| Author(s) | Karl Marx |
|---|---|
| Written | 5 November 1880 |
MARX TO FRIEDRICH ADOLPH SORGE
IN HOBOKEN
[London,] 5 November 1880
IN HASTE
Dear Sorge,
I had just sent off a longish letter to you[1] when, after the event — postfestum but not before the post office closed — another point occurred to me in connection with that poor devil Borkheim. Last summer, when I went from Ramsgate to see him in Hastings, where I found him ill in bed, he requested me to ask you to dun a certain Francis Murhard (215 Washington Street, Hoboken). This man owes our friend Borkheim some money — £10 if I remember aright — which he lent Murhard for the journey to America and in respect of which he possesses a promissory note.
Salut.
Your
K.M.