MARX TO EUGEN OSWALD[1]
IN LONDON
London, 5 August 1870
Dear Oswald,
Would you kindly send your Address[2] to my friend L. S. Borkheim who would like to see it. His private address is: 10 Brunswick Gardens, Kensington, W.
My best regards to the ladies.
Yours,
Karl Marx
- ↑ Marx wrote this letter on a form from Borkheim's office bearing its address: 9 Billiter Square, E.C.
- ↑ In his letter of 18 July 1870, Eugen Oswald, a German refugee, asked Marx to sign an Address on the Franco-Prussian War drawn up by a group of French and German democratic refugees. The Address was published as a leaflet on 31 July 1870; the editions that followed were signed by Marx, Engels, Liebknecht, Bebel and other members of the International. Marx and his associates agreed to sign it on conditions outlined by Marx in his letter to Oswald of 3 August 1870 (see this volume, p. 34).
Oswald enclosed with his letter an excerpt from Louis Blanc's letter in which he called for the Address on the Franco-Prussian War to be signed by as many people as possible.