n into Hell. I have found at least
fifty varieties of what happens to us there. Sometimes, our dead bodies are
dissected and fried on huge pans. Sometimes we are baked whole in iron
chambers with glass doors, by a burning blue fire or by white-hot metal rods
that radiate searing heat. Sometimes we are boiled in monstrous pots painted
in many colors. At other times, we are frozen in blocks of ice. In other
words, nothing too comforting."
"But who is doing that to us?"
"What do you mean, who? The gods."
"Why do they need it?"
"Well, you see, we are their food."
Sixfinger shuddered and carefully regarded his trembling knees.
"They like legs the best," remarked Hermit. "Well, and hands, too. I
was actually going to talk to you about our hands. Lift them up."
Sixfinger stretched out his hands -- thin and powerless, they looked
rather pitiful.
"A long time ago we used our hands for flying," Hermit said, "but then
everything changed."
"And what is `flying'"?
"Nobody knows exactly. The only known fact is that one must have strong
arms. Much stronger than yours or even mine. That's why I want to teach you
an exercise. Take two of these nuts."
With great effort Sixfinger dragged two enormous weights to Hermit's
feet.
"Good. Now put your hands through the holes."
Sixfinger complied.
"Move your hands up and down... Like this."
In a minute Sixfinger was so tired that he couldn't raise his hands no
matter how he tried.
"That's it," he said, lowering his hands, and the nuts fell on the
floor.
"Now look at me doing it," Hermit said and loaded each hand with five
nuts. After holding out both hands for a couple of minutes, he did not seem
tired in the least.
"What do you think?"
"Outstanding," mouthed Sixfinger. "But why do you hold them still?"
"Otherwise, a difficulty appears at some point in this exercise. You
will later understand what I mean," Hermit answered.
"But are you sure that one can learn to fly that way?"
"No. I am not sure. On the contrary, I suspect that it is a useless
activity."
"Then why do you need it? If you know that it is useless?"
"How should I say... Because I know many other things, and one of them
is: if you are in the dark and notice even a weakest ray of light, you must
follow it instead of pondering whether or not it might make sense. Perhaps,
it doesn't in fact make sense. But sitting in the dark and doing nothing
doesn't make sense anyway. Do you understand the difference?"
Sixfinger was silent.
"We are alive while we have hope," Hermit said. "And if you lose hope,
you should never let yourself realize that. Then something might change. But
one shouldn't seriously hope for that."
Sixfinger felt somewhat annoyed.
"All this is great," he said, "but what does it really mean for us?"
"For you it really means that you shall do exercises with the nuts
every day, until you can do the same as I. For me it means that I shall
watch your progress as if it is indeed important for me."
"Isn't there anything else for us to do?" Sixfinger asked.
"There is," Hermit answered. "We could be preparing ourselves for the
Decisive Stage. But in that case you'd be on your own."
--------
6
"Listen, Hermit, you know everything. So tell me, what is love?"
"I wonder where you picked up that word," Hermit asked.
"When they drove me away from the Socium, someone asked if I loved the
right things. I said I didn't know. And then One-Eye said that she loved you
very much, and you said that you loved her."
"I see. It's actually hard to explain. Let's take an example -- imagine
you fell into a water barrel and are drowning."
"OK."
"Then imagine that for a second your head came above the water, you saw
the light, gulped in some air and something touched your hands. And you
grabbed it and held on to it. Now if your whole life is like drowning -- and
it is -- then love is what helps you to keep your head above the water."
"You mean the love of the right things?"
"What you love is not really important. Of course, one can love the
right things even under water. Whatever it is you love and hold on to, it
must hold you. The worst is when you love someone else -- you see, he can
always withdraw his hand. To make a long story short, love is what puts
everyone where he is. Except maybe the dead. Well, actually..."
"I think I never loved anything," interrupted Sixfinger.
"Oh yes, you've been there too. Remember how you cried all day thinking
about the guy who waved you back when they threw us over the wall? That was
love. You don't know why he did it, do you? Maybe he thought he was mocking
you in a much subtler fashion than others. And I personally think he was. So
your crying for him was pretty foolish, but absolutely right. Love gives
meaning to what we do, although it isn't really there. "
"So is love cheating us? Is it something like a dream?"
"No, love is something like love, while a dream is a dream. All the
things you do, you do them because of love. Otherwise you'd just sit on the
ground and howl in horror. Or in disgust."
"But many people do what they do not at all because of love."
"Come on. They do nothing."
"And do you love something, Hermit?"
"I do."
"What is it?"
"I don't know. It comes to me sometimes. Sometimes it's a thought, or a
nut, or the wind. The important thing is, I know it when it comes to me, in
whatever disguise, and I meet it with the best I have in me."
"How?"
"I grow calm."
"Do you mean you worry the rest of the time?"
"No. I am always calm. It's just the best I can be, so when what I love
shows itself to me, I meet it with my calmness."
"What you you think is best in me?"
"In you? I think it's when you sit silently somewhere out of sight."
"Really?"
"I don't know. Seriously, you can find out yourself what is best in
you, because this is how you meet what you are in love with. What did you
feel thinking about that guy who waved? "
"Sadness."
"Well then, sadness it is. That's the best you have, and you will
always meet the things you love with sadness.
Hermit looked around and stood for a moment, listening.
"Want to have a look at the gods?" he asked unexpectedly.
"Please, not now," Sixfinger was visibly frightened.
"Don't be afraid, they are stupid. Look, there they are."
Two huge creatures walked quickly beside the conveyor belt. They were
so huge that their heads were hardly visible in the dusk under the ceiling.
They were followed by another similar creature, somewhat lower and fatter,
carrying a conical vessel with the narrow end down. The first two stopped
not far from the place where Hermit and Sixfinger sat, and started emitting
low rumbling sounds ("They speak", guessed Sixfinger), while the third
creature reached the wall, put its vessel on the ground, dipped in it a long
pole with bristles on its end, and drew a fresh line of dirty gray on the
dirty gray wall. The smell was funny.
"Listen," whispered Sixfinger as quietly as he could, "you said you
understood their language. What are they saying?"
"Those two? Wait. The first is saying `I wanna slug', and the other,
'Don't you ever come close to Dun'ka!'"
"What's Dun'ka?"
"A region of the world."
"Uh, and what does the first one want to slug?"
"Dun'ka, of course," Hermit said after giving it some thought.
"How can he slug in a whole region of the world?"
"Well, they are gods, aren't they?"
"And this fat one, what does she say?"
"She is not speaking but singing. About how after death she wants to
become a willow. My favorite divine song, by the way. Some day I'll sing it
to you. Unfortunately, I don't know what a willow is."
"Do gods die?"
"Of course. That is their main business."
The two gods moved on, their heavy footfall and low rumbling voices
receded, and it was quiet. "What greatness!" thought a shaken Sixfinger.
Small particles of dust were stirred up by a draught and swirled over the
tiled floor. Sixfinger suddenly felt as if he was looking down from an
incredibly high mountain peak at a strange stony wasteland below, the
wasteland where nothing changes in a million years: the same wind blows and
carries remnants of people's lives, which from afar look like pieces of
straw, shreds of paper and chips of wood. "Some day," thought Sixfinger,
"someone else would look from this place down and think about me, not
knowing that he is thinking about me. Just as I am now thinking of someone
who felt what I am feeling, God knows when. Every day there is a moment
connecting it to both the past and the future. Why is this world filled with
so much sadness?..."
"And yet there is something in it that justifies even the saddest kind
of life," Hermit said suddenly.
"When I die, I want to become a wee-ee-llow," quietly sang the fat
goddess near the bucket of paint. Sixfinger, his head rested on his elbow,
was submerged in sadness, while Hermit was perfectly calm and looked into
the void, as if above thousands and thousands of invisible heads.
--------
7
While Sixfinger was busy exercising with the nuts, as many as ten
worlds passed into the Shop Number One. Something creaked and pounded behind
the green gates, something was being done there. A mere thought of that made
Sixfinger shiver in cold sweat, but it also gave him strength. His arms were
noticeably longer and stronger now, like Hermit's. Yet nothing came out of
their exercises. The only thing Hermit knew was that flying was done with
one's arms, but it was unclear what exactly it was. Hermit thought that it
was a way of instantaneous transport in space: one needs to imagine the
place one wants to be, and then give one's hands a thought order to
transport one's whole body there. Hermit spent days on end in meditation
trying to transport himself even a few steps away, to no avail.
"Perhaps," he would tell Sixfinger, "our arms are not yet strong
enough. We must continue."
Once, as Hermit and Sixfinger were sitting on a pile of rags between
the crates trying to discern the essence of things, an extremely unpleasant
event happened. The light darkened a bit, and when Sixfinger opened his eyes
he saw a huge unshaven face of a god looming before him.
"Look at them here," said the face. Enormous dirty hands grabbed Hermit
and Sixfinger from between the crates, transported them with incredible
speed over a vast expanse and dropped them into one of the worlds not too
far from the Shop Number One. At first, Hermit and Sixfinger took it calmly
and even with a bit of irony. They settled near the World-wall and began to
build Refuges of the Soul for themselves. But suddenly the god returned,
took Sixfinger out and, after examining him, whistled in surprise. Then the
god wound a strip of blue adhesive tape around his leg and threw him back.
In a few minutes, several gods came by, took Sixfinger out and examined him
one by one, making excited exclamations.
"I don't like this at all," Hermit said when the gods finally put
Sixfinger down and left. "We are in trouble."
"I think so, too," answered a frightened Sixfinger. "Maybe I should
take off this piece of junk?"
He pointed to the blue tape around his leg.
"No, don't take it off yet," Hermit said.
They sat in gloomy silence for a while. Then Sixfinger said:
"It's all because of my six toes. Even if we escape from this place,
they will be looking for us again. They already know about the crates. Is
there any other place to hide?"
Hermit became even more dejected and, instead of answering, suggested
visiting the local Socium to improve spirits.
But it appeared that a delegation from the far-away Feeder was already
approaching them. About twenty steps away from Hermit and Sixfinger, the
delegates prostrated themselves on the ground and continued on all fours;
judging by that, they clearly had serious intentions. Hermit told Sixfinger
to move back, while he stepped forward to straighten up matters. When he
returned, he said:
"I haven't seen anything like this before. They seem to have a
religious sect here. At any rate, they have seen you communicate with the
gods, and now they think you are a prophet and I am your disciple or
something of that sort."
"So what is happening now? What do they want?"
"They are asking us to join them. They said that a `pathway was
straightened', that something was `braided out' and so on. I didn't
understand a thing but it seems we should go."
"Let's go," Sixfinger shrugged indifferently. Gloomy premonitions
filled his mind.
On their way, the people insistently tried to carry Hermit on their
shoulders, and this was avoided with much effort. As for Sixfinger, nobody
dared to look at him, much less come near him, so he walked at the center of
an empty circle.
After they arrived, Sixfinger was put on a high knoll of hay, while
Hermit remained below and engaged in a conversation with about twenty of the
local high priests -- one could easily recognize them by their paunchy,
obese faces. Then he blessed them and climbed the knoll to join Sixfinger,
who was so ill-spirited that he ignored Hermit's ritual bow; although it
must have looked quite natural for the congregation.
It turned out that everybody was long expecting the advent of a
Messiah. The impending Decisive Stage, which they called the Great Judgment,
was on everyone's mind, but the high priests became so fat and lazy that
they merely nodded toward the sky in answer to all questions. The appearance
of Sixfinger with his disciple was well timed.
"They are waiting for a sermon," Hermit said.
"So make up something for them," grunted Sixfinger. "Don't you know
that I am just a stupid fool."
His voice trembled at the word "fool", and he seemed close to crying.
"They will eat me, these gods," he sobbed. "I feel it."
"There, there. Calm down," Hermit said. He turned to the crowd beneath
the knoll and assumed a prayerful posture by raising his head and hands
high.
"Hey you!" he shouted. "Soon, all of you will be thrown into Hell. You
will be roasted, and the most sinful of you will be marinated in vinegar
first."
A terrified sigh swept over the Socium.
"But, by the will of the gods and their messenger, my master, I wish to
teach you how to be saved. For that, you must overcome sin. But do you even
know what sin is?"
Silence was the answer.
"Sin is excess weight. Your flesh is sinful, for it is for your flesh
that the gods afflict you. Think, all of you: what draws the Deci... Great
Judgment nearer? Nothing but the fact that you grow fat on your bodies. For
the skinny ones shall be saved, but the fat ones shall perish. Truly so:
none of the blue-skinned and scrawny will be thrown into the fire, but the
fat and the pink-skinned will all be there. Anyone who fasts from now on
until the Great Judgment will receive new life. Aye, oh Lord God! Now arise,
go forth and sin no more."
But nobody stood up: they all lay silently on the ground and gazed into
the abyss of the sky or stared at Hermit who was waving his hands. Many were
crying. It appeared that only the high priests did not like Hermit's speech.
"Why did you tell them all that," Sixfinger whispered when Hermit
returned and sat on the straw. "They believed you, after all."
"Well, I hadn't lied to them, had I?" Hermit answered. "If they lose a
lot of weight, they will be given a second feeding cycle. Then, perhaps,
even a third. Forget about them, we'd better take care of our business."
--------
8
Hermit often talked to the people, teaching them how to acquire the
least appetizing looks, while Sixfinger spent most of his time on his knoll
of straw pondering the nature of flight. He rarely took part in Hermit's
sermons other than absent-mindedly blessing laymen who crawled up to him on
their knees. the former high priests clearly didn't plan on losing weight
and hated him, but their hands were tied: more and more gods paid visits to
the world, took Sixfinger out and showed him to one another. Once there came
a senile and flabby gray-haired sage accompanied by a large and extremely
respectful retinue. While being held, Sixfinger spitefully moved his bowels
into the sage's cold, shaking palm, and was immediately and rather roughly
returned to his usual place.
Everyone in the Socium fasted and by now looked almost transparent.
Hermit took the Feeder apart. Every night, while all others slept, he and
Sixfinger desperately continued to train their arms. The less they believed
that their exercises would lead to anything, the harder they tried. Their
arms grew so much that even practicing with the metal pieces of the Feeder
became impossible. One sweeping movement of the arms made their feet lose
the ground, so they had to stop the exercise. That was the difficulty Hermit
had warned Sixfinger about, but they circumvented it -- Hermit taught
Sixfinger how to develop the muscles with static exercises. The green gates
were already looming beyond the World-wall, and, according to Hermit's
calculations, the Great Judgment was only a dozen eclipses away. Gods did
not scare Sixfinger much -- he got used to their attention and accepted it
with a squeamish submissiveness. He reconciled himself with his position
and, mainly to entertain himself, delivered dark and obscure sermons. His
speeches literally stunned the flock. Once he remembered One-Eye's tale of
the underground universe and described the cooking of a soup for one hundred
and sixty green-clothed demons with such inspiration and blood-curdling
detail that by the end he not only got himself scared to death, but also
freaked out Hermit, who at the beginning of the speech would only chuckle.
Many in the congregation learned this sermon by heart, and it became known
as the "Revelation of the Blue Band" (such was Sixfinger's sacral name).
After that even the priests stopped eating and ran around the disassembled
Feeder for hours on end to burn their fat.
Since both Hermit and Sixfinger always ate with great appetite, Hermit
had to introduce a special dogma of infallibility, which quickly stopped
various whisperings.
But while Sixfinger has fully recovered from their ordeals, with Hermit
something was amiss. It seemed that Sixfinger's depression passed on to him;
he grew more reclusive with every hour.
Finally he told Sixfinger:
"You know, if we don't succeed, I will go to the Shop Number One with
the rest."
Sixfinger opened his mouth to object, but Hermit continued:
"And since it seems clear that we won't succeed, you may consider it
decided."
Sixfinger realized that what he was going to say was irrelevant. He
could not change the other's decision, only express his fondness for Hermit.
Whatever he could say would have mattered little beyond that. Some time ago
Sixfinger would have said many unnecessary words, but now he too has
changed. He just nodded and went away to meditate. After a little while he
returned and said:
"I will go with you."
"No," Hermit said, "you should not do that. You know almost everything
I have known. And you should go on and find a disciple. Maybe, he will
master the art of flying."
"You want me to remain alone?" Sixfinger was annoyed. "With those
blockheads?"
He gestured towards the congregation lying on their faces since the
beginning of their prophet's conversation. Trembling, emaciated bodies, all
alike, covered almost all visible space.
"They are not blockheads," Hermit said. "They are more like children."
"Retarded children," Sixfinger pointed out. "With many inborn vices."
Hermit glanced at Sixfinger's feet with a grin.
"I wonder if you remember what you were like before we met?"
Sixfinger thought about it, embarrassed.
"No," he said finally, "I don't. Honestly, I don't remember."
"All right," said Hermit. "Do what you will."
They did not return to this conversation.
The days left before the Judgment went fast, and one morning, when the
flock was still half asleep, Sixfinger and Hermit noticed that the green
gates that had seemed so far away yesterday, were already right above the
World-wall. They looked at each other, and Hermit said:
"Today we'll make our last attempt. It will be the last one because
tomorrow no one will be left to try. Our arms are so big that we cannot even
wave them in the air, they sweep us from our feet. We will now go to the
Wall to get away from all this racket, and from there will try to transport
ourselves to the roof of the Feeder. If we fail, we will say our farewells
to the world."
"How does one do that?" asked Sixfinger out of habit.
Hermit looked at him, surprised.
"How do I know?" he replied.
The flock was told that they are going to talk to the gods. Soon Hermit
and Sixfinger stood at the World-wall, their backs against it.
"Remember," said Hermit, "you must imagine that you are already there,
and then..."
Sixfinger closed his eyes, concentrated on his hands and thought of the
rubber tube connected to the top of the Feeder. Presently he was in trance,
and felt that the tube was very close, within his reach. Before, when he had
achieved that feeling of being where he wanted to fly, Sixfinger used to
hurry and open his eyes, only to find himself back where he started. This
time he decided to try something new. "If I bring my arms together slowly so
that the tube is between them, what will happen then?", he thought.
Carefully, trying not to spill the achieved awareness that the tube is near,
he moved his hands. And when they came together and felt the tube where only
emptiness has been, he couldn't bear it any longer and yelled with all his
might: "I'm there!", and opened his eyes.
"Quiet, you fool!" said Hermit whose leg he was clutching. "Look!"
Sixfinger scrambled to his feet and looked up. The gates of the Shop
Number One were open and their world was slowly sailing through.
"We are there," Hermit said. "Let's go back."
On their way back both were silent. The conveyor belt was moving with
about the same speed in the opposite direction, and the Gates remained right
over them all the time while they walked. As they reached their honorary
places near the Feeder, the entrance swallowed them and moved on.
Hermit motioned a member of the flock to him.
"Listen," he said, "keep calm. Go and tell the rest that the Great
Judgment has come. Do you see how the sky is darkened?"
"What are we to do now?" the latter asked with hope.
"Tell all to sit on the ground and do this," Hermit covered his eyes.
"And don't look, or we cannot vouch for anything. And keep quiet."
At first, there was commotion and noise, but it quickly ceased.
Everyone sat on the ground and did what Hermit had told them.
"Well," Sixfinger said, "should we now say goodbye to the world?"
"Yes," said Hermit. "You go first."
Sixfinger stood up, looked around, sighed and sat down again.
"Are you done?" Hermit asked, and Sixfinger nodded.
"My turn," Hermit said. He rose, threw his head up and yelled as loudly
as he could: "Farewell, world!"
--------
9
"Look at that one cackling away," a thunderous voice said. "Which one
was that again? The one cackling?"
"Nope," another voice answered. "The one next."
Two enormous faces loomed over the World-wall. They were gods.
"What crap," the first face remarked ruefully. "No idea what to do with
them. They are half-dead, all of them."
A huge hand in a white, blood-stained and fluff-covered sleeve rushed
over the world and touched the Feeder.
"Semyon, you bastard, where were you looking? Their feeder is broken!"
"It was all right," a bass answered. "I checked it the beginning of
this month. So, are we going to do them?"
"No. Get the transporter going, take another crate, and fix this feeder
by tomorrow. They could all have starved..."
"Fine."
"And that one, with six toes: shall I cut both feet for you?"
"Both."
"I wanted one for myself."
Hermit turned to Sixfinger who was listening carefully but understood
almost nothing.
"Listen," he whispered, "it looks like they are going to..."
But at that moment a huge white hand dashed across the sky again and
grabbed Sixfinger.
Sixfinger could not make out Hermit's words. The palm grasped him and
took him up, then he saw a huge chest with a pocket pen, a collar, and
finally two large bulging eyes which stared squarely at him.
"Look at its wings. Like an eagle's!" said an incredibly large mouth
with yellow uneven teeth.
Sixfinger was long used to being held by gods. But this time the palms
holding him vibrated strangely and frighteningly. He barely understood that
the gods were talking about his arms or his feet when he heard Hermit shout
madly from below:
"Sixfinger! Flee! Peck him right in the mug!"
For the first time of their acquaintance, a real desperation was heard
in Hermit's voice. This frightened Sixfinger to such an extent that his
actions acquired a somnambulistic precision. He struck the bulging, staring
eye with all his might and started hitting both sides of the god's sweaty
face with his hands.
The roar was so strong that Sixfinger felt it not as a sound but as
pressure on his whole body. The god loosened his grasp, and in the next
moment Sixfinger found himself hanging in the air just below the ceiling,
unsupported. At first he could not understand it, but then he realized that
he was still waving his hands -- that supported him in the void. He could
now oversee the Shop Number One: it was a separated area of the transporter
with a long wooden table covered by red and brown stains, fluff and
feathers, and piles of clear bags. The world he had left was simply a big
octagonal container filled by a multitude of tiny unmoving bodies. Sixfinger
could not see Hermit but he was sure that Hermit saw him.
"Hey!" he shouted, making circles around the ceiling. "Hermit! Get up
here! Wave your hands as fast as you can!"
Something flashed in the crate below and grew in size as it was
approaching, and then Hermit appeared. He followed Sixfinger and shouted,
"Get down over there!"
When Sixfinger flew close to a square spot of muddy whitish light, he
saw Hermit already sitting on the windowsill.
"A wall," he said when Sixfinger sat down next to him. "A luminous
wall."
He appeared calm but Sixfinger knew him well and could see that Hermit
was dazzled by all the events, as was Sixfinger himself. And suddenly he saw
it.
"Listen," he shouted, "this really is flight! We were flying!"
Hermit regarded him for a while and nodded.
"Yes, perhaps," he said. "Even though it is too primitive..."
In the meanwhile, the commotion below settled down somewhat; two
figures in white gowns held the third who was clutching his face with his
hand.
"A bitch! He killed my eye! A bitch!" the third one was bellowing.
"What is a bitch?" Sixfinger asked.
"It is a supplication to one of the elements," Hermit answered. "This
word does not have a separate meaning. But it seems we are in deep trouble."
"And which element is he trying to address?" Sixfinger asked.
"We shall see."
As Hermit was saying these words, the god freed himself from the hands
that were holding him, ran to the wall, snatched a red fire extinguisher
tank and hurled it toward the windowsill. He did it so quickly that nobody
could stop him, and Hermit and Sixfinger barely managed to fly away.
The fire extinguisher broke through the window with a loud crash and
disappeared, letting in a stream of fresh air. Only then the heady stench
that filled the room became apparent. It was unbelievably bright.
"Come on, fly!" Hermit shouted, suddenly shedding all his composure.
"Get going! Off!"
And then he flew away from the window to take a running start, folded
his wings and disappeared in the ray of hot yellow light that gushed from
the hole in the painted glass. A wind blew from it, and new, unknown sounds
could be heard.
Sixfinger sped up his circling. He caught the last glimpse of the
octagonal container below, the blood-stained table and the gods waving their
hands, as he rushed through the hole with folded wings.
For a moment, he was blinded by the brightness of light. When his eyes
got used to it, he saw above and ahead of him a disk of such a furious
yellow glare that he could not look at it even with a side glance. Higher
above he saw a black dot -- it was Hermit who was turning around to let
Sixfinger catch up. Soon they were flying side by side.
Sixfinger looked back, at the large and ugly gray building far below.
It had only a few oil-painted windows, one of them broken. The clean and
bright colors of everything around them were driving Sixfinger crazy, and he
decided to look up.
Flying was amazingly easy, not any more strenuous than walking. They
soared higher and higher, until everything below became colorful squares and
spots.
Sixfinger turned to Hermit.
"Where to?" he shouted.
"Southward," was the short reply.
"What is that?" Sixfinger asked.
"I don't know," answered Hermit, "but it is that way."
And he waved toward the huge blazing disk, which only in color
resembled what they used to call suns.
--------
Translators' notes
1 A reference to a widely known stanza from V. Mayakovsky's poem
"Vladimir Ilyich Lenin":
Lenin and the Party are twin brothers.
Who is more valuable for Mother History?
We say "Lenin", and we mean the Party,
We say "The Party", and we mean Lenin.
V. I. Lenin (1870 -- 1924) -- the founder of the USSR and of its
Communist Party.
2 In the USSR, many government-operated organizations such as factories
or schools were named after prominent political leaders.
3 An allusion to an often-quoted formula: "The <Communist> party is the
mind, the dignity and the conscience of our epoch" (V. I. Lenin).