“At the beginning
of April, Lenin arrived with his suite, via Germany in the ‘sealed box-car.’ Before
his departure from Zurich, he declared Kerensky and Chkheidze to be ‘traitors
to the revolution,’ and on April 4, at a meeting of the Bolsheviks, he invited
the Social Democrats to ‘throw off their old linen’ and assume the name ‘Communists.’”
My
father-in-law was typically generous: The two-volume boxed set of Peter Taylor’s
Complete Stories, published by the Library of America, and an attractive
little volume, Somewhere Becoming Rain: Collected Writings on Philip Larkin,
by the late Clive James. In his introduction he writes:
“[T]he
struggle continues. People of surprisingly high intelligence have managed to
convince themselves that Larkin’s poetry didn’t amount to much at all. And
presumably, to them, it doesn’t, although their dismissal of him makes you
wonder whose poetry they think does matter, if his does not.”
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