| Author(s) | Friedrich Engels |
|---|---|
| Written | 18 October 1867 |
ENGELS TO HERMANN MEYER1
IN LIVERPOOL
Manchester, 18 October 1867
Dear Meyer,
I received your telegram this morning and can't say how sorry I am that I am unable to go to Liverpool this evening. My associé[1] and our chief clerk[2] are both away tomorrow, and so I have to be here to sign cheques and keep an eye on everything myself. Moreover, we close at 1 o'clock here on Saturdays, and as you yourself are not arriving in Liverpool until about 11 o'clock this evening and the Russia sails at 12 o'clock, you will see for yourself that there is nothing to be done.
Please write your address and Mrs Weydemeyer's on the enclosed piece of paper and then hand in the envelope at the hotel for posting. Please convey my hearty greetings to Mrs Weydemeyer and tell her I would have written her a few lines long ago if I had known her address.
I hope you will be able to bring Marx's book[3] to the attention of the German-American press and of the workers. With the 8-hour-agitation that is in progress in America now,[4] this book with its chapter on the working day will come at just the right time for you over there, and, in other respects too, it is likely to clarify people's minds on a variety of issues. The future of the party in America will be greatly beholden to you for any step you can take in that direction.
Please pass on my best greetings to Jacobi[5] in New York as well. Have a safe journey!
Yours most sincerely
Friedrich Engels