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Special pages :
Letter to Inessa Armand, March 18, 1911
Source: Lenin Collected Works, Progress Publishers, 1977, Moscow, Volume 43, page 616b.
This letter (postcard) to Inessa Armand in Clarens was written by Lenin on his way to Zurich from La Chaux-de-Fonds and posted by him in Ambulant (Switzerland). In La Chaux-de-Fondsâa large working-class centre of SwitzerlandâLenin delivered a lecture (in German) at a workersâ club on the Paris Commune and the prospects of development of the Russian revolution (âWill the Russian Revolution Follow the Path of the Paris Commune?â).
Dear Friend,
I am writing to you on my way back from a lecture. Yesterday (Saturday) I lectured on the amnesty.[1] We are all dreaming of leaving. If you are going home drop in to see us first. Weâll have a talk. I would very much like you to find out for me in England discreetly whether I would be granted passage.
All the best,
Yours,
V. U.
- â Lenin is referring to the declaration of the Provisional Government setting fort its political programme, one point of which provided for a complete and immediate amnesty in political and religious cases (see Vestnik Vremennogo Pravitelstva No. 1, March 5, 1917).