| Author(s) | Karl Marx |
|---|---|
| Written | 11 October 1871 |
MARX TO HERMANN JUNG
IN LONDON
[London,] 11 October 1871
Dear Jung,
From the enclosed letter of Perret[1] you will see that he has not yet received the Resolutions on the 'Alliance', etc.[2] If you have not yet sent them, do not do so, because I shall send you a corrected copy.
£1 I have sent to Rozwadowski. Give from the refugees' money so much to Duru that he can leave the lodgings he now lives in which are too dear considering their miserable state. It would be well, if Duru received money enough to get his things out of the pawning shop. But my opinion is that he should take them not to his present lodgings but depose them in your house and leave his lodgings without paying the rest of his house-rent I He has already paid more than was really due for such a hole.
Give also say £1 to the nouveau venu[3] of whom you spoke yesterday.
These expenses—this employment of part of the money remitted to us from the United States—I shall defend so soon as the disposal of those moneys will come before the Council.[4]
Yours fraternally,
Karl Marx