Letter to Bertalan Szemere, March 13, 1860

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MARX TO BERTALAN SZEMERE[1]

IN PARIS

Manchester, 13 March 1860
6 Thorncliffe Grove, Oxford Road

My dear Sir,

I have not yet received your book[2] Otherwise I should have given a compte rendu[3] of it in the New-York Tribune.

I sent you the article against Kossuth[4] on the express condition of its being returned to me. I attach not the least importance to that article, but I want it for specific purpose.

I have instituted two actions for libel at Berlin and London against newspapers[5] which had the impudence of reprinting extracts from Vogt's libel.[6] I observed, for 10 years, a strict silence in the face of the most reckless calumnies, but I know that now the moment has arrived of publicly exposing them.

My friend from whose house I am addressing these lines to you may perhaps (he is a merchant) become useful to you. Send him a catalogue (Mr Frederick Engels, care of Messrs Ermen and Engels, Manchester) of your wines. But do not use such fellows as Stoffregen for your agents.

Yours truly

Williams[7]

In a few days I shall return to London.

  1. This letter is reproduced from the copy Marx made in his notebook.
  2. B. Szemere, La Question hongroise (1848-1860), Paris, 1860. See also this volume, p. 6.
  3. review
  4. K. Marx, 'Kossuth and Louis Napoleon'. See also this volume, p. 12.
  5. National Zeitung and The Daily Telegraph
  6. C. Vogt, Mein Prozess gegen die Allgemeine Zeitung, Geneva, 1859.
  7. A. Williams, an alias used by Marx in some of his letters.