Our Revolution: Essays on Working-Class and International Revolution, 1904-1917
Author of The Soul of the Russian Revolution
1918 Copyright, 1918, BY HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
The world has not known us Russian revolutionists. The world has sympathized with us; the world abroad has given aid and comfort to our refugees; the world, at times, even admired us; yet the world has not known us. Friends of freedom in Europe and America were keenly anxious to see the victory of our cause; they watched our successes and our defeats with breathless interest; yet they were concerned with material results. Our views, our party affiliations, our factional divisions, our theoretical gropings, our ideological constructions, to us the leading lights in our revolutionary struggles, were foreign to the world. All this was supposed to be an internal Russian affair.
The Revolution has now ceased to be an internal Russian affair. It has become of world-wide import. It has started to influence governments and peoples. What was not long ago a theoretical dispute between two underground revolutionary circles, has grown into a concrete historical power determining the fate of nations. What was the individual conception of individual revolutionary leaders is now ruling millions.
The world is now vitally interested in understanding Russia, in learning the history of our Revolution which is the history of the great Russian nation for the last fifty years. This involves, however, knowing not only events, but also the development of thoughts, of aims, of ideas that underlie and direct events; gaining an insight into the immense volume of intellectual work which recent decades have accumulated in revolutionary Russia.
We have selected Leon Trotzky's contribution to revolutionary thought, not because he is now in the limelight of history, but because his conceptions represent a very definite, a clear-cut and intrinsically consistent trend of revolutionary thought, quite apart from that of other leaders. We do not agree with many of Trotzky's ideas and policies, yet we cannot overlook the fact that these ideas have become predominant in the present phase of the Russian Revolution and that they are bound to give their stamp to Russian democracy in the years to come, whether the present government remains in power or not.
Leon Trotsky
OUR REVOLUTION
Essays on Working-Class and International Revolution, 1904-1917
LEON TROTZKY
MOISSAYE J. OLGIN
PREFACE
CONTENTS
LEON TROTZKY
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES
THE PROLETARIAT AND THE REVOLUTION
EXPLANATORY NOTES
THE EVENTS IN PETERSBURG
EXPLANATORY NOTES
PROSPECTS OF A LABOR DICTATORSHIP
EXPLANATORY NOTES
THE SOVIET AND THE REVOLUTION
THE LESSONS OF THE GREAT YEAR
ON THE EVE OF A REVOLUTION
TWO FACES
THE GROWING CONFLICT
WAR OR PEACE?
TROTZKY ON THE PLATFORM IN PETROGRAD
INDEX
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