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Engels conditions of the working class
Engels conditions of the working class












engels conditions of the working class

viagent, who hails from Berlin or Hamburg, Jew or Christian, after frequenting the Manchester Exchange for a few months, finds out that, in order to buy cotton yarn or cloth cheap, he, too, had better drop those slightly more refined but still miserable wiles and subterfuges which are considered the acme of cleverness in his native country. The pettifogging business tricks of the Polish Jew, the representative in Europe of commerce in its lowest stage, those tricks that serve him so well in his own country, and are generally practised there, he finds to be out of date and out of place when he comes to Hamburg or Berlin and, again, the commission p.

engels conditions of the working class

Though not expressly stated in our recognised treatises, it is still a law of modern Political Economy that the larger the scale on which Capitalistic Production is carried on, the less can it support the petty devices of swindling and pilfering which characterise its early stages. The state of things described in this book belongs to-day, in many respects, to the past, as far as England is concerned. The first had little to do with the book itself it discussed the American Working-Class Movement of the day, and is, therefore, here omitted as irrelevant, the second-the original preface-is largely made use of in the present introductory remarks.

engels conditions of the working class

The American edition being as good as exhausted, and having never been extensively circulated on this side of the Atlantic, the present English copyright edition is brought out with the full consent of all parties interested.įor the American edition, a new Preface and an Appendix were written in English by the author.

engels conditions of the working class

Kelley Wischnewetzky, and published in the following year in New York. It was translated into English, in 1885, by an American lady, Mrs. The author, at that time, was young, twenty-four years of age, and his production bears the stamp of his youth with its good and its faulty features, of neither of which he feels ashamed. The book, an English translation of which is here republished, was first issued in Germany in 1845. The Condition of the Working-Class in England in 1844














Engels conditions of the working class