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Trotsky said, "The biggest surprise that comes to a man is old age," or something like that. Leader of the October Revolution, he must've known how they end, always one more body to add to the heap. Sooner or later, in a sidewalk café in Trieste, sharing coffee and scones, the early hours uneventful and lacking imagination, the proletariat rush-to-work past, he would meet with his bullet, or in New York City, a car would swerve at a busy intersection, taking in his whole body, dragging him a half a block before speeding off, or at last at his house in Coyoacán, ax-murdered by a Spanish Stalinist. No accident of aim, the bloody flags flying. Or was he saying that the old man sitting on the lip of the plaza fountain, his face wrinkled with light, battered fedora shading his eyes, his clichéd poise, chin balanced on top of both his hands cupped over a cane, dozing to the water falling from concrete nymphs and the cooing of pigeons in the Church of Guadalupe bell tower, is the permanent revolution.
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