[39] Ibid., p. 88.
[40] Berliner Tageblatt, May 18, 1920. The story is repeated with further variations, in the fourth edition, published in 1917, extracts from which are given in the Morning Post, August 12, 1920. In this edition Nilus quotes certain enigmatic statements of the late Theodor Herzl as proof of a secret Jewish teaching. It happens that the correspondence with Herzl on this subject is in the possession of the present writer. It has nothing to do with a secret Jewish teaching.
[41] Fourth edit., cap. III. (Quoted by Morning Post, Aug. 12, 1920.)
[42] "The Jewish Peril," pp. 12, 13, 14, 32.
[43] Lond., 1898.
[44] Pobyedonoszeff: "Reflections" (English edit.), pp. 26, 27, 28. Allowance must be made for the different styles and qualities of the two translations.
[45] "The Jewish Peril," pp. 2, 5.
[46] Mautner: Der Bolschewismus (Stuttgart, 1920), p. 95. See also Landau-Aldanov: Lenine (Paris, 1920), pp. 31-32. It is amusing to note that the Morning Post (July 21, 1920) counts almost all these Jewish Mensheviks as Bolsheviks.
[47] The date of the original Russian edition is unknown to the present writer, but a German edition was published at Zurich in 1918.
[48] Séménoff: "The Russian Government and the Massacres" (Lond., 1907).