Trotsky (47 page)

Read Trotsky Online

Authors: Bertrand M. Patenaude

especially strong among the youth: Jack Weber to Trotsky, November 22, 1937, Glotzer papers, box 4; Jan Frankel to Trotsky, December 23, 1937, TEP 1263; Israel Kugler to Trotsky, November 17, 1938, TEP 2422.

four out of seventy-five votes: Jan Frankel to Trotsky, January 2, 1938, TEP 1265.

“totalitarian” twins bearing a “deadly similarity”: Leon Trotsky,
The Revolution Betrayed,
Max Eastman, trans. (Dover, 2004), 208, 210.

This confounded the Trotskyists: Shachtman, “The Soviet Union and the World War,”
New International
, April 1940.

The Germans had launched their blitzkrieg: Craig II, 659–61.

the Soviets arrested and deported hundreds of thousands of Poles…Katyn Forest Massacre: Allen Paul,
Katyn: The Untold Story of Stalin’s Polish Massacre
(Scribner’s, 1991).

“The USSR in War”:
In Defense of Marxism,
3–21.

“nothing else would remain”:
In Defense Of Marxism,
9, 14–15.

took his followers by surprise: Glotzer, 315;
In Defense of Marxism,
30.

In Trotsky’s view, the Red Army…was serving as a vehicle for progress in Poland:
In Defense of Marxism,
18.

Shachtman had now joined forces with Burnham:
In Defense of Marxism
, ix–x; Deutscher III, 382.

Anatoly Lunacharsky…wrote a profile of him: Anatoly Vasilievich Lunacharsky,
Revolutionary Silhouettes,
Michael Glenny, trans. (Penguin, 1967), 61–62, 66.

“a man of exceptional abilities”: Volkogonov, 18.

second congress of the Russian Social Democrats: Deutscher I, 60–69; Volkogonov, 25–28.

Our Political Tasks:
Knei-Paz, 176–199; Deutscher I, 73–77; Volkogonov, 30–31.

his break with the Mensheviks: Knei-Paz, 206–14.

His ineptitude as a conciliator: Deutscher I, 160–64; Knei-Paz, 180.

“the poisonous seeds of its own destruction”: Trotsky quoted in 31.

Trotsky turned down Lenin’s offer: Knei-Paz, 225.

“Go where you belong from now on: into the dustbin of history!”: Ulam, 363–73; Deutscher I, 259; Knei-Paz, 509; Glotzer, 125.

Trotsky’s passivity in the struggle to succeed Lenin: Glotzer, 149–53.

“In the time of revolutionary storm”: Eastman,
Heroes
, 258–59.

“sharing the bitter fate”: Ulam, 373.

Trotsky’s account of the October events:
Istoriia russkoi revoliutsii,
Vol. 2/2, 277–78.

Eastman…and his wife visited Prinkipo: Eastman,
Companions,
114–15.

Eastman was strikingly handsome: John P. Diggins, “Getting Hegel out of History: Max Eastman’s Quarrel with Marxism,”
American Historical Review,
Vol. 79, No. 1 (February 1974), 38–39 [hereafter: Diggins].

pale blue color of his eyes…kept insisting were black: Eastman,
Love and Revolution,
557–58.

“Trotsky’s throat was throbbing and his face was red”: Eastman,
Companions,
114.

twice tried and twice acquitted: Eastman,
Love and Revolution
, 85–99, 118–24.

an invitation from Lenin and Trotsky: Eastman,
Love and Revolution,
78.

Lenin’s still-secret political testament: Eastman,
Love and Revolution,
442–55.

the dialectic, a principle of change…“historical materialism”: Walter Kaufmann,
Hegel: A Reinterpretation
(University of Notre Dame Press, 1978), 153–62; Edmund Wilson,
To the Finland Station: A Study in the Writing and Acting of History
(Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1972), 210–30; Max Eastman, “Russia and the Socialist Ideal,”
Harper’s
, March 1938; George Novack, “Trotsky’s Views on Dialectical Materialism,” in
Leon Trotsky
, 94–102.

Eastman was puzzled by the connection…the library of the Marx-Engels Institute: Eastman,
Love and Revolution,
125–32, 416–18; Diggins, “Getting Hegel out of History.”

Marx and Lenin: The Science of Revolution:
Eastman,
Love and Revolution,
460–63.

Hook and Eastman were Dewey’s “bright boys”: Eastman,
Love and Revolution,
499–500.

“he became almost hysterical”: Eastman,
Companions,
115.

“to trim Marx’s beard”: Van, 63; Lunacharsky,
Revolutionary Silhouettes
, 66.

Eastman’s “petty-bourgeois revisionism”: Eastman,
Love and Revolution,
593–95.

fixated on the subject of Eastman’s heresy…“Pragmatism, empiricism is the greatest curse”: George Novack, “Trotsky’s Views on Dialectical Materialism,” in
Leon Trotsky,
94–102;
In Defense of Marxism,
44–47; Shachtman to Trotsky, March 5, 1939, TEP 5107.

an article in
Harper’s
in March 1938: Eastman, “Russia and the Socialist Idea.”

that Eastman be dealt with “mercilessly”: Trotsky to Burnham, March 22, 1939, TEP 7458.

Burnham was prepared to defend the October Revolution…but not dialectical materialism: Shachtman to Trotsky, March 5, 1939, TEP 5107.

Hook…Dewey…Edmund Wilson: Diggins, 59–60.

the “greatest blow”…“the best of gifts to the Eastmans of all kinds”: Trotsky to Shachtman, January 20, 1939, TEP 10337; Trotsky to Shachtman, March 9, 1939, Glotzer papers, box 3.

the intellectual equivalent of an appendectomy: Kelly, 77.

“Trotsky does not write on the dialectic”: Hansen to Trotsky, June 23, 1939, TC 18:12.

a defense of Marxism’s core principles: Trotsky to Cannon, January 9, 1940, TEP 7558; Knei-Paz, 485–86; Glotzer, 285–86.

Events in Europe in the autumn of 1939: Craig II, 659–61.

the Trotskyist Minority…proposed a referendum: Cannon to Trotsky, September 8 and October 26, 1939, TEP, 13874, 6222; Hansen to Reba Hansen, October 19, 1939, Hansen papers, 19:1;
In Defense of Marxism,
33.

the vote was eight to four: Cannon to Trotsky, November 8, 1939, TEP 523.

the Soviet invasion of Finland: Craig II, 661–62.

“A Petty-Bourgeois Opposition in the Socialist Workers Party”:
In Defense of Marxism,
43–62.

“The ABC of Materialist Dialectics”:
In Defense of Marxism,
48–52.

not sure how it related to current debates: Hansen to Trotsky, January 1, 1940, TEP 1814.

“Cannon represents the proletarian party”:
In Defense of Marxism,
61.

his analysis of the Finnish events:
In Defense of Marxism,
56–59.

“moral and material support”: Stanley [Stanley Plastrik] to Trotsky, December 23, 1939, TEP 5379.

utterly fantastic: Manny Garrett [Geltman] to Bob, December 26, 1939, Glotzer papers, box 2; Burnham, “The Politics of Desperation,”
New International,
January 1940; Glotzer, 305–6.

the Old Man had gone “completely haywire”: Glotzer to John [Jan Frankel], January 21, 1940, Glotzer papers, box 12; Shachtman, “The Crisis in the American Party,”
New International,
March 1940.

Sherman Stanley…secretary-guard: Young to Charles Cornell, May 3, 1940, TEP 7239.

“the most monstrous and shameful non-sequitur”: Stanley [Stanley Plastrik] to Trotsky, December 23, 1939, TEP 5379.

“petty-bourgeois,” a time-honored Bolshevik term of abuse: Van, 130.

“L.D. has laid the gauntlet”: Manny Garrett [Geltman] to Bob, December 26, 1939, Glotzer papers, box 2.

“enraged petty-bourgeois”: Trotsky to Friends, December 27, 1939, TC 13:31.

“Stalinist agents working in our midst”: Trotsky to Cannon, December 29, 1939, TEP 7555.

laying the basis for a split: Hansen to Trotsky, January 1, 1940, TEP 1814.

“wrong side of the barricades”: Trotsky to Shachtman, December 20, 1939, TC 12:14.

Hansen’s…reputation for heavy-handed sarcasm: Stanley [Stanley Plastrik] to Trotsky, December 23, 1939, TEP 5379; Hansen to Trotsky, March 15, 1940, TEP 1820.

“declassed kibitzers” and “petty-bourgeois smart alecks”: Cannon to Trotsky, January 11, January 18, and February 20, 1940, TEP 530, 532, 6203.

a “madhouse”: Hansen to Trotsky, January 15, 1940, Hansen papers, 34:3.

“Where’s the civil war in Finland?”: Hansen to Trotsky, March 15, 1940, TEP 1820.

Howls of laughter: Hansen to Paul Anderson, March 7, 1940, Hansen papers, 18:6.

“provincials, blockheads, stupid yokels”: Hansen to Trotsky, January 15, 1940, Hansen papers, 34:3.

Trotsky gritted his teeth: Trotsky to Friends, January 3, 1940, TC 12:32.

He had lived in the Bronx: Trotsky obituary,
The New York Times,
August 22, 1940.

“The oppositionists, I am informed”:
In Defense of Marxism,
104.

“the Jewish petty-bourgeois elements”:
In Defense of Marxism,
109; also, Trotsky to Cannon, October 10, 1937, and March 27, 1939, TEP 7511, 8108.

“petty-bourgeois disdain”:
In Defense of Marxism,
145.

Burnham’s “brutal challenge”: Trotsky to Friends, January 3, 1940, TEP 7556.

“each contribution by the OM”: Cannon, “On the Party,” undated [spring 1940] manuscript, TEP 6238.

“The Finnish events were absolutely decisive”: Hansen to Trotsky, April 20, 1940, TEP 1823.

“petty-bourgeois windbags”: Cannon, “Measures to Combat a Split,” January 24, 1940, TEP 13879.

“a vigorous intervention in favor of unity”: Trotsky to Albert Goldman, February 19, 1940, TC 10:66.

“Back to the Party!”:
In Defense of Marxism,
153–55.

“enemies and traitors”…“war of political extermination”: Cannon to Trotsky, February 20, 1940, TEP 6203.

special convention of the Socialist Workers Party: Farrell Dobbs to Trotsky, April 10, 1940, TEP 799.

Shachtman announced…to form a separate party: Hansen to Trotsky, April 20, 1940, TEP 1823.

“The OM did nothing”: Stanley [Stanley Plastrik] quoted in Young to Trotsky, May 3, 1940, TEP 7239.

Frankel on the other side of the barricades…“the old
Iskra
days”: Young to Trotsky, May 3, 1940, TEP 7239; Young to Trotsky, July 6, 1940, TEP 6081; Van to Trotsky, March 4, 1940, TEP 5664; Dobbs to Trotsky, February 29, 1940, TEP 795.

Trotsky was shaken by the loss: Trotsky to Young, July 29, 1940, TEP 10953; Trotsky to Van, January 7 and February 27, 1940, TEP 10702, 10203.

a note to Trotsky: Sylvia Ageloff to Trotsky, January 25, 1940, TEP 122.

Sylvia was invited to come to the house: Trotsky to Sylvia Ageloff, January 26, 1940, TEP 11000.

“petty bourgeois Menshevism of the minority”: Robins to Rose Karsner, February 3, 1940, TC 24:16.

“the factional struggle provides a
perfect
cover”: Wright to Walter O’Rourke, March 28, 1940, TEP 7204.

As Sylvia left Trotsky’s home: “Memorandum of talk with Rosmers,” August 23, 1940, TC 24:6.

Chapter Ten: Lucky Strike

last will and testament: TC 22:4.

recent examination by his doctor: Hansen to Usick [Wright], September 21, 1940, TC 22:4.

“This magnetism is colossal”: Tucker,
Stalin as Revolutionary,
35–36.

“He was my master”:
My Life,
394.

London in October 1902:
My Life,
142–43; Deutscher I, 48–49; Ulam, 174–75.

“We were lying side by side”:
My Life,
327–28.

‘It’s a bowl of mush we have”:
Diary,
83–84.

an assassination attempt: Ulam, 428–30.

“He had a way of
falling in love
with people”:
Diary,
84.

“Lenin and I had several sharp clashes”:
Diary,
85.

Krupskaya writes to say:
My Life,
511.

Lenin’s testament: Deutscher II, 57–58; Ulam, 562–63.

Trotsky was pressured by Stalin…avoid a premature clash: Deutscher II, 169–70, 247–48; Eastman,
Love and Revolution,
442–55, 510–16.

Trotsky’s shabby treatment of Eastman: Cannon to Trotsky, February 20, 1940,

TEP 6203; Trotsky to Hansen, February 29, 1940, TEP 8444.

Max Eastman, accompanied by his wife…more mellow: Eastman,
Love and Revolution,
596; on Trotsky’s mellowing, see also Van, 27; Hansen, “With Trotsky in Coyoacan,” xxiii.

March 1940…Veracruz harbor: Buchman describes his films in “Black and White Roll,” TC 32:12.

Young was born Alexander Buchman: Buchman biography on Lubitz Trotskyana Net, http://www.trotskyana.net/Trotskyists/Bio-Bibliographies/bio-bibliographies.html; Suzi Weissman remembrance, Buchman, box 1.

arranged for him to visit Trotsky in Mexico: Frank Glass to Trotsky, August 30, 1939, TEP 1429; Cannon to Trotsky, October 27, 1939, TEP 520.

Trotsky’s cactus-hunting picnics: “Black and White Roll” Robins memoir, TC 30:1.

Avenida Viena 19: Irish O’Brien to Usick, May 14, 1939, TEP 12537; Hansen, “The Attempted Assassination of
Leon Trotsky,”
in Leon Trotsky, 5–12; Natalia, 251; Mosley, 37; Julius H. Klyman, “Revolutionist in Exile,”
St. Louis Post-Dispatch,
March 26, 1940.

feeding his rabbits and chickens…began at the Blue House: Lillian to Sara Weber, December 30, 1938, and February 4, 1939, TEP 12487, 12488.

later arranged to purchase: Trotsky to Dear Friends, March 20 and April 16, 1940, TC 9:75, 9:77.

Rhode Island Reds…fifty in all: Hansen to Reba Hansen, October 13, 1939, Hansen papers, 19:1.

new three-decker cages: Al Goldman to Hansen, February 29, 1940, Hansen papers, 15:4; “Black and White Roll.”

the chief buck take a hard bite: Hansen to Reba Hansen, October 13, 1939, Hansen papers, 19:1.

“a flock of rabbits”: Eastman, “Political Murder à Outrance,”
The New Leader,
December 14, 1959.

quiz the guards: Klyman, “Revolutionist in Exile.”

“Well, that’s all there is”: “Black and White Roll.”

inspecting the alarm system: Buchman to Glotzer, January 5 and August 27, 1990, Glotzer papers, box 48.

Other books

Kursed by Lindsay Smith
Stripping Asjiah II by Sa'Rese Thompson.
Dead by Morning by Beverly Barton
Arise by Tara Hudson
Shadowed by Kariss Lynch
Embracing Change by Roome, Debbie
The Twins by Gary Alan Wassner
Beneath a Trojan Moon by Anna Hackett