What do you think?
Rate this book


Paperback
First published January 1, 1977
This was part two of Yvonne Kapp's enormous biography of Eleanor Marx, and I confess, not as enjoyable as the first (you can read about that one here).The fight for free speech and the right of assembly had a long and stormy history. In the early 'eighties, the East End Radicals who held regular meetings on Mile End Waste in Stepney were constantly chivied by the police. They then adjourned to Limehouse where an open air meeting in Piggot Street, off the junction of the Commercial Road and the East India Dock Road, was addressed by a member of the SDF. it was stopped by the police for causing and obstruction. Thereafter both Radical Club and SDF speakers took to nearby Dod Street, mainly occupied by factories and warehouses and thus deserted on summer Sunday mornings. (69)
The importance of these East End Radical Clubs -- which covered the boroughs from Poplar and Hackney, Bermondsey and Stepney as far west as Islington and Finsbury, with their local Federations -- lay in that they drew together politically conscious working men...(196)
The impact of Ibsen upon Eleanor and her immediate circle was violent: as violent as the sense of outrage felt by the majority of English critics at the first performance of his plays. This new "social drama" stunned them -- though not into silence -- by its complete break with the theatrical conventions of the time, both in manner and content. (100)
To translate such a book, a fair knowledge of literary German is not enough. Marx uses freely expressions of everyday life and idioms of provincial dialects; he coins new words, he takes his illustrations from every branch of science, his allusions from the literature of a dozen languages; to understand him, a man must be a master of German indeed, spoken as well as written, and must know something of German life too... but there is something more required. Marx is one of the most vigorous and concise writers of the age. To render him adequately, a man must be a master, not only of German, but of English too... Powerful German requires powerful English to render it; the best resources of the language have to be drawn upon; new-coined German terms requires the corresponding new terms in English... (113)
Eleanor Marx, Wilhelm Liebknecht, Edward Aveling in America, 1886[/caption]One of the "small matters" which had become "a great question" was the conduct of the unemployed. Some of them had hit upon novel ways of drawing attention to their plight, such as holding church parades in various parts of the country, marching into places of worship to swell the congregation which they treated as a public meeting, objecting loudly and strongly whenever they did not agree with the sentiments of the speaker in the pulpit. (219)
...in the streets here one sees so many starving people -- people with hunger in every line of their faces that one cannot but be wretched... (222)
Last Sunday the troops had ammunition ready and stood with fixed bayonets. Next Sunday I think it very possible they will actually fire. That would be very useful to the whole movement here. It would complete the work some of us have been doing this long while past, of winning over the better Radical element to Socialism. (230)
In Eleanor's view only those who tried their wings would ever learn to fly. Revolution for her did not have a "a very big R": it was a process inherent in the small act of standing your ground, asserting and extending your rights, defending your dignity as a human being in every situation and in all the circumstances of daily life. In that way, and that way alone, would men and women change their conditions, their circumstances and, in doing so, themselves. (231)
you should have seen that high hearted host run. Running hardly expresses our collective action. We skedaddled and never drew rein until we were safe on Hampstead Heath or thereabouts. Tarlton found me paralysed with terror and brought me on to the Square, the police kindly letting me through in consideration of my genteel appearance. On the whole, I think it was the most abjectly disgraceful defeat ever suffered by a band of heroes outnumbering their foes a thousand to one. (footnote, 231)
In front of the platform sat Lady Macbeth Aveling and the redoubtable Edward, S.Sc. They were, of course, in favour of a spirited dash at Trafalgar Square; and very fine it was to see the lofty scorn of Lady Macbeth when any speaker on the pacific side rose to address the meeting. When the resolution proposing the Hyde Park meeting was read Lady Macbeth turned to Edward, D.Sc., and hissed 'C-o-w-a-r-d-s!' between her teeth. It was very fine indeed... (233)
1888 was a year of trade recovery and the great wave of demonstrations subsided. But it was something beyond the ill-usage of the unemployed that now produced a shift in her attitude to the working class. She had begun to explore the East End, sometimes alone, occasionally with Margaret Harkness, not as a speaker nor a demonstrator but more as an explorer, and what she discovered left her deeply and personally involved with the lives of the people. They were not any less the downtrodden and exploited "masses"...but they were no longer featureless crowds... (261)
In letter after letter written at that time, whether from London or the country, this preoccupation with suffering is reflected. (262)
To go to the docks is enough to drive one mad. The men fight and push and hustle like beasts--not men--and all to earn at best 3d. or 4d. an hour! Si serious has the struggle become that the 'authorities' have had to replace certain iron palings with wooden ones--the weaker men got impaled in the crush!...You can't help thinking of all this when you've seen it and been in the midst of it... (263)
At that time Thorne was not the stout and stolid figure familiar at the House of Commons to later generations. (323)
In 1852 S.W. Silver & Co., "the well-known outfitter of Cornhill", bought one acre of land between Bow Road and Braking Creek to which it removed its small waterproofing works from Greenwich. It was the oldest factory on the waterfront. Seven more cares were added in the next few years and, by 1860, the premises were so extensive "that the name of Silvertown was given to the district of which they formed the centre." (336)