If you laid all the
material that has been written about Karl Marx from London to furthest Siberia it
would make a six lane highway; further comment might seem superfluous. It is likely that this may be known. If not then
at last I am rewriting history.
In 1881 his neighbours in
Maitland Park Road are to one side an organ builder and on the other a door
keeper at the House of Lords. Possibly,
this was as near as Marx got to the working aristocracy. The others on the street are a mix of largely
lower middle class and some skilled trades.
Earlier, in 1871 it is
much the same and a couple of doors along is a retired Treasury Clerk, then a
Civil Engineer in telegraphy with a War Office clerk next along. A Proustian touch is that this last has a
wife called Albertine.
So far so petit bourgeois
and not the sort of people he might encounter at the Library of the British
Museum or in all those academic meetings and discussion groups. In 1861 I cannot find the Marx (Mark or Marks
etc.) family but in the Grafton Terrace said to be their home street the
inhabitants are much the same.
But 1851 is a different
story altogether. Dean Street in Soho
was a mixed group of people with a number from Europe. There were Anglican and Roman Catholic clergy
with some of modest wealth but the bulk of the residents were working in a
variety of trades at one level or another and it was quite a mixture.
Some intriguing names crop
up. At 49 is a publican, George Osborne
with a pot boy son, also George. Was
this "The Golden Lion" and did he water the worker's beer? To offset this is a Balls family, could he
have been Temperance? There is Mary
Freshwater, a Lunacy Nurse to keep them all in order. A couple of doors away from the Marx family
was a Covent Garden ballet dancer, did Karl's eyes ever wander?
At 93 is a George Gissing,
a shoe maker. This brings to mind the
author of the same name but born in Wakefield in 1857. Checking up, though, and his father Thomas
Gissing, also a shoemaker, was born in the same part of Suffolk as the Dean
Street George. I met the author's son,
Alfred, at Les Marecottes in Switzerland in 1951. George and Alfred are in
Wikipedia.
The name that did impact
and this was in number 28 the same house as the Marx family (he was listed
as Charles Mark), had rooms was Morgan Kavanagh.
By this time he was on his own, estranged from his wife, Bridget, born
Fitzpatrick and their daughter Julia.
Morgan had an interesting
varied life as a writer on unusual areas of study. Julia was a respected authoress in
her own right.
The Kavanagh name of his
part of Ireland hit a nerve bringing to mind the famous Arthur Kavanagh MP who led a very
full life and was contemporary with
Morgan. Any connection is not known but
it might add another dimension. But to
have Morgan and his field of interests at the same time, in the same house and
likely drinking in the same pub's as Marx in the period when Marx is moving away
from Hegelian thought into others is striking to say the least.
Morgan's ideas, written up
at length in a very individual style did not enjoy a good press and he was
classed among the eccentrics according to the press reports of the period that
are available. They ran counter to the
prevailing ideas of race, nationalism and basics of philosophy. Nowadays his basic thesis that language,
myths, belief systems and religions are essentially as one and relate to common
very ancient periods of human development might have a wider audience.
When one looks at Marx's
later thinking on religion and contingent matters arguably they might have some
basis in the wordy tracts of Kavanagh.
Certainly Kavanagh's ideals of the primitivism of humanity and
motivations have an echo in Marx and what he as to say about the division of
capitalism and socialism.
Capitalism becomes the
evil of the new and of exploitation.
Socialism is then a reversion to a better, more ordered and mutuality of
man in his early form. It is almost
Kavanagh writ large and translated into the new industrialised and trading contemporary
life.
What is also striking
about Marx is not just that allegedly he never saw the inside of a factory, nor
went down a pit or had a good look around a dockyard etc. but he seems
oblivious to the nature of the lives and economies of his immediate
surroundings.
A good deal of his data
came from Friedrich Engels, but that in turn is of its time, depends on the
interpretation in an academic study an relates to an area which although
economically important was far from typical.
Having worked through a great many Census returns of the districts in
question it was a lot more complex and varied than Engels suggests.
What Marx did do was to
have an enormous output and engage with many groups to whom he became a kind of
prophet. He was very busy and active and
relentless in his pursuit of academic authority in his field. Our trouble today is how much we view this
minor group of activists as important as opposed to the reality.
Again, Engels did his work
just at the beginning of the period when the Temperance Movement began to
grow. It was also the time when many
clergy in the Anglican Church, the Catholic and very much among Non Conformist
and other denominations began to exert influence and authority in making
progress in social and welfare matters.
It was these groups that
transformed society and not the sundry academics chattering away in their
endless discussion groups largely in central London and pursuing rivalries for
authority or pouring out theoretical texts on how work might be done and
organised. Our problem today is that it
is largely this class who command attention and action.
Morgan Kavanagh was an
expert in fantasy and myth and so much of our present governance seems to be
based on that as do our ideas of society and the rest.
So it could be that
basically, Karl Marx was away with the fairies and the leprechauns.
"So it could be that basically, Karl Marx was away with the fairies"
ReplyDeleteMy impression is that many others were too. A strange period mixing wisdom, a desire for social justice and extreme naivety.