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Special pages :
Letter to Lev Kamenev, July 30, 1912
Source: Lenin Collected Works, Progress Publishers, 1977, Moscow, Volume 43, page 294.
Dear L. B.,
First of all hearty greetings to all friends, thanks for the telegram and heaps of best wishes! (Never mind the blot.) Salut, salut Ă vous.. Ah, Iâd give a lot to hear MontĂŠgus now.
But Iâve gone off the âseriousâ key.
And thereâs âbusinessâ to discuss.
(1) I am enclosing our reply to the German Vorstand.[1] Show it to a narrow circle+the Committee of the Organisations Abroad and return.
(2) A letter from Zaks for you. Read it, go into it, reply and return....
All the best,
Yours,
Lenin
Morozov is talking nonsense....[2] A young man without allegiances, at loose ends.
Ryazanov in Vienna snaps and sulksâfound himself looking foolish after Plekhanovâs article in Pravda. (I wrote a long, heart-melting letter to Kiselyov. I donât think anything will come of it.)
Lunacharsky writes in Kievskaya Mysl[3] about âscientific mysticismâ. Get hold of it and give him a public fatherly trouncing.
Why donât you write something for Prosveshcheniye?[4]
- â Reply âTo the Executive Committee of the German Social-Democratic Partyâ (see present edition, Vol. 18, p. 204).âEd.
- â Manuscript partly damaged. Here several words are illegible.âEd.
- â Kievskaya Mysl (Kiev Thought)âa bourgeois-democratic daily published from 1906 to 1918.
- â Prosveshcheniye (Enlightenment)âa legal theoretical Bolshevik monthly published in St. Petersburg from December 1911 to June 1914. It was founded on Leninâs initiative as a successor to the journal Mysl, which had been closed down. On the eve of the First World War, Prosveshcheniye was closed down by the tsarist government. Publication was resumed in the autumn of 1917, but only one double issue came out.