Marx-Engels Correspondence 1877
Letter from Marx to Editor of the Otyecestvenniye Zapisky
[Notes on the
Fatherland]
[...]
In order that I might be qualified to estimate the economic
development in Russia to-day, I learnt Russian and then for many years studied
the official publications and others bearing on this subject. I have arrived at
this conclusion: If Russia, continues to pursue the path she has followed since
1861, she will lose the finest chance ever offered by history to a nation, in
order to undergo all the fatal vicissitudes of the capitalist regime.
II
The chapter on primitive accumulation does not pretend to do more
than trace the path by which, in Western Europe, the capitalist order of
economy emerged from the womb of the feudal order of economy. It therefore
describes the historic movement which by divorcing the producers from their
means of production converts them into wage earners (proletarians in the modern
sense of the word) while it converts into capitalists those who hold the means
of production in possession. In that history, “all revolutions are epoch-making
which serve as levers for the advancement of the capitalist class in course of
formation; above all those which, after stripping great masses of men of their
traditional means of production and subsistence, suddenly fling them on to the
labour market. But the basis of this whole development is the expropriation of
the cultivators.
“This has not yet been radically accomplished except in
England....but all the countries of Western Europe are going through the same
movement,” etc. (Capital, French Edition, 1879, p. 315). At the end of
the chapter the historic tendency of production is summed up thus: That it
itself begets its own negation with the inexorability which governs the
metamorphoses of nature; that it has itself created the elements of a new
economic order, by giving the greatest impulse at once to the productive forces
of social labour and to the integral development of every individual producer;
that capitalist property, resting as it actually does already on a form of
collective production, cannot do other than transform itself into social property.
At this point I have not furnished any proof, for the good reason that this
statement is itself nothing else than the short summary of long developments
previously given in the chapters on capitalist production.
Now what application to Russia can my critic make of this
historical sketch? Only this: If Russia is tending to become a capitalist
nation after the example of the Western European countries, and during the last
years she has been taking a lot of trouble in this direction – she will not succeed
without having first transformed a good part of her peasants into proletarians;
and after that, once taken to the bosom of the capitalist regime, she will
experience its pitiless laws like other profane peoples. That is all. But that
is not enough for my critic. He feels himself obliged to metamorphose my
historical sketch of the genesis of capitalism in Western Europe into an
historico-philosophic theory of the marche generale [general path]
imposed by fate upon every people, whatever the historic circumstances in which
it finds itself, in order that it may ultimately arrive at the form of economy
which will ensure, together with the greatest expansion of the productive
powers of social labour, the most complete development of man. But I beg his pardon.
(He is both honouring and shaming me too much.) Let us take an example.
In several parts of Capital I allude to the fate which
overtook the plebeians of ancient Rome. They were originally free peasants,
each cultivating his own piece of land on his own account. In the course of
Roman history they were expropriated. The same movement which divorced them
from their means of production and subsistence involved the formation not only
of big landed property but also of big money capital. And so one fine morning
there were to be found on the one hand free men, stripped of everything except
their labour power, and on the other, in order to exploit this labour, those
who held all the acquired wealth in possession. What happened? The Roman
proletarians became, not wage labourers but a mob of do-nothings more
abject than the former “poor whites” in the southern country of the United
States, and alongside of them there developed a mode of production which was
not capitalist but dependent upon slavery. Thus events strikingly analogous but
taking place in different historic surroundings led to totally different
results. By studying each of these forms of evolution separately and then
comparing them one can easily find the clue to this phenomenon, but one will
never arrive there by the universal passport of a general
historico-philosophical theory, the supreme virtue of which consists in being
super-historical.