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Amor & capital: A saga familiar de Karl Marx e a história de uma revolução (Portuguese Edition) by
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Alan M. de León
is on page 315 of 709
“His inheritances had bought him freedom, and he used the time to work on his book… and dabble in the stock market. Marx told his uncle he had made four hundred pounds on one speculation and declared trading to his liking. This was an Engels stratagem: he had spent more than a decade in Manchester diverting funds from the factory system he loathed in order to support the man he hoped would destroy it.”
— Feb 01, 2026 06:43PM
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Alan M. de León
is on page 313 of 709
“The lords of the land and the lords of capital will always use their political privileges for the defense and perpetuation of their economic monopolies… To conquer political power has therefore become the great duty of the working classes… One element of success they possess - numbers; but numbers weigh only in the balance if united by combination and led by knowledge.”
— Feb 01, 2026 06:09PM
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Alan M. de León
is on page 310 of 709
“Astounded by Lupus’ gift, Marx gave an oration during the funeral, his voice failing him as he recalled his friend. But for Engels, Lupus’ death was particularly hard… Engels was so bereft he could not stay in Manchester, so Marx invited him to London. For the first time in two decades, from a rare position of comfort and wealth, the Marx family would be caring for Engels instead of Engels caring for them”
— Feb 01, 2026 05:59PM
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Alan M. de León
is on page 307 of 709
“I made a daily pilgrimage to the old Westphalen home which interested me more than any Roman antiquities because it reminded me of the happiest days of my youth and had harbored my greatest treasure. Everyday i’m asked about the most beautiful girl in Trier and the queen of the ball. It’s damned pleasant for a man when his wife lives on like this as an enchanted princess in the imagination of a whole town”
— Feb 01, 2026 05:26PM
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Alan M. de León
is on page 304 of 709
“Engels forgave Marx. Like Jenny, Lenchen, and countless others, he recognized Marx’s personal flaws but he, like they, loved him too much to allow those flaws to overshadow the brilliant qualities - his mind, his wit, even his capacity for love and loyalty (as hard as it must have been to remember those at such moments. Engels also felt it was his role to protect this man, from whom he expected great thing.”
— Jan 27, 2026 04:29AM
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