Letter to Stanislaw Mendelson, July 4, 1892
| Author(s) | Friedrich Engels |
|---|---|
| Written | 4 July 1892 |
First published, printed according to the original and translated from the French in: Marx and Engels, Works, Second Russian Edition, Vol. 38, Moscow, 1965
Published in English for the first time in Marx-Engels Collected Works, Volume 49
Published in English for the first time in Marx-Engels Collected Works, Volume 49
ENGELS TO STANISLAW MENDELSON
IN LONDON
[London,] 4 July 1892
122 Regent's Park Road, N. W.
Dear Citizen,
I have this minute received a letter from Bebel with a communication for you, which I am sending on at once.[1] I trust you will receive the money through the Deutsche Bank (which has, I believe, a branch here in London) and that you will be able to decipher Bebel's writing. If not, perhaps you might care to return me the letter so that I can transcribe it into characters of a more international nature.
My compliments, as also those of Mrs Kautsky, to Mrs Mendelson.[2]
Yours ever,
F. Engels
Bebel was not immediately able to lay his hands on your address, which is why he sent the bank's statement of sale to me.
- ↑ In his letter of 1 July 1892 Bebel asked Engels to forward TO STANISLAW MENDELSON a letter containing the receipt for a sum of money the German Social-Democratic Party had provided by way of material aid to a Polish student who carried on revolutionary work among Poles in Germany.
- ↑ Maria Mendelson