| Author(s) | Friedrich Engels |
|---|---|
| Written | 23 January 1884 |
ENGELS TO AUGUST BEBEL
IN BORSDORF NEAR LEIPZIG[1]
London, 23 January 1884
Dear Bebel,
I forgot to say in Saturday's letter[2] that you and Liebknecht should on no account order copies of the third edition of Capital[3] since we shall be sending one for each of you as soon as we get any. A third will go to the party archives in Zurich.[4]
Tussy will have written to you regarding a translation of Die Frau.1*5 It's unlikely that you'll get any royalties from it, though there's no harm in trying—at most 3 PENCE = 0.25 mark per copy sold; that is the usual form here. The actual book could, I believe, only fetch, say, 2 à 2.50 marks here, of which 30% at least would go to the retail booksellers. Moreover, the kind of publishers who deal in such books are very few and far between and also pauvres.[5] We ourselves shall have to invest something like £200 in cash in the English edition of Capital,16 and may also have to advance the translator's fee, and then work on a fifty-fifty basis; it probably couldn't be done in any other way.
Kindest regards to Liebknecht and yourself from
Your
F.E.