Letter to Friedrich Engels, March 22, 1859


MARX TO ENGELS

IN MANCHESTER

[London, 22 March 1859]

Dear Engels,

Herewith Eccarius' letter. Unfortunately he had to return to his tailor's sweat-shop for which, or so it seems to me, he is by no means sufficiently recovered. I wrote about the Reform Bill today[1] ; you should write (if your eyes [are alright], as I hope—otherwise, OF COURSE, DONT THINK or IT) about the likelihood of war.[2] This I regard as necessary, if the rascals on the Tribune are not to reprint anything.[3] Nothing from Berlin. Only 3 proof-sheets received[4] in 8 weeks.

Salut.

Your

K. M.

  1. Besides 'The New British Reform Bill' (see present edition, Vol. 16), Marx wrote two more articles on the 1859 Reform Bill, on 22 March and 1 April 1859, but they were not published in the New-York Daily Tribune and have not reached us.—406, 411
  2. In response to this request Engels wrote the article 'War Inevitable'.
  3. Marx has in mind cases when the New-York Daily Tribune reprinted articles from the London Times.—406
  4. of Marx's A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy