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Since Lenin Died


Max Eastman

Since Lenin Died


Appendix I:
 

Lunacharsky on Trotsky’s Character


A LITTLE book of Revolutionary Silhouettes, by A.V. Lunacharsky, the Soviet Commissar of Education, has come to my hand just as this book goes to press. It contains such a poised and sensible estimate of Trotsky that I insert here a few paragraphs, hastily translated.



I first met Trotsky in 1905, after the event of January. He came to Geneva, I have forgotten whence, and was to speak with me at a big meeting called to discuss that tragedy. Trotsky was then unusually elegant, in distinction from all of us, and very beautiful. That elegance of his, and especially a kind of careless high-and-mighty manner of talking with no-matter-who, struck me very unpleasantly. I looked with great disapproval on that dude, who swung his leg over his knee, and dashed off with a pencil an outline of the impromptu speech he was going to make at the meeting. But Trotsky spoke mighty well ...

I met him very little in the revolution of 1905. He held himself apart not only from us, but from the Mensheviks. His work was mainly in the Soviet of Workers’ Deputies ...

I remember how somebody said in the presence of Lenin: “Khristalev’s star has fallen, and the strong man in the Soviet now is Trotsky.” Lenin sort of darkened for a minute,and then said: “Well, Trotsky won that with his tireless and fine work ...”

Trotsky’s popularity among the Petersburg proletariat up to the time of his arrest was very great, and it increased as a result of his extraordinary picturesque and heroic conduct in court. I ought to say that Trotsky, of all the Social Democratic leaders of 1905 and 1906, undoubtedly showed himself, in spite of his youth, the most thoroughly prepared; least of all he wore the imprint of a certain emigrant narrowness, which, as I have said, impeded even Lenin at that time; he more than any other realised what a broad struggle for sovereignty really is. And he came out of the revolution with the greatest gain in popularity. Neither Lenin nor Martov made any essential gain. Plekhanov lost much in consequence of his half-cadet tendencies. Trotsky from that time stood in the front rank ...

At the Stuttgart Congress of the International, Trotsky carried himself modestly, and advised us to, considering us all knocked out of the saddle by the reaction of 1906, and therefore unable to impose ourselves on the Congress.

Afterward Trotsky was allured by the conciliatory line, and the idea of the unity of the party. He occupied himself with this at various plenary sessions, and he dedicated his Vienna journal, Pravda, three-fourths to that perfectly hopeless idea ...

I will say here immediately that Trotsky succeeded very badly in organising, not only a party, but even a little group ... A tremendous imperiousness and a kind of inability or unwillingness to be at all caressing and attentive to people, an absence of that charm which always surrounded Lenin, condemned Trotsky to a certain loneliness. Remember that even some of his personal friends (I speak, of course, only of the political sphere) afterward became his sworn enemies ...

For work in political groups Trotsky seemed little fitted, but in the ocean of historic events, where such personal features lose their importance, only his favourable side came to the front ...

I always considered Trotsky a big man. Yes, and who could doubt it? In Paris [during the war] he had already mightily grown up in my eyes as a statesman, and thereafter he grew continually – whether because I knew him better, and he could better show the whole measure of his strength on the wider field that history offered him, or because the actual experience of the revolution and its problems enlarged him and increased the spread of his wings.

The agitational work of the spring of 1917 does not belong to the task of these silhouettes, but I ought to say that, under the influence of its enormous scope and blinding success, many people near to Trotsky were even inclined to see in him the genuine first leader of the Russian revolution. Thus M.C. Uritsky, who regarded Trotsky with immense respect, said once to me, and, it seems, Manuilsky: “You see, the great revolution is come, and, no matter how intelligent Lenin is, he begins to dim a little beside the genius of Trotsky.” That evaluation proved incorrect, not because it exaggerated the endowment and power of Trotsky, but because at that time the dimensions of the political genius of Lenin were not yet clear ...

The chief external endowments of Trotsky are his oratorical gift and his talent as a writer. I consider Trotsky probably the greatest orator of our times. I have heard in my day all the great parliamentary and popular orators of Socialism, and very many of the famous orators of the bourgeois world, and I should have difficulty in naming any of them, except Jaures, whom I might place beside Trotsky.

Effective presence, beautiful broad gesture, mighty rhythm of speech, loud, absolutely tireless voice, wonderful compactness, literariness of phrase, wealth of imagery, scorching irony, flowing pathos, and an absolutely extraordinary logic, really steel-like in its clarity – those are the qualities of Trotsky’s speech. He can speak epigrammatically, shoot a few remark ably well-aimed arrows, and he can pronounce such majestic political discourses as I have heard elsewhere only from Jaurès. I have seen Trotsky talk for two and a half to three hours to an absolutely silent audience, standing on their feet, and listening as though bewitched to an enormous political treatise ...

As to Trotsky’s inner structure as a leader, as I said, he was on the small scale of party organisation ... unapt and unskilful. He was impeded here by the extreme definiteness of the outlines of his personality.

Trotsky is prickly, imperative. Only in his relations with Lenin after their union, he showed always a touching and tender yieldingness. With the modesty characteristic of truly great men, he recognised Lenin’s priority.

As a political man of wisdom, Trotsky stands on the same height that he does as an orator. And how could it be otherwise? The most skilful orator whose speech is not illumined with thought is nothing but an idle virtuoso, and all his oratory is a tinkling cymbal. That love, of which the Apostle Paul speaks, may not be necessary to the orator, he may be full of hate, but thought is absolutely necessary ...

It seems to me that Trotsky is incomparably more orthodox than Lenin, although this will seem strange to many. Trotsky’s political course appears a little winding: he was neither a Menshevik nor a Bolshevik, sought the middle road, and then poured his stream into the Bolshevik river. Nevertheless, Trotsky always followed, so to speak, the accurate rules of revolutionary Marxism. Lenin feels himself a creator and proprietor in the realm of political thought, and very often proposes completely new slogans, which afterward give rich results. Trotsky is not distinguished by that boldness of thought; ... he is infinitely bold in his condemnations of Liberalism, of half-way Socialism, but not in any kind of innovation ...

It is often said of Trotsky that he is personally ambitious. That is of course pure nonsense. I remember one very significant phrase spoken by Trotsky at the time when Chernov accepted a place in the Government: “What contemptible ambitiousness – to abandon his historic position for a portfolio!” In that you have the whole of Trotsky. There is not a drop of vanity in him ...

Lenin also is not the least bit ambitious. I believe that Lenin never looks at himself, never glances in the mirror of history, never even thinks of what posterity will say of him – simply does his work. He does his work imperiously, not because power is sweet to him, but because he is sure that he is right, and cannot endure to have anybody spoil his work. His love of power grows out of his tremendous sureness and the correctness of his principles, and, if you please, out of an inability (very useful in a political leader) to see from the point of view of his opponent ...

In distinction from him, Trotsky often looks at himself. Trotsky treasures his historic role, and would undoubtedly be ready to make any personal sacrifice, not by any means excluding the sacrifice of his life, in order to remain in the memory of mankind with the halo of a genuine revolutionary leader. His love of power has the same character as Lenin’s, with the difference that he is oftener capable of making mistakes, not possessing the almost infallible instinct of Lenin, and that, being a man of choleric temperament, he is capable, although only temporarily, of being blinded by passion. While Lenin, equable and always blaster of himself, hardly ever even gets into a fit of irritation.

You must not think, however, that the second great leader of the Russian revolution yields in all respects to his colleague; there are points in which Trotsky indubitably excels him: he is more brilliant, he is more clear, he is more motile. Lenin is perfectly fitted for sitting in the president’s chair of the Soviet of People’s Commissars, and guiding with genius the world revolution, but obviously he could not handle the titanic task which Trotsky took upon his shoulders, those lightning trips from place to place, those magnificent speeches, fanfares of instantaneous commands, that role of continual electrifier now at one point and now another of the weakening army. There is not a man on the earth who could replace Trotsky there.

When a really great revolution comes, a great people always find for every part a suitable actor, and one of the signs of the greatness of our revolution is that the Communist Party advanced from its midst, or adopted from other parties and strongly implanted in its body, so many able people suited to this and that governmental function.

Most of all suited to their parts are the two strongest of the strong – Lenin and Trotsky.

 

Revolutionary Silhouettes
Moscow, 1923
A.V. LUNACHARSKY



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