V. I.   Lenin

Two Worlds


Published:
Source: Lenin Collected Works, Progress Publishers, 1964, Moscow, Volume 24, pages 30-31.
Translated: Isaacs Bernard
Transcription\Markup: B. Baggins and D. Walters
Public Domain: Lenin Internet Archive 1999 (2005). You may freely copy, distribute, display and perform this work; as well as make derivative and commercial works. Please credit “Marxists Internet Archive” as your source.
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Capitalist newspapers like Rech and Novoye Vremya[3] have published articles attacking our passage through Germany and insinuating that the new arrivals were aiding the German imperialists.[1]

Izvestia of the Soviet of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies[4] reprints in full the report published in yesterday’s Pravda[2] [5] which was presented to the Executive Committee of the Soviet of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies on the very first day after our arrival. In addition to the report, Izvestia publishes the resolution of the Executive Committee, which it gives in the following words:

Having heard the report of Comrades Zurabov and Zinoviev, the Executive Committee decided to take the matter up immediately with the Provisional Government and to take steps towards securing the immediate return to Russia of all emigrants, irrespective of their political views and their attitude towards the war. The results of the negotiations with the government will be published in the near future.—Editors.”

Here you have a small—a very small, but very characteristic—picture of two worlds. One, the world of the capitalists, Rech, Russkaya Volya, Novoye Vremya, dark hints, vile insinuations against the socialists; the other, the world of the revolutionary democrats, of the workers’ and soldiers’ deputies, who in a calm, consistent, and dignified manner have decided to “take steps”. Steps leading to what? Steps leading to what was not done by the Provisional Government!

Is this not tantamount to a censure of the Provisional Government?

And is not this censure warranted?

Mind you, the Executive Committee, in passing this resolution, was fully aware of the political dissensions that existed between it and the Bolsheviks. For capitalists this would be a pretext for insinuations. Human dignity is something one need not look for in the world of capitalists.


Notes

[1] The famous—notoriously famous—Russkaya Volya in its article against us provides “incriminating” material quite in the vein of Rech. Won’t Milyukov and Co. be ashamed of such a neighbour? —Lenin

[2] Will Rech dare to publish it? —Lenin

[3] [PLACEHOLDER.]

[4] [PLACEHOLDER.]

[5] [PLACEHOLDER.]


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