640
NOTES
The article “ To the Social-Democrats”, intended only for Party
members, was published in Cracow as a hectographed leaflet.
p. 529
Azef, Y. F. (1869-1918)—one of the founders of the Socialist-
Revolutionary Party, became a secret police agent in 1892. He
made preparations for and carried out several acts of terrorism to
win the confidence of the S. R. leadership. On the other hand, he
betrayed members of the S. R. Party to the police. He was exposed
in 1908.
p. 532
A line seems to be missing in this passage in Pravda. The draft
resolution analysed by Lenin proposed hanging up posters of The
Daily Herald as well as of The Daily Citizen, which was in the
hands of opportunists, on the premises occupied by Party organi-
sations.
The Daily Herald was founded in April 1912 by George Lans-
bury as a Left-wing Labour newspaper. In 1922 it became the or-
gan of the British Labour Party.
p. 548
The wild landlord, a character in M. Saltykov-Shchedrin’s fairy-
tale of the same name.
p. 551
The explanation offered by Kasso, the Minister of Education, in
the Duma was prompted by a question of forty-four members of
the Duma tabled on December 14 (27), 1912, regarding the arrest
of thirty-four secondary-school pupils in St. Petersburg during a
meeting at Witmer’s private gymnasium. The pupils were suspect-
ed by the secret police of being members of an illegal
political group. The question was discussed at five sittings
of the Duma. On February 6 (19), 1913, the majority voted for
a formula of procedure to the next business that considered the
tsarist Minister’s explanation unsatisfactory.
p. 571
The words quoted by Lenin are a paraphrase of two lines in N. Nek-
rasov’s “Cradle Song”, which read as follows:
You will be an official without
And a scoundrel within....
p. 593
Die Zeit ( Time)—a daily newspaper published by the Bund in Yid-
dish in St. Petersburg from December 20, 1912 (January 2, 1913)
to May 5 (18), 1914.
p. 600
In the present edition, the article “Spare Cash” includes—between
the phrase “national juggling” and the sentence “This is a speci-
men of predatory economy”—an insertion discovered in 1941,
which was missing in the text of the article as it first appeared in
Pravda No. 62, on March 15, 1913, and in the second and third
editions of Lenin’s Collected Works.
p. 601
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
THE LIFE AND WORK
O F
V. I. LENIN
Outstanding Dates
(
,
pril 1912-March 1913)
643
April-later
part of June
(N.S.)
April 22
(May 5)
April 25
(May 8)
April 26
(May 9)
May 6 ( 19)
May 8 and 9
(21 and 22)
May 10 ( 23)
May 22
(June 4)
May 31
(June 13)
1912
Lenin lives in Paris
The first issue of Pravda, a legal Bolshevik daily,
is published.
Lenin’s articles “The Fourth Duma Election Cam-
paign and the Tasks of the Revolutionary Social-
Democrats”, “The Liquidators Against the Party”
and “In Memory of Herzen” are published in So-
tsial-Demokrat No. 26.
At a meeting of the Paris section of the R.S.D.L.P.
Organisation Abroad, Lenin reports on the Lena
shootings, on strikes in Russia and on the Party
tactics necessitated by those events.
Lenin’s article “Landownership in European Rus-
sia” is published in Nevskaya Zvezda No. 3.
Lenin’s article “The Trudoviks and the Worker
Democrats” is published in Pravda Nos. 13 and 14.
Lenin’s article “Political Parties in Russia” is
published in Nevskaya Zvezda No. 5.
Lenin’s articles “The Essence of the ‘Agrarian
Problem in Russia’” and “Some Conclusions To Be
Drawn from the Pre-election Mobilisation” are
published in Nevskaya Zvezda No. 6.
Lenin reads the paper “The Revolutionary Upsurge
of the Russian Proletariat” at the Salle de l’Alca-
zar, at a meeting organised by the Paris section
of the R.S.D.L.P. Organisation Abroad.
Lenin’s article “Economic and Political Strikes”
is published in Nevskaya Zvezda No. 10.
THE LIFE AND WORK OF V. I. L E N I N
644
June 3 ( 16)
June 4 ( 17)
Latter part,
June ( N.S.)
June 10 ( 23)
June 17 ( 30)
June 21 ( July 4)
June 24 ( July 7)
End of June
July 1 ( 14)
July 6 ( 19)
Not later than
July 8 ( 21)
July 11 ( 24)
Lenin’s article “The Problem of Resettlement” is
published in Nevskaya Zvezda No. 11.
Lenin’s articles “The Revolutionary Upswing”,
“The Slogans of the All-Russia Conference of the
R.S.D.L.P. in January 1912 and the May Day
Movement”, “The Liquidators Oppose Revolution-
ary Mass Strikes” and “‘Uniters’” are published
in Sotsial-Demokrat No. 27.
Lenin reads a paper on “Revolutionary Upswing
in Russia” in Leipzig.
Lenin moves from Paris to Cracow to establish
closer ties with Russia and give greater guidance
to the Bolshevik Duma group and the Editorial
Board of Pravda.
Lenin’s article “The Nature and Significance of
Our Polemics Against the Liberals” is published
in Nevskaya Zvezda No. 12.
Lenin’s article “Capitalism and ‘Parliament’” is
published in Nevskaya Zvezda No. 13.
Lenin in Cracow moves to 218 Ul. Zwierzyniec.
Lenin’s article “The Elections and the Opposition”
is published in Nevskaya Zvezda No. 14.
Lenin writes the article “The Situation in the
R.S.D.L.P. and the Immediate Tasks of the
Party”. The article was published in Gazeta Ro-
botnicza, the “Rozlamist” opposition newspaper
of the Social-Democratic Party of Poland and
Lithuania, No. 15-16, on July 3 (16).
Lenin’s articles “The Significance of the St. Pe-
tersburg Elections” and “A Comparison of the Sto-
lypin and the Narodnik Agrarian Programmes”
are published in Nevskaya Zvezda No. 15.
Lenin writes a letter to Pravda exposing Trotsky
as a liar and intriguer.
Lenin writes the item “A Reply to the Liquidators”
for Pravda, insisting on a more determined fight
against the liquidators at the Fourth Duma elec-
tions.
Lenin writes a letter to Nevskaya Zvezda emphati-
cally condemning the editors’ fear of polemics
against the liquidators.
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