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Collected Works of V. I. Lenin - Vol. 13 - From Marx to Mao

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528 NOTES122123124125126127128129129a<strong>13</strong>0<strong>13</strong>1<strong>13</strong>2<strong>13</strong>3<strong>13</strong>4<strong>13</strong>5<strong>13</strong>6Karl <strong>Marx</strong>, Capital, <strong>Vol</strong>. III, Moscow, 1959, pp. 634-720. p. 304Ibid., p. 761. p. 305Ibid., p. 761-62. p. 306Ibid., p. 787. p. 314Ibid., p. 790. p. 315Ibid., p. 792. p. 316Ibid., p. 785, 789-90. p. 317Karl <strong>Marx</strong>, Theorien über den Mehrwert, 2. Teil, Berlin, DietzVerlag, 1959, S. 36. p. 320See present edition, <strong>Vol</strong>. 10, p. 341. p. 346The words in inverted commas “Chi ... chi ... etc. ,” are aparaphrase <strong>of</strong> a passage from Chernyshevsky’s Essays on the GogolPeriod in Russian Literature. This passage, ridiculing a controversialtrick used by the journalist Senkovsky (“Baron Brambeus”) readsas follows: “A witty comment <strong>of</strong> Dead Souls might be written in thefollowing manner: After giving the title <strong>of</strong> the book, ‘TheAdventures <strong>of</strong> Chichikov, or Dead Souls’, the commenta<strong>to</strong>r mightstart straight <strong>of</strong>f with: ‘The bad dentures <strong>of</strong> Chi! chi! kov—don’tthink that I have sneezed, dear reader ... etc., etc.’ Some twentyyears ago there may have been readers who would think that witty.”p. 346K. <strong>Marx</strong> and F. Engels, Selected Correspondence, Moscow, p. 537.p. 358K. <strong>Marx</strong> and F. Engels, Selected <strong>Works</strong>, <strong>Vol</strong>, I, 1955, p. 578. p. 359Pravda (Truth)—a monthly Menshevik magazine dealing withquestions <strong>of</strong> art, literature, and social activities, published inMoscow in 1904-06. p. 365Stepan Razin and Yemelyan Pugachov—leaders <strong>of</strong> great peasantrevolts in Russia in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. p. 369Saryn na kichku (literally, “<strong>to</strong> the prow, lubbers!”)—a cry said <strong>to</strong>have been used by <strong>Vol</strong>ga freebooters ordering the people on aboarded vessel <strong>to</strong> lie down in the bows and stay there until thelooting was over. p. 369Plekhanov’s “Diary”—Dnevnik Sotsial-Demokrata (Diary <strong>of</strong> aSocial-Democrat)—a non-periodical organ published at considerableintervals by Plekhanov in Geneva from March 1905 <strong>to</strong> April 1912.

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