Chapter
IX
Victory
Order Number I
To the Troops of the Pulkovo Detachment.
November 13, 1917. 38 minutes past 9 a. m.
After a cruel fight the troops of
the Pulkovo detachment completely routed the counter-revolutionary
forces, who retreated from their positions in disorder,
and under cover of Tsarskoye Selo fell back toward
Pavlovsk II and Gatchina.
Our advanced units occupied the northeastern
extremity of Tsarskoye Selo and the station Alexandrovskaya.
The Colpinno detachment was on our left, the Krasnoye
Selo detachment to our right.
I ordered the Pulkovo forces to occupy
Tsarskoye Selo, to fortify its approaches, especially
on the side of Gatchina.
Also to pass and occupy Pavlovskoye,
fortifying its southern side, and to take up the railroad
as far as Dno.
The troops must take all measures
to strengthen the positions occupied by them, arranging
trenches and other defensive works.
They must enter into close liaison
with the detachments of Colpinno and Krasnoye Selo,
and also with the Staff of the Commander in Chief
for the Defence of Petrograd.
Signed,
Commander in Chief aver all Forces
acting against the Counter-revolutionary Troops of
Kerensky,
Lieutenant-Colonel MURAVIOV.
Tuesday morning. But how is this?
Only two days ago the Petrograd campagna was full
of leaderless bands, wandering aimlessly; without
food, without artillery, without a plan. What
had fused that disorganised mass of undisciplined
Red Guards, and soldiers without officers, into an
army obedient to its own elected high command, tempered
to meet and break the assault of cannon and Cossack
cavalry? (See App. IX, Sect. 1)
People in revolt have a way of defying
military precedent. The ragged armies of the
French Revolution are not forgotten-Valmy and the
Lines of Weissembourg. Massed against the Soviet
forces were yunkers, Cossacks, land-owners,
nobility, Black Hundreds-the Tsar come again, Okhrana
and Siberian chains; and the vast and terrible menace
of the Germans…. Victory, in the words of Carlyle,
meant “Apotheosis and Millennium without end!”
Sunday night, the Commissars of the
Military Revolutionary Committee returning desperately
from the field, the garrison of Petrograd elected
its Committee of Five, its Battle Staff, three soldiers
and two officers, all certified free from counter-revolutionary
taint. Colonel Muraviov, ex-patriot, was in command-an
efficient man, but to be carefully watched. At
Colpinno, at Obukhovo, at Pulkovo and Krasnoye Selo
were formed provisional detachments, increased in size
as the stragglers came in from the surrounding country-mixed
soldiers, sailors and Red Guards, parts of regiments,
infantry, cavalry and artillery all together, and
a few armoured cars.
Day broke, and the pickets of Kerensky’s
Cossacks came in touch. Scattered rifle-fire,
summons to surrender. Over the bleak plain on
the cold quiet air spread the sound of battle, falling
upon the ears of roving bands as they gathered about
their little fires, waiting…. So it was beginning!
They made toward the battle; and the worker hordes
pouring out along the straight roads quickened their
pace…. Thus upon all the points of attack automatically
converged angry human swarms, to be met by Commissars
and assigned positions, or work to do. This was
their battle, for their world; the officers
in command were elected by them. For the moment
that incoherent multiple will was one will….
Those who participated in the fighting
described to me how the sailors fought until they
ran out of cartridges, and then stormed; how the untrained
workmen rushed the charging Cossacks and tore them
from their horses; how the anonymous hordes of the
people, gathering in the darkness around the battle,
rose like a tide and poured over the enemy….
Before midnight of Monday the Cossacks broke and were
fleeing, leaving their artillery behind them, and the
army of the proletariat, on a long ragged front, moved
forward and rolled into Tsarskoye, before the enemy
had a chance to destroy the great Government wireless
station, from which now the Commissars of Smolny were
hurling out to the world paeans of triumph….
TO ALL SOVIETS OF WORKERS’ AND SOLDIERS’ DEPUTIES
The 12th of November, in a bloody
combat near Tsarskoye Selo, the revolutionary army
defeated the counter-revolutionary troops of Kerensky
and Kornilov. In the name of the Revolutionary
Government I order all regiments to take the offensive
against the enemies of the revolutionary democracy,
and to take all measures to arrest Kerensky, and also
to oppose any adventure which might menace the conquests
of the Revolution and the victory of the proletariat.
Long live the Revolutionary Army!
MURAVIOV.
News from the provinces….
At Sevastopol the local Soviet had
assumed the power; a huge meeting of the sailors on
the battleships in the harbour had forced their officers
to line up and swear allegiance to the new Government.
At Nizhni Novgorod the Soviet was in control.
From Kazan came reports of a battle in the streets,
yunkers and a brigade of artillery against
the Bolshevik garrison….
Desperate fighting had broken out
again in Moscow. The yunkers and White
Guards held the Kremlin and the centre of the town,
beaten upon from all sides by the troops of the Military
Revolutionary Committee. The Soviet artillery
was stationed in Skobeliev Square, bombarding the
City Duma building, the Prefecture and the Hotel Metropole.
The cobblestones of the Tverskaya and Nikitskaya had
been torn up for trenches and barricades. A hail
of machine-gun fire swept the quarters of the great
banks and commercial houses. There were no lights,
no telephones; the bourgeois population lived in the
cellars…. The last bulletin said that the Military
Revolutionary Committee had delivered an ultimatum
to the Committee of Public Safety, demanding the immediate
surrender of the Kremlin, or bombardment would follow.
“Bombard the Kremlin?”
cried the ordinary citizen. “They dare not!”
From Vologda to Chita in far Siberia,
from Pskov to Sevastopol on the Black Sea, in great
cities and little villages, civil war burst into flame.
From thousands of factories, peasant communes, regiments
and armies, ships on the wide sea, greetings poured
into Petrograd-greetings to the Government of the
People.
The Cossack Government at Novotcherkask
telegraphed to Kerensky, “The Government of the
Cossack troops invites the Provisional Government
and the members of the Council of the Republic to come,
if possible, to Novotcherkask, where we can organise
in common the struggle against the Bolsheviki.”
In Finland, also, things were stirring.
The Soviet of Helsingfors and the Tsentrobalt
(Central Committee of the Baltic Fleet), jointly proclaimed
a state of siege, and declared that all attempts to
interfere with the Bolshevik forces, and all armed
resistance to its orders, would be severely repressed.
At the same time the Finnish Railway Union called
a countrywide general strike, to put into operation
the laws passed by the Socialist Diet of June, 1917,
dissolved by Kerensky….
Early in the morning I went out to
Smolny. Going up the long wooden sidewalk from
the outer gate I saw the first thin, hesitating snow-flakes
fluttering down from the grey, windless sky. “Snow!”
cried the soldier at the door, grinning with delight.
“Good for the health!” Inside, the long,
gloomy halls and bleak rooms seemed deserted.
No one moved in all the enormous pile. A deep,
uneasy sound came to my ears, and looking around,
I noticed that everywhere on the floor, along the
walls, men were sleeping. Rough, dirty men, workers
and soldiers, spattered and caked with mud, sprawled
alone or in heaps, in the careless attitudes of death.
Some wore ragged bandages marked with blood.
Guns and cartridge-belts were scattered about….
The victorious proletarian army!
In the upstairs buffet so thick they
lay that one could hardly walk. The air was foul.
Through the clouded windows a pale light streamed.
A battered samovar, cold, stood on the counter, and
many glasses holding dregs of tea. Beside them
lay a copy of the Military Revolutionary Committee’s
last bulletin, upside down, scrawled with painful
hand-writing. It was a memorial written by some
soldier to his comrades fallen in the fight against
Kerensky, just as he had set it down before falling
on the floor to sleep. The writing was blurred
with what looked like tears….
Alexei Vinogradov
D. Maskvin
S. Stolbikov
A. Voskressensky
D. Leonsky
D. Preobrazhensky
V. Laidansky
M. Berchikov
These men were drafted into the Army
on November 15th, 1916. Only three are left of
the above.
Mikhail Berchikov
Alexei Voskressensky
Dmitri Leonsky
Sleep, Warrior eagles, sleep with peaceful soul.
You have deserved, our own ones, happiness and
Eternal peace. Under the earth of the grave
You have straitly closed your ranks. Sleep,
Citizens!
Only the Military Revolutionary Committee
still functioned, unsleeping. Skripnik, emerging
from the inner room, said that Gotz had been arrested,
but had flatly denied signing the proclamation of
the Committee for Salvation, as had Avksentiev; and
the Committee for Salvation itself had repudiated
the Appeal to the garrison. There was still disafiection
among the city regiments, Skripnik reported; the Volhynsky
Regiment had refused to fight against Kerensky.
Several detachments of “neutral”
troops, with Tchernov at their head, were at Gatchina,
trying to persuade Kerensky to halt his attack on
Petrograd.
Skripnik laughed. “There
can be no ‘neutrals’ now,” he said.
“We’ve won!” His sharp, bearded
face glowed with an almost religious exaltation.
“More than sixty delegates have arrived from
the Front, with assurances of support by all the armies
except the troops on the Rumanian front, who have
not been heard from. The Army Committees have
suppressed all news from Petrograd, but we now have
a regular system of couriers….”
[Graphic page-224 Certificate approving telegram transmission]
Order given me at Staff headquarters by command of
the Council of
People’s Commissars, to transmit the first despatch
out of Perograd
after the November Revolution, over the Government
wires to America.
(Translation)
STAFF
Military Revolutionary
Commitee
Sov. W. & S. D.
2 November, 1917
No. 1860
CERTIFICATE
Is given by the present to the journalist of
the New York Socialist press JOHN REED, that the text
of the
telegram (herewith) has been examined by the Government
of People’s
Commissars, and there is no objection to its transmission,
and also
it is recommended that all cooperate in every way
to transmit same
to its destination.
For
the Commander in Chief, ANTONOV
Chief
of Staff, VLAD. BONCH-BRUEVITCH
Down in the front hall Kameniev was
just entering, worn out by the all-night session of
the Conference to Form a New Government, but happy.
“Already the Socialist Revolutionaries are inclined
to admit us into the new Government,” he told
me. “The right wing groups are frightened
by the Revolutionary Tribunals; they demand, in a sort
of panic, that we dissolve them before going any further.
... We have accepted the proposition of the Vikzhel
to form a homogeneous Socialist Ministry, and they’re
working on that now. You see, it all springs
from our victory. When we were down, they would’t
have us at any price; not everybody’s in favour
of some agreement with the Soivets…. What we
need is a really decisive victory. Kerensky wants
an armistice, but he’ll have to surrender (See
App. IX, Sect. 2) ....”
That was the temper of the Bolshevik
leaders. To a foreign journalist who asked Trotzky
what statement he had to make to the world, Trotzky
replied: “At this moment the only statement
possible is the one we are making through the mouths
of our cannon!”
But there was an undercurrent of real
anxiety in the tide of victory; the question of finances.
Instead of opening the banks, as had been ordered
by the Military Revolutionary Committee, the Union
of Bank Employees had held a meeting and declared a
formal strike. Smolny had demanded some thirty-five
millions of rubles from the State Bank, and the cashier
had locked the vaults, only paying out money to the
representatives of the Provisional Government.
The reactionaries were using the State Bank as a political
weapon; for instance, when the Vikzhel demanded
money to pay the salaries of the employees of the
Government railroads, it was told to apply to Smolny….
I went to the State Bank to see the
new Commissar, a redhaired Ukrainean Bolshevik named
Petrovitch. He was trying to bring order out
of the chaos in which affairs had been left by the
striking clerks. In all the offices of the huge
place perspiring volunteer workers, soldiers and sailors,
their tongues sticking out of their mouths in the
intensity of their effort, were poring over the great
ledgers with a bewildered air….
The Duma building was crowded.
There were still isolated cases of defiance toward
the new Government, but they were rare. The Central
Land Committee had appealed to the Peasants, ordering
them not to recognise the Land Decree passed by the
Congress of the Soviets, because it would cause confusion
and civil war. Mayor Schreider announced that
because of the Bolshevik insurrection, the elections
to the Constituent Assembly would have to be indefinitely
postponed.
Two questions seemed to be uppermost
in all minds, shocked by the ferocity of the civil
war; first, a truce to the bloodshed (See App.
IX, Sect. 3)-second, the creation of a new Government.
There was no longer any talk of “destroying
the Bolsheviki”-and very little about excluding them
from the Government, except from the Populist Socialists
and the Peasants’ Soviets. Even the Central
Army Committee at the Stavka, the most determined
enemy of Smolny, telephoned from Moghilev: “If,
to constitute the new Ministry, it is necessary to
come to an understanding with the Bolsheviki, we agree
to admit them in a minority to the Cabinet.”
Pravda, ironically calling
attention to Kerensky’s “humanitarian
sentiments,” published his despatch to the Committee
for Salvation:
In accord with the proposals of the
Committee for Salvation and all the democratic organisations
united around it, I have halted all military action
against the rebels. A delegate of the Committee
has been sent to enter into negotiations. Take
all measures to stop the useless shedding of blood.
The Vikzhel sent a telegram to all Russia:
The Conference of the Union of Railway
Workers with the representatives of both the belligerent
parties, who admit the necessity of an agreement,
protest energetically against the use of political
terrorism in the civil war, especially when it is carried
on between different factions of the revolutionary
democracy, and declare that political terrorism, in
whatever form, is in contradiction to the very idea
of the negotiations for a new Government….
[Graphic page-227 Leaflet ]
Popular leaflet sold in the streets
just after the Bolshevik insurrection, containing
rhymes and jokes about the defeated bourgeoisie and
the “moderate” Socialist leaders, Called,
“How THE BOORZHUI (BOURGEOISIE) LOST THE POWER.”
Delegations from the Conference were
sent to the Front, to Gatchina. In the Conference
itself everything seemed on the point of final settlement.
It had even been decided to elect a Provisional People’s
Council, composed of about four hundred members-seventy-five
representing Smolny, seventy-five the old Tsay-ee-kah,
and the rest split up among the Town Dumas, the Trade
Unions, Land Committees and political parties.
Tchernov was mentioned as the new Premier. Lenin
and Trotzky, rumour said, were to be excluded….
About noon I was again in front of
Smolny, talking with the driver of an ambulance bound
for the revolutionary front. Could I go with
him? Certainly! He was a volunteer, a University
student, and as we rolled down the street shouted
over his shoulder to me phrases of execrable German:
“Also, gut! Wir nach die Kasernen zu essen
gehen!” I made out that there would be lunch at
some barracks.
On the Kirotchnaya we turned into
an immense courtyard surrounded by military buildings,
and mounted a dark stairway to a low room lit by one
window. At a long wooden table were seated some
twenty soldiers, eating shtchi (cabbage soup)
from a great tin wash-tub with wooden spoons, and
talking loudly with much laughter.
“Welcome to the Battalion Committee
of the Sixth Reserve Engineers’ Battalion!”
cried my friend, and introduced me as an American
Socialist. Whereat every one rose to shake my
hand, and one old soldier put his arms around me and
gave me a hearty kiss. A wooden spoon was produced
and I took my place at the table. Another tub,
full of kasha, was brought in, a huge loaf of
black bread, and of course the inevitable tea-pots.
At once every one began asking me questions about
America: Was it true that people in a free country
sold their votes for money? If so, how did they
get what they wanted? How about this “Tammany”?
Was it true that in a free country a little group
of people could control a whole city, and exploited
it for their personal benefit? Why did the people
stand it? Even under the Tsar such things could
not happen in Russia; true, here there was always
graft, but to buy and sell a whole city full of people!
And in a free country! Had the people no revolutionary
feeling? I tried to explain that in my country
people tried to change things by law.
“Of course,” nodded a
young sergeant, named Baklanov, who spoke French.
“But you have a highly developed capitalist class?
Then the capitalist class must control the legislatures
and the courts. How then can the people change
things? I am open to conviction, for I do not
know your country; but to me it is incredible….”
I said that I was going to Tsarskoye
Selo. “I, too,” said Baklanov, suddenly.
“And I-and I-” The whole roomful decided
on the spot to go to Tsarskoye Selo.
Just then came a knock on the door.
It opened, and in it stood the figure of the Colonel.
No one rose, but all shouted a greeting. “May
I come in?” asked the Colonel. “Prosim!
Prosim!” they answered heartily. He
entered, smiling, a tall, distinguished figure in a
goat-skin cape embroidered with gold. “I
think I heard you say that you were going to Tsarskoye
Selo, comrades,” he said. “Could I
go with you?”
Baklanov considered. “I
do not think there is anything to be done here to-day,”
he answered. “Yes, comrade, we shall be
very glad to have you.” The Colonel thanked
him and sat down, filling a glass of tea.
In a low voice, for fear of wounding
the Colonel’s pride, Baklanov explained to me.
“You see, I am the chairman of the Committee.
We control the Battalion absolutely, except in action,
when the Colonel is delegated by us to command.
In action his orders must be obeyed, but he is strictly
responsible to us. In barracks he must ask our
permission before taking any action…. You might
call him our Executive Officer….”
Arms were distributed to us, revolvers
and rifles-”we might meet some Cossacks, you know”-and
we all piled into the ambulance, together with three
great bundles of newspapers for the front. Straight
down the Liteiny we rattled, and along the Zagorodny
Prospekt. Next to me sat a youth with the shoulder-straps
of a Lieutenant, who seemed to speak all European
languages with equal fluency. He was a member
of the Battalion Committee.
“I am not a Bolshevik,”
he assured me, emphatically. “My family
is a very ancient and noble one. I, myself, am,
you might say, a Cadet….”
“But how—?” I began, bewildered.
“Oh, yes, I am a member of the
Committee. I make no secret of my political opinions,
but the others do not mind, because they know I do
not believe in opposing the will of the majority….
I have refused to take any action in the present civil
war, however, for I do not believe in taking up arms
against my brother Russians….”
“Provocator! Kornilovitz!”
the others cried at him gaily, slapping him on the
shoulder….
Passing under the huge grey stone
archway of the Moskovsky Gate, covered with golden
hieroglyphics, ponderous Imperial eagles and the names
of Tsars, we sped out on the wide straight highway,
grey with the first light fall of snow. It was
thronged with Red Guards, stumbling along on foot
toward the revolutionary front, shouting and singing;
and others, greyfaced and muddy, coming back.
Most of them seemed to be mere boys. Women with
spades, some with rifles and bandoleers, others wearing
the Red Cross on their arm-bands-the bowed, toil-worm
women of the slums. Squads of soldiers marching
out of step, with an affectionate jeer for the Red
Guards; sailors, grim-looking; children with bundles
of food for their fathers and mothers; all these,
coming and going, trudged through the whitened mud
that covered the cobbles of the highway inches deep.
We passed cannon, jingling southward with their caissons;
trucks bound both ways, bristling with armed men;
ambulances full of wounded from the direction of the
battle, and once a peasant cart, creaking slowly along,
in which sat a white-faced boy bent over his shattered
stomach and screaming monotonously. In the fields
on either side women and old men were digging trenches
and stringing barbed wire entanglements.
Back northward the clouds rolled away
dramatically, and the pale sun came out. Across
the flat, marshy plain Petrograd glittered. To
the right, white and gilded and coloured bulbs and
pinnacles; to the left, tall chimneys, some pouring
out black smoke; and beyond, a lowering sky over Finland.
On each side of us were churches, monasteries….
Occasionally a monk was visible, silently watching
the pulse of the proletarian army throbbing on the
road.
At Pulkovo the road divided, and there
we halted in the midst of a great crowd, where the
human streams poured from three directions, friends
meeting, excited and congratulatory, describing the
battle to one another. A row of houses facing
the cross-roads was marked with bullets, and the earth
was trampled into mud half a mile around. The
fighting had been furious here…. In the near
distance riderless Cossack horses circled hungrily,
for the grass of the plain had died long ago.
Right in front of us an awkward Red Guard was trying
to ride one, falling off again and again, to the childlike
delight of a thousand rough men.
The left road, along which the remnants
of the Cossacks had retreated, led up a little hill
to a hamlet, where there was a glorious view of the
immense plain, grey as a windless sea, tumultuous
clouds towering over, and the imperial city disgorging
its thousands along all the roads. Far over to
the left lay the little hill of Kranoye Selo, the
parade-ground of the Imperial Guards’ summer
camp, and the Imperial Dairy. In the middle distance
nothing broke the flat monotony but a few walled monasteries
and convents, some isolated factories, and several
large buildings with unkempt grounds that were asylums
and orphanages….
“Here,” said the driver,
as we went on over a barren hill, “here was
where Vera Slutskaya died. Yes, the Bolshevik
member of the Duma. It happened early this morning.
She was in an automobile, with Zalkind and another
man. There was a truce, and they started for the
front trenches. They were talking and laughing,
when all of a sudden, from the armoured train in which
Kerensky himself was riding, somebody saw the automobile
and fired a cannon. The shell struck Vera Slutskaya
and killed her….”
And so we came into Tsarskoye, all
bustling with the swaggering heroes of the proletarian
horde. Now the palace where the Soviet had met
was a busy place. Red Guards and sailors filled
the court-yard, sentries stood at the doors, and a
stream of couriers and Commissars pushed in and out.
In the Soviet room a samovar had been set up, and
fifty or more workers, soldiers, sailors and officers
stood around, drinking tea and talking at the top
of their voices. In one corner two clumsy-handed
workingmen were trying to make a multigraphing machine
go. At the centre table, the huge Dybenko bent
over a map, marking out positions for the troops with
red and blue pencils. In his free hand he carried,
as always, the enormous bluesteel revolver. Anon
he sat himself down at a typewriter and pounded away
with one finger; every little while he would pause,
pick up the revolver, and lovingly spin the chamber.
A couch lay along the wall, and on
this was stretched a young workman. Two Red Guards
were bending over him, but the rest of the company
did not pay any attention. In his breast was a
hole; through his clothes fresh blood came welling
up with every heart-beat. His eyes were closed
and his young, bearded face was greenish-white.
Faintly and slowly he still breathed, with every breath
sighing, “Mir boudit! Mir boudit! (Peace
is coming! Peace is coming!)”
Dybenko looked up as we came in.
“Ah,” he said to Baklanov. “Comrade,
will you go up to the Commandant’s headquarters
and take charge? Wait; I will write you credentials.”
He went to the typewriter and slowly picked out the
letters.
The new Commandant of Tsarskoye Selo
and I went toward the Ekaterina Palace, Baklanov very
excited and important. In the same ornate, white
room some Red Guards were rummaging curiously around,
while my old friend, the Colonel, stood by the window
biting his moustache. He greeted me like a long-lost
brother. At a table near the door sat the French
Bessarabian. The Bolsheviki had ordered him to
remain, and continue his work.
“What could I do?” he
muttered. “People like myself cannot fight
on either side in such a war as this, no matter how
much we may instinctively dislike the dictatorship
of the mob…. I only regret that I am so far
from my mother in Bessarabia!”
Baklanov was formally taking over
the office from the Commandant. “Here,”
said the Colonel nervously, “are the keys to
the desk.”
A Red Guard interrupted. “Where’s
the money?” he asked rudely. The Colonel
seemed surprised. “Money? Money?
Ah, you mean the chest. There it is,” said
the Colonel, “just as I found it when I took
possession three days ago. Keys?” The Colonel
shrugged. “I have no keys.”
The Red Guard sneered knowingly.
“Very convenient,” he said.
“Let us open the chest,”
said Baklanov. “Bring an axe. Here
is an American comrade. Let him smash the chest
open, and write down what he finds there.”
I swung the axe. The wooden chest was empty.
“Let’s arrest him,”
said the Red Guard, venomously. “He is
Kerensky’s man. He has stolen the money
and given it to Kerensky.”
Baklanov did not want to. “Oh,
no,” he said. “It was the Kornilovitz
before him. He is not to blame.
“The devil!” cried the
Red Guard. “He is Kerensky’s man,
I tell you. If you won’t arrest
him, then we will, and we’ll take him
to Petrograd and put him in Peter-Paul, where he belongs!”
At this the other Red Guards growled assent.
With a piteous glance at us the Colonel was led away….
Down in front of the Soviet palace
an auto-truck was going to the front. Half a
dozen Red Guards, some sailors, and a soldier or two,
under command of a huge workman, clambered in, and
shouted to me to come along. Red Guards issued
from headquarters, each of them staggering under an
arm-load of small, corrugated-iron bombs, filled with
grubit-which, they say, is ten times as strong,
and five times as sensitive as dynamite; these they
threw into the truck. A three-inch cannon was
loaded and then tied onto the tail of the truck with
bits of rope and wire.
We started with a shout, at top speed
of course; the heavy truck swaying from side to side.
The cannon leaped from one wheel to the other, and
the grubit bombs went rolling back and forth
over our feet, fetching up against the sides of the
car with a crash.
The big Red Guard, whose name was
Vladimir Nicolaievitch, plied me with questions about
America. “Why did America come into the
war? Are the American workers ready to throw
over the capitalists? What is the situation in
the Mooney case now? Will they extradite Berkman
to San Francisco?” and other, very difficult
to answer, all delivered in a shout above the roaring
of the truck, while we held on to each other and danced
amid the caroming bombs.
Occasionally a patrol tried to stop
us. Soldiers ran out into the road before us,
shouted “Shtoi!” and threw up their guns.
We paid no attention. “The
devil take you!” cried the Red Guards.
“We don’t stop for anybody! We’re
Red Guards!” And we thundered imperiously on,
while Vladimir Nicolaievitch bellowed to me about
the internationalisation of the Panama Canal, and such
matters….
About five miles out we saw a squad
of sailors marching back, and slowed down.
“Where’s the front, brothers?”
The foremost sailor halted and scratched
his head. “This morning,” he said,
“it was about half a kilometer down the road.
But the damn thing isn’t anywhere now.
We walked and walked and walked, but we couldn’t
find it.”
They climbed into the truck, and we
proceeded. It must have been about a mile further
that Vladimir Nicolaievitch cocked his ear and shouted
to the chauffeur to stop.
“Firing!” he said.
“Do you hear it?” For a moment dead silence,
and then, a little ahead and to the left, three shots
in rapid succession. Along here the side of the
road was heavily wooded. Very much excited now,
we crept along, speaking in whispers, until the truck
was nearly opposite the place where the firing had
come from. Descending, we spread out, and every
man carrying his rifle, went stealthily into the forest.
Two comrades, meanwhile, detached
the cannon and slewed it around until it aimed as
nearly as possible at our backs.
It was silent in the woods. The
leaves were gone, and the tree-trunks were a pale
wan colour in the low, sickly autumn sun. Not
a thing moved, except the ice of little woodland pools
shivering under our feet. Was it an ambush?
We went uneventfully forward until
the trees began to thin, and paused. Beyond,
in a little clearing, three soldiers sat around a
small fire, perfectly oblivious.
Vladimir Nicolaievitch stepped forward.
“Zra’zvuitye, comrades!” he greeted,
while behind him one cannon, twenty rifles and a truck-load
of grubit bombs hung by a hair. The soldiers
scrambled to their feet.
“What was the shooting going on around here?”
One of the soldiers answered, looking
relieved, “Why we were just shooting a rabbit
or two, comrade….”
The truck hurtled on toward Romanov,
through the bright, empty day. At the first cross-roads
two soldiers ran out in front of us, waving their
rifles. We slowed down, and stopped.
“Passes, comrades!”
The Red Guards raised a great clamour.
“We are Red Guards. We don’t need
any passes…. Go on, never mind them!”
But a sailor objected. “This
is wrong, comrades. We must have revolutionary
discipline. Suppose some counterrevolutionaries
came along in a truck and said: ‘We don’t
need any passes?’ The comrades don’t know
you.”
At this there was a debate. One
by one, however, the sailors and soldiers joined with
the first. Grumbling, each Red Guard produced
his dirty bumaga (paper). All were alike
except mine, which had been issued by the Revolutionary
Staff at Smolny. The sentries declared that I
must go with them. The Red Guards objected strenuously,
but the sailor who had spoken first insisted.
“This comrade we know to be a true comrade,”
he said. “But there are orders of the Committee,
and these orders must be obeyed. That is revolutionary
discipline….”
In order not to make any trouble,
I got down from the truck, and watched it disappear
careening down the road, all the company waving farewell.
The soldiers consulted in low tones for a moment, and
then led me to a wall, against which they placed me.
It flashed upon me suddenly; they were going to shoot
me!
In all three directions not a human
being was in sight. The only sign of life was
smoke from the chimney of a datchya, a rambling
wooden house a quarter of a mile up the side road.
The two soldiers were walking out into the road.
Desperately I ran after them.
“But comrades! See!
Here is the seal of the Military Revolutionary Committee!”
They stared stupidly at my pass, then at each other.
“It is different from the others,”
said one, sullenly. “We cannot read, brother.”
I took him by the arm. “Come!”
I said. “Let’s go to that house.
Some one there can surely read.” They hesitated.
“No,” said one. The other looked
me over. “Why not?” he muttered.
“After all, it is a serious crime to kill an
innocent man.”
We walked up to the front door of
the house and knocked. A short, stout woman opened
it, and shrank back in alarm, babbling, “I don’t
know anything about them! I don’t know anything
about them!” One of my guards held out the pass.
She screamed. “Just to read it, comrade.”
Hesitatingly she took the paper and read aloud, swiftly:
The bearer of this pass, John Reed,
is a representative of the American Social-Democracy,
an internationalist….
Out on the road again the two soldiers
held another consultation. “We must take
you to the Regimental Committee,” they said.
In the fast-deepening twilight we trudged along the
muddy road. Occasionally we met squads of soldiers,
who stopped and surrounded me with looks of menace,
handling my pass around and arguing violently as to
whether or not I should be killed….
It was dark when we came to the barracks
of the Second Tsarskoye Selo Rifles, low sprawling
buildings huddled along the post-road. A number
of soldiers slouching at the entrance asked eager questions.
A spy? A provocator? We mounted a winding
stair and emerged into a great, bare room with a huge
stove in the centre, and rows of cots on the floor,
where about a thousand soldiers were playing cards,
talking, singing, and asleep. In the roof was
a jagged hole made by Kerensky’s cannon….
I stood in the doorway, and a sudden
silence ran among the groups, who turned and stared
at me. Of a sudden they began to move, slowly
and then with a rush, thundering, with faces full of
hate. “Comrades! Comrades!”
yelled one of my guards. “Committee!
Committee!” The throng halted, banked around
me, muttering. Out of them shouldered a lean
youth, wearing a red arm-band.
“Who is this?” he asked
roughly. The guards explained. “Give
me the paper!” He read it carefully, glancing
at me with keen eyes. Then he smiled and handed
me the pass. “Comrades, this is an American
comrade. I am Chairman of the Committee, and I
welcome you to the Regiment….” A sudden
general buzz grew into a roar of greeting, and they
pressed forward to shake my hand.
“You have not dined? Here
we have had our dinner. You shall go to the Officers’
Club, where there are some who speak your language….”
He led me across the court-yard to
the door of another building. An aristocratic-looking
youth, with the shoulder straps of a Lieutenant, was
entering. The Chairman presented me, and shaking
hands, went back.
“I am Stepan Georgevitch Morovsky,
at your service,” said the Lieutenant, in perfect
French. From the ornate entrance hall a ceremonial
staircase led upward, lighted by glittering lustres.
On the second floor billiard-rooms, card-rooms, a
library opened from the hall. We entered the
dining-room, at a long table in the centre of which
sat about twenty officers in full uniform, wearing
their gold- and silver-handled swords, the ribbons
and crosses of Imperial decorations. All rose
politely as I entered, and made a place for me beside
the Colonel, a large, impressive man with a grizzled
beard. Orderlies were deftly serving dinner.
The atmosphere was that of any officers’ mess
in Europe. Where was the Revolution?
“You are not Bolsheviki?” I asked Morovsky.
A smile went around the table, but
I caught one or two glancing furtively at the orderly.
“No,” answered my friend.
“There is only one Bolshevik officer in this
regiment. He is in Petrograd to-night. The
Colonel is a Menshevik. Captain Kherlov there
is a Cadet. I myself am a Socialist Revolutionary
of the right wing…. I should say that most of
the officers in the Army are not Bolsheviki, but like
me they believe in democracy; they believe that they
must follow the soldier-masses….”
Dinner over, maps were brought, and
the Colonel spread them out on the table. The
rest crowded around to see.
“Here,” said the Colonel,
pointing to pencil marks, “were our positions
this morning. Vladimir Kyrilovitch, where is your
company?”
Captain Kherlov pointed. “According
to orders, we occupied the position along this road.
Karsavin relieved me at five o’clock.”
Just then the door of the room opened,
and there entered the Chairman of the Regimental Committee,
with another soldier. They joined the group behind
the Colonel, peering at the map. map.
| |
“Good,” said the Colonel.
“Now the Cossacks have fallen back ten kilometres
in our sector. I do not think it is necessary
to take up advanced positions. Gentlemen, for
to-night you will hold the present line, strengthening
the positions by—”
“If you please,” interrupted
the Chairman of the Regimental Committee. “The
orders are to advance with all speed, and prepare to
engage the Cossacks north of Gatchina in the morning.
A crushing defeat is necessary. Kindly make the
proper dispositions.”
There was a short silence. The
Colonel again turned to the map. “Very
well,” he said, in a different voice. “Stepan
Georgevitch, you will please—” Rapidly
tracing lines with a blue pencil, he gave his orders,
while a sergeant made shorthand notes. The sergeant
then withdrew, and ten minutes later returned with
the orders typewritten, and one carbon copy.
The Chairman of the Committee studied the map with
a copy of the orders before him.
“All right,” he said,
rising. Folding the carbon copy, he put it in
his pocket. Then he signed the other, stamped
it with a round seal taken from his pocket, and presented
it to the Colonel….
Here was the Revolution!
I returned to the Soviet palace in
Tsarskoye in the Regimental Staff automobile.
Still the crowds of workers, soldiers and sailors
pouring in and out, still the choking press of trucks,
armoured cars, cannon before the door, and the shouting,
the laughter of unwonted victory. Half a dozen
Red Guards forced their way through, a priest in the
middle. This was Father Ivan, they said, who had
blessed the Cossacks when they entered the town.
I heard afterward that he was shot…. (See App.
IX, Sect. 4)
Dybenko was just coming out, giving
rapid orders right and left. In his hand he carried
the big revolver. An automobile stood with racing
engine at the kerb. Alone, he climbed in the rear
seat, and was off-off to Gatchina, to conquer Kerensky.
Toward nightfall he arrived at the
outskirts of the town, and went on afoot. What
Dybenko told the Cossacks nobody knows, but the fact
is that General Krasnov and his staff and several thousand
Cossacks surrendered, and advised Kerensky to do the
same. (See App. IX, Sect. 5)
As for Kerensky-I reprint here the
deposition made by General Krasnov on the morning
of November 14th:
“Gatchina, November 14, 1917.
To-day, about three o’clock (A. M.), I
was summoned by the Supreme Commander (Kerensky).
He was very agitated, and very nervous.
“‘General,’ he said
to me, ’you have betrayed me. Your Cossacks
declare categorically that they will arrest me and
deliver me to the sailors.’
“‘Yes,’ I answered,
’there is talk of it, and I know that you have
no sympathy anywhere.’
“‘But the officers say the same thing.’
“‘Yes, most of all it is the officers
who are discontented with you.’
“‘What shall I do? I ought to commit
suicide!’
“’If you are an honorable
man, you will go immediately to Petrograd with a white
flag, you will present yourself to the Military Revolutionary
Committee, and enter into negotiations as Chief of
the Provisional Government.’
“‘All right. I will do that, General.’
“‘I will give you a guard and ask that
a sailor go with you.’
“’No, no, not a sailor.
Do you know whether it is true that Dybenko is here?’
“‘I don’t know who Dybenko is.’
“’He is my enemy.
“’There is nothing to
do. If you play for high stakes you must know
how to take a chance.’
“‘Yes. I’ll leave to-night!’
“’Why? That would
be a flight. Leave calmly and openly, so that
every one can see that you are not running away.’
“‘Very well. But you must give me
a guard on which I can count.’
“‘Good.’
“I went out and called the Cossack
Russkov, of the Tenth Regiment of the Don, and ordered
him to pick out ten Cossacks to accompany the Supreme
Commander. Half an hour later the Cossacks came
to tell me that Kerensky was not in his quarters,
that he had run away.
“I gave the alarm and ordered
that he be searched for, supposing that he could not
have left Gatchina, but he could not be found….”
And so Kerensky fled, alone, “disguised
in the uniform of a sailor,” and by that act
lost whatever popularity he had retained among the
Russian masses….
I went back to Petrograd riding on
the front seat of an auto truck, driven by a workman
and filled with Red Guards. We had no kerosene,
so our lights were not burning. The road was crowded
with the proletarian army going home, and new reserves
pouring out to take their places. Immense trucks
like ours, columns of artillery, wagons, loomed up
in the night, without lights, as we were. We
hurtled furiously on, wrenched right and left to avoid
collisions that seemed inevitable, scraping wheels,
followed by the epithets of pedestrians.
Across the horizon spread the glittering
lights of the capital, immeasurably more splendid
by night than by day, like a dike of jewels heaped
on the barren plain.
The old workman who drove held the
wheel in one hand, while with the other he swept the
far-gleaming capital in an exultant gesture.
“Mine!” he cried, his
face all alight. “All mine now! My
Petrograd!”