the Union. Even t�e. slave. states proper, however much external war ·mternal mIlitary dICtatorship and slavery give them everywhere fo; the m ?�ent a semblance of harmony, are nevertheless not without OpposItIonal elements. A striking example is Texas with 1 80 ' 388 sla�es out of 60 1 ,039 inhabitants. The law of 1 84 5 , a by virtue 0 f whICh Texas became a S tate 0f th e Union as a slave state ' entitled � ��orm not merely one, b�t five states out of its territ�ry. The o wo�ld thereby have ga�ned ten new votes instead of two in the A mencan Senate: and �n mcrease in the number of its votes in the Senate was a major object of its policy at that time. From 1 845 � 1 860, however, the slaveholders found it impracticable to cut up exas, where the �erman population plays an important art into even two states Without giving .the party of free labour the �PPer hand over the party of slavery m the second state . 63 Thl' s furnlshes the. best p�oof 0 f th� strength of the opposition to the slaveholding oIIgarchy m Texas Itself. Georgia is the largest and most populous of the slave states . It . has 462,230 slaves out of a total of 1 ' 057 , 327 m hab'Itants th e,ref ore nearI y half the population. Nevertheless, the slavehold� ers pa�ty has not so far succeeded in getting the Constitution ·Impose on the So th at Montgomery b sanctioned by a general � vote 0 f the people m Georgia. In the State Convention ?f Louisiana, meeting on March 2 1 ' 1 86 1 , at New Orleans, Rosehus, the political veteran of the state ' d ec1ared : ·
·
: Joint
Resolution for annexing Texas to the United States [ 1 845J - Ed . c°nstltutlOn of the Confederate States of America ( New- Yor Dai y Tribune, . 1 8 6 1 ) .- Ed. N o. 62 0 6. M arch 1 6,
k
i
49
racy. It does pi ns co a t bu n, io ut tit ns co a t no is n "T he Mon tgomery Constitutio gated oligarchy. iti m un d an us io od an t bu , le op pe e th not inaugurate a government of onvention at . C he T r. te at m is th in y sa y an ve ha The people were not permitted to d upon to lle ca e ar e w w no d an , ty er lib al ic lit po M ontgomery ha s dug the grave of attend its funeral . " a
s er ld o eh av sl d n sa u o th d re d n In d ee d , the oligarchy o f three h u y not only to proclaim th e er m o tg n o M f o ss re g n o C e th utilised e m sa e th at it ed it lo p ex It . h rt o N e separation o f the South from th to , es at st e av sl e th f o s n o ti u it st n co al time to reshape the intern ad h at th n o ti la u p o p e it h w e th f o subjugate completely the section e th d an n io ct te ro p e th er d n u ce en still preserved so m e independ e th 0 6 8 1 d n a 6 5 8 1 n ee w et B . n io n U e th f o n o ti u it st n o C ic at cr o em d e th f o s n ia g lo eo th d an s st li ra political spokes m e n , jurists, mo ht to prove, not so much that g u so y ad re al ad h ty ar p s' er ld o eh slav f o r te at m a is r u lo co at th er th ra t u b , d ie if st ju is y er av sl ro g e N . y er av sl to rn o b e er h yw er ev is s as indifference a n d the working cl y ac er d fe n o C n er th u o S e th f o ar w e One se es , therefore, that th ad re sp e th r fo t es u q n co f o ar w a rd o w e th f o se n se e u tr e th in is es at st er rd o b e th f o t ar p er at re g and perpetuation o f slavery. The ession of the U nio n , w h o se side ss o p e th in l il st e ar es ri to ri er T an d s. rm a h it w en th d an x o b tlo al they have taken first through the b th em for the "South " a n d ts n u co , er ev w o h , y ac er d fe n o C The h ic h w es at st er rd o b e th In . n io n U e th m o fr m e th er u q n co to s seek e th g in ld o h is it , g n ei b e m ti e th the Confederacy has occupied for martial la w . Within the actual y b k ec ch in s d n la h ig h ee fr ly relative g n ti is ex to er h it h e th g n ti n la p p su is ' it es lv se em th es at st e slav ev a sl 0 0 ,0 0 0 3 e th f o y ch ar g li d e m ocracy by the unrestricted o holders. n er th u o S e th t, es u q n co f o Were it to relinquish its plans ity to live an d the purpose ac p ca s it h is u q n li re ld u o w y ac er d Confe e th in h it w se au ec b ce la p k o to ly n o , d e e d in , n o si es ec S . n io ss ce se of to in es ri to ri er T d an es at st er rd o U nion the transformation o f the b able. On the other h a n d , were in ta at er g n lo o n d e m e se es at st slave n er th u o S e th to y ll fu ce ea p ry o it rr te ed st te n co e th e d ce to it c li b u p re e av sl e th to er d en rr su Confederacy, the North would entire territory o f the U nited more than three-quarters of the hole of the G u lf of Mexico a n d w e th se lo ld u o w h rt o N e h T s. State to y a B t o sc b o en P m o fr p ri st w ro ar n e th t p ce ex , n a ce O c ti an tl A e th ic if ac P e th m o fr ff o lf se it t cu Delaware B ay , a n d would even o, Arkansas and Texas would ic ex M w e N s, sa n a K , ri u so is M . n a ce O f o th u o m e th g in st re w f 4 o le b a p ca draw California after th e m .6 In 6 1 .- Ed. 18 , 29 ch ar M 7, 1 62 o. N , ne k Daily Tribu or -Y ew N e th in d te or ep R a
50
Karl Marx
The Civil War in the United States
the Mississippi from the hands of the strong, hostile slave republic in the South, the great agricultural states in the basin between the Rocky Mountains and the Alleghenies, in the valleys of the Mississippi, the Missouri and the Ohio, would be compelled by their economic interests to secede from the North and enter the Southern Confederacy. These northwestern states,65 in their turn, would draw after them into the same whirlpool of secession all the Northern states lying further east, with perhaps the exception of the states of New England.66 What would in fact take place would be not a dissolution of the Union, but a reorganisa�ion of it, a reorganisation on the basis of slavery, under the recogmsed control of the slaveholding oligarchy. The plan of such a reorganisation has been openly proclaimed by the principal s peakers of the ,South at the Congress of Montgom ery and explams the paragraph of the new Constitution which leaves it open to every state of the old Union to join the new Confederacy. The slave system would infect the whole Union. In the Nor.thern states, where Negro slavery is in practice impossible, the whIte working class would gradually be forced down to the le�el of h �10 �ry.67 This would fully accord with the loudly proclaImed pnnCIple that only certain races are capable of freedom, and as the actual labour is the lot of the Negro in the South, so in the North it is the lot of the German and the Irishman, or their direct descendants. The present struggle between the South and North is therefore nothing but a struggle between two social systems, th� system of slavery and the system of free labour. The struggle has broken out because the two systems can no longer live peacefully side by side o ? the North American continent. It can only be ended by the VICtory of one system or the other. If th � border states, the disputed areas in which the two systems have hItherto contended for domination, are a thorn in the flesh of the South, there can, on the other hand, be no mistake that, in . up to now, they have constituted the chief the course of the war weakness of the North. One section of the slaveholders in these distri�ts sim �lated loyalty to the North at the bidding of the conspIrators m the South; another section found that in fact it was i � accordan �e with their real interests and traditional ideas to go WIth . the Umon. The two sections have equally crippled the North. AnXIety to keep the "loyal" slaveholders of the border states in good humour; fear of throwing them into the arms of secession in � . �
51
govern me nt with incurable we akn ess sin�e the . beginning of the war , driven it to hal f me asu res , forced It to dIssemble away the principle of the war, and to spare the foe's most vulnerable spot, the root of the evil slavery itself. a d oke rev sly o ni illa pus coln Lin ly, ent rec � y onl When, � Fremont's Missouri proclam ation on the emanCIpatIOn of Negroes belonging to the rebels,68 this was don e solely out of regard for the lou d protest of the "loyal" slaveholders of � entucky. However, a turning point has already been reached. WIth Kent�cky, the last border state has been pushed into the series of battlefIelds be�ween South and No rth . With the real wa r for the border states m the border states themselves, the question of win nin g or losing them is withdrawn from the sphere of dip lom atic negoti�tions and parliamentary discussions. On e section of slaveholders WIl l throw off a f ct spe pro the h wit lf t its ten con l wil er oth � the ; alty loy of sk ma the . � gave the est Ind ian � financial compen sation such as Great Bn tam planters.69 Eve nts the� sel�es drive to the promu lgatIOn of the decisive slogan emanClpatwn of the slaves. That even the most hardened De mocrats and diplomats of the North feel themselves dra wn to this point, is sho wn by som e announcements of very recent dat e. In an op en letter, General Ca ss, Secre�ary of State for War un der Buchanan and hit?er�o one of the most ardent allies of the South, declared em anCIpatIOn � f the slaves the conditio sine qua non of the Un ion 's salvation .h In hIS the of n ma kes spo the n, nso ow Br . Dr er, tob Oc for w vie Re t las Catholic party of the No rth , o� h �s ow n admission the mo st en ergetic adversary of the em anCIp��IOn mo vem en t from 183 6 to 1 86 0, publishes an article for AbolItIOn.
" I f we have opposed Abolition heretofore, " he says among other things, "because we would preserve the Union, we must a !ortw:l now 0'p pose slavery . whenever, in our judgement, its continuance becomes mc�mpatlble Ith the . , maintenance of the Union, or of our nation as a free repubhcan state.
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Finally, the World, a New York orga? of the diplo� ats of . the Washington Cabinet, concludes one of Its latest blustenng artIcles against the Abolitionists with the words: a In a letter to Fremont of September I I , 1 86 1 , ( New-York Daily Tribune,
No. 6380, September 15, 1 861).- Ed. . . b Cass's statement was quoted in a leadmg article m the New- York Dmly Tnbune, No. 638 1 , September 1 6, 1 86 1 .- Ed. . Marx presumably quotes from the leadi�g art.lcle In the New-York Da� l) . Tribune, No. 640 1 , October 9, 1 86 1 , which contams thiS passage from the article In Brownson's Quarterly Review.-Ed. .
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Karl Marx
53
"On the day when it shall be decided that either slavery or the Union must go down, on that day sentence of death is passed on slaver I f th North cannot triumph without emancipation, it will triumph with emanc ation. �
Written about October 20 , 18 61
First published in Die Presse, N o. 306, November 7, 1861
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Printed according to the news paper
•
Karl Marx THE CRISIS IN ENGLAND 70
Today, as fifteen years ago, England faces a catastrophe that threatens to strike at the root of her entire economic system. As is known, the potato formed the exclusive food of Ireland and a not inconsiderable section of the English working people when the potato blight of 1 845 and 1 846 struck the root of Irish life with decay. The results of this great catastrophe are known. The Irish population declined by two million, of whom one part died of starvation and the other fled across the Atlantic Ocean. At the same time, this dreadful misfortune helped the English Free Trade party to triumph; the English landed aristocracy was compelled to sacrifice one of its most lucrative monopolies, and the abolition of the Corn Laws a assured a broader and sounder basis for the reproduction and maintenance of the working millions. What the potato was to Irish agriculture, cotton is to the dominant branch of Great Britain's industry. On its manufacture depends the subsistence of a mass of people greater than the total number of inhabitants of Scotland and than two-thirds of the present number of inhabitants of Ireland. For according to the census of 1 86 1 , the population of Scotland consisted of 3,06 1 , 1 1 7 persons, that of Ireland now only 5,764,543,b whilst more than four millions in England and Scotland live directly or indirectly by the cotton industry. Now the cotton plant is not, indeed, diseased. Just as little is its production the monopoly of a few regions of the earth. On the contrary, no other plant that yields clothing material •
•
a "An Act to Amend the Laws Relating to the Importation of Corn" [ 1 846].- Ed. b Population of the United Kingdom according to the Census of 1861 ( The Times, No. 23992, July 23, 1 8 6 1 ) .- Ed. 6 - 1 134
54
Karl Marx
thrives in equally extensive areas o f Amer cotton monopoly o f the slave states o f th ica, A si a a n d Africa. The e A m er ic a n U n io n is n ot a a tu ra l, b u t a n historical monopoly. It grew a n � d developed sImultaneously with the monopoly of th e on the world marke t. I the year 1 7 9 3 English cotton industry , � sh o rt ly after the time o f . the gre�t mechamcal mventions in E n g la n d , a Quaker 71 o f . C o n n.ectICut, E ly W� Itney, invented the co cleanmg cotton, �h�ch separates the cott tton g in : a machine for o n . fi b re from the cotton se e d . Pnor to thIs mvention, a day o f labour barely sufficed to separate a p a Negro's most intensive o u n d o f cotton fibre from the cotton se e d . After the invention o f th e cotton g in , a n o ld N �growoman could com fortably supp ly fifty pounds o f cotton daI.ly and gradual improvements hav . e su ' b se q u e n tl y d o u b le d th e ff IC Ie n c y o f th e m a � c h ine. The fetters on the cultivation of . cotton m the U!'uted State� were now burst a su the E n ghsh cotton mdustry, it grew sw nder. H a n d in hand with if tl y to a great commercial power. Now a n d then in the Cours e . se e m e d to take fnght at the monopoly o f d e v e lo p m e n t, England o f American cotton, as at a spectre that thr:atened danger. Su ch a m o m e n t occurred , for e x a � p le , at t�e tIme w h e n the e m a n ci p EnglIs� c?l?mes w a s purchased for { ation of the Negroes in the 2 0 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 .7 2 It was a matter for mIsgIvmg that the in d u stry in L a n c a shire and Yorkshire should rest on the sovereignty o f th e . A la� �m a , whIlst �h e E n glish nation slave-whip in Georgia a n d im p o se d o n it se lf so great a sacnfICe to abolIsh slavery in its o w n c o lonies. Philanthropy h�:l\\:ever, d o e s not m a k e history, lea ' st o f a ll c o m m e rc ia l h is to ry SImIlar doubts arose a s often a s a co tt . o n cr op failure occurred i � the U mte� States and a s, in addition, was exp l�Ited b y the slaveholders to such a natural p h e n o m e n o n a rt . co�ton stIll hIgher through combin ificially raise the price o f a ti o n . The English cotton spmne�� a n d weavers then threate n e . . Cot�on . Mamfold projects for proc d rebellion against · " Kin g u ri n g cotton from Asiatic a n d Afncan Sources c a m e to light. T h is w 1 � 5 0 .b Howeve:, the following good a s the case for e x a m p le in c ro p in t h e U n it e d S t�tes n u m p h a n tl y � dIspelled such yearnings for e m a nc ipation. In d e e d , I� the last few years the American co . tton monopoly attained d Im e n sIOns scarcely dreamt o f before , p a rt ly in consequence o f the f�e e tra?e le�islation, which repe a le dIfferentIal tanff on the cotton g d the hitherto existing rown by slave s; partly in
:
M a:x uses the English term.Ed. ThI S may refer to artIcle s On cotton cultivation published in The Economist Nos. 37 0, 3 7 1 and 3 72 , Septe ' mber 28 , October 5 an d 1 2; 1 85 0. - Ed.
The Crisis in England .
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55
consequence of the simultaneous giant strid.es � ade by . the English cotton industry and American cotton cultIvatIon dUrIng the last decade. In the year 1 857 the consumption of cotton in England already amounted to nearly 1 ,500 million p�unds. . Now, all of a sudden, the American CIVIl War menaces thIS great pillar of English industry. Whilst the Union blockades the harbours of the Southern states, in order to cut off the secessionists' chief source of income by preventing the export of their cotton crop of this year, the Confederacy lends compelling force to this blockade with the decision not to export a bale of cotton of its own accord, but rather to compel England to come and fetch her cotton from the Southern harbours herself. England is to be driven to the point of forcibly breaking through the blockade, of then declaring war on the Union and so of throwing her sword into the scale of the slave states. From the beginning of the American Civil Wa� the pric� of cotton in England rose continuously; for a consIderable tIme, however, to a less degree than was to be expected. On the whole, the English commercial world appeared to look dow.n very phlegmatically on the American crisis : The cause of thIS cold blooded way of viewing things was �nmIstakable. Th� whole of the last American crop was long ago m Europe. The YIeld of a ne� crop is never shippe.d befor.e the en� of � ovember, and thIS shipment seldom attams consIderable . dImen�lOns before the end of December. Till then, therefore, It remamed pretty much a matter of indifference whether the cotton bales were held back on the plantations or forwarded to the harbours of the South immediately after their packing. Should the blockade cease at any time before the end of the year, England could safely c�unt �:m receiving her customary cotton imports in March or AprIl, qUIte as if the blockade had never taken place. The English commercial world, in large measure misled by the English pre� s, succun;bed, however, to the delusion that a spectacle of about SIX months :war would end with recognition of the Confederacy by the U mted States. But at the end of August, North Americans appea:ed � n the market of Liverpool to buy cotton, partly for s peculatIon In Europe, partly for reshipment to North Amenca. ThIS unheard-of event opened the eyes of th.e English. !hey began to understand the seriousness of the situatIon. The LIverpool cotton market has since been in a state of feverish excitement; the prices of cotton were soon driven 100 per cent above t�eir �verage level; the . speculation in cotton a�surn.ed �he sa�e wII� feature � t�at characterised the speculatIon m radways m 1 845. 3 The spmmng
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57
Karl Marx
and weaving mills in Lancashire and other seats of the British cotton industry limited their labour time to three days a week; a number of mills stopped their machines altogether; the disastrous reaction on other branches of industry was not wanting, and at this moment all England trembles at the approach of the greatest economic catastrophe that has yet threatened her. The consumption of Indian cotton is naturally increasing, and the rising prices will ensure further increase of importation from the ancient home of cotton. Nevertheless, it remains impossible radically to change the conditions of production and the course of trade at, so to speak, a few months' notice. England is, in fact, now expiating her long mismanagement of India. Her present spasmodic attempts to replace American cotton by Indian encounter two great obstacles: the lack of means of communica tion and transport in India, and the miserable condition of the Indian peasant, which prevents him from taking advantage of the momentarily favourable circumstances. But, apart from this, apart from the process of improvement that Indian cotton has still to go through to be able to take the place of American, even under the most favourable circumstances it will be years before India can produce for export the requisite quantity of cotton. It is statistically established, however, that in four months the stocks of cotton in Liverpool will be exhausted. They will hold out even as long as this only if the limitation of the labour time to three days a week and the complete stoppage of a part of the machinery is effected by the British cotton spinners and weavers to a still greater extent than hitherto. Such a procedure is already exposing the factory districts to the greatest social sufferings. But if the American blockade continues over January! What then? Written about November 1 , 1 86 1 First published in Die Presse No. 305, November 6, 1861
Printed according to the news paper
Karl M arx B RIT IS H C O M M E R C E
London, Nov. 2, 1861 s � t n o m e i n e h r fo s rn tu � e R � . utlOn, a n d m T h e E n li sh B o a rd of Trade rts a large dlmm o p x e in w o sh 1 6 18 0 3 � S d' P rt ° f. � e th n e e tw e b so ri a p m co A . � se a re c n i r e rg l � l il � s : s � r �� � . s re l ra e n e g g m w o ll fo e th s e iv g rs a e y e re th st la e th f o � li st ding Sept. en s th on m ne ni e th r fo ts or xp E Value of 1 859 ........ £98,037,3 1 1 1 860 ........ 1 0 1 ,724,346 1 8 6 1 ........ 93,795,332 a
30 .
' is year, if compared to the th f o s rt o p x e e th y tl n e u q se n o C f ; 14 ,0 9 . 2 ,9 7 £ y � b d se a re c e d e v a h , 0 6 8 1 f o d ' o en p g . n vlz m d n o p es rr co s 0 3 7 1 ' 7 6 5 £ � lo rt o r e rg la r fa � y b e th p se a re e 'th e men' . ca� trad� . d l ta to which 0f n io ct a tr n co n e d d su e th u d f r b � : � e � � u so is th m o fr d e v � r d ss lo l ra e n e g � e th h c � h w . dustry may � i s : ::;:�� �� s m sh tI n B f o s e h c n ra b t n re fe if d e th d e affect from th e annexed tab le : months ne ni e th in es at St d te ni U e th Value of Exports to ending Sept. 30. 1859.
Beer and ale . . . . . . . . . . . Coals and culm . . . . ....................... . ............................. . Cottons Earthenware and porcelain ......... · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·
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£
78,060 144,556 2 ,753,782 448,661
1860.
£
76 ,8 4 3 1 56,665 2,776,472 5 1 8,778
1 86 1 .
£
25,642 200,244 1 , 1 30,973 1 9 1 ,606
s" , The rn u et R de ra T of rd oa B e h "T m e quoted fro ar es bl ta e th w lo be d an e er H a Ed. .1 86 1 2, er b m ve o N 9, 94 . Economist, N o
British Commerce
Karl Marx •
58 Haberdashery and millinery ...... . L'Inens .......... . Hardwares and cutlery .............. . . Metals-Iron-Pig .................... . . Bar, bolt, and rod . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Railway of all kinds Cast . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wrought of all kinds . . . . . . . . . . ... Steel, unwrought ........................ . . Copper, sheets and nails . Lead , pig . . . ... . .............................. . Tin plates .................................... . Oil Seed . . . . . . . .......................... . . . . . . . Salt .......... .. Silk �tuffs, handkerchiefs, . and rIbbons '. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... . . . . . Other silk articles Soda ............. . Spirits, (British) .............. . . Woolens-Cloths of all kinds Mixed stuffs, flannels, blankets etc. .... . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... ..... . Worsted Stuffs . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
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Total . ....... . . . . . . ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . .
: :
1 , 204,085 1 ,486,276 865,066 205,947 642,822 744,505 1 6,489 357, 1 62 372,465 99,422 53,45 1 935,692 1 22,570 63,876
1 ,083,438 1 ,337,778 776,772 1 65,052 546,493 665,619 1 7 ,056 378,842 457,490 44,97 1 66,0 1 5 833,644 72,9 1 5 84,8 1 8
542,3 1 2 493,654 446,095 79,086 148,587 1 68,657 9,239 1 25,752 2 16,246 1 0 ,005 1 ,45 1 274,488 1 ,680 59,809
197,605 1 2 9 ,557 439,584 53, 1 73 586,70 1
1 02 ,393 9 3 ,227 399 , 1 53 56,423 535 , 1 30
88,360 22,984 142,3 1 1 1 2 ,430 250,023
1 ,732 ,224 1 ,052,053
1 ,6 1 2,284 840,507
652,399 377,597
15,785,784 1 3 ,698,778 74
5,67 1 ,730
. �eyond the dlmmution due to the decrease of the Amencan trade, the general exports sho� , moreover, a decline of g d u e c £2 257 284 Th in e s l h t s e h s r r t t a in r u d � � � : : � � � � : � ' � : · e ��g� pnce of cotton, and the m�nth o f Sept consequent rise in cotton manuf actures. .and yarns ' had b. egun to powerfully react on the markets of B ntISh r-.:orth An:enca, a East India, and Australia. During the whole penod of nme months k September 1861 ey an Germany d ended T ere, next to the ur " � . . . U mted States, the countries f em: t m restrammg their absorp . �� : tion of British merchandise. e port trade t.o . Fra�ce has not ?rown in any observable de gree. ' the only stnkmg mstance of mcrease being limited to a . agnc�ltural article, viz., sheeps' and lambs' wool. During the � st nme months of 1 860, England exported to France 4 , 735 , 1 �� pound s of wool, worth £354,047.b Canada.- Ed. b The figures here and below are uotedb from the Accounts relating to Trade and Navigation for the Nine Months, ended eptem er 30, 1 86 1 ( The Economist, No. 949, November 2, 1861).- Ed. a
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s a h t r o p x e t a th , r a e y is th f o d io r e p g in d n o sp e r r o c e Durin g th 6 ,08 2 pounds, valued at £642 ,4 6 8 . The only other rise n to 8 ,7 1feature in the export returns refers to I taly . B ritish r e m arkable e new kingdom are evide ntly enlarging, which fact exports to that length in accounting for E n glish sympathies with will go a gre .75 Thus, for instance, the export of B ritish cottons to I talian liberty scany, N aples, and Sicily, has increased from -Sardinia, Tu 0 , to [ 1 ,2 0 4 ,2 8 7 in 1 8 6 1 ; the export o f cotton f o t r £ 7 5 6 ,8 9 2 in 1 86 o p x e e th ; 1 6 8 1 in 3 7 ,3 8 3 5 £ to 0 6 8 1 in 8 5 ,1 8 4 3 £ yarns from 0 ,8 6 7 in 1 86 0 , to [ 1 60 ,9 1 2 in 1 86 1 . irons from £ 1 2 bles extend only to the first eight months o f the The import ta general result is shown by the subsequent current year. Their figures: Real Value of Imports. 1 8 59 1 86 0 1861
3 ,7 6 2 9 ,9 8 8 .. £ .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . . . . . .. .. .. .. 8 7 ,2 4 9 ,8 6 10 .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. , 1 07 8 8 ,5 14 1 . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
e g r la a to e u d is ts r o p im f o se a e r c in t a th f o t r a p l The principa hase o f foreign wheat, which, from £ 6 ,7 96 , 1 3 1 addition in the purconths of 1 86 0 , had risen to [ 1 3 ,43 1 ,487 in the in the first eight emriod of 1 86 1 . As to raw cotton , the quantity corresponding p ing the period referred to, only slightly fallen imported h ad , dure o f the article had largely increased, as will be off, while the pricnexed figures: seen from the an eight months). the first g n ri u (d d te or p im n to ot C Quantity of •
Cwts."
Value.
£24,039 , 197 2 8 ,0 3 2 ,0 8 . . .. .. .. .. .. 1 8 5 9 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 76 ,6 0 4 ,9 8 2 7 4 ,3 16 ,6 0 1 . . .. 1 86 0 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 09 ,2 79 ,8 30 87 ,0 16 6 9, . . .. .. .. 1 8 6 1 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
in t n e m o m t n se e r p e th t a s c ti li o p l a r e n e g o n t l ia r There exis st u d in e th in d e b r so b a e r a y d o b y r e v e d n a g in England. Everyth merican crisis. I called your attention in a question and the eAfeverish state o f the Liverpool cotton market.b former letter to th eks it has exhibited, in fact, all the symptoms o f For the last two we in 1 84 5 . 76 Surgeons, dentists, physicians, the railway mania orkingmen, clerks and lords, comedians and barristers, cooks, wand sailors, newspaper writers and boardingparsons, soldiers . d E s. th n o m e in n f o d io for the per en iv g re a n m lu co is th a The figures in Ed. .0 -2 7 1 . p p , e m lu o v is b See th
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Karl Marx
school mistresses, males and females, all were speculating in cotton. Many of the lots purchased, sold and resold amounted to only .one, t� o, three, or four bales. More considerable quantities remaI ?ed m the s �me warehouses, although changing their proprIetors twenty tImes. One who had purchased cotton at 1 0 o'clock offered it for sale at 1 1 o'clock, and realized a profit of 1/2d. on one p ound. Many l
a " Motives of the Federalists in Coercing the Secessionists", The Economist, No. 949, November 2 , 1 86 1 .- Ed.
British Commerce ,
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l u m si is d la g n E s, ie lt cu fi if d al � Apart from its o w n commerci e h T s. ce an fm ch n re F e th f o e at st al ic taneously bothered b y th e crit rance to stay the bullion drain to . s maneuvers of the B an k of F d d � sc th o R e th m o fr ed in ta b o , ls il England by accommodation b a m ed lt su re , en se re fo e b to s a w as and other great firm s, have, w o n s a h e h S . ts en m ss ra ar b em r e h f o n io at ig it m . n , H a m b rg , ry ra o p m te t u b rh e B t s � k n b e th to r o � cc su r fo � ed li p successively ap g rm cu ro p f o d ea st m s ve tI ta n te e es th l al t u b ; rg . h the F re n ch u sb er et P .' S to whIc t. S and It ra st e h T r. ai p es d d ye ra et b relief, have only o d e r cu re s re su ea � m o : tw m o fr r ea Government is actually p u t app m , ls Il b ry su a re T e th n o st re te in e h T . t. in the course of a fortnigh e I Il h w t, n ce r e p / 7 to ed is ra e b o rd e r to keep them afloat, h a d to ed to p rtially2 postpon� �he d an m m co � as w el u n a m m E r V icto s st ah it p ca ch n re F h IC h w f o , an lo n ia al It ew n e th f o ts en m al st in e th to ed d ce ac e, rs u co f o , e h o ld a very large amount. H . fluences, . te m application of h is patron. SI O p p o o tw w o n e ar e er th s ie In the Tuiler e th f o re cu ry ra o p m te e th r fo s . proposing two opposite nostrum tists, Persigny, and the Cre, dIt ar ap n o B l a re e h T . se ea is d al ci finan f o k an B e th ct je b su to h ic h w y b ct je ro p a h is er ch 7 r/ ie il b o M to t, en m n er v o G e th f o l o tr n co te le France to the direct and comp se u to d a , ry su ea T e th n ? o cy en d en � . n of convert h e r into a m er e dep o SI IS em ed ct rI st re n u e th r fo th e power thus obtained y b d te n se re p re , ty ar er th o e h T . inconvertible State paper m o n ey rm er re gpIm es , propose a new fo f o es ad eg n re er th o d an ld u Fo at t es d o m st o m e th y b ed at m ti lo a n , �hose amount is variously es £ 3 0 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 . at g n ri a d re o m e th y b , 0 0 ,0 0 0 £ 16 ,0 Written on November 2 , 1861 First published in the New-York Daily Tribune, No. 6440, November 23, 1 8 6 1
Reproduced from the newspaper
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Economic Notes
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Karl Marx ECONOMIC NOTES 78
Lo nd on , November 3 At the pres� nt mo me nt gener.al politics are non-existent in E. ngla�d. Th e mterest of the country is absorbed in the French . . fm. an CIa l co mm e rCI I an d agncuI tu ra l cr isi s, th e Br iti sh ind us tri al a . ' . cn SlS , th e d earth of cotton and the Amenc ' an questIOn . C om p.etent circles here are no t for a mo me nt ' deceived concernm� the Bank of France's b�ll-jobbing with a few big houses on �oth Sides of th e Ch an ne l be mg a palliative of the weakest sort. Al l that could be achieved an d ha s been achieved therebY was a momentary abateme nt of the drain of gold to England . The repeated attem pt s of the Bank of France to raise me taII'IC auxi'1'mry . tro op s in P e t er s b ur g, H am bu rg an d Be rlin da ma ' d . without fi� lin g its coffers. Th e raising of the rate !t i ��� r�:; �� . treasury bIlls, m or. de, r to keep them in currency and the necessi. ty of securi.ng a remiSSIOn 0 f th e payments for the' ne w Italian loan from VI Ctor Em ma nu el- both are he ld he re t0 be sen. ous . . sym ptom s 0f F rench f'manCIal SICkness. It is known moreover, th at at the present mo me nt two projects contend in th' e Tuileries for p�ec� de nc e. The full-blooded Bo na partists with Pe rsi gnY and ' Perelre (of the Credit Mobilier) b at th elr ' h ead , want to ma ke the . B �n k of. France compl� tely subject to governmental authority to �e ?ce . It to a mere offICe of th e Finance Mi nis try an d to us e 'the mstIt� tIon, thus transformed, as an assignat facta'ry . . It IS. k �own th at th IS' pn. nCIpl e wa s originally at the bottom of the orgamsatIon of the Credit Mobilier . The I ess ad venturous party,
� See
this v<,'lume, p. 6 1 .- Ed. ' The Cre, dIt Mobilier bank was founded by the brothers Em ile and Isaac . . Perelre. Marx presumably means the latter.- Ed.
s pe' ilip Ph uis Lo of des ega ren er oth and uld Fo by ted sen repre 400 to t oun am to is ich wh , loan al ion nat new a es pos pro e, tim to ing ord n, acc llio mi 0 70 to e; som to ing ord acc , ncs fra n mi llio oth ers . The Times, in a lea din g article today, probably reflects the "iew of the City wh en it states that France is completely ean rop Eu r of he bed rob d an sis cri c mi no eco r he by ed lys p ara g. on wr y are Cit the d an es Tim e Th s, les the ver Ne e.a nc lue inf Should the December power 80 succeed in outlasting the winter in et mp tru r wa the w blo n l the wil it s, rm sto al ern int at gre without t bu , ied ed rem be y reb the t no l wil ss tre dis al ern int e Th . ing spr the its voice will be drowned. b I po int ed out that the cotton swi nd le in ter let er rli ea an In Liverpool during the las t few we ek s fully rem ind s on e of the ma dd est da ys of the railway ma nia of 1 84 5. De nti sts , surgeons, s ian ed com ds, d lor an rks cle rs, rke wo s, ow wid ks, coo s, ter ris bar an d clergy me n, soldiers an d tailors, journalists an d persons letting all sm ite Qu . ton cot in d ate cul spe all e, wif d an n ma ts, apartmen . ain ag d sol d an d sol ht, ug bo re we les ba 4 to 1 m fro of es titi an qu More considerable quantities lay for months in the sam e warehouse, although they changed owners twenty tim es. Whoever h an wit k loc o'c 1 1 at ain ag it d sol k, loc o'c 0 1 at ton cot ht ug bo d ha addition of a ha lfp en ny a po un d. Th us the sam e cotton often , ek we is Th s. ur ho ten in es tim six nd ha to nd ha m fro ed circulat however, there cam e a lul l, an d for no more rational reason than that a pound of cotton (na me ly, mi dd lin g Orleans cotton) ha d ore ref the are d an g llin shi a ke ma ce pen 2 1 t tha g, llin shi a to ris en a round figure. So everyone had purposed selling out, as soon as , ply sup the of se rea inc n de sud e nc He d. che rea s wa um xim thi s ma an d consequent reaction. As soon as the En gli sh ma ke themselves conversant with the possibility that a pound of cotton can rise n tha dly ma re mo urn ret l wil ce dan s us' Vit St. the g, llin shi a ve abo ever. h itis Br on ' ade Tr of ard Bo the of ort p re ly nth mo l icia t off las e Th exports and im ports ha s by no me an s dis pe lled the gloomy feeling. Th e export tables cover the nin e months' period from d rio pe e sam the h wit on ris pa com In . 1 86 1 r be tem Sep to y uar Jan of 1 86 0, they show a falling-off of about [8 ,00 0,0 00 . Of thi s, 79
d
Times, The , ... s itic pol nch Fre h wit lves mse the n cer con o wh se tho a "To :\10. 24080, November 2 , 1861 .- Ed. b See this volume, pp. 53-56.- Ed. , Marx uses the En g lish name.-Ed. tember 30. Sep ed end nths Mo e Nin the for n atio vig Na and de Tra to ting rela ts oun d Acc plement).-Ed. 1 86 1 ( The Economist, No . 949 . November 2 , 1 86 1 , Sup "
Karl Marx
64
Economic Notes ,
fall to exports to the United States alone, whilst the remainder is distributed over British North America: the East Indies, Australia, Turkey and Germany. Only in Italy is an increase shown. Thus, for example, the export of British cotton commodities to Sardinia, Tuscany, Naples and Sicily has risen from [756,892 for the year 1 860 to [ 1 ,204,287 for the year 1 86 1 ; the export of British cotton yarn from [348, 1 58 to [538,373; the export of iron from [ 1 20,867 to [ 1 60,9 1 2, etc. These figures are not without weight in the scale of British sympathy for Italian freedom.8l Whilst the export trade of Great Britain has thus declined by nearly [8,000,000 her import trade has risen in still higher proportion, a circumstance that by no means facilitates the adjustment of the balance. This rise in imports stems, in particular, from the increase in wheat imports. Whereas for the first eight months of 1 860 the value of the wheat imported amounted to only [6,796, 1 3 1 , for the same period of the present year it totals [ 1 3,43 1 ,487. The most remarkable phenomenon revealed by the import tables is the rapid increase of French imports which have now attained a volume of nearly [ 1 8,000,000 (yearly), whilst English exports to France are not much bigger than, perhaps, those to Holland . . Continental politicians have hitherto overlooked this entirely new phenomenon of modern commercial history. It proves that the economic dependence of France on England is, perhaps, six times as great as the economic dependence of England on France, if, that is, one not only considers the English export and import tables, but also compares them with the French export and import tables. It then follows that England has now become the principal export market for France, whereas France has remained a quite secondary export market for England. Hence, despite all chauvin ism and all Waterloo 82 rodomontade, the nervous dread of a conflict with "perfidious Albion".83 Finally, one more important fact emerges from the latest English export and import tables. Whilst in the first nine months of this year English exports to the United States declined by more than 65 per cent b in comparison with the same period of 1 860, the port of N ew York alone has increased its exports to England by [5,67 1 ,730
a Canada.- Ed.
b The original mistakenly
says 25 per cent. Marx took the figure from The Economist, No. 949, November 2, 1861, where an error had been made in the calculation.- Ed.
•
65
a during the first eight months of the present �rin ' this period the export of American gold to Englani�. a� � o � ceased while now ' on the contrary, gold has been flowmg : � �eeks fra'm England to New York. It is in fact �ngland ��d whose crop failures cover the North Amencan �ance defI I , � � Fwhile the Morrill tariff 84 and the economy insepara?le from a c vII � have simultaneously decimated the consumptIOn of EnglIsh ;�� French manufactures in North AI?eric� . And now o�e may compare t�ese s.tatistical facts with . th JeremIads of The Ttmes on the financIal rum of North Amenca.�
£6 000 000
1 Written o n November 3 , 1 86 e, N o . 30 8, ss re P ie D in ed h lis b u p st Fir November 9 , 18 6 1
•
Printed according to the news paper
66
Intervention in Mexico
,
Karl Marx
INTERVENTION IN MEXICO 85 •
London, November 7 The Times of today has a leading article in its well-known confusedly �al.eidos.copic, affectedly humorous style, on the 'French gov� rnme ?t s .InVaSIOn of Dappenthal and on Switzerland's protest agaInst thIS vIOlation of territory.86 The oracle of Printing House Squa.re 87 recalls how, at the time of most acute struggle between EnglIsh n:anufacturers and landowners, little children employed in the factones �ere led to throw needles into the most delicate parts of the machInery to .upset . the motion of the whole powerful automaton. The machInery IS Europe, the little child is Switzer land and th.e needl � that she throws into the smoothly rtl,jll ing automaton IS Louts Bonaparte's . invasion of her territory or rather, her outcry at his invasion . Thus the needle is suddenl; transformed into the outcry at the needle's prick and the metaphor into a piece of buffoonery at the expense of the reader who e::, pects a metaphor. The Times is further enlivened by its own dIsc?very that Dap pen thaI consists of a single village called �reSSOn ?Ieres . . It .ends ItS short article with a complete contradic tI�n .of . It� begInnIng. Why, it exclaims, make so much ado about t�IS InfImtely small Swiss bagatelle, when every quarter of Europe wIll be ablaze next spring? One may not forget that, shortly before, Europe was a well regulated automaton. The whole article appears sheer nonsense and yet it has its sense. It is a declaration that Palmerston has given carte blanche in the Swiss incident to his ally on the other side of the Channel. The explanation of this a
a "Some of our middle-aged readers may recollect the time .. " , The Times,
No. 24083, November 6, 1 8 6 1 . - Ed.
.
67
declaration is found in the dry notice in the Moniteura that on October 3 1 England, France and Spain concluded a convention on joint intervention in Mexico. 88 The article of The Times on Dappenthal and the note of the Moniteur on Mexico stand as close together as the Canton of Waadt and Vera Cruz lie far apart. It is credible that Louis Bonaparte counted on intervention in l\Iexico among the many possibilitie's which he continually has ready to divert the French people. Surely Spain, whose cheap successes in Morocco and St. Domingo 89 have gone to her head, dreams of a Restoration in Mexico. But it is certain that France's project had not yet matured and that both Fra'l1ce and Spain were opposed to a crusade against Mexico under English command. On September 24, Palmerston's private Moniteur, the Morning Post, announced the details of an agreement that England, France and Spain had reached for joint intervention in Mexico.b The following day the Patrie denied the existence of any such agreement . On September 27 The Times refuted the Patrie, without naming it. According to The Times' article, Lord Russell had communicated the English decision on intervention to the French government, whereupon M. Thouvenel had answered that the Emperor of the French had arrived at a like conclusion. It was now the turn of Spain. In a semi-official organ the Spanish government declared that it purposed an intervention in Mexico, but by no means an intervention alongside of England. It rained dementis. The Times had categorically announced that "the full assent of the American President had been given to the planned expedition". Hardly had the report reached the other side of the Atlantic Ocean when all the organs of the American government branded it as a lie, since President Lincoln was going with and not against Mexico. From all this it follows that the plan of intervention in its present form originated in the Cabinet of St. James.gO . No less puzzling and contradictory than the statements concern ing the origin of the convention were the statements concerning its points at issue. One organ of Palmerston, the Morning Post, announced that Mexico was not an organised state, with an established government, but a mere robbers' nest. It was to be treated as such . The expedition had only one object-the satisfaction of the Mexican state's creditors in England, France and "Bulletin", Le Moniteur universel, No. 309, November 5, 1 86 1 .- Ed. Here and below Marx draws on the press review published in The Free Press, No. 10, October 2 , 1861 ("The Projected Intervention in Mexico").- Ed.
a
b
68
Karl Marx
Spain . To this end the combined forces would occupy the principal ports of Mexico, collect the import and export duties on her coast and hold this "material guarantee" till all debt claims were satisfied. The other organ of Palmerston, The Times, declared, on the coritrary, that England was "steeled against plunderings on the part of bankrupt Mexico by long experience". It was not a question of the private interests of the creditors, but "they hope that the mere presence of a combined squadron in the Gulf of Mexico and the seizure of certain ports, will urge the Mexican government to new exertions in keeping the internal peace, and will compel the malcontents to confine themselves to some form of opposition more constitutional than brigandage". According to this, the expedition would therefore take place to support the official government of Mexico. At the same time, however, The Times intimates that "the City of Mexico was sufficiently healthy, should it be necessary to penetrate so far". The most original means of consolidating a . government indisputably consists in the sequestration of its revenues and its territories by force . On the · other hand, mere occupation of the ports and collection of the duties in them can only cause the Mexican government to set up a more inland-lying line of custom houses. Import duties on foreign commodities, export duties on American commodities would in this way be doubled; the intervention would in fact satisfy the claims of European creditors by extortions from European-Mexican trade. The Mexican govern ment can become solvent only by internal consolidation, but it can consolidate itself at home only so long as its independence is respected abroad . If the expedition's ostensible ends are so contradictory, then the ostensible means to these ostensible ends are still more contradictory. The English government organs themselves admit that if one thing or another would be attainable by a ut;lilateral intervention of France or England or Spain, everything becomes unattainable by a joint intervention of these states. One may recall that the Liberal Party in Mexico under Juarez, the official President of the republic, has now the upper hand at almost all points; that the Catholic Party under General Marquez has suffered defeat after defeat, and that the robber band organised by it has been driven back to · the sierras of Queretaro and is dependent on an alliance with Mejia, the Indian chief there. The last hope of the Catholic Party was Spanish intervention. a
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Intervention in Mexico
69
"The only point," says The Times, "on which there may possibly be a difference between ourselves and our allies, regards the government of the republic. England will be content to see it remain in the hands of the Liberal Party, while France and Spain are suspected of a partiality for the ecclesiastical rule which has recently been overthrown. It would be strange, if France were, in Ix4th the old and the new world, to make herself the protec�or of priests and bandits. Just as in Italy the partisans of Francis I I at Rome are being equipped for their work of making N aples ungovernable, so in Mexico the highways, indeed, the streets of the capital, are infested with robbers, whom the church party openly declares to be its friends. "
And just for this reason England strengthens the Liberal government; in undertaking a crusade against it with France and Spain she seeks to suppress anarchy by supplying the clerical party lying at its last gasp with fresh allied troops from Europe! Save during the short winter months the coasts of Mexico, pestilential as they are, can only be held by conquest of the country itself. But a third English government organ, The Economist, declares the conquest of Mexico to be impossible.
"If it is desired," says this paper, "to thrust upon her a British prince with an English army, then the fiercest wrath of the United States is excited. France's jealousy would make such a conquest impossible, and a motion to this effect would be rejected almost unanimously by an English parliament the moment it was submitted to it. England, for her part, cannot entrust the government of Mexico to France. Of Spain there can be no question' whatever. " a
The whole expedition is therefore a mystification, the key to which the Patrie gives in these words: "The convention recognises the necessity of installing in Mexico a strong government that can maintain tranquillity and order there." b
The question is simply one of applying to the states of America through a new Holy Alliance the principle according to which the Holy Alliance held itself called on to interfere in the internal governmental affairs of the countries of Europe.9 1 The first plan of this sort was drawn up by Chateaubriand for the Bourbons of Spain and France at the time of the Restoration.92 It was frustrated by Canning and Monroe, the President of the United States, who declared any European interference in the internal affairs of American states to be forbidden. Since then the Ameri can Union has constantly asserted the Monroe Doctrine 93 as an international law. The present Civil War, however, created the right situation for securing to the European monarchies an "The Case of Mexico", The Economist, No. 947, October 19, 1 8 6 1 .- Ed. b Marx presumably quotes this passage ( La Patrie, October 29, 1 86 1 ) from reprint in the New-York Daily Tribune, No. 6434, November 1 6, 1861.-Ed. a
7- 1 134
a
70
Karl Marx
71
intervention precedent on which they can build later. That is the real object of the English-French-Spanish intervention. Its im mediate result can only be and is only intended to be the restoration of the anarchy just dying out in Mexico. Apart from all standpoints of international law in general, the affair has the great significance for Europe that by concessions in the domain of Continental politics England has purchased the support of Louis Bonaparte in the Mexican expedition. Written on November 6-7, 1861 First published in Die Presse, No. 3 1 1 , November 12, 1861
Karl Marx
THE INTERVENTION IN MEXICO
Printed according to the news paper
London, Nov. 8, 1861 The contemplated intervention in Mexico by England, France, and Spain, is, in my opinion, one of the most monstrous enterprises ever chronicled in the annals of international history. I t is a contrivance of the true Palmerston make, astounding the uninitiated by an insanity of purpose and an imbecility of the means employed which appear quite incompatible with the known capacity of the old schemer. It is probable that, among the many irons which, to amuse the French public, Louis Bonaparte is compelled' to always keep in the fire, a Mexican Expedition may have figured. It is sure that Spain, whose never overstrong head has been quite turned by her recent cheap successes in Morocco and St. Domingo, dreams of a restoration in Mexico. But, nevertheless, it is certain that the French plan was far from being matured, and that both France and Spain strove hard against a joint expedition to Mexico under English leadership. On Sept. 24, Palmerston's private Moniteur, The London Morning �ost, first announced in detail the scheme for the joint interven tIOn, according to the terms of a treaty just concluded, as it said, between England, France, and Spain." This statement had hardly crossed the Channel, when the French Government, through the columns of the Paris Patrie, gave it the lie direct. On Sept. 27, The London Times, Palmerston's national organ, first broke its silence �
p
rOJ ected Intervention in Mexico", The Free Press, No. 10, October 2, 1 86 1 .- Ed.
7•
� Here and below Marx makes use of the press review from the article "The
•
72
Karl Marx
The I ntervention in Mexico
on the scheme in a leader contradicting, but not quoting, the Patrie. The Times even stated that Earl Russell had communicated to the French Government the resolution arrived .at on the part of England of interfering in Mexico, and that M. de Thouvenel replied that the Emperor of the French had come to a similar conclusion. Now it was the turn of Spain. A semi-official paper of Madrid, while affirming Spain's intention to meddle with Mexico, repudiated at the same time the idea of a joint intervention with England. The dementis were not yet exhausted. The Times had categorically asserted that "the full assent of the American President had been given to the Expedition." All the American papers taking notice of The Times article, have long since contradicted its assertion. It is, therefore, certain, and has even been expressly admitted by The Times, that the joint intervention in its present form is of English-i.e . , Palmerstonian make. Spain was cowed into adher ence by the pressure of France; and France was brought round by concessions made to her in the field of European policy. In this respect, it is a significant coincidence that The Times of Novem ber 6, in the very number in which it announces the conclusion at London of a convention for the joint interference in Mexico,a simultaneously publishes a leader, pooh-poohing and treating with exquisite contumely the protest of Switzerland against the recent invasion of her territory-viz., the Dappenthal-by a French military force. b In return for his fellowship in the Mexican expedition, Louis Bonaparte has obtained carte blanche for his contemplated encroachments on Switzerland and, perhaps, on other parts of the European continent. The transactions on these points between England and France have lasted throughout the whole of the months of September and October. There exist in England no people desirous of an intervention in Mexico save the Mexican bondholders, who, however, had never to boast the least sway over the national mind. Hence the difficulty of breaking to the public the Palmerstonian scheme . The next best means was to bewilder the British elephant by contradictory statements, proceeding from the same laboratory, compounded of the same materials, but varying in the doses administered to the animal.
in its print of September 24, announced that there would be "no territorial war on Mexico," that the only point at issue was the monetary claims on the Mexican exchequer; that "it would be impossible to deal with Mexico as an organized and established Government," and that, consequently, "the principal Mexican ports would be temporarily occupied and their customs revenues sequestered . The Times of September 27 declared, on the contrary, that "to. dishonesty, to repudiation, to the legal and irremediable plunder of our countrymen by the default of a bankrupt community, we were steeled by long endurance," and that, consequently, "the private robbery of the English ?ondhol�ers" lay. not, as T�e Post had it,b at the bottom of the mterventlOn. WhIle remarkmg, en passant, that "the City of Mexico was sufficiently healthy, should it be necessary to penetrate so far," The Times hoped, however, that "the mere presence of combined squadron in the Gulf, and the seizure of certain ports, will urge the Mexican Government to new exertions in keeping the peace, and will convince the malcontents that they must confine themselves to some form of opposition more constitutional than brigandage." If, then, according to The Post, the expedition was to start because there "exists no Government in Mexico," it was, according to The Times, only intended as encouraging and supporting the existing Mexican Government. To be sure! The oddest means ever hit upon for the consolidation of a Government consists in the seizure of its territory and the sequestration of its revenue. The Times and The Morning Post having once given out the cue, John Bull was then handed over to the minor ministerial oracles, systematically belaboring him in the same contradictory style for four weeks, until public opinion had at last become sufficiently trained to the idea of a joint intervention in Mexico, although kept in deliberate ignorance of the aim and purpose of that interven tion . At last, the transactions with France had drawn to an end; the Moniteur announced that the convention between the three interfering powers had been concluded on October 3 1 ; and the Journal des Dibats, one of whose coproprietors is appointed to the com mand of one of the vessels of the French squadron, informed the world that no permanent territorial conquest was intended;
"Paris, a 1 86 1 .- Ed
.
Tuesday, Nov. 5, 7 A.M.", The Times, No. 240 83, November 6,
b "Some of our middle-aged readers may recollect the time ... " , No. 24 083, November 6, 1861.-Ed.
The Times,
73
The Morning Post,
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a
C
Here and below Marx draws on the press review given in the article "The Proj ecte d Intervention in Mexico", The Free Press, No. 1 0 . October 2, 1 86 1 .- Ed. b The Morning Post.-Ed. "Bulletin " , Le Moniteur universel, No. 3 0 9, November 5 , 1 86 1 .- Ed. a
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The Intervention in Mexico
Karl Marx
74
that Vera Cruz and other points on the coast were to be seized, an advance to the capital being agreed upon in case of non compliance by the constituted authorities in Mexico with the demands of the intervention; that, moreover, a strong govern ment was to be imported into the Republica The Times, which ever since its first announcement on Sep tember 27,b seemed to have forgotten the very existence of Mexico, had now again to step forward. Everybody ignorant of its connection with Palmerston, and the original introduction in its columns of his scheme, would be induced to consider the to-day's leader of The Times as the most cutting and merciless satire on the whole adventure. It sets out by stating that "the expedition is a very remarkable one" [later on it says a curious one]. "Three States are combining to coerce a fourth into good behavior, not so much
by way of war as by authoritative interference in behalf of order."
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Authoritative interference in behalf of order! This is literally the Holy Alliance 94 slang, and sounds very remarkable indeed on the part of England, glorying in the non-intervention principle! And why is "the way of war, and of declaration of war, and all other behests of international law," supplanted by "an authoritative interference in behalf of order?" Because, says The Times, there "exists no Government in Mexico." And what is the professed aim of the expedition? "To address demands to the constituted authorities at Mexico . " The only grievances complained of by the intervening Powers, the only causes which might give to their hostile procedure the slightest shade of justification, are easily to be summed up. They are the monetary claims of the bondholders and a series of personal outrages said to have been committed upon subjects of England, France and Spain. These were also the reasons of the intervention as originally put forth by The Morning Post, and as some time ago officially indorsed by Lord John Russell in an interview with some representatives of the Mexican bondholders in England. The to-day' s Times states:
"England, France, and Spain have concerted an expedition to bring Mexico to the performance of her specific engagements, and to give protection to the subjects of the
respective crowns."
France. Paris, 3 novembre" , Journal des Dibats, November 6, 1 8 6 1 .- Ed. a ""The assurance, in spite of the denial of the Patrie... ", The Times, No. 24049, b
September 27, 1 86 1 , leading article.- Ed. , The Times, No. 24085, November 8, 1 8 6 1 .- Ed. C "In a very short time . . .
..
However, in the progress of its article, an d exclai ms:
The Times
75
veers round,
f o n ou� pecuniary recognitio a least at obtaining in succeed doubt, no shall, "We d d f h l h h l at sahsfactton o at amount t obtaine ave cou frigate Britis e sing a fact n ' I · , c IaUns . ed any moment. We may trust,. too, t at the more scan.dalous of the outrages .commltt le�r that, It but c IS ents; atonem tial and substan ate Immedi more by d expiate will be . .
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d d h h h h h to extremItieS as suc resorte ave not nee we about, t broug be to was muc is l t if on y are now proposed."
then, confesses in so many words that the reasons originally given out for the exped�tion . are shallow pretexts; that for the attainment of redress nothmg hke the pr�,sent pr?�edure recogmtIOn of w as needed ; and that, in point of fact, the monetary claims, and the protection .o� E� ropean �ubj �cts" h�ve nothing at all to do with the present Jomt mterventIon m MexICO. What then, is its real aim and purpose? Be fore following The Times in its further explanations, we will, en passant, note some more "cu,!"iosi.ties " whi�h . it has t�ken. g?O� care .not to touch upon. In the first mstance, It IS a real CUrIOSIty to see Spain-Spain out of all other countries tu�n crusa.der for the sanctity of foreign debts! Last Sunday'S a c.ourrter du Dtmanche already summons the French Government to Improve the oppor tunity, and compel Spain, "into the eternally delayed perfo;,mance of her old standing engagements to French bondholders. The second still greater "curiosity" is, that the very same Palmerston who, according to Lord John Russell's recent declara tion, is about invading Mexico to make its Government �ay the English bondholders, has himself, volunta�ily, and despIte the Mexican Government, sacrificed the treaty rIghts of England and the security mortgaged by Mexico to her British creditors. b By the treaty concluded with England in 1 826, Mexico became bound to not allow the establishment of Slavery in any of the territories constituting her then empire.c By another clause of the same treaty, she tendered England, as a security for the loans obtained from British capitalists, the mortgage of 45,000,000 acres of the public lands in Texas. It was Palmerston who, t�n or tw� lve years later interfered as the mediator for Texas agamst MeXICO. In the tre �ty then concluded by him with Texas, he sacrificed not The Times,
d
November 3, 1 86 1 .- Ed. b The Times, No. 24049, September 27, 1 86 1 .- Ed. . Here and below Marx draws on documents cited in the article "Annexation of the Texas, a Case of War between England and the United States", The Portfol io; �iplomatic Review (new series), London, 1 844, Vol. III, No. XI.- Ed. d In 1840.- Ed. a
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Karl Marx
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The Intervention in Mexico
77
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only the Anti-Slavery cause, but also the mortgage on the public lands, thus robbing the English bondholders of their security. The Mexican Government protested at the time, but meanwhile, later on, Secretary John C. Calhoun could permit himself the jest of informing the Cabinet of St. James that its desire "of seeing Slavery abolished in Texas would be" best realized by annexing Texas to the United States. The English bondholders lost, in fact, any claim upon Mexico, by the voluntary sacrifice on the I part of Palmerston of the mortgage secured to them in the treaty of 1 826. But, since. The London Times avows that the present intervention has nothing to do either with monetary claims or with personal outrages, what, then, in all the world, is its real or pretended aim? "An authoritative interference in behalf of Order. "a
England, France, and Spain, planning a new Holy Alliance, and having formed themselves into an armed areopagus for the restoration of order all over the world, "Mexico," says The Times, " must be rescued from anarchy, and put in the way of self government and peace. A strong and stable government must be established" there by the invaders, and that government is to be extracted from "some Mexican party." Now, does any one imagine that Palmerston and his mouth piece, The Times, really consider the joint intervention as a means to the professed end, viz: The extinction of anarchy, and the establishment in Mexico of a strong and stable government? So far from cherishing any such chimerical creed, The Times states expressly in its first leader of September 2 7 :
"The only point on which there may possibly be a difference between ourselves and our allies, regards the government of the Republic. England will be content to see it remain in the hands of the liberal party which is now in power, while France and Spain are suspected of a partiality for the ecclesiastical rule which has recently been overthrown.. . It would, indeed, be strange, if France were, in both the old and new world, to make herself the protector of priests and bandits."
.
In its to-day's leader, The Times goes on reasoning in the same strain, and resumes its scruples in this sentence:
"It is hard to suppose that the intervening powers could all concur in the absolute preference of either of the two parties between which Mexico is divided, and equally hard to imagine that a compromise would be found practicable between enemies so determined. "
Palmerston and The Times, then, are fully aware that there "exists a government in Mexico," that "the Liberal party," a
The Times, No. 24085, November 8, 186 1 .- Ed.
in power," that "the sten sibly favored by England, "is now ' ccle siastical rule has been overthrown; " a that Spams' h mterven�ion was the las� forlorn hope of t�e priests and bandits; and, finally, that MeXICan anarchy was dymg away. They know, then, that the joint intervention, with no other avowed end save the rescue of Mexico from anarchy, will produce just the opposite. effect, weaken the Constitutional Government, strength�n the priestly party by a supply of French and Spanish bayonets, rekindle the embers of civil war, and, instead of extinguishing, restore anarchy to its full bloom. The inference The Times itself draws from those premises is really "remarkable" and "curious . "
o
Although, it says, "these considerations may induce us to look with some anxiety d to the results of the expedition, they do not militate against the expe iency of the eXjJedition itself." b
It does, consequently, not militate against the expediency of the expedition itself, that the exped �t!on mili�ates against its only ostensible purpose. It does not mIlItate agamst the means that It baffles its own avowed end. The greatest "curiosity" pointed out by The Times, I have, however, still kept in petto.
"If," says it, "President Linco ln should accept the invitation, which is provided for by the convention, to participate in the approaching operations, the character of the work wou ld become more curious sti ll."
It would, indeed, be the greatest "curiosity" of all if the United States, living in amity with Mexico, should associate with the European order-mongers, and, by participating in their acts, sanction the interference of a European armed Areopagus with the internal affairs of American States. The first scheme of such a transplantation of the Holy Alliance to the other side of the Atlantic was, at the time of the restoration, 95drawn up for the French and Spanish Bourbons by Chateaubriand. The attempt .was baffled by an English Minister, Mr. Canning, and an Amencan Pre sident, Mr. Monroe. The present convulsion in the United States appeared to Palmerston an opportune moment for taking up the old project in a modified form. Since the United- States, for the prese nt, must allow no foreign complication to interfere with their war for the Union, all they can do is to protest. Their best well-wishers in Europe hope that they will protest, and thus, •
a
b
The Times, No. 24 049, September 2 7 , 1861.-Ed. Here and below, The Times, No. 24 085, November
8, 1861.-Ed.
78
79
Karl Marx
before the eyes of the world, firmly repudiate any complicity in one of the most nefarious schemes. T? �s mi�itary expedition of Palmerston's, carried out by a coahtIOn . wIth t.wo other Europ�an powers, is started during the prorogatIon, without the sanctIOn, and against the will of the British Parliament. The first extra Parliamentary war of Palmer ston 's was the Afghan war softened and justified by the pro duction of forged papers: 96 Another war of that sort was his Persi �n war ?f �856-1 857.97 He .defended . it at the time on the plea that the pnnCIple of the prevIous sanctIOn of the House did not apply . to Asiatic �ars." b It seems that it does neither apply to Amencan wars. WIth the control over foreign wars, Parliament will lose all control over the national exchequer, and Parliamentary government turn to a mere farce. Written on November 8, 186 1
First published in the New-York Dai ly Tribune, No. 6440 , November 23, 186 1
Reproduced from the newspaper
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Karl Marx
MONSIEUR FOULD 98 •
Paris, November 16 Art experts in the field of high political comedy find a source of the purest pleasure in the French Moniteur of November 1 4. As in the ancient classical drama, Fate invisibly, irresistibly enmeshes the heroes-Fate in the form of a thousand million-franc deficit. As in ancient drama, the dialogue is only between two persons, Oedipus-Bonaparte and Teiresias-Fould. The tragedy turns into comedy, however, since Teiresias says only what Oedipus has whispered to him in advance.a One of the most characteristic tricks of Bonapartist comedy is to put its old, worn dramatis personae on stage over and over again as brand-new heroes. Billault comes on in place of Persigny, and then Persigny comes on in pla�e of Billault! And likewise in the Dece mbrist press! b Grandguillot, Cassagnac, Limayrac are tossed to and fro between the Constitutionnel, the Pays and the Patrie. Monsieur Veron, the "Bourgeois de Paris",c is replaced by Cesena as director of the Constitutionnel, Cesena by Cucheval, Cucheval by Cassagnac, Cassagnac by Renee, Renee by Grandguillot, and after six years Veron comes on again in his old spot as a brand-new hero. Likewise under the constitutional system Thiers became new as Soon as Guizot was worn out, and Mole new as soon as Thiers was worn out, and then the round was repeated. However, these ,
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Correspondence Relating to Persia and Afghanistan, London, 1 839.- Ed. H . J. Pa!merston's speech in the House of Commons on July 16, 1 85 7 , Hansard ,s Parizamentary Debates, Third series, Vol. CXLVI, London, 1 85 7 .- Ed.
a An allusion to Napoleon Ill's message to Fould and the latter's "Memoire a
I Em pereur", both published in
1 86 1 .- Ed. b
The press of Louis Bonaparte, who staged a coup d 'etat on December 2,
1 8 5 L_ Ed. C
Le Moniteur universel, No. 3 1 8, November 14,
:-\n allusion to L. Veron's book Memoires d 'un bourgeois de Paris.-Ed.
Monsieur Fould
Karl Marx
80
different men represented different parties and tendencies. If they pushed one another out, in order to follow one another, and followed . one . another in . order to push one another out again, then theIr tomg and fromg only showed the oscillations in the bala�ce o! . the parties �hat in general formed the pays legal a under LOUIS PhIlIppe. But BIllault or Persigny, Walewski or Thouvenel, Laroquette or Fould, Grandguillot or Limayrac? It is what the English call "a distinction without a difference". b They all r� present �he same thing-the coup d'etat. They do not represent dIfferent mterests and parties among the people. They only r�present different f �cial fe�tures of the Emperor. They are only dIfferent masks, behmd WhICh the same head is hidden. The Times, whose weak point is comparisons, compares Louis Bonaparte with Louis XVI and Fould with Turgot.c Fould and Turgot! It is like trying to compare M. Vaillant with Carnot, because both of them were Ministers of War. Turgot was the head of the new economic school of the eighteenth century the PhYSlOCratlc " School. He was one of the intellectual heroes who overthrew the old regime, while Louis XVI was the incarnation of that old regime. But who is Fould? Fould, a member of the dynastic opp
99
81
Louis Bonaparte but also the victory of Fould. Fould became all-powerful. Fould became Minister of State. Fould could raise even his menus plaisirsa to the level of affairs of state. He seized hold of the dictatorship of the theatre along with the dictatorship b of finances. Like other notorious men of haute jinance, Fould shared a passion for the dollar with a passion for the heroines of the wings. Fould became a sultan of the wings. Fould, with Pereire, is the inventor of imperialist finance. He is the direct cause of nine-tenths of the current deficit. Finally, in 1 860, the great Fould withdrew into private life, to reappear in 1 86 1 as "a new man" ("a brand new man'Y in the imperialist finance as again Turgot, Fould as Marquis Posa! comedy . Fould appears 10 1 Applaudite, amici!
Written on November 1 6, 1861
First published in Die Presse, No. 3 18 , ",ovember 1 9, 1861
Printed according to the news paper Published in English for the first time •
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The section of the people having the right to vote.- Ed. Marx uses the English phrase and gives the German translation in brackets.- Ed. hour of reckoning has at length overtaken France . . . " , The Times, C "The No. 2409 1 , November 15, 1 86 1 , leading article.- Ed. d d Louis Bonaparte's.- E .
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b
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Lesser pleasures.- Ed. b High finance.- Ed. Marx uses the English phrase "a new man " and adds "a brand new man " in Germ an in brackets.- Ed. a
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France's Financial Situation
82
of the financial prosperity ia gor sma nta pha s rou mo gla the ind beh n des Deux in hidde I s ue Rev the nt me mo y ver s thi at y, h Na d. ure ass en ich it has been so oft financial the to ard reg h s wit ent em stat g kin ma for d ute sec pro is being o. t they are far too rosy." tha is ich wh of lt fau y onl the , nce Fra pOSItion of .
: ; M :des
Karl Marx
FRANCE'S FINANCIAL SITUATION
The Times, which at first praised the imperialist coup d'iclata m <;>derately and then lauded it in hyperboles, makes a sudden sWItch today. from panegyrics to criticism.b The way in which this manoeuvre executed is typical of the Leviathan of the English press: :'We :v�1I lea�e /0 ?thers .the task of congratulating Caesar on his admission that IS
he IS a fmite an alhble bemg, and that, indisputably reigning by the ower of the P . . sword, he does not pretend to rule by virtue of Divine right. We had rather mqu lre wh t h � b�en th f anClal results of ten years of Imperial sway, which are better wo th m kmg t an �he phrases in which those results have been made . .... The xecutIve dId what t pleased; the Ministers were responsible to the P or lon the state of the fmances was entirely concealed from the public and th � C am ers. The an�ual form of voting a budget, instead of a check, was a ma�k,. mstead of a protectIon, a delusion. What " then have the French peopIe . . achIeved by placmg ' thelr ' II"berUes and their possessions at the disposal of a sm Ie � man ? ... M. Fould himself admits that between 1 85 1 and 1 858 extraord'mary eredItS h ve been opened to the amount of 2,800 ,000 ,000 francs, and that the deficit for t e present year amounts to no less than I 000 , 000,000 francs. ' " We d not know how these sums were raised, but assuredly it has not been b . tax�uon . V!e are told that four millions paid by the Ban k of France for the renew . fI nvIl ges have been spent, that five millions and a half of the Army Dotatio un aV een borrowed , and that securities of different kinds have been thrown . . . mto clrcu atl�m. As to the present state of affairs, our Correspondent in Paris assures a.t t e not money .n th� Treasury to pay the half-yearly dividends due next month. c IS e Isastrous, t e dlsgr�ceful state of French Finance, after ten years of . bn'11'Iant and success ul Impenahs m, and it is only now, at a moment when it is . unable to Ischarge ItS cu�rent obligations, that the French Government has taken . . the nation m some degree mto ItS confidence and shown it a little of the reality that
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Glorious exploit.- Ed. "The extraord'mary frankness of M. Fould ... ", November 18, 1861, leading article .- Ed. a
b
83
The Times, No. 24093,
. pse lla co s thi of ses cau the o int ire qu en to on es go The Times re mo ve ha s ort exp 's nce Fra ade dec st iali per im the During ed . Agriculture has developed along with industry, and ubl than dowa t en ipi inc ly on , tem sys dit cre e Th th. bo th wi tem sys y the rail1848 s nt me lop ve de ese th l . Al ns tio ec dir all in up ot sh s ha , before the m fro t bu , r's ro pe Em the of e cre de y an m fro se ari did not of ry ve co dis the ce sin et rk ma rld wo the in s ge an ch ary revolution the sed s cau ha at wh en Th a ali str Au d an ia rn lifo Ca . gold in catastrophe? the on res itu nd pe ex ry ina ord tra ex the s on nti me es The Tim to s ort eff s rte pa na Bo uis Lo ' of it fru al tur na the vy, na d an army the y all fin d an rs, wa the s on nti me It . pe ro Eu in n leo po Na play tre en the py cu oc r to de or in rks wo c bli pu on ys tla ou gigantic ur. mo hu od go in m the p kee d an t ria leta pro the and rs preneu
"But," it continues, "all this is insufficient to account for this frightful deficit, the largest of which the history of mankind furnishes us with an example .... To the aggressive military and naval armaments, public works, and occasional wars, has been added a shameless and universal system of pillage. A shower of gold has descended upon the Empire and its supporters. The enormous fortunes suddenly and unaccountably acquired have been the cause of scandal and wonder till scandal grew dumb and wonder weak from the frequency, indeed the universality, of the phenomenon. Modern France has taught us better to understand those passages in Juvenal's satires which treat suddenly acquired wealth as a crime against the people.a The splendid mansions, the brilliant equipages, the enormous wastefulness of men who till the coup d 'etat notoriously starved, have been in every one's mouth. The Court has been conducted on a scale of almost incredible wastefulness. New palaces have arisen as by the wand of an enchanter, and the splendours of the ancien regimeb have been surpassed. Extravagance has had no limits but public money and public credit; the one is gone and the other shattered. This is w hat ten
years of Imperialism have done for France."
The most important question for Europe is without doubt whether the imperialist finance system can be converted into a constitutional finance system, as the correspondence between Louis Bonaparte and Fould contemplates.c What is involved here is not the momentary intentions of persons. It is the economic conditions for the life of the restored empire . The financial fraud Juvenal, Satires, XIV, 1 73-78.- Ed. tion of 1 789 .- Ed. b The political and social system of France before the revolu ea oir em "M er's latt the and ld Fou A. to ge ssa me 's Ill eon pol Na C This refers to l , No . 3 1 8, November 14, e vers uni ur nite Mo I'E mpereur ... " , published in Le 186 1 . Ed. a
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France's Financial Situation
Karl Marx
84
85
hts that rig al ion ut tit ns co of d sse sse po un d an ip, sh or tat dic military . country under d 'InVIO able ;>. " a . n a l a rs e iv n u are
system could only be converted into a prosaic finance system by eliminating corruption as a general means of government; by reducing the army and navy to a peace footing, and therefore by abandoning the Napoleonic character of the present regime; finally, by complete renunciation of the plan followed hitherto of binding . a part of the middle class and of the city proletariat to the existing government by means of great government construction projects and other public works. Would not meeting all these conditions mean: Et propter vitam vivendi perdere causas?a Is it actually believed that the modest system of Louis Philippe can be brought into being again under Napoleonic auspices? As little as that 02the July monarchy could be established under the drapeau blanc. 1 We therefore called the coup d'iclat of November 14 a comedy b' from the outset, and did not doubt for a moment that this comedy had only two aims in view: remedying the immediate difficulty and getting through the winter. Once these two goals had been achieved, the war bugles would blow in the spring and the attempt would be undertaken to make the war pay its own way this time. It should not be forgotten that up to now-and this was a necessary consequence of a merely simulated Napoleonism-Decembrist France has paid for all its glory out of the French state treasury. After a brief period of wavering, the English press has arrived at the same conclusions with respect to the seriousness of the November 14 promises and the possibility of their being carried out. Thus, The Times of to-day says in the leader cited above:
I
. ' SIS a I an Its s de lu nc co Y It y. rl ila sim f el its The Economist expresses s: rd o w g in w . o ll fo e th with t of a man, l gh ou li th st fir e th be ll sti t us k ris a tic po , ee cr � . . . "Despite the de y uproot. e ma lur faI al nt Ide Inc y an ICh wh ing th me so as h's I dy na sty 100 ks to
:�'ho
s e ng da to pe ro Eu d se po � ex ly on s ha e rt So far, Louis Bonapas been continually exposed to danger ha lf se m hi he . e s au ec b to se ea cr de Ill w pe ro Eu to er ng da s hi at th d ve lie it be s I . . e nc ra . Fthe same extent as the danger to �ImseIf ' France Illcreases ';l. 0. nIy e. od pl ex to e tIm n ve gi is er ng da al rn te if the in III
III
Written on November 1 8, 18 61
2, First published in Die Presse, N o. 32 November 23 , 1 86 1
Printed according. to the news paper
Published in English for the first ttme •
"The Emperor gives up the power of originating extraordinary credits. This is exactly one of those pieces of self-denying virtue which usually precede, but seldom survive, a new French loan."
And its Stock Exchange article says:
"Whether the financial sanctity suddenly adopted at the crisis of the Treasury sickness will outlast the fit for a long time after the Exchequer has been replenished and a new loan secured, is now the question .... Public opinion, it is asserted, will force the Emperor, whether he will or not, to carry out Fould's programme. Would it not be more correct to say that every one is prepared to accept this self-delusion, while army and navy contractors and speculators firmly rely on it that in the spring, after the present danger has been weathered, the Moniteur will find sufficient reasons, in 'the changed circumstances of Europe', or the necessity of rectifying something that somewhere threatens French honour, the Catholic faith, or the civilisation and liberty of the human race, for a recurrence to the old financial system, which can never be permanently abandoned in any "And for life's sake, destroy the very basis of life" (Juvenal, Satires, VIII, 8 4) . - Ed. b See this volume, pp. 79-8 1 .- Ed.
a
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imes, No . 24093, November 18 , h T e T ", ce en lig tel In ty Ci a "Mon ey -M ar ke t and 1 8 6 1 . - Ed. . ovember 1 6 , N 1 , 95 . No , ISt om on Ec e Th ", ce an Fr in ge an Ch "The Constitutional 1 86 1 .- Ed.
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86
The Dismissal of Fremont
Karl Marx 103 THE DISMISSAL OF FREMONT .
!rem<;>nt's
dismissal . from .the post o f Commander-in-Chief in �IS�O � for�ns a t��nmg pomt in the history of the development o t e mencar: CIvIl War. Fremont has two great sins to ex H e .was . the fIrst candidate o f the Republican Part f piate . pre�IdentIaI office ( 1 85 6 ), and he is the first general o f �he o � to ave threatened the slaveholders with emancipation o f � o�� �Aug�st 30 , . 18 6 1) .� H e remains, therefore, a rival o f candidslavateses or t e p:esId.ency m the future and an obstacle to the mak ers o f compromIses m the present. D�i�g the last two decades the singular practice develop the .mted States �f n o t electing to the presidency an m ed in an w h o Y occupIed an. au th ontative position in his own party. The names 0f . such men, It. IS true, were u tilised for election demonstrati as soon as It came to actual business, they were dro ons' but r�placed by unknown mediocrities of merely local infl� ed a d t . IS �anner Polk, Pierce, Buchanan, etc., became Pre�nce �n LIkewIse Ab:aham Lincoln. General Andrew Jackson was sid�nts the last P�esident o f the United States who owed his officein fac� personal Impor�ance, whilst all his successors owed it, to his on the contrary, to theIr personal unim portance In �7e ele�ion year 1 86 0 , the most dis�inguished names o Repu lCan a�ty were Fremont and Seward. Known f the adventures durmg the Mexican War 104 for h IS" m rep ' d for his tion o f California and his candidacy' o f 1 85 6 Fre� moint expIorastn' km ' g a fIgure even. tp come under consideration as sowonas astoo it was n o longer a questIOn o f a Republican demon stration, b ut o f a U
'
a
See this volume, pp . 5 1 -5 2. - Ed.
87
Republican success . He did not, therefore, stand as a candidate. It was otherwise with Seward, a Republican Senator in the Congress of Washington, Governor of the State of New York and, since the rise of the Republican Party, unquestionably its leading orator. It required a series of mortifying defeats to induce Mr. Seward to renounce his own candidacy and to give his oratorical patronage to the then more or less unknown Abraham Lincoln. As soon, however, as he saw his attempt to stand as a candidate fail, he imposed himself as a Republican Richelieu on a man whom he considered a Republican Louis XIII. He contributed towards making Lincoln President, on condition that Lincoln made him Secretary of State, an office which is in some measure comparable with that of a British Prime Minister. As a matter of fact, Lincoln was hardly President-elect, when Seward secured the Secretaryship of State. Immediately a singular change took place in the attitude of the Demosthenes of the Republican Party, whom the prophesy ing of the "irrepressible conflict" a between the system of free labour and the system of slavery had made famous.b Although elected on November 6, 1 860, Lincoln took up office as President only on March 4, 1 86 1 . In the interval, during the winter session of Congress, Seward made himself the central figure of all attempts at compromise; the Northern organs of the South, such as the New-York Herald, for example, whose bete noire Seward had been till then, suddenly extolled him as the statesman of reconciliation and, indeed, it was not his fault that peace at any price was not achieved. Seward manifestly regarded the post of Secretary of State as a mere preliminary step, and busied himself less with the "irrepressible conflict" of the present than with the presidency of the future. He has provided fresh proof that virtuosos of the tongue are dangerously inadequate statesmen. Read his state dispatches! What a repulsive mixture of magnilo quence and petty-mindedness, of simulated strength and real weakness! For Seward, therefore, Fremont was the dangerous rival who had to be ruined; an undertaking that appeared so much the easier since Lincoln, in accordance with his legal tradition, has an aversion for all genius, anxiously clings to the letter of the Constitution and fights shy of every step that could mislead the "loyal" slaveholders of the border states. Fremont's character Marx gives the English phrase.- Ed. k Daily b W. H . Seward [Speech at Rochester, October 25, 1 8581, New-Yor Tribune, No. 5466, October 28, 1 858.- Ed. a
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88
Karl Marx
89
offered another ho ld . He is manifestly a ma n of pathos, so mewhat pompous and haughty, and no t without a touch of th e melodra matic. First the govern m en t attempted to drive hi m to vo lu ntary retirement by a su cc es sio n of petty chicaneries. W he n th is did no t su<;ceed, it deprived hi m of hi s co mm an d at the ve ry mo me nt wh en the ar m y he hi m se lf had organised ca m e face to face with the en em y in southwest M iss ou ri an d a decisive battl e wa s ImmInent. Fr em on t is the idol of the states of the No rth we st, which sin g hi s pr ais es as the "pathfinder" ! They regard hi s di sm iss al as a pe rso na l in su lt. Should the Un io n go ve rn m en t m ee t with a few more m ish ap s like those of Bu ll Ru n an d Ba ll's Bl uf f, 1 05 it ha s its elf given the opposition, which wi ll th en rise up again st it an d · sm as h the hitherto prevailing diplomatic system of wagi ng wa r, its lea de r in Jo hn Fr em on t. We sh all return later to the indictment of the di sm iss ed general b published by the W ar De pa rt m en t in W ash ing ton . •
Karl Marx THE TRENT CASE 1 06
•
Written about November 19, 1861
First published in Die Presse, No. 325, November 26, 1861
Printed according to the news paper
Marx uses the English word.- Ed. b The reference is to Brigadier Ge neral A. Thomas's report on the investigation of
18 61 .- E .
London, November 28 The conflict of the English mail ship Trent with the North American warship San Jacinto in the narrow passage of the Old Bahama Channel is the lion among the events of the day. I n the afternoon of November 27 the mail ship La Plata brought t�e news of the incident to Southampton, whence the electnc telegraph at once flashed it to all parts of Great Britain. The same evening the London Stock Exchange was the stage of stormy scenes similar to those at the time of the announcement of the Italian war. Quotations for government stock sank 3 /4 to 1 per . cent. The wildest rumours circulated in London. The Amencan A mbassador Adams was said to have been given his passports, an ' embargo to have been imposed on all An:erican ships in the Thames, etc. At the same time a protest meetmg of merchants was held at the Stock Exchange in Liverpool, to demand measures from the British Government for the satisfaction of the violated honour of the British flag. Every sound-minded Engli� hman went to bed with the conviction that he would go to sleep m a state of peace but wake up in a state of war. . . Nevertheless the fact is well-nigh categoncally estabhshed that the conflict be �ween the Trent and the San Jacinto brings no war in its train. The semi-official press, like The Times and The Morning Post, strikes a peaceful note and pours juridically co?l . deductions on the flickerings of passion! Papers hke the I?� tly b Telegraph, which at the faintest mot d'ordre roar for the Bntish The reference is to the leading articles "It requires a strong effort. . . ", The Times, No. 241 0 2, November 28, 1861 and "The Government of the United States !,l as taken a step .. . ", The Morning Post, No. 27 440 , November 28, 1 86 1 .- Ed. d b Watchword.- E . a
90
Karl Marx
The Trent Case
lio n, are true m od el s of moderation. O nl y the Tory opposition pr es s, The Morning Herald and The Standa rd, hits out. These facts force every expert to co nc lu de that th e ministry has already decided not to m ak e a casus belli out of the "untoward even t" .a It m u st be ad d ed that the ev en t, if no t the details of its enactment, was anticipated. O n Oct ober 1 2, M es sr s. Sl id el l, Confederacy em is sa ry to Fr an ce , an d M as on , Confederacy em is sa ry to E ng la nd , together with thei r secretaries E u st is an d M ac Fa rl an d , had ru n the blockade o f C harleston o n the st ea m sh ip Theodora an d sailed for H av an a, there to se ek the opportunity of a passage to Europe u n d er the B ritish fl ag . I n E n gl an d their arrival was expected d ai ly . North A m er ic an warships had set out from Liverpool to in tercept the gentlem en , w ith their d is p at ch es , o n this side o f the Atlantic O ce an . The B ri ti sh ministry had already su bm itted the question whether th e N or th Americans were en titled to take such a step to its of ficial ju ri sc on su lts for their op in io n . Their an sw er is said to have b ee n in the affirmative. The legal question tu rn s in a narrow circ le. Since the foundation of the U nited States, North America h as adopted B ritish maritime la w in all its rigour. A m aj o r principle o f this maritime law is that al l neutral merchantmen are subject to search by the belligerent parties. •
"This right," said Lord StowelJ in a judgment which has become famous, "offers the sole security that no contraband is carried on neutral ships. " b
The greatest American authority, Kent, states in the same sense:
"The right of self-preservation gives beIJigerent nations this right. The doctrine of the English admiralty on the right of visitation and search ... has been recognised in its fuIJest extent by the courts of justice in this country. " c
It was not opposition to the right of search, as is sometimes erroneously suggested, that brought about the Anglo-American War of 1 8 1 2 to 1 8 1 4. 1 07 Rather, America declared war because England unlawfully presumed to search even American warships, on the pretext of catching deserters from the British Navy. The San Jacinto, therefore, had the right to search the Trent and to confiscate any contraband stowed aboard her. That dispatches in the possession of Mason, Slidell and Co. come under
�����of contraband even
91
the � at . remains the question whether Mes�rs. Mason, Shdell adml o . were themselves contraband and m ght consequent y . be an d . ated!. The point is a ticklish one and dlfference f op mon
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The Times, The Morning Post, etc. ,
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� � � conhs� prevaII among the doctors of law. Pratt the most dlstmgUIshed . ' B · ti"sh auth on'ty on "Contraband" , in. the sectIon "Quastn cont : b d Dispatches Passengers " specifICally refers to com mum a n of inform ;tion and orders from a belligerent g�v.ern ment t its officers abroad, or the conveyance of mlh�ary p as n rs" a Messrs. Mason and Slidell, if not officers, were J ust ttl a�bassadors, since their governments are recog Is d as . h b Britain nor by France. What are they, then. n el ? Justl atio of the very broad conceptions of contraband asserted . . . by Bntam m the Anglo-French wars , 108 Jefferson already remarks . . h 's memoirs that contraband, by Its nature, precI ud es any mh stive definition and necessarily leaves great scope f r bi rariness.b I n any event, however, � ne see.s that from t e stand point of English law the legal questwn dWlI�dles �o a Duns Scotus con troversy , 109 the explosive force of WhICh Will not go be nd exchange of diplomatic notes. e political aspect of the North American procedure was estimated quite correctly by The Times in these words: '
"
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" Even Mr. Sewa�d himself must know that the voices of the Southern . . commissioners, soundl? g from their cap lvity, are a thousand times more eloquent . Pans than they wouI h ave been if they had been heard in St. III and London in James's and the Tuileries." C
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And is not the Confederacy already represented in London by Messrs Yancey and Mann? . . We ;egard this latest operation of Mr. Sewar as a �haractenstlc . act of tactlessness by seIf-consCiOUS w eakness simulatmg strength . If the naval incident hastens Seward's removal from the Wa h'mg . ton Cabinet, the U nited States will have. no :e�son to recor It as an "untoward event" in the annals of Its CIvIl War.
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Printed according to the news paper
Written on November 28, 1 8 6 1 First published in Die Presse, No. 3 3 1 , December 2 , 1 86 1
a Marx uses the English expression here and below, and gives the German
translation in brackets in the first case.- Ed. b Quoted from the leading article "It requires a strong effort . . . " , The Times, No. 24 1 02 , November 28, 1 86 1 .- Ed. c Ibidem; The Times quotes from J. Kent's book Commentaries on A merican Law- Ed.
F. Th. Pratt, Law of Contraband 01 TAT .. ar. . , Lo don, 1 856 ' pp ' LIV-LV.- Ed. ? b Th. Jefferson, Memoirs, Correspondence, and Private Papers. .. , Vo . III , London, 1 829 , p. 4 88 . Ed. ' c "It requires a strong effort. .. ".- Ed. a
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I
92
The Anglo-American Conflict
•
Karl Marx
THE ANGLO-AMERICAN CONFLICT
110
93
the Trent herself in taw as a prize, brought her to the nearest her to the judgment of a American port and there submitted N ort h American prize court . lll This is incontestably the procedure corresponding to British and therefore to North American m aritime law. It is equally incontestable that the British frequently violated this rule during the anti-Jacobin war and proceeded in the summary fashion of the San Jacinto. However that may be, the whole conflict is reduced by this opinion of the law officers of the Crown to technical error and consequently deprived of any immediate import. Two circumstances make it easy for the Union govern ment to accept this point of view and therefore to afford formal satisfaction. In the first place, Captain Wilkes, the commander of the San Jacinto, could have received no direct instructions from Washington. On the voyage home from Africa to New York, he called on November 2 at Havana, which he left again on November 4, whilst his encounter with the Trent took place on the high seas on November 8. Captain Wilkes's stay of only two days in Havana did not permit any exchange of notes between him and his government. The consul of the Union a was the only American authority with whom he could deal. In the second place, however, he had obviously lost his head, as his failure to insist on the surrender of the dispatches proves. The importance of the incident lies in its moral effect on the English people and in the political capital that can easily be made out of it by the British cotton friends of secession. Characteristic of the latter is the Liverpool protest meeting organised by them and previously mentioned by me.b The meeting took place on November 27 at three in the afternoon, In the cotton auction rooms of the Liverpool Exchange, an hour after the alarming telegram from Southampton had arrived. After vain attempts to press the chairmanship on Mr. Cunard, the owner of the Cunard steamships laying between Liverpool and New York, and other high trade officials, a young merchant named Spence, notorious for a work he wrote in support of the slave republic,c took the chair. Contrary to the rules of English meetings, he, the chairman, himself proposed the motion to a
London, November 29 ,!, �e law officers of . the Crown a had yesterday to give their opmIOn on the naval mcident in the Bahama Channel. b Their records of the case consisted of the written reports of the British officers who have remained on board the Trent and of the oral testimony of Commodore Williams, who was on board the Trent as Admiralty agent, but disembarked from the steamer La Plata on November 27 at Southampton, whence he was immediately summoned by telegraph to London. The law officers of the Crown acknowledged the right of the San Jacinto to visit and search the Trent. Since Queen Vi�toria's p:oclamation of neutrality on the outbreak �f the Amencan C!' vtl WarC expressly lists dispatches among artIcles of €ontraband, there could be no doubt on this point either. There remained, then, the question whether Messrs. Mason, Slidell and Co. were themselves contraband and therefore c�)llfiscable. The law officers of the Crown appear to hold this Vlt�W, f �r they have dropped the material legal question entirely. Accordmg to th<; report of The Times: their opinion blames the commander of the San Jacinto ! only for an error in procedure. Instead of Messrs. Mason, Slidell and Co., he should have taken The Attorney-General and the Solicitor-General. At the time, the posts wer e held by R. Palmer and W. Atherton.- Ed. b See this volume, pp. 89-9 1 .- Ed. C Victoria, R. A Proclamation [May 1 3, 1 86 1 ] , The Times, No . 239 33, May IS, 1 86 1 .- Ed. d See this volume, pp. 1 05- 1 07.- Ed. e "W her eve r two or three men met together yesterday .. ", The Times, No . 24 103 , November 29, 1 86 1 , leading article. - Ed. ! Ch. Wilkes.- Ed. a
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"call upon the government to assert the dignity of the British flag by requiring prompt reparation for this outrage".d Charles J. Helm.- Ed. b See this volume, p. 89.- Ed. The American Union... , London, 1 8 6 1 .- Ed. C J. Spence, d '''Liverpool, Wednesday ", The Times, No. 24 1 02 , Nov�mber 28, 1 86 1 .- Ed. a
95
Karl Marx
94
Tremendous applause, clapping and cheers upon cheers! The main argument of the opening speaker for the slave republic was that slave sh ips had hitherto been protected by the American flag . from the right of search claimed by Britain. And then this philanthropist launched a furious attack on the slave trade! He admitted that England had brought about the war of 1 8 1 2- 1 4 with the United States by insisting on searching Union warships for deserters from the British Navy.
Karl Marx THE NEWS AND ITS EFFECT IN LONDON
"But," he continued with wonderful dialectic, "there is a difference between the right of sear�h to recover deserters from the British Navy and the right to seize passengers, hke Mr. Mason and Mr. Slidell, men of the highest respectability, regardless of the fact that they were protected by the British flag! "
He played his highest trump, however, at the close of his diatribe.
"The other day," he bellowed, "while I was on the European Continent, I . heard observatI ons made as to our conduct in regard to the United States which made me blush. What is the feeling of every intelligent man upon the Continent? That we would slavishly submit to any outrage and suffer every indignity offered to us by the Government of the United States. What could I reply to this? I could . blush. But the pItcher goes so often to the well that it is broken at last. Our only patience had been exercised long enough-as long as it was possible to control it. At last we have arrived at facts [I]: this is a very hard and startling fact [!] and it is the uty o every E�glishman to apprise the Government of how strong and unammous IS the feehng of this great community .of the outrage offered to our flag. "
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This sense!ess rigmarole was greeted with a peal of applause. . Opposmg VOICes were howled down and hissed down and stamped dow � : To the ;emar� of a Mr. Campbell t?at the whole meeting , was Irregular , the mexorable Spence rephed: "So may it be, but the fact that we have met to consider is rather an irregular fact. " To th� propos�l of a Mr. Turner to adjourn the meeting to the followmg day, m order that "the city of Liverpool can have its say . and not a chque of cotton brokers usurp its name", cries of "Collar him, throw him out ! " resounded from all sides. Unper turbed, Mr. Turner repeated his motion, which, however, was not put to the vote, again contrary to all the rules of English meetings. . Spence triumphed. But, as a matter of fact, nothing has done more to cool London's temper than the news of Mr. Spence's triumph. Written on November 29, 1 8 6 1
First published in Die Presse, No. 332, December 3, 1 8 6 1
Printed according to the news paper
London, Nov.
30,
1861
an d se es itn w r ve ne I a si us R t ns ai ag Since the declaration of w ar to l ua eq y et ci so h is gl En of ta ra st e th l excitement throughout al ed to ey nv co , ir fa af nt re T e th of s w ne e th that produced by k oc cl o' 2 t ou ab t A . st in th 27 e th on ta Southampton by the La Pla he t of t en m ce un no an e th h, ap gr le te ic tr ec . . p .m ., by means of the el B rl t�sh e th ! al of s om ro sw ne e th in ed st po as w "untoward event" e ic pr e th le hI w n, w do t en w s tie ri cu se al Exchanges . A ll co m m er ci at le hi w , nt ce 3 r pe / ed in cl de ls so on C . 4 of saltpeter went up ls fro� se es on d de an m de e 12 1 er w s ea � in gu ve fi of s w ar risk Lloyds m ed at ul rc CI s or m ru t es ild w e th g in en N ew -Y or k. Late in the ev ith hw rt fo d ha " r te is in M an ic er m A e th at th London to the effect e th r fo ed su is en be d ha rs de or at . been s�nt hi s pa ss po rt s, th d te m U e th of s rt po e th in s ip sh an ic er m A immediate seizure of all a� on � ss ce Se of s n ie fr on tt c he T h. rt ? K in gd om , and so fo es ut m m n te at g, m ld ho r fo ty um rt po Liverpool im pr ov ed the op an , ge an ch Ex k oc St e th of m oo sr le sa notice in the cotton e th , ce en Sp r. M of y c en id es pr e th indig�ation meeting, un de r rn he ut So e th of st re te in e th in t le ph m pa author of some obscure nt on ge A ty al ir dm A e th s, m ia ill W e or od m Confedera cy.b Com ce on at as w , ta la P a L e th ith w d ve ri ar board the Trent, who ha d su m m oned to London. s es pr n do on L e th r, be em ov N of th 28 O n the following day, the rast nt co y el ng ra st n io at er od m of ne to a , le exhibited, on the w ho e th of e t m te ci ex il nt ca er m d � an al ic � in g with the tremendous polit st, Po g mn or M , es tm T , rs pe pa on st er lm Pa previ ou s evening. The
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Ch . Adams.- Ed. , 1 86 1 .- Ed. on nd Lo , ... n io Un n ica er Am The , ce en J. Sp
96
The News and Its Effect in London
Karl Marx ,
Daily Telegraph, Morning Advertiser, and Sun, had received orders .. to calm down rather than to exasperate. The Daily News, by its st:i�tures on the conduct of the San Jacinto, evidently aimed less at ••. hIttmg the Federal Government than clearing itself of the . suspicion of "Yankee prejudices, " while The Morning Star, John ' Bright's organ, without passing any j udgment on the policy and '. wisdo� of the "act," pleaded its lawfulness. There were only two . exceptIons to the general tenor of the London press. The " !ory-scribblers of The Morr:ing Herald and The Standard, forming m fact one paper under dIfferent names, gave full vent to their savage satisfaction of having at last caught the "republicans" in a trap, and finding a casus belli, ready cut out. They were supported by but one other journal, The Morning Chronicle, which for years ? ad tried to p�olong its checkered existe?ce. by alternately selling Itself to the pOIsoner Palmer and the TUllenes. 1 13 The excitement on the Exchange greatly subsided in consequence of the pacific tone of the leading London papers. On the same 28th of Nov . , . �ommander Williams attended at the Admiralty, and reported the , . CIrcumstances of the occurrence in the old Bahama Channel. His report, together with the written depositions of the officers on board the Trent, were at once submitted to the law officers of the . Crown: whose opinion, late in the evening, was officially brought under the notice of Lord Palmerston, Earl Russell and other members of the Government. On the 29th of November there was to be remarked some slight change in the tone of the ministerial press. It became known that the law officers of the Crown, on a technical ground, had declared the proceedings of the frigate San Jacinto illegal, and that later in the day, the Cabinet, summoned to a general council, had decided to send by next steamer to Lord Lyons instructions to conform to the opinion of the English law officers. Hence the excitement in the principal places of business, such as the Stock Exchange, Lloyd' s, the Jerusalem, the B altic,I 14 etc., set in with redoubled fo:ce, and was further stimulated by the news that the projected . shIPron ents to Amenca of saltpeter had been stopped on the prevIOUS day, and that on the 29th a general order was received at the Custom-House prohibiting the exportation of this article to any country except under certain stringent conditions. The Engli�h f� nds further fell 3/4 , and at one time a real panic prevaIled m all the stock markets, it having become impossible to transact any business in some securities, while in all descriptions a a R. Palmer and W. Atherton.- Ed.
97
ery ov rec a on no er aft the In d. rre cu oc s ice pr of ion ess pr de . re . e sev IIy to ' Ipa mC pr b ut rs, mo l ru era sev to e du s wa et rk ma . the stock t th� act tha on � in op his ed ess pr ex h d s am Ad . Mr t tha rt � e repo , t. bm Ca ton mg ash W the by d we avo � dIs be uld wo to cin Ja of t he San th wI rs pe pa on nd Lo the all y) -d (to er mb ve No of th 30 � : O n the of e tIv na er alt e th t pu r, Sta mg orn e M Th of ion pt e exce . t h e singl r. wa ' or et b m a C on gt hm as W e th by n reparatio l of iva arr the m fro ts en ev the of y tor his the up ed mm su . Ha ving eed to recordmg oc pr w no all sh I y, da nt ese pr e th to ata Pl the La on ed er id ns co be to s int po o tw se, ur co of , re we e er opinion s. Th r� zu sei � th of y, lic e po th nd ha r he ot e th on , law e th nd the one ha a on board an En gh sh ma d s er ion iss mm Co rn he ut So of the steame r. by ed ot mo y ult fic dif st fir e th , air aff e th of t ec asp al leg e As to th ited U� e th at t � wa e icl ron Ch ing orn M e Th d an � ess pr the Tory er lhg be s as Ist On SSI Ce Se rn he ut So e th d ize gn co re r States had neve in s ht rig t en er llig be im cla t no uld co ly, nt ue eq ns co ents, and , regard to th em . . . . ' ess pr al en Ist Mm e th by of sed po dIs ce on at s wa This quibble itself. as a tes Sta ate der nfe Co se the d ize h ogn rec y ead alr ve "ha es, Tim T e "W e," said .
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ent nm )Ver G ir the z gni eco es, com e tim the en � wh ll, � sha we : and belligerent power, of a es enc enI onv inc and ties du the all s lve rse ou on d ose imp e Therefore we hav power neutral between two belligerents." b
e th ize gn co re tes Sta d ite Un the t no or er eth wh He nc e, on up ist ins to ht rig the ve ha y the ts, en er llig be as tes ra de Confe a of es nc nie ve on inc d an s tie du the all to ing England submitt neutral in maritime warfare. n Lo ole wh the , ed ion nt me s ion pt ce ex e th th wi ly, nt ue eq ns Co ul, ha er ov to to cin Ja n Sa e th of ht rig e th s ge led n ow do press ackn visit, and search the Trent, in order to ascertain whether she carried goods or pe rso ns be lon gin g to the category of "co ntraband of wa r." The Times's ins inu ation that the En glish law of decision s 1 15 "w as given under circumstances very differen t from those which now occu r;" th at " steamers did not then exist ," an d ma il the w<;,rld have of ns tio na e th all ein er wh s ter let els ess ing ry , ar "c : Im me diate interest, were un know n;" that "we (the En glI sh ) were fighting for existence, an d did in those da ys what we should ,not �llow others to do , " was no t seriously thrown out. Palmerston s pnvate J. Mason and J . Slidell.- Ed. 1, 86 1 28, ber h vem No , 02 1 24 . No es, Tim T e , " ... ort eff ng b "It requires a stro leaai ng article.- Ed. a
98
The News and Its Effect in London
Karl Marx
Moniteur, The Morning Post, declared on the same day that mail steamers were simple merchantmen, not sharing the exemption . from the right of search of men-of-war and transports.a The of search, on the part of the San Jacinto, was in point of fact, ! conceded by the London press as well as the law officers of the · ·. Crown. The objection that the Trent, instead of sailing from a · belligerent to a belligerent port, was, on the contrary, bound from .. a neutral to a neutral port, fell to the ground by Lord Stowell's . decision that the right of search is intended to ascertain the . destination of a ship.b In the second instance, the question arose whether by firing a . round shot across the bows of the Trent, and subsequently throwing a shell, bursting close to her, the San Jacinto had not violated the usages and courtesies appurtenant to the exercise of the right of visitation and search. It was generally conceded by the London press that, since the details of the event have till now been only ascertained by the depositions of one of the parties concerned, no such minor question could influence the decision to be arrived at by the British Government. The right of search, exercised by the San Jacinto, thus being conceded, what had she to look for? For contraband of war, presumed to be conveyed by the Trent. What is contraband of war? Are the dispatches of a belligerent Government contraband of war? Are the persons carrying those dispatches contraband of war? And, both questions being answered in the affirmative, do those dispatches and the bearers of them continue to be contraband of war, if found on a merchant ship bound from a neutral port to a neutral port? The London press admits that the decisions of the highest legal authorities on both sides of the Atlantic are so contradictory, and may be claimed with such appearance of justice for both the affirmative and the negative, that, at all events, a prima faciec case is made out for the San Jacinto. Concurrently with this prevalent opinion of the English press, the English Crown lawyers have altogether dropped the material question, and only taken up the formal question. They assert that the law of nations was not violated in substance, but in form only. They have arrived at the conclusion that the San Jacinto failed in seizing, on her own responsibility, the Southern Commissioners, a "The Government of the United States has taken a step. . . ", The Morning Post,
No. 27440, November 28, 1 8 6 1 .- Ed. b "It requires a strong effort...".-Ed. C Plausible.- Ed.
99
itting the subm and port ral Fede a to t Tren the g takin of d . . . t ea . JOs ht ng a avmg h ' er crms d arme no rt, -Cou Pnze ral Fede a to n sti U o q ake hims elf a Judg e at sea. A violation in the procedure of the o efore, all that is imputed to her by the Engl ish ther is, cinto Ja a w ho, in my opin ion, are right in their con clus ion. ers, lawy wn C rth precedents, showing England to have unea to easy be t rnigh I� formalities of maritime law; but the on ed pass tres r1y rnila sl to supp lant the law itself . ed allow be r neve can law of ns · olatio VI The question may now be moo ted, whether the reparation of on ituti the rest is, that ent ernm Gov lish Eng the by ed and dem h whic ry inju by an d ante warr be rs ione miss Com rn he Sout the the English themselves avow to be of form rather than of substance ? A lawyer of the Tem ple, l l6 in the to-day's Times, rem arks , in respect to this po in t:
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"If the case is not so clearly in our favor as that a decision in the American Court condemning the vessel would have been liable to be questioned by us as manifestly contrary to the laws of nations, then the irregularity of the American Captain a in allowing the Trent to proceed to Southampton, clearly redo� nded to the advantage of the British owners and the British passengers. Could we In such a case find a ground of international quarrel in an error of procedure which in effect told in our own favor?" b
Still, if the Ame rican Gov ernm ent mus t conc ede, as it seem s to me, that Cap t. Wilk es has committed a violation of maritime law, whether formal or material, their fair fame and their interest ought alike to prevent them from nibbling at the terms of the satisfaction to be given to the injur ed party. They ought to remember that they do the work of the Secessionists in embroiling the United States in a war with Eng land , that such a war wou ld be a godsend to Louis Bonaparte in his present difficulties, and would, consequently, be supported by all the official weight of France; and, lastly , that, what with the actual force unde r the comma nd of the British on the North Ame rican and Wes t Indi an stations, what with the forces of the Mexican Expedition,c the . English Gov ernm ent wou ld have at its disposal an over whe lmin g maritime power. . As to the policy of the seizure in the Bah ama Cha nnel , the VOIce not only of the English but of the Euro pean press is unan imou s in expressions of bewi lderm ent at the strange cond uct of the Ch. Wilkes.- Ed. b Justitia, "To the Editor of The Times ", The Times, No. 24 1 04, November 30, I 8 6 1 .- Ed. � See pp. 7 1 -78 of this volume.- Ed. a
,
100
Karl Marx
101
American Government, provoking such tremendous ' ntt�rn dangers, for gaining the bodies of Messrs. Mason, Slidell & while Messrs. Yancey and Mann are strutting in London. . Times is certainly right in saying:
" Even Mr. Seward himself must know that the voices of these Commissioners, sounding from their captivity, are a thousand times more in London and in Paris than they would have been if they had been heard at James's and the Tuileries. " a
Karl Marx T HE
PRINCIPAL ACTORS IN THE TRENT DRAMA 1 1 7
The people of the United States having magnanimously submitted to a curtailment of their own liberties in order to save their country, · will certainly be no less ready to turn the tide of popular opinion in ' England by openly avowing, and carefully making up for, an .· international blunder the vindication of which might realize the boldest hopes of the rebels.
Written on November 30. 1 86 1 First published in the New-York Dai ly Tribune, No. 6462. December 19, 1 86 1
Reproduced from the newspaper
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London, December 4 At
the present moment it is of interest to get acquainted in sonie measure with the leading figures in the Trent drama. On one side stands the active hero, Captain Wilkes, the commander of the San Jacinto; on the other, the passive heroes, J. M. Mason and John Slidell. Captain Charles Wilkes is a direct descendant of the brother of the celebrated English demagogue, [John] Wilkes, who threatened for a moment to shake the throne of George III. 1 l8 The struggle with the North American colonies saved the Hanoverian dynasty at that time from the outbreak of an English revolution , symptoms of which were alike perceptible in the cry of a Wilkes and the letters of a Junius. Captain Wilkes, born ,in New York in 1 798, forty-three years in the service of the American navy, commanded the squadron that from 1 83 8 to 1 842 explored the North and South Pacific Ocean by order of the Union government. He has published a report on this expedition in five volumes: He is also the author of a work on Western America, which contains some valuable information on California and the Oregon district.b It is now certain that Wilkes improvised his coup de maine independently and without instructiQns from Wash . lllgton . The two intercepted commissioners of the Southern Confedera cy - Messrs. Mason and Slidell form a contrast in every respect. Mason, born in 1 798, is descended from one of those old d d S h f l Ch. Wilkes, Narrative ition. . . Vols. I-V. Unite t Exp oring Expe a e o tates . Philadelphia. 1 84 5.- Ed. b Ch. Wilkes. Western America, including California and Oregon . . Philadelphia. .
a "It requires a strong effort ... " , The Times, No. 24102, November 28. 1 86 1 , leading article.- Ed.
l 849._ Ed. C
An impetuous and unexpected attack.- Ed.
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The Principal Actors in the Trent Drama
Karl Marx .
aristocratic families of Virginia that fled from England after Ul Royalists had been defeated at the battle of Worcester. 1 1g grandsire of our hero a belongs to the circle of men who, with Washington, Jefferson, etc . . are designated by the as "the revolutionary fathers".b John Slidell is neither, like M of aristocratic lineage, nor, like his colleague, a slaveholder birth. H is native town is New York, where his grandfather and . father lived as honest tallow-chandlers.' Mason, after he had occupied himself for some years with the study of law, stepped on the political stage. H e figured repeatedly since 1 826 as a member of the H ouse of Representatives of Virginia; made his appearance · in 1 83 7 in the H ouse of Representatives of the American Congress · for a session ; but his importance only dates from 1 847. I n that . year Virginia elected him to the American Senate, in which he · held his seat until the spring of 1 8 6 1 . Slidell, who is now sixty-�ight years old, was obliged to leave New York as a young man m consequence of adultery and a duel, in short, of a scandal. He b�took himself to . � ew Orleans, where he lived first by .· gamblmg, later by practIsmg law. Having become first a member · of the legislature of Louisiana, he soon made his way to the House ; of Representatives and finally to the Senate of the American . . �ongres � . As a director of election rogueries during the presidentIal electIOn of 1 844 and, later, as a participant in a swindle in state lands, he had even somewhat shocked the sort of morals that prevail in Louisiana. Mason inherited influence; Slidell acquired it. The two men found and supplemented each other in the American Senate, the bulwark of the slave oligarchy. In accordance with the American Cons�itution, the Senate elects a special Committee of Foreign . RelatIOns, whICh plays about the same role as the Privy Council d 1 20 formerly played in England, before the so-called Cabinet, a quantity theor�tically unknown to the English Constitution, . usu:ped the Pr�vy Cou �cil's functions. Mason was for a long time chaIrman of thIS commIttee; Slidell, a prominent member of it. Mason, firmly convinced that every Virginian is a demi-god and every Yankee a plebeian rascal, never sought to conceal his contempt for his Northern colleagues. 'Haughty, overbearing, a G. Mason.- Ed.
b Marx uses the English expression and gives the German translation in
parenthesis.- Ed. uses the English words "tallow-chandlers" and gives the Ger_man C Marx translation in parenthesis.- Ed. d Marx gives the English name in brackets after its German equivalent.- Ed.
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ber, Zeus-like som a in ws bro his knit to how w kne he nt, ole 'n s ners native to man the ate Sen to the ted spor tran fact in and wn ro eles s sham a ery, slav of gist eulo l tica fana A . tion ta plan the Nor the rn wor king of the y larl ticu par and th Nor the of er r nde sla Senate with the ried wea on Mas , land Eng nst agai r tere blus a s, �:las ly vain that ch spee of flow nt siste per a of nity ortu imp lix pro th e p. As a pom ow holl a er und uity vac e plet com its e hid to ght sou of dem onstration , he wen t around in recent years in Virginian , man the tic of eris ract cha is this and , but n; line y gra ade e-m hom e cam ch whi of s, all ton but d lou h wit d rne ado was t coa y gra he t from a state of New En gla nd, from Co nnecticut. Whilst Ma son played the Jupiter Tonansa of the slave oligarchy on the pro scen ium , Slid ell worked behind the scen es. With a rare talent for intrigue, tireless perseverance and an uns cru pul ous lack of regard, but at the sam e time war y, covert, never strutting, but always insi nua ting him self , Slid ell was the sou l of the Southern conspiratorial conclave. On e may jud ge the ma n's repute from the fact that wh en in 1 845 , shortly before the outbreak of war with Mexico, he was sen t there as Am bas sad or, Mexico refused to treat with such an individual . 1 2 1 Slid ell's intrigues ma de Pol k President. He was one of the most pernicious cou nse llor s of President Pierce and the evil genius of Buc han an's adm inistration . The two, Ma son and Slid ell, were the chie f spo nso rs of the law on runaway slaves 1 22 ; they brought about the bloodbath in Kan sas, l 23 and both were wirepullers for the me asu res whereby Buc han an' s adm inist ration smu ggled all the me ans to secession into the han ds of the South, whilst it left the North defenceles s.1 24 As early as 1 855 Ma son declared on a public occasion in South Carolina that "for the South onl y one way lies ope n imm edi ate , absolute and eter nal separation " . b In Mar ch 186 1 he declared in the Senate that "he owed the Uni on gov ern men t no allegiance ",c but retained his seat in the Sen ate and continued to draw his senatori al salary as lon g as the safety of his per son allowed a spy in the sup rem e council of the nation and a fraudulent parasite on the public exchequer. Ma son 's great-grandmother was a daughter of the celebrated Sir William Te mp le. He is therefore a distant relative of Pal me rsto n.
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Jupiter the thunderer.- Ed. the South], New-York Times, b J. M. Mason [Statement urging the separation of Octobe r 14, 1 856.- Ed. J. M. Mason [Speech in the Senate on M arch 1 1 , 1 8 6 1 ] , The New-York Daily Tribune, No. 620 2, Mar ch 1 2, 1 86 1 . In quoting, Marx uses the English word . " allegiance" and gives the translation in brackets.- Ed. a
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Karl Marx
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Maso � and �lidell appeared to the pe ? ple of the North not merely . as theIr pohtical opponents, but as theIr personal enemies. Hence the general jubilation over their capture, which in its first days even overwhelmed regard for the danger threatening from England. Written on December 4, 1 86 1
First published in Die Presse, No. 33 7 , December 8, 1 86 1
Karl Marx
Printed according to the news paper
[CONTROVERSY OVER THE TRENT CASE] 1 2 5
London, December 7 The Palmerston press and on another occasion I will show that in foreign affairs Palmerston's control over nine-tenths of the English press is just as absolute as Louis Bonaparte's over nine-tenths of the French press a the Palmerston press feels that it works among "pleasing hindrances" .b On the one hand, it admits that the law officers of the Crown have reduced the accusation against the U nited States to a mere mistake in procedure, to a technical error. On the other hand, it boasts that on the basis of such a legal quibble a compelling ultimatum has been presented to the U nited States, such as can only be justified by a gross violation of law, but not by a formal error in the exercise of a recognised right. Accordingly, the Palmerston press now pleads the question of material right again. The great importance of the case appears to demand a brief examination of the question of material right. By way of introduction, it may be observed that not a single English paper ventures to reproach the San Jacinto for the visi tation and search of the Trent. This point, therefore, falls out side the controversy. First, we again call to mind the relevant passage in Queen Vic toria's proclamation of neutrality of May 1 3 , 1 86 1 . The passage reads: " Victoria R. C
" As we are at peace with the United States ... we warn all our beloved subjects " . to abstain from contravening our Proclamation . . . by breaking the legally See this volume, pp. 12 7-3 0 . - Ed. b Heinrich Heine, "Neuer Friihling", Prolog.- Ed. C R. Palmer and W. Atherton.- Ed. a
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Controversy over the Trent Case
recognised blockade or by carrying officers ... dispatches . . . or any other contraband . of war. All persons so offending will be liable to the various penalties imposed in that behalf by the English municipal law and by the law of nations. . . . Such persons will in no way receive our protection against the consequences of their conduct but will, on the contrary, incur our displeasure." a
may be forwarded or obstructed . . . . The penalty is confiscation of the nt ere l Be \. g
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This proclamation of Queen Victoria, therefore, i n the first place declares dispatches to be contraband and makes the ship that carries such contraband liable to the " penalties of the law of nations" . What are these penalties? Wheaton, an American writer on international law whose authority is recognised on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean alike, says in his Elements of International Law, p. 565 b : "The carrying of dispatches of the enemy subjects the neutral vessel in which they are transported to capture and confiscation. The consequences of such a service
are infinitely beyond the effect of conveying ordinary contraband. . . . As Sir W. Scott, the English judge, says, the carrying of military stores is necessarily of limited nature, while the carrying of dispatches is an act that may defeat the entire plan of campaign of the other belligerent .. . . The confiscation of the noxious article, which constitutes the usual penalty for contraband , would be ridiculous when applied to dispatches. There would be no freight dependent on their transporta tion. Therefore, their confiscation does not affect the shipowner and hence does not punish the ship carrying them. The vehicle, in which they are carried, must, therefore, be confiscated."
Walker, in his Introduction to American Law, says:
" Neutrals may not be concerned in bearing hostile dispatches, under the penalty of confiscation of the vehicle, and of the cargo also."
Kent, who is accounted a decisive authority in English courts, states in his Commentaries:
"If, on search of a ship, it is found that she carries enemy dispatches, she incurs the penalty of capture and of confiscation by judgment of a prize court."
Dr. Robert Phillimore, Advocate of Her Majesty in Her Office of Admiralty,' says in his latest work on international law, p. 370:
"Official communications from an official person d on the affairs of a belligerent Government are such dispatches as impress an hostile character upon the carriers of them. The mischievous consequences of such a service cannot be estimated, and extend far beyond the effect of any Contraband that can be conveyed, for it is manifest that by the carriage of such dispatches the most important plans of a Here and below Marx quotes from the article "The Capture of Mason and Slidell" , New-York Daily Tribune, No. 64 35, November 18, 1 86 I .- Ed. b Here and below Marx gives the English titles of the books and the German translation in brackets.- Ed. , Marx gives the English designation and supplies the German translation in brackets.- E d. d Marx gives the English words "official" and, below, "carriers" in brackets after their German equivalents.- Ed. a
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,·11 I p Two points are therefore established. Queen Victoria's proclaships that carry of May 1 3 , 1 86 1 , subjects English nl,1tion . . disp atches of the Confed �racy t? the p�naItIes 0 f mte:natl. �:maI I aw. I l ter national law, accordmg to Its Enghsh and Amencan mterpre t rs, impose s the penalty of capture an? confiscation on such ships. I tly ud on orders from above consequen organs merston's Pal in affirming that ,111 d we were naive enough to believe their lie ' hes the captain of the San Jacinto had neglected to seek for dlspatc Trent and therefore had of course found none; and that O J1 the ' the Trent had consequently become shot-proof t h rough t.h IS oversight. The American journals of November 1 7 to 20, whICh could not yet have been aware of the English lie, unanimously state, on the contrary, that the dispatches had b�en seize� and were . al ready in print for submission to Congress m Was� mgton. ThIS changes the whole state of affairs. Because of these dlspatches, the Sa n Jacinto had the right to take the '!'rent in tow and every American prize court had the duty to confIscate her a� d her cargo. . With the Trent, her passengers also naturally came wIthm the pale of American jurisdiction . Messrs. Mason, Slidell and Co., as soon as the Trent had touched at Monroe, came under American jurisdiction as rebels. I f, therefore, instead of towing the Trent herself to an Ame:i�an . port, the captain of the San Jacinto contented himself wlth selzmg the dispatches and their bearers, he in no way worsened the . position of Mason, Slidell and Co., whilst, on the other hand, hIS error in procedure benefited the Trent, her cargo . and . h �r passengers. And it would be indeed unprecedented l � B r�tam wished to declare war on the United States because Captam WIlkes committed an error in procedure harmful to the United States, but profitable to Britain. The question whether Mason, Slidell and Co. :vere themselves contraband, was only raised and could
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Karl Marx
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t en res rep y the se cau be nt rta po im are n bde Co d an t igh Br . oice s of are represented in � powerful section of middle-�lass int�rests andd als o, more or les s, bson an GI r lne 'MI , ne sto ad Gl by try nis mi he portant im is rt ha qu Ur of ce voi e Th . wis Le ll wa rne Co ��, Sir es nis og rec ne ryo eve d y an ud -st life his is law al on ati ern int . I)C cau se onaI I aw . atI " ern h mt IS t of er ret erp int le tib up orr inc an as h 'ill ech spe t's igh Br te ica un mm co ll wi s rce sou r pe pa ws ne l ua us 1 The . support of the U nited States an d Co bd en 's letter, which is . em th on ell dw t no ll wi e I for ere Th a se. sen e sam the in ��nceived , ue iss est lat its in tes sta , ess Pr ee Fr e Th n, ga or s rt' Urquha publishe d on December 4 :
officers? Were Mason, Slidell and Co. "officers " of the C��f(�dc::r, cy? "Officers, " says Samuel Johnson in his dictionaw of the En language, are " men employed by the public" ," that is, in German : ' offentliche Beamte. Walker gives the same definition. (See his dictionary, 1 8 6 1 edition.) According to the usage of the :English language, therefore, Mason, Slidell and Co. , these emissaries, id est, officials of the Confederacy, come under the category of "officers", whom the " . royal proclamation declares to be contraband. The Trent captain knew them in this capacity and therefore rendered himself, his . ship and his passengers confiscable. I f, according to Phillimore . and all other authorities, a ship becomes confiscable as the carrier b of an enemy ? ispatch because it violates neutrality, in a still higher . • . . degree IS thIS true of the person who carries the dispatches. . . �CCOrdI?g to Wheat�n, even an enemy ambassador, so long as he is m transttu, may be mtercep ted. I n general, however , the basis of ' all international law is that any member of the belligerent party may be regarded and treated as "belliger ent" by the opposing party. "So long as a man," says Vattel. "continues to be a citizen of his own country. he . . IS the enemy of all those with whom his nation is at war." C '
which met the nds sou ntic fra the e wer h Suc ' rk! Yo w Ne d bar bom st mu " 'We vening of this day e t n o don m : L of ets stre the sed � ver tra o wh � one ry eve ears of . . was act e Th nt. lde mC hke war g hn tnf a of e enc llig inte the of l iva arr heek. on the as a matter of course-namely. the ted mit com has nd gla En , war ry eve . () ne which . in ty af h er ene mi es. " per pro and s son per the of l tra a neu of rd seizure on boa
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The Free Press further argues that, in 1 856 at the Congress of Paris, Palmerston. without any authority from the Crown or Parliament, sacrificed English maritime law in the interest of Russia, and then says:
"In order to justify this sacrifice, Palmerston's organs stated at that time that if we maintained the righ t of visitation and search, we should assuredly be mvolved m a w{lr with the United States on the occasion of the first war in Europe. And now he calls on us through the same organs of public ? pinion to bombard New York . because the United States act on those laws whICh are theirs no less than our own. " b
One sees, therefore, that the law officers of the English Crown reduced the point of contention to a mere error in procedure, not an error in re, d but an error in forma, because, actually, no violation of materia � right is to h � nd . .The Palmerston organs chatter about the questIOn of matenal nght again because a mere error in procedure, in the interest of the "Trent " at that, gives no plausible pretext for a haughty-toned ultimatum. Meanw hile, important voices have been raised in this sense from diametrically opposite sides: on the one side, Messr s. Bright and Cobden; on the other, David Urquhart. These men are enem ies on grounds of principl � and perso nally: the first two, peaceable . cosmopohtan s ; the thIrd, the "last of the Englishmen " 1 26; the former always ready to sacrifice all international law to international trade; the other hesitating not a mome nt: "Fiat justitia, pereat mundus "/ and by "justic e" he understands "English " justice. The a Marx gives the definition in English.- Ed. e
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With regard to the utterances of the " organs of public opinion ", The Free Press remarks:
"The bray of Baron Munchausen's thawing post-horn was nothi�g t?, the clangour of the British press on the capture of Messrs. Mason and Shdell. c
Then humorously. it places side by side, in "strophe" and "antistrophe", the contradictions by which the English press seeks to convict the United States of a "breach of law". Written on December 7, 1 86 1
First published in Die Presse, No. 340. December 1 1 . 1 86 1
Marx uses the English word and gives the German translation in brackets.
E. de Vattel. Le Droit des gens. . Tome I I . livre III. chapitre V , § 7 I .- Ed. , In substance.- Ed. In form.- Ed. Let justice be done, though the world perish.- Ed. .
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" ] . Bright's speech and R. Cobden's letter were reported in the note, "Mr. Bright on America", The Times, No. 24109, December 6, 1 86 1 .- Ed.
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Here and above Marx quotes from the article. " 'We must bombard New York! Such were .. . " , The Free Press, No. 12. December 4, 1 86 1 .- Ed. , " 'Public Opinion' on the San Jacinto Affair", The Free Press, same issue.- Ed. b
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1 10 Progress of Feeling in England
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PROGRESS OF FEELING IN ENGLAND
wI'th America, " says The Economist, a paper deeply in Palmerston's : ' ' the hIStOry InCi " ' dents In 0f .e, "must always be one of the most lamentable fIdenc . ' ' con he present lS certamly the penod at WhlCh l t Wl'II d0 us to happen, t if it is u t b d' E n gla n d the only moment in our joint annals at which it would confer h f arm an o m HHnu . tI" Hll d d
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J . Mason and J . Slidell.- Ed,
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1e very reasons accounting for the eagerness of England to any decent pre�ext for war at th'IS " onIy moment" .se ize uponwithhold the Umted States from forwardmg such a oug h t to . r�text at this "only moment." You go not to war WIt' h th e aIm ta . � .» )Tour enemy "the minimum of harm, " and, even to confer upon b y the war "an incidental and partial compensation. " The h� SI e, 'd h 'd on SI t e e opp Ortunity of the moment would all be on one . ' a f reasonmg wanted ta prove 0 f Y our foe. Is there any great stram . 11a t an internal war raging in a State is the least opportune tIme for entering upon a foreign war? At every ather moment the mercantile classes of· Great Britain would have looked upon a war against the United S�ates wi�h the utmost horror. �ow, on th.e contrary, a large and mfluentIaI party of the mercantIle cOI?mum ty has for months been urging on the Government to vIOle n tly . . break the blockade, and thus provide the main brar:ch of Bntlsh industry with its raw material. The fear of a curt�ulm:nt of the English export trade to the � nited States has lost Its stm � , by th� curtailment of that trade havmg already actually occurred. They (l h e Northern States), says The Economist, "are wretched custom�rs, instead of good ones." The vast c�ed�t usually given by EnglIsh commerce to the United States, pnnCIpally by the acceptance of bills drawn from China and India, has been already reduced .to sGircely a fifth of what it was in 1 857. Last, not least, Decembnst F rance, bankrupt, paralyzed at home, beset with difficulty abroa?, pounces upon an Anglo-American war as a. real !:?odsend, and, m order to buy English support in Europe, wIll s.tram all her pow� r to support "Perfidious Albion" on the other SIde of t� e Atlanuc. . . Read only the French newspapers . �he pitch of mdlgnatIOn to . which they have wrought th�mselv�s Ir: theIr tender care f<,>r the "honor of England " their fIerce dlatnbes as to the necessIty on the part of England to revenge th� outrage . on the Union Jack, thei r vile denunciations of everythmg Amencan, would be truly app alling, if they were not ridicu�ous an� dis!?u�ting at the sarr:e time . Lastly, if the United Sta�es !:? lVe. way m thIS mstance, they WIll llot derogate one iota of theIr dlgmty. Engla?d has reduced � er complaint to a mere error of procedure, a techmcal blunder of whICh '1"1
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London, Dec. 7, 1 86 1 The friends o f the U nited States on this side o f th a,nxiously hope that conciliatory steps will be taken b e Atlantic Government. They do so not from a concurrence iny the Federal crowing of t.he British press over a war incident, wh ic the frantic to the Enghsh Crown lawyers themselves, resolves h, according mere error o f procedure, and may be summed up itsetf into a th�t there has been a breach of international law, bin the words WIlkes, ins�e�d o f taki?g the Trent, her cargo, her pa ecause Capt. the Co �mlssIOners: dId 0 r: ly take the Commissionerssse�gers, and the anxIety o f the well-wIshers of the Great Rep . Nor springs ublic from an . the long appreh�nsIOn lest, m ru n , it sh o u ld cope wIth England, although backed by the civil nwoat r;prove able to all, do they expect the United States to abdicate, and, least o f mome.nt, and in a. dark hour o f trial, the proud po even for a them .m the �ounCII o f nations. The motives that prosition held by mpt them are o f qUIte a dIfferent nature. . In the first instance, the business next in hand for States is to crush the rebellion and to restore the Un the U n ited uppermost in the minds of the Slaveocracy and thion. The wish tools was always to plunge the U n ited States intoeir Northern England. The first step of England as Soon as hostil a war with would �e to recognize the Southern Confederacy, aities broke out to termmate the blockade. Secondly, no general, if nnd the second accept battle at the time and under the conditions ot forced, will chosen by his enemy .
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"The Effect of an American War upon English Commerce" , The Economist, \/0, 954, December 7 , 1861.-Ed,
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she has . made � erself systematically guilty in all her maritime but aga� nst WhI� h the United States have never ceased to and whI�h Pres�dent Madison, in his message inaugurating the ?f 1 8 1 2 : expatIated upon as one of the most shocking breaches mternatIOn�1 law. If the United States may be defended in gnlanlirr Englan? wIth. her own coin, will they be accused for ously .dIsavowmg, on the part of a single American captain on hIS .own resp.onsibility, what they always denounc�d as systematIc �surpatIOn on the part of the British Navy! In point. f�ct, the gam of such a procedure would be all on the Ul. s�de. England, o.n the one hand, would have acknowledged the nght of the Un� ted States to capture and bring to adjudication before �n Amencan prize court every English ship employed in the serVICe of the Confederation. On the other hand, she would " , on�e for all, �efore . the eyes of the whole world, have practicall; '' :esIgned a claIm whIch she was not brought to desist from either m the peace of Ghent, in 1 8 1 4,c or the transactions carried on " betw�en Lord Ashburton and Secretary Webster in 1 842. 127 The .' questI,?n then comes to this: Do you prefer to turn the "untoward . event to your ow.n account, or, blinded by the passions of the moment, turn It to the account of your foes at home and abroad? Since this day .week, when I sent you my last letter,d British co-?sols have �gam lowered, the decline, compared with last fnday, amountmg to 2 per cent, the present prices being 893/ to /8 for mone� and 90 .to 90 1 /8 for the new account on the 9th of Ja��ary. ThIs quotatIOn corresponds to the quotation of the . BntIsh consols during the first two years of the AngI0-RUSSIan war. Th IS' decr me I' � altogether due to the warlike interpretation put upon. the Amencan papers conveyed by the last mail, to the exac�rbatml? tone of the London press, whose moderation of two d�ys standmg was but a feint, ordered by Palmerston, to the dIspatch of troops for Canada, to the proclamation forbidding the export of arms and materials for gunpowder f and lastly, to the ��r
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' n , To the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States J : M adIso [was hmgton, J une I , 1 8 1 2].- Ed. b Ch. Wilkes.- Ed. A Treaty of Peace and A mity between his Britannic Majesty and the United States oj A menca; Signed at Ghent, December 24, lR14.- Ed. d See this volume, pp. 95- 1 00.- Ed, The rimean War of 1 853-56,-Ed. . Victoria, R., A Proclamation [December 4 " 1 86 1 ] The Times, No. 24 1 08 , December 5, 1 86 1 .- Ed. C
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aar p re p le ab id rm fo e th g in rn ce n co ts en atem st s u o ti ta en st o ly s. al n se i ar e da im it ar m d an ks oc d e th .uons for war in t ?' te re p al eg � a ts an w ' o st er m al P , re su e b y -? m u yo tg ir th � e on Of ls cI n u co et m ab C e th m ts ee m t u b , es at St d te m U e th h it w ' ar f�.ltha w m o st determinate o p position on the part o f M es sr s. a r Si of e, re eg d ss le a to , d an , n so ib G er iln M d an e n �;. dsto Lewis . "The noble viscount" is back.ed by �ussell, an . h an d s, and th e whole WhIg C ot en e. If th e c :r nw all IS h in ol to ct e th bje , xt te re p ed ir es d e th h is rn fu ld ou sh et in ab C on gt �ashin Ca�inet will b e �p�u n g , to be supplanted b y a Tory f o e p re sent g an ch a ch su r fo s ep st y ar m m h re p e h T . n Io at tr is in Adm d an on st er m al P n ee w et b d le tt se y ad re al n ee b e av h y er n sce d an d al er H g in orn M he T f o ry -c ar w s ou ri fu e th ce en H i. el ra Dis e th f o t ec sp ro p e th at g n li w o h es lv o w The Standard, th o se h u n g ry . er n o m al c li b u p e th m o fr s b m u long-missed cr a ry o em m to in g n lli ca y b p u n w o sh e Palmerston's designs may b , n io at m la oc pr e th on p u ed st si in o h w e h as w It s. ct fa few f o g in rn o m e th on , ts en er g li el b as acknowledging the Secessionists m o fr h p ra g le te y b ed rm fo in n ee b ad the 1 4th o f M ay , after h e h f o t h ig n e th n o on d on L at ve ri Liverpool that M r. Adams would ar ruggle w it h h is colleagues, st re ve se a r te af e, H . ay M h 3t 1 the ed d n te in if s, u lo u ic d ri y m ar an a, ad dispatched 3, 00 0 men to Can if d an -h of tgh ei sl er ev cl a t u b to cover a frontier of 1 ,5 00 m il es , e, H . d te ta ri ir e b to n io n U e th d an the rebellion was to b e cheered, ed m ar t in jo a e os p ro p to te ar ap many w ee k s ago, urged Bon t ec oj pr at th ed rt po p su ," le gg intervention " in the internecine stru e th by it g n yi rr ca in ly on d ile in the Cabinet council, and fa to ed rt so re en th te ar ap on B d an e H resistance of h is colleagues. o tw ed rv se n io at er op at h T r: le the Mexican intervention as a pis al e th f o t ar p e th n o t en tm n se re purpose s, by provoking ju st e th r fo t ex et pr a ng hi is rn fu y sl ou ne Americans, and by simulta o "t , it as h t os P g in orn M he T as dispatch of a squadron, ready, f o t en m n er ov G e th f o ct u d n co le ti os h perform whatever duty th e e th of s er at w e th in m or rf pe Washington m ay require u s to as w on ti di pe ex at th en h w e m ti e N orthern Atlantic ." b At th r le al sm e th d an es im T he T h it started, The Morning Post, together w g, in th e n fi ry ve a as w it at th id sa , fry of Palmerston's p re ss slaves ld u o w it se au ec b , in ga ar b e th to in g , and a philanthropic thin ti n A e th sre fi o tw to n io at er d ex pose the slaveholding Confe •
The last me an s Ed. st, Po g in orn M e Th , . . s . er ad re r ou rm to in fo l> "W e are glad to be able "'0 . 27 44 2, November 30 , 1 86 1 .- Ed. a
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Slavery North and the Anti-Slavery force of England and And what says the very same Morning Post, this curious com of Jenkins and Rhodomonte, of plush and swash, in its issue, on occasion of Jefferson Davis's address? a Hearken to Palmers ton oracle:
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" e must lo? k to t is interventi?n as one that may be in operation during consIderable perIod of tIme; and whIle the Northern Government is too distant admit of its attitude entering materially into this question, the Confederation, on the other hand, stretches for a great distance along the frc'n of Mexico, so as to render its friendly disposition to the authors of the insurrection . no slight consequence. The Northern Government has invariably railed at ?eutrality, but the Southern with statesmanship and moderation has recognized It all that we could do for either party; and whether with a view to our in Mexico, or to our relations with the Cabinet at Washington, the forbearance of the Southern Confederacy is an important point in our favor . " ti
Karl Marx THE CRISIS OVER THE SLAVERY ISSL'E 1 2 9
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. I may remark that the Nord of December 3 a Russian paper . and consequently a paper initiated into Palmerston's insinuates that the Mexican expedition was from the first set foot, not for its ostensible purpose, but for a war against United States.c Gen. Scott's letter had produced such a beneficent reaction in public opinion, and even on the London Stock Exchange, that the , conspirators of Downing street and the Tuileries 128 found it necessary to let loose the Patrie, stating with all the airs of " . knowledge derived from official sources that the seizure of the Southern Comrriissioners from the Trent was directly authorized by the Washington Cabinet. "
Written on December 7, 1 86 1
Reproduced from the newspaper "
First published in the New-York Daily Tribune, No. 6467, December 25, 1 86 1
h it w e ag st al iti cr a d re t en tly en � id ev s � T he U nited States ha le ho w e th g In rl de un Y t on es qu e th n, tio es qu � . slavery . e th to d ar eg r ivil War. General Fremont has been dlSlhlssed for declarIng the C e th , an � er Sh al er e� G to e iv ct re di A slaves of rebels free: r te la tle ht a as w , na oh ar C h ut So to . commander of the expedition r he rt fu es go ch hI w , nt n er ov G n to �� published by the W as hing l ya lo of en ev es av sl e tIv gI fu at th s ee cr than Fremont, for it de d an rs ke or w as ed oy pl em d an ed slave-owners should be welcom s le ns co d an , ed n; a s ce � an st um rc ci n ai n paid a wage, and under certe prospect of reCeIV. In n IO at ns pe m co g th th e "l oy al " ow ne rs w ith he t, on em Fr an th r he rt fu en ev ne later.b Colonel Cochrane ha s go he T .c re su ea m ry ta ili m a as es av sl l al demands the arming of s e' an hr oc C of es ov pr ap ly ic bl pu on er Secretary of War Cam e th of lf ha be on ,e or ri te In e th of y "v iews" .d The Secretar y a� et cr Se he T . a W of y ar et cr Se e th : es at di government, then repu Ic bl pu a at ly al tl ha em e or m en ev � I? . re p rt to of War expresses hi s "v ie w s" IS h In s ew VI e es th e at ic nd vi ill w he at th g in . SOUri,? and meeting stat . MIS In s es cc su t's on em Fr , <:>� ck le al H al er en .f G ss Congre . . o fr s oe gr N e tlv gl fu � en iv dr ve � ha a General D ix in east Virgini In re tu fu In ar pe ap to m th n de id rb fo � th ei r military camps and .ies. Ge ra l Wool at �� . th e vicinity of the positio.ns held by theIr arm en op h It W nd ba ra nt co " k ac bl e th ed the same time ha s receIv
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a J . Davis, " To the Congress of the C onfederate States. Richmond, Nov.
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New-York Daily Tribune, No. 644 1 , November 25, 1 86 1 .- Ed. b "The principal intelligence conveyed by the Edinburgh . . ", The Morning Post, No. 27448, December 7, 1 86 1 .- Ed. "Resume politique", Le Nord, No. 337, December 3, 1 86 1 .- Ed. .
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in the ed ish bl pu s wa n io at m la oc pr t's on em Fr this volume, pp . 86 -8 8. a See 1 86 1 .� Ed. r I:. be e pt Se , 66 63 . No , ne � ibu Tr o ily -Y 'w Da .\" rk ", an m er Sh . en G to ns tIo uc str in the Item In b T he di re ctive wa s di sc us se d Ed. ,Yew- York Daily Tribune, No . 64 45 , N ovember 29 � 1 86 .mber ve No , 33 64 o. N , ne bu Tn tly Da k or -Y ew N Cochrane's message to soldiers, . 15, 1 86 1 .- Ed. . Ed .ue Iss e m sa , ne ibu Tr ily Da k or -Y ew N soldiers, d Ca m er on 's speech to e C. B . Sm ith .- Ed. n an d to ng hi as W om fr rt po re a in d se us sc di s wa lemic f Th e Sm ith -C am eron po . Ed .1 86 1 9, er mb ce De , I J J 24 . No s, me pu blished in The Ti
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arms at Fort Monroe. 1 3o The old leaders of the Democratic Party . Senator Dickinson and Croswell (a former member of the so-called Democratic regency 1 3 1 ), have published open letters in which they express their agreement with Cochrane and Cameron: and Colonel Jennison in Kansas has surpassed all his military predeces sors by an address to his troops which contains the following passage:
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"No temporising with rebels and those sympathising with them .... I have told General Fremon � that I would not have drawn my sword had I thought that slavery would outlast thIS struggle. The slaves of rebels will always find protection in this camp and we will defend them to the last man and the last bullet. I want no men who are not Abolitionists,b I have no use for them and I hope that there are no such people amo�� us, for everyone knows that slavery is the basis, the centre and the vertex of thIS Infernal war.. : . Should the government disapprove of my action it can tak� b�ck my patent, but In that case I shall act on my own hook even if in the begInnIng I can only count on six men." C
The slavery question is being solved in practice in the border �lave states even now, especially in Missouri and to a lesser extent In K.entucky, etc. A large-scale di�persal of slaves is taking place . For Instance 50,000 slaves have dIsappeared from Missouri, some of them have run away, others have been transported by the slave-owners to the more distant southern states. It is rather strange that a most important and significant event is not mentioned in any English newspaper. On November 1 8, . delegates from 45 North Carolina counties met on Hatteras Island, appointed a provisional government, revoked the Ordi nance of Secession and proclaimed that North Carolina was returning to .the U nio? The counties of North Carolina rep resented at �hIS conventIOn have been called together to elect their Representatives to Congress at Washington.d Written on December 1 0, 1 86 1 First published in Die Presse, No. 343, December 1 4 , 1 8 6 1
Printed according to the news paper
Croswell's letter in the New-York Daily Tribune, No. 644 1 , November 25 1 86 1 . In a postscript to it Dickinson declared himself in agteement witl Croswell.- Ed. b Marx g ves the beginning of this sentence in English in brackets, after the German eqUivalent. In the same manner he gives the phrase "on my own hook" further in this paragraph.- Ed. C Jennison's address was reproduced in the item "Camp Jennison. Kansas City, Tuesday, Nov. 1 2, 1 86 1 ", New- York Daily Tribune, No. 644 1 November 25 1 86 1 .- Ed. d These events were reported in the item " Hatteras Inlet N ' C " Nov. 1 8 , 1 86 1 " , New- York Daily Tribune, No. 6438, November 2 1 , 1 86 1 .- d. a
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Karl Marx AMERICAN MATTERS
London, December 1 3 e th of t si vi e th d an ch ir B y ve ar H e th of The news of the fate on k or Y ew N d he ac re r ou rb ha on pt m ha ut cruiser Nashville in So n io at ns se e th ed ok ov pr ve ha to em se November 29 , bu t do es no t as w it as re he s le rc ci n ai rt ce in ed ct pe that was every bit as ex e ok br e av w e on e, tim s hi T 132 . ar w e th to ile st feared in ot he rs , ho e th r fo n ig pa m ca e th by up d re ir st as on anoth er . For N ew York w n po es rr co n to ng hi as W he T 3. r be em ec D election of the Mayor on by nt le ta tic el C s hi ls oi sp ho w ll, se us R r. dent of The Times, M r de on w in s er ld ou sh s hi g ru sh to ds affecting English ways, preten r. M , se ur co f O " . n tio ec el al . or ay m e th at this excitement over e th at th y ne ck co on nd Lo e th of n Russell is flattering the illusio f nd ki e m sa e th is ? k or Y ew N election of the Mayor in In or ay M rd Lo a of n tio ec el e th as y old-fashioned tomfooler s ha n do on L of or ay M d or L e th at Lo nd on . It is w el l known th l in m no e th is e � n. � do on L of rt pa r te ea nothing to do with the gr S hI e ov pr to s ve ri st ho w r te ac ar ch ruler of the City, a story-book d ba d an s et nq ba at s up so � le rt tu reality by producing good rd L A. s. lO at ul re e lic ? po of n io � at ol vi � ju dg m ents in cases of n Io at m ag Im e th m ly on re gu fi t en m M ayor of London is a govern b ew N of or ay M he T . rs ve di s it fa d an e ill ev of Paris w ri te rs of va ud e th of g in nn gi be e th t A . er w po al York , on the contrary, is a re d, oo W do an rn Fe s ou ri to no e th , or ay M en secession movement the th ty ci nt de en de in an k or Y e N g � . plan .w was on the point of proclaimin IS H . IS aV D n so er ff Je ith W , se ur co of re p ublic, 1 33 in collusion, 3, 1 r be m ce De 5, 1 1 24 o. N s, me Ti e Th ", " [W . H . Russelll "Washington, Nov. 29 . 1 86 1 .- Ed. b Local news items.- Ed.
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ma n, old an is he As y. ead alr on siti po the for ed ect sel n bee e hav . said to n) ce n a y cIause an ce sm d an , nts eve of rse cou al tur na the in ge sta the ve '" u . Id soon lea s thu uld wo o xic Me d, ide avo be to is sor ces suc his of ion . g the nominat . . he " ou m . . " l. " 1 37 co ncern alt H as O m XIC Me ph m um trI uld wo licy po e sam the ert to Spain - so that ' IS
foundered owing to the energy of the Republican Party of the Empire City.1 34 On November 27, Charles Sumner of Massachusetts, a member · of the American Senate, where he had been beaten with a stick by ." a Southern senator " at the time of the Kansas affair, J 35 delivered a , brilliant speech before a large meeting in Cooper Union 1 36 in New York on the origin and secret motives of the slaveholder . rebellion.b After his speech the meeting adopted the following resolution:
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Writ ten on December 1 3 , 1 86 1
Printed according to the news paper
December 1 7 , 1 86 1
Published in English for the first time
First published in Die Presse, No. 346,
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"The doctrine enunciated by General Fremont, with respect to the emancipa tion of the slaves of rebels, and the more recent utterances of General Burnside, Senator Wilson,c George B ancroft (the famous historian), Colonel Cochrane and Simon Cameron, foreshadowing the eventual rooting out of slavery as the cause of the rebellion, indicate a moral, political, and military necessity. In the judgment of this meeting, the public sentiment of the North is now fully in sympathy with any practicable scheme which may be presented for the extirpation of this national evil, and it regards such a result as the only consistent issue of this contest between civilisation and barbarism." d
The New- York Tribune comments, in particular, on Sumner's address:
"The allusion of Mr. Sumner to the coming discussions of Congress on the subject of slavery will kindle a hope that that body will at last understand where Southern weakness and Northern strength really lie, and will seize the instrumen tality by which alone the rebellion is to be brought to a speedy and final extirpation." e
A private letter from Mexico states among other things:
"The English ambassador f pretends to be a warm friend of the administration of President Juarez. Persons well acquainted with the Spanish intrigues assure us that General Marquez has been instructed by Spain to bring the scattered forces of the Clerical party together again, its Mexican as well as Spanish elements. This party is then to take advantage of the opportunity soon to be offered to beg Her Catholic Majesty g to provide a king for the Mexican throne. An uncle of the " P. S. Brooks.- Ed. b Sumner's speech was published in the New-York Daily Tribune, No. 6444, November 28, 186 1 .- Ed. c Presumably Henry Wilson.- Ed. d "The· Sentiment of the Cooper Institute Meeting Last Night", New-York Daily Tribune, No. 6444, November 28, 1 86 1 .- Ed. New-York Daily Tribune, e "It is certainly an indicative and important fact... ", same issue, leading article.- Ed. f Th. Murphy.- Ed. g Isabella IL- Ed.
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slander, in which a local weekly paper, Lloyd's Weekly News, was the defe�d a� and Stubbs and Compo the plaintiff. Stubbs and Compo pubhs? a weekly u �der the title of Stubbs' Gazette, the organ of Stubbs ,Trade Protectwn Co"!'pany. The paper is sent privately to . sub�cnbers, who pay 3 gUIneas a year, but is not sold by · single copies, as <;>ther ne�spapers are, in stationers' shops, on the s.treet, at railway stations, and so on. Actually, it is a proscription lIst of bad . debtors, whatever their position in life. Stubbs' " Protection Company" spies out the solvency of private individu als, Stubbs' Gazette records them in black and white. The number of subscribers runs to 20,000. Well, Lloyd's Weekly News had published an article in which the following statement appeared: "It is the duty of every honourable man to put . an . e�d to this disgraceful system of espionage." Stubbs demanded JudiCIal revenge for this slander. After the attorney fO.r the. plaintiff, Serjeant Shee, had poured out the stream of hiS Insh eloquence, the plaintiff Stubbs u nderwent a cross examination b (in effect, the cross fire to which the wi�nesses are subjected during the hearing) by Serjeant Ball�ntIn�, the attorney for Lloyd's Weekly News. The following comical dialogue ensued.c B allantine: "Do you ask your subscribers for information ?" Stubbs: 1 invite the �ubscribers to send me the names of persons they . consl?er to be SWIndlers. We then investigate these cases. I do not InvestIgate them myself. I have agents in London and other large cities. I have 9 or 1 0 agents in London, who get a yearlv. salary." Ballantine: "What do these gentlemen receive for hunting out . mformation ?" Stubbs: " From 1 50 to 200 pounds sterling." Ballantine: " And a new suit? Well, when one of these well-paid gentlemen catches a swindler, what happens then?" "We publish his name." Ballantine: "When he is a thorough swindler?" "Yes. " "But if he is only half a swindler?" "Then we enter it in our register. "
Karl Marx A SLANDER TRIAL
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London, December 1 9 The ancient Egyptians are known to have developed the division of labour to a high degree, so far as it extended to the whole of society and not to the individual workshop. With them almost every particular part of the body had its own special physician, whose therapy was confined by law to this particular region. Theft was the occupation of a special trade, the head of which was an officially recognised person. But how inadequate the ancient Egyptian division of labour appears when compared to that of modern England! The strange nature of some trades in London amazes us no less than the extent to which they are carried on. One of these curious industries is espionage. It divides fnto two big branches, civil espionage and political espionage. We leave the latter entirely out of account here. Civil espionage is again broken down into two large subdivisions official and private espionage. The official sort is carried on, on the one hand, by detectives, who are paid either by the government or the municipal authorities, and on the other hand, by common informers, who spy on their own and are paid by jobwork a by the police. The business of private espionage breaks down into many subtypes, which may be united under two major headings. One comprises non-commercial private relations, the other commercial. Under the first heading, in which espionage on marital infidelity plays an important part, the establishment of Mr. Field has won European fame. The business of commercial espionage will be better understood from the following incident. Last Tuesday b the Court of Exchequer 138 dealt with a suit for
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Marx uses the English word.- Ed. b. Marx uses the English words "serjeant", "cross examination" and, below, " solicito r" ._ Ed. Marx draws on a report published in The Times. No. 2 4 1 1 9) Dpcember 18 ... a
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Marx uses the English words "detectives", "common informers" and "jobwork" and gives the German translation in brackets.- Ed. b December 1 7.- Ed.
A Slander Trial
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A Slander Trial
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" Until he is in full bloom, and then you publish it?" "Yes. " "Do you publish autographs of swindlers?" "Yes. " "And you go to even greater expense for the benefit of trade . . You publish photographs of swindlers?" "Yes. " "Do you not have a secret police agency? Are you not connected •. with Mr. Field?" "I am glad to be able to say No! " "What is the difference?" "I decline to answer that." "What do you mean by your 'legal agents'?" "That concerns collection of debts. I mean by it solicitors . · (something between attorney and bailiff) who take care of subscribers' business according to the conditions stated in the prospectus. " "So, you are a collector of debts, too?" "I collect debts through 700 solicitors." "Good Lord, you have 700 solicitors, and the world still exists! Do you keep the solicitors or do the solicitors keep you?" "They keep themselves. " "Have you had other court cases?" "Yes, half a dozen." "Did you ever contest them?" "Yes. " "Was the decision ever in your favour?" "Once. " "What do you mean by the heading in your paper, 'Addresses Wanted', followed by a long list of names?" . "Absconding debtors whose whereabouts neither we nor our subscribers could trace." " How is your business organised?" "Our central office is in London, with branch offices in Birmingham, Glasgow, Edinburgh and Dublin. My father left me the business. He carried it on in Manchester originally." Attorney Ballantine in his plea pounced mercilessly on Stubbs, whose "smiling and self-complacent attitude during his testimony proved at any rate that he had no more idea than a dung-beetle of the filth of the material he moved in". English trade must have sunk deep indeed, if it needed such a protector. This unworthy spy system would give Stubbs a fearful weapon for extortion, etc.
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The Lord Chie f Baro n,l 39 who was sitting as judg e: threw �is With luded conc He ce. defen the for ce balan the into� -up ming m su the words:
"The jury owe much to the freedom of the . press; but juries . a�e not th� pr� ss. IS free b�cause the Junes are but free, is press the se becau t enden dep in ,iI1dependent. You must consider wheth er the. mcnmmated article goes beyond the ' to ' subJect s is a pubhc character and as such IS bou nds of honest criticism. StubbL 's Weekly News h as gone beyond the boun s d l oy that e criticism. Should you believ , . . . ges. dama pnate of honest criticism, then it is up to you to award the plamtlff appro
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The jurors withdrew to the jury room to deliberate. After debating for a quarter of an �o �r they rea'pp �ared in . the courtroom with the verdict: . Plamtlff Stub�s IS m the �Igh� ; damages for his wounded honour o�� farthtng. The farthm� IS the smallest English coin, correspondmg �o the Fr� nch centime and the German pfennig. Stubbs left GUIldhall amidst the . loud laughter of the large audi� nce, escorted by a �umber of admlrer� , from who se urgent ovations only speedy fhght could save hiS . modest dignity. Written on December 1 9 , 1 86 1 First published in Die Presse, No. 353, December 24, 1 8 6 1
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" the common highway of the nations, carmot fall to the sov . ereignty of any neutraI power. . . As a matter of fact, however, the DeclaratI?n of 1 � 56. veI�s u nder its philanthropic phrases a great. inhumamty. In prInCIple It '.lnsforms war from a war of peopIes mto a war 0f governments. �� endows property with an inviolability that -it denies to persons. I t emancipates trade from the terrors of w.ar and thereby makes the classes carrying on trade and industry callous to the ter� ors of . war. For the rest, it is self-understood that the humamtarIan retexts of the Declaration of 1 856 were only addressed to the k uropean gallery, just like the religious pretexts of the H oly Alliance. . It is a well-known fact that Lord Clarendon, who sIgned away Britain's maritime rights at the Congress of Paris, acted, as he subsequently confessed in the Upper House, �ithout the fo�e knowledge or instructions of the Crown. HIS sole authorIty consisted in a private letter from Palmerston. Up to the present Palmerston has not dared to demand the sanction of the British Parliament for the Declaration of Paris and its signature by Clarendon. Apart from the debates on the contents . of . the Declaration there was fear of debates on the ConstitutIOnal question whether, independently . of Crown and Parliament, .a British minister might usurp the rIght to sweep away �he ?l? ba�Is of English sea power with a stroke <;>f the pen : That thIS mmisterIal coup d'etat did not lead to �tormy mt�rpellatIons, but, rather, was silently accepted as a fatt accomplt, Palmerston owed to the influence of the Manchester school. 143 It found to be in accorda�ce with the interests represented by it, and ther� fore �lso wIth philanthropy, civilisation and p�ogress, an inn�vatIon. whIch .would allow English commerce to contmu� to pur�ue ItS. busmess WIth .the enemy undisturbed on neutral ShIpS, whIlst saIlors and soldIers fought for the honour of the nation. T?e !'1anchester men. were jubilant over the fact that by an u?constIt�tIOnal coup � maw the minister had bound England to mternatIonal conceSSIons whose attainment in the constitutional parliamentary way was wholly improbable. Hence the present indignation of the Manch�ster . party in England over the disclosure� of the Blue Book submitted by Seward to the Congress in Washmgton ! As is known, the United States was the only great power that refused to accede to the Paris Declaration of 1 856. If they had renounced privateering, then they would have to create a great state navy. Any weakening of �heir means of war at sea simultaneously threatened them wIth the dreadful prospect of ,IS
Karl Marx THE WASH INGTON CABINET AND THE WESTERN POWERS 1 40
On e of the most striking surprises of a war so rich in surprises as the Anglo-French-Turkish-Russian was incontestably the decla ration on maritime law agreed at Paris in the spr ing of 1 856 .1 4 1 When the war against Russia began, England suspended her mo st formidable wea pon s against Ru ssia : confiscation of enemy-owned goods on neutral ships and privateering. At the conclusion of the war, England broke these weapons in pieces and sacrificed the fragments on the altar of peace. Russia, the ostensibly vanquished party, received a concession that, by a series of "ar me d neu tralities", 14 2 wars and diplomatic intrigues, she had tried in vain to extort since Catherine II. England, the ostensible victor, re nounced, on the other han d, the great means of attack and defence that had grown up out of her sea power and that she had maintained for a century and a half against a world in arm s. The humanitarian grounds that served as a pretext for the Declaration of 1 856 vanish before the most su perficial examina tion . Privateering is no greater barbarism than the action of volunteer corps or guerillas in land warfare. The privateers are the guerillas of the sea . Co nfiscation of the private goods of a belligerent nation also occurs in land warfare. Do military requisitions, for example, hit only the cash-box of the ene my government and not the property of private per son s als o? Th e nature of lan d warfare safeguards enemy possessions that are on neutral soil, therefore un der the sovereignty of a neutral po we r. Th e nature of sea warfare obliterates these barriers, since the sea , a
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having to maintain a standing land army on the European scale. Nevertheless, President Buchanan stated that he was ready to accept the Declaration of Paris provided that the same inviolability would be assiIred to all property, enemy or neutral, found on sh �ps, with the excepti�n of contraband of war. His proposal was �eJecte� . From Sew� rd s Blue Book it now appears that Lincoln, ImmedIately after hIS assumption of office, offered England and France the adhesion of the United States to the Declaration of Paris, so far as it abolishes privateering, on condition that the prohibition of privateering should be extended to the parts of the United States in r�volt, that is, the Southern Confederacy. The answer that he receIved amounted in practice to recognition of . the belligerent rights of the Southern Confederacy." "Humanity, progress and civilisation" whispered to the Cabinets ?f St. James's and t�e �uileries that the prohibition of privateer mg would extraordmanly reduce the chances of secession and therefore of dissoluti?n o� the U nited States. The Confederacy was therefore recogmsed m all haste as a belligerent party, in order afterwards to reply to the Cabinet at Washington that England and France could naturally not recognise the proposal of one belligerent party as a binding law for the other belligerent party .. �he same " noble uprightness" inspired all the diplomatic �egotiatIOns of England and France with the Union government smce the outbreak of the Civil War, and had the San Jacinto not held up the Trent in the Bahama Channel, any other incident would have sufficed to provide a pretext for the conflict that Lord Palmerston aimed at. Written about December 20, 1 8 6 1 First published in Die Presse, No. 354, December 25, 1 8 6 1
Printed according to the news paper
Karl Marx THE OPINION OF THE NEWSPAPERS AND THE OPINION OF THE PEOPLE 144
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London, December 25 s es pr on nd Lo e th in at th e in ag im o wh s, an ici lit po l Continenta e, pl eo sh gli En e th r of pe m te e th or � � er et om m er th a ss sse they po e th Ith W t. en om m t en es pr e th at s IOn lUS nc co lse inevitably draw fa up d re fla e id pr l na tio na sh gli En e th se ca t en Tr e th first news of t os alm m fro d de un so re s ate St d ite Un e th th wi and the call for war , nd ha r he ot e th on s, es pr on nd Lo e Th .. ty cie so all sections of us cas a er eth wh ted ub do s me Ti e Th en ev d an n tio ra de affected mo s wa n sto er lm Pa ? on en om en ph is th b e nc he W belli existed at all . m a pOSItIOn to re we rs ye law n ow Cr e th er uncertain wheth re fo be lf ha a d an ek we a r, Fo r. wa r fo xt ete pr al leg y an e contriv rn he ut So e th of ts en ag , on pt m ha ut So at ata Pl th e arrival of the La l, oo rp ve Li m fro et bin Ca sh gli En e th to ed rn tu d ha y Confederac m fro t ou t pu to rs se ui cr n ica er Am of n tio ten in e th d ce denoun e �h on ., etc ll, de Sli , on as M s sr es M pt ce ter in d English ports an : . sh gh En e th of Ion nt ve ter m e th d de an m de d an high se as , rs, ye law n ow Cr its of ion in op e th th wi ce an rd government. In acco e th g, in nn gi be e th in e, nc He t. es qu re e th d se fu the latter re e th to st ra nt co in s es pr on nd Lo e th of ne to ate er od m d ul an ef peac n ow Cr e th as r, ve we ho , on so So le. op pe e th of e warlike im patienc th bo c al, er en r-G ito lic So e th d an al er en -G ey rn to At e th lawyers l ica hn tec a t ou ed rk wo d ha t ne bi Ca e th of rs be em m s em lve th se . p p hi ns io lat re e th , es at St ted ni U e th th wi l re ar qu a r retext fo •
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" The reference is to Queen Victoria's proclamation of neutrality of May 1 3 ' 1 86 1 (see this volume, pp. 92).- Ed.
" See this volume, pp. 89-94.- Ed. he Times, T , ..." ort eff g on str a es uir req t I " icle b Th e reference is to the art No . 2 4 1 02 , November 28 , 1 86 1 .- Ed. es in English.- Ed. C Marx gives the titl . d W . Atherton an d R. Pa lm er .- Ed
128
Opinion of the Newspapers and Opinion of the People Karl Marx
between the people and the press turned into its opposite. The war fever increased in the press in the same measure as the war fever abated in the people. At the present moment a war with America is j �st as unpopular with all sections of the English people, the frIends of cotton and the country squires excepted, as the war-howl in the press is overwhelming. But now, consider the London pres s! At its head stands The Times, w.hose leadi?-g editor, Bob Lowe, was formerly a dem agogue In AustralIa, where he agitated for separation from England. He is a subordinate member of the Cabinet, a kind of minister for education, and a mere creature of Palmerston. Punch is the court jester of The Times and transforms its sesquipedalia verbaa into flat joke s and spiritless caricatures. A principal editor �f Punch was accommodated by Palmerston with a seat on the Board of Health b and an annual salary of a thousand pounds sterling. The Morning Post is in part Palmerston's private property. Another part of this singular institution is sold to the French Embassy . .The rest belongs to the haute voleec and supplies the most pr�Clse reports for court flunkeys and ladies' tailors. Among the EnglIsh people the Morning Post is accordingly notorious as the Jenkins (the stock figure for the lackey) of the pres s. The Morning Advertiser is the joint property of the "licensed victuall ers" :d . that is: of the public houses, which, besides beer, may also s �ll SpIrIts. It IS, f�rther, the organ of the English Pietists 1 45 and dItto �f the sportmg characters, that is, of the people who m �ke a busm� ss of horse-racing, betting, boxing and the like . The edI tor of thIS paper, Mr . Grant, previously employed as a s.tenographer by the newspapers and quite uneducated in a lIterary sen se, has had the honour to get invited to Palmerston's private soirees. Since then he has been enthusiastic for the "truly English minister" 1 46 wh om , on the outbreak of the Russian war he had denounced as a "Russian agent" . It mu st be added that the pious patrons of this liquor-journal stand und er the ruling rod of , l of Shaftesbury and that Shaftesbury the Ear is Palmerston's son-in-law. Shaftesbury is the pope of the Low Churchmen, 1 47 who ,
: W�rds Ed.
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9�) .-.
Ed. of a foot and a half long ( orace, Art of Poetry, Marx uses the Enghsh name and gIves the German translatIon III brackets.
C
129
High society.- Ed. � ere and below Marx uses the English expressions "licensed victuallers", d " sportmg characters", "Low Chu rchm en" , "truly English minister" (he translates the last phrase into German in brackets ).- Ed.
blend the spiritus sanctusa with the profane spirit of the honest Advertiser. The Morning Chronicle! Quantum mutatus ab illo! b For well-nigh
half a century the great organ of the Whig Party and the not unfortunate rival of The Times, its star paled after the Whig war . 148 It went through metamorphoses of all sorts, ,,turned itself into a penny paper " and sought to live by "sensations /49 thus, for example, by taking the side of the poisoner, Palmer. It subsequent ly sold itself to the French Embassy, which, however, soon regretted throwing away its money. It then threw itself into anti-Bonapartism, but with no better success. Finally, it found the long missing buyer in Messrs. Yancey and Mann the agents of the Southern Confederacy in London. The Daily Telegraph is the private property of a certain Levy. His paper is stigmatised by the English press itself as Palmerston s Besides this function it conducts a chronique scan mob paper. d daleuse. It is characteristic of this Telegraph that, on the arrival of the news about the Trent, by ordre from above it declared war to be impossible. In the dignity and moderation dictated to it, it seemed so strange to itself that since then it has published half-a-dozen articles about this instance of moderation and dignity displayed by it. As soon, however, as the ordre to change its line reached it, the Telegraph has sought to compensate itself for the constraint put upon it by outbawlin g all its comrades in howling loudly for war. The Globe is the ministerial evening paper which receives official subsidies from all Whig ministries. The Tory papers, The Morning Herald and The Evening Standard, both belonging to the same boutique, are governed by a double motive: on the one hand, hereditary hate for "the revolted English colonies" e ; on the other hand, a chronic ebb in their finances. They know that a war with America must shatter the present coalition Cabinet and pave the way for a Tory Cabinet. With the Tory Cabinet official subsidies for The Herald and The Standard would return. Accordingly, hungry wolves cannot howl louder for prey than these Tory papers for an American war with its ensuing shower of gold! a
Holy Spirit.- Ed. b How changed from what he once was! (Virgil, Aeneid, II, 274).- Ed. Marx uses the English expression "penny paper" and, below, "mob paper", the latter with the German translation in brackets.- Ed. t! Chronicle of scandal.- Ed. An allusion to the leading article " Let those who believe .. ", The Times, :-';0. 24 1 22, December 2 1 , I H6 1 .- Ed. C
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Karl Marx
Of the London daily press, The Daily News and The Morning Star are the only papers left that are worth mentioning; both work counter to the trumpeters of war. The Daily News is restricted in its movement by a connection with Lord John Russell; The Morning Star (the organ of Bright and Cobden) is diminished in its influence by its character as a "peace-at-any-price paper" . Most of the London weekly papers are mere echoes of the daily press, therefore overwhelmingly warlike. The Observer is in the ministry's pay. The Saturday Review strives for esprit and believes it has attained it by affecting a cynical elevation above "humanitarian" prejudices.a To show "esprit ", the corrupt lawyers, parsons and schoolmasters that write this paper have smirked their approbation of the slaveholders since the outbreak of the American Civil War. Naturally, they subsequently blew the war-trumI?et With. The Times. They are already drawing up plans ?f campaIgn agamst the United States displaying a hair-raising Ignorance. The Spectator, The Examiner and, particularly, MacMillan's Magazine must be mentioned as more or less respectable exceptions. One sees: On the whole, the London press with the exception of the cotton organs, the provincial papers form a commendable contrast represents nothing but Palmerston and again Palmer ston . . Palmerston wants war; the English people don't want it. Immment events will show who will win in this duel, Palmerston or the pe?ple. In any case, he is playing a more dangerous game than LOUIS Bonaparte at the beginning of 1 859. 150 Written on December 25, 1 8 6 1 First published in Die Presse, N o . 359, December 3 1 , 1 8 6 1
Karl Marx FRENCH NEWS HUMBUG., ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF WAR
London, December 3 1
Printed according to the news paper
, ,
a An allusion to the article " Unblessed Peacemakers", No. 320, December 14, 1 8 6 1 .-- Ed.
The Saturday Review,
151
The belief in miracles seems to be withdrawn from one sphere only in order to settle in another. If it is driven out of nature, it now rises up in politics. At least, that is the view of the Paris newspapers and their confederates in the telegraph agencies and the newspaper-correspondence shops. Thus, Paris evening papers of yesterday announce: Lord Lyons has stated to Mr. Seward that he will wait until the evening of December 20, but then depart for London, in the event of the Cabinet at Washington refusing to surrender the prisoners.a Therefore, the Paris papers already knew yesterday the steps that Lord Lyons took after receiving the dispatches transmitted to him on the Europa. Up to today, however, news of the arrival of the Europa in New York has not yet reached Europe. The Patrie and its associates, before they are informed of the arrival of the Europa in America, publish in Europe news of the events that ensued on the heels of the Europa's arrival in the United States. The Patrie and its associates manifestly believe that legerdemain requires no magic. One journal over here remarks in its stock exchange article that these Paris inventions, quite like the p rovocatory articles in some English papers, serve not only the political speculations of certain persons in power, but just as much the stock exchange speculations of certain private individuals. •
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J. Mason and J. Slidell. Marx cites the statement according to The Times, 241 30, December 3 1 , 1 86 1 .- Ed.
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Karl Marx
French News Humbug.-Economic Consequences of War
The Economist, hitherto one of the loudest bawlers of the war , ; party, publishes in its last number a letter from a Liverpool merchant "
and a leading article in which the English public is warned not on any account to underestimate the dangers of a war with the , United States." England imported grain worth [1 5,380,90 1 during , 1 86 1 ; of the whole amount nearly [6,000,000 fell to the United States. b England would suffer more from the inability to buy American grain than the United States would suffer from the inability to sell it. The United States would have the advantage of prior information. If they decided for war, then telegrams would fly ' forthwith from Washington to San Francisco, and the American " ships in the Pacific Ocean and the China seas would commence ', war operations many weeks before England could bring the news , of the war to India. Since the outbreak of the Civil War the American-Chinese trade, and the American-Australian trade quite as much, has diminished ' to an enormous extent. So far, however, as it is still carried on, it ' buys its cargoes in most cases with English letters of credit, therefore with English capital. English trade from India, China and Australia, always very considerable, has, on the contrary, grown still more since the interruption of the trade with the United States. American privateers would therefore have a great field for privateering; English privateers, a relatively insignificant one. English investments of capital in the United States are greater than the whole of the capital invested in the English cotton industry. American investments of capital in England are nil. The English navy eclipses the American, but not nearly to the same extent as during the war of 1 8 1 2 to 1 8 14. If at that time the American privateers already showed themselves far superior to the English, then how about them now? ' . An effective blockade of the North American ports, particularly in winter, is quite out of the question. In the inland waters between Canada and the United States-and superiority here is decisive for the land warfare in Canada the United States would, with the opening of the war, hold absolute sway. In short, the Liverpool merchant comes to the conclusion:
133
. expense than to wage war with the U nited States on their behalf for one
�t�t t e
Ceterum censeoa that the Trent case will not lead to war. Written
on December 3 1 , 1861
published in Jauuary 4, 1 862 First
Die Presse, No. 4,
Printed according to the news paper
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"Nobody in England dares to recommend war for the sake of mere cotton. It would be cheaper for us to feed the whole of the cotton districts for three years at a
"The Mercantile Realities of an American War'", signed "A Liverpool Merchant", and the article " Operation of a War with America. on England" published in The Economist, No. 957, December 28, 1 86 1 .- Ed. b "The Board of Trade Tables", The Economist, same issue.- Ed.
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"Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam" ("By the way, I believe t at Car thage should be destroyed" , Plutarch, Life of Cato the Elder)-the words with IVhictJ Cato, Roman soldier and statesman (234- 1 49 B.C.) usually conclude , re frai n-like, his speeches in the Senate. Here the phrase means, roughly: I repe a t " ._ Ed. , a
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A Pro-America Meeting
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th e hour of her peril, we take advantage of a position favourable to us, to revenge t h e insult. Would not such a procedure brand us as cowards in the eyes of the cj\lJ ised world?" �f r .
Karl Marx A PRO-AMERICA
MEETING 153
London, January
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The anti-war movement among the English people gains from i: day to day in energy and extent. Public meetings in the most .', diverse parts of the country insist on settlement by arbitration of ' the dispute between England and America. Memoranda in this . ' sense rain on the chief of the Cabinet,a and the independent , provincial press is almost unanimous in its opposition to the war-cry '. '" of the London press. Subjoined is a detailed report of the meeting held last Monday b in Brighton, since it emanated from the working class, and the two ' principal speakers, Mess rs. Coningham and White, are influential members of Parliament who both sit on the ministerial side of the ' House. Mr. Wood (a worker) proposed the first motion, to the effect
" the "tha t di spute betwee n Englan and d Ameri ca arose out a of misint erpreta, . , Uon of mternatlOnal law, but not out of an intentional insult to the British flag; that ' accordingly this meeting is of the opinion that the whole question in dispute should be referred to a neutral power for decision by arbitration; that under the existing . circumstances a war with America is not j ustifiable, but , rather merits the condemnation of the English people" .
In support of his motion Mr. Wood, among other things, remarked: " It is said that this new insult is merely the last link in a chain of insults that America has offered to England. Suppose this to be true, what w0l!ld it prove in regar? to the cry f?r war at the present moment? I t would prove that so long as . Amenca was undivided and strong, we submitted quietly to her insults; but now, in
a
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H . J . Palmerston.- Ed, December 30, 1 86 1 .-Ed.
Coningham:
" " ,At this moment there is developing in the midst of the Union an avowed policy of emancipation (Applause), and I express the earnest hope that no intervention "n the part of the English government will be permitted (Applause)" .. Will you, freeborn Englishmen, allow, yourselves to be embroiled in an anti-republican war? For that is the intention of The Times and of the party that stands behind it. ... I appeal to the workers of England, who have the greatest interest in the presenation of peace, to raise their voices and, in case of need, their hands for the prev en tion of so great a crime (Loud applause). . . The Times has exerted every en deavour to excite the warlike spirit of the land and by bitter scorn and slanders to engender a hostile mood among the Americans . . . . I do not belong to the so-called peace party.154 The Times favoured the policy of Russia and put forth (in I f\53) all its powers to mislead our country into looking on calmly at the 'military encroachments of Russian barbarism in the East. I was amongst those who raised their voices against this false policy. At the time of the introduction of the Conspiracy Bill, whose object was to facilitate the extradition of political refugees, no expenditure of effort seemed too great to The Times, to force this Bill through the Lower House. I was one of the 99 members of the House who withstood this encroachment on the liberties of the English people and brought about the minister's downfall 155 (applause). This minister is now at the head Of the Cabinet. I prophesy to him that should he seek to embroil our country in a war with America without good and sufficient reasons, his plan will fail ignominiously. I promise him a fresh ignominious defeat, a worse defeat than was his lot on the occasion of the Conspiracy Bill (Loud applause).... I do not know the official communication that has gone to Washington; but the opinion prevails that the Crown lawyers a have ' recommended the government to take its stand on the quite narrow legal ground that the Southern commissioners might not be seized without the ship that carried them, Consequently the handing over of Slidell and Mason is to be demanded as the conditio sine qua non. "Suppose the people on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean does not permit its go\'ernment to hand them over. Will you go to war for the bodies of these two envoys of the slavedrivers? ... There exists in this country an anti-republican war party , Remember the last Russian war. From the secret dispatches published in Peter sburg it was clear beyond all doubt that the articles published by The Times in 1 855 were written by a person who had access to the secret Russian state papers and documents. At that time Mr. Layard read the striking passages in the Lower I\ouse, b and The Times, in its consternation, immediately changed its tone and blew the war-trumpet next morning c . . . The Times has repeatedly attacked the Emperor Napoleon and supported our government in its demand for unlimited credits for land fortifications and floating batteries. Having done this and raised the alarm cry against France, does The Times now wish to leave our coast exposed to the French emperor by embroiling our country in a trans-Atlantic war. . . ? It is to be feared that W. Atherton and R. Palmer.- Ed. 1 854]. t, A . H . Layard [Speech in the House of Commons on March 3 1 , !-{an "IKd's Parliamentary Debates, Third series, VoL CXXXII, London, 1 854.- Ed, " To whatever quarter. .. ", The Times. No. 2 1 704, April 1 . 1 854, leading artide. _ Ed, ,l
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Karl Marx
the present great preparations are intended by no means only for the Trent but for the eventuality of a recognition of the governm ent of the slave states . England does this, then she will cover herself with everlasting shame."
Mr. White:
Karl Marx
"It is due to the working class to mention that they are the originators of meetin g and that all the expenses of organising it are borne by their committee. The present govern ment never had the good judgme nt to deal honestly frankly with the people . . . . I have never for a momen t believed that there was remotest possibility of a war developing out of the Trent case. I have said to face of more than one member of the government that not a single member of government believed in the possibility of a war on account of the Trent case. 'h .. then, these massive preparations? .T believe that England and France have an understanding to recognise the independence of the Southern states spring. B y then Great Britain would have a fleet of superior strength in Air waters. Canad a would be completely equipped for defence. If the Northern are then inclined to make a casus belli out of the recognition of the Southern Great Britain will then be prepared . . . . "
The speaker then went on to develop the dangers of a war the United States, called to mind the sympathy that showed on the death of General Havelock, the assistance that American sailors rendered to the English ships in the UIHU'L Peiho engagement/56 etc. He closed with the remark that the C War would end with the abolition of slavery and England therefore stand unconditionally on the side of the North. The original motion having been unanimously adopted, memorandum for Palmerston was submitted to . the debated and adopted. Written on January I , 1 862
First published in January 5, 1 862
Die Presse, No. 5,
Printed according to the paper
ENGLISH PUBLIC OPINION
London, Jan. 1 1 , 1 862 The news of the pacific solution of the. Trent conflic.t 1 57 was, . by the bulk of the English people, saluted WIth an exultatIon provIng unmistakably the unpopularity of the apprehended war a�d the dread of its consequences. It ought never to be forgotten In the lJ nited States that at least the working classes of England, from the commencement to the termination of the difficulty, have never forsaken them. To them it was due that, despite the poisonous stimulants daily administered by a venal and rec�less press, . not one single public war meeting could be held I� the Umted Kingdom during all the period that peace tr� mbled In the balanc: . The only war meeting convened on the arrIval of the La Plata, In the cotton salesroom of the Liverpool Stock Exchange, was a corner meeting where the cotton jobbers ha? it all to themselves. Even at Manchester, the temper of the workIng classes was so well understood that an insulated attempt at the convocation of a war meeting was almost as soon abandoned .as thought of. Wherever public meetings took place . In . Engla� d, Scotland, or Ireland, they protested against the rabId war-crIes of the press, against the sinister designs of the Government, and declared for a pacific settlement of the pending question. In this regard, the two last meetings held, the one at Paddington, London, the othe� at Newcastle-upon-Tyne, are characteristic. The former meetIng , applauded Mr. Washington Wilkes's argu.mentation .that England Was not warranted in finding fault wIth the seIzure of the Southern Commissioners a ; while the Newcastle meeting almost unanimously carried the resolution- firstly, that the Americans .
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Karl Marx
1 39
English Public Opinion
,
had only made themselves guilty of a lawful exercise of the . of search and sei zu re; secondly, that the captain of the ought to be punished for his violation of En glish neutrality , proclaimed by the Queen.b In ordinary circumstances , the of th e B ritish workingmen might have been anticipated from natural sympathy the popular classes all over the world ought feel for the only popular Government in the wo rld . Un de r th e pr ese nt circumstance s, however, wh en a portion of the B ritish working classes directly and severely uflfer: un de r the consequences of the Southern blockad e; wh en anloth part is indirectly smitten by the curtailment of the commerce, owing, as they are told, to the selfish " policy" of the Republicans; wh en the only remaining .errlC we ek ly, Reynolds's pa pe r, has sold itself to M es srs . Yancey M an n, and we ek after week exhausts its horse-powers of language in appeals to the working classes to urge the G()V(�r me nt, for their own interests, to wa r with the Un ion - un de r circumstances, sim ple justice requires to pay a tribute to the attitude of the B ritish working classes, the more so when contrasted with the hypocritical, bullying, cowardly, and stupid conduct of the official and well-to-do Jo hn B ull . What a difference in this attitude of the people from what it had assumed at the time of the Russian complication ! Then The .. Ti�es, The Post, and the ot he r Ye llo wp lu sh es of the London pr es s, whmed for peace, to be rebuked by tremendous wa r meetings all over the country. Now they have howled for wa r, to be answered by peace meetings denouncing the liberticide schemes and the Pro-Slavery sympathy of the Government. The grimaces cut by the "; augurs of public opinion at the news of the pacific solution of the .. . Trent case are really am us in g. In t�e !irst place, they m us t needs congratulate themselves upon ' t� e digmty, common se ns e, good wi ll, and moderation, daily ; dIsplayed by them for the whole interval of a month. They were . m od erate for the first two days after the arrival of the La Plata, . wh en Palmerston felt uneasy wh et he r any legal pretext for a .. quarrel was to be picked. Bu t hardly had the crown lawyers hi t . upon a legal quibble, wh en they opened a charivari unheard of . since the anti-J acobin wa r. 1 58 Th e dispatches of the English C
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Moir.- Ed. b Victoria, R., A Proclamation [May 1 3 , 1 86 1 ] , The Times, No . 239 33, May 15, 1 86 L- Ed. I .e., of the Crimean War.- Ed. d R. Palmer and W. Atherton.- Ed. C
·ernment left Queenstown in the beginning of December. No o mcial answer from Washington could possibly. b� looked, !or be fore the commencement of January. The . new mCIdents ansmg . the interval told all in favor of the Amencans. The tone of the )11 59 1 mIgh t h ave ' Tra nsatlantic Press, although the Nash VI'11e aff. alr ) Ou se d its passions ' was calm. All facts. ascertamed concurred . to ' sh ovv that Capt. Wilkes had acted on hIS ?wn hook: T h e. posltlon of the Washington Government .was dehca�e: If It resIsted �he English demands, it .wou.ld comphcate. the CIvIl � ar by a for�lgn war . If it gave way, It mIght damage ItS populanty at home, and appe ar to cede to pressure from abroad. And. the Gover�me�t thus placed, carried, at the same time, a war whlCh must. enl1St t . e warmest sympathies of every man, not a confessed ruffIan, on Its . side. Common prudence, conventional decency, ought: therefore,. to have dictated to the London press, at least for the tlI� e separatlI� g the English demand from the American reply, to anxIOusly �bst�m . from every word calculated to heat .. .passIOn, . breed Ill-wIll, complicate the difficulty. But no! That mexpresslbly mea� and groveling" press, as William � obbett, an? he was a connmsseur, calls it, really boasted of havmg, when .m fear of the compact power of the U nited States, humbly s�b� mtte? to the accumulated slights and insults of Pro-Slavery Admmlstrat�ons for alrn.0st half a century, while now, with the savage exultau<;>n of cm,:a�ds, t�ey panted for taking their revenge on the Repubhca? Admml�trauon, distracted by a civil war. The record of mankmd chronIcles no self-avowed infamy like this. One of the yellow-plushes, Palmerston's private Moniteur- The Morning Post finds itself arraigned on a most ugly charge from the American papers. John B ull has never been mformed -on information carefully withheld from him by the oligarchs that lord it over him that Mr. Seward, without awaiting Russell's dispatch, had disavowed any participation of the Washington Cabinet in the act of Capt. Wilkes. Mr. Seward's dispatch arrived at London on December 19. On the 20th December, the rumor of this "secret" spread on the Stock Exchange. On the 2 1 st, the yellow-plus� of The Morning Post stepped forward to gravely herald that the dispatch in question does not in any way whatever refer to the Outrage on our mail packet." a I n The Daily News, The Morning Star, and other London G
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" "In the present state of the public mind . . . ", The Morning Post, No. 27460, December 2 1 , 1 86 1 , leading article.- Ed.
1 40
English Public Opinion
Karl Marx
journals, you will find yellow-plush pretty sharply handled, you will not learn from them what people out of doors say. say that The Morning Post and The Times, like the Patrie and Pays, duped the public not only to politically mislead them, but fleece them in the monetary line on the Stock Exchange, in the ' interest of their patrons. The brazen Times, fully aware that during the whole crisis it had compromised nobody but itself, and given another proof of the " hollowness of its pretensions of influencing the real people of •• England, plays .to-day a trick which here, at London, only works ., upon the laughmg muscle s, but on the other side of the Atlantic . might be misinterpreted ." The "popular classes" of London, th� . · "mob" , as the yellow-plush call them, have given unmistakable ·' s� gns . have even. hinted in newspapers- that they should con- • SI? er It an e�ceedmgly seasonable joke to treat Mason (by the by, a ., dIstant relatIve of Palmerston, since the original Mason had ! married a daughter of Sir W. Temp le), Slidell & Co. with the " same demonstrations Haynau received on his visit at Barclay's brewery. 1 60 The Times stands aghast at the mere idea of such a shocking incident, and how does it try to parry it? It admonishes • the people of England not to overwhelm Mason , Slidell & Co. with .. any sort of public ovation! The Times knows that its to-day's article '. will form the laughing-stock of all the tap-rooms of London. But i never mind! People on the other side of the Atlantic may, perhaps, fancy that the magnanimity of The Times has saved them , from the affront of public ovations to Mason , Slidell & Co., while , in point of fact, The Times only intends saving those gentlemen from public insult! So long as the Trent affair was undecided, The Times, The Post, The Herald, The Economist, The Saturday Review, in fact the whole of the fashionable, hireling press of London, had tried its utmost t� persuade John Bull that the Washington Government, even if it WIlled, would prove unable to keep the peace, because the Yankee mob would not allow it, and because the Federal Government was a mob Government. Facts have now given them the lie direct. Do they now atone for their malignant slanders against the American peopl e? Do they at least confess the errors which yellow-plush , in presu f!1ing to judge of the acts of a free people, could not but comm.It? By no means. They now unanimously discover that the AmerIcan Government, in not anticipating England's dema nds, ...
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"A turn of the wheel , which the American Cabinet has managed to make . . . ", The Tunes, No. 24 1 40, January I I , 1 862, leading article.- Ed.
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y re the as we n soo as s itor tra rn the Sou the ing der ren sur not and t sen pre its ed riv dep and n, asio occ at gre a sed mis , cau ght ard Sew . Mr sh! plu low yel , eed Ind rit. me all of n sio ces con sh gli En the of l iva arr the ore bef s lke Wi of act the ed d isavow a on up er ent to g lin wil f sel him ed lar dec e onc at and s, nd dem a concili atory course a ; and what did you do on similar occasions? rd boa on ors sail h glis En g sin res imp of t tex pre the on When, me rit � ma � wit ted nec con all at t no t tex pre a psshi an c eri Am belligerent rights, bu t a downright, m�nstro� s usurpa�lOn agamst all international law the Leopard fIred Its broadsI�e at the Chesapeake, killed six , wo un ded twenty-one of her saIlors, and seized the pretended En gli shm en on board the Chesapeake, what did the English Government do ? That outrage wa s perpetrated on the of er d ren sur the n, ctio isfa sat l rea e Th . 807 1 e, Jun of h 20t the . years sailors, & c . , wa s only offered on November 8, 1 8 1 2, fIve act the ce on at d we avo dis e, tru is it , ent nm ver Go h itis Br e Th later. s; lke Wi pt. Ca to ard reg in did ard Sew . Mr as , ley rke Be ral mi Ad of bu t, to punish the Admiral, it removed him from an inferior to 61a 1 cil, un C in s der Or her ing im cla pro in , � nd gla En k. ran or superi distinctly confessed that they were. outrages .on th� rIghts of neutrals in general, and of the Umted States m partIcular ; that t ins aga n tio alia ret of res asu me as her on up ced for re we they Napoleon, and that she would feel bu t too glad to revoke them whenever Napoleon should revoke his encroachments �m neutral tes Sta Ited U the as far as m, the oke rev did n leo � po Na .b hts rig . were concerned, in the Spring of 1 8 1 0. England persIsted m her avowed outrage on the maritime rights of America. He r resistance lasted from 1 806 to 23d of Jun e, 1 8 1 2 - after, on the 1 8th of Jun e, 1 8 12, the Un ited States had declared war against England. n t , ar y six for e cas s thi in , tly ? uen seq con � d, ne � tai abs nd En gla . from atoning for a confessed outrage, but from dlscontmumg It. And this people talk of the magnificent occasion . missed �y th� m the rIg ht, It or g on wr the in er eth Wh ! ent nm ver Go can eri Am was a cowardly act on the part of the British .Government to back a complaint grounded on pretended techmcal blunder, and a mere error of procedure, by an ultimatum, by a demand for the t gh mi ent nm ver Go can eri Am e Th . ers son pri the of der surren , have reasons to accede to that de ma nd ; it could have none to antICIpate It. •
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a "New York, Dec. 28", The Times, No. 24 1 39, January 10, 1 862.- Ed. . b Order in Council. At the Court at the Queen's Palace, the 1 1th of November, 1807, present, the King's most Excellent Majesty in Council.-Ed.
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Karl Marx
143
By the present settlement of the Trent collision, the questio underlying the wh ol e dispute, and likely to again occu r- thne belligerent rights of a maritime power against neutrals ha s no t been settled. I shall, with your permission, try to survey the whole question in a subsequent letter. For the present, allow m e to ad d that, in my opinion, M es sr s. Mason and Slidell have done grea t service to the Federal Government. There was an influential wa r party in England, which, what for commercial, what for politica l reasons, showed eager for a fray with the United States. Th e Tren t affair pu t that party to the te st. It has failed. Th e wa r passion has been discounted on a minor iss ue , the steam has be en le t of f, the vociferous fury of the oligarchy has raised th e suspicions of English democracy, the large British inte re sts connected with the United States have made a stand, the tru character of the civil war has been brought home to the work e in g classes, and la st, not lea st, the dangerous period wh en Palmersto n rules single-headed without being checked by Parliamen t, rapidly drawing to an en d. That was the only time in which is an English war for th e slaveocrats might have been hazarded. It is now ou t of question. Written on January 1 1 . 1 862 First published in the New-York Daily Tribune. No. 6499, February I , 1 862
Karl Marx MORE ON SEWARD'S SUPPRESSED DISPATCH 162
London, January 1 4
Reproduced from the newspaper
The defunct Trent case is resurrected, this time, however, as a casus belli not between England and the U nited States, but between the English people and the English go�ernment. The new casus belli will be decided in Parliament, WhICh assembles next month. Without doubt you have already .taken notice . of the polemic of The Daily News" and The Star agaI�st The M�rmng Post over the suppression and denial of Seward s peace dIspatch of November 30 ,b which on December 1 9 was read to Lord. John Russell by the American Ambassador, Mr. Adams. PermIt � e, now to return to this matter. With the assurance of The Mormng Post that Seward's dispatch had not the remotest bearing on the Trent affair,c stock exchange securities fell and. property worth millions changed hands, was lost on the one SIde, won on the other. In commercial and industrial circles, therefore, the wholly unjustifiable semi-official lie of The Morning Post disclosed by the publication of Seward's dispatch of November 30 arouses the most tremendous indignation. On the afternoon of January 9 the peace new� reac� e.d London. The same evening The Evening Star (the evenmg edltlO� of The 1\1orning Star) interpellated the government concernmg he � suppression of Seward's dispatch . of Novemb�r 30. The fol�owmg morning, January 1 0 , The Mornmg Post rephed as follows. '
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" The reference is to the leading article in The Daily News, No. 4890 )anuary . 1 1 , 1 862 (" As the rising of the sun after a nig t of oublous watchmgs...-) . Ed. �; Southampton, Jan. 1 2 :-, The b Seward's dispatch was published in the Item Times No. 24 1 4 1 , January 1 3, 1 862.- Ed. . C ':In the present state of the public mind . . . ", The Mornmg Post, No. 27460, December 2 1 , 1 86 1 , leading article.- Ed.
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Karl Marx
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145
"It is asked why nothinl? ha� been heard sooner of Mr. Seward's dispatch, which rea�hed Mr. Adams some nme m December. The explanation of this is very simple. . by Mr. Adams was not communicated to our receIved It IS that the dIspatch government." b a
On the evening of the same day The Star gave the lie to the Post completely and declared its "rectification" to be a miserable subterfuge. The dispatch, it wrote, had in fact not been "communicated " to Lord Palmers ton and Lord Russell by Mr. Adams, but had been "read out". Ne.xt morning, Saturday, January 1 1 , The Daily News entered the lIsts and proved from The Morning Post's article of December 2 � that the Post and the govern.ment had been fully acquainted , . at that tIme and deliberately falsified it. dIspatch s Seward wIth The government now prepared to retreat. On the evening of January 1 1 the semi-official Globe declared that Mr. Adams had, to be sure, communicated Seward's dispatch to the government on Decemb� r 19; this, however, "contained no offer by the Washing ton Ca�l?-et" any more. than "a direct apology for the outrage on the BritIsh flag". ThIS shamefaced admission of a deliberate deceptio.n of t�e English people for three weeks only fanned the flame hIgher, Instead of quenching it. A cry of anger resounded through all the organs of the industrial districts of Great Britain which yesterday finally found its echo even in the Tor; . newspapers. The whole question, one should note, was placed on the �Hder of ,the day: not by politicians, but by the commercial publIc. Today s Mormng Star remarks on the subject:
"Lord John Russell is undoubtedly an accomplice in that suppression of the �ruth; he allowed the Mornmg Post's lie to circulate uncontradicted but he is mc�pable of having dictated that mendacious and incalculably perni ious article whICh appeared m The 0�ing Post on the 2 1 st of December. This could only be . done by one man. The Mmlster who fabncated the Afghan war is alone capable of . havmg suppressed Mr. Seward's message of peace. l�3 The foolish leniency of the H �use of Commons condoned the one offence. WIll not Parliament and people . ulllte 111 the infliction of punishment for the other?"
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Written on January 1 4, 1 862 First published in Die Presse, No. 17, January 1 8, 1 862
Printed according to the news paper
a Marx gives the English words "not communicated" in brackets after the
German translation.- Ed. our power to state ... ", b "We have it in January 1 0 , 1 862, leading article.- Ed.
The Morning PO.lt, No. 27476,
Karl Marx A CO UP D'ETAT BY LORD JO HN RUSSELL 164 /
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London, January 17 a s wa s isi cr nt ce re e th g rin du n io sit po ll's sse Ru Lord John en am rli pa e ol wh e os wh an m a r fo en ev e, on thoroughly vexatious r we po al re ce ifi cr sa to ed at sit he om ld se s ha he at tary life proves th st lo d ha ll sse Ru hn Jo rd Lo at th ot rg fo e on o N n. io sit for of fic ial po r be em m re to ed em se e on no t bu n, sto er lm Pa th e Premiership to e th l Al n. sto er lm Pa om fr ce ffi O n ig re Fo e th ed that he had gain d cte re di n sto er lm Pa at th iom ax t en id ev lfse a it ed er world consid e m na e th r de un y lic po n ig re fo d an e m na n ow th e Cabinet in hi s : rk Yo w Ne om fr ws ne e ac pe st fir e th of al riv ar e of Ru sse ll. O n th e th to ts las t-b pe um tr in r he ot an e on th wi d W hi gs and Tories vie n ig re Fo e th t ils wh , ip sh an sm te sta s n' sto er lm Pa greater glory of e ais pr r fo e at id nd ca a en ev t no s wa ll, sse Ru hn Jo rd Secretary, Lo d ha r, ve we ho y, dl ar H d. re no ig ly te lu so ab s wa as hi s assistant. H e em ov N of ch at sp di n ica er m A d sse re pp su e th th e scandal over om fr d te ec rr su re s wa e m na l's el ss Ru en be r 30 b broken ou t, wh the dead. e ibl ns po res e th at th y er ov sc di e th e ad m w no e nc fe de d Attack an en ev w no t Bu ll! sse Ru hn Jo rd Lo d lle ca s wa Foreign Secretary , Russell's patience gave way. Without waiting for the opening of he n, tio en nv co ial er ist in m y er ev to ry ra nt Parliament and co n ow s hi 14 y ar nu Ja of tte ze Ga l ia fic of e th in ith hw published fort •
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1 46
sell (A Coup d'Etat by Lord Jo hn Rus
Karl Marx
correspond�nce. with Lord Lyons! This correspondence proves that Seward s dIspatch of November 30 was read by Mr. Adams to Lord John Russell on December 19; that Russell expressly ac�nowledged this dispatch as an apology for the act of Captain WIlkes, and that Mr. Adams, after Russell's disclosures, considered a . peaceful outcome of the dispute as certain. After this official dIs�losure, . what bec�mes of the .Morning Post of December 2 1 , whtch demed the arnval of any dIspatch from Seward relating to the. Trent case b; what becomes of the Morning Post of January 1 0, whtch blamed Mr. Adam� for the suppression of the dispatch,c what becomes of the entIre · war racket of the Palmerston press from December 19, 1861, to January 8, 1 862? Even more! Lord John Russell's dispatch to Lord Lyons of December 1 9� 1861 proves that the English Cabinet presented no war ultimatu '' tha� Lord Lyons did not receive instructions to leave Washington seven days after delivering "this ultimatum" ; that Russell ordered the ambassa�or to a�oid every s �mblance of a threat, and, finally, that the EnglI�h Cabmet had deCIded to make a definitive decision only after receIpt of the American answer. The whole of the policy trumpeted by the �almer�ton press, which found so many servile echoes on the Contment, IS therefore a mere chimera. It has never been carried out in real life. It only proves, as a London paper s �ate� today: that Palmerston "sought to thwart the declared and bmdmg polley of the responsible advisers of the Crown". Tha� Lord John Russell's coup de main struck the Palmerston pr.ess lIke a bolt from the blue, one fact proves most forcibly. The TImes of yest�rday �uppressed the Russell correspondence and made no mentI�n of I � ",:hatever. Only today a reprint from the Londo,,! Gazette fIgures m Its colun:ms, introd �ced and prefaced by . a leadm� artIcle that carefully aVOIds the real Issue, the issue between !he Enlflzsh people and the English Cabinet, and touches on it merely I� t�e Ill-h �moured phrase that "Lord John Russell has exerted all hIS mgenUIty to extract an apology out of Seward's dispatch of November 30".d On the other hand, the wrathful Jupiter Tonanse " Foreign Office, January 1 4, 1 862. Copies of Correspondence ... ", The London Gazette, No. 22589, January 1 4 , 1 862.- Ed. b "I n th e present state of the public mind . . ", The Morning Post' No 27460, December 2 1 , 1 86 1 , leading article.- Ed. C "We have it in our power to state. . . ". The Jl,forning Post, N 0. 27476 , J anuary 1 0 , 1 862 , I eading article.- Ed. d "The following additional correspondence. . . ", The Times, No. 24 1 44, J anuary 1 6 , 1 862 ' , I eading article.- Ed. e Jupiter the thunderer.- Ed. a
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g in ad le nd co se a in m 16 ea st f of 5 ts le re ua . ry, the . ist inting H ou se Sq o f Pr m m e h t f 0 r be em m a , in ilp G r. M 'nticle, in which e � t of n is rt pa a d an de ra T � of the Board l>rcsident ofscho m e ac pl S hI of y th or w un be to 166 ed ar cl de is ol, \r anchester p am th or N in g tin ee m ic bl pu a at ,C ay �he ministry. b For last Tuesd presentative he is , Gilpin, a former re ry ta en m ia rl pa se ho w tO n m ho w n, io at er od m of tle os ap an d an ue og ag ho(;kseller, a dem to le op pe ish gl En e th d ge ur ly al in im cr nobody w ill take for a he ro , e th of on iti gn co re y el tim un an ns tio ra st prevent by public demon an as d ise at m ig st y el at er id ns co in he ch hi w , cy S outhern Confedera if as s, m ai cl ex tly an gn di in es im T he T offspring of slavery. A s if , ce en ist ex e th rs be em m re w no es im T he T Pa lm erston and R us se ll to es liv r ei th l al ht ug fo t no d ha eor m ce on ll of Lord Jo hn Russe ed at ul lc ca a n, tio re sc di in an y re � su as . people pu t down slavery! d It wof M r. Gilpm . , to call the EnglIs h rt pa e th indiscretion on ch hi to y tr is in m a of gs in � ng lo ry ve sla opr e into the lists against th o n IS , ed on ti en m y ad re al as , in ilp G . he himself belongs. But M r. IS H . om rd ty ar m r fo ity ac p ca tle lit s ce en he ro . H is whole career evid d ie rr ca ll se us R hn Jo d (,r L as y da e indiscretion occurred on the sam et in ab C e th at th de lu nc co e or ef er th ou t hi s coup de main. We may rs be em m al du vi di in its at th e d an " i s n ot a "h ap py fa m ily aar ep "s of ea id e th ith w es lv se em th ed is ar ady famili re al ve ha . tIOn . e th to el qu se al ri te is in m h lis ng E N o le ss noteworthy than the e tir en e th ng ri du ch hi w a, si us R e. gu ilo Trent drama is its Russian ep w no s, m ar ed ld fo ith w nd ou gr ck ba e th racket stood silently in s er ld ou sh e th on d ar w Se r. M s ap cl , um ni springs to the prosce e th of n tio la gu re ve ti ni fi de e th r fo t en and declares that the mom n, ow kn is as a, si us R d. ve ri ar st la at s ha ls ra . s of maritime rights of neut On tI es qu nt ge ur e th t pu to on d lle ca considers herself in d an e m ti t gh ri e th at y or st hi ld or w of civilisation on the agenda e im it ar m e th by e bl ila sa as un es the right place. Russia becom ts gh ri nt re ge lli be r ei th h it w , p u ve gi er powers the moment the latt s ri Pa he T e. ad tr rt po ex s a' si us R against neutrals , their power over of py co im at rb ve a rt pa in is ch hi w 6, C on vention of April 16 , 1 85 a
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Marx gives the English name.- Ed. e m sa s, me Ti e Th ", . . . s on m m Co of se ou H e stinct of th b "T he true an d ju st in lSSU C. Ed. January 14 .- Ed. , The d" an gl En d an ica er Am on , P. . M , ey nl He rd d ':M r. Gilpin, M . P. , and Lo Times. No . 24 1 43 , January 1 5 , 1 86 2.- Ed. Marx uses th e English phrase.- Ed. a
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Karl Marx
�he Russia� "A rm ed" Ne� trality Treaty of 1 780 against England, . IS meanwhIl� not yet law m England. What a trick of destiny if A n:�lo-A meTlcan dIs p� te ended with the British Parliament and tu 'he : . Bntish Crown sanctIOnmg a concession that two British minister made to Russia on their own authority at the end of th s ,' e. Anglo-Russian wa r. Written on January 1 6- 1 7 , 1 862 First published in Die Presse. No. 20 January 2 1 , 1 862
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Karl Marx STATISTICAL OBSERVATIONS ON THE RAILWAY SYSTEM
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a He�e Ma�x probably drew on the excerpts from documents on the law of the sea published In The Free Press, No. 1 , January 1 , 1 862.- Ed.
The English railways are a generation old, 30 years. Except for the national debt, no other branch of the national wealth has developed so rapidly to such an enormous size. According to a recently published Blue Book, the capital invested in the railways until 1 860 came to £348 , 1 30, 127, of which £ 1 90,79 1 ,067 were raised by common stock, £67,873,840 by preferred stock, £7,576,878 by bonds, and £8 1 ,888,546 by current loans. The total capital amounts to about half the national debt and is five times t he yearly revenue from all the real estate in Great Britain. This parvenu form of wealth, the most colossal offspring of modern industry, a remarkable economic hybrid whose feet are rooted in the earth and whose head lives on the Stock Exchange, has given aristocratic landowning a powerful rival, and the middle class an army of new auxiliary troops. In 1 860, the steel rails stretched for 22,000 English miles, cou nting double-track and branch lines. On average, therefore, 7 3 3 miles of track have been laid every year over the last 30 years. This sort of average figure, however, is even more deceptive in this branch of industry than in any other, as regards expressing the actual living process. Some years of the railway mania, 167 such as 1 844 and 1 845, conquered the bulk of the territory at the double. The other years fill things out gradually, connect the major lines, branch out, expand relatively slowly. During these years the production of railways falls below the average level. An' enormous amount of work precedes the laying of the rails. Aq:ording to the data provided by Robert Stephenson as early as 1 2'- 1 1 34
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Karl Marx
Statistic
1 854 some 70 miles of railway tunnels had been driven there were 25,000 railway bridges and numerous viaducts, one which, near London, was more than 1 1 miles long. earthworks, 70,000 cubic yards per mile, would fill an 550 million cubic yards. Piled up in the form of a the diameter would be half an (English) mile and the Iei�:h and a half, a mountain of earth beside which St. Paul's �dr: would shrink to Lilliputian size. But since the time of Stephenson's estimate the length of railways has increased by third. The "eternal way", as the English have baptised the railway, . not immortal by any means. It is subject to constant 111., The iron, which is continually being lost by wear, oxidation, new manufacture, has constantly to be replaced. It has calculated that a locomotive wears off 2.2 pounds in a · run of miles, every empty car 4 1 /2 ounces, every ton of freight an and a half, and that the railways like the London-North W Line will last about 20 years. The yearly total of iron worn off is · estimated at half a pound per yard ; 24,000 tons of iron are ., required for replacements over the whole system in its extent every year and 240,000 tons for the annual installation. But! the rails form the bones and need to be replaced much slowly than the wooden supports of the rails. The wood part of the apparatus of the network requires an annual input of trees, which need an area of 6,000 acres to grow in. When the railway is completed, it needs locomotives, coal, water, ', railway cars, and finally working personnel to operate it. The · number of locomotives was 5,80 1 in 1 860, or more than one " locomotive for every two miles. Like most machines in their infancy, locomotives were at first clumsy-looking, awkward in motion, still bound up to a certain extent in reminiscences of the " old-fashioned instrument they replaced, and relatively cheap. The first English locomotive, four-wheeled, weighing barely 6 tons and .' priced at £550, has gradually been replaced by steam engines priced at £3,000, which pull 30 passenger cars, each weighing 5 1 /2 tons, at 30 miles an hour, or 500 tons of goods at 20 miles per hour. Like their predecessors, the horses, individual locomotives have their own names and have attained varying degrees of fame for their names. The Liverpool, belonging to the North Western Line, pours out 1 , 1 40 horsepower at full load. A monster like this consumes a ton of coal and 1 , 000 to 1 ,500 gallons of water daily. The organism of these iron horses is extremely delicate. It has no less than 5,4 1 6 parts, 'T'.
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Observations on the Railway System
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ay A railw ch. a wat s of part the as fully care as ed mbl asse are h \\. 'hic ain going 50 (English) miles per hour has a sixth of the velocity of a oning the average cost of a locomotive at £2,2 00, �.\nnooutnlayball.onReck ry 0. Eve 0,00 r 2,70 1 £ ove to es com ives mot loco 1 5,80 t. Il e lin ute of the year 4 to 5 tons of coal turn 20 to 25 tons of .water into remarks that the water thus converted mto �team ste am. Step hens on of IOn ulat re pop enti the for ly supp r wate y dail uate adeq an be uld wo Liverpool. The quantity of fuel consumed is almost as much . as Britain' s total coal exports four years ago, more than half the enUre consumption of London. The 5,80 1 locomotives are followed, as baggage, by 1 5,07 6 passen ger cars ar,t� 1 80,5 74 �oods wag ons , which represe �t a total capital of £20 mllhon. � tra�n made up �Jf all the locomotIves and cars would take the enUre lme from Bnghton to Aberde en, over (JOO mile s. M ore than 7,00 0 trains run every day , over seven trains every minute throughout the twenty-four hou rs. Last year passengers and goo ds trav elle d ove r 1 00 mill ion mile s, mor e than fou r thousand times the circumference of the earth. Every second of the yea r over 3 miles of railway are covered by trai ns. Twelve millions cattle, she,ep, and pigs made railway jour ney s; 90 million tons of goods and minerals were transported. The minerals came . to twice the quantity of all the othe r goods. The gross revenue totalled £28 mill ion. The production costs, apart from the wear of the railway itself, came to 4 1 per cent of the revenue for the Midland Company, 42 per cent for the Yorkshire and Lancashire railway line , 46 per cent for the West Midland Line and 55 to 56 per cent for the Great Northern Line ; the average outlay for all the line s came to £ 1 3 , 1 87,3 68, or 47 per cent of revenue. The London and North Western Line ranks first in size. Originally limited to the London and � irmingha� Li�e, the Gra nd Junction, the Manchester and LIverpool .Lme, It now exten ds with its branch lines from London to Carhsle and from Peterborough to Leeds in the east and to Holyhead in the west. Its management controls over a thousand mil es of railways and is. at the head of an industrial army of about 20,000 men . ConstructIOn of' the railway line costs over £36 mil lion . Every hour of the day and night its gross revenue is £50 0; its weekly law costs are £ 1 ,000 . The net yield of this railway, as of most of the others, fell relatively as their extent increased to cover less populous and less industrial districts. Their shares, issued at £ 1 00, gradually sank from £24 0 to £92 -93, and dividends from 1 0 per cent to 33/4 per 11
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Karl Marx
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cent. As the s�ale of operations grew enormously, for this as well as other railways, control by the shareholders decreased, the management gained greater power and mismanagement · ensued.
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Written not later than January 20, 1 862 ' First published in Die Presse, No. 22, January 23, 1 862
Karl Marx
Printed according to the news paper
A LONDON WORKERS' MEETING 1 68
Published in English for the first time •
London, January 28
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The working class, so preponderant a part of a society that within living memory has no longer possessed a peasantry, is known not to be represented in Parliament. Nevertheless, it is not without political influence. No important innovation, no decisive measure has ever been carried through in this country without pressure from without; whether it was the opposition that required such pressure against the government or the government that required the pressure against the opposition. By pressure from without the Englishman understands great, extra-parliamentary popular dem onstrations, which naturally cannot be staged without the lively participation of the working class. Pitt understood how to use the masses against the Whigs in his anti-Jacobin war. The Catholic emancipation, the Reform Bill, the abolition of the Corn Laws, the Ten Hours Bill, the war against Russia, the rejection of Palmerston's Conspiracy Bill, 1 69 all were the fruit of stormy extra-parliamentary demonstrations, in which the working class, sometimes artificially incited, sometimes acting spontaneously, played the principal part only as a persona dramatis, only as the chorus or, according to circumstances, performed the noisy part. So much the more striking is the attitude of the English working class in regard to the American Civil War. . The misery that the stoppage of the factories and the shortening of the labour time, motivated by the blockade of the slave states, has produced among the workers in the northern manufacturing districts is incredible and in daily process of growth. The other a Marx uses the English words "pressure from without" and gives the German •
translation in brackets. He also uses the English phrase further in the text.- Ed.
1 54
Karl Marx
component parts of the working class do not suffer to the same extent; but they suffer severely from the reaction of the crisis in the cotton industry on the other industries, from the curtailment of the export of their own products to the North of America in 170 consequence of the Morrill tariff and from the loss of this export to the South in consequence of the blockade. At the present moment, English interference 71in America has accordingly become a knife-and-fork question 1 for the working class. Moreover, no means of inflaming its wrath against the United States is scorned by its "natural superiors"." The sole great and widely circulating workers' organ still existing, Reynolds's Newspaper, has been purchased expressly in order that for six months it might reiterate weekly in raging diatribes the ceterum censeo b of English intervention. The, working class is accordingly fully conscious that the government is only waiting for the intervention cry from below, the pressure from without, to put an end to the American blockade and English misery. Under these circumstances, the persistence with which the working class keeps silent, or breaks its silence only to raise its voice against intervention and for the United States, is admirable. This is a new, brilliant proof of the indestructible staunchness of the English popular masses, of that staunchness which is the secret of England's greatness and which, to speak in the hyperbolic language of Mazzini, made the common English soldier seem a demi-god during the Crimean War and the Indian insurrection. The following report on a great workers' meeting that took place yesterday in Marylebone, the most populous district of London, may serve to characterise the "policy" of the working class: Mr. Steadman, the chairman, opened the meeting with the remark that the question was one of a decision on the part of the English people in regard to the reception of Messrs. Mason and Slidell.
"It has to be considered whether these gentlemen were coming here to free the slaves from their chains or to forge a new link for these chains."
Mr. Yates:
"On the present occasion the working class dare not keep silent. The two gentlemen who are sailing across the Atlantic Ocean to our country are the agents . of slaveholding and tyrannical states. They are in open rebellion against the lawful Constitution of their country and come here to induce our government to recognise the independence of the slave states. It is the duty of the working class to Marx uses the English phrase and gives the German translation in brackets.- Ed. b See p. 1 :13, footnote a.- Ed. a
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A London Workers' Meeting
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)r()[\ounce its opinion now, if the English government is not to believe that we ey I , gard its 'foreign policy with indifference. We must show that the mon c on the emancipation of slaves cannot be allowed to be pende d by this peogle 2 Had our government acted hone tly, it would ha � l elcssly squandered. . �� . .-' l l pported the Northern states hear. t and soul in suppressmg this fearful rebelhon.
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After a detailed defence of the Northern states and the observation that " Mr. Lovejoy's violent tirade against England a was called forth by the slanders of the English press", the speaker proposed the following motion:
"This meeting resolves that the agents of the rebels, Mason and Slidell, now on of the moral the way from America to England, are absolutely unworthy svmpathies of the working class of this .country: since th�y are s.laveholders as w�ll that IS at this very mon,tent m on facti l mca tyran the of ts agen essed conf the as rebellion against the American republic and the sworn enemy of the sOCIal and political rights of the working class in all countries ."
Mr. Whynne supported the motion. It was, however, self understood that every personal insult to Mason and Slidell must be avoided during their stay in London. . Mr. Nichols, a resident " of the extreme North of the Umted States", as he announced, who was in fact sent to the meeting by Messrs. Yancey and Mann as the advocatus diaboli,b protested against the motion.
"I am here because here freedom of speech prevails. With us at home, the government ha permitted no man to open his mouth for three months. Liberty has been crushed not only in the South, but also in the North. The war has many opponents in the North, but they dare not speak. No less than two hundred newspapers have been suppressed or destroyed by the � ob. The Southern states have the same right to secede from the North as the Umted States had to separate from England."
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Despite the eloquence of Mr . Nichols, the first motion was carried una nim ous ly. He now sprang up afresh:
"If they reproached Messrs. Mason and Slidell with being slaveholders, the same thing would apply to Washington and Jefferson, etc."
Mr. Beales refuted Nichols in a detailed speecl;1 and then brought · forward a second motion:
"In view of the ill-concealed efforts of The Times and other misleading journals to misrepresent English public opinion on all American affairs; to embroil us in •
In his speech in Congress on January 1 4 , 1 862 , Lovejoy called on the government to declare war on England after the suppression of the Southern rebellion.- Ed. icipant in the canonisation b Advocatus diaboli (the devil's advocat e)- a part procedure of the Catholic Church whose task is to point out defects in the character of ;he person for whom the honour is sought; figuratively, an implacable accuser.- Ed. a
Karl Marx
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war with �iIlions of our kinsmen on any pretext whatever, and to take of the penls currentl� threatening the republic to defame democratic i· Ilstitt . . thIS meetmg regards It :fs the very special duty of the workers, since they are . repres�nted � n the �enate of the nation, to declare their sympathy with the . States m theIr tItanIC struggle for the maintenance of the Union · t0 denounce shameful d·!Shone�ty and advocacy of slaveholding on the part of The Times . . kmdre anstoc:atlC Journ�ls; to express themselves most emphatically in favour the stnctest pohcy of non-mterventlon in affairs of the United States and in fay, of the settlement of all matters that may be in dis ute b commis ion s . . arbItratIon courts nominated by both sides; to denou ce th war Pol c organ ? f the stock excha��e swindlers a and to express the warmest s m h . the stnvmgs of the AbohtlonI. sts for a final solution of the slave q st on. .r
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T ? is motion was unanimously adopted, as well as the motIon
"to forward to the American government per medium of Mr Ad s a copy �� the �esolutions framed, as an expression of the feelings an opm lons of workmg class of England".
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Written on January 28, 1 862 First . published in Die Presse, N o . 32 , February 2 , 1 862
Printed accord·mg t0 t he newspaper
London, January 3 1 Liverpo ol's co mmercial greatness derives its origin from the slave d he ric en s ha l oo erp Liv ich wh th wi ns tio ibu ntr co e trade. The sol
ty Fif . de tra ve sla e th to es od e ar nd gla En of re tu ra lite c the poeti e th at ly on il so l oo rp ve Li on ot fo set uld co e orc erf ilb W o ag rs yea in so , de tra ve sla the y tur cen g din ece pr the in As e. risk of his lif n tto co ry ve sla of t uc od pr the in de tra the y tur cen nt ese the pr , er nd wo No ss. tne ea gr l's oo rp ve Li of sis ba ial formed the mater of ds en fri sh gli En e th of tre cen e th is l oo erp Liv t tha therefore, e er wh m do ng Ki d ite Un the in y cit e sol e th t fac in is It . ion secess during the recent crisis it wa s possible to organise a quasi-public es do at wh d An .a tes Sta d ite Un e th th wi r wa a of r ou fav meeting in , ns ga or ily da t ea gr its of e on to n ke ar he us t Le w? no say ol po Liver the Daily Post. b it ·is stated s" ee nk Ya te Cu he "T led tit en le tic ar g din In a lea among other thi ngs :
arent loss into app an ted ver con e hav s, nes oit adr al usu ir the h wit es, nke Ya "The age .... Great Britain has a real gain and made En gla nd subservient to their advant ited in fact displayed her power, but to what end ? Since the foundation of the Un ge that vile pri the flag l tra neu a for d ime cla ays alw e hav es nke te Sta s the Ya by the ack att and ion ent erv int any m fro ted tec pro are it der un ling passengers sai belligerents. We contested this privilege to the limit during the Anti-Jacobin War, in 1 842 , the Anglo-American War of 1 8 12 to 1 8 14 , and again, · more recently, Daniel te, of Sta ary ret Sec the and on urt hb As rd Lo en we bet ns atio oti riuring the neg triumphed. Mr . has le ncip pri kee Yan The se. cea st mu ion osit opp our w No 4 er. Webst 1 7 and that ple nci pri in y wa en giv e hav we t tha es lar dec t and fac the rs Sew ard registe
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See this volume, pp. 93-94, 95.- Ed. title in English and the es giv rx . Ma 862 1 , 3 y 1 uar Jan , 1 206 . No t, ily Pos Da e Th b supp lies the German translation in brackets.- Ed. a
The Economist.-Ed.
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More important still is the Daily Post's admission of the shift in •• ' public opinion even in Liverpool.
"The Confederates", it says, "have certainly done nothing to forfeit the good opinion entertained of them. Quite the contrary. They have fought manfully and made dreadful sacrifices. If they do not obtain their independence everyone must admit that they deserve it. Public opinion, however, has now run counter to their claims. They are no longer the fine fellows a they were four weeks ago. They are now pronounced a very sorry set. ...A reaction has indeed commenced. The anti-slavery people, who shrank into their shoes during the recent popular excitement, now come forth to thunder big words against man-selling and the rebellious slave-owners.... Are not even the walls of our town posted with large placards full of denunciations and angry invectives against Messrs. Mason and " Slidell, the authors of the accursed Fugitive Slave Law? The Confederates have lost by the Trent affair. It was to be their gain; it has turned out to be their ruin. The sympathy of this country will be withdrawn from them, and they will have to realise as soon as possible their peculiar situation. They have been very ill-used but they will have no redress. "
After this admission by such a friend of secession as the Liverpool daily paper it is easy to explain the altered language that some important organs of Palmerston now suddenly make use of before the opening of Parliament. Thus The Economist of last Saturday has an article entitled, "Shall the B lockade be Re spected? " b I t proceeds in the first place from the axiom that the blockade is a mere paper blockade and that its violation is therefore permitted by international law. France demanded the blockade's forcible removal. The practical decision of the question lay accordingly in the hands of England, who had great and pressing motives for such a step. I n particular she was in need of American cotton. One may remark incidentally that it is not quite clear how a " mere paper blockade" can prevent the shipping of cotton. " But nevertheless," cries The Economist, " England must respect the blockade. " Having motivated this j udgment with a series of sophisms, it finally comes to the gist of the matter. C Marx quotes in German but gives a number of phrases in English in brackets after their German equivalents: "fine fellows", "a very sorry set", "they will have no redress".- Ed. b The Economist. No. 96 1 , January 25, 1 862.- Ed. Marx has: "des Pudels Kern", an allusion to the saying, "Das also war des Pudels Kern", in Goethe's Faust (Der Tragodie erster Theil, "Studierzim mer"). Ed. a
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Karl Marx
through the Trent case the United States have obtained a concession from us to' secure which they had hitherto exhausted every means of diplomacy and of war in . . vam. "
Anti-I ntervention Feeling
1 59
le ho w e th ve ha to ve ha ld ou w t en m rn ve d " it says "the go k' m IS h' t f o e ca a In y an r fo ed " ar e� pr t ye t � . no e ar le op pe sh iti The r�at bod �f the Br ry hm bhshment of a ta es e th ng di ai of ce an bl t tion m se � e th e av h wo d even l llI (O posI e th ; ry ter ve sla on d se in ba is . y ac er ed nf Co stem of the s al ci so he T . c h b u p � r y at the root of la s la ve ry ve sla at th us de ua rs pe to d ul co Fcderahst� have done wh at t e slavery; and to hostile were ts, Federa lis the they t and t at en em v o m n lo ss e ec S th e . ' ror and de�estation ... . The real error of the popular . or h l a Cl . pe es r ou IS ' ry I, de en_ , m on " U m S ,1\ � e th of n, io . at or st re e th t no . . dissolution, he T e h IS ent tIm 0 r the n tio sen pa ci an em e th to th pa the only sure is h ut So e � th f 0 t a e e i h e t t o n ar yet. The cle
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se u ca ld u o w n o ti en rv te in ch su at . I n o th er wo rd s '. th e at te m p t T h T h w s m la eX so al is th ?, d n f:> inistry. A th e d o w n fa ll o f th e m r o d an n o tl en rv te m y an st n . so d ec id ed ly ag ai f 't el S I s e c n u o n o pr E n g la n d 's neutrahty.
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Written on January 3 1 , 1 86 2 34 , o. N e, ss re P ie D in d he is bl pu First February 4, 1 86 2
Printed according to the news paper
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Karl Marx ON THE COTTON CRISIS
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Some days ago a the annual meeting of the Chamber of Man.chest �r �ook place. It represents Lancashire the of . d stnal d ' m .� Istnct of the United Kingdom and the chief seat ' Bntish cotton manufacture . The chaIrman of the meetin M · E potter, and the principal speakers at it, Messrs. Bazle� and : T�r ner, represent Manchester and a part of Lanc h" Ire as m . Lower House. From the proceedings 0 f the meetmg, therefore, we., learn officially what attitude the great ce;tre o � t� � .English cotton ', industry will adopt in the "Senate 0 f t e natIOn m face of the > American crisis.b . At the meeting of the Ch �mber 0f Commerce last year Mr. ', of Ashworth, one En land' g bIggest cotton barons, had celebrated s . with p'In Ie d expansion of the '. anc extravagance the d unexamp . . cotton md ustry durmg the l t d c d ' e ;� �r��c�l�r he stressed that ev.en the commercial cr��s o� � 8� 7 I ad prod uced ' cotton yarns and textile no fallmg off in the e�ort 0f Enghsh fabrics. He explained e p henomenon by the wonder-workinr; ·. powers 0 f the free trade system introduced in 1 846 . E ven then It . ' sounded strange that this s e ' �ou gh unable to spar� England the crises of 1 847 and i�� ;n, s ou ld be able to WIthdraw a •
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: January 30, I S62.- Ed. �elow Marx makes use
. of the article " I nd'Ian Import Duties and the American Question", published in Th yomes, N o . 24 1 5 7 , Janua:y 3 1 , I S 6 2 .- Ed. anua ;0 , S60 A :ep�rt on It appeared in The C The meeting was h e ld on Tzmes, No. 23530, on January I " I S un er the title . Manchester Chamber of Commerce".- Ed. d The system was introduced by "An Act to Amend the Laws Relating to the Importation of Corn".- Ed. •
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O n the Cotton Crisis
m o fr ry st u d in n o tt o c e th ry st u d in sh li g n E f o h c n ra b r a e th ll A a rt i c ul ? y a -d to r a e h e w o d t a h w t u B s. se ri c se o th f o ce n e lu fheeainkefr s, Mr. Ashworth included, confess that since p1la8c5e8 anand n e � ta s a sp h ts e rk a a si A e t? f o g � in ? tt lu g d te n e d e c e ss a m a n o n w ct u d u np r ro p er ov g m u tm n o c y Il d a e st f o e c n e u q se n o c e th t u o h it w n e v tha t in e r, u c c o to d n u o b s a w n o ti a n g a st t n se e r p e th . e d a k c lo b e th scale d n a 6 17 ff ri ta l il r r o M e th , r a W il iv C n a A meric in ff o g in ll fa e th s e c n a st m u c ir c g n ti a v ra g g a se e th t u o h it w r , 0 0 ,0 0 0 Wh ethe ,0 6 £ s a h c u m s a n e e b e v a h ld u o w s rt o p x e s r a e p p a t o la s t y e a r' n s e o d t u b , n io st e u q n e p o n a s in a m re y ll d n a a si A f na tu ra o ts e rk a m l a ip c n ri p e th t a th r a e h e w n e h w le b a b e lv e tw r fo i m p ro s re tu c fa u n a m n o tt o c sh li g n E h it w d e k c o st re Australia a months. f o r e b m a h C r e st e h c n a M e th f o n o si is m d a e th to g in rd o c c a s, Thu in s si ri c e th , ty ri o th u a h it w s k a e sp r e tt a m is th in h ic h w , e rc e Comm e th f o t o n lt su re e th n e e b r fa so s a h ry st u d in n o tt o c sh li t a the Eng h w t u B . n o ti c u d ro rp e v o sh li g n E f o t u b , e d a k c lo b n a c Ameri il iv C n ca ri e m A e th f o n o ti a u n ti n o c a f o s e c n e u q se n o c e would be th : r e sw n a s u o im n a n u n a e iv e c re in a g a e w n io st e u q is th o T W a r? e th r fo in ru d n a ss la c g in rk o w e th r fo g n ri e ff su ss le e r M e a su smaller manufacturers.
plenty o f ill st e av h e w at h "t , am th ee h ed M r. C rv se b o ," n o d n o L in id sa is It price, an d " f o on ti es qu t a u b , on tt co f o a question t o n is it t u b ; h it w n o go to cotton ed ." oy tr es d g n ei b is s er n w o ill m e the capital of th at present prices
e b to lf se it s re la c e d r, e v e w o h T h e C h a m b e r of C o m m e r c e , h g u o h lt a s, te ta S d e it n U e th in on ti en rv te in y n a st in a g a ly d decide to es im T e h T y b d e y a sw y tl n ie ic ff su re a rs e b m e m s it f o st mo . le b a id o v a n u e b to n io n consider the dissolution o f the U
. n o ti en rv te in is d en m m co re we could at h "t , er tt o P r. M ys sa ," g in "The last th othing w il l N r. te es ch an M is e su is ld u osal co The la st place whence such a prop ly wron g ." al or m is at th g in h yt an t es gg te m pt u s to su
Mr. Bazley:
tion. en rv te n -i n o n ct ri st f o e on e b arrel must qu an ic er m A e th to e d tu ti at r s. " u ir "O fa af n w o r ei th le tt se to ed be allow T he people of that vast country must •
M r. Cheetham:
tion in en rv te in y an to d st; o p p o lly o h trict is w "T h e leading opinion in this dis pressure g n ro st se u ca be r, ea cl is th e ak the American dispute. It is necessary to m bt of it ." ou d y an as w e er th if t en m rn the Gove w ou ld be put by the other side upon
e h T ? d n e m m o c e r e c r e m m o C f o r e b m a h C e th s e o d , n e th t, Wha n a f o s e cl a st b o e th ll a e v o E n gli sh government ought to rem e d e cotton cultivation in a d ministrative character that still im p port duty o f 10 p e r cent im e th ft li to t h g u o it r, la u ic rt India . In pa
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with whi ch Eng lish cotton yarn s and textile fabrics are in I ndi a. The regime of the Eas t I ndia Com pan y 1 7 7 had been don e away with , Eas t I ndi a had har dly bee n incorporated . the B ritish Em pire , whe n Palm erst on introduced this import on English manufactures through Mr . Wil son , and tha t at sam e time as he sold Savoy and Nice for the Anglo-J: