| Author(s) | Friedrich Engels |
|---|---|
| Written | 3 October 1893 |
ENGELS TO JOHN B. SHIPLEY
IN LONDON
[Draft]
[London], 3 October 1893
Dear Sir,
On my return from abroad[1] I find your letter of Aug. 10th. I am afraid I cannot be of any use to you in your dispute with your family. Even were your legal right to the money a good deal clearer to me than it is, I could only say that you, as a poor man, would hardly have the ghost of a chance, in English law courts, against wealthy people who moreover could fight you with your own money. But supposing you had the money to fight, my advice would still be: keep it rather than waste it on law.
As to a lawyer such as you describe and who would be willing to undertake your lawsuit, you will not be astonished if I tell you I do not know such a one.
Regretting I cannot give you a more comforting reply
I remain etc.