"Without agreeing to tend his German father’s business interests in Manchester he would have lacked the income for himself and Marx to live in the comfort they took as their right. The profligate Marx was constantly on the edge of penury. Engels counted his pennies (or rather his tens of thousands of pounds) more carefully but did not stint in his pleasures. He rode out regularly with the prestigious and costly Cheshire Hounds. He drank wine of quality and Pilsner beer in quantity. He treated himself to bevies of young women, including prostitutes. He dressed in fashion."
Robert Service in The Sunday Times reviews Tristram Hunt's The Frock-Coated Communist: The Revolutionary Life of Friedrich Engels.
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Workers of the World, Relax
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