| Author(s) | Karl Marx |
|---|---|
| Written | 2 September 1870 |
MARX TO SIGFRID MEYER
IN HOBOKEN
London, 2 September 1870 1 Maitland Park Road, Haverstock Hill
Dear Meyer,
Just a few lines in great haste (if I am to catch die post). I shall write to you more fully next week. I came back yesterday from the seaside where the doctors had sent me for my health[1] but where a violent and painful attack of SCIATICA bent me double for weeks on end.
The first thing I did on my return was to reply to a pile of letters waiting for me; among my letter-creditors was Sorge, with half a dozen letters. Your letter had been mislaid and I only received it after sending off my reply to Sorge,[2] so I was unable to modify that in the light of the information contained in your letter.*5
In any case I simply had to write to Sorge because he had sent me newspapers and LABOR STATISTICS (Massachusetts)[3] , ditto information about Hume of use to the General Council, together with 2 SAMPLES of the International cards, etc., he had produced.[4] Lastly, I could not under any circumstances permit friend Vogt's erroneous view of Schily—one of my oldest and most intimate friends—to stand uncorrected.[5]
I was delighted to see from Sorge's last letter that you were being sent as a delegate to Cincinnati.[6]
If the German Workers' Union has nominated other correspondents this FACT should be reported to me officially for communication to the General Council.
Salut et fraternité.
Yours,
K. M.
Could you give me any further information, such as the relevant acts of Congress, etc., about the economics of the railroad in the West?