| Author(s) | Karl Marx |
|---|---|
| Written | 6 September 1871 |
MARX TO COLLET DOBSON COLLET
IN LONDON
[London,] 6 September 1871
Dear Sir,
From your letter I see that you are not only 'alarmed',[1] but have also grown suspicious, since you tuned down your usual 'My dear Sir' to 'Dear Sir'. Lafargue[2]
For my own part I consider the feeling of 'alarm' not one peculiarly adapted to lend a scientific and objective point de vue.
I regret not being able to fulfil your wish. I have gone through the whole round of my Continental friends but found no one in possession of some of the numerous reviews and extracts of my book[3] that have appeared in Italian and French. The French edition in extenso has been cut short by the Prussian war.[4]
Neither translation nor review has appeared in English. Two years since my friend F. Engels sent a very accurate analysis of Das Kapital to the Fortnightly, but it was returned with the remark that 'it was too scientific for the English Review-reader'.'
I do not know of what manifestoes you speak. Save the address on The Civil War in France and Mr. Washburne,[5] which I had the honour to send you, the General Council has, since September 1870, published no manifesto except those on the Franco-Prussian War[6] which I hereby forward you. Apart [from] the manifestoes published by the French and Prussian police in the name of the International, and which I have declared to be forgeries in La Vérité (Paris),[7] no manifesto has besides been published in the latter times. The so-called Swiss manifesto, printed in The Times,[8] is, as The Examiner of last Saturday justly remarked,[9]
'a garbled translation of a French version, itself far from accurate... It issues, not from the International Workingmen's Association, but from some of its Swiss members'.
Yours faithfully,
K. M.