| Author(s) | Friedrich Engels |
|---|---|
| Written | 27 February 1874 |
ENGELS TO FRIEDRICH ADOLPH SORGE
IN HOBOKEN
London, 27 February 1874
Dear Sorge,
The things listed on the back of this letter were sent off to you today in a parcel addressed to F. A. Sorge, General Secretary I.W.M. Association, 25 Hudson Street, Hoboken, N.J. via New York, per Continental Parcels Express Company (W. Wheatley & Co.—New York Agents: W. H. Bucknam & Co., 57 Broadway). Carriage forwarded, Value declared £10.
The BRITISH FEDERAL COUNCIL has become so lackadaisical that I have not yet managed to extract an official price for the English Rules[1] from them — only a POSTCARD from Barry saying, I THINK I... Will.
I am charging 2 shillings each for the Alliance[2] but in return am paying the carriage of those sent by post.[3]
I have to leave in an hour for a few days, so farewell and keep your chin up. Your police seem to want to outdo even those in Versailles.
Your
F. Engels