| Author(s) | Karl Marx |
|---|---|
| Written | 26 March 1870 |
MARX TO ENGELS
IN MANCHESTER
[London,] 26 March 1870
Dear Fred,
Returned, enclosed, the letter from the 'wrong' Moll.[1] I have heard nothing from Menke yet. When you write to the lads, please tell them, also, 1. that Lessner has written repeatedly to them that the Central Council[2] can do nothing on this matter; 2. that they can work it out on their own 5 fingers that their cooperative society is of absolutely no interest to the English; and 3. that the Central Council is bombarded from all parts of Europe with demands for money, without receiving financial contributions from anybody on the continent.
I don't understand your lines of this morning. This is probably due to the fact that my head, as a result of physical infirmity, is not at its most lucid.
I would appreciate it if you could send me, tomorrow evening (if there is a post on Sunday, which is not the case here), £5 as an advance on the coming quarter. My wife informed me too late, i.e. at a moment of exhausted exchequer, that the gas bill has to be paid at 2 o'clock on Monday.
I think I left behind in Manchester the number of the Queen's Messenger containing the biography of Clanricarde. Since this brute is putting on great airs in connection with the Irish coercion bill,[3] it is high time for J. Williams to introduce to the French a counterpart for Pierre Bonaparte.
Have you ever seen such filthy weather as this winter and autumn? No wonder that one can't get back on one's feet.
Salut
Your
K. M.