Letter to Karl Marx, November 1, 1867
| Author(s) | Friedrich Engels |
|---|---|
| Written | 1 November 1867 |
Printed according to the original
Published in English for the first time in Marx-Engels Collected Works, Volume 42
ENGELS TO MARX
IN LONDON
Manchester, 1 November 1867
Dear Moor,
What is the matter? Why have I not heard from you at all? Ever since your last letter I have been in constant fear that you have the carbuncles again. Have you heard any more from across the water? From Kugelmann or Meissner concerning articles on your book3? I am getting no news of any kind and, in the circumstances, there is damn little I can do.
Just how far Dizzy[1] has contrived not merely to DISH the Whigs but to disorganise the Tories, too, was demonstrated to me the day before yesterday in a conversation with two of that ilk. They were agreed:
1. that the Irish Church and thus the Established Church in England, too, should fall forthwith,
2. that the LAWS OF PRIMOGENITURE AND ENTAIL[2] are no longer tenable,
3. that when the Queen[3] dies, a revolution will probably soon follow here.
Your
F. E.