(^242) KARL MARX: A BIOGRAPHY
then went to Constantinople, became a Muslim and an officer in the Turkish
army, was condemned to death for treason with the Russians, but was freed
and returned to Constantinople. There he became press officer to the Grand
Vizier Kiprisli Pascha and died in 1868 as a Turkish police lieutenant. The
manuscript, entitled Heroes of the Exile, is translated in K. Marx, The Cologne
Communist Trial, ed. R. Livingstone.
89. MEW XXVII 1 100.
90. Ibid.
91. Ibid., 101.
92. Ibid.
93. Ibid., 576.
94. MEW vni 575. Further on Willich, see L. Easton, 'August Willich, Marx
and Left Hegelian Socialism', Etudes de Marxologie (1965).
95. MEW xxvin 30.
96. Ibid., 43.
97. Quoted in F. Mehring, Karl Marx, p. 242.
98. MEW XXVII 377.
99. Ibid., 184.
100. Ibid., 193.
101. Ibid., 195 f.
102. Ibid., 561.
103. Marx's feelings were not reciprocated by Harney, who towards the end of
his life still considered Marx 'one of the most warm-hearted, genial and
attractive of men'.
104. Engels to Marx, MEW xxxn 253.
105. MEW XXVII 153.
106. Ibid., 591.
107. MEW xxvm 523.
108. Ibid., 125.
109. MEW x 126.
no. Cf. MEW xxvm 433.
in. Ibid., 434.
112. xxix 44 f.
113. See further, J. Saville, Ernest Jones Chartist (London, 1952).
114. MEW xxvm 30.
115. MEW XXVII 608.
116. MEW xxvm 128 f.
117. Marx to Cluss, MEW xxvm 560.
118. ME W xxvm 272.
119. Ibid. 300.
120. Cf. M. Kovalevsky, 'Meetings with Marx', Reminiscences, p. 298 ; H. M. Hynd-
man, Record of an Adventurous Life (London, 1911 ) pp. 277 ff.
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