Chapter
XII
The Peasants’
Congress
IT was on November 18th that the snow
came. In the morning we woke to window-ledges
heaped white, and snowflakes falling so whirling thick
that it was impossible to see ten feet ahead.
The mud was gone; in a twinkling the gloomy city became
white, dazzling. The droshki with their
padded coachmen turned into sleights, bounding along
the uneven street at headlong speed, their drivers’
beards stiff and frozen…. In spite of Revolution,
all Russia plunging dizzily into the unknown and terrible
future, joy swept the city with the coming of the
snow. Everybody was smiling; people ran into
the streets, holding out their arms to the soft, falling
flakes, laughing. Hidden was all the greyness;
only the gold and coloured spires and cupolas, with
heightened barbaric splendour, gleamed through the
white snow.
Even the sun came out, pale and watery,
at noon. The colds and rheumatism of the rainy
months vanished. The life of the city grew gay,
and the very Revolution ran swifter….
I sat one evening in a traktir-a
kind of lower-class inn-across the street from the
gates of Smolny; a low-ceilinged, loud place called
“Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” much frequented
by Red Guards. They crowded it now, packed close
around the little tables with their dirty table-cloths
and enormous china tea-pots, filling the place with
foul cigarette-smoke, while the harassed waiters ran
about crying “Seichass! Seichass! In a
minute! Right away!”
In one corner sat a man in the uniform
of a captain, addressing the assembly, which interrupted
him at every few words.
“You are no better than murderers!”
he cried. “Shooting down your Russian brothers
on the streets!”
“When did we do that?” asked a worker.
“Last Sunday you did it, when the yunkers—”
“Well, didn’t they shoot
us?” One man exhibited his arm in a sling.
“Haven’t I got something to remember them
by, the devils?”
The captain shouted at the top of
his voice. “You should remain neutral!
You should remain neutral! Who are you to destroy
the legal Government? Who is Lenin? A German—”
“Who are you? A counter-revolutionist!
A provocator!” they bellowed at him.
When he could make himself heard the
captain stood up. “All right!” said
he. “You call yourselves the people of Russia.
But you’re not the people of Russia.
The peasants are the people of Russia.
Wait until the peasants—”
“Yes,” they cried, “wait
until the peasants speak. We know what the peasants
will say…. Aren’t they workingmen like
ourselves?”
In the long run, everything depended
upon the peasants. While the peasants had been
politically backward, still they had their own peculiar
ideas, and they constituted more than eighty per cent
of the people of Russia. The Bolsheviki had a
comparatively small following among the peasants;
and a permanent dictatorship of Russia by the industrial
workers was impossible…. The traditional peasant
party was the Socialist Revolutionary party; of all
the parties now supporting the Soviet Government,
the Left Socialist Revolutionaries were the logical
inheritors of peasant leadership-and the Left Socialist
Revolutionaries, who were at the mercy of the organised
city proletariat, desperately needed the backing of
the peasants….
Meanwhile Smolny had not neglected
the peasants. After the Land decree, one of the
first actions of the new Tsay-ee-kah had been
to call a Congress of Peasants, over the head of the
Executive Committee of the Peasants’ Soviets.
A few days later was issued detailed Regulations for
the Volost (Township) Land Committees, followed
by Lenin’s “Instruction to Peasants,”
(See App. XII, Sect. 1) which explained the Bolshevik
revolution and the new Government in simple terms;
and on November 16th, Lenin and Miliutin published
the “Instructions to Provincial Emissaries,”
of whom thousands were sent by the Soviet Government
into the villages.
1. Upon his arrival in the province
to which he is accredited, the emissary should call
a joint meeting of the Central Executive Committees
of the Soviets of Workers’, Soldiers’ and
Peasants’ Deputies, to whom he should make a
report on the agrarian laws, and then demand that
a joint plenary session of the Soviets be summoned….
2. He must study the aspects
of the agrarian problem in the province.
a. Has the land-owners’
property been taken over, and if so, in what districts?
b. Who administers the confiscated
land-the former proprietor, or the Land Committees?
c. What has been done with the
agricultural machinery and with the farm-animals?
3. Has the ground cultivated
by the peasants been augmented?
4. How much and in what respect
does the amount of land now under cultivation differ
from the amount fixed by the Government as an average
minimum?
5. The emissary must insist that,
after the peasants have received the land, it is imperative
that they increase the amount of cultivated land as
quickly as possible, and that they hasten the sending
of grain to the cities, as the only means of avoiding
famine.
6. What are the measures projected
or put into effect for the transfer of land from the
land-owners to the Land Committees and similar bodies
appointed by the Soviets?
7. It is desirable that agricultural
properties well appointed and well organised should
be administered by Soviets composed of the regular
employees of those properties, under the direction
of competent agricultural scientists.
All through the villages a ferment
of change was going on, caused not only by the electrifying
action of the Land decree, but also by thousands of
revolutionary-minded peasant-soldiers returning from
the front…. These men, especially, welcomed
the call to a Congress of Peasants.
Like the old Tsay-ee-kah in
the matter of the second Congress of Workers’
and Soldiers’ Soviets, the Executive Committee
tried to prevent the Peasant Congress summoned by
Smolny. And like the old Tsay-ee-kah,
finding its resistance futile, the Executive Committee
sent frantic telegrams ordering the election of Conservative
delegates. Word was even spread among the peasants
that the Congress would meet at Moghilev, and some
delegates went there; but by November 23d about four
hundred had gathered in Petrograd, and the party caucuses
had begun….
The first session took place in the
Alexander Hall of the Duma building, and the first
vote showed that more than half of all the delegates
were Left Socialist Revolutionaries, while the Bolsheviki
controlled a bare fifth, the conservative Socialist
Revolutionaries a quarter, and all the rest were united
only in their opposition to the old Executive Committee,
dominated by Avksentiev, Tchaikovsky and Peshekhonov….
The great hall was jammed with people
and shaken with continual clamour; deep, stubborn
bitterness divided the delegates into angry groups.
To the right was a sprinkling of officers’ epaulettes,
and the patriarchal, bearded faces of the older, more
substantial peasants; in the centre were a few peasants,
non-commissioned officers, and some soldiers; and
on the left almost all the delegates wore the uniforms
of common soldiers. These last were the young
generation, who had been serving in the army….
The galleries were thronged with workers-who, in Russia,
still remember their peasant origin….
Unlike the old Tsay-ee-kah,
the Executive Committee, in opening the session, did
not recognise the Congress as official; the official
Congress was called for December 13th; amid a hurricane
of applause and angry cries, the speaker declared
that this gathering was merely “Extraordinary
Conference”... But the “Extraordinary Conference”
soon showed its attitude toward the Executive Committee
by electing as presiding officer Maria Spiridonova,
leader of the Left Socialist Revolution aries.
Most of the first day was taken up
by a violent debate as to whether the representatives
of Volost Soviets should be seated, or only
delegates from the Provincial bodies; and just as in
the Workers’ and Soldiers’ Congress, an
overwhelming majority declared in favour of the widest
possible representation. Whereupon the old Executive
Committee left the hall….
Almost immediately it was evident
that most of the delegates were hostile to the Government
of the People’s Commissars. Zinoviev, attempting
to speak for the Bolsheviki, was hooted down, and as
he left the platform, amid laughter, there were cries,
“There’s how a People’s Commissar
sits in a mudpuddle!”
“We Left Socialist Revolutionaries
refuse,” cried Nazariev, a delegate from the
Provinces, “to recognise this so-called Workers’
and Peasants’ Government until the peasants are
represented in it. At present it is nothing but
a dictatorship of the workers…. We insist upon
the formation of a new Government which will represent
the entire democracy!”
The reactionary delegates shrewdly
fostered this feeling, declaring, in the face of protests
from the Bolshevik benches, that the Council of People’s
Commissars intended either to control the Congress
or dissolve it by force of arms-an announcement which
was received by the peasants with bursts of fury….
On the third day Lenin suddenly mounted
the tribune; for ten minutes the room went mad.
“Down with him!” they shrieked. “We
will not listen to any of your People’s Commissars!
We don’t recognise your Government!”
Lenin stood there quite calmly, gripping
the desk with both hands, his little eyes thoughtfully
surveying the tumult beneath. Finally, except
for the right side of the hall, the demonstration wore
itself out somewhat.
“I do not come here as a member
of the Council of People’s Commissars,”
said Lenin, and waited again for the noise to subside,
“but as a member of the Bolshevik faction, duly
elected to this Congress.” And he held
his credentials up to that all might see them.
“However,” he went on,
in an unmoved voice, “nobody will deny that
the present Government of Russia has been formed by
the Bolshevik party-” he had to wait a moment,
“so that for all purposes it is the same thing….”
Here the right benches broke into deafening clamour,
but the centre and left were curious, and compelled
silence.
Lenin’s argument was simple.
“Tell me frankly, you peasants, to whom we have
given the lands of the pomieshtchiki; do you
want now to prevent the workers from getting control
of industry? This is class war. The pomieshtchiki
of course oppose the peasants, and the manufactures
oppose the workers. Are you going to allow the
ranks of the proletariat to be divided? Which
side will you be on?
“We, the Bolsheviki, are the
party of the proletariat-of the peasant proletariat
as well as the industrial proletariat. We, the
Bolsheviki, are the protectors of the Soviets-of the
Peasants’ Soviets as well as those of the Workers
and Soldiers. The present Government is a Government
of Soviets; we have not only invited the Peasants’
Soviets to join that Government, but we have also invited
representatives of the Left Socialist Revolutionaries
to enter the Council of People’s Commissars….
“The Soviets are the most perfect
representatives of the people-of the workers in the
factories and mines, of the workers in the fields.
Anybody who attempts to destroy the Soviets is guilty
of an anti-democratic and counter-revolutionary act.
And I serve notice here on you, comrades Right
Socialist Revolutionaries-and on you, Messrs. Cadets-that
if the Constituent Assembly attempts to destroy the
Soviets, we shall not permit the Constituent Assembly
to do this thing!”
On the afternoon of November 25th
Tchernov arrived in hot haste from Moghilev, summoned
by the Executive Committee. Only two months before
considered an extreme revolutionist, and very popular
with the peasants, he was now called to check the
dangerous drift of the Congress toward the Left.
Upon his arrival Tchernov was arrested and taken to
Smolny, where, after a short conversation, he was released.
His first act was to bitterly rebuke
the Executive Committee for leaving the Congress.
They agreed to return, and Tchernov entered the hall,
welcomed with great applause by the majority, and the
hoots and jeers of the Bolsheviki.
“Comrades! I have been
away. I participated in the Conference of the
Twelfth Army on the question of calling a Congress
of all the Peasant delegates of the armies of the
Western Front, and I know very little about the insurrection
which occurred here—”
Zinoviev rose in his seat, and shouted,
“Yes, you were away-for a few minutes!”
Fearful tumult. Cries, “Down with the Bolsheviki!”
Tchernov continued. “The
accusation that I helped lead an army on Petrograd
has no foundation, and is entirely false. Where
does such an accusation come from? Show me the
source!”
Zinoviev: “Izviestia
and Dielo Naroda-your own paper -that’s
where it comes from!”
Tchernov’s wide face, with the
small eyes, waving hair and greyish beard, became
red with wrath, but he controlled himself and went
on. “I repeat, I know practically nothing
about what has happened here, and I did not lead any
army except this army, (he pointed to the peasant
delegates), which I am largely responsible for bringing
here!” Laughter, and shouts of “Bravo!”
“Upon my return I visited Smolny.
No such accusation was made against me there….
After a brief conversation I left-and that’s
all! Let any one present make such an accusation!”
An uproar followed, in which the Bolsheviki
and some of the Left Socialist Revolutionaries were
on their feet all at once, shaking their fists and
yelling, and the rest of the assembly tried to yell
them down.
“This is an outrage, not a session!”
cried Tchernov, and he left the hall; the meeting
was adjourned because of the noise and disorder….
Meanwhile, the question of the status
of the Executive Committee was agitating all minds.
By declaring the assembly “Extraordinary Conference,”
it had been planned to block the reelection of the
Executive Committee. But this worked both ways;
the Left Socialist Revolutionists decided that if
the Congress had no power over the Executive Committee,
then the Executive Committee had no power over the
Congress. On November 25th the assembly resolved
that the powers of the Executive Committee be assumed
by the Extraordinary Conference, in which only members
of the Executive who had been elected as delegates
might vote….
The next day, in spite of the bitter
opposition of the Bolsheviki, the resolution was amended
to give all the members of the Executive Committee,
whether elected as delegates or not, voice and vote
in the assembly.
On the 27th occurred the debate on
the Land question, which revealed the differences
between the agrarian programme of the Bolsheviki and
the Left Socialist Revolutionaries.
Kolchinsky, for the Left Socialist
Revolutionaries, outlined the history of the Land
question during the Revolution. The first Congress
of Peasants’ Soviets, he said, had voted a precise
and formal resolution in favour of putting the landed
estates immediately into the hands of the Land Committees.
But the directors of the Revolution, and the bourgeois
in the Government, had insisted that the question
could not be solved until the Constituent Assembly
met…. The second period of the Revolution, the
period of “compromise,”was signalled by the
entrance of Tchernov into the Cabinet. The peasants
were convinced that now the practical solution of
the Land question would begin; but in spite of the
imperative decision of the first Peasant Congress,
the reactionaries and conciliators in the Executive
Committee had prevented any action. This policy
provoked a series of agrarian disorders, which appeared
as the natural expression of impatience and thwarted
energy on the part of the peasants. The peasants
understood the exact meaning of the Revolution-they
tried to turn words into action….
“The recent events,” said
the orator, “do not indicate a simple riot,
or a ‘Bolshevik adventure,’ but on the
contrary, a real popular rising, which has been greeted
with sympathy by the whole country….
“The Bolsheviki in general took
the correct attitude toward the Land question; but
in recommending that the peasants seize the land by
force, they committed a profound error…. From
the first days, the Bolsheviki declared that the peasants
should take over the land ’by revolutionary
massaction.’ This is nothing but anarchy;
the land can be taken over in an organised manner….
For the Bolsheviki it was important that the problems
of the Revolution should be solved in the quickest
possible manner-but the Bolsheviki were not interested
in how these problems were to be solved….
“The Land decree of the Congress
of Soviets is identical in its fundamentals with the
decisions of the first Peasants’ Congress.
Why then did not the new Government follow the tactics
outlined by that Congress? Because the Council
of People’s Commissars wanted to hasten the
settlement of the Land question, so that the Constituent
Assembly would have nothing to do….
“But also the Government saw
that it was necessary to adopt practical measures,
so without further reflection, it adopted the Regulations
for Land Committees, thus creating a strange situation;
for the Council of People’s Commissars abolished
private property in land, but the Regulations drawn
up by the Land Committees are based on private property….
However, no harm has been done by that; for the Land
Committees are paying no attention to the Soviet decrees,
but are putting into operation their own practical
decisions-decisions based on the will of the vast majority
of the peasants….
“These Land Committees are not
attempting the legislative solution of the Land question,
which belongs to the Constituent Assembly alone….
But will the Constituent Assembly desire to do the
will of the Russian peasants? Of that we cannot
be sure…. All we can be sure of is that the
revolutionary determination of the peasants is now
aroused, and that the Constituent will be forced
to settle the Land question the way the peasants want
it settled…. The Constituent Assembly will
not dare to break with the will of the people….”
Followed him Lenin, listened to now
with absorbing intensity. “At this moment
we are not only trying to solve the Land question,
but the question of Social Revolution-not only here
in Russia, but all over the world. The Land question
cannot be solved independently of the other problems
of the Social Revolution…. For example, the
confiscation of the landed estates will provoke the
resistance not only of Russian land-owners, but also
of foreign capital-with whom the great landed properties
are connected through the intermediary of the banks….
“The ownership of the land in
Russia is the basis for immense oppression, and the
confiscation of the land by the peasants is the most
important step of our Revolution. But it cannot
be separated from the other steps, as is clearly manifested
by the stages through which the Revolution has had
to pass. The first stage was the crushing of
autocracy and the crushing of the power of the industrial
capitalists and land-owners, whose interests are closely
related. The second stage was the strengthening
of the Soviets and the political compromise with the
bourgeoisie. The mistake of the Left Socialist
Revolutionaries lies in the fact that at that time
they did not oppose the policy of compromise, because
they held the theory that the consciousness of the
masses was not yet fully developed….
“If Socialism can only be realised
when the intellectual development of all the people
permits it, then we shall not see Socialism for at
least five hundred years.... The Socialist
political party-this is the vanguard of the working-class;
it must not allow itself to be halted by the lack
of education of the mass average, but it must lead
the masses, using the Soviets as organs of revolutionary
initiative…. But in order to lead the wavering,
the comrades Left Socialist Revolutionaries themselves
must stop hesitating….
“In July last a series of open
breaks began between the popular masses and the ‘compromisers’;
but now, in November, the Left Socialist Revolutionaries
are still holding out their hand to Avksentiev, who
is pulling the people with his little finger….
If Compromise continues, the Revolution disappears.
No compromise with the bourgeoisie is possible; its
power must be absolutely crushed….
“We Bolsheviki have not changed
our Land programme; we have not given up the abolition
of private property in the land, and we do not intend
to do so. We adopted the Regulations for Land
Committees,-which are not based on private property
at all-because we want to accomplish the popular will
in the way the people have themselves decided to do
it, so as to draw closer the coalition of all the
elements who are fighting for the Social Revolution.
“We invite the Left Socialist
Revolutionaries to enter that coalition, insisting,
however, that they cease looking backward, and that
they break with the ‘conciliators’ of their
party….
“As far as the Constituent Assembly
is concerned, it is true, as the preceding speaker
has said, that the work of the Constituent will depend
on the revolutionary determination of the masses.
I say, ’Count on that revolutionary determination,
but don’t forget your gun!’”
Lenin then read the Bolshevik resolution:
The Peasants’ Congress, fully
supporting the Land decree of November 8th… approves
of the Provisional Workers’ and Peasants’
Government of the Russian Republic, established by
the second All-Russian Congress of Soviets of Workers’
and Soldiers’ Deputies.
The Peasants’ Congress… invites
all peasants unanimously to sustain that law, and
to apply it immediately themselves; and at the same
time invites the peasants to appoint to posts and positions
of responsibility only persons who have proved, not
by words but by acts, their entire devotion to the
interests of the exploited peasant-workers, their
desire and their ability to defend these interests
against all resistance on the part of the great land-owners,
the capitalists, their partisans and accomplices….
The Peasants’ Congress, at the
same time, expresses its conviction that the complete
realisation of all the measures which make up the
Land decree can only be successful through the triumph
of the Workers’ Social Revolution, which began
November 7th, 1917; for only the Social Revolution
can accomplish the definite transfer, without possibility
of return, of the land to the peasant-workers, the
confiscation of model farms and their surrender to
the peasant communes, the confiscation of agricultural
machinery belonging to the great land-owners, the
safe-guarding of the interests of the agricultural
workers by the complete abolition of wage-slavery,
the regular and methodical distribution among all
regions of Russia of the products of agriculture and
industry, and the seizure of the banks (without which
the possession of land by the whole people would be
impossible, after the abolition of private property),
and all sorts of assistance by the State to the workers….
For these reasons the Peasants’
Congress sustains entirely the Revolution of November
7th… as a social revolution, and expresses its unalterable
will to put into operation, with whatever modifications
are necessary, but without any hesitation, the social
transformation of the Russian Republic.
The indispensable conditions of the
victory of the Social Revolution, which alone will
secure the lasting success and the complete realisation
of the Land decree, is the close union of the peasant-workers
with the industrial working-class, with the proletariat
of all advanced countries. From now on, in the
Russian Republic, all the organisation and administration
of the State, from top to bottom, must rest on that
union. That union, crushing all attempts, direct
or indirect, open or dissimulated, to return to the
policy of conciliation with the bourgeoisie-conciliation,
damned by experience, with the chiefs of bourgeois
politics-can alone insure the victory of Socialism
throughout the world….
The reactionaries of the Executive
Committee no longer dared openly to appear. Tchernov,
however, spoke several times, with a modest and winning
impartiality. He was invited to sit on the platform….
On the second night of the Congress an anonymous note
was handed up to the chairman, requesting that Tchernov
be made honorary President. Ustinov read the
note aloud, and immediately Zinoviev was on his feet,
screaming that this was a trick of the old Executive
Committee to capture the convention; in a moment the
hall was one bellowing mass of waving arms and angry
faces, on both sides…. Nevertheless, Tchernov
remained very popular.
In the stormy debates on the Land
question and the Lenin resolution, the Bolsheviki
were twice on the point of quitting the assembly,
both times restrained by their leaders…. It
seemed to me as if the Congress were hopelessly deadlocked.
But none of us knew that a series
of secret conferences were already going on between
the Left Socialist Revolutionaries and the Bolsheviki
at Smolny. At first the Left Socialist Revolutionaries
had demanded that there be a Government composed of
all the Socialist parties in and out of the Soviets,
to be responsible to a People’s Council, composed
of an equal number of delegates from the Workers’
and Soldiers’ organisation, and that of the Peasants,
and completed by representatives of the City Dumas
and the Zemstvos; Lenin and Trotzky were to be eliminated,
and the Military Revolutionary Committee and other
repressive organs dissolved.
Wednesday morning, November 28th,
after a terrible all-night struggle, an agreement
was reached. The Tsay-ee-kah,composed of
108 members, was to be augumented by 108 members elected
proportionally from the Peasants’ Congress; by
100 delegates elected directly from the Army and the
Fleet; and by 50 representatives of the Trade Unions
(35 from the general Unions, 10 Railway Workers, and
5 from the Post and Telegraph Workers). The Dumas
and Zemstvos were dropped. Lenin and Trotzky
remained in the Government, and the Military Revolutionary
Committee continued to function.
The sessions of the Congress had now
been removed to the Imperial Law School building,
Fontanka 6, headquarters of the Peasants’ Soviets.
There in the great meeting-hall the delegates gathered
on Wednesday afternoon. The old Executive Committee
had withdrawn, and was holding a rump convention of
its own in another room of the same building, made
up of bolting delegates and representatives of the
Army Committees.
Tchernov went from one meeting to
the other, keeping a watchful eye on the proceedings.
He knew that an agreement with the Bolsheviki was
being discussed, but he did not know that it had been
concluded.
He spoke to the rump convention.
“At present, when everybody is in favour of
forming an all-Socialist Government, many people forget
the first Ministry, which was not a coalition
Government, and in which there was only one Socialist-Kerensky;
a Government which, in its time, was very popular.
Now people accuse Kerensky; they forget that he was
raised to power, not only by the Soviets, but also
by the popular masses….
“Why did public opinion change
toward Kerensky? The savages set up gods to which
they pray, and which they punish if one of their prayers
is not answered…. That is what is happening
at this moment…. Yesterday Kerensky; today
Lenin and Trotzky; another to-morrow….
“We have proposed to both Kerensky
and the Bolsheviki to retire from the power.
Kerensky has accepted-to-day he announced from his
hiding-place that he has resigned as Premier; but the
Bolsheviki wish to retain the power, and they do not
know how to use it….
“If the Bolsheviki succeed,
or if they fail, the fate of Russia will not be changed.
The Russian villages understand perfectly what they
want, and they are now carrying out their own measures….
The villages will save us in the end….”
In the meanwhile, in the great hall
Ustinov had announced the agreement between the Peasants’
Congress and Smolny, received by the delegates with
the wildest joy. Suddenly Tchernov appeared, and
demanded the floor.
“I understand,” he began,
“that an agreement is being concluded between
the Peasants’ Congress and Smolny. Such
an agreement would be illegal, seeing that the true
Congress of Peasants’ Soviets does not meet
until next week….
“Moreover, I want to warn you
now that the Bolsheviki will never accept your demands….”
He was interrupted by a great burst
of laughter; and realising the situation, he left
the platform and the room, taking his popularity with
him….
Late in the afternoon of Thursday,
November 16th, the Congress met in extraordinary session.
There was a holiday feeling in the air; on every face
was a smile…. The remainder of the business
before the assembly was hurried through, and then
old Nathanson, the white-bearded dean of the left
wing of the Socialist Revolutionaries, his voice trembling
and tears in his eyes, read the report of the “wedding”
of the Peasants’ Soviets with the Workers’
and Soldiers’ Soviets. At every mention
of the word “union” there was ecstatic
applause…. At the end Ustinov announced the
arrival rival of a delegation from Smolny, accompanied
by representatives of the Red Army, greeted with a
rising ovation. One after another a workman,
a soldier and a sailor took the floor, hailing them.
Then Boris Reinstein, delegate of
the American Socialist Labor Party: “The
day of the union of the Congress of Peasants and the
Soviets of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies
is one of the great days of the Revolution. The
sound of it will ring with resounding echoes throughout
the whole world-in Paris, in London, and across the
ocean-in New York. This union will fill with happiness
the hearts of all toilers.
“A great idea has triumphed.
The West, and America, expected from Russia, from
the Russian proletariat, something tremendous….
The proletariat of the world is waiting for the Russian
Revolution, waiting for the great things that it is
accomplishing….”
Sverdlov, president of the Tsay-ee-kah,
greeted them. And with the shout, “Long
live the end of civil war! Long live the United
Democracy!” the peasants poured out of the building.
It was already dark, and on the ice-covered
snow glittered the pale light of moon and star.
Along the bank of the canal were drawn up in full
marching order the soldiers of the Pavlovsky Regiment,
with their band, which broke into the Marseillaise.
Amid the crashing full-throated shouts of the soldiers,
the peasants formed in line, unfurling the great red
banner of the Executive Committee of the All-Russian
Peasants’ Soviets, embroidered newly in gold,
“Long live the union of the revolutionary and
toiling masses!” Following were other banners;
of the District Soviets-of Putilov Factory, which
read, “We bow to this flag in order to create
the brotherhood of all people!”
From somewhere torches appeared, blazing
orange in the night, a thousand times reflected in
the facets of the ice, streaming out smokily over
the throng as it moved down the bank of the Fontanka
singing, between crowds that stood in astonished silence.
“Long live the Revolutionary
Army! Long live the Red Guard! Long live
the Peasants!”
So the great procession wound through
the city, growing and unfurling ever new red banners
lettered in gold. Two old peasants, bowed with
toil, were walking hand in hand, their faces illumined
with child-like bliss.
“Well,” said one, “I’d
like to see them take away our land again, now!
Near Smolny the Red Guard was lined
up on both sides of the street, wild with delight.
The other old peasant spoke to his comrade, “I
am not tired,” he said. “I walked
on air all the way!”
On the steps of Smolny about a hundred
Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies were massed,
with their banner, dark against the blaze of light
streaming out between the arches. Like a wave
they rushed down, clasping the peasants in their arms
and kissing them; and the procession poured in through
the great door and up the stairs, with a noise like
thunder….
In the immense white meeting-room
the Tsay-ee-kah was waiting, with the whole
Petrograd Soviet and a thousand spectators beside,
with that solemnity which attends great conscious moments
in history.
Zinoviev announced the agreement with
the Peasants’ Congress, to a shaking roar which
rose and burst into storm as the sound of music blared
down the corridor, and the head of the procession came
in. On the platform the presidium rose and made
place for the Peasants’ presidium, the two embracing;
behind them the two banners were intertwined against
the white wall, over the empty frame from which the
Tsar’s picture had been torn….
Then opened the “triumphal session.”
After a few words of welcome from Sverdlov, Maria
Spiridonova, slight, pale, with spectacles and hair
drawn flatly down, and the air of a New England school-teacher,
took the tribune-the most loved and the most powerful
woman in all Russia.
“... Before the workers
of Russia open now horizons which history has never
known…. All workers’ movements in the
past have been defeated. But the present movement
is international, and that is why it is invincible.
There is no force in the world which can put out the
fire of the Revolution! The old world crumbles
down, the new world begins….”
Then Trotzky, full of fire: “I
wish you welcome, comrades peasants! You come
here not as guests, but as masters of this house, which
holds the heart of the Russian Revolution. The
will of millions of workers is now concentrated in
this hall…. There is now only one master of
the Russian land: the union of the workers, soldiers
and peasants….”
With biting sarcasm he went on to
speak of the Allied diplomats, till then contemptuous
of Russia’s invitation to an armistice, which
had been accepted by the Central Powers.
“A new humanity will be born
of this war…. In this hall we swear to workers
of all lands to remain at our revolutionary post.
If we are broken, then it will be in defending our
flag….”
Krylenko followed him, explaining
the situation at the front, where Dukhonin was preparing
to resist the Council of People’s Commissars.
“Let Dukhonin and those with him understand well
that we shall not deal gently with those who bar the
road to peace!”
Dybenko saluted the assembly in the
name of the Fleet, and Krushinsky, member of the Vikzhel,
said, “From this moment, when the union of all
true Socialists is realised, the whole army of railway
workers places itself absolutely at the disposition
of the revolutionary democracy!” And Lunatcharsky,
almost weeping, and Proshian, for the Left Socialist
Revolutionaries, and finally Saharashvili, for the
United Social Democrats Internationalists, composed
of members of the Martov’s and of Gorky’s
groups, who declared:
“We left the Tsay-ee-kah
because of the uncompromising policy of the Bolsheviki,
and to force them to make concessions in order to
realise the union of all the revolutionary democracy.
Now that that union is brought about, we consider
it a sacred duty to take our places once more in the
Tsay-ee-kah.... We declare that all those
who have withdrawn from the Tsay-ee-kah should
now return.”
Stachkov, a dignified old peasant
of the presidium of the Peasants’ Congress,
bowed to the four corners of the room. “I
greet you with the christening of a new Russian life
and freedom!”
Gronsky, in the name of the Polish
Social Democracy; Skripnik, for the Factory-Shop Committees;
Tifonov, for the Russian soldiers at Salonika; and
others, interminably, speaking out of full hearts,
with the happy eloquence of hopes fulfilled….
It was late in the night when the following resolution
was put and passed unanimously:
“The Tsay-ee-kah, united
in extraordinary session with the Petrograd Soviet
and the Peasants’ Congress, confirms the Land
and Peace decrees adopted by the second Congress of
Soviets of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies,
and also the decree on Workers’ Control adopted
by the Tsay-ee-kah.
“The joint session of the Tsay-ee-kah
and the Peasants’ Congress expresses its firm
conviction that the union of workers, soldiers and
peasants, this fraternal union of all the workers and
all exploited, will consolidate the power conquered
by them, that it will take all revolutionary measures
to hasten the passing of the power into the hands
of the working-class in other countries, and that
it will assure in this manner the lasting accomplishment
of a just peace and the victory of Socialism.”(See
App. XI, Sect. 2)