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Special pages :
Letter to Maxim Gorky, After March 6, 1913
Source: Lenin Collected Works, Progress Publishers, 1976, Moscow, Volume 35, page 92
Dear A. M.,
I have read the âManifestoâ[1] today....
It seems there is a complete amnesty for writers. You should try to get hackâhaving first found out, of course, whether they wonât play you a dirty trick on account of the âschoolâ,[2] etc. Probably they wonât be able to prosecute you for this.
I hope you donât take the view that one mustnât âacceptâ an amnesty? This would he wrong. A revolutionary, as things are today, will do more from inside Russia, and our deputies even sign âthe solemn oathâ.
But you donât have to sign anything, only to make use of the amnesty. Drop me a line about your opinion and your plans. Perhaps you will call here it you do moveâ after all, itâs on your way!
And for a revolutionary writer to have the possibility of roaming around Russia (the new Russia) means that he is afterwards able to hit a hundred limes harder at the Romanovs and Co....
Did you get my last letter? Somehow we havenât had news from you for a long time. Are you well?
Yours,
Lenin
P.S. Did you get the letter from N. K. with the material?