Chapter
I
Background
TOWARD the end of September, 1917,
an alien Professor of Sociology visiting Russia came
to see me in Petrograd. He had been informed by
business men and intellectuals that the Revolution
was slowing down. The Professor wrote an article
about it, and then travelled around the country, visiting
factory towns and peasant communities-where, to his
astonishment, the Revolution seemed to be speeding
up. Among the wage-earners and the land-working
people it was common to hear talk of “all land
to the peasants, all factories to the workers.”
If the Professor had visited the front, he would have
heard the whole Army talking Peace….
The Professor was puzzled, but he
need not have been; both observations were correct.
The property-owning classes were becoming more conservative,
the masses of the people more radical.
There was a feeling among business
men and the intelligentzia generally that the
Revolution had gone quite far enough, and lasted too
long; that things should settle down. This sentiment
was shared by the dominant “moderate”
Socialist groups, the oborontsi (See App.
I, Sect. 1) Mensheviki and Socialist Revolutionaries,
who supported the Provisional Government of Kerensky.
On October 14th the official organ
of the “moderate” Socialists said:
The drama of Revolution has two acts;
the destruction of the old régime and the creation
of the new one. The first act has lasted long
enough. Now it is time to go on to the second,
and to play it as rapidly as possible. As a great
revolutionist put it, “Let us hasten, friends,
to terminate the Revolution. He who makes it last
too long will not gather the fruits….”
Among the worker, soldier and peasant
masses, however, there was a stubborn feeling that
the “first act” was not yet played out.
On the front the Army Committees were always running
foul of officers who could not get used to treating
their men like human beings; in the rear the Land
Committees elected by the peasants were being jailed
for trying to carry out Government regulations concerning
the land; and the workmen (See App. I, Sect.
2) in the factories were fighting black-lists and
lockouts. Nay, furthermore, returning political
exiles were being excluded from the country as “undesirable”
citizens; and in some cases, men who returned from
abroad to their villages were prosecuted and imprisoned
for revolutionary acts committed in 1905.
To the multiform discontent of the
people the “moderate” Socialists had one
answer: Wait for the Constituent Assembly, which
is to meet in December. But the masses were not
satisfied with that. The Constituent Assembly
was all well and good; but there were certain definite
things for which the Russian Revolution had been made,
and for which the revolutionary martyrs rotted in
their stark Brotherhood Grave on Mars Field, that
must be achieved Constituent Assembly or no Constituent
Assembly: Peace, Land, and Workers’ Control
of Industry. The Constituent Assembly had been
postponed and postponed-would probably be postponed
again, until the people were calm enough-perhaps to
modify their demands! At any rate, here were eight
months of the Revolution gone, and little enough to
show for it….
Meanwhile the soldiers began to solve
the peace question by simply deserting, the peasants
burned manor-houses and took over the great estates,
the workers sabotaged and struck…. Of course,
as was natural, the manufacturers, land-owners and
army officers exerted all their influence against
any democratic compromise….
The policy of the Provisional Government
alternated between ineffective reforms and stern repressive
measures. An edict from the Socialist Minister
of Labour ordered all the Workers’ Committees
henceforth to meet only after working hours. Among
the troops at the front, “agitators” of
opposition political parties were arrested, radical
newspapers closed down, and capital punishment applied-to
revolutionary propagandists. Attempts were made
to disarm the Red Guard. Cossacks were sent to
keep order in the provinces….
These measures were supported by the
“moderate” Socialists and their leaders
in the Ministry, who considered it necessary to cooperate
with the propertied classes. The people rapidly
deserted them, and went over to the Bolsheviki, who
stood for Peace, Land, and Workers’ Control
of Industry, and a Government of the working-class.
In September, 1917, matters reached a crisis.
Against the overwhelming sentiment of the country,
Kerensky and the “moderate” Socialists
succeeded in establishing a Government of Coalition
with the propertied classes; and as a result, the
Mensheviki and Socialist Revolutionaries lost the
confidence of the people forever.
An article in Rabotchi Put
(Workers’ Way) about the middle of October,
entitled “The Socialist Ministers,” expressed
the feeling of the masses of the people against the
“moderate” Socialists:
Here is a list of their services.(See App. I,
Sect. 3)
Tseretelli: disarmed the workmen
with the assistance of General Polovtsev, checkmated
the revolutionary soldiers, and approved of capital
punishment in the army.
Skobeliev: commenced by trying
to tax the capitalists 100% of their profits, and
finished-and finished by an attempt to dissolve the
Workers’ Committees in the shops and factories.
Avksentiev: put several hundred
peasants in prison, members of the Land Committees,
and suppressed dozens of workers’ and soldiers’
newspapers.
Tchernov: signed the “Imperial”
manifest, ordering the dissolution of the Finnish
Diet.
Savinkov: concluded an open alliance
with General Kornilov. If this saviour of the
country was not able to betray Petrograd, it was due
to reasons over which he had no control.
Zarudny: with the sanction of
Alexinsky and Kerensky, put some of the best workers
of the Revolution, soldiers and sailors, in prison.
Nikitin: acted as a vulgar policeman
against the Railway Workers.
Kerensky: it is better not to
say anything about him. The list of his services
is too long….
A Congress of delegates of the Baltic
Fleet, at Helsingfors, passed a resolution which began
as follows:
We demand the immediate removal from
the ranks of the Provisional Government of the “Socialist,”
the political adventurer-Kerensky, as one who is scandalising
and ruining the great Revolution, and with it the
revolutionary masses, by his shameless political blackmail
on behalf of the bourgeoisie….
The direct result of all this was
the rise of the Bolsheviki….
Since March, 1917, when the roaring
torrents of workmen and soldiers beating upon the
Tauride Palace compelled the reluctant Imperial Duma
to assume the supreme power in Russia, it was the masses
of the people, workers, soldiers and peasants, which
forced every change in the course of the Revolution.
They hurled the Miliukov Ministry down; it was their
Soviet which proclaimed to the world the Russian peace
terms-”No annexations, no indemnities, and the right
of self-determination of peoples”; and again,
in July, it was the spontaneous rising of the unorganised
proletariat which once more stormed the Tauride Palace,
to demand that the Soviets take over the Government
of Russia.
The Bolsheviki, then a small political
sect, put themselves at the head of the movement.
As a result of the disastrous failure of the rising,
public opinion turned against them, and their leaderless
hordes slunk back into the Viborg Quarter, which is
Petrograd’s St. Antoine. Then followed
a savage hunt of the Bolsheviki; hundreds were imprisoned,
among them Trotzky, Madame Kollontai and Kameniev;
Lenin and Zinoviev went into hiding, fugitives from
justice; the Bolshevik papers were suppressed.
Provocators and reactionaries raised the cry that
the Bolsheviki were German agents, until people all
over the world believed it.
But the Provisional Government found
itself unable to substantiate its accusations; the
documents proving pro-German conspiracy were discovered
to be forgeries; [] and one by one the Bolsheviki
were [Part of the famous “Sisson Documents”]
released from prison without trial, on nominal or no
bail-until only six remained. The impotence and
indecision of the ever-changing Provisional Government
was an argument nobody could refute. The Bolsheviki
raised again the slogan so dear to the masses, “All
Power to the Soviets!”-and they were not merely self-seeking,
for at that time the majority of the Soviets was “moderate”
Socialist, their bitter enemy.
But more potent still, they took the
crude, simple desires of the workers, soldiers and
peasants, and from them built their immediate programme.
And so, while the oborontsi Mensheviki and Socialist
Revolutionaries involved themselves in compromise with
the bourgeoisie, the Bolsheviki rapidly captured the
Russian masses. In July they were hunted and
despised; by September the metropolitan workmen, the
sailors of the Baltic Fleet, and the soldiers, had
been won almost entirely to their cause. The
September municipal elections in the large cities
(See App. I, Sect. 4) were significant; only 18
per cent of the returns were Menshevik and Socialist
Revolutionary, against more than 70 per cent in June….
There remains a phenomenon which puzzled
foreign observers: the fact that the Central
Executive Committees of the Soviets, the Central Army
and Fleet Committees, [] and the Central Committees
of some of [See Notes and Explanations.] the Unions-notably,
the Post and Telegraph Workers and the Railway Workers-opposed
the Bolsheviki with the utmost violence. These
Central Committees had all been elected in the middle
of the summer, or even before, when the Mensheviki
and Socialist Revolutionaries had an enormous following;
and they delayed or prevented any new elections.
Thus, according to the constitution of the Soviets
of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies, the
All-Russian Congress should have been called in September;
but the Tsay-ee-kah [] would not [See Notes
and Explanations.] call the meeting, on the ground
that the Constituent Assembly was only two months
away, at which time, they hinted, the Soviets would
abdicate. Meanwhile, one by one, the Bolsheviki
were winning in the local Soviets all over the country,
in the Union branches and the ranks of the soldiers
and sailors. The Peasants’ Soviets remained
still conservative, because in the sluggish rural districts
political consciousness developed slowly, and the
Socialist Revolutionary party had been for a generation
the party which had agitated among the peasants….
But even among the peasants a revolutionary wing was
forming. It showed itself clearly in October,
when the left wing of the Socialist Revolutionaries
split off, and formed a new political faction, the
Left Socialist Revolutionaries.
At the same time there were signs
everywhere that the forces of reaction were gaining
confidence.(See App. I, Sect. 5) At the Troitsky
Farce theatre in Petrograd, for example, a burlesque
called Sins of the Tsar was interrupted by
a group of Monarchists, who threatened to lynch the
actors for “insulting the Emperor.”
Certain newspapers began to sigh for a “Russian
Napoleon.” It was the usual thing among
bourgeois intelligentzia to refer to the Soviets
of Workers’ Deputies (Rabotchikh Deputatov)
as Sabatchikh Deputatov-Dogs’ Deputies.
On October 15th I had a conversation
with a great Russian capitalist, Stepan Georgevitch
Lianozov, known as the “Russian Rockefeller”-a
Cadet by political faith.
“Revolution,” he said,
“is a sickness. Sooner or later the foreign
powers must intervene here-as one would intervene to
cure a sick child, and teach it how to walk.
Of course it would be more or less improper, but the
nations must realise the danger of Bolshevism in their
own countries-such contagious ideas as ’proletarian
dictatorship,’ and ’world social revolution’...
There is a chance that this intervention may not be
necessary. Transportation is demoralised, the
factories are closing down, and the Germans are advancing.
Starvation and defeat may bring the Russian people
to their senses….”
Mr. Lianozov was emphatic in his opinion
that whatever happened, it would be impossible for
merchants and manufacturers to permit the existence
of the workers’ Shop Committees, or to allow
the workers any share in the management of industry.
“As for the Bolsheviki, they
will be done away with by one of two methods.
The Government can evacuate Petrograd, then a state
of siege declared, and the military commander of the
district can deal with these gentlemen without legal
formalities…. Or if, for example, the Constituent
Assembly manifests any Utopian tendencies, it can be
dispersed by force of arms….”
Winter was coming on-the terrible
Russian winter. I heard business men speak of
it so: “Winter was always Russia’s
best friend. Perhaps now it will rid us of Revolution.”
On the freezing front miserable armies continued to
starve and die, without enthusiasm. The railways
were breaking down, food lessening, factories closing.
The desperate masses cried out that the bourgeoisie
was sabotaging the life of the people, causing defeat
on the Front. Riga had been surrendered just
after General Kornilov said publicly, “Must we
pay with Riga the price of bringing the country to
a sense of its duty?” [] [ See “Kornilov
to Brest-Litvosk” by John Reed. Boni and
Liveright N.Y., 1919]
To Americans it is incredible that
the class war should develop to such a pitch.
But I have personally met officers on the Northern
Front who frankly preferred military disaster to cooperation
with the Soldiers’ Committees. The secretary
of the Petrograd branch of the Cadet party told me
that the break-down of the country’s economic
life was part of a campaign to discredit the Revolution.
An Allied diplomat, whose name I promised not to mention,
confirmed this from his own knowledge. I know
of certain coal-mines near Kharkov which were fired
and flooded by their owners, of textile factories at
Moscow whose engineers put the machinery out of order
when they left, of railroad officials caught by the
workers in the act of crippling locomotives….
A large section of the propertied
classes preferred the Germans to the Revolution-even
to the Provisional Government-and didn’t hesitate
to say so. In the Russian household where I lived,
the subject of conversation at the dinner table was
almost invariably the coming of the Germans, bringing
“law and order.”... One evening I spent
at the house of a Moscow merchant; during tea we asked
the eleven people at the table whether they preferred
“Wilhelm or the Bolsheviki.” The
vote was ten to one for Wilhelm…
The speculators took advantage of
the universal disorganisation to pile up fortunes,
and to spend them in fantastic revelry or the corruption
of Government officials. Foodstuffs and fuel were
hoarded, or secretly sent out of the country to Sweden.
In the first four months of the Revolution, for example,
the reserve food-supplies were almost openly looted
from the great Municipal warehouses of Petrograd,
until the two-years’ provision of grain had fallen
to less than enough to feed the city for one month….
According to the official report of the last Minister
of Supplies in the Provisional Government, coffee
was bought wholesale in Vladivostok for two rubles
a pound, and the consumer in Petrograd paid thirteen.
In all the stores of the large cities were tons of
food and clothing; but only the rich could buy them.
In a provincial town I knew a merchant
family turned speculator_-maradior_ (bandit, ghoul)
the Russians call it. The three sons had bribed
their way out of military service. One gambled
in foodstuffs. Another sold illegal gold from
the Lena mines to mysterious parties in Finland.
The third owned a controlling interest in a chocolate
factory, which supplied the local Cooperative societies-on
condition that the Cooperatives furnished him everything
he needed. And so, while the masses of the people
got a quarter pound of black bread on their bread
cards, he had an abundance of white bread, sugar,
tea, candy, cake and butter…. Yet when the soldiers
at the front could no longer fight from cold, hunger
and exhaustion, how indignantly did this family scream
“Cowards!”-how “ashamed” they were
“to be Russians”... When finally the Bolsheviki
found and requisitioned vast hoarded stores of provisions,
what “Robbers” they were.
Beneath all this external rottenness
moved the old-time Dark Forces, unchanged since the
fall of Nicholas the Second, secret still and very
active. The agents of the notorious Okhrana
still functioned, for and against the Tsar, for and
against Kerensky-whoever would pay…. In the
darkness, underground organisations of all sorts, such
as the Black Hundreds, were busy attempting to restore
reaction in some form or other.
In this atmosphere of corruption,
of monstrous half-truths, one clear note sounded day
after day, the deepening chorus of the Bolsheviki,
“All Power to the Soviets! All power to
the direct representatives of millions on millions
of common workers, soldiers, peasants. Land,
bread, an end to the senseless war, an end to secret
diplomacy, speculation, treachery…. The Revolution
is in danger, and with it the cause of the people
all over the world!”
The struggle between the proletariat
and the middle class, between the Soviets and the
Government, which had begun in the first March days,
was about to culminate. Having at one bound leaped
from the Middle Ages into the twentieth century, Russia
showed the startled world two systems of Revolution-the
political and the social-in mortal combat.
What a revelation of the vitality
of the Russian Revolution, after all these months
of starvation and disillusionment! The bourgeoisie
should have better known its Russia. Not for a
long time in Russia will the “sickness”
of Revolution have run its course….
Looking back, Russia before the November
insurrection seems of another age, almost incredibly
conservative. So quickly did we adapt ourselves
to the newer, swifter life; just as Russian politics
swung bodily to the Left-until the Cadets were outlawed
as “enemies of the people,” Kerensky became
a “counter-revolutionist,” the “middle”
Socialist leaders, Tseretelli, Dan, Lieber, Gotz and
Avksentiev, were too reactionary for their following,
and men like Victor Tchernov, and even Maxim Gorky,
belonged to the Right Wing….
About the middle of December, 1917,
a group of Socialist Revolutionary leaders paid a
private visit to Sir George Buchanan, the British
Ambassador, and implored him not to mention the fact
that they had been there, because they were “considered
too far Right.”
“And to think,” said Sir
George. “One year ago my Government instructed
me not to receive Miliukov, because he was so dangerously
Left!”
September and October are the worst
months of the Russian year-especially the Petrograd
year. Under dull grey skies, in the shortening
days, the rain fell drenching, incessant. The
mud underfoot was deep, slippery and clinging, tracked
everywhere by heavy boots, and worse than usual because
of the complete break-down of the Municipal administration.
Bitter damp winds rushed in from the Gulf of Finland,
and the chill fog rolled through the streets.
At night, for motives of economy as well as fear of
Zeppelins, the street-lights were few and far between;
in private dwellings and apartment-houses the electricity
was turned on from six o’clock until midnight,
with candles forty cents apiece and little kerosene
to be had. It was dark from three in the afternoon
to ten in the morning. Robberies and housebreakings
increased. In apartment houses the men took turns
at all-night guard duty, armed with loaded rifles.
This was under the Provisional Government.
Week by week food became scarcer.
The daily allowance of bread fell from a pound and
a half to a pound, then three quarters, half, and a
quarter-pound. Toward the end there was a week
without any bread at all. Sugar one was entitled
to at the rate of two pounds a month-if one could
get it at all, which was seldom. A bar of chocolate
or a pound of tasteless candy cost anywhere from seven
to ten rubles-at least a dollar. There was milk
for about half the babies in the city; most hotels
and private houses never saw it for months. In
the fruit season apples and pears sold for a little
less than a ruble apiece on the street-corner….
For milk and bread and sugar and tobacco
one had to stand in queue long hours in the
chill rain. Coming home from an all-night meeting
I have seen the kvost (tail) beginning to form
before dawn, mostly women, some with babies in their
arms…. Carlyle, in his French Revolution,
has described the French people as distinguished above
all others by their faculty of standing in queue.
Russia had accustomed herself to the practice, begun
in the reign of Nicholas the Blessed as long ago as
1915, and from then continued intermittently until
the summer of 1917, when it settled down as the regular
order of things. Think of the poorly-clad people
standing on the iron-white streets of Petrograd whole
days in the Russian winter! I have listened in
the bread-lines, hearing the bitter, acrid note of
discontent which from time to time burst up through
the miraculous goodnature of the Russian crowd….
Of course all the theatres were going
every night, including Sundays. Karsavina appeared
in a new Ballet at the Marinsky, all dance-loving
Russia coming to see her. Shaliapin was singing.
At the Alexandrinsky they were reviving Meyerhold’s
production of Tolstoy’s “Death of Ivan
the Terrible”; and at that performance I remember
noticing a student of the Imperial School of Pages,
in his dress uniform, who stood up correctly between
the acts and faced the empty Imperial box, with its
eagles all erased…. The Krivoye Zerkalo
staged a sumptuous version of Schnitzler’s “Reigen.”
Although the Hermitage and other picture
galleries had been evacuated to Moscow, there were
weekly exhibitions of paintings. Hordes of the
female intelligentzia went to hear lectures
on Art, Literature and the Easy Philosophies.
It was a particularly active season for Theosophists.
And the Salvation Army, admitted to Russia for the
first time in history, plastered the walls with announcements
of gospel meetings, which amused and astounded Russian
audiences….
As in all such times, the petty conventional
life of the city went on, ignoring the Revolution
as much as possible. The poets made verses-but
not about the Revolution. The realistic painters
painted scenes from mediæval Russian history-anything
but the Revolution. Young ladies from the provinces
came up to the capital to learn French and cultivate
their voices, and the gay young beautiful officers
wore their gold-trimmed crimson bashliki and
their elaborate Caucasian swords around the hotel
lobbies. The ladies of the minor bureaucratic
set took tea with each other in the afternoon, carrying
each her little gold or silver or jewelled sugar-box,
and half a loaf of bread in her muff, and wished that
the Tsar were back, or that the Germans would come,
or anything that would solve the servant problem….
The daughter of a friend of mine came home one afternoon
in hysterics because the woman street-car conductor
had called her “Comrade!”
All around them great Russia was in
travail, bearing a new world. The servants one
used to treat like animals and pay next to nothing,
were getting independent. A pair of shoes cost
more than a hundred rubles, and as wages averaged
about thirty-five rubles a month the servants refused
to stand in queue and wear out their shoes.
But more than that. In the new Russia every man
and woman could vote; there were working-class newspapers,
saying new and startling things; there were the Soviets;
and there were the Unions. The izvoshtchiki
(cab-drivers) had a Union; they were also represented
in the Petrograd Soviet. The waiters and hotel
servants were organised, and refused tips. On
the walls of restaurants they put up signs which read,
“No tips taken here-” or, “Just because
a man has to make his living waiting on table is no
reason to insult him by offering him a tip!”
At the Front the soldiers fought out
their fight with the officers, and learned self-government
through their committees. In the factories those
unique Russian organisations, the Factory-Shop Committees,
[] gained experience and strength and a realisation
of [ See Notes and Explanations] their historical
mission by combat with the old order. All Russia
was learning to read, and reading-politics,
economics, history-because the people wanted to know….
In every city, in most towns, along the Front, each
political faction had its newspaper-sometimes several.
Hundreds of thousands of pamphlets were distributed
by thousands of organisations, and poured into the
armies, the villages, the factories, the streets.
The thirst for education, so long thwarted, burst
with the Revolution into a frenzy of expression.
From Smolny Institute alone, the first six months,
went out every day tons, car-loads, train-loads of
literature, saturating the land. Russia absorbed
reading matter like hot sand drinks water, insatiable.
And it was not fables, falsified history, diluted
religion, and the cheap fiction that corrupts-but
social and economic theories, philosophy, the works
of Tolstoy, Gogol, and Gorky….
Then the Talk, beside which Carlyle’s
“flood of French speech” was a mere trickle.
Lectures, debates, speeches-in theatres, circuses,
school-houses, clubs, Soviet meeting-rooms, Union headquarters,
barracks…. Meetings in the trenches at the Front,
in village squares, factories…. What a marvellous
sight to see Putilovsky Zavod (the Putilov factory)
pour out its forty thousand to listen to Social Democrats,
Socialist Revolutionaries, Anarchists, anybody, whatever
they had to say, as long as they would talk! For
months in Petrograd, and all over Russia, every street-corner
was a public tribune. In railway trains, street-cars,
always the spurting up of impromptu debate, everywhere….
And the All-Russian Conferences and
Congresses, drawing together the men of two continents-conventions
of Soviets, of Cooperatives, Zemstvos, [] nationalities,
priests, peasants, political parties; the [ See Notes
and Explanations] Democratic Conference, the Moscow
Conference, the Council of the Russian Republic.
There were always three or four conventions going
on in Petrograd. At every meeting, attempts to
limit the time of speakers voted down, and every man
free to express the thought that was in him….
We came down to the front of the Twelfth
Army, back of Riga, where gaunt and bootless men sickened
in the mud of desperate trenches; and when they saw
us they started up, with their pinched faces and the
flesh showing blue through their torn clothing, demanding
eagerly, “Did you bring anything to read?”
What though the outward and visible
signs of change were many, what though the statue
of Catharine the Great before the Alexandrinsky Theatre
bore a little red flag in its hand, and others-somewhat
faded-floated from all public buildings; and the Imperial
monograms and eagles were either torn down or covered
up; and in place of the fierce gorodovoye (city
police) a mild-mannered and unarmed citizen militia
patrolled the streets-still, there were many quaint
anachronisms.
For example, Peter the Great’s
Tabel o Rangov-Table of Ranks-which he rivetted
upon Russia with an iron hand, still held sway.
Almost everybody from the school-boy up wore his prescribed
uniform, with the insignia of the Emperor on button
and shoulder-strap. Along about five o’clock
in the afternoon the streets were full of subdued old
gentlemen in uniform, with portfolios, going home from
work in the huge, barrack-like Ministries or Government
institutions, calculating perhaps how great a mortality
among their superiors would advance them to the coveted
tchin (rank) of Collegiate Assessor, or Privy
Councillor, with the prospect of retirement on a comfortable
pension, and possibly the Cross of St. Anne….
There is the story of Senator Sokolov,
who in full tide of Revolution came to a meeting of
the Senate one day in civilian clothes, and was not
admitted because he did not wear the prescribed livery
of the Tsar’s service!
It was against this background of
a whole nation in ferment and disintegration that
the pageant of the Rising of the Russian Masses unrolled….