There being only so long that even political junkies like me
can watch a nominating convention, I found myself channel surfing last night
and came upon a wonderful old 1981 movie, Reds, on Turner Classic Movies.
This is a film starring Diane Keaton and Warren Beatty that tells the story of
the great communist journalist John Reed. As I watched it, I experienced
that odd thrill one gets from having a personal connection to an historical
event. I have told this story in my autobiography, but that was 10 years ago
and I don’t think it is too soon to tell it again.
In the first part of the 20th century the leading
socialist newspaper in New York City was The Call. My paternal grandmother’s
maiden sister, my great aunt Fanny, worked on The Call as a secretary. On October 31st, John Reed, who was
in Petrograd reporting for The Call,
filed a dramatic account of the Bolshevik uprising which the Call
printed on page one with a banner headline.
Reed unequivocally declared the Bolsheviks to be the wave of the future,
and consigned Kerensky to the trash heap of history. He filed a twenty-five page cablegram, which
the Call edited very lightly and published virtually verbatim. The cable, which is too long to include here,
ends with a dramatic florish:
“Good to be
alive. Trotsky and Lenin through CALL
send to American revolutionary international socialists greeting from
first
proletarian republic of the world and call to arms for international social
revolution. Send me money."
How is it that I have the precise wording of
this historic document? Therein lies a
lovely story After Fanny had finished
transcribing the cable, she asked the editor whether she could keep the
original stack of cable pages, and he agreed.
The cable, yellowed with age but still intact, was passed from her to my
grandfather and grandmother, from them to my father, and from him to me as part
of the mass of papers in my parents' attic.
For many years, it simply sat on my shelf, but eventually, I decided to
donate it to the John Reed Archives in Houghton Library at Harvard [Reed, of
course, had been a Harvard graduate], in memory of my grandfather and
grandmother. This is the same library in
which I had sat, as a graduate student, reading the microfilm of the German
translation of James Beattie's Essay on
the Nature and Immutability of the Truth, and thereby establishing an
essential link in Immanuel Kant's knowledge of the sceptical arguments of David
Hume. It seemed appropriate that I repay
them in some way for their assistance during the writing of my doctoral
dissertation.
There is an amusing coda to the story. When I came to write the book about my
grandparents, I asked Houghton Library for a copy of the cable, so that I could
quote it in my book. They charged me a
fee, even though it was I who had donated it to the library. I wrote a restrainedly ironic letter to
Harvard’s President, Neil Rudenstine, and received a very contrite
apology. I urged him not to send
the money back, as that would, I suggested, not be a classy thing to do, and he
had the grace to accede to my suggestion.
I gather that in future the donors of documents will be able to get
copies of them gratis.
2 comments:
This is totally off topic, but in glancing at NYR Daily (the NY Review of Books' blog-like site) earlier today, I ran across a harrowing first-person account of the Beirut blast and aftermath. It's recent, so if you go to NYR Daily and scroll down a bit, you will see it.
"Send me money".
My parents printed and bound all of the emails (and, I think, the actual letters - I tried to send at least one a month) that I sent them when I was in the Peace Corps in Russia, and gave me a copy of it. I don't think I asked them to send me money, exactly, that many times, but it is a bit embarrassing how often I was asking them to do some petty task, or to buy and send me something. The stuff of great literature they were not.
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