Wednesday, July 14, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five . Wednesay, Juy 4,191 HEMIH-_NDALYPae-v A redeeming rkythm prophetic books, are much more adjust his mask and put s'me Peter Gould BURNT TOAST, important for us than anything shape on, or pass for a tree, be- Knopf, $3.10. else. For in this type of writing fore we pass each other an- the By NEAL BRUSS we can "write ourselves out," trail and tip caps, or. stop t Writing visionary literatureas come to discover ourselves in exchange light words, as way- many people are presently, is al- language and find rhythms and farers do (it could happen; way astrule wr h prese in a- words which can serve as the days and nights are travellirs ways a struggle with whatever in frequencies of our being. As this of eternity, poets say). tenitiousness or cliquishness onto writing always involves a dis- This book, which does not o- tenpagessIftherc sessmoeo covery of a new freedom, it is vde a self-sustaining mytiilogi- the page. If there were more of always a source of encourage- cal universe or speak sti asght the visionry-o lnsbestheass- ment for others. from the type of life found every- problem. But of course writing is We find this type of writing in where in the West, has special the very path we have chosen for forms ranging from vast original problems for the average readeur, fulfillment, so- we have these dif- mythologies (Blake) to continu- a moral problem. What it is O y- ficulties. And the more we want ing autobiographies (Henry Mil ing to do, why it was x rits en, a "success" and lack patience, ler)- Peter Gould's Burnt Toast what some of the ssietnces the more our energies seem to de- is a hybrid, a story of a Ver- mean may make no sse with- feat themselves. mont life in which visionary out a bit of insight into Zen and But the "successes," be they images (especially memories of a American Indian lore of visoin- single perfect phrases that pop father's influence), are pursued. ary initiation. into our thoughts or sustained And while the book's carping on More, the book opens prey- the intimate / rural / organic ing on the history of Lbe atio / magic business is obnoxious in News Service, particulalyty ho". its seriousness from the begin- the LNS circle fled to Veriont ning ("The night before, for sup- escaped politics in farming, and per, we'd had brown rice and split among themselles. Burnt vegetables and sesame toast and Toast is a sort of sequel to the Verandah's onion soup with goat LNS history, Ray Mungo's Fa- cheese melted in. Then peach mous Long Ago. pie and camomile tea."), Gould Readers should also have some his written himself out through- patience, if not experience, pur- out. And that is redeeming. suing unknowns. Gould'a is nam- In putting himself through a ed in his title: spiritual rite of passage, coming I may as well tell you now: to a place in a community of dif- you've set off on the wreng foot ferent spirits, and fulfilling the in- already, if you've just hap- fluences of his father, Gould in pened to code, somewhere into his persona, Silent, speaks in an your memory, a slice of white easy and gentle language with toast, mildly scorched, even the rhythm of the movement of blackened, buttered or no, impressions: hanging in the air over Spirit And walking, and sitting, and Lake (the image of fire over books cc walking again, I met nobody, water). That's not what I saw, which is no one I can recall, coming or that's just a name I have for it. works of going - but when I tell this Though it presented itself as a ' These story again, it won't be like piece of burnt toast, it seemr'd weakness this at all, I know. Walking the to say, in the same iustant, this Iles Gou same path twice, you can't help is only a symbol: what I am and, in I but find it different: some other like is what I am not; things passes. time, coming round tze last that you see are as provisional poet" cea bend, I'll chance upon some as words themselves, tempor- marks a shadow, a shuffling hour, or a ary perceptions that last till annoying fleet-footed minute, who, see- you know what's really there, more ou ing me, has just enough time to Some readers will resent the tences ar KARL RADEK A clown to be taken -Photo by Dianne Davis 'nstant, lyric sexuality, into the fluid language of his always the case with revery: this kind. . . . we stand and listen to are not problems or the wind that's come from so ses as much as obsta- far, carrying his father on his ld faces on his w:y, back, wind and the father wind the course of the book, that pound on our door for His crowing, "I'm a food; the three of us look at ases, the life-,iyle trade- each other as the wind passes nd menues become les by-not now at least, not set; . Gould comes to write not this night but some other, t of his aw, the sen- we'll know when e easier, the book lapses to let him in. seriously Sweden, Russia and China. Kar Warren Lerner, KARL RA- Radek is viewed by most bour DEK: THE LAST INTERNA- geois and Marxist historians a TIONALIST, Stanford University the outstanding clown of interna Press, $7.95. tional socialism. This is not to b' denied, yet if one reads Lerner' By ROBERT BERNARD biography carefully, he will rea Warren Lerner, in his exciting lize that Radek must be taker and excellent biography of Karl seriously not simply as a journa Radek, very carefully portrays list and a polemicist, but also a a side of Radek's activities that a political theoretician, strategist I doubt anyone has ever been tactician, activist, and 'behind fully aware of. the-scenes' manipulator. I doub Born in 1885 in Lvov, Poland, if even Lenin was fully aware o educated in a gymnasium in Cra- just how instrumental a role Ra cow, Karl Radek eventually came dek played in the events sur to play a drastically underevalu- rounding the Russian Revolution ated role in leftist politics in Po- Of course, Radek was a clowi land, G e r m a n y, Switzerland, and a scoundrel. This biography rl r- Is l- ie 's r- n ~m s, among others, fully documents this fact. One of the most famous anecdotes about Radek (which Lerner believes is a myth) took place just after Radek capitulated to Stalin in 1929. Stalin is supposed to have said on this occasion: "Com- rade Radek, we are pleased to have you back, but you must watch your jokes and gibes about me. Do not forget that I am not only the Secretary Gen- eral of the Communist Party, I am also the leader of the world revolution." Radek is supposed to have been unable to resist the reply: "That, Comrade Stalin, is your joke, not mine!" Lerner reveals Radek's role in combating revisionism in the Second International, in helping to transport Lenin from Switz- erland to Petrograd in 1917, in handling German affairs for the Communist International, and in attempting to forestall the de- bacle in China in 1927. However, Lerner does not feel that Radek functioned effectively as a po- litical theorist. To strengthen his argument, Lerner quotes from an article written by Radek in 1918. The transition from capital- ism to socialism begins when capitalism has inflicted such suffering on the people . . . that they rise up against the rule of capitalism; when the masses can no longer endure the conse- quences of capitalist economic conditions . . . Austria and Italy are in a similar situation to that of Russia, and the experience of the Russian Revolution proves that a socialist revolu- tion is by, no means certain in the land where capitalism has had the greatest development. There are some who might dis- agree with Lerner's pronounce- ment of Radek's theoretical capa- bilities. With the death of Lenin, fac- tions arose in the Russian Com- munist Party. Right from the be- ginning, Radek was a loyal and active member of the Left Op- position. In 1928 he was exiled to Siberia. Finally in 1929, for his own peculiar reasons, Radek capitulated to Stalin, denounced Trotsky, and for the next seven years played what he (Radek) and others considered to be an in- strumental role in the Stalinist bureaucracy. In 1936 he was arrested. Alex- ander Orlov, a former senior of- ficial of the NKVD (the Soviet secret police), has written in his book, The Secret History of Sta- lin's Crimes, that Radek not only insisted on rewriting his own con- fession but also suggested em- bellishing the confession of the former Soviet diplomat, Sokol- nikov. According to Orlov, Sta- lin was so pleased with Radek's 'sense of the ridiculous' that from that point on "Radek be- came personal consultant to Yez- hov (the current head of the NKVD) in the task of improving the legend of the conspiracy and perfecting its dramatic and liter- ary quality." It wasn't enough for Radek to play the role of the 'Good Soldier Schweik,' he de- manded a promotion to 'Field Marshal Schweik.' Radek, as always, gave a com- mand performance at his trial. In summing up Radek declared: And therefore the conclusion: restoration of capitalism in the circumstances of 1935. For nothing at all, just for the sake of Trotsky's beautiful eyes- the country was to return to capitalism. When I read this I felt as if (I were in) a mad- house . . We had to put up with Trotsky when he gave us directives from abroad, but in this case we were to become a g e n t s of foreign fascist states." (Lerner) Radek was sentenced to ten years and according to a recent publication of the Soviet Com- must Party died in 1939. Is it possible to render a final judgment of such an enigmatic man? This is how Lerner con- cludes his biography. For all his frivolity, Radek cared deeply about his place in history. Though he confessed to all sorts of exotic charges of crimes against Stalin's regime, he never confessed to any acts against the cause of world revo- lution. In his final plea he stat- ed with uncharacteristic ser- iousness and pathos: "I have not the right to speak as a re- pentant Communist; neverthe- less, the 35 years I worked in the labour movement, despite all the errors and crimes with which they ended, entitle me to ask you to believe one thing -that, after all, the masses of people with whom I marched do mean something to me." And there were those who be- lieved him. Even AngeIica Balabanoff (the first Secretary of the Executive Committee of the Third International), nev- er at any time Radek's admir- er, wrote after his trial: "I feel about Radek . . .that though he was capable of anything within the confines of the revo- lutionary movement, he would never sell himself to the ene- mies of the revolution. These would be his enemies too." Today's Writers ... Neal Bruss, a graduate stu- dent in English literature, is a familiar writer and reviewer for the Daily. Robert Bernard will be a grad- uate student in American his- tory in the fall,