| Author(s) | Karl Marx |
|---|---|
| Written | 25 October 1860 |
MARX TO ENGELS
IN MANCHESTER
[London,] 25 October 1860
Dear Engels,
Herewith the letter from Weber, to whom I must therefore send ABOUT 6 talers; so ends the spree with Prussian justice.[1] You can pass on this news to Siebel.
Later on, I shall publish ABOUT one sheet ON PRUSSIAN JUSTICE[2] here in London, but not until the book[3] is safely in Germany.
During the first 4 weeks, all went very slowly at Hirschfeld's, partly because Zinn, the compositor, left him in the lurch, and also because he had a great deal to do and one of my sheets amounted to more than 2 ordinary printed sheets. However, last week I entered into a written agreement with him whereby he has got to finish by 15 November.
In the last number of Stimmen der Zeit, Kolatschek has brought the thing[4] up again in the 'Juchheisten', in which friend Lassalle, among others, comes off "orribly'.[5]
How goes it with the Navy[6] ? Do you think there might actually be war this autumn?
What with proof-correcting and a host of petty things to do, I've had my hands so full that for a while I hardly had time to write to you.
Salut.
Your
K. M.