Chapter
VIII
Counter-Revolution
NEXT morning, Sunday the 11th, the
Cossacks entered Tsarskoye Selo, Kerensky (See App.
VIII, Sect. 1) himself riding a white horse and all
the church-bells clamouring. From the top of a
little hill outside the town could be seen the golden
spires and many-coloured cupolas, the sprawling grey
immensity of the capital spread along the dreary plain,
and beyond, the steely Gulf of Finland.
There was no battle. But Kerensky
made a fatal blunder. At seven in the morning
he sent word to the Second Tsarskoye Selo Rifles to
lay down their arms. The soldiers replied that
they would remain neutral, but would not disarm.
Kerensky gave them ten minutes in which to obey.
This angered the soldiers; for eight months they had
been governing themselves by committee, and this smacked
of the old régime…. A few minutes later Cossack
artillery opened fire on the barracks, killing eight
men. From that moment there were no more “neutral”
soldiers in Tsarskoye….
Petrograd woke to bursts of rifle-fire,
and the tramping thunder of men marching. Under
the high dark sky a cold wind smelt of snow. At
dawn the Military Hotel and the Telegraph Agency had
been taken by large forces of yunkers, and
bloodily recaptured. The Telephone Station was
besieged by sailors, who lay behind barricades of
barrels, boxes and tin sheets in the middle of the
Morskaya, or sheltered themselves at the corner of
the Gorokhovaya and of St. Isaac’s Square, shooting
at anything that moved. Occasionally an automobile
passed in and out, flying the Red Cross flag.
The sailors let it pass….
Albert Rhys Williams was in the Telephone
Exchange. He went out with the Red Cross automobile,
which was ostensibly full of wounded. After circulating
about the city, the car went by devious ways to the
Mikhailovsky yunker school, headquarters of
the counter-revolution. A French officer, in
the court-yard, seemed to be in command…. By
this means ammunition and supplies were conveyed to
the Telephone Exchange. Scores of these pretended
ambulances acted as couriers and ammunition trains
for the yunkers.
Five or six armoured cars, belonging
to the disbanded British Armoured Car Division, were
in their hands. As Louise Bryant was going along
St. Isaac’s Square one came rolling up from the
Admiralty, on its way to the Telephone Exchange.
At the corner of the Gogolia, right in front of her,
the engine stalled. Some sailors ambushed behind
wood-piles began shooting. The machine-gun in
the turret of the thing slewed around and spat a hail
of bullets indiscriminately into the wood-piles and
the crowd. In the archway where Miss Bryant stood
seven people were shot dead, among them two little
boys. Suddenly, with a shout, the sailors leaped
up and rushed into the flaming open; closing around
the monster, they thrust their bayonets into the loop-holes,
again and again, yelling… The chauffeur pretended
to be wounded, and they let him go free-to run to
the Duma and swell the tale of Bolshevik atrocities….Among
the dead was a British Officer….
Later the newspapers told of another
French officer, captured in a yunker armoured
car and sent to Peter-Paul. The French Embassy
promptly denied this, but one of the City Councillors
told me that he himself had procured the officer’s
release from prison….
Whatever the official attitude of
the Allied Embassies, individual French and British
officers were active these days, even to the extent
of giving advice at executive sessions of the Committee
for Salvation.
All day long in every quarter of the
city there were skirmishes between yunkers
and Red Guards, battles between armoured cars….
Volleys, single shots and the shrill chatter of machine-guns
could be heard, far and near. The iron shutters
of the shops were drawn, but business still went on.
Even the moving-picture shows, all outside lights
dark, played to crowded houses. The street-cars
ran. The telephones were all working; when you
called Central, shooting could be plainly heard over
the wire…. Smolny was cut off, but the Duma
and the Committee for Salvation were in constant communication
with all the yunker schools and with Kerensky
at Tsarskoye.
At seven in the morning the Vladimir
yunker school was visited by a patrol of soldiers,
sailors and Red Guards, who gave the yunkers
twenty minutes to lay down their arms. The ultimatum
was rejected. An hour later the yunkers
got ready to march, but were driven back by a violent
fusillade from the corner of the Grebetskaya and the
Bolshoy Prospekt. Soviet troops surrounded the
building and opened fire, two armoured cars cruising
back and forth with machine guns raking it. The
yunkers telephoned for help. The Cossacks
replied that they dare not come, because a large body
of sailors with two cannon commanded their barracks.
The Pavlovsk school was surrounded. Most of the
Mikhailov yunkers were fighting in the streets….
At half-past eleven three field-pieces
arrived. Another demand to surrender was met
by the yunkers shooting down two of the Soviet
delegates under the white flag. Now began a real
bombardment. Great holes were torn in the walls
of the school. The yunkers defended themselves
desperately; shouting waves of Red Guards, assaulting,
crumpled under the withering blast…. Kerensky
telephoned from Tsarskoye to refuse all parley with
the Military Revolutionary Committee.
Frenzied by defeat and their heaps
of dead, the Soviet troops opened a tornado of steel
and flame against the battered building. Their
own officers could not stop the terrible bombardment.
A Commissar from Smolny named Kirilov tried to halt
it; he was threatened with lynching. The Red
Guards’ blood was up.
At half-past two the yunkers
hoisted a white flag; they would surrender if they
were guaranteed protection. This was promised.
With a rush and a shout thousands of soldiers and Red
Guards poured through windows, doors and holes in
the wall. Before it could be stopped five yunkers
were beaten and stabbed to death. The rest, about
two hundred, were taken to Peter-Paul under escort,
in small groups so as to avoid notice. On the
way a mob set upon one party, killing eight more yunkers....
More than a hundred Red Guards and soldiers had fallen….
Two hours later the Duma got a telephone
message that the victors were marching toward the
Injinierny Zamok-the Engineers’ school.
A dozen members immediately set out to distribute
among them armfuls of the latest proclamation of the
Committee for Salvation. Several did not come
back…. All the other schools surrendered without
resistance, and the yunkers were sent unharmed
to Peter-Paul and Cronstadt….
The Telephone Exchange held out until
afternoon, when a Bolshevik armoured car appeared,
and the sailors stormed the place. Shrieking,
the frightened telephone girls ran to and fro; the
yunkers tore from their uniforms all distinguishing
marks, and one offered Williams anything for
the loan of his overcoat, as a disguise…. “They
will massacre us! They will massacre us!”
they cried, for many of them had given their word
at the Winter Palace not to take up arms against the
People. Williams offered to mediate if Antonov
were released. This was immediately done; Antonov
and Williams made speeches to the victorious sailors,
inflamed by their many dead-and once more the yunkers
went free…. All but a few, who in their panic
tried to flee over the roofs, or to hide in the attic,
and were found and hurled into the street.
Tired, bloody, triumphant, the sailors
and workers swarmed into the switchboard room, and
finding so many pretty girls, fell back in an embarrassed
way and fumbled with awkward feet. Not a girl
was injured, not one insulted. Frightened, they
huddled in the corners, and then, finding themselves
safe, gave vent to their spite. “Ugh!
The dirty, ignorant people! The fools!”...
The sailors and Red Guards were embarrassed.
“Brutes! Pigs!” shrilled the girls,
indignantly putting on their coats and hats.
Romantic had been their experience passing up cartridges
and dressing the wounds of their dashing young defenders,
the yunkers, many of them members of noble families,
fighting to restore their beloved Tsar! These
were just common workmen, peasants, “Dark People.”...
The Commissar of the Military Revolutionary
Committee, little Vishniak, tried to persuade the
girls to remain. He was effusively polite.
“You have been badly treated,” he said.
“The telephone system is controlled by the Municipal
Duma. You are paid sixty rubles a month, and
have to work ten hours and more…. From now on
all that will be changed. The Government intends
to put the telephones under control of the Ministry
of Posts and Telegraphs. Your wages will be immediately
raised to one hundred and fifty rubles, and your working-hours
reduced. As members of the working-class you
should be happy—”
Members of the working-class
indeed! Did he mean to infer that there was anything
in common between these-these animals-and us?
Remain? Not if they offered a thousand rubles!...
Haughty and spiteful the girls left the place….
The employees of the building, the
line-men and labourers-they stayed. But the switch-boards
must be operated-the telephone was vital….
Only half a dozen trained operators were available.
Volunteers were called for; a hundred responded, sailors,
soldiers, workers. The six girls scurried backward
and forward, instructing, helping, scolding….
So, crippled, halting, but going, the wires
slowly began to hum. The first thing was to connect
Smolny with the barracks and the factories; the second,
to cut off the Duma and the yunker schools….
Late in the afternoon word of it spread through the
city, and hundreds of bourgeois called up to scream,
“Fools! Devils! How long do you think
you will last? Wait till the Cossacks come!”
Dusk was already falling. On
the almost deserted Nevsky, swept by a bitter wind,
a crowd had gathered before the Kazan Cathedral, continuing
the endless debate; a few workmen, some soldiers and
the rest shop-keepers, clerks and the like.
“But Lenin won’t get Germany to make peace!”
cried one.
A violent young soldier replied.
“And whose fault is it? Your damn Kerensky,
dirty bourgeois! To hell with Kerensky! We
don’t want him! We want Lenin….”
Outside the Duma an officer with a
white arm-band was tearing down posters from the wall,
swearing loudly. One read:
To the Population of Petrograd!
At this dangerous hour, when the Municipal
Duma ought to use every means to calm the population,
to assure it bread and other necessities, the Right
Socialist Revolutionaries and the Cadets, forgetting
their duty, have turned the Duma into a counter-revolutionary
meeting, trying to raise part of the population against
the rest, so as to facilitate the victory of Kornilov-Kerensky.
Instead of doing their duty, the Right Socialist Revolutionaries
and the Cadets have transformed the Duma into an arena
of political attack upon the Soviets of Workers’,
Soldiers’ and Peasants’ Deputies, against
the revolutionary Government of peace, bread and liberty.
Citizens of Petrograd, we, the Bolshevik
Municipal Councillors elected by you-we want you to
know that the Right Socialist Revolutionaries and
the Cadets are engaged in counter-revolutionary action,
have forgotten their duty, and are leading the population
to famine, to civil war. We, elected by 183,000
votes, consider it our duty to bring to the attention
of our constituents what is going on in the Duma,
and declare that we disclaim all responsibility for
the terrible but inevitable consequences….
Far away still sounded occasional
shots, but the city lay quiet, cold, as if exhausted
by the violent spasms which had torn it.
In the Nicolai Hall the Duma session
was coming to an end. Even the truculent Duma
seemed a little stunned. One after another the
Commissars reported-capture of the Telephone Exchange,
street-fighting, the taking of the Vladimir school….
“The Duma,” said Trupp, “is on the
side of the democracy in its struggle against arbitrary
violence; but in any case, whichever side wins, the
Duma will always be against lynchings and torture….”
Konovski, Cadet, a tall old man with
a cruel face: “When the troops of the legal
Government arrive in Petrograd, they will shoot down
these insurgents, and that will not be lynching!”
Protests all over the hall, even from his own party.
Here there was doubt and depression.
The counter-revolution was being put down. The
Central Committee of the Socialist Revolutionary party
had voted lack of confidence in its officers; the left
wing was in control; Avksentiev had resigned. signed.
A courier reported that the Committee of Welcome sent
to meet Kerensky at the railway station had been arrested.
In the streets could be heard the dull rumble of distant
cannonading, south and southwest. Still Kerensky
did not come…
Only three newspapers were out-Pravda,
Dielo Naroda and Novaya Zhizn. All of them
devoted much space to the new “coalition”
Government. The Socialist Revolutionary paper
demanded a Cabinet without either Cadets or Bolsheviki.
Gorky was hopeful; Smolny had made concessions.
A purely Socialist Government was taking shape-all
elements except the bourgeoisie. As for Pravda,
it sneered:
We ridicule these coalitions with
political parties whose most prominent members are
petty journalists of doubtful reputation; our “coalition”
is that of the proletariat and the revolutionary Army
with the poor peasants…
On the walls a vainglorious announcement
of the Vikzhel, threatening to strike if both
sides did not compromise:
The conquerors of these riots, the
saviours of the wreck of our country, these will be
neither the Bolsheviki, nor the Committee for Salvation,
nor the troops of Kerensky-but we, the Union of Railwaymen…
Red Guards are incapable of handling
a complicated business like the railways; as for the
Provisional Government, it has shown itself incapable
of holding the power…
We refuse to lend our services to
any party which does not act by authority of … a
Government based on the confidence of all the democracy….
Smolny thrilled with the boundless
vitality of inexhaustible humanity in action.
In Trade Union headquarters Lozovsky
introduced me to a delegate of the Railway Workers
of the Nicolai line, who said that the men were holding
huge mass-meetings, condemning the action of their
leaders.
“All power to the Soviets!”
he cried, pounding on the table. “The_oborontsi_
in the Central Committee are playing Ko&rgrave;nilov’s
game. They tried to send a mission to the Stavka,
but we arrested them at Minsk…. Our branch has
demanded an All-Russian Convention, and they refuse
to call it….”
The same situation as in the Soviets,
the Army Committees. One after another the various
democratic organisations, all over Russia, were cracking
and changing. The Cooperatives were torn by internal
struggles; the meetings of the Peasants’ Executive
broke up in stormy wrangling; even among the Cossacks
there was trouble….
On the top floor the Military Revolutionary
Committee was in full blast, striking and slacking
not. Men went in, fresh and vigorous; night and
day and night and day they threw themselves into the
terrible machine; and came out limp, blind with fatigue,
hoarse and filthy, to fall on the floor and sleep….
The Committee for Salvation had been outlawed.
Great piles of new proclamations (See App. VIII,
Sect. 2) littered the floor:
... The conspirators, who have
no support among the garrison or the working-class,
above all counted on the suddenness of their attack.
Their plan was discovered in time by Sub-Lieutenant
Blagonravov, thanks to the revolutionary vigilance
of a soldier of the Red Guard, whose name shall be
made public. At the centre of the plot was the
Committee for Salvation. Colonel Polkovnikov was
in command of their forces, and the orders were signed
by Gotz, former member of the Provisional Government,
allowed at liberty on his word of honour….
Bringing these facts to the attention
of the Petrograd population, the Military Revolutionary
Committee orders the arrest of all concerned in the
conspiracy, who shall be tried before the Revolutionary
Tribunal….
From Moscow, word that the yunkers
and Cossacks had surrounded the Kremlin and ordered
the Soviet troops to lay down their arms. The
Soviet forces complied, and as they were leaving the
Kremlin, were set upon and shot down. Small forces
of Bolsheviki had been driven from the Telephone and
Telegraph offices; the yunkers now held the
centre of the city. ... But all around them the
Soviet troops were mustering. Street-fighting
was slowly gathering way; all attempts at compromise
had failed…. On the side of the Soviet, ten
thousand garrison soldiers and a few Red Guards; on
the side of the Government, six thousand yunkers,
twenty-five hundred Cossacks and two thousand White
Guards.
The Petrograd Soviet was meeting,
and next door the new Tsay-ee-kah, acting on
the decrees and orders (See App. VIII, Sect.
3) which came down in a steady stream from the Council
of People’s Commissars in session upstairs;
on the Order in Which Laws Are to be Ratified and
Published, Establishing an Eight hour Days for Workers,
and Lunatcharsky’s “Basis for a System
of Popular Education.” Only a few hundred
people were present at the two meetings, most of them
armed. Smolny was almost deserted, except for
the guards, who were busy at the hall windows, setting
up machine-guns to command the flanks of the building.
In the Tsay-ee-kah a delegate
of the Vikzhel was speaking: “We
refuse to transport the troops of either party….
We have sent a committee to Kerensky to say that if
he continues to march on Petrograd we will break his
lines of communication….”
He made the usual plea for a conference
of all the Socialist parties to form a new Government….
Kameniev answered discreetly.
The Bolsheviki would be very glad to attend the conference.
The centre of gravity, however, lay not in composition
of such a Government, but in its acceptance of the
programme of the Congress of Soviets.
... The Tsay-ee-kah had
deliberated on the declaration made by the Left Socialist
Revolutionaries and the Social Democrats Internationalists,
and had accepted the proposition of proportional representation
at the conference, even including delegates from the
Army Committees and the Peasants’ Soviets….
In the great hall, Trotzky recounted
the events of the day.
“We offered the Vladimir yunkers
a chance to surrender,” he said. “We
wanted to settle matters without bloodshed. But
now that blood has been spilled there is only one
way-pitiless struggle. It would be childish to
think we can win by any other means…. The moment
is decisive. Everybody must cooperate with the
Military Revolutionary Committee, report where there
are stores of barbed wire, benzine, guns.
... We’ve won the power; now we must keep
it!”
The Menshevik Yoffe tried to read
his party’s declaration, but Trotzky refused
to allow “a debate about principle.”
“Our debates are now in the
streets,” he cried. “The decisive
step has been taken. We all, and I in particular,
take the responsibility for what is happening….”
Soldiers from the front, from Gatchina,
told their stories. One from the Death Battalion,
Four Hundred Eighty-first Artillery: “When
the trenches hear of this, they will cry, ‘This
is our Government!’” A yunker
from Peterhof said that he and two others had refused
to march against the Soviets; and when his comrades
had returned from the defence of the Winter Palace
they appointed him their Commissar, to go to Smolny
and offer their services to the real Revolution….
Then Trotzky again, fiery, indefatigable,
giving orders, answering questions.
“The petty bourgeoisie, in order
to defeat the workers, soldiers and peasants, would
combine with the devil himself!” he said once.
Many cases of drunkenness had been remarked the last
two days. “No drinking, comrades!
No one must be on the streets after eight in the evening,
except the regular guards. All places suspected
of having stores of liquor should be searched, and
the liquor destroyed. (See App. VIII, Sect. 4)
No mercy to the sellers of liquor….”
The Military Revolutionary Committee
sent for the delegation from the Viborg section; then
for the members from Putilov. They clumped out
hurriedly.
“For each revolutionist killed,”
said Trotzky, “we shall kill five counter-revolutionists!”
Down-town again. The Duma brilliantly
illuminated and great crowds pouring in. In the
lower hall wailing and cries of grief; the throng
surged back and forth before the bulletin board, where
was posted a list of yunkers killed in the
day’s fighting-or supposed to be killed, for
most of the dead afterward turned up safe and sound….
Up in the Alexander Hall the Committee for Salvation
held forth. The gold and red epaulettes of officers
were conspicuous, the familiar faces of the Menshevik
and Socialist Revolutionary intellectuals, the hard
eyes and bulky magnificence of bankers and diplomats,
officials of the old régime, and well-dressed women….
The telephone girls were testifying.
Girl after girl came to the tribune-over-dressed,
fashion-aping little girls, with pinched faces and
leaky shoes. Girl after girl, flushing with pleasure
at the applause of the “nice” people of
Petrograd, of the officers, the rich, the great names
of politics-girl after girl, to narrate her sufferings
at the hands of the proletariat, and proclaim her loyalty
to all that was old, established and powerful….
The Duma was again in session in the
Nicolai Hall. The Mayor said hopefully that the
Petrograd regiments were ashamed of their actions;
propaganda was making headway.
[Graphic page-205 Proclamation for “wine pogroms”
]
Revolutionary law and order.
A proclamation of the Finland Regiment, in December,
1917, announcing desperate remedies for “wine
pogroms.” For translation see Appendix
5.
... Emissaries came and went,
reporting horrible deeds by the Bolsheviki, interceding
to save the yunkers, busily investigating….
“The Bolsheviki,” said Trupp, “will be conquered by moral force, and
not by bayonets.....”
Meanwhile all was not well on the
revolutionary front. The enemy had brought up
armoured trains, mounted with cannon. The Soviet
forces, mostly raw Red Guards, were without officers
and without a definite plan. Only five thousand
regular soldiers had joined them; the rest of the
garrison was either busy suppressing the yunker
revolt, guarding the city, or undecided what to do.
At ten in the evening Lenin addressed a meeting of
delegates from the city regiments, who voted overwhelmingly
to fight. A Committee of five soldiers was elected
to serve as General Staff, and in the small hours of
the morning the regiments left their barracks in full
battle array…. Going home I saw them pass,
swinging along with the regular tread of veterans,
bayonets in perfect alignment, through the deserted
streets of the conquered city….
At the same time, in the headquarters
of the Vikzhel down on the Sadovaya, the conference
of all the Socialist parties to form a new Government
was under way. Abramovitch, for the centre Mensheviki,
said that there should be neither conquerors nor conquered-that
bygones should be bygones. ...In this were agreed all
the left wing parties. Dan, speaking in the name
of the right Mensheviki, proposed to the Bolsheviki
the following conditions for a truce: The Red
Guard to be disarmed, and the Petrograd garrison to
be placed at the orders of the Duma; the troops of
Kerensky not to fire a single shot or arrest a single
man; a Ministry of all the Socialist parties except
the Bolsheviki. For Smolny Riazanov and Kameniev
declared that a coalition ministry of all parties
was acceptable, but protested at Dan’s proposals.
The Socialist Revolutionaries were divided; but the
Executive Committee of the Peasants’s Soviets
and the Populist Socialists flatly refused to admit
the Bolsheviki…. After bitter quarrelling a
commission was elected to draw up a workable plan….
All that night the commission wrangled,
and all the next day, and the next night. Once
before, on the 9th of November, there had been a similar
effort at conciliation, led by Martov and Gorky; but
at the approach of Kerensky and the activity of the
Committee for Salvation, the right wing of the Mensheviki,
Socialist Revolutionaries and Populist Socialists
suddenly withdrew. Now they were awed by the
crushing of the yunker rebellion…
Monday the 12th was a day of suspense.
The eyes of all Russia were fixed on the grey plain
beyond the gates of Petrograd, where all the available
strength of the old order faced the unorganised power
of the new, the unknown. In Moscow a truce had
been declared; both sides parleyed, awaiting the result
in the capital. Now the delegates to the Congress
of Soviets, hurrying on speeding trains to the farthest
reaches of Asia, were coming to their homes, carrying
the fiery cross. In wide-spreading ripples news
of the miracle spread over the face of the land, and
in its wake towns, cities and far villages stirred
and broke, Soviets and Military Revolutionary Committees
against Dumas, Zemstvos and Government Commissars-Red
Guards against White-street fighting and passionate
speech…. The result waited on the word from
Petrograd….
Smolny was almost empty, but the Duma
was thronged and noisy. The old Mayor, in his
dignified way, was protesting against the Appeal of
the Bolshevik Councillors.
“The Duma is not a centre of
counter-revolution,” he said, warmly. “The
Duma takes no part in the present struggle between
the parties. But at a time when there is no legal
power in the land, the only centre of order is the
Municipal Self-Government. The peaceful population
recognises this fact; the foreign Embassies recognise
only such documents as are signed by the Mayor of the
town. The mind of a European does not admit of
any other situation, as the Municipal self-government
is the only organ which is capable of protecting the
interests of the citizens. The City is bound to
show hospitality, to all organisations which desire
to profit by such hospitality, and therefore the Duma
cannot prevent the distribution of any newspapers
whatever within the Duma building. The sphere
of our work is increasing, and we must be given full
liberty of action, and our rights must be respected
by both parties….
“We are perfectly neutral.
When the Telephone Exchange was occupied by the yunkers
Colonel Polkovnikov ordered the telephones to Smolny
disconnected, but I protested, and the telephones were
kept going….”
At this there was ironic laughter
from the Bolshevik benches, and imprecations from
the right.
“And yet,” went on Schreider,
“they look upon us as counter-revolutionaries
and report us to the population. They deprive
us of our means of transport by taking away our last
motor-cars. It will not be our fault if there
is famine in the town. Protests are of no use….”
Kobozev, Bolshevik member of the Town
Board, was doubtful whether the Military Revolutionary
Committee had requisitioned the Municipal automobiles.
Even granting the fact, it was probably done by some
unauthorised individual, in the emergency.
“The Mayor,” he continued,
“tells us that we must not make political meetings
out of the Duma. But every Menshevik and Socialist
Revolutionary here talks nothing but party propaganda,
and at the door they distribute their illegal newspapers,
Iskri (Sparks), Soldatski Golos and
Rabotchaya Gazeta, inciting to insurrection.
What if we Bolsheviki should also begin to distribute
our papers here? But this shall not be, for we
respect the Duma. We have not attacked the Municipal
Self-Government, and we shall not do so. But
you have addressed an Appeal to the population, and
we are entitled also to do so….
Followed him Shingariov, Cadet, who
said that there could be no common language with those
who were liable to be brought before the Attorney
General for indictment, and who must be tried on the
charge of treason…. He proposed again that
all Bolshevik members should be expelled from the
Duma. This was tabled, however, for there were
no personal charges against the members, and they
were active in the Municipal administration.
Then two Mensheviki Internationalists,
declaring that the Appeal of the Bolshevik Councillors
was a direct incitement to massacre. “If
everything that is against the Bolsheviki is counter-revolutionary,”
said Pinkevitch, “then I do not know the difference
between revolution and anarchy…. The Bolsheviki
are depending upon the passions of the unbridled masses;
we have nothing but moral force. We will protest
against massacres and violence from both sides, as
our task is to find a peaceful issue.”
“The notice posted in the streets
under the heading ’To the Pillory,’ which
calls upon the people to destroy the Mensheviki and
Socialist Revolutionaries,” said Nazariev, “is
a crime which you, Bolsheviki, will not be able to
wash away. Yesterday’s horrors are but
a preface to what you are preparing by such a proclamation….
I have always tried to reconcile you with the other
parties, but at present I feel for you nothing but
contempt!”
The Bolshevik Councillors were on
their feet, shouting angrily, assailed by hoarse,
hateful voices and waving arms….
Outside the hall I ran into the City
Engineer, the Menshevik Gomberg and three or four
reporters. They were all in high spirits.
“See!” they said.
“The cowards are afraid of us. They don’t
dare arrest the Duma! Their Military Revolutionary
Committee doesn’t dare to send a Commissar into
this building. Why, on the corner of the Sadovaya
to-day, I saw a Red Guard try to stop a boy selling
Soldatski Golos.... The boy just laughed
at him, and a crowd of people wanted to lynch the
bandit. It’s only a few hours more, now.
Even if Kerensky wouldn’t come they haven’t
the men to run a Government. Absurd! I understand
they’re even fighting among themselves at Smolny!”
A Socialist Revolutionary friend of
mine drew me aside. “I know where the Committee
for Salvation is hiding,” he said. “Do
you want to go and talk with them?”
By this time it was dusk. The
city had again settled down to normal-shop-shutters
up, lights shining, and on the streets great crowds
of people slowly moving up and down and arguing….
At Number 86 Nevsky we went through
a passage into a courtyard, surrounded by tall apartment
buildings. At the door of apartment 229 my friend
knocked in a peculiar way. There was a sound of
scuffling; an inside door slammed; then the front
door opened a crack and a woman’s face appeared.
After a minute’s observation she led us in-a
placid-looking, middle-aged lady who at once cried,
“Kyril, it’s all right!” In the
dining-room, where a samovar steamed on the table and
there were plates full of bread and raw fish, a man
in uniform emerged from behind the window-curtains,
and another, dressed like a workman, from a closet.
They were delighted to meet an American reporter.
With a certain amount of gusto both said that they
would certainly be shot if the Bolsheviki caught them.
They would not give me their names, but both were
Socialist Revolutionaries….
“Why,” I asked, “do
you publish such lies in your newspapers?”
Without taking offence the officer
replied, “Yes, I know; but what can we do?”
He shrugged. “You must admit that it is
necessary for us to create a certain frame of mind
in the people….”
The other man interrupted. “This
is merely an adventure on the part of the Bolsheviki.
They have no intellectuals. ... The Ministries
won’t work…. Russia is not a city, but
a whole country…. Realising that they can only
last a few days, we have decided to come to the aid
of the strongest force opposed to them-Kerensky-and
help to restore order.”
“That is all very well,”
I said. “But why do you combine with the
Cadets?”
The pseudo-workman smiled frankly.
“To tell you the truth, at this moment the masses
of the people are following the Bolsheviki. We
have no following-now. We can’t mobilise
a handful of soldiers. There are no arms available….
The Bolsheviki are right to a certain extent; there
are at this moment in Russia only two parties with
any force-the Bolsheviki and the reactionaries, who
are all hiding under the coat-tails of the Cadets.
The Cadets think they are using us; but it is really
we who are using the Cadets. When we smash the
Bolsheviki we shall turn against the Cadets….”
“Will the Bolsheviki be admitted
into the new Government?”
He scratched his head. “That’s
a problem,” he admitted. “Of course
if they are not admitted, they’sll probably do
this all over again. At any rate, they will have
a chance to hold the balance of power in the Constituent-that
is, if there is a Constituent.”
“And then, too,” said
the officer, “that brings up the question of
admitting the Cadets into the new Government-and for
the same reasons. You know the Cadets do not
really want the Constituent Assembly-not if the Bolsheviki
can be destroyed now.” He shook his head.
“It is not easy for us Russians, politics.
You Americans are born politicians; you have had politics
all your lives. But for us-well, it has only
been a year, you know!”
“What do you think of Kerensky?” I asked.
“Oh, Kerensky is guilty of the
sins of the Provisional Government,” answered
the other man. “Kerensky himself forced
us to accept coalition with the bourgeoisie.
If he had resigned, as he threatened, it would have
meant a new Cabinet crisis only sixteen weeks before
the Constituent Assembly, and that we wanted to avoid.”
“But didn’t it amount to that anyway?”
“Yes, but how were we to know?
They tricked us-the Kerenskys and Avksentievs.
Gotz is a little more radical. I stand with Tchernov,
who is a real revolutionist…. Why, only to-day
Lenin sent word that he would not object to Tchernov
entering the Government.
“We wanted to get rid of the
Kerensky Government too, but we thought it better
to wait for the Constituent…. At the beginning
of this affair I was with the Bolsheviki, but the
Central Committee of my party voted unanimously against
it-and what could I do? It was a matter of party
discipline….
“In a week the Bolshevik Government
will go to pieces; if the Socialist Revolutionaries
could only stand aside and wait, the Government would
fall into their hands. But if we wait a week the
country will be so disorganised that the German imperialists
will be victorious. That is why we began our
revolt with only two regiments of soldiers promising
to support us-and they turned against us….
That left only the yunkers....”
“How about the Cossacks?”
The officer sighed. “They
did not move. At first they said they would come
out if they had infantry support. They said moreover
that they had their men with Kerensky, and that they
were doing their part…. Then, too, they said
that the Cossacks were always accused of being the
hereditary enemies of democracy…. And finally,
’The Bolsheviki promise that they will not take
away our land. There is no danger to us.
We remain neutral.’”
During this talk people were constantly
entering and leaving-most of them officers, their
shoulder-straps torn off. We could see them in
the hall, and hear their low, vehement voices.
Occasionally, through the half-drawn portières, we
caught a glimpse of a door opening into a bath-room,
where a heavily-built officer in a colonel’s
uniform sat on the toilet, writing something on a
pad held in his lap. I recognised Colonel Polkovnikov,
former commandant of Petrograd, for whose arrest the
Military Revolutionary Committee would have paid a
fortune.
“Our programme?” said
the officer. “This is it. Land to be
turned over to the Land Committees. Workmen to
have full representation in the control of industry.
An energetic peace programme, but not an ultimatum
to the world such as the Bolsheviki issued. The
Bolsheviki cannot keep their promises to the masses,
even in the country itself. We won’t let
them…. They stole our land programme in order
to get the support of the peasants. That is dishonest.
If they had waited for the Constituent Assembly-”
“It doesn’t matter about
the Constituent Assembly!” broke in the officer.
“If the Bolsheviki want to establish a Socialist
state here, we cannot work with them in any event!
Kerensky made the great mistake. He let the Bolsheviki
know what he was going to do by announcing in the
Council of the Republic that he had ordered their
arrest….
“But what,” I said, “do you intend
to do now?”
The two men looked at one another.
“You will see in a few days. If there are
enough troops from the front on our side, we shall
not compromise with the Bolsheviki. If not, perhaps
we shall be forced to….”
Out again on the Nevsky we swung on
the step of a streetcar bulging with people, its platforms
bent down from the weight and scraping along the ground,
which crawled with agonising slowness the long miles
to Smolny.
Meshkovsky, a neat, frail little man,
was coming down the hall, looking worried. The
strikes in the Ministries, he told us, were having
their effect. For instance, the Council of People’s
Commissars had promised to publish the Secret Treaties;
but Neratov, the functionary in charge, had disappeared,
taking the documents with him. They were supposed
to be hidden in the British Embassy….
Worst of all, however, was the strike
in the banks. “Without money,” said
Menzhinsky, “we are helpless. The wages
of the railroad men, of the postal and telegraph employees,
must be paid…. The banks are closed; and the
key to the situation, the State Bank, is also shut.
All the bank-clerks in Russia have been bribed to stop
work….
“But Lenin has issued an order
to dynamite the State Bank vaults, and there is a
Decree just out, ordering the private banks to open
to-morrow, or we will open them ourselves!”
The Petrograd Soviet was in full swing,
thronged with armed men, Trotzky reporting:
“The Cossacks are falling back
from Krasnoye Selo.” (Sharp, exultant cheering.)
“But the battle is only beginning. At Pulkovo
heavy fighting is going on. All available forces
must be hurried there….
“From Moscow, bad news.
The Kremlin is in the hands of the yunkers,
and the workers have only a few arms. The result
depends upon Petrograd.
“At the front, the decrees on
Peace and Land are provoking great enthusiasm.
Kerensky is flooding the trenches with tales of Petrograd
burning and bloody, of women and children massacred
by the Bolsheviki. But no one believes him….
“The cruisers Oleg, Avrora
and Respublica are anchored in the Neva, their
guns trained on the approaches to the city….”
“Why aren’t you out there
with the Red Guards?” shouted a rough voice.
“I’m going now!” answered Trotzky, and left the platform.  His face a
little paler than usual, he passed down the side of the room, e room, | |
surrounded by eager friends, and hurried out to the waiting
automobile.
Kameniev now spoke, describing the
proceedings of the reconciliation conference.
The armistice conditions proposed by the Mensheviki,
he said, had been contemptuously rejected. Even
the branches of the Railwaymen’s Union had voted
against such a proposition….
“Now that we’ve won the
power and are sweeping all Russia,” he declared,
“all they ask of us are three little things:
1. To surrender the power. 2. To make the
soldiers continue the war. 3. To make the peasants
forget about the land….”
Lenin appeared for a moment, to answer
the accusations of the Socialist Revolutionaries:
“They charge us with stealing
their land programme…. If that is so, we bow
to them. It is good enough for us….”
So the meeting roared on, leader after
leader explaining, exhorting, arguing, soldier after
soldier, workman after workman, standing up to speak
his mind and his heart…. The audience flowed,
changing and renewed continually. From time to
time men came in, yelling for the members of such
and such a detachment, to go to the front; others,
relieved, wounded, or coming to Smolny for arms and
equipment, poured in….
It was almost three o’clock
in the morning when, as we left the hall, Holtzman,
of the Military Revolutionary Committee, came running
down the hall with a transfigured face.
“It’s all right!”
he shouted, grabbing my hands. “Telegram
from the front. Kerensky is smashed! Look
at this!”
He held out a sheet of paper, scribbled
hurriedly in pencil, and then, seeing we couldn’t
read it, he declaimed aloud:
Pulkovo. Staff. 2.10 A.M.
The night of October 30th to 31st
will go down in history. The attempt of Kerensky
to move counter-revolutionary troops against the capital
of the Revolution has been decisively repulsed.
Kerensky is retreating, we are advancing. The
soldiers, sailors and workers of Petrograd have shown
that they can and will with arms in their hands enforce
the will and authority of the democracy. The bourgeoisie
tried to isolate the revolutionary army. Kerensky
attempted to break it by the force of the Cossacks.
Both plans met a pitiful defeat.
The grand idea of the domination of
the worker and peasant democracy closed the ranks
of the army and hardened its will. All the country
from now on will be convinced that the Power of the
Soviets is no ephemeral thing, but an invincible fact….
The repulse of Kerensky is the repulse of the land-owners,
the bourgeoisie and the Kornilovists in general.
The repulse of Kerensky is the confirmation of the
right of the people to a peaceful free life, to land,
bread and power. The Pulkovo detachment by its
valorous blow has strengthened the cause of the Workers’
and Peasants’s Revolution. There is no return
to the past. Before us are struggles, obstacles
and sacrifices. But the road is clear and victory
is certain.
Revolutionary Russia and the Soviet
Power can be proud of their Pulkovo detachment, acting
under the command of Colonel Walden. Eternal
memory to those who fell! Glory to the warriors
of the Revolution, the soldiers and the officers who
were faithful to the People!
Long live revolutionary, popular, Socialist Russia!
In the name of the Council,
L. TROTZKY, People’s Commissar….
Driving home across Znamensky Square,
we made out an unusual crowd in front of the Nicolai
Railway Station. Several thousand sailors were
massed there, bristling with rifles.
Standing on the steps, a member of
the Vikzhel was pleading with them.
“Comrades, we cannot carry you
to Moscow. We are neutral. We do not carry
troops for either side. We cannot take you to
Moscow, where already there is terrible civil war….”
All the seething Square roared at
him; the sailors began to surge forward. Suddenly
another door was flung wide; in it stood two or three
brakeman, a fireman or so.
“This way, comrades!”
cried one. “We will take you to Moscow-or
Vladivostok, if you like! Long live the Revolution!”