Friedrich Engels - Collected Woks Included

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Friedrich Engels - Collected Woks Included

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Friedrich Engels, (born Nov. 28, 1820, Barmen, Rhine province, Prussia [Germany]—died Aug. 5, 1895, London, Eng.)


On August 5 (new style), 1895, Frederick Engels died in London. After his friend Karl Marx (who died in 1883), Engels was the finest scholar and teacher of the modern proletariat in the whole civilised world. From the time that fate brought Karl Marx and Frederick Engels together, the two friends devoted their life’s work to a common cause. And so to understand what Frederick Engels has done for the proletariat, one must have a clear idea of the significance of Marx’s teaching and work for the development of the contemporary working-class move­ ment. Marx and Engels were the first to show that the working class and its demands are a necessary outcome of the present economic system, which together with the bourgeoisie inevitably creates and organises the proletar­ iat. They showed that it is not the well-meaning efforts of noble-minded individuals, but the class struggle of the organised proletariat that will deliver humanity from the evils which now oppress it. In their scientific works, Marx and Engels were the first to explain that socialism is not the invention of dreamers, but the final aim and necessary result of the development of the productive forces in modern society.

In 1838 Engels, without having completed his high-school studies, was forced by family circumstances to enter a commercial house in Bremen as a clerk. Commer­cial affairs did not prevent Engels from pursuing his scien­ tific and political education. He had come to hate autoc­racy and the tyranny of bureaucrats while still at high school. The study of philosophy led him further. At that time Hegel’s teaching dominated German philosophy, and Engels became his follower. Although Hegel himself was an admirer of the autocratic Prussian state, in whose ser­ vice he was as a professor at Berlin University, Hegel’s teachings were revolutionary. Hegel’s faith in human rea­son and its rights, and the fundamental thesis of Hegelian philosophy that the universe is undergoing a constant pro­ cess of change and development, led some of the disciples of the Berlin philosopher—those who refused to accept the existing situation—to the idea that the struggle against this situation, the struggle against existing wrong and prev­alent evil, is also rooted in the universal law of eternal development. If all things develop, if institutions of one kind give place to others, why should the autocracy of the Prussian king or of the Russian tsar, the enrichment of an insignificant minoiity at the expense of the vast ma­jority, or the domination of the bourgeoisie over the peo­ple, continue for ever? Hegel’s philosophy spoke of the development of the mind and of ideas; it was idealistic. From the development of the mind it deduced the devel­opment of nature, of man, and of human, social relations.

While retaining Hegel’s idea of the eternal process of de­velopment, * Marx and Engels rejected the preconceived idealist view; turning to life, they saw that it is not the development of mind that explains the development of na­ture but that, on the contrary, the explanation of mind must be derived from nature, from matter.... Unlike He­ gel and the other Hegelians, Marx and Engels were mate­rialists. Regarding the world and humanity materialis­tically, they perceived that just as material causes under­ lie all natural phenomena, so the development of human society is conditioned by the development of material forces, the productive forces. On the development of the productive forces depend the relations into which men enter with one another in the production of the things required for the satisfaction of human needs. And in these relations lies the explanation of all the phenomena of social life, human aspirations, ideas and laws. The development of the productive forces creates social relations based upon private property, but now we see that this same develop­ment of the productive forces deprives the majority of their property and concentrates it in the hands of an in­ significant minority. It abolishes property, the basis of the modern social order, it itself strives towards the very aim which the socialists have set themselves. All the socialists have to do is to realise which social force, owing to its po­sition in modern society, is interested in bringing socialism about, and to impart to this force the consciousness of its interests and of its historical task. This force is the prole­tariat. Engels got to know the proletariat in England, in the centre of English industry, Manchester, where he set­ tled in 1842, entering the service of a commercial firm of which his father was a shareholder.

Here Engels not only sat in the factory office but wandered about the slums in which the workers were cooped up, and saw their poverty and misery with his own eyes. But he did not confine him­ self to personal observations. He read all that had been re­vealed before him about the condition of the British working class and carefully studied all the official docu­ments he could lay his hands on. The fruit of these studies and observations was the book which appeared in 1845: The Condition of the Working Class in England. We have already mentioned what was the chief service rendered by Engels in writing The Condition of the Working Class in England. Even before Engels, many people had des­cribed the sufferings of the proletariat and had pointed to the necessity of helping it. Engels was the first to say that the proletariat is not only a suffering class; that it is, in fact, the disgraceful economic condition of the proletar­iat that drives it irresistibly forward and compels it to fight for its ultimate emancipation. And the fighting prole tariat will help itself. The political movement of the work­ ing class will inevitably lead the workers to realise that their only salvation lies in socialism. On the other hand, socialism will become a force only when it becomes the aim of the political struggle of the working class. Such are the main ideas of Engels’s book on the condition of the working class in England, ideas which have now been adopted by all thinking and fighting proletarians, but which at that time were entirely new. These ideas were set out in a book written in absorbing style and filled with most authentic and shocking pictures of the misery of the English proletariat. The book was a terrible indict­ment of capitalism and the bourgeoisie and created a pro­ found impression. Engels’s book began to be quoted every­ where as presenting the best picture of the condition of the modern proletariat. And, in fact, neither before 1845 nor after has there appeared so striking and truthful a picture of the misery of the working class.

It was not until he came to England that Engels be­ came a socialist. In Manchester he established contacts with people active in the English labour movement at the time and began to write for English socialist publications.

In 1844, while on his way back to Germany, he became acquainted in Paris with Marx, with whom he had al­ ready started to correspond. In Paris, under the influence of the French socialists and French life, Marx had also become a socialist. Here the friends jointly wrote a book entitled The Holy Family, or Critique of Critical Critique. This book, which appeared a year before The Condition of the Working Class in England, and the greater part of which was written by Marx, contains the foundations of revolutionary materialist socialism, the main ideas of which we have expounded above. “The holy family” is a facetious nickname for the Bauer brothers, the philoso­phers, and their followers.

These gentlemen preached a criticism which stood above all reality, above parties and politics, which rejected all practical activity, and which only “critically” contemplated the surrounding world and the events going on within it. These gentlemen, the Bauers, looked down on the proletariat as an uncritical mass. Marx and Engels vigorously opposed this absurd and harmful tendency. In the name of a real, human per­ son—the worker, trampled down by the ruling classes and the state—they demanded, not contemplation, but a strug­gle for a better order of society. They, of course, regarded the proletariat as the force that is capable of waging this struggle and that is interested in it. Even before the ap­pearance of The Holy Family, Engels had published in Marx’s and Ruge’s Deutsch-Franzdsische Jahrbiicher his “Critical Essays on Political Economy”,60 in which he ex­amined the principal phenomena of the contemporary eco­nomic order from a socialist standpoint, regarding them as necessary consequences of the rule of private property. Contact with Engels was undoubtedly a factor in Marx’s decision to study political economy, the science in which his works have produced a veritable revolution.

From 1845 to 1847 Engels lived in Brussels and Paris, combining scientific work with practical activities among the German workers in Brussels and Paris. Here Marx and Engels established contact with the secret German Communist League, which commissioned them to expound the main principles of the socialism they had worked out.Thus arose the famous Manifesto of the Communist Par­ty of Marx and Engels, published in 1848. This little booklet is worth whole volumes: to this day its spirit ins­pires and guides the entire organised and fighting prole­tariat of the civilised world. The revolution of 1848, which broke out first in France and then spread to other West-European countries, brought Marx and Engels back to their native country. Here, in Rhenish Prussia, they took charge of the democratic Neue Rheinische Zeitung published in Cologne. The two friends were the heart and soul of all revolutionary-democratic aspirations in Rhenish Prussia. They fought to the last ditch in defence of freedom and of the interests of the people against the forces of reaction. The latter, as we know, gained the upper hand. The Neue Rheinische Zeit­ung was suppressed. Marx, who during his exile had lost his Prussian citizenship, was deported; Engels took part in the armed popular uprising, fought for liberty in three battles, and after the defeat of the rebels fled, via Switzer­ land, to London.

nd, to London. Marx also settled in London. Engels soon became a clerk again, and then a shareholder, in the Manchester commercial firm in which he had worked in the forties. Until 1870 he lived in Manchester, while Marx lived in London, but this did not prevent their maintaining a most lively interchange of ideas: they corresponded almost daily. In this correspondence the two friends exchanged views and discoveries and continued to collaborate in working out scientific socialism. In 1870 Engels moved to London, and their joint intellectual life, of the most strenuous nature, continued until 1883, when Marx died. Its fruit was, on Marx’s side, Capital, the greatest work on political economy of our age, and on Engels’s side, a number of works both large and small. Marx worked on the analysis of the complex phenomena of capitalist eco­nomy. Engels, in simply written works, often of a polem­ical character, dealt with more general scientific prob­lems and with diverse phenomena of the past and pres­ent in the spirit of the materialist conception of history and Marx’s economic theory.

Of Engels’s works we shall mention: the polemical work against Duhring (analysing highly important problems in the domain of philosophy, natural science and the social sciences)/’ The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the Stated (translated into Russian, published in St. Petersburg, 3rd ed., 1895), Lud­wig Feuerbach^ (Russian translation and notes by G. Plekhanov, Geneva, 1892), an article on the foreign policy of the Russian Government (translated into Rus­ sian in the Geneva Sotsial-Demokrat Nos. 1 and 2),65 splendid articles on the housing question,66 and finally, two small but very valuable articles on Russia’s economic development (Frederick Engels on Russia, translated into Russian by Zasulich, Geneva, 1894).67 Marx died before he could put the final touches to his vast work on capital. The draft, however, was already finished, and after the death of his friend, Engels undertook the onerous task of preparing and publishing the second and the third volumes of Capital.

He published Volume II in 1885 and Volume III in 1894 (his death prevented the preparation of Volume IV68). These two volumes entailed a vast amount of labour. Adler, the Austrian Social-Democrat, has rightly remarked that by publishing volumes II and III of Capital Engels erected a majestic monument to the genius who had been his friend, a monument on which, without intending it, he indelibly carved his own name.

Indeed these two volumes of Capital are the work of two men: Marx and Engels. Old legends contain various mov­ing instances of friendship. The European proletariat may say that its science was created by two scholars and fight­ers, whose relationship to each other surpasses the most moving stories of the ancients about human friendship. Engels always—and, on the whole, quite justly—placed himself after Marx. “In Marx’s lifetime,” he wrote to an old friend, “I played second fiddle.

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

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