| Author(s) | Karl Marx |
|---|---|
| Written | 16 November 1859 |
MARX TO ENGELS
IN MANCHESTER
[London,] 16 November 1859
Dear Engels,
I hope that a Morocco will arrive from you on Friday.[1] Apart from everything else, this is the time of the presidential elections, and in any case I fear that restrictions will again be put on the quantity of articles to be delivered. This fate will befall me all the sooner if, given the present shortage of material, I don't write about THEMES like this that interest the fellows.
You must also write something for me, PRIVATELY, OF COURSE, not for the Tribune, about the Schiller tomfoolery in Manchester. In my next I shall tell you about the Kinkel festival down here. Just now Freiligrath is deeply resentful of Gottfried. Meanwhile you should read the latest number of the Hermann[2] and see with your own eyes how 'Parson Charming' drools over himself.
The Augsburg Allgemeine Zeitung has not, it seems, accepted my declaration because it was apparently rendered superfluous by the one sent to them by Blind.[3] I have now sent them an answer to this slyboots from Baden with a positive demand—for I refer at the same time to the letters they wrote me[4] —that they print my answer.[5]
Salut
Your
K. M.