Chapter
VII
The Revolutionary
Front
SATURDAY, November 10th….
Citizens!
The Military Revolutionary Committee
declares that it will not tolerate any violation of
revolutionary order….
Theft, brigandage, assaults and attempts
at massacre will be severely punished….
Following the example of the Paris
Commune, the Committee will destroy without mercy
any looter or instigator of disorder….
Quiet lay the city. Not a hold-up,
not a robbery, not even a drunken fight. By night
armed patrols went through the silent streets, and
on the corners soldiers and Red Guards squatted around
little fires, laughing and singing. In the daytime
great crowds gathered on the sidewalks listening to
interminable hot debates between students and soldiers,
business men and workmen.
Citizens stopped each other on the street.
“The Cossacks are coming?”
“No….”
“What’s the latest?”
“I don’t know anything. Where’s
Kerensky?”
“They say only eight versts
from Petrograd…. Is it true that the Bolsheviki
have fled to the battleship Avrora?”
“They say so….”
Only the walls screamed, and the few
newspapers; denunciation, appeal, decree….
An enormous poster carried the hysterical manifesto
of the Executive
Committee of the Peasant’ Soviets:
....They (the Bolsheviki) dare to
say that they are supported by the Soviets of Peasants’
Deputies, and that they are speaking on behalf of
the Soviets of Peasants’ Deputies….
Let all working-class Russia know
that this is a LIE, AND THAT ALL THE WORKING PEASANTS-in
the person of-the EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE ALL-RUSSIAN
SOVIETS OF PEASANTS’ DEPUTIES-refutes with indignation
all participation of the organised peasantry in this
criminal violation of the will of the working-classes….
From the Soldier Section of the Socialist
Revolutionary party:
The insane attempt of the Bolsheviki
is on the eve of collapse. The garrison is divided….
The Ministries are on strike and bread is getting
scarcer. All factions except the few Bolsheviki
have left the Congress. The Bolsheviki are alone….
We call upon all sane elements to
group themselves around the Committee for Salvation
of Country and Revolution, and to prepare themselves
seriously to be ready at the first call of the Central
Committee….
In a hand-bill the Council of the
Republic recited its wrongs:
Ceding to the force of bayonets, the
Council of the Republic has been obliged to separate,
and temporarily to interrupt its meetings.
The usurpers, with the words “Liberty
and Socialism” on their lips, have set up a
rule of arbitrary violence. They have arrested
the members of the Provisional Government, closed
the newspapers, seized the printing-shops….This
power must be considered the enemy of the people and
the Revolution; it is necessary to do battle with it,
and to pull it down….
The Council of the Republic, until
the resumption of its labours, invites the citizens
of the Russian Republic to group themselves around
the….local Committees for Salvation of Country and
Revolution, which are organising the overthrow of the
Bolsheviki and the creation of a Government capable
of leading the country to the Constituent Assembly.
Dielo Narodasaid:
A revolution is a rising of all the
people…. But here what have we? Nothing
but a handful of poor fools deceived by Lenin and Trotzky….
Their decrees and their appeals will simply add to
the museum of historical curiosities….
And Narodnoye Slovo(People’sWord-PopulistSocialist):
“Workers’ and Peasants’
Government?” That is only a pipedream; nobody,
either in Russia or in the countries of our Allies,
will recognise this “Government”-or even in
the enemy countries….
The bourgeois press had temporarily
disappeared….Pravada had an account of the first
meeting of the new Tsay-ee-kah, now the parliament
of the Russian Soviet Republic. Miliutin, Commissar
of Agriculture, remarked that the Peasants’
Executive Committee had called an All-Russian Peasant
Congress for December 13th.
“But we cannot wait,”
he said. “We must have the backing of the
peasants. I propose that we call the Congress
of Peasants, and do it immediately….”
The Left Socialist Revolutionaries agreed. An
Appeal to the Peasants of Russia was hastily drafted,
and a committee of five elected to carry out the project.
The question of detailed plans for
distributing the land, and the question of Workers’
Control of Industry, were postponed until the experts
working on them should submit a report.
Three decrees (See App. VII,
Sect. 1) were read and approved: first, Lenin’s
“General Rules For the Press,” ordering
the suppression of all newspapers inciting to resistance
and disobedience to the new Government, inciting to
criminal acts, or deliberately perverting the news;
the Decree of Moratorium for House-rents; and the Decree
Establishing a Workers’ Militia. Also orders,
one giving the Municipal Duma power to requisition
empty apartments and houses, the other directing the
unloading of freight cars in the railroad terminals,
to hasten the distribution of necessities and to free
the badly-needed rolling-stock….
Two hours later the Executive Committee
of the Peasants’ Soviets was sending broadcast
over Russia the following telegram:
The arbitrary organisation of the
Bolsheviki, which is called “Bureau of Organisation
for the National Congress of Peasants,”is inviting
all the Peasants’ Soviets to send delegates to
the Congress at Petrograd….
The Executive Committee of the Soviets
of Peasants’ Deputies declares that it considers,
now as well as before, that it would be dangerous
to take away from the provinces at this moment the
forces necessary to prepare for elections to the Constituent
Assembly, which is the only salvation of the working-class
and the country. We confirm the date of the Congress
of Peasants, December 13th.
At the Duma all was excitement, officers
coming and going, the Mayor in conference with the
leaders of the Committee for Salvation. A Councillor
ran in with a copy of Kerensky’s proclamation,
dropped by hundreds from an aeroplane low flying down
the Nevsky, which threatened terrible vengeance on
all who did not submit, and ordered soldiers to lay
down their arms and assemble immediately in Mars Field.
The Minister-President had taken Tsarskoye
Selo, we were told, and was already in the Petrograd
campagna, five miles away. He would enter the
city to-morrow-in a few hours. The Soviet troops
in contact with his Cossacks were said to be going
over to the Provisional Government. Tchernov
was somewhere in between, trying to organise the “neutral”
troops into a force to halt the civil war.
In the city the garrison regiments
were leaving the Bolsheviki, they said. Smolny
was already abandoned…. All the Governmental
machinery had stopped functioning. The employees
of the State Bank had refused to work under Commissars
from Smolny, refused to pay out money to them.
All the private banks were closed. The Ministries
were on strike. Even now a committee from the
Duma was making the rounds of business houses, collecting
a fund to pay the salaries of the strikers….
Trotzky had gone to the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs and ordered the clerks to translate
the Decree on Peace into foreign languages; six hundred
functionaries had hurled their resignations in his
face…. Shliapnikov, Commissar of Labour, had
commanded all the employees of his Ministry to return
to their places within twenty-four hours, or lose
their places and their pension-rights; only the door-servants
had responded…. Some of the branches of the
Special Food Supply Committee had suspended work rather
than submit to the Bolsheviki…. In spite of
lavish promises of high wages and better conditions,
the operators at the Telephone Exchange would not
connect Soviet headquarters….
The Socialist Revolutionary Party
had voted to expel all members who had remained in
the Congress of Soviets, and all who were taking part
in the insurrection….
News from the provinces. Moghilev
had declared against the Bolsheviki. At Kiev
the Cossacks had overthrown the Soviets and arrested
all the insurrectionary leaders. The Soviet and
garrison of Luga, thirty thousand strong, affirmed
its loyalty to the Provisional Government, and appealed
to all Russia to rally around it. Kaledin had
dispersed all Soviets and Unions in the Don Basin,
and his forces were moving north….
Said a representative of the Railway
Workers: “Yesterday we sent a telegram
all over Russia demanding that war between the political
parties cease at once, and insisting on the formation
of a coalition Socialist Government. Otherwise
we shall call a strike to-morrow night…. In
the morning there will be a meeting of all factions
to consider the question. The Bolsheviki seem
anxious for an agreement….”
“If they last that long!”
laughed the City Engineer, a stout, ruddy man….
As we came up to Smolny-not abandoned,
but busier than ever, throngs of workers and soldiers
running in and out, and doubled guards everywhere-we
met the reporters for the bourgeois and “moderate”
Socialist papers.
“Threw us out!” cried
one, from Volia Naroda. “Bonch-Bruevitch
came down to the Press Bureau and told us to leave!
Said we were spies!” They all began to talk
at once: “Insult! Outrage! Freedom
of the press!”
In the lobby were great tables heaped
with stacks of appeals, proclamations and orders of
the Military Revolutionary Committee. Workmen
and soldiers staggered past, carrying them to waiting
automobiles.
One began:
TO THE PILLORY!
In this tragic moment through which
the Russian masses are living, the Mensheviki and
their followers and the Right Socialist Revolutionaries
have betrayed the working-class. They have enlisted
on the side of Kornilov, Kerensky and Savinkov….
They are printing orders of the traitor
Kerensky and creating a panic in the city, spreading
the most ridiculous rumours of mythical victories
by that renegade….
Citizens! Don’t believe
these false rumours. No power can defeat the
People’s Revolution…. Premier Kerensky
and his followers await speedy and well-deserved punishment….
We are putting them in the Pillory.
We are abandoning them to the enmity of all workers,
soldiers, sailors and peasants, on whom they are trying
to rivet the ancient chains. They will never be
able to wash from their bodies the stain of the people’s
hatred and contempt.
Shame and curses to the traitors of the People!...
The Military Revolutionary Committee
had moved into larger quarters, room 17 on the top
floor. Red Guards were at the door. Inside,
the narrow space in front of the railing was crowded
with well-dressed persons, outwardly respectful but
inwardly full of murder-bourgeois who wanted permits
for their automobiles, or passports to leave the city,
among them many foreigners…. Bill Shatov and
Peters were on duty. They suspended all other
business to read us the latest bulletins.
The One Hundred Seventy-ninth Reserve
Regiment offers its unanimous support. Five thousand
stevedores at the Putilov wharves greet the new Government.
Central Committee of the Trade Unions-enthusiastic
support. The garrison and squadron at Reval elect
Military Revolutionary Committees to cooperate, and
despatch troops. Military Revolutionary Committees
control in Pskov and Minsk. Greetings from the
Soviets of Tsaritzin, Rovensky-on-Don, Tchernogorsk,
Sevastopol…. The Finland Division, the new Committees
of the Fifth and Twelfth Armies, offer allegiance….
From Moscow the news is uncertain.
Troops of the Military Revolutionary Committee occupy
the strategic points of the city; two companies on
duty in the Kremlin have gone over to the Soviets,
but the Arsenal is in the hands of Colonel Diabtsev
and his yunkers. The Revolutionary Committee
demanded arms for the workers, and Riabtsev parleyed
with them until this morning, when suddenly he sent
an ultimatum to the Committee, ordering Soviet troops
to surrender and the Committee to disband. Fighting
has begun….
In Petrograd the Staff submitted to
Smolny’s Commissars at once. The Tsentroflot,
refusing, was stormed by Dybenko and a company of
Cronstadt sailors, and a new Tsentroflot set
up, supported by the Baltic and the Black Sea battleships….
But beneath all the breezy assurance
there was a chill premonition, a feeling of uneasiness
in the air. Kerensky’s Cossacks were coming
fast; they had artillery. Skripnik, Secretary
of the Factory-Shop Committees, his face drawn and
yellow, assured me that there was a whole army corps
of them, but he added, fiercely, “They’ll
never take us alive!” Petrovsky laughed weariedly,
“To-morrow maybe we’ll get a sleep-a long
one….” Lozovsky, with his emaciated, red-bearded
face, said, “What chance have we? All alone….
A mob against trained soldiers!”
South and south-west the Soviets had
fled before Kerensky, and the garrisons of Gatchina,
Pavlovsk, Tsarskoye Selo were divided-half voting
to remain neutral, the rest, without officers, falling
back on the capital in the wildest disorder.
In the halls they were pasting up bulletins:
FROM KRASNOYE SELO, NOVEMBER 10TH, 8 A.M.
To be communicated to all Commanders
of Staffs, Commanders in Chief, Commanders, everywhere
and to all, all, all.
The ex-Minister Kerensky has sent
a deliberately false telegram to every one everywhere
to the effect that the troops of revolutionary Petrograd
have voluntarily surrendered their arms and joined
the armies of the former Government, the Government
of Treason, and that the soldiers have been ordered
by the Military Revolutionary Committee to retreat.
The troops of a free people do not retreat nor do
they surrender.
Our troops have left Gatchina in order
to avoid bloodshed between themselves and their mistaken
brother-Cossacks, and in order to take a more convenient
position, which is at present so strong that if Kerensky
and his companions in arms should even increase their
forces ten times, still there would be no cause for
anxiety. The spirit of our troops is excellent.
In Petrograd all is quiet.
Chief of the Defence of Petrograd
and the Petrograd District,
Lieutenant-Colonel Muraviov.
As we left the Military Revolutionary
Committee Antonov entered, a paper in his hand, looking
like a corpse.
“Send this,” said he.
TO ALL DISTRICT SOVIETS OF WORKERS’
DEPUTIES AND FACTORYSHOP COMMITTEES
The Kornilovist bands of Kerensky
are threatening the approaches to the capital.
All the necessary orders have been given to crush
mercilessly the counter-revolutionary attempt against
the people and its conquests.
The Army and the Red Guard of the
Revolution are in need of the immediate support of
the workers.
WE ORDER THE WARD SOVIETS AND FACTORY-SHOP COMMITTEES:
1. To move out the greatest possible
number of workers for the digging of trenches, the
erection of barricades and reinforcing of wire entanglements.
2. Wherever it shall be necessary
for this purpose to stop work at the factories this
shall be done immediately.
3. All common and barbed wire
available must be assembled, and also all implements
for the digging of trenches and the erection of barricades.
4. All available arms must be taken.
5. THE STRICTEST DISCIPLINE IS
TO BE OBSERVED, AND EVERY ONE MUST BE READY TO SUPPORT
THE ARMY OF THE REVOLUTION BY ALL MEANS.
Chairman of the Petrograd Soviet
of Worker’s and Soldiers’ Deputies,
People’s Commissar LEON TROTZKY.
Chairman of the Military Revolutionary Committee,
Commander in Chief PODVOISKY.
As we came out into the dark and gloomy
day all around the grey horizon factory whistles were
blowing, a hoarse and nervous sound, full of foreboding.
By tens of thousands the working-people poured out,
men and women; by tens of thousands the humming slums
belched out their dun and miserable hordes. Red
Petrograd was in danger! Cossacks! South
and southwest they poured through the shabby streets
toward the Moskovsky Gate, men, women and children,
with rifles, picks, spades, rolls of wire, cartridge-belts
over their working clothes…. Such an immense,
spontaneous outpouring of a city never was seen!
They rolled along torrent-like, companies of soldiers
borne with them, guns, motor-trucks, wagons-the revolutionary
proletariat defending with its breast the capital of
the Workers’ and Peasants’ Republic!
Before the door of Smolny was an automobile.
A slight man with thick glasses magnifying his red-rimmed
eyes, his speech a painful effort, stood leaning against
a mud-guard with his hands in the pockets of a shabby
raglan. A great bearded sailor, with the clear
eyes of youth, prowled restlessly about, absently
toying with an enormous blue-steel revolver, which
never left his hand. These were Antonov and Dybenko.
Some soldiers were trying to fasten
two military bicycles on the running-board. The
chauffeur violently protested; the enamel would get
scratched, he said. True, he was a Bolshevik,
and the automobile was commandeered from a bourgeois;
true, the bicycles were for the use of orderlies.
But the chauffeur’s professional pride was revolted….
So the bicycles were abandoned….
The People’s Commissars for
War and Marine were going to inspect the revolutionary
front-wherever that was. Could we go with them?
Certainly not. The automobile only held five-the
two Commissars, two orderlies and the chauffeur.
However, a Russian acquaintance of mine, whom I will
call Trusishka, calmly got in and sat down, nor could
any argument dislodge him….
I see no reason to doubt Trusishka’s
story of the journey. As they went down the Suvorovsky
Prospect some one mentioned food. They might
be out three or four days, in a country indifferently
well provisioned. They stopped the car.
Money? The Commissar of War looked through his
pockets-he hadn’t a kopek. The Commissar
of Marine was broke. So was the chauffeur.
Trusishka bought the provisions….
Just as they turned into the Nevsky a tire blew out.
“What shall we do?” asked Antonov.
“Commandeer another machine!”
suggested Dybenko, waving his revolver. Antonov
stood in the middle of the street and signalled a
passing machine, driven by a soldier.
“I want that machine,” said Antonov.
“You won’t get it,” responded the
soldier.
“Do you know who I am?”
Antonov produced a paper upon which was written that
he had been appointed Commander-in-Chief of all the
armies of the Russian Republic, and that every one
should obey him without question.
“I don’t care if you’re
the devil himself,” said the soldier, hotly.
“This machine belongs to the First Machine-Gun
Regiment, and we’re carrying ammunition in it,
and you can’t have it….”
The difficulty, however, was solved
by the appearance of an old battered taxi-cab, flying
the Italian flag. (In time of trouble private cars
were registered in the name of foreign consulates,
so as to be safe from requisition.) From the interior
of this was dislodged a fat citizen in an expensive
fur coat, and the party continued on its way.
Arrived at Narvskaya Zastava, about
ten miles out, Antonov called for the commandant of
the Red Guard. He was led to the edge of the
town, where some few hundred workmen had dug trenches
and were waiting for the Cossacks.
“Everything all right here, comrade?”
asked Antonov.
“Everything perfect, comrade,” answered
the commandant.
“The troops are in excellent
spirits…. Only one thing-we have no ammunition….”
“In Smolny there are two billion
rounds,” Antonov told him. “I will
give you an order.” He felt in his pockets.
“Has any one a piece of paper?”
Dybenko had none-nor the couriers.
Trusishka had to offer his note-book….
“Devil! I have no pencil!”
cried Antonov. “Who’s got a pencil?”
Needless to say, Trusishka had the only pencil in the
crowd….
We who were left behind made for the
Tsarskoye Selo station. Up the Nevsky, as we
passed, Red Guards were marching, all armed, some with
bayonets and some without. The early twilight
of winter was falling. Heads up they tramped
in the chill mud, irregular lines of four, without
music, without drums. A red flag crudely lettered
in gold, “Peace! Land!” floated over
them. They were very young. The expression
on their faces was that of who know they are going
to die…. Half-fearful, half-contemptuous, the
crowds on the sidewalk watched them pass, in hateful
silence….
[Graphic page-184 Pass to the Northern Front]
This pass was issued upon the recommendation
of Trotzky three days after the Bolshevik Revolution.
It gives me the right of free travel to the Northern
front-and an added note on the back extends the permission
to all fronts. It will be noticed that the speaks
of the Petersburg, instead of the Petrograd
Soviet; it was the fashion among thorough-going internationalists
to abolish all names which smacked of “patriotism”;
but at the same time, it would not do to restore the
“Saint.”...
(Translation)
Executive Committee Petrograd Soviet of Workers’
and Soldiers’
Deputies
Military Section
28th October, 1917
No. 1435
CERTIFICATE
The present certificate is given to the representative
of the American Social Democracy, the internationalist
comrade JOHN REED. The Military Revolutionary Committee
of the Petersburg Soviet of Workers’ and Soldiers’
Deputies gives him the right of free travel through
the entire Northern front, for the purpose of reporting
to our American comrades-internationalists concerning
events in Russia.
For
the President
For
the Secretary
At the railroad station nobody knew
just where Kerensky was, or where the front lay.
Trains went no further, however, than Tsarskoye….
Our car was full of commuters and
country people going home, laden with bundles and
evening papers. The talk was all of the Bolshevik
rising. Outside of that, however, one would never
have realised that civil war was rending mighty Russia
in two, and that the train was headed into the zone
of battle. Through the window we could see, in
the swiftly-deepening darkness, masses of soldiers
going along the muddy road toward the city, flinging
out their arms in argument. A freight-train,
swarming with troops and lit up by huge bonfires, was
halted on a siding. That was all. Back along
the flat horizon the glow of the city’s lights
faded down the night. A street-car crawled distantly
along a far-flung suburb….
Tsarskoye Selo-station was quiet,
but knots of soldiers stood here and there talking
in low tones and looking uneasily down the empty track
in the direction of Gatchina. I asked some of
them which side they were on. “Well,”
said one, “we don’t exactly know the rights
of the matter…. There is no doubt that Kerensky
is a provocator, but we do not consider it right for
Russian men to be shooting Russian men.”
In the station commandant’s
office was a big, jovial, bearded common soldier,
wearing the red arm-band of a regimental committee.
Our credentials from Smolny commanded immediate respect.
He was plainly for the Soviets, but bewildered.
“The Red Guards were here two
hours ago, but they went away again. A Commissar
came this morning, but he returned to Petrograd when
the Cossacks arrived.”
“The Cossacks are here then?”
He nodded, gloomily. “There
has been a battle. The Cossacks came early in
the morning. They captured two or three hundred
of our men, and killed about twenty-five.”
“Where are the Cossacks?”
“Well, they didn’t get
this far. I don’t know just where they are.
Off that way….” He waved his arm vaguely
westward.
We had dinner-an excellent dinner,
better and cheaper than could be got in Petrograd-in
the station restaurant. Nearby sat a French officer
who had just come on foot from Gatchina. All was
quiet there, he said. Kerensky held the town.
“Ah, these Russians,” he went on, “they
are original! What a civil war! Everything
except the fighting!”
We sallied out into the town.
Just at the door of the station stood two soldiers
with rifles and bayonets fixed. They were surrounded
by about a hundred business men, Government officials
and students, who attacked them with passionate argument
and epithet. The soldiers were uncomfortable
and hurt, like children unjustly scolded.
A tall young man with a supercilious
expression, dressed in the uniform of a student, was
leading the attack.
“You realise, I presume,”
he said insolently, “that by taking up arms
against your brothers you are making your-selves the
tools of murderers and traitors?”
“Now brother,”answered the soldier
earnestly, “you don’t understand.
There are two classes, don’t you see, the proletariat
and the bourgeoisie. We—”
“Oh, I know that silly talk!”
broke in the student rudely. “A bunch of
ignorant peasants like you hear somebody bawling a
few catch-words. You don’t understand what
they mean. You just echo them like a lot of parrots.”
The crowd laughed. “I’m a Marxian
student. And I tell you that this isn’t
Socialism you are fighting for. It’s just
plain pro-German anarchy!”
“Oh, yes, I know,” answered
the soldier, with sweat dripping from his brow.
“You are an educated man, that is easy to see,
and I am only a simple man. But it seems to me—”
“I suppose,” interrupted
the other contemptuously, “that you believe
Lenin is a real friend of the proletariat?”
“Yes, I do,” answered the soldier, suffering.
“Well, my friend, do you know
that Lenin was sent through Germany in a closed car?
Do you know that Lenin took money from the Germans?”
“Well, I don’t know much
about that,” answered the soldier stubbornly,
“but it seems to me that what he says is what
I want to hear, and all the simple men like me.
Now there are two classes, the bourgeoisie and the
proletariat—”
“You are a fool! Why, my
friend, I spent two years in Schlüsselburg for revolutionary
activity, when you were still shooting down revolutionists
and singing ‘God Save the Tsar!’ My name
is Vasili Georgevitch Panyin. Didn’t you
ever hear of me?”
“I’m sorry to say I never
did,” answered the soldier with humility.
“But then, I am not an educated man. You
are probably a great hero.”
“I am,” said the student
with conviction. “And I am opposed to the
Bolsheviki, who are destroying our Russia, our free
Revolution. Now how do you account for that?”
The soldier scratched his head.
“I can’t account for it at all,”
he said, grimacing with the pain of his intellectual
processes. “To me it seems perfectly simple-but
then, I’m not well educated. It seems like
there are only two classes, the proletariat and the
bourgeoisie—”
“There you go again with your
silly formula!” cried the student.
“—only two classes,” went on
the soldier, doggedly.
ldquo;And whoever isn’t on one side is on the
other…”
We wandered on up the street, where
the lights were few and far between, and where people
rarely passed. A threatening silence hung over
the place-as of a sort of purgatory between heaven
and hell, a political No Man’s Land. Only
the barber shops were all brilliantly lighted and
crowded, and a line formed at the doors of the public
bath; for it was Saturday night, when all Russia bathes
and perfumes itself. I haven’t the slightest
doubt that Soviet troops and Cossacks mingled in the
places where these ceremonies were performed.
The nearer we came to the Imperial
Park, the more deserted were the streets. A frightened
priest pointed out the headquarters of the Soviet,
and hurried on. It was in the wing of one of the
Grand Ducal palaces, fronting the Park. The windows
were dark, the door locked. A soldier, lounging
about with his hands in the top of his trousers, looked
us up and down with gloomy suspicion. “The
Soviet went away two days ago,” said he.
“Where?” A shrug. “Nie znayu. I
don’t know.”
A little further along was a large
building, brightly illuminated. From within came
a sound of hammering. While we were hesitating,
a soldier and a sailor came down the street, hand
in hand. I showed them my pass from Smolny.
“Are you for the Soviets?” I asked.
They did not answer, but looked at each other in a
frightened way.
“What is going on in there?”
asked the sailor, pointing to the building.
“I don’t know.”
Timidly the soldier put out his hand
and opened the door a crack. Inside a great hall
hung with bunting and evergreens, rows of chairs,
a stage being built.
A stout woman with a hammer in her
hand and her mouth full of tacks came out. “What
do you want?” she asked.
“Is there a performance to-night?”
said the sailor, nervously.
“There will be private theatricals
Sunday night,” she answered severely. “Go
away.”
We tried to engage the soldier and
sailor in conversation, but they seemed frightened
and unhappy, and drew off into the darkness.
We strolled toward the Imperial Palaces,
along the edge of the vast, dark gardens, their fantastic
pavilions and ornamental bridges looming uncertainly
in the night, and soft water splashing from the fountains.
At one place, where a ridiculous iron swan spat unceasingly
from an artificial grotto, we were suddenly aware of
observation, and looked up to encounter the sullen,
suspicious gaze of half a dozen gigantic armed soldiers,
who stared moodily down from a grassy terrace.
I climbed up to them. “Who are you?”
I asked.
“We are the guard,” answered
one. They all looked very depressed, as undoubtedly
they were, from weeks and weeks of all-day all-night
argument and debate.
“Are you Kerensky’s troops, or the Soviets’?”
There was silence for a moment, as
they looked uneasily at each other. Then, “We
are neutral,” said he.
We went on through the arch of the
huge Ekaterina Palace, into the Palace enclosure itself,
asking for headquarters. A sentry outside a door
in a curving white wing of the Palace said that the
commandant was inside.
In a graceful, white, Georgian room,
divided into unequal parts by a two-sided fire-place,
a group of officers stood anxiously talking.
They were pale and distracted, and evidently hadn’t
slept. To one, an oldish man with a white beard,
his uniform studded with decorations, who was pointed
out as the Colonel, we showed our Bolshevik papers.
He seemed surprised. “How
did you get here without being killed?” he asked
politely. “It is very dangerous in the streets
just now. Political passion is running very high
in Tsarskoye Selo. There was a battle this morning,
and there will be another to-morrow morning.
Kerensky is to enter the town at eight o’clock.”
“Where are the Cossacks?”
“About a mile over that way.” He
waved his arm.
“And you will defend the city against them?”
“Oh dear no.” He
smiled. “We are holding the city for Kerensky.”
Our hearts sank, for our passes stated that we were
revolutionary to the core. The Colonel cleared
his throat. “About those passes of yours,”
he went on. “Your lives will be in danger
if you are captured. Therefore, if you want to
see the battle, I will give you an order for rooms
in the officers’ hotel, and if you will come
back here at seven o’clock in the morning, I
will give you new passes.”
“So you are for Kerensky?” we said.
“Well, not exactly for
Kerensky.” The Colonel hesitated. “You
see, most of the soldiers in the garrison are Bolsheviki,
and to-day, after the battle, they all went away in
the direction of Petrograd, taking the artillery with
them. You might say that none of the soldiers
are for Kerensky; but some of them just don’t
want to fight at all. The officers have
almost all gone over to Kerensky’s forces, or
simply gone away. We are-ahem-in a most difficult
position, as you see….”
We did not believe that there would
be any battle…. The Colonel courteously sent
his orderly to escort us to the railroad station.
He was from the South, born of French immigrant parents
in Bessarabia. “Ah,” he kept saying,
“it is not the danger or the hardships I mind,
but being so long, three years, away from my mother….”
Looking out of the window of the train
as we sped through the cold dark toward Petrograd,
I caught glimpses of clumps of soldiers gesticulating
in the light of fires, and of clusters of armoured
cars halted together at cross-roads, the chauffeurs
hanging out of the turrets and shouting to each other….
All the troubled night over the bleakflats
leaderless bands of soldiers and Red Guards wandered,
clashing and confused, and the Commissars of the Military
Revolutionary Committee hurried from one group to
another, trying to organise a defence….
Back in town excited throngs were
moving in tides up and down the Nevsky. Something
was in the air. From the Warsaw Railway station
could be heard far-off cannonade. In the yunker
schools there was feverish activity. Duma members
went from barracks to barracks, arguing and pleading,
narrating fearful stories of Bolshevik violence-massacre
of the yunkers in the Winter Palace, rape of
the women soldiers, the shooting of the girl before
the Duma, the murder of Prince Tumanov…. In
the Alexander Hall of the Duma building the Committee
for Salvation was in special session; Commissars came
and went, running…. All the journalists expelled
from Smolny were there, in high spirits. They
did not believe our report of conditions in Tsarskoye.
Why, everybody knew that Tsarskoye was in Kerensky’s
hands, and that the Cossacks were now at Pulkovo.
A committee was being elected to meet Kerensky at
the railway station in the morning….
One confided to me, in strictest secrecy,
that the counter-revolution would begin at midnight.
He showed me two proclamations, one signed by Gotz
and Polkovnikov, ordering the yunker schools,
soldier convalescents in the hospitals, and the Knights
of St. George to mobilise on a war footing and wait
for orders from the Committee for Salvation; the other
from the Committee for Salvation itself, which read
as follows:
To the Population of Petrograd!
Comrades, workers, soldiers and citizens of revolutionary Petrograd! nary Petrograd! | |
The Bolsheviki, while appealing for
peace at the front, are inciting to civil war in the
rear.
Do not dig their provocatory appeals!
Do not dig trenches!
Down with the traitorous barricades!
Lay down your arms!
Soldiers, return to your barracks!
The war begun in Petrograd-is the death of the Revolution!
In the name of liberty, land, and
peace, unite around the Committee for Salvation of
Country and Revolution!
As we left the Duma a company of Red
Guards, stern-faced and desperate, came marching down
the dark, deserted street with a dozen prisoners-members
of the local branch of the Council of Cossacks, caught
red-handed plotting counter-revolution in their headquarters….
A soldier, accompanied by a small
boy with a pail of paste, was sticking up great flaring
notices:
By virtue of the present, the city
of Petrograd and its suburbs are declared in a state
of siege. All assemblies or meetings in the streets,
and generally in the open air, are forbidden until
further orders.
N. PODVOISKY, President of the Military
Revolutionary Committee.
As we went home the air was full of
confused sound-automobile horns, shouts, distant shots.
The city stirred uneasily, wakeful.
In the small hours of the morning
a company of yunkers, disguised as soldiers
of the Semionovsky Regiment, presented themselves at
the Telephone Exchange just before the hour of changing
guard. They had the Bolshevik password, and took
charge without arousing suspicion. A few minutes
later Antonov appeared, making a round of inspection.
Him they captured and locked in a small room.
When the relief came it was met by a blast of rifle-fire,
several being killed.
Counter-revolution had begun…