Chapter
V
Plunging
Ahead
THURSDAY, November 8th. Day broke
on a city in the wildest excitement and confusion,
a whole nation having up in long hissing swells of
storm. Superficially all was quiet; hundreds of
thousands of people retired at a prudent hour, got
up early, and went to work. In Petrograd the
street-cars were running, the stores and restaurants
open, theatres going, an exhibition of paintings advertised….
All the complex routine of common life-humdrum even
in war-time-proceeded as usual. Nothing is so
astounding as the vitality of the social organism-how
it persists, feeding itself, clothing itself, amusing
itself, in the face of the worst calamities….
The air was full of rumours about
Kerensky, who was said to have raised the Front, and
to be leading a great army against the capital. Volia
Naroda published a prikaz launched by him
at Pskov:
The disorders caused by the insane
attempt of the Bolsheviki place the country on the
verge of a precipice, and demand the effort of our
entire will, our courage and the devotion of every
one of us, to win through the terrible trial which
the fatherland is undergoing….
Until the declaration of the composition
of the new Government-if one is formed-every one ought
to remain at his post and fulfil his duty toward bleeding
Russia. It must be remembered that the least
interference with existing Army organisations can bring
on irreparable misfortunes, by opening the Front to
the enemy. Therefore it is indispensable to preserve
at any price the morale of the troops, by assuring
complete order and the preservation of the Army from
new shocks, and by maintaining absolute confidence
between officers and their subordinates. I order
all the chiefs and Commissars, in the name of the
safety of the country, to stay at their posts, as
I myself retain the post of Supreme Commander, until
the Provisional Government of the Republic shall declare
its will….
In answer, this placard on all the walls:
FROM THE ALL-RUSSIAN CONGRESS OF SOVIETS
“The ex-Ministers Konovalov,
Kishkin, Terestchenko, Maliantovitch, Nikitin and
others have been arrested by the Military Revolutionary
Committee. Kerensky has fled. All Army organisations
are ordered to take every measure for the immediate
arrest of Kerensky and his conveyance to Petrograd.
“All assistance given to Kerensky
will be punished as a serious crime against the state.”
With brakes released the Military
Revolutionary Committee whirled, throwing off orders,
appeals, decrees, like sparks. (See App. V, Sect.
1)... Kornilov was ordered brought to Petrograd.
Members of the Peasant Land Committees imprisoned
by the Provisional Government were declared free.
Capital punishment in the army was abolished.
Government employees were ordered to continue their
work, and threatened with severe penalties if they
refused. All pillage, disorder and speculation
were forbidden under pain of death. Temporary
Commissars were appointed to the various Ministries:
Foreign Affairs, Vuritsky and Trotzky; Interior and
Justice, Rykov; Labor, Shliapnikov; Finance, Menzhinsky;
Public Welfare, Madame Kollontai; Commerce, Ways and
Communications, Riazanov; Navy, the sailor Korbir;
Posts and Telegraphs, Spiro; Theatres, Muraviov; State
Printing Office, Gherbychev; for the City of Petrograd,
Lieutenant Nesterov; for the Northern Front, Pozern….
To the Army, appeal to set up Military
Revolutionary Committees. To the railway workers,
to maintain order, especially not to delay the transport
of food to the cities and the front…. In return,
they were promised representation in the Ministry
of Ways and Communications.
Cossack brothers! (said one proclamation).
You are being led against Petrograd. They want
to force you into battle with the revolutionary workers
and soldiers of the capital. Do not believe a
word that is said by our common enemies, the land-owners
and the capitalists.
At our Congress are represented all
the conscious organisations of workers, soldiers and
peasants of Russia. The Congress wishes also
to welcome into its midst the worker-Cossacks.
The Generals of the Black Band, henchmen of the land-owners,
of Nicolai the Cruel, are our enemies.
They tell you that the Soviets wish
to confiscate the lands of the Cossacks. This
is a lie. It is only from the great Cossack landlords
that the Revolution will confiscate the land to give
it to the people.
Organise Soviets of Cossacks’
Deputies! Join with the Soviets of Workers’
and Soldiers’ Deputies!
Show the Black Band that you are not
traitors to the People, and that you do not wish to
be cursed by the whole of revolutionary Russia!...
Cossack brothers, execute no orders
of the enemies of the people. Send your delegates
to Petrograd to talk it over with us…. The
Cossacks of the Petrograd garrison, to their honour,
have not justified the hope of the People’s
enemies….
Cossack brothers! The All-Russian
Congress of Soviets extends to you a fraternal hand.
Long live the brotherhood of the Cossacks with the
soldiers, workers and peasants of all Russia!
On the other side, what a storm of
proclamations posted up, hand-bills scattered everywhere,
newspapers-screaming and cursing and prophesying evil.
Now raged the battle of the printing press-all other
weapons being in the hands of the Soviets.
First, the appeal of the Committee
for Salvation of Country and Revolution, flung broadcast
over Russia and Europe:
TO THE CITIZENS OF THE RUSSIAN REPUBLIC!
Contrary to the will of the revolutionary
masses, on November 7th the Bolsheviki of Petrograd
criminally arrested part of the Provisional Government,
dispersed the Council of the Republic, and proclaimed
an illegal power. Such violence committed against
the Government of revolutionary Russia at the moment
of its greatest external danger, is an indescribable
crime against the fatherland.
The insurrection of the Bolsheviki
deals a mortal blow to the cause of national defence,
and postpones immeasurably the moment of peace so
greatly desired.
Civil war, begun by the Bolsheviki,
threatens to deliver the country to the horrors of
anarchy and counter-revolution, and cause the failure
of the Constituent Assembly, which must affirm the
republican régime and transmit to the People forever
their right to the land.
Preserving the continuity of the only
legal Governmental power, the Committee for Salvation
of Country and Revolution, established on the night
of November 7th, takes the initiative in forming a
new Provisional Government; which, basing itself on
the forces of democracy, will conduct the country
to the Constituent Assembly and save it from anarchy
and counter-revolution. The Committee for Salvation
summons you, citizens, to refuse to recognise the power
of violence. Do not obey its orders!
Rise for the defence of the country and Revolution!
Support the Committee for Salvation!
Signed by the Council of the Russian Republic, the
Municipal Duma of
Petrograd, the Tsay-ee-kah (First Congress),
the Executive
Committee of the Peasants’ Soviets, and from
the Congress itself the
Front group, the factions of Socialist Revolutionaries,
Mensheviki,
Populist Socialists, Unified Social Democrats, and
the group
“Yedinstvo.”
Then posters from the Socialist Revolutionary
party, the Mensheviki oborontsi, Peasants’
Soviets again; from the Central Army Committee, the
Tsentroflot....
... Famine will crush Petrograd!
(they cried). The German armies will trample
on our liberty. Black Hundred pogroms will
spread over Russia, if we all-conscious workers, soldiers,
citizens-do not unite….
Do not trust the promises of the Bolsheviki!
The promise of immediate peace-is a lie! The
promise of bread-a hoax! The promise of land-a
fairy tale!...
They were all in this manner.
Comrades! You have been basely
and cruelly deceived! The seizure of power has
been accomplished by the Bolsheviki alone….
They concealed their plot from the other Socialist
parties composing the Soviet….
You have been promised land and freedom,
but the counter-revolution will profit by the anarchy
called forth by the Bolsheviki, and will deprive you
of land and freedom….
The newspapers were as violent.
Our duty (said the Dielo Naroda)
is to unmask these traitors to the working-class.
Our duty is to mobilise all our forces and mount guard
over the cause of the Revolution!...
Izviestia, for the last time
speaking in the name of the old Tsay-ee-kah,
threatened awful retribution.
As for the Congress of Soviets, we
affirm that there has been no Congress of Soviets!
We affirm that it was merely a private conference
of the Bolshevik faction! And in that case, they
have no right to cancel the powers of the Tsay-ee-kah....
Novaya Zhizn, while pleading
for a new Government that should unite all the Socialist
parties, criticised severely the action of the Socialist
Revolutionaries and the Mensheviki in quitting the
Congress, and pointed out that the Bolshevik insurrection
meant one thing very clearly: that all illusions
about coalition with the bourgeoisie were henceforth
demonstrated vain…
Rabotchi Put blossomed out
as Pravda, Lenin’s newspaper which had
been suppressed in July. It crowed, bristling:
Workers, soldiers, peasants!
In March you struck down the tyranny of the clique
of nobles. Yesterday you struck down the tyranny
of the bourgeois gang….
The first task now is to guard the
approaches to Petrograd.
The second is definitely to disarm
the counter-revolutionary elements of Petrograd.
The third is definitely to organise
the revolutionary power and assure the realisation
of the popular programme…
What few Cadet organs appeared, and
the bourgeoisie generally, adopted a detached, ironical
attitude toward the whole business, a sort of contemptuous
“I-told-you-so” to the other parties.
Influential Cadets were to be seen hovering around
the Municipal Duma, and on the outskirts of the Committee
for Salvation. Other than that, the bourgeoisie
lay low, biding its hour-which could not far off.
That the Bolsheviki would remain in power longer than
three days never occurred to anybody-except perhaps
to Lenin, Trotzky, the Petrograd workers and the simpler
soldiers….
In the high, amphitheatrical Nicolai
Hall that afternoon I saw the Duma sitting in permanence,
tempestuous, grouping around it all the forces of
opposition. The old Mayer, Schreider, majestic
with his white hair and beard, was describing his
visit to Smolny the night before, to protest in the
name of the Municipal Self-Government. “The
Duma, being the only existing legal Government in
the city, elected by equal, direct and secret suffrage,
would not recognise the new power,” he had told
Trotzky. And Trotzky had answered, “There
is a constitutional remedy for that. The Duma
can be dissolved and re-elected….” At
this report there was a furious outcry.
“If one recognises a Government
by bayonet,” continued the old man, addressing
the Duma, “well, we have one; but I consider
legitimate only a Government recognised by the majority,
and not one created by the usurpation of a minority!”
Wild applause on all benches except those of the Bolsheviki.
Amid renewed tumult the Mayor announced that the Bolsheviki
already were violating Municipal autonomy by appointing
Commissars in many departments.
The Bolshevik speaker shouted, trying
to make himself heard, that the decision of the Congress
of Soviets meant that all Russia backed up the action
of the Bolsheviki.
“You!” he cried.
“You are not the real representative of the people
of Petrograd!” Shrieks of “Insult!
Insult!” The old Mayor, with dignity, reminded
him that the Duma was elected by the freest possible
popular vote. “Yes,” he answered,
“but that was a long time ago-like the Tsay-ee-kah-like
the Army Committee.”
“There has been no new Congress
of Soviets!” they yelled at him.
“The Bolshevik faction refuses
to remain any longer in this nest of counter-revolution-”
Uproar. “-and we demand a re-election of the
Duma….” Whereupon the Bolsheviki left
the chamber, followed by cries of “German agents!
Down with the traitors!”
Shingariov, Cadet, then demanded that
all Municipal functionaries who had consented to be
Commissars of the Military Revolutionary Committee
be discharged from their position and indicted.
Schreider was on his feet, putting a motion to the
effect that the Duma protested against the menace
of the Bolsheviki to dissolve it, and as the legal
representative of the population, it would refuse to
leave its post.
Outside, the Alexander Hall was crowded
for the meeting of the Committee for Salvation, and
Skobeliev was again speaking. “Never yet,”
he said, “was the fate of the Revolution so acute,
never yet did the question of the existence of the
Russian state excite so much anxiety, never yet did
history put so harshly and categorically the question-is
Russia to be or not to be! The great hour for
the salvation of the Revolution has arrived, and in
consciousness thereof we observe the close union of
the live forces of the revolutionary democracy, by
whose organised will a centre for the salvation of
the country and the Revolution has already been created….”
And much of the same sort. “We shall die
sooner than surrender our post!”
Amid violent applause it was announced
that the Union of Railway Workers had joined the Committee
for Salvation. A few moments later the Post and
Telegraph Employees came in; then some Mensheviki
Internationalists entered the hall, to cheers.
The Railway men said they did not recognise the Bolsheviki
and had taken the entire railroad apparatus into their
own hands, refusing to entrust it to any usurpatory
power. The Telegraphers’ delegate declared
that the operators had flatly refused to work their
instruments as long as the Bolshevik Commissar was
in the office. The Postmen would not deliver
or accept mail at Smolny…. All the Smolny telephones
were cut off. With great glee it was reported
how Uritzky had gone to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
to demand the secret treaties, and how Neratov had
put him out. The Government employees were all
stopping work….
It was war-war deliberately planned,
Russian fashion; war by strike and sabotage.
As we sat there the chairman read a list of names and
assignments; so-and-so was to make the round of the
Ministries; another was to visit the banks; some ten
or twelve were to work the barracks and persuade the
soldiers to remain neutral-”Russian soldiers, do not
shed the blood of your brothers!”; a committee
was to go and confer with Kerensky; still others were
despatched to provincial cities, to form branches
of the Committee for Salvation, and link together
the anti-Bolshevik elements.
The crowd was in high spirits.
“These Bolsheviki will try to dictate
to the intelligentzia? We’ll show them!”...
Nothing could be more striking than the contrast between
this assemblage and the Congress of Soviets.
There, great masses of shabby soldiers, grimy workmen,
peasants-poor men, bent and scarred in the brute struggle
for existence; here the Menshevik and Social Revolutionary
leaders-Avksentievs, Dans, Liebers,-the former Socialist
Ministers-Skobelievs, Tchernovs,-rubbed shoulders with
Cadets like oily Shatsky, sleek Vinaver; with journalists,
students, intellectuals of almost all camps.
This Duma crowd was well-fed, well-dressed; I did
not see more than three proletarians among them all….
News came. Kornilov’s faithful
Tekhintsi [] had slaughtered his [ See Notes
and Explanations] guards at Bykhov, and he had escaped.
Kaledin was marching north…. The Soviet of
Moscow had set up a Military Revolutionary Committee,
and was negotiating with the commandant of the city
for possession of the arsenal, so that the workers
might be armed.
With these facts was mixed an astounding
jumble of rumours, distortions, and plain lies.
For instance, an intelligent young Cadet, formerly
private secretary to Miliukov and then to Terestchenko,
drew us aside and told us all about the taking of the
Winter Palace.
“The Bolsheviki were led by
German and Austrian officers,” he affirmed.
“Is that so?” we replied, politely.
“How do you know?”
“A friend of mine was there and saw them.”
“How could he tell they were German officers?”
“Oh, because they wore German uniforms!”
There were hundreds of such absurd
tales, and they were not only solemnly published by
the anti-Bolshevik press, but believed by the most
unlikely persons-Socialist Revolutionaries and Mensheviki
who had always been distinguished by their sober devotion
to facts….
But more serious were the stories
of Bolshevik violence and terrorism. For example,
it was said printed that the Red Guards had not only
thoroughly looted the Winter Palace, but that they
had massacred the yunkers after disarming them,
had killed some of the Ministers in cold blood; and
as for the woman soldiers, most of them had been violated,
and many had committed suicide because of the tortures
they had gone through…. All these stories were
swallowed whole by the crowd in the Duma. And
worse still, the mothers and fathers of the students
and of the women read these frightful details, often
accompanied by lists of names, and toward nightfall
the Duma began to be besieged by frantic citizens….
A typical case is that of Prince Tumanov,
whose body, it was announced in many newspapers, had
been found floating in the Moika Canal. A few
hours later this was denied by the Prince’s family,
who added that the Prince was under arrest so the
press identified the dead man as General Demissov.
The General having also come to life, we investigated,
and could find no trace of any body found whatever….
As we left the Duma building two boy
scouts were distributing hand-bills (See App.
V, Sect. 2) to the enormous crowd which blocked the
Nevsky in front of the door-a crowd composed almost
entirely of business men, shop-keepers, tchinouniki,
clerks. One read!
FROM THE MUNICIPAL DUMA
The Municipal Duma in its meeting
of October 26th, in view of the events of the day
decrees: To announce the inviolability of private
dwellings. Through the House Committees it calls
upon the population of the town of Petrograd to meet
with decisive repulse all attempts to enter by force
private apartments, not stopping at the use of arms,
in the interests of the self-defence of citizens.
Up on the corner of the Liteiny, five
or six Red Guards and a couple of sailors had surrounded
a news-dealer and were demanding that he hand over
his copies of the Menshevik Rabot-chaya Gazeta
(Workers’ Gazette). Angrily he shouted
at them, shaking his fist, as one of the sailors tore
the papers from his stand. An ugly crowd had
gathered around, abusing the patrol. One little
workman kept explaining doggedly to the people and
the news-dealer, over and over again, “It has
Kerensky’s proclamation in it. It says we
killed Russian people. It will make bloodshed….”
Smolny was tenser than ever, if that
were possible. The same running men in the dark
corridors, squads of workers with rifles, leaders
with bulging portfolios arguing, explaining, giving
orders as they hurried anxiously along, surrounded
by friends and lieutenants. Men literally out
of themselves, living prodigies of sleeplessness and
work-men unshaven, filthy, with burning eyes, who drove
upon their fixed purpose full speed on engines of
exaltation. So much they had to do, so much!
Take over the Government, organise the City, keep
the garrison loyal, fight the Duma and the Committee
for Salvation, keep out the Germans, prepare to do
battle with Kerensky, inform the provinces what had
happened, Propagandise from Archangel to Vladivostok….
Government and Municipal employees refusing to obey
their Commissars, post and telegraph refusing them
communication, railroads roads stonily ignoring their
appeals for trains, Kerensky coming, the garrison
not altogether to be trusted, the Cossacks waiting
to come out…. Against them not only the organised
bourgeoisie, but all the other Socialist parties except
the Left Socialist Revolutionaries, a few Mensheviki
Internationalists and the Social Democrat Internationalists,
and even they undecided whether to stand by or not.
With them, it is true, the workers and the soldier-masses-the
peasants an unknown quantity-but after all the Bolsheviki
were a political faction not rich in trained and educated
men….
Riazanov was coming up the front steps,
explaining in a sort of humorous panic that he, Commissar
of Commerce, knew nothing whatever of business.
In the upstairs cafe sat a man all by himself in the
corner, in a goat-skin cape and clothes which had been-I
was going to say “slept in,” but of course
he hadn’t slept-and a three days’ growth
of beard. He was anxiously figuring on a dirty
envelope, and biting his pencil meanwhile. This
was Menzhinsky, Commissar of Finance, whose qualifications
were that he had once been clerk in a French bank….
And these four half-running down the hall from the
office of the Military Revolutionary Committee, and
scribbling on bits of paper as they run-these were
Commissars despatched to the four corners of Russia
to carry the news, argue, or fight-with whatever arguments
or weapons came to hand….
The Congress was to meet at one o’clock,
and long since the great meeting-hall had filled,
but by seven there was yet no sign of the presidium….
The Bolshevik and Left Social Revolutionary factions
were in session in their own rooms. All the livelong
afternoon Lenin and Trotzky had fought against compromise.
A considerable part of the Bolsheviki were in favour
of giving way so far as to create a joint all-Socialist
government. “We can’t hold on!”
they cried.
“Too much is against us.
We haven’t got the men. We will be isolated,
and the whole thing will fall.” So Kameniev,
Riazanov and others.
But Lenin, with Trotzky beside him,
stood firm as a rock. “Let the compromisers
accept our programme and they can come in! We
won’t give way an inch. If there are comrades
here who haven’t the courage and the will to
dare what we dare, let them leave with the rest of
the cowards and conciliators! Backed by the workers
and soldiers we shall go on.”
At five minutes past seven came word
from the left Socialist Revolutionaries to say that
they would remain in the Military Revolutionary Committee.
“See!” said Lenin. “They are
following!”
A little later, as we sat at the press
table in the big hall, an Anarchist who was writing
for the bourgeois papers proposed to me that we go
and find out what had become of the presidium.
There was nobody in the Tsay-ee-kah office,
nor in the bureau of the Petrograd Soviet. From
room to room we wandered, through vast Smolny.
Nobody seemed to have the slightest idea where to find
the governing body of the Congress. As we went
my companion described his ancient revolutionary activities,
his long and pleasant exile in France…. As
for the Bolsheviki, he confided to me that they were
common, rude, ignorant persons, without aesthetic sensibilities.
He was a real specimen of the Russian intelligentzia....
So he came at last to Room 17, office of the Military
Revolutionary Committee, and stood there in the midst
of all the furious coming and going. The door
opened, and out shot a squat, flat-faced man in a uniform
without insignia, who seemed to be smiling-which smile,
after a minute, one saw to be the fixed grin of extreme
fatigue. It was Krylenko.
My friend, who was a dapper, civilized-looking
young man, gave a cry of pleasure and stepped forward.
“Nicolai Vasilievitch!”
he said, holding out his hand. “Don’t
you remember me, comrade? We were in prison together.”
Krylenko made an effort and concentrated
his mind and sight. “Why yes,” he
answered finally, looking the other up and down with
an expression of great friendliness. “You
are S-. Zdra’stvuitye!” They kissed.
“What are you doing in all this?” He waved
his arm around.
“Oh, I’am just looking on…. You
seem very successful.”
“Yes,” replied Krylenko,
with a sort of doggedness, “The proletarian
Revolution is a great success.” He laughed.
“Perhaps-perhaps, however, we’ll meet
in prison again!”
When we got out into the corridor
again my friend went on with his explanations.
“You see, I’am a follower of Kropotkin.
To us the Revolution is a great failure; it has not
aroused the patriotism of the masses. Of course
that only proves that the people are not ready for
Revolution….”
It was just 8.40 when a thundering
wave of cheers announced the entrance of the presidium,
with Lenin-great Lenin-among them. A short, stocky
figure, with a big head set down in his shoulders,
bald and bulging. Little eyes, a snubbish nose,
wide, generous mouth, and heavy chin; clean-shaven
now, but already beginning to bristle with the well-known
beard of his past and future. Dressed in shabby
clothes, his trousers much too long for him. Unimpressive,
to be the idol of a mob, loved and revered as perhaps
few leaders in history have been. A strange popular
leader-a leader purely by virtue of intellect; colourless,
humourless, uncompromising and detached, without picturesque
idiosyncrasies-but with the power of explaining profound
ideas in simple terms, of analysing a concrete situation.
And combined with shrewdness, the greatest intellectual
audacity.
Kameniev was reading the report of
the actions of the Military Revolutionary Committee;
abolition of capital punishment in the Army, restoration
of the free right of propaganda, release of officers
and soldiers arrested for political crimes, orders
to arrest Kerensky and confiscation of food supplies
in private store-houses…. Tremendous applause.
Again the representative of the Bund.
The uncompromising attitude of the Bolsheviki would
mean the crushing of the Revolution; therefore, the
Bund delegates must refuse any longer to sit
in the Congress. Cries from the audience, “We
thought you walked out last night! How many times
are you going to walk out?”
Then the representative of the Mensheviki
Internationalists. Shouts, “What!
You here still?” The speaker explained that only
part of the Mensheviki Internationalists left the
Congress; the rest were going to stay-
“We consider it dangerous and
perhaps even mortal for the Revolution to transfer
the power to the Soviets”Interruptions“but we feel
it our duty to remain in the Congress and vote against
the transfer here!”
Other speakers followed, apparently
without any order. A delegate of the coal-miners
of the Don Basin called upon the Congress to take
measures against Kaledin, who might cut off coal and
food from the capital. Several soldiers just
arrived from the Front brought the enthusiastic greetings
of their regiments…. Now Lenin, gripping the
edge of the reading stand, letting his little winking
eyes travel over the crowd as he stood there waiting,
apparently oblivious to the long-rolling ovation,
which lasted several minutes. When it finished,
he said simply, “We shall now proceed to construct
the Socialist order!” Again that overwhelming
human roar.
“The first thing is the adoption
of practical measures to realise peace…. We
shall offer peace to the peoples of all the belligerent
countries upon the basis of the Soviet terms-no annexations,
no indemnities, and the right of self-determination
of peoples. At the same time, according to our
promise, we shall publish and repudiate the secret
treaties…. The question of War and Peace is
so clear that I think that I may, without preamble,
read the project of a Proclamation to the Peoples
of All the Belligerent Countries….”
His great mouth, seeming to smile,
opened wide as he spoke; his voice was hoarse-not
unpleasantly so, but as if it had hardened that way
after years and years of speaking-and went on monotonously,
with the effect of being able to go on forever….
For emphasis he bent forward slightly. No gestures.
And before him, a thousand simple faces looking up
in intent adoration.
PROCLAMATION TO THE PEOPLES AND GOVERNMENTS
OF ALL THE BELLIGERENT NATIONS.
The Workers’ and Peasants’
Government, created by the revolution of November
6th and 7th and based on the Soviets of Workers’,
Soldiers’ and Peasants’ Deputies, proposes
to all the belligerent peoples and to their Governments
to begin immediately negotiations for a just and democratic
peace.
The Government means by a just and
democratic peace, which is desired by the immense
majority of the workers and the labouring classes,
exhausted and depleted by the war-that peace which
the Russian workers and peasants, after having struck
down the Tsarist monarchy, have not ceased to demand
categorically-immediate peace without annexations
(that is to say, without conquest of foreign territory,
without forcible annexation of other nationalities),
and without indemnities.
The Government of Russia Proposes
to all the belligerent peoples immediately to conclude
such a peace, by showing themselves willing to enter
upon the decisive steps of negotiations aiming at such
a peace, at once, without the slightest delay, before
the definitive ratification of all the conditions
of such a peace by the authorised assemblies of the
people of all countries and of all nationalities.
By annexation or conquest of foreign
territory, the Government means-conformably to the
conception of democratic rights in general, and the
rights of the working-class in particular-all union
to a great and strong State of a small or weak nationality,
without the voluntary, clear and precise expression
of its consent and desire; whatever be the moment
when such an annexation by force was accomplished,
whatever be the degree civilisation of the nation
annexed by force or maintained outside the frontiers
of another State, no matter if that nation be in Europe
or in the far countries across the sea.
If any nation is retained by force
within the limits of another State; if, in spite of
the desire expressed by it, (it matters little if
that desire be expressed by the press, by popular
meetings, decisions of political parties, or by disorders
and riots against national oppression), that nation
is not given the right of deciding by free vote-without
the slightest constraint, after the complete departure
of the armed forces of the nation which has annexed
it or wishes to annex it or is stronger in general-the
form of its national and political organisation, such
a union constitutes an annexation-that is to say,
conquest and an act of violence.
To continue this war in order to permit
the strong and rich nations to divide among themselves
the weak and conquered nationalities is considered
by the Government the greatest possible crime against
humanity; and the Government solemnly proclaims its
decision to sign a treaty of peace which will put
an end to this war upon the above conditions, equally
fair for all nationalities without exception.
The Government abolishes secret diplomacy,
expressing before the whole country its firm decision
to conduct all the negotiations in the light of day
before the people, and will proceed immediately to
the full publication of all secret treaties confirmed
or concluded by the Government of land-owners and
capitalists, from March until November 7th, 1917.
All the clauses of the secret treaties which, as occur
in a majority of cases, have for their object to procure
advantages and privileges for Russian capitalists,
to maintain or augment the annexations of the Russian
imperialists, are denounced by the Government immediately
and without discussion.
In proposing to all Governments and
all peoples to engage in public negotiations for peace,
the Government declares itself ready to carry on these
negotiations by telegraph, by post, or by pourparlers
between the representatives of the different countries,
or at a conference of these representatives.
To facilitate these pourparlers, the Government appoints
its authorised representatives in the neutral countries.
The Government proposes to all the
governments and to the peoples of all the belligerent
countries to conclude an immediate armistice, at the
same time suggesting that the armistice ought to last
three months, during which time it is perfectly possible,
not only to hold the necessary pourparlers between
the representatives of all the nations and nationalities
without exception drawn into the war or forced to
take part in it, but also to convoke authorised assemblies
of representatives of the people of all countries,
for the purpose of the definite acceptance of the
conditions of peace.
In addressing this offer of peace
to the Governments and to the peoples of all the belligerent
countries, the Provisional Workers’ and Peasants’
Government of Russia addresses equally and in particular
the conscious workers of the three nations most devoted
to humanity and the three most important nations among
those taking part in the present war-England, France,
and Germany. The workers of these countries have
rendered the greatest services to the cause of progress
and of Socialism. The splendid examples of the
Chartist movement in England, the series of revolutions,
of world-wide historical significance, accomplished
by the French proletariat-and finally, in Germany,
the historic struggle against the Laws of Exception,
an example for the workers of the whole world of prolonged
and stubborn action, and the creation of the formidable
organisations of German proletarians-all these models
of proletarian heroism, these monuments of history,
are for us a sure guarantee that the workers of these
countries will understand the duty imposed upon them
to liberate humanity from the horrors and consequences
of war; and that these workers, by decisive, energetic
and continued action, will help us to bring to a successful
conclusion the cause of peace-and at the same time,
the cause of the liberation of the exploited working
masses from all slavery and all exploitation.
When the grave thunder of applause
had died away, Lenin spoke again:
“We propose to the Congress
to ratify this declaration. We address ourselves
to the Governments as well as to the peoples, for a
declaration which would be addressed only to the peoples
of the belligerent countries might delay the conclusion
of peace. The conditions of peace, drawn up during
the armistice, will be ratified by the Constituent
Assembly. In fixing the duration of the armistice
at three months, we desire to give to the peoples as
long a rest as possible after this bloody extermination,
and ample time for them to elect their representatives.
This proposal of peace will meet with resistance on
the part of the imperialist governments-we don’t
fool ourselves on that score. But we hope that
revolution will soon break out in all the belligerent
countries; that is why we address ourselves especially
to the workers of France, England and Germany….
“The revolution of November
6th and 7th,” he ended, “has opened the
era of the Social Revolution…. The labour movement,
in the name of peace and Socialism, shall win, and
fulfil its destiny….
There was something quiet and powerful
in all this, which stirred the souls of men.
It was understandable why people believed when Lenin
spoke….”
By crowd vote it was quickly decided
that only representatives of political factions should
be allowed to speak on the motion and that speakers
should be limited to fifteen minutes.
First Karelin for the Left Socialist
Revolutionaries. “Our faction had no opportunity
to propose amendments to the text of the proclamation;
it is a private document of the Bolsheviki. But
we will vote for it because we agree with its spirit….”
For the Social Democrats Internationalists
Kramarov, long, stoop-shouldered and near-sighted-destined
to achieve some notoriety as the Clown of the Opposition.
Only a Government composed of all the Socialist parties,
he said, could possess the authority to take such
important action. If a Socialist coalition were
formed, his faction would support the entire programme;
if not, only part of it. As for the proclamation,
the Internationalists were in thorough accord with
its main points….
Then one after another, amid rising
enthusiasm; Ukrainean Social Democracy, support; Lithuanian
Social Democracy, support; Populist Socialists, support;
Polish Social Democracy, support; Polish Socialists
support-but would prefer a Socialist coalition; Lettish
Social Democracy, support…. Something was kindled
in these men. One spoke of the “coming
World-Revolution, of which we are the advance-guard”;
another of “the new age of brotherhood, when
all the peoples will become one great family….”
An individual member claimed the floor. “There
is contradiction here,” he said. “First
you offer peace without annexations and indemnities,
and then you say you will consider all peace offers.
To consider means to accept….”
Lenin was on his feet. “We
want a just peace, but we are not afraid of a revolutionary
war…. Probably the imperialist Governments will
not answer our appeal-but we shall not issue an ultimatum
to which it will be easy to say no…. If the
German proletariat realises that we are ready to consider
all offers of peace, that will perhaps be the last
drop which overflows the bowl-revolution will break
out in Germany….
“We consent to examine all conditions
of peace, but that doesn’t mean that we shall
accept them…. For some of our terms we shall
fight to the end-but possibly for others will find
it impossible to continue the war…. Above all,
we want to finish the war….”
It was exactly 10:35 when Kameniev
asked all in favour of the proclamation to hold up
their cards. One delegate dared to raise his
hand against, but the sudden sharp outburst around
him brought it swiftly down…. Unanimous.
Suddenly, by common impulse, we found
ourselves on our feet, mumbling together into the
smooth lifting unison of the Internationale.
A grizzled old soldier was sobbing like a child.
Alexandra Kollontai rapidly winked the tears back.
The immense sound rolled through the hall, burst windows
and doors and seared into the quiet sky. “The
war is ended! The war is ended!” said a
young workman near me, his face shining. And
when it was over, as we stood there in a kind of awkward
hush, some one in the back of the room ck of the
room | | shouted, “Comrades!
Let us remember those who have died for liberty!”
So we began to sing the Funeral March, that slow,
melancholy and yet triumphant chant, so Russian and
so moving. The Internationale is an alien
air, after all. The Funeral March seemed the
very soul of those dark masses whose delegates sat
in this hall, building from their obscure visions
a new Russia-and perhaps more.
You fell in the fatal fight
For the liberty of the people, for the honour of the
people….
You gave up your lives and everything dear to you,
You suffered in horrible prisons,
You went to exile in chains….
Without a word you carried your chains
because you could not ignore your suffering brothers,
Because you believed that justice is stronger than
the sword….
The time will come when your surrendered life will
count
That time is near; when tyranny falls
the people will rise, great and free!
Farewell, brothers, you chose a noble path,
You are followed by the new and fresh
army ready to die and to suffer….
Farewell, brothers, you chose a noble path,
At your grave we swear to fight, to
work for freedom and the people’s happiness….
For this did they lie there, the martyrs
of March, in their cold Brotherhood Grave on Mars
Field; for this thousands and tens of thousands had
died in the prisons, in exile, in Siberian mines.
It had not come as they expected it would come, nor
as the intelligentzia desired it; but it had
come-rough, strong, impatient of formulas, contemptuous
of sentimentalism; real….
Lenin was reading the Decree on Land:
(1.) All private ownership of land
is abolished immediately without compensation.
(2.) All land_owners’ estates,
and all lands belonging to the Crown, to monasteries,
church lands with all their live stock and inventoried
property, buildings and all appurtenances, are transferred
to the disposition of the township Land Committees
and the district Soviets of Peasants’ Deputies
until the Constituent Assembly meets.
(3.) Any damage whatever done to the
confiscated property which from now on belongs to
the whole People, is regarded as a serious crime,
punishable by the revolutionary tribunals. The
district Soviets of Peasants’ Deputies shall
take all necessary measures for the observance of
the strictest order during the taking over of the
land-owners’ estates, for the determination of
the dimensions of the plots of land and which of them
are subject to confiscation, for the drawing up of
an inventory of the entire confiscated property, and
for the strictest revolutionary protection of all the
farming property on the land, with all buildings,
implements, cattle, supplies of products, etc.,
passing into the hands of the People.
(4.) For guidance during the realisation
of the great land reforms until their final resolution
by the Constituent Assembly, shall serve the following
peasant nakaz (See App. V, Sect. 3) (instructions),
drawn up on the basis of 242 local peasant nakazi
by the editorial board of the “Izviestia
of the All-Russian Soviet of Peasants’ Deputies,”
and published in No.88 of said “Izviestia”
(Petrograd, No.88, August 19th, 1917).
The lands of peasants and of Cossacks
serving in the Army shall not be confiscated.
“This is not,” explained
Lenin, “the project of former Minister Tchernov,
who spoke of ‘erecting a frame-work’ and
tried to realise reforms from above. From below,
on the spot, will be decided the questions of division
of the land. The amount of land received by each
peasant will vary according to the locality….
“Under the Provisional Government,
the pomieshtchiki flatly refused to obey the
orders of the Land Committees-those Land Committees
projected by Lvov, brought into existence by Shingariov,
and administered by Kerensky!”
Before the debates could begin a man
forced his way violently through the crowd in the
aisle and climbed upon the platform. It was Pianikh,
member of the Executive Committee of the Peasants’
Soviets, and he was mad clean through.
“The Executive Committee of
the All-Russian Soviets of Peasants’ Deputies
protests against the arrest of our comrades, the Ministers
Salazkin and Mazlov!” he flung harshly in the
faces of the crowd, “We demand their instant
release! They are now in Peter-Paul fortress.
We must have immediate action! There is not a
moment to lose!”
Another followed him, a soldier with
disordered beard and flaming eyes. “You
sit here and talk about giving the land to the peasants,
and you commit an act of tyrants and usurpers against
the peasants’ chosen representatives! I
tell you-” he raised his fist, “If one
hair of their heads is harmed, you’ll have a
revolt on your hands!” The crowd stirred confusedly.
Then up rose Trotzky, calm and venomous,
conscious of power, greeted with a roar. “Yesterday
the Military Revolutionary Committee decided to release
the Socialist Revolutionary and Menshevik Ministers,
Mazlov, Salazkin, Gvozdov and Maliantovitch-on principle.
That they are still in Peter-Paul is only because
we have had so much to do…. They will, however,
be detained at their homes under arrest until we have
investigated their complicity in the treacherous acts
of Kerensky during the Kornilov affair!”
“Never,” shouted Pianikh,
“in any revolution have such things been seen
as go on here!”
“You are mistaken,” responded
Trotzky. “Such things have been seen even
in this revolution. Hundreds of our comrades were
arrested in the July days…. When Comrade Kollontai
was released from prison by the doctor’s orders,
Avksentiev placed at her door two former agents of
the Tsar’s secret police!” The peasants
withdrew, muttering, followed by ironical hoots.
The representative of the Left Socialist
Revolutionaries spoke on the Land Decree. While
agreeing in principle, his faction could not vote
on the question until after discussion. The Peasants’
Soviets should be consulted….
The Mensheviki Internationalists,
too, insisted on a party caucus.
Then the leader of the Maximalists,
the Anarchist wing of the peasants: “We
must do honour to a political party which puts such
an act into effect the first day, without jawing about
it!”
A typical peasant was in the tribune,
long hair, boots and sheep-skin coat, bowing to all
corners of the hall. “I wish you well,
comrades and citizens,” he said. “There
are some Cadets walking around outside. You arrested
our Socialist peasants-why not arrest them?”
This was the signal for a debate of
excited peasants. It was precisely like the debate
of soldiers of the night before. Here were the
real proletarians of the land….
“Those members of our Executive
Committee, Avksentiev and the rest, whom we thought
were the peasants’ protectors-they are only Cadets
too! Arrest them! Arrest them!”
Another, “Who are these Pianikhs,
these Avksentievs? They are not peasants at all!
They only wag their tails!”
How the crowd rose to them, recognising brothers!
The Left Socialist Revolutionaries
proposed a half-hour intermission. As the delegates
streamed out, Lenin stood up in his place.
“We must not lose time, comrades!
News all-important to Russia must be on the press
to-morrow morning. No delay!”
And above the hot discussion, argument,
shuffling of feet could be heard the voice of an emissary
of the Military Revolutionary Committee, crying, “Fifteen
agitators wanted in room 17 at once! To go to
the Front!”hellip;
It was almost two hours and a half
later that the delegates came straggling back, the
presidium mounted the platform, and the session recommenced
by the reading of telegrams from regiment after regiment,
announcing their adhesion to the Military Revolutionary
Committee.
In leisurely manner the meeting gathered
momentum. A delegate from the Russian troops
on the Macedonian front spoke bitterly of their situation.
“We suffer there more from the friendship of
our ‘Allies’ than from the enemy,”
he said. Representatives of the Tenth and Twelfth
Armies, just arrived in hot haste, reported, “We
support you with all our strength!” A peasant-soldier
protested against the release of “the traitor
Socialists, Mazlov and Salazkin”; as for the
Executive Committee of the Peasants’ Soviets,
it should be arrested en masse!Here was real
revolutionary talk…. A deputy from the Russian
Army in Persia declared he was instructed to demand
all power to the Soviets…. A Ukrainean officer,
speaking in his native tongue: “There is
no nationalism in this crisis…. Da zdravstvuyet
the proletarian dictatorship of all lands!” Such
a deluge of high and hot thoughts that surely Russia
would never again be dumb!
Kameniev remarked that the anti-Bolshevik
forces were trying to stir up disorders everywhere,
and read an appeal of the Congress to all the Soviets
of Russia:
The All-Russian Congress of Soviets
of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies, including
some Peasants’ Deputies, calls upon the local
Soviets to take immediate energetic measures to oppose
all counter-revolutionary anti-Jewish action and all
pogroms, whatever they may be. The honour
of the Workers’, Peasants’ and Soldiers’
Revolution demands that no pogrom be tolerated.
The Red Guard of Petrograd, the revolutionary
garrison and the sailors have maintained complete
order in the capital.
Workers, soldiers and peasants, you
should follow everywhere the example of the workers
and soldiers of Petrograd.
Comrade soldiers and Cossacks, on
us falls the duty of assuring real revolutionary order.
All revolutionary Russia and the entire
world have their eyes on us….
At two o’clock the Land Decree
was put to vote, with only one against and the peasant
delegates wild with joy…. So plunged the Bolsheviki
ahead, irresistible, over-riding hesitation and opposition-the
only people in Russia who had a definite programme
of action while the others talked for eight long months.
Now arose a soldier, gaunt, ragged
and eloquent, to protest against the clause of the
nakaz tending to deprive military deserters
from a share in village land allotments. Bawled
at and hissed at first, his simple, moving speech
finally made silence. “Forced against his
will into the butchery of the trenches,” he cried,
“which you yourselves, in the Peace decree,
have voted senseless as well as horrible, he greeted
the Revolution with hope of peace and freedom.
Peace? The Government of Kerensky forced him again
to go forward into Galicia to slaughter and be slaughtered;
to his pleas for peace, Terestchenko simply laughed….
Freedom? Under Kerensky he found his Committees
suppressed, his newspapers cut off, his party speakers
put in prison…. At home in his village, the
landlords were defying his Land Committees, jailing
his comrades…. In Petrograd the bourgeoisie,
in alliance with the Germans, were sabotaging the food
and ammunition for the Army…. He was without
boots, or clothes…. Who forced him to desert?
The Government of Kerensky, which you have overthrown!”
At the end there was applause.
But another soldier hotly denounced
it: “The Government of Kerensky is not
a screen behind which can be hidden dirty work like
desertion! Deserters are scoundrels, who run away
home and leave their comrades to die in the trenches
alone! Every deserter is a traitor, and should
be punished….” Uproar, shouts of “Do
volno! Teesche!” Kameniev hastily proposed
to leave the matter to the Government for decision.
(See App. V, Sect. 4)
At 2.30 A. M. fell a tense hush.
Kameniev was reading the decree of the Constitution
of Power:
Until the meeting of the Constituent
Assembly, a provisional Workers’ and Peasants’
Government is formed, which shall be named the Council
of People’s Commissars. (See App. V, Sect.
5)
The administration of the different
branches of state activity shall be intrusted to commissions,
whose composition shall be regulated to ensure the
carrying out of the programme of the Congress, in close
union with the mass-organisations of working-men, working-women,
sailors, soldiers, peasants and clerical employees.
The governmental power is vested in a collegium
made up of the chairmen of these commissions, that
is to say, the Council of People’s Commissars.
Control over the activities of the
People’s Commissars, and the right to replace
them, shall belong to the All-Russian Congress of
Soviets of Workers’, Peasants’ and Soldiers’
Deputies, and its Central Executive Committee.
Still silence; as he read the list
of Commissars, bursts of applause after each name,
Lenin’s and Trotzky’s especially.
President of the Council: Vladimir Ulianov
(Lenin)
Interior: A. E. Rykov
Agriculture: V. P. Miliutin
Labour: A. G. Shliapnikov
Military and Naval Affairs-a
committee composed of V. A.
Avseenko (Antonov), N. V. Krylenko, and F.
M. Dybenko.
Commerce and Industry: V. P. Nogin
Popular Education: A. V. Lunatcharsky
Finance: E. E. Skvortsov (Stepanov)
Foreign Affairs: L. D. Bronstein (Trotzky)
Justice: G. E. Oppokov (Lomov)
Supplies: E. A. Teodorovitch
Post and Telegraph: N. P. Avilov (Gliebov)
Chairman for Nationalities:
I. V. Djougashvili (Stalin)
Railroads: To be filled later.
There were bayonets at the edges of
the room, bayonets pricking up among the delegates;
the Military Revolutionary Committee was arming everybody,
Bolshevism was arming for the decisive battle with
Kerensky, the sound of whose trumpets came up the south-west
wind…. In the meanwhile nobody went home; on
the contrary hundreds of newcomers filtered in, filling
the great room solid with stern-faced soldiers and
workmen who stood for hours and hours, indefatigably
intent. The air was thick with cigarette smoke,
and human breathing, and the smell of coarse clothes
and sweat.
Avilov of the staff of Novaya Zhizn
was speaking in the name of the Social Democrat Internationalists
and the remnant of the Mensheviki Internationalists;
Avilov, with his young, intelligent face, looking
out of place in his smart frock-coat.
“We must ask ourselves where
we are going…. The ease with which the Coalition
Government was upset cannot be explained by the strength
of the left wing of the democracy, but only by the
incapacity of the Government to give the people peace
and bread. And the left wing cannot maintain
itself in power unless it can solve these questions….
“Can it give bread to the people?
Grain is scarce. The majority of the peasants
will not be with you, for you cannot give them the
machinery they need. Fuel and other primary necessities
are almost impossible to procure….
“As for peace, that will be
even more difficult. The allies refused to talk
with Skobeliev. They will never accept the proposition
of a peace conference from you. You will not
be recognised either in London and Paris, or in Berlin….
“You cannot count on the effective
help of the proletariat of the Allied countries, because
in most countries it is very far from the revolutionary
struggle; remember, the Allied democracy was unable
even to convoke the Stockholm Conference. Concerning
the German Social Democrats, I have just talked with
Comrade Goldenberg, one of our delegates to Stockholm;
he was told by the representatives of the Extreme
Left that revolution in Germany was impossible during
the war….” Here interruptions began to
come thick and fast, but Avilov kept on.
“The isolation of Russia will
fatally result either in the defeat of the Russian
Army by the Germans, and the patching up of a peace
between the Austro-German coalition and the Franco-British
coalition at the expense of Russia-or in a
separate peace with Germany.
“I have just learned that the
Allied ambassadors are preparing to leave, and that
Committees for Salvation of Country and Revolution
are forming in all the cities of Russia….
“No one party can conquer these
enormous difficulties. The majority of the people,
supporting a government of Socialist coalition, can
alone accomplish the Revolution….
“He then read the resolution of the two factions:
Recognising that for the salvation
of the conquests of the Revolution it is indispensable
immediately to constitute a government based on the
revolutionary democracy organised in the Soviets of
Workers,’ Soldiers’ and Peasants’
Deputies, recognising moreover that the task of this
government is the quickest possible attainment of
peace, the transfer of the land into the hands of the
agrarian committees, the organisation of control over
industrial production, and the convocation of the
Constituent Assembly on the date decided, the Congress
appoints an executive committee to constitute such
a government after an agreement with the groups of
the democracy which are taking part in the Congress.
In spite of the revolutionary exaltation
of the triumphant crowd, Avilov’s cool tolerant
reasoning had shaken them. Toward the end, the
cries and hisses died away, and when he finished there
was even some clapping.
Karelin followed him-also young, fearless,
whose sincerity no one doubted-for the Left Socialist
Revolutionaries, the party of Maria Spiridonova, the
party which almost alone followed the Bolsheviki,
and which represented the revolutionary peasants.
“Our party has refused to enter
the Council of People’s Commissars because we
do not wish forever to separate ourselves from the
part of the revolutionary army which left the Congress,
a separation which would make it impossible for us
to serve as intermediaries between the Bolsheviki
and the other groups of the democracy…. And
that is our principal duty at this moment. We
cannot sustain any government except a government
of Socialist coalition….
“We protest, moreover, against
the tyrannical conduct of the Bolsheviki. Our
Commissars have been driven from their posts.
Our only organ, Znamia Truda (Banner of Labour),
was forbidden to appear yesterday….
“The Central Duma is forming
a powerful Committee for Salvation of Country and
Revolution, to fight you. Already you are isolated,
and your Government is without the support of a single
other democratic group….
And now Trotzky stood upon the raised
tribune, confident and dominating, with that sarcastic
expression about his mouth which was almost a sneer.
He spoke, in a ringing voice, and the great crowd
rose to him.
“These considerations on the
dangers of isolation of our party are not new.
On the eve of insurrection our fatal defeat was also
predicted. Everybody was against us; only a faction
of the Socialist Revolutionaries of the left was with
us in the Military Revolutionary Committee. How
is it that we were able to overturn the Government
almost without bloodshed?.... That fact is the
most striking proof that we were not isolated.
In reality the Provisional Government was isolated;
the democratic parties which march against us were
isolated, are isolated, and forever cut off from the
proletariat!
“They speak of the necessity
for a coalition. There is only one coalition
possible-the coalition of the workers, soldiers and
poorest peasants; and it is our party’s honour
to have realised that coalition…. What sort
of coalition did Avilov mean? A coalition with
those who supported the Government of Treason to the
People? Coalition doesn’t always add to
strength. For example, could we have organised
the insurrection with Dan and Avksentiev in our ranks?”
Roars of laughter.
“Avksentiev gave little bread.
Will a coalition with the oborontsi furnish
more? Between the peasants and Avksentiev, who
ordered the arrest of the Land Committees, we choose
the peasants! Our Revolution will remain the
classic revolution of history….
“They accuse us of repelling
an agreement with the other democratic parties.
But is it we who are to blame? Or must we, as
Karelin put it, blame it on a ‘misunderstanding’?
No, comrades. When a party in full tide of revolution,
still wreathed in powder-smoke, comes to say, ’Here
is the Power-take it!’-and when those to whom
it is offered go over to the enemy, that is not a
misunderstanding…. that is a declaration of pitiless
war. And it isn’t we who have declared
war….
“Avilov menaces us with failure
of our peace efforts-if we remain ‘isolated.’
I repeat, I don’t see how a coalition with Skobeliev,
or even Terestchenko, can help us to get peace!
Avilov tries to frighten us by the threat of a peace
at our expense. And I answer that in any case,
if Europe continues to be ruled by the imperialist
bourgeoisie, revolutionary Russia will inevitably be
lost….
“There are only two alternatives;
either the Russian Revolution will create a revolutionary
movement in Europe, or the European powers will destroy
the Russian Revolution!”
They greeted him with an immense crusading
acclaim, kindling to the daring of it, with the thought
of championing mankind. And from that moment
there was something conscious and decided about the
insurrectionary masses, in all their actions, which
never left them.
But on the other side, too, battle
was taking form. Kameniev recognised a delegate
from the Union of Railway Workers, a hardfaced, stocky
man with an attitude of implacable hostility.
He threw a bombshell.
“In the name of the strongest
organisation in Russia I demand the right to speak,
and I say to you: the Vikzhelcharges me
to make known the decision of the Union concerning
the constitution of Power. The Central Committee
refuses absolutely to support the Bolsheviki if they
persist in isolating themselves from the whole democracy
of Russia!” Immense tumult all over the hall.
“In 1905, and in the Kornilov
days, the Railway Workers were the best defenders
of the Revolution. But you did not invite us to
your Congress-” Cries, “It was the old
Tsay-ee-kah which did not invite you!”
The orator paid no attention. “We do not
recognise the legality of this Congress; since the
departure of the Mensheviki and Socialist Revolutionaries
there is not a legal quorum…. The Union supports
the old Tsay-ee-Kah, and declares that the Congress
has no right to elect a new Committee….
“The Power should be a Socialist
and revolutionary Power, responsible before the authorised
organs of the entire revolutionary democracy.
Until the constitution of such a power, the Union of
Railway Workers, which refuses to transport counter-revolutionary
troops to Petrograd, at the same time forbids the execution
of any order whatever without the consent of the Vikzhel.
The Vikzhel also takes into its hands the entire
administration of the railroads of Russia.”
At the end he could hardly be heard
for the furious storm of abuse which beat upon him.
But it was a heavy blow-that could be seen in the
concern on the faces of the presidium. Kameniev,
however, merely answered that there could be no doubt
of the legality of the Congress, as even the quorum
established by the old Tsay-ee-Kah was exceeded-in
spite of the secession of the Mensheviki and Socialist
Revolution arises….
Then came the vote on the Constitution
of Power, which carried the Council of People’s
Commissars into office by an enormous majority….
The election of the new Tsay-ee-kah,
the new parliament of the Russian Republic, took barely
fifteen minutes. Trotzky announced its composition:
100 members, of which 70 Bolsheviki…. As for
the peasants, and the seceding factions, places were
to be reserved for them. “We welcome into
the Government all parties and groups which will adopt
our programme,” ended Trotzky.
And thereupon the Second All-Russian
Congress of Soviets was dissolved, so that the members
might hurry to their homes in the four corners of
Russia and tell of the great happenings….
It was almost seven when we woke the
sleeping conductors and motor-men of the street-cars
which the Street-Railway Workers’ Union always
kept waiting at Smolny to take the Soviet delegates
to their homes. In the crowded car there was
less happy hilarity than the night before, I thought.
Many looked anxious; perhaps they were saying to themselves,
“Now we are masters, how can we do our will?”
At our apartment-house we were held
up in the dark by an armed patrol of citizens and
carefully examined. The Duma’s proclamation
was doing its work….
The landlady heard us come in, and
stumbled out in a pink silk wrapper.
The House Committee has again asked
that you take your turn on guard-duty with the rest
of the men,” she said.
“What’s the reason for this guard-duty?”
“To protect the house and the women and children.”
“Who from?”
“Robbers and murderers.”
“But suppose there came a Commissar
from the Military Revolutionary Committee to search
for arms?”
“Oh, that’s what they’ll
say they are…. And besides, what’s
the difference?”
I solemnly affirmed that the Consul
had forbidden all American citizens to carry arms-especially
in the neighbourhood of the Russian intelligentzia....