Talk:Friendship of peoples

Latest comment: 7 years ago by 108.171.128.174

Lenin appears to call Tsarist Russia the "prison of the peoples", in On the National Pride of the Great Russians, which surely could be a simple translation difference. However, he refers to it not as his own phrase, "... in a country which has been rightly called..."

Later in the same paper, Lenin quotes Chernyshevsky of referring to Russia as "A wretched nation, a nation of slaves, from top to bottom—all slaves." -Rholton 23:01, 31 May 2004 (UTC)Reply

Thanks for the link and the exact quote, I incorporated them into the article. Can't find the author yet. Humus sapiensTalk 00:36, 1 Jun 2004 (UTC)
Nice bit of detective work on the origins of the phrase. It's almost worth an article page of its own. -Rholton 06:27, 5 Jun 2004 (UTC)

Deleting the reference to Hamlet; he doesn't mean anything like what is meant by the phrase "prison of the peoples"; it's rhetoric referring to the way he, personally, feels imprisoned by the limits of his role in the court of Denmark. [1]Winterbadger (talk) 17:51, 8 April 2010 (UTC)Reply

WTF?

"Even though the USSR often claimed to make significant progress on that path, its dissolution put an end to that goal." — Preceding unsigned comment added by 108.171.128.174 (talk) 10:41, 9 October 2017 (UTC)Reply