Editing Nikolai Bukharin

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He had urged us to think for ourselves and to try to bring our influence to bear on public matters; now he himself had turned against the views, the faith he had stirred up. He would like to have regained our confidence, but it was too late. He had allowed himself to be broken. As a political figure he was on the run. The inevitable ending was already in sight. Soon he was to be arrested, charged with a crime he had never committed, and shamefully put to death.
He had urged us to think for ourselves and to try to bring our influence to bear on public matters; now he himself had turned against the views, the faith he had stirred up. He would like to have regained our confidence, but it was too late. He had allowed himself to be broken. As a political figure he was on the run. The inevitable ending was already in sight. Soon he was to be arrested, charged with a crime he had never committed, and shamefully put to death.


'Learn by my errors," Bukharin had said when I handed him our resolution, "and bear in mind that Stalin always has a dirty trick up his sleeve." Alas, there were too many errors for us to learn from, and we had to look for more reliable models on which to shape our lives than this intelligent but weak man who made so puny a statesman. (284)|publisher=Indiana University Press}}</ref> Tokaev expresses frustration that [[Kamenev]] establishes links between himself, Zinoviev, and Bukharin during his 1935 trial, and "thus, in the course of the second Moscow trial, were sewn the seeds of the fourth trial."<ref>{{Citation|author=Grigory Tokaev|year=1956|title=Comrade X|title-url=https://archive.org/details/TokaevComradeX1956|chapter=Terrorism by Judicial Trial|page=59|publisher=The Harvill Press}}</ref>
'Learn by my errors," Bukharin had said when I handed him our resolution, "and bear in mind that Stalin always has a dirty trick up his sleeve." Alas, there were too many errors for us to learn from, and we had to look for more reliable models on which to shape our lives than this intelligent but weak man who made so puny a statesman. (284)|publisher=Indiana University Press}}</ref> Tokaev expresses frustration that [[Kamenev]] establishes links between himself, Zioviev, and Bukharin during his 1935 trial, and "thus, in the course of the second Moscow trial, were sewn the seeds of the fourth trial."<ref>{{Citation|author=Grigory Tokaev|year=1956|title=Comrade X|title-url=https://archive.org/details/TokaevComradeX1956|chapter=Terrorism by Judicial Trial|page=59|publisher=The Harvill Press}}</ref>


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