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1 For assessments of Berlin's writings on Russia, see Aileen Kelly, Toward Another Shore (New Haven and London, 1998: Yale University Press), introduc­tion and chapter 1, and her 'A Revolutionary Without Fanaticism', in Mark Lilla, Ronald Dworkin and Robert B. Silvers (eds), The Legacy of Isaiah Berlin (New York, 2001: New York Review Books), 3-30.

3 London, 1945: Routledge; Princeton, 1950: Princeton University Press.

4 London, 1952: Seeker and Warburg; published in the USA as The Rise of Totalitarian Democracy (Boston, 1952: Beacon Press).

2 American Political Science Review 57 No 4 (1963), 841-54.

3 Oxford and Cambridge, Mass., 1994: Blackwell.

5 Political Studies 19 (1971), 81-6.

6 ibid. 29 (1991), 303-20.

7 ibid. 41 (1993), 284-96.

10 Oxford, 1999: Clarendon Press/The British Academy.

11 Princeton, 1961: Van Nostrand, 137-57. It was reprinted in his The Rebirth of Classical Political Rationalism, ed. Thomas L. Pangle (Chicago and London, 1989: University of Chicago Press).

i London Review of Books, 5-18 November 1981, 6-7 (with Berlin's response in the same number, 7-8, and correspondence, 3-16 June 1982, 5).

' Rantan 17 (1997), 83-95.

4 In The Legacy of Isaiah Berlin, 3 1-42.

8 In The Idea of Freedom, I 5 3-74^

1 New Left Review No 50 Quly-August 1968), 3-57, esp. 25-8.

2 In his A Zone of Engagement (London and New York, 1992: Verso), 23^50.

3 Encounter 43 No 4 (October 1974), 67-72.

4 Annual Review of Political Science 2 (1999), 345-62.

5 Oxford, 1982: Martin Robertson; Baltimore, Md, 1982: Johns Hopkins University Press, chapter 2.

6 London, 1990: Weidenfeld and Nicolson; New York, 1990: Random House, esp. 274-9.

' London, 1999: HarperCollins; Chicago, 1999: University of Chicago Press, 209-32-

eSpectator, 15 November 1997, 16-17.

' In Edward Craig (ed.), Routledge Encyclopaedia of Philosophy (London and New York, 1998: Routledge), vol. 1, 750-3.

10 In his English Pasts (Oxford and New York, 1999: Oxford University Press), 195-209.

" Oxford and Malden, Mass., 1999: Blackwell, chapter 8.

12 Political Studies 48 (2000), 1026-39.

13 Cambridge and New York, 1980-2001: Cambridge University Press, vol. 3, 646-50.

'4 This list was updated (again) in the most recent printing (Princeton, 2001: Princeton University Press).

'5 Australian Financial Review, 30 June 2000, 4-5; also available on the website.

[1] In this view I differ, in company with others, from John Gray, author of the

[2] The manner of the book's creation would surely have been roundly censured in a Research Assessment Exercise.

[3] 'They' must have been Maurice Bowra, who had introduced me to the work of the Russian poet Alexander Blok (i88o-i92i), and Max Hayward, with whom I was then translating the title-poem of what would become Alexander Blok, The Twelve and Other Poems, trans. Jon Stallworthy and Peter France (London, 1970). j .s.

[4] This appears as note I to p. I 8 below. Hampshire comments when he sends in the note: 'the alien footnote is a new literary genre' (deployed again in the previous note). Not to be outdone, I have made use of another rare genre - the alien interpolation - by asking Jon Stallworthy to add the preceding passage on his memory of his definitive meeting with Berlin.

[5] There are, however, some necessary alterations of detail, especially in quotations and references, and readers who are concerned with accuracy at this level should use this revised edition in preference to, or alongside, the original edition. In particular, some quotations were attributed by Berlin, usually following inaccurate accounts by earlier writers, to the wrong author.

г Excluding The Proper Study of Mankind, which is an anthology drawn from earlier collections.

[7] This piece was published in the New York Review of Books in 1988, and is also included in The Crooked Timber of Humanity (1990) and The Proper Study of Mankind.

[8] I have normalised the somewhat wayward spelling, punctuation and layout of the original manuscript, but otherwise, apart from a few insignificant adjustments to ease the reader's passage, have followed what the young Berlin wrote exactly. These changes were not made when the story was first published, in 1998 (see p. xxxii below); I have made them now because they seemed appropriate in this more disproportionately grown-up company.

[9] e.g. on pp. 245-6, 288 below.

[10] History of Western Philosophy (New York, 1945; London, 1946), p. 226.

[11] See pp. 246, 288 below. Berlin also uses 'inner citadel' in a rather different sense, as on pp. 1 8 1 -2, 306 below.