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Special pages :
Letter to Ferdinand Freiligrath, July 20, 1867
| Author(s) | Karl Marx |
|---|---|
| Written | 20 July 1867 |
Published in English for the first time in Marx-Engels Collected Works, Volume 42
MARX TO FERDINAND FREILIGRATH6
IN LONDON
[Copy]
[London,] 20 July 1867
Dear Freiligrath,
I am not a regular reader of German literary trash, but I cannot prevent friends in Germany from occasionally sending me excerpts containing personal references to me. Thus, yesterday I received all the passages referring to myself in a publication by a certain Rasch entitled 'Zwölf Streiter der Revolution'. I should be obliged to you for an explanation of the following[1]:
'Freiligrath had, etc., broken off relations with Marx entirely; a quite unpardonable action on Marx's part, about which I wish to say no more here, had been the last straw. It can only be explained as due to the obnoxious character of a man like Marx. I was so indignant about it that one day I asked Freiligrath for details, but he tactfully passed over it.'
Your
K. M.
- ↑ G. Struve and G. Rasch, Zwölf Streiter der Revolution, p. 61.