Warning

Some thinkers have sadly concluded that the enchantment Nadezhda Mandelstam recognized in the word revolution, “to which ­whole nations have succumbed,” continues to bewitch intellectuals. In his argument with dissident scientist Andrei Sakharov, Solzhenitsyn accused him of having “contracted the squint characteristic of the age—­viewing all revolutions with general approval.” This failing is not “personal,” Solzhenitsyn opined, but “is the result . . .  of the general hypnosis of a ­whole generation, which cannot wake up abruptly” and learn the danger of revolutionism in its many forms. “No,” Solzhenitsyn admonished, “let us not wish ­either ‘revolution’ or ‘counter-­revolution’ on our worst enemies.”

–––Gary Saul Morson, Wonder Confronts Certainty: Russian Writers on the Timeless Questions  ,And Why Their Answers Matter, 175

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