since engaged him, and for which hn abandoned his academic honours A f m the death of William III. he was in the ranks of the politicians who desired to make Prussia free, and was encased in the publication of Die Hhciniwhc /n(u)w From that time until now he has been* kind of literary Garibaldi, with (\midcn Town for his Caprera. In Berlin m Cologne, in Brussels, and in pliria he has written constantly, attacking autocratic Governments in newspin^ articles, pamphlets, brochures, ami )ns_ lories, and has achieved a vast amount of general literary work belles Excluded from Primem, and nm»nfe either in Brussels or Paris, whence so many of his friends were banished, he came to Loudon, and took up his abode, in our “ respectable ” suburb, whence be issued to take tbo initiative at, the formation of the International, a meeting to inaugurate which in England win; held at St.. James’s Hall. It, min t not be considered, however, that Karl Marx adopts all those tierce revolutionary doctrines which distinguish the rabid democrats who have wrought the ruin of Franco. Perhaps his general scheme may be founded on what is sometimes known as 44 Pan-Germanism,” but it m, at all events, less violent than that of many self-elected leaders of the people evon in this country, and, however ill adaptod his system may be to English habits and modes of thought, wo may at least congratulate ourselves that he lias a reputation for that “respectability” at which, as we have said, the French doctrinaires are apt to sneeri but which, after all, has about it something higher and better than they seem to dream of.