YALE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVJK REVOLUTION YALE Veterans of the Russian Revolution Tchaikovsky, Lazarev and Breshko-Breshkovwkaya THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION BY EDWARD ALSWORTH ROSS, Ph.D., LL.D. Professor of Sociology, University or Wisconsin. Author of "Social Control," "Social Psychology," "Foundations of Sociology," "Principles of Sociology," "The Changing Chinese," "Changing America," "South of Panama," "Russia in Upheaval," etc. ILLUSTRATED WITH OVER THIRTY PHOTOGRAPHS NEW YORK THE CENTURY CO. 1921 Copyright, 1921, by The Centubt Co. PREFACE This book is not written to make out a case, but to set forth what appear to be the significant facts. It is offered on the theory that intelligent people are tired of being victims of propaganda about Russia and will welcome a book that is not trying to give their minds a certain twist. I can truthfully aver that when I set pen to paper I had no rigid mental attitudes toward the phases of the Russian revolution, so that such interpretations as I venture on have come out of my study of the facts themselves. The current notion of the second or Bolshevik rev olution is that it was the work of a handful of ex tremists who captivated the Russian masses with their ideas. Under the pitiless pelting of facts I have been driven to the conclusion that this is untrue. As I now see it, most of the developments of the eight months between the March Revolution and the November Revolution were not caused by leaders but were inevitable, given the background of experience of the Russian common people. If the train bearing Lenin and eighteen other Bolsheviks across Germany to Russia had fallen through a bridge on its way and all had perished, events in Russia would have taken much the same course. The peasants would have seized the estates and the soldiers would have quit fighting. The robbed and oppressed masses — a hun dred millions of men and women — moved toward the goal of their long unfulfilled desires like a flow vi PREFACE of molten lava that no human force can dam or turn aside. It was a majestic and appalling social phenomenon — as elemental almost as an earthquake or a tidal wave. Edward Alsworth Ross Madison, Wisconsin. CONTENTS CHAPTER I PAdE The Revolutionary Honeymoon 3 Moral exaltation of the Russian people after the fall of the tsardom — Fellowship in happiness — The spirit of mutual aid — Symptoms of unselfishness and good will — Treatment of prisoners — Hopes for a new Russia — Wrong doers dealt with summarily — Why the ecstatic fraternal mood could not last. CHAPTER II The Background op the Toiling Masses .... 10 The peasant's background of experience — Life in the villages — Chronic undernourishment— How the peasants were "done" at the time of emancipation — Low wages of the farm laborer — Sickness and infant mortality — Theories as to the cause of the peasant's wretchedness — The noblesse — How the peasant feels about the estates. The worker's background of experience — Gigantic fac tories — Outrageously low wages — Long hours — Tolstoi on Russian freight handlers — Abuse and fines — Housing of the workers — Repression of strikes and labor unions. The soldier's background of experience — Harsh discipline — Brutality of officers — Betrayal — Mismanagement of the war — Lack of rifles — Shell shortage — Horrible losses of life — Prostration of industry — "War-weariness." CHAPTER III The Provisional Government 39 Anarchy and revolutionary disorder — Cautious steps by Rodzianko and the Duma — Regiments come to the Tauride — The Provisional Committee — Triumph of the revolutionists — Formation of a government — Miliukov's speech — The Min isters — The "program" — Nicholas's abdication — Michael's "Declaration from the Throne." viii CONTENTS CHAPTER IV PAGE The Soviets 53 The workingmen organize in support of the revolution — Creation of the Petrograd Soviet — Soviets spring up all over Russia — A typical city Soviet — Activities of the "sections" — Early control of the Soviets by the moderates — Arrival of ninety thousand exiles — They swing proletarian opinion to the Left. CHAPTER V Opposite Conceptions of the Revolution .... 60 Deep disillusionment of the people with the masters of the old order — Different ideas as to what the revolution is to bring — The Intelligentia expect it to mean freedom — The business men expect it to mean efficiency — The toilers expect to live better — Excessive concentration of wealth — Impossi bility of fulfilling the expectations of the people without dis turbing property rights. CHAPTER VI Agitation 66 Sudden release of ideas — A whirlwind of public discussion — Wonderful opportunities for the agitator — Prompt seizure of leadership by the radicals — Getting the start of the bourgeoisie — Reckless agitation — Secret German influence on behalf of extremism — The Kaiser plays both ends against the middle. CHAPTER VII Political Groupings and Programs 71 Embryonic stage of political opinion — The bulk of the masses destitute of political ideas — The People-ists — The Social Revolutionaries — The Social-Demomits — Origin of the terms Bolsheviki and Mensheviki — The "cadets" — Their abrupt change of character — Competition of the parties to win the support of the millions who have not yet made up their mind. CHAPTER VIII The Flood of Political Reforms 76 Honesty of the Provisional Government — Its free hand Clearing away the old system — The new justice — Liberation CONTENTS ix PAGE of the oppressed nationalities — Religious freedom — "Militia" substituted for "police" — Mild-mannered commissaries — Local self-government — But the rights of property remain undisturbed."' CHAPTER IX Army Order Number One 82 An incident at Sebastopol — Order No. 1 — Why it was issued — Who was responsible for it — How it was distributed to the army — Soviets and committees spring up among the soldiers. CHAPTER X The Cloud no Bigger than a Man 's Hand . . . .88 The Soviet begins at the same time as the Provisional Gov ernment and has power, altho no legal authority — The Soviet comes to the help of the Government — Why the revolution ists do not wish to take over political power — The question as to the future of Nicholas — 'Tenderness of the Government for tsarist officers — Popular dread of a counter-revolution — The Soviet press censorship — The problem of co-operation — "Dual authority" — A portent. CHAPTER XI Lenin and his Slogan 102 Lenin's great reception at Petrograd — The transit across Germany — Sketch of Lenin's life — Lenin as defeatist — As Marxian — As internationalist — As advocate of the dictator ship of the proletariat — As opponent of anarchism. CHAPTER XII The Mat Crisis 113 Contradictory theories of the war — The Soviet's appeal to proletarians — Miliukov wants the Dardanelles — His note of May 1 — Linde stirs up trouble — The demonstration of the regiments — The Cadet demonstration of May 4 — Clashes and bloodshed — A dangerous rift — The Government recedes — Guchkov and Miliukov out — Five Soviet leaders join the Ministry. x CONTENTS CHAPTER XIII PAGE The Revolution and Labor 135 Labor forces up wages — Capital's scandalous profits — De mand for back pay — Story of the thirteen sacks — Breakdown of factory discipline — Great falling-off in productivity — Who is to blame? — The eight-hour day — Hire and fire — Dismissal pay — Medical benefits. CHAPTER XIV The Decomposition op the Army 145 The making of the Tsar's officers — The deep gulf between officers and men — The officers line up against the revolution — Defeatism — The Soldiers' Charter — The committee nuis ance — Bolshevik propaganda in the army — Factors of de moralization — Fraternization — Commissaries — The "women's battalion" — The soldiers simply quit and go home. CHAPTER XV The July Riots 161 Demonstrations by the regiments in Petrograd — "Joy-rid ing" on a "white night" — Who is responsible ? — Shooting and bloodshed — Trotsky saves Tchernov — Did the Bolsheviks clutch at power ? — What the leaders declare — The actual fac tors of the July troubles. CHAPTER XVI "German Agents" 174 Suppression of the Bolsheviks — Their arrest and indict ment — Bourtsev's charges — Alexinsky prints Bolshevik tele grams — Pereverzev blackens the Bolshevik leaders with the soldiers — He is forced out — Failure to incriminate the Bol sheviks — Bursting of the "German agent" bubble. CHAPTER XVII Kerensky 182 Forming of the Save-the-Revolution Government Kerensky's origin and education — His record in the Duma CONTENTS xi PAGB — His role in the March revolution — Minister of Justice — War Minister Marvellous effect of his oratory — The Galician debacle — He loses the proletariat and the proper tied — Calumnies — His real character. CHAPTER XVIII Growing Anarchy 194 Disregard of the rights of the propertied — Agrarian dis orders — Labor takes the upper hand — Seizure of estates — Were agitators responsible? — Looting of grain shipments — The Provisional Government is powerless as against the Soviet — Experiences of the American Red Cross. CHAPTER XIX City Elections 204 Election of city dumas — 'Formlessness of political opinion — Queer groupings of voters — Tickets put up by those of the same nationality, faith, or economic interest — Growth of the parties of the Left. CHAPTER XX The Moscow Conference 208 Removal of Nicholas to Tobolsk — Convening of the Na tional Conference — Its make-up and purposes — Statements of Kerensky, Nekrassov, Kornilov, Kaledin, Tcheidze, Tseretelli and Rodzienko. — Protests by Breshkovskaya and Kropotken — Competitive demonstrations between opposing groups — The Conference reveals the class antagonism developing in society. CHAPTER XXI The Kornilov Affair 223 Kornilov's personality and record — His desperate measures after the Galician collapse — Made Supreme Commander-in- chief—Why he yielded Riga — Exodus from Petrograd— Kor nilov protects the interests of the estate-owners in the war zone — Savinkov's mission — Lvov intervenes — Kerensky and Kornilov at cross purposes — Kornilov deposed leads a re bellion — The Soviets rally to the side of the Government — Propaganda among the Moslem soldiers — Collapse of Korni lov's attempt — Smolny takes the lead — The Cadets discred ited — Sentiment swings to the Left. xii CONTENTS CHAPTER XXII PAGE The Democratic Conference 243 The Bolsheviks capture the Petrograd Soviet Formation of the Red Guard — The "Quinquevirate" — Russia proclaimed a Republic — Convening of the Democratic Conference — Bourgeois ridicule — The votes on Coalition — Kerensky an nounces a Coalition Ministry — Creation of the Pre-Parlia ment — Bolt of the Bolsheviks CHAPTER XXIII The Pre-Parliament and the Council of the Rus sian Republic 252 Pre-Parliament mis-born — The representatives of the prop ertied will not bow to its authority — It becomes a mere Council — The bourgeoisie make terms — A new ministry in which the masses have no confidence — Growing impotence of the Council — Trotsky's defiance — The Bolsheviks walk out. CHAPTER XXIV The Soviet's Peace Terms and the "Fourteen Points 260 The nakaz of the Soviet — Peace terms framed eighty-one days before President Wilson's "fourteen points" appeared — Comparison of the two proposals — Numerous agreements. CHAPTER XXV The November Revolution 264 The nearing bayonets of Wilhelm — Attempted removal of the Petrograd garrison — Formation of the Military Revolu tionary Committee — The overturn of the Provisional Gov ernment — Podvoisky's story — Antonov's story — Kamenev's story— Fatal self-confidence of Kerensky — His last appear ance—The revolt of the Cadets— Krasnov's collapse— Heavy fighting in Moscow— The Soviets everywhere seize power — Stunned bourgeoisie. CHAPTER XXVI The Constituent Assembly 290 The strike of the functionaries— How dealt with— The Second Soviet Congress— Outlines of the new government— CONTENTS xiii PACK Land nationalization — Peace overtures — Workers' control of the factories — Abolition of class distinctions — The elections to the Constituent — Did their results reflect accurately the will of the people? — Sabotaging the Assembly — Uritzky — Rough methods — First and last session of the Assembly — Tchernov — The split — Dissolution — What the Assembly would have done — A fatal step. LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS FACING PAGE Veterans of the Russian Revolution . . Frontispiece Attacking the Czar's police during the first days of the March Revolution 16 A. Kollontay 17 Act of abdication of Nicholas II, March 16, 1917 . 50 Act of abdication of Grand Duke Michael, March 17, 1917 51 L. Kamenev 64 A. Lunacharsky 65 Smolny Institute 80 May 1st, 1918 81 Nickolai Lenin . 112 May Day demonstration in front of the Marble Palace 113 May Day demonstration in front of the "Winter Palace 128 Cossacks parading on May 1 129 Bourgeoisie at work 144 D. Antonov 145 Leon Trotzky 160 Political manifestation in favor of the Soviet, July 1, 1917 161 Woman's Battalion of Death guarding the Winter Palace 168 The beginning of the July uprising in Petrograd . 169 Scene from one of the July Bolshevist meetings . 192 A. F. Kerensky 193 A detachment of the Red Guard in a captured armored car 208 N.Krylenko 209 XV xvi LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS FACING PAGB Vladimir Bonch-Brujevitch 209 General Kornilov and his staff 224 Enlistment of volunteers for the Red Army . . 225 Peace demonstration in Petrograd, December 17, 1917 256 Proshian ... 257 Podvoisky . . . . .... 272 Bolshevik troops guarding the telephone station . . 273 High Revolutionary Tribunal 276 G. Zinoviev 277 G. Chicherin . . 277 M. Uritsky . . 284 A detachment of Red Guard Sailors who dissolved the Constituent Assembly 285 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION CHAPTER I THE REVOLUTIONARY HONEYMOON WHEN in March, 1917, the rotten tsardom un expectedly fell, a wonderful spirit of brother hood swept through all classes of Russian society. Save its paid and petted defenders no one stood up for the old regime. Only the police were willing to risk their skins for it. They, indeed, were ruthlessly dealt with, but they were usually taken fully armed while playing machine-guns from roofs and belfries upon the unarmed people in the streets. After the rat-tat-tat of Protopopov's machine-guns died away there were no guardians of public order except the hastily organized youthful "militia." Neverthe less, the people made it a point of honor to preserve order and for several weeks life in the large cities was almost perfectly safe. Sympathetic association has an almost magical value. After the San Francisco fire it was remarked that families that had lost all and were camped in the parks were by no means downhearted. The se cret was that the universal sympathy and helpful- 4 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION ness were meat and drink to the starved social self. The sudden fellowship that springs up in hours of disaster— like the death-watch of the Titanic— is found so sweet that the survivors form an associa tion and meet annually in order to revive it. Just as the loveliest flowers grow nearest the toe of the gla cier, so the sweetest intimacies spring up among those sharing the most terrible experiences. In war "comrade" becomes a sacred word, and the bonds uniting trench-mates and messmates often last through life. So comforting is this perfect fellow ship that soldiers will joke and whistle amid hor rors that would drive a solitary man out of his wits. The journals of Polar expeditions bear witness to the cheerfulness of the men during the long Arctic night. "With companionship but without sunshine they were far happier than the mountain shepherds who have sunshine but lack companionship. So was it for a few days following the March Revolution. There was a brief period of socializa tion, which, nevertheless, soon passed away be cause it had no solid basis. Upon realizing that at last the ancient dreadful incubus was gone, happy excited crowds rolled through the streets, every one cheering, singing, shaking hands with strangers, crying for very joy. The officers of the military missions maintained by the Allies met smiles and friendly looks whenever they showed themselves. Later they found it hard to recollect that for a brief season they basked in the sunshine of popularity. With a solemn self-devoted look the young fellows -—soldiers', students, and workingmen— dashed [about in the army trucks and automobiles, fighting THE REVOLUTIONARY HONEYMOON 5 the police, while with tears in their eyes the people waved and cheered and exclaimed to one another: ' ' They are ours ! Thank God, the army is with us/ at last!" Never were people so obliging to one another and so kind. Any rough-looking man would step off the path into the wet snow to make room for a woman or a child. "Workingmen would say: "This is no time to be demanding higher wages. Until the new Russia is safe all the wages we will ask is enough to feed our children. " In a milk shop you might find customers, rich and poor, going to the milk cans, pouring out what they needed, and leaving the right change on the counter. The spirit of helpfulness was abroad. On the street corners speakers told the people how to organize themselves. Out of students and young men of this type a police was improvised to keep order. Committees sprang up to organize the food supplies, finding where food was needed most and providing for its distribution to every part of the town. In the big apartment- or tenement-houses committees were formed and a larger committee for each block; and these committees considered the need of every family.1 The people's forces captured the prisons and the prisoners, trembling and sick-looking, were brought out. As they came out they were asked by the revolutionists, "WHiat were you in for?" If it was a political offense they were cheered. Many shook their hands and even wept. Nothing was too good for them. If the prisoner admitted having been in- i See Poole, The Village, pp. 57-59. 6 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION carcerated for a real offense, particulars were asked. In some cases they were cuffed or thrashed and warned their lives would be forfeit if they were caught again. But all were let go, and no doubt this mistaken clemency cost Russia dear. The testimony of Mrs. Tirkova-Williams,1 a Rus sian woman married to the well-known English news paper correspondent, Harold Williams, is striking: In those days good-nature and good-will were general, and created a strong, common feeling, breathing energy and force. People looked joyfully and trustfully into each other's eyes and smiled with that irrepressible happy smile which beams upon lover's faces. We believed that Russia stood upon the threshold of a new, longed-for-life, when every one would feel him self equally free, when rights and duties would be as signed, not as a series of privileges and compulsions, but as something inherent in every individual. It was a joy to behold how the pathos of liberty was kindled in the hearts of drab, insignificant men and women, who but yesterday felt themselves to be pariahs. On the second or third day of the Revolution a telegraph mes senger brought me a telegram, and handing it to me, said: "Thank you so much." I looked at him in surprise. A pale, tired-out, sickly, hollow-cheeked man stood before me. But the light in his eyes relieved the drab insignificance of his countenance. "What for?" I asked him. "Why, to be sure, we know about it," he said warmly, "although we are small people, and have kept to our slums afraid to move, still we knew of what others did. I have read your articles in the papers and heard your speeches at meetings. We also understand what different people i From Liberty to Brest Litoesk, pp. 10-12. THE REVOLUTIONARY HONEYMOON 7 stand for. Well, thank God, we 've gained our liberty, you and I. It seems to me as if I were born again. What were we before now? Nothing. Worse off than dogs. Harassed by every one, not looked upon as human beings. And now my back is straightened. I seem to tread on air, my very soul seems to sing — I am a man, I am no longer a slave but a free man. ' ' His words gushed out in torrents. The joy of liberty was bubbling in him like wine. I could not take my gaze off the eyes that sparkled with pride and joy. We both laughed with that glad laugh which means so much more than words. And the telegraph messenger hastened to tell his story in order to make me realise more vividly the importance of all that was filling his soul to overflowing: "Here I have a wife and five children. As to myself, I am an invalid. I have consumption. You yourself know how hard my work is? Out in the street in all weathers. Our wages are beggarly — forty rubles a month. But I claim nothing, I want nothing, no increase, nothing. We '11 bear it, we '11 weather it somehow. If only we can hold firmly together, only not return to what was before. But we '11 hold together, won't we?" The small grey eyes shone with hope and faith. We parted like old friends with a hearty hand-shake. And often in the gloomy days of disillusion and defeat I thought of this consumptive postman, of his enthusiasm, his touch ing intimacy with all whom he looked upon as friends of liberty, his heroic readiness to bear any further material misfortunes if only to safeguard his rights as a man and a citizen. His was by no means an exceptional case. Liberty had straightened out many people, had made them kinder and more sociable. All around there arose the overwhelming consciousness of proximity to and of fusion with millions of other people. Probably something of the kind is felt in moments of mass religious movements. 8 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION An official of the Kerensky Government declares : I remember well the strange kindness and tenderness evinced by the people of Petrograd during the first weeks of the Revolution, and especially after the Czar was ar rested. I saw not a sign of animosity or distrust. All were eager to show affection and faith in each other, to help each other, to cooperate for the common weal. I can never forget the young Russian student, a girl of about nineteen years of age. She was engaged to work for the Petrograd Council of Workmen and Soldiers and in dis tributing bread and soup to the people who crowded the palace for days and nights. I saw her one day looking with a happy smile at a soldier, who had fallen asleep while standing on guard in the palace. I greeted her. "Is it not true, comrade," she asked me, "that it is worth while to die now? People are happy and free. Oh I envy those who have fallen I"1 The spontaneous lynching of persons suspected to be guilty of anti-social offenses, was not so dis cordant with the general spirit of good will as one might at first suppose. It was felt that it was doubly wrong to commit crime now that the police were gone and the death penalty was abolished. Under the tsar much might be forgiven; but there should be no mercy for the man who smirched the fair fame of the Revolution. Now that brotherhood had be come a reality it was felt that the man guilty of breaking the implied laws of brotherhood was not fit to live. In fact, the ecstatic fraternal mood of the liberated people recalls Wordsworth's character ization of the early days of the French Revolution : i Zilboorg, The Passing of the Old Order in Europe, p. 187. THE REVOLUTIONARY HONEYMOON 9 Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive, But to be young was very Heaven ! That this blithe spirit later became overcast by furious contention was due, in the case of Russia as in the case of France, not so much to particular persons as to a terrific reservoir of guilt and ignorance filled up from age to age That could no longer hold its loathsome charge But burst and spread in deluge through the land. CHAPTER II THE BACKGROUND OF THE TOILING MASSES NOTHING is more preposterous than to wonder why the toiling masses of Russia, standing amid their freshly broken chains, did not conduct themselves as we should do facing their problems of war and social reconstruction. When their behav ior appears to us "unreasonable" or "violent," there is always at hand a stock explanation in the illiteracy figures for the Russian people. In case this does not suffice we are urged to consider the "primitiveness" of the Russian folk mind. Now, the ignorance and want of outlook of the muzhiks must, indeed, be borne in mind in interpret ing the phenomena of the Revolution. On the whole, however, the key it is necessary to apply in order to make understandable the behaviour of the Russian masses is their background of experience. In order to see why it is inevitable that the first gush of brotherhood should pass quickly like the morning dew, so that spring will hardly pass into summer before freed ^Russia becomes the theater of fierce class struggle, it is necessary to realize the lot of the toiling masses under the regime which has just collapsed over their heads* It is the bitterness of this lot that explains why tney obstinately withhold their confidence from the government' provided 10 BACKGROUND OF THE TOILING MASSES 11 them by the classes they look upon as their ex ploiters and speedily become enchanted with the slogans, "Save the Revolution!" "All power to the Soviets!" It is this that accounts for their easily aroused, and often quite groundless, fear lest, after all, their erstwhile oppressors shall contrive somehow to take their Revolution away from them. Here we come upon the secret of their intense sus piciousness and their fierceness toward any individ ual or group against whom the cry of "counter-rev olutionary" can be raised. THE PEASANT'S BACKGROUND OE EXPERIENCE In European Russia the tillers of the soil rarely live on individual farms, but huddle in rural villages which harbor sometimes as many as ten thousand in habitants. Entering such a village, you miss the sidewalks, trees, and spacious front yards which re deem the American country town. To prevent the spread of fire among these wooden habitations the streets are made very wide, but no highway runs down their middle and no footpaths flank them. In winter they are a deep bed of snow, in summer usu ally a trough of dust or mud. Trees, shrubbery, grass-plots, flower beds, find no place in the scene. The houses are tiny huts of logs — in the treeless South of Russia they are of mud — of one or two rooms. The floor is of earth or rough boards. A table, some backless benches, perhaps a chair or two, constitute, along with the omnipresent icons, the fur niture. The outstanding feature of the peasant's izba is a big whitewashed brick stove. The top of it offers a spacious platform on which in cold 12 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION weather the older folks sleep at night and rest by day. It is here that the children play during the long weary winter months and here is the domestic hospital to which the ailing members of the family resort. Thanks to this stove and to the wood splinters which light the hut when, as is often the case, there is no lamp, the interior is likely to be smoky. Small wonder that eye trouble and blind ness are rife in these villages! Save in the central provinces supplied with fab rics from the textile factories of the Moscow region, the clothes of the peasant are homespun from flax, hemp, or wool. Underwear there is none. Two garments, trousers and smock, constitute the man's dress in summer. In winter there is a sheepskin coat with the wool turned inside. Many a family has but one sheepskin coat, the older members wearing it by turns. When the peasant wears foot gear at all it will be — for holiday best — the coars est of long cowhide boots ; for the rest he wears the bast shoes common among our ancestors in the Mid dle Ages. These are a sort of moccasin plaited from strips of bark. They suffice to protect the foot from laceration but not from cold and wet. The women knit themselves stockings, but the men, as a rule, do not wear socks. They swathe their feet in rags. The Russian peasant is in small danger of obesity. He lives below any plane we know to have been touched by the rural population of medieval Eng land. Perhaps we should liken his lot to that of the French peasantry at the time of the Jacqueries in the seventeenth century. To abstain from meat during BACKGROUND OF THE TOILING MASSES 13 the numerous fast-days and seasons of the Russian Orthodox Church is no violent wrench to his dietary habits. ' ' The hog or steer which the peasant raises he is likely to sell in order to obtain the money with which to pay his taxes and debts. Even the well-to- do muzhik partakes of meat only on Sundays or holi days and on other special occasions, never every day."1 As for his bread, it will be black, made from whole rye or barley — never from wheat, for his wheat he sells. White bread is an article of luxury as it was in France under the Bourbon regime. Moreover, even black bread is not consumed reck lessly. For the five years immediately preceding the outbreak of the World War the average annual per-capita consumption of bread grains by the prin cipal peoples was as follows : Hundredweight Canadians 26.5 Americana 22 2 Danes 19.1 Hungarians 11 Belgians 10.8 Germans 10 French 0.6 Dutch 9 Rumanians 8.4 Russians 7.6 A Russian economist who was a bureau chief un der the Provisional Government declares: Taking into consideration that bread is the chief article of food of the Russian peasant, whereas in Western coun tries it plays a far less important part, it may fairly be asserted that the Russian population, with its consump tion of 381 kilograms per head, was chronically underfed. 2 1 Hindus, The Russian Peasant, p. 15. 2 Nordman, Peace Problems; Russian Economics, p. 36. 14 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION Insufficient black bread, then, eked out with po tatoes, mush, and cabbage soup— such is the coarse and monotonous diet of the peasants. And often millions cannot find even enough of these to hold body and soul together. Since the memorable visi tation of 1891 scarcely a year has passed that there lias not been famine in some part of Russia. The wretchedness of his lot but reflects the small- ness of the peasant 's income. Sixty years ago, when the Russian serfs were emancipated, they received by no means the amount of land — on the whole about one half of the estates — upon which their owners had been accustomed to allow them to grow their own food. The best portions of the land they had been tilling for themselves were cut off and taken by their master for himself. Consequently most of the serfs entered upon freedom with too little land to live from and burdened with a long series of payments which should "redeem" this land, for which they were required to pay from 50 to 100 per cent, more than it was worth. Since emancipation the peasant population of European Russia has doubled, with the inevitable result of a remorseless growth of poverty and misery. The average hold ing per family, which was 13 acres in 1860, fell to 914 acres by 1880, and to but 7 acres in 1900. If, landless or unable to raise a living from his petty holding, the peasant hires out, he earns a wage comparable only to that of the coolie of India or China. Twenty years ago the agricultural la borer in half the provinces of European Russia was paid no more in a year than the American "farm hand" earned in a month! According to a table *s BACKGROUND OF THE TOILING MASSES 15 prepared by the United States Department of Agri culture in 1892, the Russian agricultural laborer received in a year about as much as his fellow of British India, a little over half as much as the Ital ian, a third as much as the German, a fourth as much as the Frenchman, and a fifth as much as the Briton. For the first decade of our century his daily wage without board ranged in forty -four prov inces from 18 to 40 cents. The prevalent wage was from 30 to 35 cents. These "dark" folk are scarcely more conscious of themselves than were the peasantry of England in the days of Edward III. They breed nearly three times as fast and die nearly three times as fast as people in the enlightened parts of the United States. Children arrive close together in the izba and a third of them are buried before they reach their first birthday. No wonder, in view of what they must undergo! Since in summer the mother is obliged to pass her day at work in distant fields, the nursling of a few months is left alone tumbling about on the dirt floor and comforting itself, when it feels the pangs of hunger, by sucking poultices of chewed bread tied to its hands or feet! Through these clusters of human beings disease sweeps almost unopposed. Official figures show that in 1912 about 82% of the population suffered from some ailment or other. The preceding year contagious disease was four times as rife in Rus sia proper as in the more civilized provinces on the Baltic and the Vistula. The peasants are more scourged by disease than the townspeople. In the United States there is one doctor for every eight 16 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION hundred persons. In Russia medical service is per haps twenty times as scarce. The ratio in 1912 was one physician to 13,000 people in the cities and one to 21,900 in the country. Various causes of the wretched plight of the Rus sian peasantry suggest themselves. The observer who grasps the significance of Malthus's Law of Population will explain it by their blind animal-like multiplication, which requires the village common lands to be divided among an ever larger number of families. Thus grows constantly the proportion of peasants with holdings too small to feed their families. So long as they propagate without fore sight or restraint there is no possibility of perma nently improving their condition. Even if all the arable land in Russia comes into their possession, they will experience relief only until in a few years the fatal expansion of population has taken up the slack. Then the strain will be as severe as ever and, unless the culture plane of the peasants can be raised, they will multiply until Russia is as over peopled as China or India. There can be, then, no lasting amelioration of the peasants' lot until their rate of increase has been curbed by the same influences which have curbed the rate of increase of a few of the more enlightened peoples. A stimulating and individualizing educa tion of all members of the rising generation is, therefore, the only thing that will extricate these people from the quagmire into which they are sink ing. Another observer, less philosophical but well Attacking the Czar's police during the first days of the March Revolution A. Kollontay People's Commissary of Social Welfare BACKGROUND OF THE TOILING MASSES 17 versed in the world's agricultural experience, might conclude : The root of these people's poverty is poor farming. The acre yield of grains in Russia is but two thirds of the yield of Italy, Bulgaria and Roumania; scarcely a half of the yield of British India, Uruguay, Greece, France, Hungary, the United States, Canada and Argentina; two fifths of the yield of Germany and Denmark ; one third or less of the yield of Hol land, Japan, Norway, England, and Belgium. And this showing includes the estates, which, being better land and better farmed, yield one fourth more per acre than the lands which belong to the 109,000 peasant communes. So that, although the great Rus sian plain is one of the best agricultural tracts in the world, no peasantry obtains a smaller return from its tillage. It is necessary, then, to discard the system of com munal land ownership, long since abandoned in Western and Central Europe, which enslaves the peasant to the farming practices and customs of his community, which yokes the progressive few with the stagnant many, which periodically reallots the land so that one has no incentive to make improve ments or to preserve or build up the fertility of the land he tills, and which requires the land to be tilled in strips so narrow that from 5 to 15 per cent, of the area cannot be properly cultivated. Other faults of peasant agriculture are — lack of horse-power to work the land, and impoverishment of the soil owing to scarcity of live stock and to burn ing for fuel the straw and manure which should be 18 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION returned to the fields, the sowing of foul or weak seed, lack of proper implements and machinery for efficient farming, and ignorance of the art of good farming. The peasants will continue in a morass of misery until proper schools disseminate among the young people a knowledge of the best agricultural practices and the spirit of cooperation, while the ex tension of communal or government credit enables them to equip themselves with the stock and imple ments necessary to their work. This is wise counsel, to be sure, but the Malthus- ian would insist that no doubling or trebling of crops will afford more than a temporary relief to the muzhiks unless they cease to propagate as they do. Let them be as clever farmers as the Belgians or the Japanese, — by the time they have added twenty or thirty millions to their numbers, a by-product of blind instinct, all their improved agriculture will not save them from being as necessitous as they now are. So may the enlightened observer ruminate as to "the one thing needful" to raise the whole plane of existence of the Russian peasantry. But the peas ants themselves look for relief in quite another di rection. Scattered among their village common lands are state lands, crown lands, church lands, monastery lands, the estates of 110,000 nobles, in all about 165,- 000,000 acres of arable land — enough, were it evenly distributed, to provide perhaps an additional ten acres for the average farm family. Property these estate's are, but not property hallowed, as it is among us, by the investment of the fruits of one 's toil. The kulaks, or rich peasants, built up their farms bit by BACKGROUND OF THE TOILING MASSES 19 bit, but the estates were gifts from the czar, cen turies ago in most cases, bestowed in order to pro vide a basis for organizing the military defense of the nation. In such property rights the peasant acknowledges no sacredness. Even when he was a serf he stubbornly disputed his master's title to the soil. "We are yours," he would say, "but the land is ours." He looks upon the landed proprie tors as usurpers. "In the consciousness of the people," declared a representative at the Congress of the Peasants' Union in 1905, "land is a gift of God like air and water. Only he who wants to work it should get it, each according to his needs." In the Duma the peasant deputy Anikin said: "We need the land not for sale or mortgage, not for spec ulation, not to rent it and get rich, but to work it. The land interests us not as merchandise or com modity, but as a means of raising useful products." Hence the slogan of the agrarian movement, Zemlia narodu, "The land to the people," i. e., the work ing-people. The fact is, the peasant idealizes the ownership of land. "All around him he sees the landlords who have everything, enjoy everything, beautiful homes, elegant clothes, an abundance of food; who ride in stately carriages drawn by sprightly horses; whose children frolic at balls and dances, and gallop mer rily about the country on horseback. The landlord, the peasant reasoned, had everything because he had much land. Any one who had much land could be happy. Hence he was sure that increase in his holding would lift him to a higher level of living." * i Hindus, The Russian Peasant, p. 172. 20 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION Toward the landlord the peasants feel only the hostility excited by those who come between us and our goal. The tales recounted by the graybeards keep alive among them recollections of the days of serfdom, but, such is the sweetness of nature of the Russian people, there is no dark heritage of grudges, no vindictive thirst to avenge on the present lord the wrongs of his ancestors against our ancestors. The pomieshtchik is a nuisance, that is all. "Let him betake himself whither he will, if only we may have his land. We have no desire to hurt him. Or, if he will stay, he shall have his share just like the rest of us. But as for tilling his acres and giving him half the crop, we will do this only so long as the czar has police and troops to coerce us,— no longer. ' ' THE WORKER'S BACKGROUND OF EXPERIENCE Forty years ago the bulk of the wares needed by the Russian common people were the product of home or village industries. It was in the later dec ades of the nineteenth century that capitalist in dustry triumphed in Russia over the older forms and grew like the mango-tree in the Hindu conjurer's trick. Lured by the almost fabulous profits of the Russian factories disposing of their products in a market protected by a very high tariff, capital hur ried from Germany, Belgium, England, and other centers of accumulation, while sturdy yokels, squeezed out of their native villages by the pres sure of natural increase, sought jobs in the rising industrial towns, such as Ekaterinoslav, Lodz, Baku, BACKGROUND OF THE TOILING MASSES 21 Rostov, Ivanovo-Vosnesensk and Kharkov, to say nothing of Petrograd and Moscow. So absentee capitalism became maker of a new Russia. The type of capitalist industry which struck root in Russia was naturally ultra modern. It is where capitalism comes, as it were, "of a piece," that it starts with giant units. Nowhere else, not even in America the proverbial home of large-scale enter prises, is the representative factory so big as in Russia. In 1890 there were only 108 factories in Russia employing a thousand or more workers each ; in 1902 there were 262 such plants with 626,500 op eratives. Monster plants of 10,000 or more hands are by no means rare. In Nijni Novgorod I heard mention of the delegates of workers from a certain concern. "How many does it employ?" I asked. ' ' Oh, about twenty-five thousand ! ' ' During the war the Putilov works in Petrograd came to enroll 50,- 000. Of course, in such colossi all the character istic features of capitalist industry are present in exaggerated form. Moreover, the concentration of workers makes it easy to rule and sway and wield them. Thus the average Russian cotton-mill can provide the agitator with an audience of near 700. These three or four millions of factory workers, largely of rural origin, submitted to the mentally stimulating influence of city life and collective la bor, quickly outgrow the simple ideas and low standards of living of the peasantry. The indus trial worker learns to read and write, acquires self- respect, and gains a notion of how a civilized human being ought to live. He wishes to wear good clothes 22 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION and present a "decent" appearance. He resents having to rear his family in a sty. But what can he do on his wages? Says Kovalevsky: Our agrarian system creates millions of proletarians looking for jobs. Although very high prices for our manu factured products are maintained by our protective tariff, our home industries cannot grow fast enough to give em ployment to all who seek it. Moreover, wages remain very low. Nowhere in the world is there an industry which pays labor as little as ours. To judge the advantages which our manufacturers enjoy I would only need to jux tapose the figures of the profits made by Russian manufac turers and foreign manufacturers; but I prefer to limit myself to this simple statement of fact. On the average the English workingman gets $291 a year, the French workingman $286, the German $239, the Austrian $170; but the Russian workingman earns less than $127 a year. Even taking into account the greater efficiency and skill of the foreign worker one must recognize that the Russian manufacturer enjoys a marked advantage in paying his workingmen so little.1 In 1912, when raw immigrant labor commanded $1.65 a day in the industrial centers of the United States, this class of labor was paid about 30 cents a day in the industrial centers of Russia. In 1917 I met a machinist who had worked in all the big centers of Russia and never received more than 85 cents a day. Coming to the United States, he began work at $2.75 a day and in five years he had never worked for less. After allowing for a slightly higher cost of living in the United States and bearing in i La Russie sociale ( 1914), p. 110. BACKGROUND OF THE TOILING MASSES 23 mind that employers reckon Russian skilled labor as 25 or 30 per cent, less efficient than American labor, it seems safe to say that under the old regime the share of the value of his product that fell to the Russian factory worker was but a third or a quarter of that received by the American factory worker! Proletarians who can be underpaid with impunity can be overworked with impunity. Hence, the working day in Russia is shamefully long. In 1897 the law limited the working day to liy2 hours. But the law proved a dead letter, and, leaving out of ac count holidays, a goodly portion of the proletariat — all the miners for example — pass a full half of life at their toil. What a bagatelle is the lot of the hand-worker in the general Russian scheme appears vividly in Tolstoy's account of a little personal investigation which set him to thinking : An acquaintance of mine who works on the Moscow- Kursk Railway as a weigher, in the course of conversa tion mentioned to me that the men who load the goods on to his scales work for thirty-seven hours on end. . . . The weigher narrated the conditions under which this work is done so exactly that there was no room left for doubt. He told me that there are two hundred and fifty such goods-porters at the Kursk station in Moscow. They were all divided into gangs of five men, and were on piece-work, receiving from one ruble to IR. 15 [fifty to fifty-eight cents] for one thousand poods [over sixteen tons] of goods received or despatched. They come in the morning, work for a day and a night at unloading the trucks, and in the morning, as soon as the night is ended, they begin to re-load, and work on for 24 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION another day. So that in two days they get one night's sleep. The account given by the weigher was so circumstantial that it was impossible to doubt it, but, nevertheless, I de cided to verify it with my own eyes, and I went to the goods-station. Their work always keeps them occupied more than thirty-six hours running, because it takes more than half an hour to get to their lodgings and from their lodgings, and besides, they are often kept at work beyond the time fixed. Paying for their own food, they earn, by such thirty- seven-hour-on-end work, about twenty-five rubles a month. To my question, why they did such convict work, they replied : "Where is one to go to?" "But why work thirty-seven hours on end? Cannot the work be arranged in shifts?" "We do what we 're told to." ' ' Yes ; but why do you agree to it ? " "We agree because we have to feed ourselves. 'If you don 't like it — be off ! ' If one 's even an hour late one has one's ticket shied at one and is told to march; and there are ten men ready to take the place." The men were all young, only one was somewhat older, perhaps about forty. All their faces were lean, and had exhausted, weary eyes, as though the men were drunk. Seeing my interest in their position, they surrounded me, and, probably taking me for an inspector, several of them speaking at once, informed me of what was evidently their chief subject of complaint — namely, that the apart ment in which they could sometimes warm themselves and snatch an hour's sleep between the day-work and the night-work was crowded. All of them expressed great dissatisfaction at this crowding. "There may be one hundred men, and nowhere to lie BACKGROUND OF THE TOILING MASSES 25 down; even under the shelves it is crowded," said dis satisfied voices. "Have a look at it yourself. It is close here." The room was certainly not large enough. In the thirty- six-foot room about forty men might find place to lie down on the shelves. Some of the men entered the room with me, and they vied with each other in complaining of the scantiness of the accommodation. "Even under the shelves there is nowhere to lie down," said they. These men, who in twenty degrees of frost, without overcoats, carry on their backs twenty-stone loads during thirty-six hours; who dine and sup not when they need food, but when their overseer allows them to eat; living altogether in conditions far worse than those of dray- horses, it seemed strange that these people only complained of insufficient accommodation in the room where they warm themselves. But though this seemed to me strange at first, yet, entering further into their position, I under stood what a feeling of torture these men, who never get enough sleep, and who are half-frozen, must experience when, instead of resting and being warmed, they have to creep on the dirty floor under the shelves, and there, in the stuffy and vitiated air, become yet weaker and more broken down. Only, perhaps, in that miserable hour of vain attempt to get rest and sleep do they painfully realise all the horror of their life-destroying thirty-seven-hour work, and that is why they are specially agitated by such an apparently insignificant circumstance as the overcrowding of their room.1 As is to be expected of a people that has not had time to straighten up since the yoke of serfdom was i Tolstoy, The Slavery of Our Times, pp. 3-12 passim. 26 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION lifted from its neck, the workingman does not deal with his master on a level. The employer con ceives himself as a benefactor of his men. They are expected to be grateful to him for giving them work. The tone of the factory administration is arrogant and harsh. It is quite common to search the workers, men and women alike, on their leaving the factory premises. Cuffs and kicks are freely dealt out, so that the factory inspectors cite nine thousand charges of physical ill treatment brought against employers in a single year. Further light on the status of the Russian operative is shed by the fact that in 1912 the workers in 4,245 establishments paid four million fines, aggregating $350,000. With his wages of 30 to 50 cents a day what sort of habitation can the Russian unskilled worker af ford? Professor Tugan-Baranovski writes: The sanitary and hygienic conditions of the Russian fac tory are horrible. Only a few factories have dormitories for their workmen and what kind of dormitories! Men, women and children sleep side by side on wooden benches, in damp, sultry and crowded barracks, sometimes in cel lars, often in rooms without windows. Most of the fac tories have no dormitories at all. In a workday of twelve, thirteen and fourteen hours the workmen lie down to sleep in the workshop itself, on stands, bench boards or tables, putting some rags under their heads. This is often the case even in shops where dyes or chemicals are used that impair the workman 's health even in work time. Those who lived away from the factory were more independent of their masters but not much more comfortable. An official report of an industrial sub urb in the province of Valdimir speaks of BACKGROUND OF THE TOILING MASSES 27 the slooodki, noisy, motley, gaudily coloured quarters out side the protection of the administration of the cities, out side the archaic power of the rural mir. Only the police had access at every hour of the day and night to these muddy haunts. The slooodki, with their miserable dolls' houses and their narrow streets, remind one of a gipsy encampment, the ephemeral home of circus-folk, where all is changing and impermanent. There is a constant coming and going ; like so many mushrooms the little yellow houses rise singly in the midst of fields, covered with rubbish. They begin to appear in rows, finally they can no longer contain their inhabitants. Then fresh dolls' houses begin to rise beside the court-yards of the others; not a birch- tree, not a bush to be seen ; nothing but dust and mud and rubbish in the streets, soot and smoke and the rumble of factories in the air.1 Tender always of the interests of the capitalists, the Romanov regime frowned upon any combined action of the workers to push up their wages. Strikes were punishable by from two to four months imprisonment, agitation for a strike by double. Nevertheless, under such repression there were more strikes in Russia than in France, Austria, or Italy. In 1905 the anti-strike law was repealed, but the Government continued to prosecute strikers when it felt itself strong enough to do so. In 1906 a stern law was directed against agri cultural laborers aiming to improve their lot by col lective action. It punished strikes on the farm with imprisonment for from two to eight months ; an un successful attempt to foment a strike with from two to four months ; membership in a society to foment i Alexinsky, Modern Russia, p. 131. 28 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION such strikes with imprisonment in a fortress for from sixteen months to four years. Worried by the marked industrial unrest, tsarism rears a noble-looking legislation on behalf of labor. It restricts the night work of women and children, limits the working day, provides for accident com pensation and sets up an elaborate system of fac tory inspection. But the fair outside of the indus trial code hides much rottenness. In secret cir culars the Minister of the Interior orders the factory inspectors to do all in their power to prevent strikes. If, nevertheless, a strike occurs, they are to give the strikers to understand that they will gain no con cessions from their masters until they return to work. The employer who yields to the demands of the strikers will feel the displeasure of a govern ment which aims to keep labor cheap and in its place. Down to the Revolution of 1905 the Government sought to repress or control labor unions. Twenty years ago it sent out its secret agents to form "safe" organizations. The workers who innocently poured into these unions often took the bit in their teeth and ran them for their own purposes, and at their meetings the "reds" debated with the "blacks" and sometimes carried the government unions right into the camp of the Social Democrats. During the brief "period of liberties" proletarian organization went forward so fast that by the end of 1906 a quar ter of a million workers were in unions. The Gov ernment, however, hurried to the relief of the be leaguered capitalists. It jailed organizers, arrested trade-union officials, suppressed the labor press, and dissolved workers' organizations, till once more the BACKGROUND OF THE TOILING MASSES 29 wage earner stood nearly defenseless before his em ployer. The thinking proletarian therefore hates the bour geois class, whom he regards as greedy exploiters, and is rebellious against the government which lends itself to their game. In vain does autocracy profess to shelter him with labor laws of the most advanced type and encourage workers' organiza tions which shall be innocent of "political" aims. Behind its smile he sees a stern and cruel organ ization of force quaking before the elementary power exhibited by the proletarian masses in move ment.1 Quite naturally, he will be unreasonably critical and suspicious of any Russian government ttvhich does not spring from the toilers themselves. THE SOLDIER'S BACKGROUND OE EXPERIENCE The Revolution finds about sixteen million men — a tenth of the population remaining in the country — in Russian uniform. Half of them are guarding communications or undergoing training in various interior cities and towns, but the other half is at the front in actual contact with the war. What has been the experience which will determine how these men will respond to the vistas opened by the Revolution? i An incident which occurred in 1910 opened the eyes of many to the real feeling of the Government toward the workers. The coal miners on the river Lena had struck against their miserable rate of pay. They had assembled and marched through the streets but without arms in their hands and with neither the intention nor the means of using violence. The Government refused to listen to them and simply ordered the soldiers to open fire upon the defenseless crowds. Two hundred were killed outright. This needless butchery sent a thrill of horror throughout Russia. A question was asked about it in the Duma, but the minister responsible merely answered with cynical insolence "So it was, so it will be." 30 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION One need not expect in them the psychology of the professional soldier. Among the million and a half first-line soldiers the tsar threw into the war arena in August, 1914, a great number looked upon war as their trade. There were many corps of men who in the military colonies planted along the marches of the empire, on the lower Don, north of the Caucasus, fronting Turkestan, and in Eastern Siberia, had from their youth up dedicated themselves to Mars. They were in honor bound to fight for their imperial master when called on, for they had received land on that express condition. But in this third year of the war few of these watch-dogs of the tsar remain. They have been invalided or impounded in German prison camps, or their bones lie under the tortured battle-fields of Poland and Galicia. Their place has been filled by common raw peasants who for genera tions have looked upon the three or four years of ex acted military service as a calamity. Always, the leaving of the young conscripts from the village has been an occasion of weeping and lamentation. These recruits from the plow-tail love not fighting for its own sake and will want to know why they must suffer and die. Russia's covenants with the Allies were drawn by the tsar's ministers and have never been communicated to the world. To the Rus sian soldiers the war aims of their Government have never been explained as those of the United States were explained — at length and with great care — to the young American soldiers in their training-camps. Under the old regime, discipline in the sense of obedi ence prompted by respect for the worth and rank of one's officer scarcely existed. Things were so bad that Grand BACKGROUND OF THE TOILING MASSES 31 Duke Nicholas authorized an officer to shoot down at once any man who failed to obey his first order. The terror istic system employed against the men is illustrated by an incident told me by an army surgeon who witnessed it. A man of the sanitary squad while getting his pay re marked to the company secretary that it was queer that sanitars and orderlies had not been included in the Easter distribution of presents among the soldiers. The secretary tattled this remark to the commandant, who thereupon beat the sanitwr with his fist and, when the prostrate man pro tested, threatened to shoot him if he uttered another word. The man was then stood up for two hours in front of a trench for the Germans to shoot at, and a squad of fifty men were ordered to defile him. When they refused, they were punished by being made to stand at attention for two hours under enemy fire. Among the officers themselves there was little discipline. They drank heavily, gambled with cards, had loose women in their quarters, and disregarded many general orders aim ing to regulate their conduct in the interest of the service. Sometimes the men were sent into an unauthorized and utterly hopeless attack by their drunken officers. Scandal ous, too, was the neglect of the sick and wounded by those in places of authority. As a result, the men hated their officers.1. The famous organizer of the Women's Battalion, Maria Botchkareva, testifies to the feeling among the soldiers that they were betrayed by certain high officers : There had been rumors aplenty in the trenches of pro- German officials in the army and the Court. We had our suspicions, too, and now they were confirmed in a shock ing manner. General Walter paid a visit to the front line. He was iRoss, Russia im, Upheaval, pp. 229-230. 32 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION known to be of German blood, and his harsh treatment of the soldiers won for him the cordial hatred of the rank and file. The General, accompanied by a considerable suite of officers and men, exposed himself on his tour of inspection of our trenches completely without attracting a single enemy bullet ! It was unthinkable to us who had to crawl on our bellies to obtain some water. And here was this party in open view of the enemy who kept such a strange silence. The General acted queerly. He would stop at points where the barbed wire was torn open or where the fortifica tions were weak and wipe his face with his kerchief. There was a general murmur among the men. The word "treason!" was uttered by many lips in suppressed tones. The officers were indignant and ealled the General's atten tion to the unnecessary danger to which he exposed him self. But the General ignored their warnings, remarking, "Nitchevo!" ("It 's nothing.") The discipline was so rigorous that no one dared to argue the matter with the General. The officers cursed, when he left. The men muttered: ' ' He is selling us out to the enemy ! ' ' Half an hour after his departure the Germans opened a tremendous fire. It was particularly directed against those points at which the General had stopped, reducing their incomplete defenses to dust. We thought at first that the enemy intended to launch an offensive, but our expectations did not materialize. He merely continued [his violent bombardment, wounding and burying alive hundreds. The cries of the men were such that rescue work could not be postponed. While the shelling was still going on I took charge and dressed some hundred and fifty wounds. If General Walter had appeared in our midst at that moment the men would never have let him get away alive, so intense was their feeling.1 lYashka, pp. 103-104. BACKGROUND OF THE TOILING MASSES 33 As the war drags on and the early hopes wither, tales of the stupidity and corruption of which the war-makers have been guilty seep down to the ranks. Thus the high command took all the steel output for cannon and shells, leaving none for the needs of the railways, factories, and farms. The high command took skilled engine-drivers and telegraphers from their work and sent them to the front because their unions were reputed to be revolutionary. Millions upon millions of peasants were needlessly called away from the production of food, leaving the fields to be worked by women and old men. At one time more than four million men were assembled in in terior camps who had no officers to drill them and no rifles to drill with.1 The President of the Duma returning from the front where he had seen soldiers with their feet protected only by rags torn from tents asked permission of the Minister of the Interior to call a conference of zemstvos to organize a supply of boots to the army. The reply he received was : "I know why you want a conference — you want to spread revolutionary ideas. ' ' 2 At the trial of the former Minister of War Souk- homlinov in August, 1917, the evidence as to the suffering of the soldiers from the incompetence of the tsar's bureaucrats is heartrending. Russia began the war short even of rifles for the four and a half million men she called out. The very first i Never has the world seen such shocking waste of labor power, such rotting of workers' morale as I saw in the garrison towns of Russia in 1917. Drilling had become a thing of the past. When they were not playing cards in, the barracks the soldiers crowded the tram-cars and loafed about (he streets nibbling sunflower seeds. 2 Wilcox, Russia's Ruin, p. 89. 34 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION reinforcing drafts which left for the front had only one rifle for every two men. Then it became one for every four, six, eight, ten, till at last whole com panies arrived without a rifle among them. Gen eral Yanoushkevitch knew cases in which the Rus sian soldiers had taken off their boots and fought with them! General Velitchko testified that for a long time the soldiers not only were trained ex clusively with sticks but took them into the trenches as their sole weapons and at one period forty thou sand were waiting near Tarnapol "literally with empty hands." Rodzianko was with the army when the Russians could fire only three rounds at the at tacking enemy and had to beat him off with sticks and stones. "It is impossible," he added, "to de scribe what our troops suffered, and yet naked, bare foot, and unarmed, they fought like lions." Guchkov saw Siberian soldiers under fire in the Galician trenches "without even sticks," while seven miles away sixteen thousand men waited for the rifles of dead and wounded comrades ! Even more ghastly in its results was the shortage of shells. Before the war broke out the Ministry had ordered the shells for its new artillery program from German factories. Of course, they were never delivered. There were instances in which the Rus sian artillerymen were limited to one round per day, while the opposing batteries were firing thousands of shells. The thrusting of the Russian Army from Galicia in the spring of 1915 was one of the most ap palling tragedies in history. Some seven hundred thousand shells burst above the shallow Russian trenches, while the Russians had no ammunition BACKGROUND OF THE TOILING MASSES 35 with which to make reply. Pitted against twenty- four army corps, the devoted Russian army of four teen corps had to retreat. The horrible needless slaughter of brave, half-armed, unprotected men left a bitterness which made men welcome revolu tion. By the spring of 1917 Russia has lost in killed, in valided, and prisoners' four millions of men. The country is nearly ' ' bled white. ' ' In the factories one sees only elderly men or men of poor physique. Women work the fields, patch the railway embank ment, care for the incoming trains, handle freight, and carry luggage. The villages are bare of hale young men. Trade is half -dead. In nearly deserted streets of the Volga cities my footsteps echo drear ily. Many restaurants, resorts, and places of amuse ment have put up the shutters. What shops re main have scarcely anything to sell. The famed Fair of Nijni Novgorod is but the shadow of its old self. Miles upon miles of booths are not opened, while those that open soon sell out their scanty stock and put up the boards again. Germany, hitherto Russia's chief source of supply of manufactured goods, is cut off. Submarines make it difficult to trade with Britain. Russia's factories are busy on war orders. The Trans-Si berian Railway cannot move the flood of American and Japanese goods that pours into Vladivostok. At one time a million tons of freight lie there wait ing shipment to European Russia. For blocks the trains move between veritable mountains of perish able goods under matting or tarpaulins. Meanwhile, necessities are almost unobtainable in 36 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION Russia. People stand all night in line in late autumn for a chance at a pair of boots or a blanket. The earnings of a month will not buy covering for one's feet. Even before the deluge of paper rubles an overcoat cost six times what it used to. Excepting the rich, the city people are underfed and ill clad. The peasants have enough of their coarse food, but the shelves of their cooperatives are nearly bare: there are no supplies of hardware, harness, tools, and clothing. So they get along as best they can with their cotton rags, their sheepskins, and their home spuns. But why should economic collapse have arrived earlier in Russia than in any of the other belligerent nations? Besides governmental incompetence, al ready mentioned, there was in Russia's industrial situation a factor peculiar to her. The Russian bourgeois and aristocracy, though educated, charming, and as delightful people around a dinner-table as one could wish to meet, courteous and generous, did not have the genius for engineer ing or for economic management. They had a ge nius, and a virile one, but it turned rather toward the ballet and the opera, painting and music, literature, expansive ideas of life and thought. They could talk for hours, interestingly and informingly, of the philosophies of the world; the languages of the world they had at their tongue's tip. Being very rich, having a large surplus of financial resources, they hired the nearest effective person to be over seer of the estate, and that nearest person was in almost every instance a German or an Austrian. who had been instructed as to Russian resources, BACKGROUND OF THE TOILING MASSES 37 needs, and conditions, and often, no doubt, was un der secret government subsidy for the very definite purpose of penetration of the Russian land. These constituted the brain at the top of the Russian eco nomic system. As soon as the war broke they abandoned their tasks, many of them returning to Vienna and Berlin, expecting to come again on the heels of a victorious army and own what they had previously managed ; while others submerged, to be come secret information agents of the German gen eral staff. These economic ministers of the Russian world sabotaged as they went. There are certain well-authenticated instances of their setting fire to oil-fields, letting water into coal-mines, etc. Hence, within a fortnight after the declaration of war, there began a paralysis at the top of the economic system in Russia. That paralysis extended steadily down all the nerves of the system, so that increasing mis ery and want manifested itself in the cities and rural districts. That this really took place under the tsar's regime, is evidenced by the fact that the first revolution was preceded by bread riots in Petro grad and Moscow. Why bread riots if the economic system was functioning? This economic paralysis, which starved the army and the factory workers and broke the heart of the Russian resistance to the German power, was a fundamental thing in the disin tegration of both the army and the social life of Russia. Yes, the Russians are very war-weary, — not be cause they are "yellow" or "quitters," but because they are human. They have gained nothing from the game the autocracy thrust them into. More than 38 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION any of their allies they have suffered appalling losses without being able to inflict punishment upon their enemy. They are nearing the point of asking why the blood-letting must still go on. Most of the older line officers of pre-war training have been ground up between the cogs of the war machine. The new junior officers — young men from civil life, many of them former students and teach ers — are frequently liberal in their views and hu mane in the treatment of their men. In the army, ¦save in the general staff, the machine-like military type of mind is nearly extinct and more and more the reaction of the front is that of plain human be ings who have suffered and are suffering unspeak ably. CHAPTER III THE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT THE Provisional Government, which for eight months held power in Russia until it was over turned by the Soviets, has its origin in the initiative of the dominating element in the State Duma. On Sunday, March 11, 1917, the President of the Duma, Rodzianko, sent to the tsar at staff headquarters the following telegram : The situation is serious. There is anarchy at the Capi tal. The Government is paralyzed. The situation as re gards transportation, food supplies and fuel has reached a state of complete disorganization. Public dissatisfac tion is growing. Disorderly shooting is taking place on the streets. Different sections of the troops are shooting at each other. It is necessary immediately to entrust a person who has the confidence of the country with the crea tion of a new government. It is impossible to delay. Any delay is fatal. I pray to God that at this hour the re sponsibility shall not fall upon the Crown-bearer. On the same date Rodzianko sent to all the com manders-in-chief of the army an identical telegram, adding to it the request that they support the appeal of the President of the Duma to the tsar. General Brussilov replied: "Your telegram received. I have done my duty to the Fatherland and the tsar." General Ruzsky replied : ' ' Telegram received. Re quest executed." 39 40 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION As a matter of fact, Rodzianko 's urgent telegram did not reach the tsar. It was withheld by the pal ace commandant, General Voyeikov, who no doubt considered it useless to acquaint his master with the demand for responsible government in view of the fact that on the previous day an order had gone out from the tsar dismissing the Duma until some time in April. The general could not have antici pated that when the council of party leaders in the Duma became acquainted with the order for dismis sal it would resolve: "The State Duma shall not disperse. Deputies are to remain in their places." On the morning of Monday, the twelfth, the Pres ident of the Duma sent a second telegram to the tsar: The situation is becoming worse. Immediate means must be taken, for to-morrow it will be too late. The last hour has struck and the fate of the Fatherland and the Dynasty is being decided. This telegram also remained unanswered. ' Only after noon of this day did the first detach ments of troops present themselves at the Tauride Palace where the Duma was sitting and proffer it their services. As soldiers under arms marched into the huge building, while telegrams came in from generals on various fronts indicating their support of the Duma, the prospects of the Revolution brightened and steps began to be taken to create a temporary government. At half -past two o'clock in the afternoon, the members of the Right having withdrawn in obedience to the tsar's order of dismis sal, the Duma sat and came to the decision to form THE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT 41 a provisional committee of twelve "to preserve or der in Petrograd and to have communication with various institutions and individuals," a non-com mittal phrase which left open a door of escape in case the troops at the front refused to ratify the Petro grad revolution and the Duma should be called upon to justify its action before His Imperial Majesty. At midnight the committee, consisting of Rod zianko, Kerensky, Tcheidze, Shulgin, Miliukov, Karaulov, Konovalov, Dmitriukov, Rzhevsky, Shid- lovsky, Nekrassov, and V. N. Lvov, put out the fol lowing proclamation: The Provisional Committee of the Members of the State Duma under the difficult conditions of internal disorgan ization, brought about by the measures of the old govern ment, has found itself compelled to take into its own hands the reestablishment of the authority of the State and pub lic order. Fully conscious of the responsibility attaching to this decision, the Committee expresses its confidence that the population and the army will assist it in the dif ficult problem of creating a new government, which shall be in accord with the desires of the people and which can rely upon its support. [Signed] M. V. Rodzianko, Chairman of the State Duma. Two hours later the committee, having added to its membership Colonel Engelhardt and made him commandant of the revolutionary Petrograd gar rison, put forth the discreet announcement: The Duma aims to establish connection between officers and privates. Urgent necessity is felt for the organization of the masses of soldiers, animated by the best impulses, who are not yet organized ; events are moving too swiftly. Therefore, officers are invited to assist the State Duma 42 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION in every possible manner in this difficult undertaking. Order has so far been maintained by patrols, organized by the Military Commission of the State Duma and by automobiles of armed people. Measures have been taken to guard the Arsenal, the Mint and the Peter and Paul Fortress. Hostile actions against the Fortress are undesir able. All political prisoners who were confined to cells, including the nineteen soldiers who were arrested during the last few days, have been set free. In spite of the great differences of political and social ideals of the Members of the State Duma that make up the Provisional Committee, there is complete unity among them at the present moment. They are all confronted with the immediate problem of organizing the elemental movement. The danger of disorganization is understood equally by all. Citizens! Organize yourselves: this is the dominant slogan of the moment. In organization there is salvation and strength. Obey the Provisional Committee of the State Duma. The reader will mark that no revolutionary note is struck in this proclamation. No step is taken that does not look to restoring order in a capital tem porarily deprived of a government. Exile in Siberia is still to be reckoned with. By the night of Tuesday, the thirteenth, Petrograd was virtually in the hands of the Revolutionaries. No military units showed fight in behalf of Nicho las II. The bloody-minded police, who from garrets, belfries, and roofs, had loosed masked machine- guns on the people, were being hunted out and killed in their nests. Motor-cars bristling with armed volunteers dashed madly about in search of the few remaining embers of resistance. From Moscow came the cheering news that there the officials and \ THE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT 43 police of the old regime had been overcome with al most no bloodshed. The fires had been extinguished and the railways were working. A city "militia" had been hastily enrolled to take over the social functions of the odious tsarist police, who had just been killed or jailed. Regiment after regiment swung into the Tauride Palace to pay homage to the Duma, new master of the Russian land. The streets were full of happy people ready to fall on one another's necks from love and joy. In the meantime the political leaders sitting in close conclave were hammering out a government. To Miliukov it was given to announce the result in a speech before a gathering of sailors, soldiers and citizens in the Tauride Palace. He said in part: We are witnessing a great historic moment. Only three days ago we were a modest opposition and the Rus sian Government seemed almighty. Now this government has fallen into the mud, part of which it became. And we and our friends from the Left have been brought out by the revolution, by the army and by the people, to the honorable place of the members of the first Russian pub lic cabinet. [Loud applause.] How is it that this event took place when only recently it seemed improbable? How did it happen that the Rus sian revolution which overthrew forever the old regime proved to be the swiftest and most bloodless of all revolu tions known in history? It happened because history does not know of another government so stupid, so dishonest, so cowardly, so treach erous as the government now overthrown, which has cov ered itself with disgrace and which has deprived itself of all roots, sympathies, and respect which bind the people to a government which possesses even a modicum of power. 44 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION We overthrew the Government easily and quickly, but this is not all that must be done. The other half of the work remains to be done — and it is the bigger half — to keep in our hands this victory so easily achieved. How can this be attained? The answer is simple and clear; we must organize the victory, and, in order to do this, first of all we must preserve that unity of will and thought which led us to victory. Among the members of the present Cabinet there were many ancient and vital disagreements. Perhaps these dis agreements will soon become important and serious, but to-day they pale and disappear before -the all-important problem still to be solved, the problem of creating a new people's government to take the place of the one which has just fallen. I hear that I am asked: "Who elected you?" No one elected us, because if we were to wait for a people 's election we could not tear the power out of the hands of the enemy ; while we were arguing as to whom we ought to elect, the enemy would succeed in organizing and would divide us and you. We were elected by the Russian Revolution. [Long and loud applause.] We will not retain this authority for a moment after the freely elected representatives of the people will tell us that they wish to see in our places people more worthy of their confidence. [Applause.] At the head of our Ministry we placed a man whose name signifies the organized Russian public [Cries: "Propertied public!"], who was implacably persecuted by the old Government: Prince G. E. Lvov, the head of the Russian Zemstvo [Cries: "Propertied Zemstvo!"] will be your Premier and Minister of Interior. He will replace his persecutor. You say: "Propertied public?" Yes, but the only one that is organized, which, therefore, will give other classes of Russian society an opportunity to organize. [Applause.] But, gentlemen, I am happy to tell you that THE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT 45 the non-propertied public also will have its representation in our Ministry. I have just received the consent of my comrade, A. F. Kerensky, to occupy a position in the first Russian public cabinet. [Stormy applause.] We were infinitely happy to trust in the worthy hands of this public worker that ministry in which he will render just punish ment to the retainers of the old regime, to all these Stiir- mers and Sukhomlinovs. [Applause.] The cowardly heroes of the days forever past will find themselves by the will of fate not in the power of Scheglovitov's justice, but in the Ministry of Justice of A. F. Kerensky. [Stormy applause.] You wish to know other names? [Cries: "And you?"] As for me, my comrades have instructed me to take the leadership of the foreign Russian policy. [Stormy and lengthy applause, developing into an ova tion to the speaker, who bows on all sides.] Perhaps I may prove to be a weak minister in this position, but I can promise you that, under me, the secrets of the Russian people will not fall into the hands of our enemies. [Long and stormy applause.] Now, I will name a person whose name I know will raise objections here. A. I. Guchkov was my political enemy [Cries: "Friend!"] during the entire life of the State Duma, but now we are political friends and one must be just even to enemies. Did not Guchkov, in the Third Duma, begin the rebuilding of the Russian Army, which at that time was disorganized by the Manchurian failure ? He placed the first stone of that victory with which our regenerated and revived army will come out of the present great war. Guchkov and I are people of different types. I am an old professor, used to reading lectures, and Guchkov is a man of action. And even now as I am speaking to you in this hall, Guchkov is organizing our victory on the streets of the capital. What would you say if instead of taking charge of placing troops at the railroad stations last night, at which we expected troops opposed to the revolution, Guchkov had been tak- 46 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION ing part in our political disputes and the hostile troops had occupied the stations and then had occupied the streets and then even this hall? What would have hap pened to you and me? [Cries of approval: "Correct! How about the Minister of Marine?"] The position of the Minister of Marine, we will leave in the hands of Guchkov, until we are able to find a worthy candidate for it. Then, we gave two places to the representatives of that liberal group of the Russian bourgeoisie, which was the first in Russia to attempt to organize the public repre sentation of the working class. [Applause and cries: "Where is it?"] Gentlemen, this was done by the old Government. A. I. Konovalov helped to organize the la bor group at the Central War Industries Committee, and M. I. Tereshchenko did the same in regard to Kiev. [Cries from the audience: "Who is Tereshchenko?"] Yes, gentlemen, this is a name which sounds big in the South of Russia. Russia is great and it is difficult to know everywhere of our best people. [Question: "And agricul ture?"] Gentlemen, in these days when the supplying of the army is a serious and difficult problem, when the old Gov ernment has brought our Motherland almost to the edge of the precipice, when every minute's delay threatens to bring about hunger riots somewhere, and when riots have already taken place in some places, we have appointed as Minister of Agriculture, A. I. Shingarev, to whom, we be lieve, is assured that public support, the absence of which assured the downfall of Mr. Rittikh. [Long and loud ap plause. Question: "And Ways of Communication?"] To this important position during the present crisis, we have delegated N. V. Nekrassov, the Vice Chairman of the State Duma, who is especially loved by our Left comrades. [Lively applause.] THE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT 47 Of the eleven members of the Provisional Govern ment, four — viz., Miliukov, Shingarev, Maniulov, and Nekrassov — belong to the Cadet party; Guch kov, and V. N. Lvov are Octobrists : Konovalov is a Progressist; Tereshchenko and Prince Lvov are non-party. Only Kerensky represents the Social ists, who doubtless already constitute the majority of the politically conscious Russians. The overwhelming preponderance in this govern ment of the representatives of the propertied re flects the relative strength of parties in the Duma rather than in the country. The basis of the Duma was exceedingly undemocratic. Its members had been chosen by electors selected by class groups on such a basis that there would be one elector for every 230 of the landed gentry, for every 1,000 wealthy citizens, for every 15,000 middle-class citi zens, for every 60,000 peasants and for every 125,- 000 workingmen! The Duma, even after the ultra- loyalists of the Right had withdrawn, was scarcely more representative of the toiling masses than one of our Chambers of Commerce or Merchants' and Manufacturers' Associations. The "program" of the new government was the outcome of an agreement between the leaders of the Duma and the spokesmen of the Petrograd So viet, and included the following clauses : (1) An immediate general amnesty for all political and religious offenses, including terrorist acts, military revolts, and agrarian crimes. (2) Freedom of speech, of the press, of association and labor organization, and the freedom to strike, with an ex- 48 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION tension of these liberties to civilians and soldiers in so far as military and technical conditions permit. (3) The abolition of all social, religious, and national restrictions. (4) Immediate preparations for the summoning of a Constituent Assembly, which, with universal suffrage as a basis, shall establish the governmental regime and the Constitution of the country. (5) The substitution for the police of a national militia, with elective heads and subject to the self-governing bod ies. (6) Elections to be carried out on the basis of universal suffrage. (7) The troops that have taken part in the revolutionary movement shall not be disarmed, and they are not to leave Petrograd. (8) While severe military discipline must be maintained on active service, all restrictions upon soldiers in the en joyment of social rights granted to other citizens are tp be abolished. (9) The Provincial Government wishes to add that it has no intention of taking advantage of the existence of war conditions to delay the realization of the above-men tioned measures of reform. Particularly significant are Clauses 7, 8, and 9. The first six clauses voice the aspirations long cher ished by the progressive elements among the Rus sian bourgeoisie. But the concluding clauses are evidently safeguards exacted by the suspicious and watchful leaders of the proletariat. These fought hard for another clause, viz., "Abstinence from all actions which would decide beforehand the forma tion of the future government. ' ' This proposal gave rise to stormy debates and was firmly resisted not THE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT 49 only by the Nationalists and the Octobrists, but also by the Cadets, who followed Miliukov in preferring a constitutional monarchy of the English type. They not only refused to proclaim a democratic republic as the popular parties desired, but they re fused to pledge themselves not to establish a mon archy prior to the convening of a Constituent As sembly. One of the first steps of the Provisional Commit tee was to send Guchkov and Shulgin to the tsar to procure if possible his abdication. Flushed with the victory over tsarism, the railroad men apprised the executive committee of the Soviet of this move "to come to some sort of an agreement with the Roman ovs" and the committee ordered its commissaries to stop the train ordered by Guchkov and Shulgin. Nevertheless, they got through somehow, found Nicholas at Pskov (where the railway men had blocked the train on which he was hurrying to his capital), and on March 15th obtained his signature to an act of abdication on behalf of himself and his son in favor of his brother, the Grand Duke Michael. Inasmuch as Miliukov on the same day had an nounced, "The power will be transferred to the Regent, Grand Duke Michael," the Socialists, who wanted a democratic republic, saw that the Govern ment intended to perpetuate the old dynasty. On the next day, however, they had their innings. After a long conference in his palace with all the ministers of the Provisional Government, Michael was induced to sign a "Declaration from the Throne" stating that he was firmly resolved to accept the Supreme Power only if this should be the Citix RoMaJi.nnKir !'««• B» ihh .enmoi oopbfe « B«t«iH»« Bpap0m.CTpe1.m1111.c11 noxn tp« roaa nopaSoTHTb naoy pojwny.rocooM Bory yroAHO C.XO MCBOCJiaTb POCCU KOBOB TMKOB .cmraiila HaiaBmlaci ,»,tpbhb!« Hapojuu-zi »0Ji«e.l« rpo.»T» OUctbbhho orpaexTbC* Ha .ajibHV».ie« BeaewlH yr.op«o)l bo«k« CyAWSa PoccIh «ct» repo-cucll Hame» ap«.ln onaro Hapoaa see fyayuiee joporoiro Ha- utro OresecTBa TpeOyioTi loreiBHls boHhh *n hto «h to hh ctano no noo&jMaro kohub hibctokiB Bpart HaipuraeT-b nocrti- nU c»™ h y«a onaaoKt "ft Koraa AoOiecTHaa ap«U nana COBulcTHO CO CJIOBHbhlll HO J»«« c o»s b h «av B cuoasn oxonMaTeilb- 110 cioMBTb »para Bi sth pkiHToTbHue lh» bi »»3h» Poccib nomm MH aonrou* cobbcth o«Jl»r>4BTb i-apoiy HABIQUf TfcCHoa eA^HBHle a cnib ray bkIctI ct npejCTaBiiTe- iia.H »oposa luec-a PocyMpcTBo Poc-iir™, „a nyTb no«A«. T floe* O/ioroAeHi-TBl* a caaBH Ja nowwen TocnoAb Bon Poccla 3-Napra /faac 5 «*„ 1917 <• /> C, Act of Abdication of Nicholas II, March 16, 1917 ju^fJ*?***^ *ty*^^ J?*»*y*- a. ' . ....... -^ - *.m - j&*s;sjr ^J&r^sfj* — S*** i&W &d*#f *ea*a*ls *p*#**4<^ jZsvty 3/777- -/?/* Act of Abdication of the Grand Duke Michael, March 17, 1917 52 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION desire of our great people, who must by means of a plebiscite, through their representatives in the Constitu ent Assembly, establish the form of government and the new fundamental laws of the Russian State. Invoking God's blessing, I, therefore, request all citi zens of Russia to obey the Provisional Government, set up on the initiative of the Duma and vested with plenary powers, until, within as short a time as possible, the Con stituent Assembly, elected on a basis of universal, equal, secret, and direct suffrage, shall express the will of the nation regarding the form of govenment to be adopted. Kerensky was the principal spokesman and him self inspired the document which the grand duke signed. Michael's formal recognition before all Russia of the authority of a body to be chosen by a "universal, equal, secret, and direct" suffrage was a clear victory for the Soviet. No doubt it was made plain to him that the revolutionary soldiers and the armed workingmen would be heard from if an at tempt were made to force monarchy upon the peo ple before the decision of the Constituent Assembly. Another circumstance which stirred the revolu tionaries was that at the time of his abdication Nicholas II notified the Senate of the appointment of Prince Lvov as President of the Council of Min isters. This perfectly natural endeavor of the new government to come before the Russian people with an authority as complete as possible was resented as a denial of the principle of people's sovereignty supposed to be established by successful revolution. CHAPTER IV THE SOVIETS IT is time now to go back and describe the forma tion of a power destined to check, hamper, and in the end overthrow, the Government of Property. In Russian "soviet" means "council," and had originally no revolutionary flavor. Under the old regime the Upper Chamber was known as the Gosudarstvennyi Soviet, i. e., Imperial Council. There were all kinds of Soviets — medical, scientific, industrial, etc. In October, 1905, a Soviet of Work men's Delegates was formed in Petrograd and lasted until January. Trotsky was at one time its presi dent and like its successor it had a bulletin known as Izvestia ("News"). It had also its guardsmen to protect its leaders from arrest when they appeared on the street. The strikes, street meetings, and demonstrations of March 8th-10th, revealed an elemental movement, which was developing, however, without organiza tion or leadership. Feeling the urgent need of a center of information and direction, the Petrograd Union of Workers' Consumers' Societies, in con cert with the Social Democrats in the Duma, called a conference of workingmen of different districts in its offices on the afternoon of Saturday, March 10th. About thirty persons were present, includ ing several political leaders of the labor movement. 53 54 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION After reports on the situation had been heard it was resolved to set about forming a soviet of workers' delegates along the lines of the Soviet of 1905. The factories were to be notified to choose their delegates at once and the soviet was to meet on the following day. But the scheme failed of realization. Later in the day about half the participants in the conference were arrested while conferring with the labor group at the office of the Central War Industries Commit tee and this incident held up the execution of the plan. Events developed with such dizzying speed that the organization of the Soviet came about as the result of action in another place and in different circumstances. On Monday morning the workingmen, despite the order of the commandant of the Petrograd Military District to report for work, stayed away from their factories. Five military units went over to the side of the revolutionists. The Arsenal and the Kresty Prison were taken and the political prisoners, in cluding the workingmen above mentioned, were re leased. Armed soldiers and workingmen with red banners were rushing about the city in automobiles. The rebellious troops began to gather at the Tauride Palace. When the Duma sat at two o'clock repre sentatives of labor organizations began to gather in Room 12 of the same building. They were met by Kerensky, Tcheidze, and Skobelev, "who looked very pale and whose eyes were burning." There was no time to lose. Events called for quick deci sions. Therefore this little group decided to send messengers immediately to all the labor districts, THE SOVIETS 55 calling upon them to elect delegates to the Soviet. The appeal ran: Citizens! The representatives of workers, soldiers, and of the people, who are meeting in the State Duma, an nounce that the first meeting of their representatives is to take place to-day at seven o'clock in the evening in the building of the State Duma. All the troops that have gone over to the side of the people should immediately elect their representatives, one for each company. Factories should elect their deputies, one for each thousand workers. Factories that have fewer than one thousand workingmen should elect one deputy each. [Signed] Provisional Executive Committee of the Soviet of Workers' Delegates. At nine o 'clock in the evening Tcheidze, the school master elected to the Duma from the Caucasus, opens the Soviet of Workers' Delegates with from one hundred and twenty-five to one hundred and fifty persons present. Officers are elected and a Credentials Committee is appointed to examine the credentials of those present. Late at night a mili tary commission is created which at once sets to work. Toward morning comes Rodzianko with the suggestion that it combine with a like commission of the Provisional Committee, which is done. The soviet creates an executive committee of fifteen. The soviet sits again the next day and two days later there is a meeting of the military units of the Petro grad garrison at which nine representatives of sol diers are elected to the executive committee. From now on begins to function the "Petrograd Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates" destined to make for itself a name that will resound in history. 56 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION This Soviet, which will come to include well above a thousand delegates, is really the parliament of the masses, for they have Httle confidence in the Duma, which appears to them as the very citadel of Privilege and Property. But the need, felt by the factory operatives and by the garrison of the cap ital, of having an organization of their own is felt by like elements all over Russia. So the soviet idea spreads quickly throughout the country. Soon every town will have its soviet, every company, battalion, regiment, division, army corps, its "executive com mittee." In time agitators will appear even in the villages. There will be Soviets of peasants' dele gates and presently an All-Russian Congress of such delegates. In September, 1917, 1 had the opportunity of look ing into the Soviet of Nijni Novgorod, which may be regarded as typical. To this soviet a delegate may be sent by every factory with fifty or more work men. The big concerns are allowed representation for every five hundred workmen or workwomen. Any fifty persons in the same craft or calling may come together and pick their delegate. Any class of employees — even reporters, bookkeepers, and bank clerks — have a right to representation. On the other hand, doctors, lawyers, clergymen, mer chants, capitalists, and landed proprietors are not considered as belonging to the proletariat. About one-sixth of the Soviet is composed of delegates named by the various proletarian parties, Social Revolutionists, Social Democrats (Bolsheviki and Mensheviki), People-ists, etc. The soldiers of the local garrison by companies THE SOVIETS 57 name delegates to the soldiers' soviet. These two Soviets in Nijni-Novgorod maintain a joint execu tive committee, composed of thirty workmen and twenty soldiers, which meets, perhaps, twice a week. Of the thirty working-class members, perhaps twenty give their entire time, and are paid the equiv alent of their ordinary wages. The Petrograd Soviet is much more than a delib erative body. It maintains numerous "sections" which busy themselves with the interests of the Revolution and of the masses. These are : Military, Naval, Labor, Agrarian, Medical-Sanitary, Railroad, Propaganda and Literature, Preparation for Con stituent Assembly, International Relations, Out-of- Town and Local Government, Munitions, Army Pro visionment, and For Combating Counter-Revolu- tion. The activities of certain of these "sections" throw much light on the subsequent course of the Revolution. The "Propaganda and Literature" group carries on an oral propaganda and distrib utes pamphlets and leaflets. By September it can boast of having put into circulation 605,850 copies of books and pamphlets. The out-of-town group keeps up relations with Soviets all over Russia. On the average it receives daily from ten to fifteen dele gations. The Section for Combating Counter-Revo- lution collects information about elemental disorders and counter-revolutionary activities by individuals and groups. It reports its findings not only to the ministry concerned but also to the local soviet. It is work of this sort, by democratic members of the Intelligentsia in association with the elite among the workers, first in the capital and then in every in- 58 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION dustrial center of Russia, which accounts for the fact that in the course of four years, control has never been wrested from the hands of the proletarians who made the Revolution. In these Soviets — composed, outside the great cen ters, chiefly of ignorant, even illiterate factory hands, without experience in organization — everything de pends upon the kind of men who lead. In an agi tated, confused time with no past to guide them the delegates may be carried in one direction by one set of leaders and swept in exactly the opposite direc tion by another group which wins their confidence. Now, in the beginning, the Soviets are under the influence of the political leaders who happened to be on the spot when the Revolution occurred, and these are moderates whose principles the old regime tolerated. Tcheidze, the first president of the Pet rograd Soviet, is a Menshevik. Of the vice-presi dents one, Skobelev, is a Menshevik, while Kerensky is a Social-Revolutionist. Most of the members of the executive committee are educated men and many of them hold university degrees. One of the first acts of the Provisional Govern ment, however, is to bring back to Russia the polit ical victims of autocracy. From Siberia about eighty thousand are brought out. From Switzer land, France, Scandinavia, the United States, even from Argentina and other remote countries, come perhaps ten thousand who have been refugees from the tsar's vengeance. In all ninety thousand at least, virtually all of them of socialist sympathies, stream into European Russia in late April, May, June, and July. Honored by a grateful people for THE SOVIETS 59 their voluntary sacrifices and sufferings they quickly rise to a commanding influence in the local Soviets and carry them irresistibly toward the political Left. CHAPTER V OPPOSITE CONCEPTIONS OF THE REVOLUTION THE one thing comfrnon to nineteen-twentieths of the Russian people at this moment is disillu sionment. It is as if in mass meeting assembled they should call before them the tsar and the grand dukes and say: "Little Father, Grand Dukes, once we believed in you, feared you and trusted you. We imagined that the thing you stand for is necessary to the preser vation of the Russian land. But now we think so no longer. We see you for what you are — brutal, cor rupt, destructive. We 've given you all we had, yet you can't even protect the Russian State. We 've given you four millions of our brothers and sons. But the feet of the invaders are on Russian soil. Away with you!" It is as if they should call before them the repre sentatives of the Greek Catholic Church, the Metro politans and the Archbishops, and say to them : "Holy Fathers, we used to believe in you, we deemed you necessary to our lives. We believed the good words you spoke, the kindly things you said. We believe in you no longer. We see you now for what you are. For two hundred years you have been Autocracy's spies. You have taxed us for birth, marriage, and death. You have provided Gregorian chants and stately ritual in splendid 60 CONCEPTIONS OF THE REVOLUTION 61 churches with golden domes, while we shiver and starve. You have talked peace to us, and mercy and love. Yet you have supported the tsars and the Cossack whip and sword. You are enemies of the people. Away with you!" It is as if they should call before them the princes, counts, and barons and say to them: "You princes, you counts, you barons, we used to believe in you. We used to think that you were necessary so that we could be fed and clothed and housed. Now for three years we have been cold and hungry. We recognize you now for what you are — parasites. We refuse to let you ride any longer on our backs. Away with you!" But sharing the same disillusionment does not mean that the Russian people entertain the same idea of the good the Revolution is to bring them. There are current at least three conceptions as to what the Revolution will mean. What chiefly disgusted the educated people, the Intelligentsia, with the old regime was its outrag ing of human dignity by its spying, letter-opening, wire-tapping, censorship, arbitrary searches and seizures, and interference with free movement and free communication. These degrading tsarist tac tics wounded deeply their self-respect, so for them the Revolution is the opening of an era of Freedom —freedom to go about at will without passports, freedom of speech, of the press, of agitation, of public demonstration, of association, religious free dom, freedom of oppressed nationalities, removal of all hampering restrictions on women. Further more, it implies the abolition of legal classes, uni- 62 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION versal suffrage, a government obedient to the peo ple, and the spread of popular education. The Party of Popular Freedom, nicknamed "Ca dets" (Ka Day being the initials of the words Constitutional Democrats, the original name of the party) expect a "liberal" regime of the type which began to prevail in England after the reform of 1832. They overlook the rise since that date of capitalistic production and the diffusion of socialis tic ideas through the proletariat. The business and propertied classes have been alienated from the old regime chiefly by its corrup tion, waste, and stupidity. They remember its in capacity either to keep the peace or to wage suc cessful war. They are tired of blundering and fav oritism in matters in life and death to the Russian land. They are deeply mortified that the destiny of a great state should hinge on the intrigues of a detestable monk like Rasputin playing upon the su perstitions of high-placed women. For them the Revolution is to mean the control of the State by intelligence and character. It is to mean Efficiency. As soon as one leaves the privileged classes and goes among the toiling mass one comes upon a very different conception of the blessings the new order is to bring. The toilers are not content with gain ing freedom. They are not content with an efficient governmental machine. They want something more. The experience of excessive toil and bitter priva tion makes them yearn for a larger share of the fruits of their labor. In a dim way they realize that all the splendor, luxury, and profligate waste of the kept classes comes out of the product of their CONCEPTIONS OF THE REVOLUTION 63 toil. And they are determined that they must have more; the lord, the employer, the speculator, less. To them revolution holds the promise of living bet ter. The peasants count on adding the lord's estate to their scanty stock of common land; the wage earners expect that their "exploitation" is to cease. The Revolution is to mean Justice. It is impossible that these expectations of the broader layers of the people should be realized with out great disturbance to establish property rights. If the landed proprietors be not dispossessed how is the Revolution to make bread more plentiful in the peasant's hut? If the capitalists retain the right to absolute disposal over their factories and mines, by what means can the workers acquire for themselves a much larger part of their product? The distribution of wealth controls in large measure the distribution of current income. The distribution of current income controls in large measure the distribution of welfare, of comfort, of culture, of self-respect and social prestige. To be sure, a regime of freedom would in time react upon the distribution of wealth so as to take it out of the hands of weak or inefficient persons and bring it into the grasp of the strong and cap able. In time the mountainous private fortunes built up under a government which catered to the great land-owners and the big capitalists would be worn down. By the end of this century, perhaps, the distribution of wealth in Russia might come to re semble the distribution of wealth in France or Nor way. In the 'long run the freedoms which have be come established in modern bourgeois society would 64 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION have profoundly changed the distribution of wealth in Russia. But human life is for the short run. Was it not too much to expect that the robbed, toiling masses of Russia should content themselves with a prospect of comparative comfort for their children, or, in any case, for their grandchildren? For years most of the toilers have been dreaming of some day enter ing the Promised Land. Will they pause at the threshold and turn back to wander again in the wilderness out of reverence for the legal rampart of property rights which bars their way? In talk ing with many property-holders to whom I presented letters of introduction in the summer of 1917 I found them strangely inconsistent. One and all they agreed that the old regime was an iniquitous regime. But if such were the case the distribution of wealth which that regime contributed to bring to pass must be iniquitous too. And being iniquitous it stood in need of being corrected. But I found no property- owner who drew any such conclusion. Without ex ception the members of the possessing class I talked with assumed that the actual titles to wealth were in no wise to be called in question. It never occurred to them that without startling economic readjust ments the "freedom" the Revolution brought might prove empty and unsatisfying to the peasants and the factory hands. Hence, very soon after the downfall of the hated autocracy appears a rift in national sentiment which deepens day by day. On the one hand are the com fortable people who insist that the Revolution has already fulfilled itself, that now it is tha part of all L. Kamenev President of the Moscow Soviet A. Lunacharsky People's Commissary of Education CONCEPTIONS OF THE REVOLUTION 65 good citizens to settle down and enjoy the new freedom and new efficiency without any further up setting of conditions. On the other hand, are the horny-handed, living in one-room huts or kennels in congested slums, eating black bread and cabbage soup and looking for an improvement in their miser able lot which somehow fails to materialize. Here in these unsatisfied desires, in the unfulfilled, long-cherished expectations of the working masses, is the secret of the instability and weakness of the Provisional Government. No power on earth could prevent the Revolution from going on to be com pleted by a fundamental social and economic change. The only doubt is as to whether this change will be accomplished in an orderly way by the Constituent Assembly, or will come earlier by a coup d'etat on the part of the leaders of the masses. CHAPTER VI AGITATION IN one of his yarns Munchausen tells of a day so cold that, although the post-boy rides his route and blows his horn as usual, not a sound comes from it. But, after his horn has been hung in the warm station room, the frozen notes thaw and come tum bling out ! So it is when the sun of freedom shines after the freezing night of despotism. Of a sudden all the long pent-up plaints, thoughts, projects, and dreams rush to be expressed. During the spring and summer of 1917 a veritable whirlwind of public discussion rages over Russia. It seems as if these people cannot get their fill of public meetings. On Sunday one will attend four or five political gatherings of the most varied ten dencies and return to his home at night tired but perfectly happy. Has he not indulged all day in what, but a few weeks since, was forbidden fruit? The supreme joy of the new citizen is to parade in political procession with a banner above him, a band in front, and cheering thousands of spectators on each side of him. He walks with his head up and his heels hit the pavement with a ring. He is con scious now of embodying a bit of his nation's sov ereignty. Never was there a more brilliant opportunity for men of ideas who can speak well on their feet. The 66 AGITATION 67 people are insatiable. What hosts of patient listen ers! With votes for all — women as well as men — and with the elections for the Constituent Assembly in the offing, they are endeavoring to provide them selves within a few months with the political con victions which the citizen of a free state inherits from his father or accumulates gradually in the course of years. And how intoxicating it is from doorsteps, lamp posts, soap-boxes, sometimes even from balconies and platforms, to unpack one's soul, to preach one's little gospel! So men hurry from group to group, talking and talking till their voices vanish. When the cave of the winds is unsealed, those, of course, have the advantage who had been trained in the 1905 revolution and since then in a free country hke America have continued practice in public speaking and in organizing the toilers. The bewil dered leaderless Russian masses are thrilled and captivated by these ready, self-confident men who tell them just what they must do in order to garner for themselves the fruits of their Revolution. This is why refugees, obscure to us altho not to Russians, who in exile had been obliged to work in our steel mills and tailor shops for a living, former residents of New York's "East Side," who lived precariously from some Russian newspaper we Americans never heard of, will rise to be heads of Soviets and, later, cabinet ministers of a government ruling a tenth of the human race. In all modern history there is no romance like it. In this vast Babel of discussion nothing is taken for granted. No institution that was a part of the 68 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION hated past is too sacred to alter. The spirit is "Everything to the melting-pot." So multitudes of unlettered, untutored men are suddenly called to sit in judgment upon such deep, difficult matters as army discipline, the factory-owner's authority, the right of the proprietor, the procedure of courts of justice, foreign relations, war aims, the issue of cen tral government versus local government. Most of them are honest and serious. As they listen they scowl from very effort of thought. They under stand quite well that the welfare of the community should be preferred to their private interest when the two conflict. So far as sound doctrine can be made clear and attractive to them they will embrace it. But on a question like factory-control by the workers or common ownership of farmland, in which truth is difficult and unpalatable, while error is plaus ible and pleasing, they are likely to go wrong. The radical leaders are eager to make hay while the sun shines. They fear the resources the prop ertied class will be able to put behind its counter- agitation and they aim to obtain a decision on funda mental matters such as peace and land before the propertied have had time to organize their resist ance. Each factory, each village, each regiment, must be roused and organized. Sometimes the workers ' committee in the factory sends workmen on employer's pay to agitate in the villages. Thus the town bourgeoisie are made to support the cam paign to destroy the country bourgeoisie! Much of the agitation carried on among the toilers is most reckless. The revolutionists set afloat short, simple, catchy slogans appealing to the elementary AGITATION 69 instincts of the people, which embody promises in capable of immediate fulfilment. It is asserted that the sending of a railway commission by the Amer ican Government to help solve Russia's transporta tion problem indicates America's intention to seize for herself the Trans-Siberian Railway. The men in the trenches are told that American capitalists are paying Kerensky so much for every Russian soldier killed. For three years, within Russia, enmity has been systematically fomented and organ ized against the Central empires. So the Bolsheviks — whose sentiment might well be "A plague on both your houses" — aim to reveal the victimized German toilers behind the Kaiser's militarism and, on the other hand, to reveal British, French, and American economic imperialism behind the democratic pro fessions of the Entente. Mixed in with the sincere agitators are agents of the German Government, busily sowing doctrines that will, it is hoped, set the Russians by the ears. This baleful influence of Germany upon Russia's do mestic life is a thing of long standing. Unburned portions of the records in the wrecked Department of Justice Building in Petrograd show that it ran back at least forty years. From these records it develops that for more than twenty years prior to 1914 two groups under Ger man imperial surveillance operated in Russia— two distinct groups, perhaps unknown one to the other, with distinct methods, working for a common end. One group worked with the extreme Right and sought to influence the Government through the autocracy, its culminating achievement being the ad- 70 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION vancement of the pro-German Sturmer to the head of the Ministry in January, 1916. This group aimed to promote disintegration by favoring the extreme reactionary position. Simultaneously another group with German funds and under German direction, extreme Left in tend ency, operated among the revolutionary elements in Russia, aiding and urging them on to revolutionary activity against the autocracy. There were several files of the records which showed how here and there in different places in Russia an impecunious worthless element of the Russian nobility was bought by German agents to serve their purposes. For in stance, a Russian lady in reduced circumstances be gins to hold meetings of revolutionists in her re spectable home. Sympathetically she lends an ear to their tales about the death-in-life in Siberia, the sufferings of the poor and oppressed. She is pro vided with money to furnish to the revolutionary circles, allows German agents to sit in and foment ¦terroristic activity, and reports everything to the German group. No doubt Germany found means to promote the diffusion of Bolshevistic ideas so long as Bolshevism was weakening Russia's capacity to resist Germany. On the other hand, when the Bolsheviks were in power and creating a new order, she followed her old tactics of supporting the groups to the right and left of them. When the nests of anarchists in Mos cow were raided in the spring of 1918 the Bolsheviks found there German machine-guns of a new model, not hitherto met with in Russia ! CHAPTER VII POLITICAL GROUPINGS AND PROGRAMS OWING to the frozen-up state of the Russian people under autocracy, political opinion is in a stage very different from that seen in free coun tries. Thanks to the obstructions the police put in the way of the propagation of "illegal" ideas, the larger part of the masses is politically inert, has in fact no opinion at all on public questions. In this respect, however, the factory-workers are far wider awake than the huge soggy peasant mass. Seeing that they Uve and work together, a good deal of un derground propaganda has gone on among them despite the police and the spies. This is why, al though the peasants outnumber the proletariat six to one, it is the latter, not the former, that will break ddwn the domination of the bourgeois and grasp the steering-wheel of the new order. Naturally, centers of protest against the auto cratic regime appeared in Russia before centers of defense; so it is the radical parties that are the older. In the seventies of the last century the slogan was raised, "Go ta the people, learn to know their real needs, and find means to lift them out of their wretched lot." Its friends called themselves Peo- ple-ists (Narodniki). Out of this movement devel oped the Party of Toil (Trudoviki) and the Social Revolutionaries. The former appeared in the days 71 tz THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION of the first Duma and was composed of peasants bent on getting the latad and an idealistic element in the Intelligentsia to whom peasant aspirations were gospel. Since it is a tolerated group, pubhc men like Kerensky belong to it until they become free to join that banned party with a terrorist rec ord, the Social Revolutionaries. This party was organized in 1901 and its great slogan is "All the land to all the people," the idea being not to create little proprietors in place of big ones, but to do away with private property in land and found land-occupancy upon a use basis. But while it advocates land-nationalization, it does not urge factory-nationalization. It is anti-monarchist, anti-imperialist, and anti-militarist. It is the party of the venerated Br-eshko-Breshkovskaya, of Tchernov, Spiridonova, Savinkov, and Kerensky. With respect to the war and the "dictatorship of the proletariat" it is destined to split into a Right, led by Madame Breshkovskaya, a Center led by Tchernov, and a Left led by Miss Spiridonova. The All-Russian Social-Democratic Labor Party composed of straight-out Marxians, dates from 1898. Its strength lies in the members of the liberal pro fessions, the students, and the factory-workers. In the rural villages it meets with little response. At its congress in Switzerland in 1903 the party spht on the question of the tactics to be pursued in bring ing about the socialist order in society. The more radical group, led by Lenin, was in the majority and thenceforth came to be known within the party as Bolsheviki or Majoritists. To translate Bolshevik POLITICAL GROUPINGS AND PROGRAMS 73 "Maximalist," as was the practice of most news paper correspondents in Russia in 1917, is to con found this group with a small extreme-Left group of the Social-Revolutionary Party. Likewise their opponents, known as Mensheviki (Minoritists), ought not to be called "Minimalists." Each of these factions considers itself the right ful heir of the party name and prestige. The Bol sheviks hold the "central committee" of the party, together with the Petrograd and Moscow commit tees. The Mensheviks are intrenched in the "or ganization committee" of the party. These evolu tionary socialists — followers of Tcheidze, Tseretelli, Skobelev, Lieber, and Dan — find their support chiefly among the town intellectuals, workingmen who have been organized either into cooperatives or into trade unions, a sprinkling of small entrepreneurs fallen under the influence of socialism and a majority of the Jewish socialistic Bund. The Bolsheviks, on the other hand, who are revolutionary Socialists, find their strength among the class-conscious workers and the poorer peasants. Plekhanov, father of Russian Marxism, is by him self with a small Group of Unity (Yedinstvo). By vigorously supporting Russia's prosecution of the war, even going so far in 1916 as to urge Russian workmen not to strike while their Government is locked in struggle against the Kaiser, he lost his leadership of the Mensheviks. Upon his return to Russia in April, 1917, he throws all his influence for the war rather than for social reconstruction, so that he and his followers are jeered at as " social patriots." Between the Menshiviks and the Bolshe- 74 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION viks stand the Menshevik Internationalists led by Martov. The Constitutional Democrats ("Party of Popu lar Freedom") popularly known as Cadets, were liberals following the lead of Professor Miliukov. Before the Revolution they stood for constitutional monarchy, freedom of speech, of assemblage and of the press, universal suffrage, progressive income taxes, and legal protection of labor. Their agrarian program recognized that the land must go to the peasants, but insisted that the landed proprietors must be compensated by its full value in government bonds. On account of its tenderness for the rights of property the Cadets have no following whatever among the peasants or workers. Their support is chiefly among the comfortably-off Intelligentsia, al though not a few landowners adhere to it. Originally idealistic so far as the implications of capitalism would allow it to be so, the Cadet Party very quickly changes its character after the Revolu tion. Having nowhere else to go, all the Reaction aries, Conservatives, and Octobrists clamber into it. Then upon the heaving up of the Bolshevik menace its idealists become chiefly law-and-order men. It speedily becomes the champion of the rights of property and its earlier solicitude for the aspira tions and welfare of all classes of society ceases to be perceptible after it comes to be financed and di rected by noble land-owners and great capitalists. For this reason the Cadets, who at one time had a certain claim on the people's gratitude, end by being intensely hated by the proletariat while they lose the sympathy of the social-minded Intelligentsia. POLITICAL GROUPINGS AND PROGRAMS 75 Nothing would be further from the truth than to imagine that Russians generally are at this time adherents of one or another of these parties. These parties, most of them incoherent and unstable, at first number their followers by tens of thousands, not by hundreds of thousands or millions. They are nuclei for agitation, centers of crystallization in a cooling solution. Or one might compare them to ferments cast into a plasm. In thousands of meet ings and in millions of newspapers, pamphlets, broadsides and placards they spread their political principles before the new citizens. Before the leaf is sere it will become apparent to all which parties are the winners in this competition for adherents. CHAPTER VIII THE FLOOD OF POLITICAL REFORMS ABSOLUTELY honest" is Steklov's character ization of the Provisional Government after a month of dealing with it as representative of the soviet. "With all our skepticism, the sight of the regeneration of that group of the propertied bour geois elements in the storm of revolutionary events was very instructive." "M. Rodzianko was so shaken by events — to him they were even more unex pected than to us — that he lost the ability to resist our most extreme demands." "Still more interest ing was the behavior of Shulgin, who in 1905-6 was engaged in the suppression of the Revolution and who is well known to you as the organizer of the 'black hundreds.' This man when I read 'to pro ceed forthwith to arrange for convoking the Con stituent Assembly on the basis of universal, direct, equal and secret suffrage,' nervously got up from his seat, came over to me, and said, 'If I had been told two days ago that I sliould be listening to these demands and would not only not be objecting to-day but would be insisting that there is no other solution, and that this hand would be writing the abdication of Nicholas II, I would have called any one making such a prediction a madman.' " This new cabinet works without defined respon sibility to any one. The tsar is under arrest. The 76 THE FLOOD OF POLITICAL REFORMS 77 Imperial Council no longer exists. The Duma, hav ing given birth to the Provisional Government, has adjourned and will never again be officially con vened. The new reform laws have only to be drawn up by experts, submitted to the Juridical Commis sion headed by Kokoshkin, a member of the Duma, and then promulgated. Accordingly, with breathless speed the charters of freedom sought by duma after duma since 1906, and always denied or mutilated by reactionary min isters of the tsar, are carried into effect. The old laws and odious administrative practices restrict ing the liberty of the citizen in a manner totally un known in other parts of the civilized world are thrown into the discard. Instead of being held in jail months or even years without trial, the arrested person must be brought before an examining magis trate within twenty-four hours or else released. Capital punishment is abolished. The new justice will not hear of "administrative process," the bu reaucrats' device for destroying their opponents without trial. Newspapers, books, theaters, and pub lic meetings are freed from censorship. The ground is cut from under the feet of the okh/una, for viola tion of the secrecy of the post, the telegraph, or the telephone, is made a punishable offense. The official, no longer privileged to wrong private citi zens with impunity, can be punished like any other offender for exceeding the powers with which he has been invested by law. He may be even prose cuted for unreasonable dilatoriness in case his cul pable delay has caused a citizen to suffer loss. The oppressed nationalities are liberated. Within 78 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION a week the Finnish Constitution, trampled on by the tsar, is restored and ere a month has passed Keren sky, addressing the Diet at Helsingfors, greets the free Finnish people in the name of the Provisional Government. Soon appears an Appeal to the Poles guaranteeing a Free Poland which shall determine its form of government by a Constituent Assembly convoked in Warsaw, and wliich, it is hoped, will enter willingly into a military union with Free Rus sia. At the same time a brotherly hand is stretched out to the Jewish people long pent up within a pale of settlement in Poland and western Russia. At a stroke are repealed all laws embodying limitations on them concerning: (1) Selection of place of residence and change of resi dence. (2) Acquiring rights of ownership and other material rights in all kinds of movable property and real-estate, and likewise in the possession of, the use and managing of all property, or receiving such for security. (3) Engaging in all kinds of trade, commerce, and in dustry, not excepting mining; also equal participation in the bidding for Government contracts, deliveries and in public auctions. (4) Participation in joint stock and other commercial or industrial companies and partnerships, and also employ ment in these companies and partnerships in all kinds of positions, either by election or by appointment. (5) Employment of servants, salesmen, foremen, labor ers, and trade apprentices. (6) Entering the Government service, civil as well as military, and the grade or condition of such service ; par ticipation in the elections for the institutions of local self- THE FLOOD OF POLITICAL REFORMS 79 government, and all kinds of public institutions; serving in all kinds of positions of Government and public estab lishments, as well as the prosecution of the duties connected with such positions. (7) Admission to all kinds of educational institutions, whether private, Government or public, and the pursuing of the courses of instruction of these institutions, and re ceiving scholarships. Also the pursuit of teaching and the other educational professions. (8) Performing the duties of guardians, trustees, or jurors. (9) The use of languages and dialects, other than Rus sian, in the proceedings of private societies, or in teaching in all kinds of private educational institutions, and in com mercial bookkeeping. The mere rehearsal of these manifold discrim inations exposes the true character of the old regime. The tsarist state put itself behind the Russian Orthodox Church. The Orthodox parent who did not present his child for baptism would be pun ished. No such child would be received into any school. The Jews, Lutherans, Roman Catholics, Armenians, and Mohammedans were allowed to teach their religion to their cliildren, but woe to them if they were caught trying to convert any of the Orthodox to their faith! On the other hand, the Orthodox Church was free to convert whom she could. The new Government hastens to put an end to such favoritism. As regards liberty of propa gating their doctrines, all religions are now placed on the same footing. When in August the first Council of the Russian Orthodox Church since 1668 decides that she must be free of the- chains laid on 80 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION her by Peter the Great, the Government gladly ac quiesces. Henceforth there is only the question of the State 's guaranteeing the salaries of the bishops and priests. It is the Bolsheviks, however, who will do a thorough job by withdrawing all State sup port of religion, thereby obliging the clergy to look to their own people for support, as the clergy do- here in America. Local judges are made elective, trial by jury be comes the rule, and women are allowed to sit on juries and to serve as magistrates. Soldiers charged with offenses of a non-military character are no longer to be brought before courts-martial. Those accused of military offenses are to be tried before juries composed equally of officers and men. — The base of municipal government is broadened by giving the vote to all instead of restricting it to the large property-owners. The zemstvos, or county and provincial councils, are thrown open to every citizen and zemstvos are instituted for units as small as the township. No longer shall the Government wield the police for its own pohtical ends. Each city recruits and manages its police force just as ours do; hence there comes into existence a mild- mannered corps known as the "militia," under an elected chief. As for the much-dreaded ispravnik — district police commissioner — and uriadnik — rural policeman, they simply vanish from the scene and no successor appears. So in the country and the village old men step into the breach and strive by exercising their personal influence, or by directing public opinion, to restrain the unruly. In the boots of the arbitrarv and tvrannical gov- Smolny Institute Headquarters of the Bolshevika May 1st, 191S 'Long Live the Third International!" THE FLOOD OF POLITICAL REFORMS 81 ernor, who had the tsar back of him to his last Cossack, quakes now the county or provincial com missary, who is expected to carry out within his jurisdiction the will of the Central Government without bringing down upon himself the wrath of the local duma or soviet. Since the soldiers are in no mood to shoot down rebellious peasants or bull dozing strikers or riotous bread liners, the commis sary has nothing to carry his point with unless it be argument, pleading, and tact. Here at last, then, is the long-hoped-for freedom. It is sweet to all, but it is satisfying only to those in easy circumstances. To be sure, the oppression of privileged nationalities, religions, orders, and per sons is done away with. But the humble man who must support his family on a ruble a day or from seven acres of ground — how will these reforms enable him to live better? The distribution of eco nomic well-being is scarcely affected by them. What the socialists call exploitation — i. e., the power of the owner of land or capital to exact as rental for the use of this necessary instrument a large part of what the worker produces — is left undisturbed. After having forced fences and palings the toilers have overrun the orchards and gardens of the priv ileged ; but now they stand before the high massive walls which enclose the citadel. Will they be able to breach the Rights of Property? CHAPTER IX ARMY ORDER NUMBER ONE IT is autumn, 1920. On the dock at Sebastopol is a small group of distinguished anti-Bolshevik Russians, among them former War Minister Guch kov. They are there to see off Maklakov, ambassa dor of the Wrangel government to Paris. Appears now a certain Baranov, who goes around the circle shaking hands. Guchkov holds out his hand, but Baranov refuses it with the words, ' ' To such scoun drels I do not give my hand. ' ' When Guchkov, con trolling himself, asks his reason, Baranov replies: "For Order Number One, the ruin of the army, and the murder of the tsar. You may send your seconds, but remember I am acting in the name of all Rus sian officers." Thus has Guchkov, a competent man, been pilloried before the world for a fatal document for which he is in no wise responsible. The famous Order No. 1 which was issued before the Provisional Government had fairly been launched deserves a place among those documents which have bent the current of history. In all the annals of army administration it is impossible to meet its match. Here is the order in full : March 14, 1917. To the garrison of the Petrograd District, to all soldiers of the guards, army artillery, and fleet, for immediate and 82 ARMY ORDER NUMBER ONE 83 accurate execution and for the information of the working- men of Petrograd. The Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates re solved : 1 In all companies, battalions, regiments, [aviation] parks, batteries, squadrons, and all branches of military and naval service, committees are to be chosen immediately from the elected representatives of ths privates of the above-mentioned military units. 2 In all military units which have not as yet elected their representatives to the Soviet of Workers' and Sol diers' Delegates, one representative should be elected from each company. This representative is to come with written credentials to the building of the Duma at ten o'clock on the morning of the 15th of March. 3 In all their political actions, the military units are subject to the Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates and their committees. 4 The orders of the Military Commission of the Duma must be executed, with the exception of those cases in which they contradict the decision of the Soviet of Workers' Del egates. 5 All kinds of arms, such as rifles, machine-guns and ar mored automobiles, etc., must be placed at the disposal and control of the company and battalion committees and in no case may they be issued to officers even at their demand. 6 During drill and during the execution of the duties of service, soldiers must maintain the strictest military discipline, but outside of service and drill, in their politi cal, civic, and private life, soldiers must not be denied the rights which all citizens enjoy. In particular, standing at attention and compulsory saluting outside of service is abolished. 7 The honoring of officers is in the same manner abol ished: "Your Excellency," "Your Honor," etc., are re placed by "Mr. General," "Mr. Colonel," etc. 84 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION The rude treatment of soldiers of any military rank — and in particular addressing them as "thou" — is forbid den ; company committees must be informed regarding any violation of this, as well as of misunderstandings between officers and soldiers. This order is to be read in all companies, battalions, regi ments, ships' crews, batteries, and other combatant and non-combatant units. [Signed] Petrograd Soviet of Soldiers' and Workers' Delegates The genesis of this order appears to have been as follows: The revolting units of the Petrograd gar rison have very good reason for not trusting their officers. They bivouac in the huge Tauride Palace, not only to protect the Duma, but to be protected by it. Thus Mrs. Williams testifies : I asked the stalwart gallant Volynsky men whether they would return to their barracks for supper. The soldiers clustered closer round me and protested excitedly. "To the barracks ? Oh, no ! What for ? The whole lot of us would be shot. We sha'n't move from the Duma. Here we '11 all remain, let them defend us here." As yet there was not much self-confidence in these troops, who from being tsarist had in a few hours become revolu tionary. To these anxious, rebellious soldiers the well- meant but indiscreet advice of Rodzianko is a cold douche. For in addressing the Preobrazhensky Guards who have come over to the side of the Duma he says: "I ask you to remain faithful to your offi cers and to have confidence in them. Return quietly to your barracks mid come here at the first call when you may be required." ARMY ORDER NUMBER ONE 85 Singular failure to enter into his hearers' state of mind! Then, too, word runs among the soldiers that the officers are depriving the soldiers of their rifles, with the intention, of course, of having them ar rested and shot later on. In fact, Colonel Engel- hardt puts out a proclamation on March 14th to the effect that these rumors have been investigated and found to be baseless. It is natural, then, that when, on the evening of March fourteenth, delegates elected by soldiers of twenty different units of the Petrograd garrison con vene in the Tauride Palace to sit in the Soviet, they inform Colonel Engelhardt, chairman of the Military Commission, that they cannot trust their officers who did not take part in the revolutionary struggle, and they ask for an order authorizing the election of of ficers by companies, squadrons, batteries, and com mands. Engelhardt submits the proposal to the Provisional Committee of the Duma and all its mem bers, including Guchkov, oppose issuing such an or der, considering it out of the question to solve in haste so serious a problem. A Httle later comes a member of the Soviet in sol dier's uniform and offers to assist in the preparation of an order which has for its purpose the regulation of relations between officers and soldiers on a new basis. After learning that the Provisional Com mittee judges such an order premature, he leaves saying: "So much the better; we will draft it our selves." Let Steklov now take up the tale. Speaking a month later when no one cares to claim the order as 86 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION his child, he says: "If among all the acts of the Soviet of Workers ' and Soldiers * Delegates there is one which was a true creation of the masses, then it is this Order Number One, prepared by soldiers' dele gates who came from the street and from the revo lutionary barracks. It was so much an act of crea tion of these masses, that the majority of the mem bers of the Executive Committee, and among them those who at this time were carrying on negotiations with the Provisional Government, learned of this act after it was printed. The soldiers themselves pre pared this act." Army Order No. 1 is immediately printed and is made public on the afternoon of March 15th. Thou sands of copies are sent by special agents to the sol diers all along the front. It thus reached them be fore it reached their officers, instead of being handed down by the staff through the channel of corps, di vision, brigade, regiment, etc! The effects are so alarming that two days later, on the initiative of the War Department, the Executive Committee causes to be prepared and issues Order No. 2, which ex plains that the right of each military unit to elect its committee does not imply the right to elect its officers. These committees, it is explained, are to be constituted not throughout the army, but only in the Petrograd garrison, in order that its represen tatives may share in the deliberations of the Pet rograd Soviet and inform it as to the soldiers' views. However, the fat is in the fire. It is too late to counteract the effects of Order No. 1. The privates in the trenches do not see any reason why they ARMY ORDER NUMBER ONE 87 should be denied privileges which have been ex tended to the men of the reserve regiments sitting safe and comfortable in the capital. So they create their committees and Soviets, which not only look after the economic, social, and cultural welfare of the men but, setting aside the authority of the of ficers, presume to decide questions relating to mili tary operations. The appalling results of these measures will be set forth in a later chapter. CHAPTER X THE CLOUD NO BIGGER THAN A MAN'S HAND WE have seen the formation, out of a Duma ex pressly devised to insure the ascendancy of the propertied, of a Provisional Government com posed with one exception of members of the bour geois political groups. We have noted the spring ing up of Soviets representing the huge working masses, who can never feel that the Duma or any government of its choosing represents them. What relation now must develop between these two bodies, one possessing all legal power, while the other pos sesses de facto power? At the beginning the Duma Provisional Commit tee, and later the Provisional Government, taking the initiative, carries on negotiations with the Soviet leaders as with representatives of a co-equal body. In a radio to the world on March 18th the Provis ional Government thus describes its early relation with the Soviet : A serious complication arose due to the agitated state of the public mind and to the energetic activities of the po litical organization of the Left. The Provisional Com mittee, however, succeeded in entering into relations with the most influential of these organizations — the Soviet of Workers' Delegates, which was elected promptly by Petro grad factories and shops. The laboring population of Petrograd demonstrated a great degree of political wisdom, 88 THE CLOUD 89 and, realizing the danger which was threatening the capi tal and the country, on the night of the 14th of March it came to an agreement with the Provisional Committee of the Duma regarding the intended reforms and political activity of the latter, as well as its own support of the future government within the limits of political plans made public. On the evening of the 15th, after prolonged discussion before an audience of a thousand workingmen, the projects prepared by both sides received the approval of the great majority of all against fifteen. This accord promised to end finally the events on the streets of the capital which were severely condemned in the appeal issued by the Soviet of Workers' Delegates. The appeal just referred to is couched in these terms : Comrades and Citizens ! The new Government which is being organized from the moderate classes of society announced to-day the reforms which it promises to realize, partly during the process of the struggle with the old regime and partly upon the termi nation of this struggle. And among these reforms some must be welcomed by the wide democratic circles. Politi cal amnesty, the obligation to take upon itself preparations for the Constituent Assembly, the realization of civic lib erties, and the abolition of discrimination between nationali ties. We trust that the democracy will support this new born government in proportion to its fulfilment of these obligations and its determined struggle with the old gov ernment. In wresting the nine-point program from the group of moderate bourgeois the Soviet bound it self in a certam measure and it promptly proceeds 90 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION to fulfill its obligations. On March 18th the Soviet calls upon the workers within its jurisdiction to return to work. It says: Recognizing that the first onslaught of the rebellious peo ple upon the old order has been crowned with success and has sufficiently secured the position of the working class in its revolutionary struggle, the Soviet of Workers' and Sol diers' Delegates considers it advisable now to resume work in the Petrograd district with the understanding that in case it shall be necessary to cease work again it shall be done at the first signal. The continuation of strikes threatens to disorganize to a great degree the economic life of the country, already un dermined by the old regime. On March 21st through its executive committee the Soviet seeks to aid War Minister Guchkov in stemming the alarming tide of disobedience which is showing itself among the soldiers. After assuring the soldiers of the safety of the new regime it goes on to say : Only internal strife in the army can interfere with the preservation of freedom. Differences between officers and soldiers also threaten our freedom, and it is the duty of all citizens to assist in adjusting the relations between the soldiers and those officers who have recognized the new order in Russia. And we are appealing to the officers, ask ing them to respect the personalitv of the citizen soldiers in their relations on duty and off duty. Hoping that the officers will heed our appeal, we appeal to the soldiers to execute their military duties strictly at the front and during the time they are on duty. At the same time the committee informs the armies at THE CLOUD 91 the front that Orders No. 1 and No. 2 concern only the sol diers of the Petrograd district, as is stated in the titles of these orders. As to the armies at the front, the War Min ister promises to prepare immediately, with the aid of the Executive Committee of the Soviet of Workers' and Sol diers' Delegates, new rules for the relations of the soldiers and the command. One may wonder why this self-conscious and en ergetic "revolutionary democracy" did not itself create a government for Russia instead of leaving the initiative to a body so unrepresentative as the Duma. One reason is that at the moment the de cision had to be made there was no assurance that the Revolution would be successful. The tsar's min isters were still at large and no one knew what would be the attitude of the garrison at Tsarskoe Selo or of the troops at the front toward the overturn in the capital. Since there was less risk in a legal body , like the Duma taking steps to restore order, it was allowed to take the lead. It was felt, too, that the revolutionists were not yet strong enough to undertake the exceedingly com--> plicated task of organizing the State. Moreover, as Izvestia, the Soviet organ, remarks in an edi torial on March 15th : Every mistake of the government created by the Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates would be skilfully used by the reactionaries; they could without difficulty develop dissatisfaction among the backward elements of the armed and unarmed people and thus would prepare the legions of the counter-revolutionary army. And no matter how bravely our revolutionary soldiers might fight in the 92 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION struggle with this black army, if in a decisive moment they were deserted by their officers, they would inevitably be defeated. Again, the Soviet leaders were reluctant to take upon their shoulders the burden of conducting the Government, because they wished to be free to de vote themselves to preparing the people for the elec tion of the Constituent Assembly which was expected to take place within three or four months. In this ill-assorted marriage of the bourgeois Min istry with the democratic Soviet it is not long be fore "incompatibility" begins to show itself. On March 22d Prince Lvov gives out the state ment: The question of the fate of Nicholas was discussed at the meeting of the Council of Ministers yesterday. The major ity is in favor of sending the former tsar with his entire family to England. The question of the necessity of re moving the Dynasty from Russian territory had no opposi tion. No final decision was reached yesterday. The sequel appears from the report of Sokolov to the Soviet next day: It became known yesterday that the Provisional Govern ment had agreed to the departure of Nicholas II to England and it had entered into negotiations with the British Gov ernment without obtaining our consent to do so and without even informing the Executive Committee. We then found it necessary to act independently ; we mobilized all the mili tary forces that were under our influence and so brought it to pass that Nicholas II could not leave Tsarskoe Selo without our consent; we sent telegrams to all railroads re- THE CLOUD 93 questing every railroad organization, every station-master, every group of railroad workers to detain the train on which Nicholas II is carried, no matter where that train would be and no matter when he would be traveling. Then we sent our commissaries to the station of the Tsarskoe Selo and to Tsarskoe Selo itself and with them we sent a sufficient num ber of military forces to surround the Palace with a dense ring of infantry, armored automobiles, and machine guns. By so executing our will we practically placed Nicholas II in a position where it was impossible for him to leave. We entered into negotiations with the Provisional Government which at first was reluctant, but in the end it was obliged to sanction everything that we did, and so the former Em peror is at the present time not only under our guardian ship but also under the guardianship of the Provisional Government. The Soviet promptly approved the very energetic action of its executive committee. The army high command contained many gen erals hostile in their hearts to the new order and not always did they succeed in cloaking their en mity. On March 16th the new commander-in-chief issued an order from headquarters declaring that there are appearing from Petrograd "purely revo lutionary licentious gangs who are attempting to disarm gendarmes on railroads." He directed to intercept them and not to disperse them, but to capture them and try them by a court martial, "whose sentences should be carried out on the spot." Inasmuch as these "gangs" were bands of revolu tionists sent out in good faith by the Petrograd So viet to disarm the tsarist railway gendarmes in order to make them powerless to harm the new regime, General Alexiev's order to have them shot or hanged 94 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION forthwith after trial by court martial was a slap in the face of the Revolution. Similar irritants were the order of General Radko- Dmitriev which threatened with field court martial soldiers who refused to salute officers, and the order of General Evert, who on March 19th not only recog nized Grand Duke Nicholas as commander-in-chief, although the Government had informed the front that it did not. recognize him as such, but also, even after the abdication of Nicholas II and Michael, ordered his troops to support the throne of the Romanovs. Then there was the treatment of General Ivanov, who actually started from the front with eight hundred "St. George's cavaUers" to crush revolutionary Pet rograd. After a considerable period of immunity he was arrested at the instance of the Soviet of Kiev, but was released by Kerensky on giving his word ttf be faithful to the Provisional Government. Stung by criticism of his action in this case and of his attitude toward members of the tsar's family, Kerensky appeared before the Petrograd Soviet, where his eloquence confounded his critics and gained him a great ovation. The fact is, the higher officers and the general staff of the army are full of anti-£e3iaLutiofia*y sen timent. This does not greatly worry Guchkov and his colleagues, who are moxe_in_terested in winning the ^ar than in keeping the Revolution, and who are in no personal danger from a successful counter revolution. But it does worry the working-class leaders, who stand in far greater peril from the tsar than from the kaiser. Every one of them THE CLOUD 95 knows there is a noose about his own neck. They remember how in 1905 they thought they had a revo lution when through October and November autoc racy was Well nigh impotent. But the cruel beast "came back" and took fearful vengeance for the mortifications it had suffered. In the words of Olgin:1 The government began a series of arrests. It imprisoned those who belonged to a revolutionary organization; it im prisoned those who had addressed meetings or led demon strations in the "days of freedom" (October and Novem ber) ; it imprisoned the strike-committees and all those who attended conferences, conventions, or councils of working- men, of peasants., of professionals, of railroad employees; it imprisoned writers, reporters, editors of newspapers, preachers, soldiers, officers. It imprisoned every one whom it suspected of having given aid and comfort to its enemies. It filled all the prisons beyond their capacity ; it sent tens of thousands to Siberia; it rented special houses to serve as prisons. It established courts-martial all over the coun try to try the most serious offenders, and the sentence was usually death, death, death. This spirit of personal vengeance characterized the puni tive actions of the administration after the December re bellions. The court-martial was prejudiced against the defendants^ The administrative courts (if courts they could be called) did not care to distinguish between inno cent and guilty. The system of imprisoning persons pend ing the investigation of the causes of their arrest again became prevalent. Between October, 1905, and April, 1906, the number of persons imprisoned or sent to Siberia by order of the administration, in the majority of cases without any trial, amounted to seventy thousand. Nearly i The Soul of the Russian Revolution, pp. 160-162. 96 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION every morning a number of men, women and young boys were hanged. The number of executed became a regular news item in the papers. More vicious even than the court-martial were the puni tive expeditions. Those were army units sent under the command of a general or a colonel to punish the population of an entire district or a province or a city where the revolutionary outbursts or the peasant revolts had been strongest. It is not easy for bourgeois ministers, who sought only to replace a government which had fallen with out complicity on their part, to allow for the desper ate anxiety of the popular leaders regarding coun ter-revolutionaries. Quite naturally they shrink from taking any step which might later cost them their lives, while the 'Soviet chiefs are bent on forc ing the ministers to do things wliich will irrevo cably commit them to the Revolution. This is why the indulgence shown the onhangers of the fallen autocrat is sharply resented. On April 10th Izvestia remarks : One would expect that the principal bulwark of reaction — the existing Imperial Council — would have ended during the first days of the revolution. In reality, this Council not only exists but it blooms, supported by the people's money. A few days ago all the "unemployed" members of this Council by appointment received their monthly thousand rubles salary for March, which money, as usual, was de livered to their homes by messengers. Is it possible that the Provisional Government sincerely believes that the reaction was supported by policemen, and not by these pillars of reaction who had their special purpose, and the majority THE CLOUD 97 of whom deserve imprisonment and not reward from the people's treasury? It would seem that with their master gone they also would be removed and justly denied payments of money. The reality, however, proves to be quite the opposite. In this regard everything remains unchanged. Another instance of undue tenderness for the higher parasites of the court was the allowance of a pension for Count Fredericks, "Minister of the Imperial Court, Commander of the Imperial Head quarters, Member of the Imperial Council, General of Cavalry," etc. The Soviet, however, is culpable of wanton en croachment. On March 21st its executive committee promulgates an order suppressing certain "black hundred" newspapers and informing publishers that without a special permit the publication of newspapers and periodicals is not permitted. This high-handed policy rouses such a storm of protest that two days later the censorship order is with drawn. The difficulty of inducing the Government to give effect to the developing will of the masses is well brought out in Steklov's report before the All-Rus sian Conference of Soviets on April 12th. It is a resume of nearly a month of experience. From time to time we met and carried on desultory con versations, until the situation convinced us that it was necessary to create a permanent organ of cooperation to in fluence the Government. We were brought to this decision largely by the activities of the War Minister (Guchkov) who up to this very day inspires us, and perhaps you as well, with the greatest concern. And so the Executive 98 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION Committee resolved to create a delegation which would al ways inform the Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates of the intentions and plans of the Government, and would inform the Government regarding the demands of the rev olutionary people; would bring pressure to bear upon the Government and would control the actual execution of our demands ! At the same time the Executive Committee con sidered it necessary to adopt that measure which the situa tion itself virtually presented to us : several departments of the government requested us to delegate to them commis saries who would right then and there express the will of the people, that would sanction this will in legislative form. First of all our provisioning organs appeared, then repre sentatives of the Ministry of Commerce. But few of the ministers came readily to meet us, and we decided to give a push to the good will of those who did not come and to take upon ourselves the initiative by sending our commissaries to their departments. First of all we sent a special delega tion to the War Minister for the purpose of establishing normal relations and control over the actions of this Min istry. Verbally he was ready to meet our wishes and prom ised to prepare an agreement with us about new conditions for relations between the commanders and the soldiers at the front, but after once unexpectedly absenting himself from the conferences, the War Minister since then has not taken any steps to renew this conference and evades it in every possible manner. Until recently he did not appear at those general meetings of the Council of Ministers to which we came with our statements and demands, and I must say that three quarters of the issues which we have to bring before the Provisional Government concern the War Ministry. At its meeting on March 23d the Soviet approves the proposal of its executive committee that a Con trol Commission of five be created "to enter im- THE CLOUD 99 mediately into relation with the Provisional Govern ment in order to learn whether or not it will permit permanent control by the Soviet." It is not long before 'thinking men scent danger in the disposition of the Soviet to regard itself as in some respects coordinate with the Provisional Government. Protest is voiced against "dual au thority" and the central committee of the Cadet party repeatedly remonstrates with the Soviet for usurping the prerogatives of the Government. Izvestia counters by reminding the Cadets of how in days of the First Duma, eleven years ago, when the Duma attempted to subject the irrespon sible bureaucracy to its control as now the Soviet at tempts to subject an irresponsible Provisional Gov ernment to its control, the "black hundred" group used to reply: "The Duma attempts to create dual authority — wliich means chaos." And Izvestia goes on to say (April 11th) : Those groups that are in power have always insisted that the power should belong to them alone. The groups that have ruled the country have always been inclined to see in every attempt of the wider classes of the population to establish control over them, an assault on their rights. And against these assaults they always bring out the scare of dual authority and anarchy. A fortnight later it parries the charge with more fierceness : If we are to believe the bourgeois papers, then Russia is at the edge of an abyss, due to the "fatal dual author ity." The cause of such a change of position by the bourgeois 100 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION press is obvious. Before the revolution the authority was in the hands of a small group of the largest landowners and bureaucrats, with the Czar at the head and with a whole legion of all kinds of "Pharaohs" below. Now authority has passed into the hands of the representatives of the bourgeoisie, and it stubbornly struggles against any attempts to limit its authority. All these cries of "dual authority" are nothing but a struggle of the bourgeoisie for complete authority. The issue is not that it is necessary to have a "single authority," but that all authority should be exclusively in the hands of the bourgeoisie. Only the bourgeois newspapers prate about ' ' dual author ity." Only representatives of the ruling classes and the officers speak about it. The press of the Left parties and all organizations of the working classes do not complain about it. The ruling classes are dissatisfied because the Provisional Government takes into account the opinion of the Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates. They do not care to allow the laboring classes to have a hand in the affairs of state. And two days later occurs a portent. The work ers of the "Stary Parvaianen" factory, 2500 in num ber, hold a meeting at which after discussion it is resolved among other things : To demand the removal of the Provisional Government, wliich serves only as a brake to the cause of the revolution, and to transfer authority to the Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates; The Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates which was started by the revolutionary proletariat must end this war which has brought profit only to capitalists and land owners and which weakens the forces of the revolutionary people ; THE CLOUD 101 To organize a Red Guard and to arm all the people ; To requisition the printing shops of all the bourgeois newspapers which are carrying on a campaign against the Soviet of Workers ' and Soldiers ' Delegates and against the labor press, and to turn over these printing shops to labor newspapers. To carry out the immediate seizure of landowners', crown, and monastery lands, and to transfer the tools of produc tion into the hands of the workers. Verily, the returned political exiles are beginning to make a difference. These fierce demands create scandal and call forth protest ; but, for all that, the workers of Stary Parvaianen will have their day. CHAPTER XI LENIN AND HIS SLOGAN WITHIN five weeks of the downfall of the old regime arrives on the scene the man des tined to give the Revolution a slant that few antici pated. This is Nicholas Lenin (Vladimir Ilyitch Ulianov) the master mind of the Bolshevik or ex tremist wing of the Russian Social-Democratic La bor Party. That Lenin is by no means a nobody appears from the following account of his recep tion which appears in Izvestia, the bulletin of the Petrograd Soviet, at this time controlled by the po litical opponents of the Bolsheviks. Quite unexpectedly on the 16th of April a telegram was received by the Executive Committee of the Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates that a large group of immigrants is returning from abroad and that among them is N. Lenin (V. I. Ulianov). This news created a good deal of excitement among the Social Democrats and it was immediately decided to organize a welcoming party for the guests. The Executive Committee resolved to greet Lenin through a special deputation. The presidium of the All- Russian Conference also sent its delegation. Then, too, the Petersburg Committee of the Russian Social-Democratic Labor party immediately began to organize a welcome. The time of the arrival was inopportune, for the holiday prevented information of the arrival reaching the masses of the proletariat. There were no newspapers and the workingmen's districts had to be informed by mes- 102 LENIN AND HIS SLOGAN 103 sengers. In spite of the fact that the organizers of the welcome had only twelve hours in which to make prepara tions, the news of the arrival of Lenin and other comrades spread swiftly throughout Petrograd, and made a stir. Military units upon being informed of the arrival imme diately issued orders to send out companies as a guard of honor to the Finnish Station. Informed by telephone of Lenin's arrival the Kronstadt sailors immediately re plied that, in spite of the fact that it was the time for the going out of the ice, they will make their way on an ice breaker to Petrograd and will send their guard of honor and an orchestra. As early as seven o'clock in the evening representatives of various organizations and districts be gan to arrive at the Finnish Station, and by ten o'clock the entire square in front of the station was thickly packed by battalions of the labor army while the station itself was filled with the guards of honor of the troops and with de putations with banners. The Central Committee of the Petersburg Social Demo crats arrived with their banners, together with the writers of the "Pravda," and masses of workers and soldiers gath ered near the Palace of Kshesinskaya where the Petersburg Committee of the Russian Social-Democratic Labor Party is located. At the van of the demonstrants rolled an armored automobile decorated with the banner of the Rus sian Social-Democratic Labor Party. The train arrived at 11 :10. Lenin came out and was greeted by friends and comrades who assist him in party work. Under the banner of the party he walked along the station while the troops stood at attention to the sounds of the Marseillaise. A naval .officer who was escorting Lenin accompanied him along a detachment of sailors where Len;n made his first speech in free Russia to revolutionary troops. All down the line of troops which stood in orderly formation along the entire platform as well as by the labor militia Lenin was greeted enthusiastically. In the reception rooms of 104 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION the station he was greeted by deputations and among them by the representative of the Executive Committee, N. S. Tcheidze. Finally Lenin came out on the square illumi nated by search-lights. The entire sea of heads began to move. Swaying banners and huge crowds, crying "Hur rah ! ' ' greeted the arrival of the old soldier of the revolu tion. The people demanded that he make a speech. Lenin stood up on an automobile and silence reigned in the square while he made his first speech to the revolutionary proletariat of Petrograd. Then the armored car division took Lenin on one of its cars and moving slowly and sur rounded by a crowd of many thousands he left for the head quarters of the Petersburg Committee. In front of the building of the Petersburg Committee of the Russian Social-Democratic Labor Party a tremendous crowd of people were waiting and here from a balcony Lenin had to speak three times. Here he was greeted by the Polish delegation of Social Democrats who added their banner to the banners of the revolutionary social democ racy. At the headquarters of the Petersburg Committee a large, solemn meeting of the representatives of the districts of the Russian Social-Democratic Labor Party of Petersburg, Kronstadt and the vicinity, took place. The celebration lasted until four o'clock in the morning when the workers of the revolutionary social democracy left for their homes. The party in which Lenin returned to Russia via Germany comprised thirty-two Russian immigrants of whom nineteen were Bolsheviks. Inasmuch as the British Government would not allow them to re turn to their country by routes which it controlled, Martov, who is no Bolshevik, suggested that they try to procure a passage through Germany in ex change for German and Austrian prisoners of war LENIN AND HIS SLOGAN 105 interned in Russia. The idea was acted upon and a written agreement was drawn up between the Swiss Socialist Internationalist Fritz Platten, and the German Minister in Switzerland. Its principal points were: (1) All immigrants may travel regardless of their views on the war. (2) The car in which the immigrants are to travel has the right of ex-territoriality (nobody has the right to enter the car without Platten 's permission). There must be no control of passports or baggage. Travelers agree to use their influence in Russia to bring about the release of a cor responding number of Austrian and German interned sub jects. The car was escorted throughout the entire jour ney by Platten and its inmates frustrated all at tempts of the German Majority Socialists to get into communication with them. Lenin is the son of a school principal belonging to the nobility of the Province of Simbirsk. When he was sixteen years of age an ineffaceable im pression was made on his mind by the hanging of his noble-minded elder brother Alexander for being implicated in a student bomb plot against the life of tsar Alexander III. He took up the study of law in Kazan University but was presently expelled for preaching socialism among his fellow students. He removed to Petrograd and tried to build up the Social-Democratic Party among the workingmen. Arrested in 1895, he was banished to Siberia after spending two years in prison. Having finished his term of exile, he lived abroad in Switzerland, 106 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION founded a newspaper ("The Spark") and a maga zine ("The Dawn"), and published a number of serious books, viz., "The Development of Capitahsm in Russia," "The Agrarian Question," "Material ism and Empirocracy, " " Imperalism, ' ' and ' ' During Twelve Years." He was an ardent lover of books, worked twelve or fifteen hours a day in libraries, and achieved such solid learning that in Paris the great Russian scholar Kovalevsky exclaimed: "What a fine professor might have been made out of Lenin!" Twenty years ago there was extreme disagreement among Russian revolutionists as to what ought to be done once the old system was smashed. Many insisted there must be a "liberal" period of ascendancy by the propertied (bour geoisie) before Russia would be ready to become a socialist commonwealth. Lenin, however, contended that the right course is not to stop with a bourgeois republic but to push straight through to working- class domination. It was he who injected this issue into the convention of the Russian Social Democrats in 1903 and split the party into Mensheviks and Bol sheviks. Lenin was back in Petrograd in 1905 and from a balcony, high up and unperceived by the public, watched the proceedings of the Petrograd Soviet. Perhaps here, looking down on this first labor parlia ment, the idea of the Soviet State dawned upon him. In the Soviet he did not see a mere union of laborers for winning better wages and hours or even the pro letariat's watch-dog over a bourgeois government. He saw it as the engine by which the workers could wrest control from the capitalists and make them- LENIN AND HIS SLOGAN 107 selves masters of society. He had to go into exile again in 1907 and lived amid poverty and discourage ment until in 1912 the Russian labor movement be gan to pick up. Then he migrated to Cracow in Galicia in order to be in close touch with his party friends and followers in Russia. No sooner is Lenin back in Petrograd in April, 1917, than he sets afoot a vigorous propaganda. The handsome villa of the ballet-dancer Kshesins- kaya on the fashionable Kameno-Ostrovski Pros- pekt, which has been abandoned by its owner in the first days of the Revolution, is "requisitioned" as the Bolshevik headquarters. Daily from a kiosk in the garden speeches are delivered to crowds of work men in the street on the other side of the palings. So long as Russia was tsarist, Lenin was a defeat ist. He wrote: "We Russians are for the defeat of Russia, since that would facilitate her internal en franchisement, her liberation from the fetters of tsarism." Trotsky, on the other hand, rightly ar gued in October, 1914, that the defeat of the tsar, while strengthening revolution in Russia, would weaken it elsewhere. "In Germany the transforma tion which began with the capitulation of the pro letarian party to militarist nationalism would be hastened, the working class there would fatten on the crumbs which fell from the table of triumphant imperialism, and social revolution would be struck to the heart." In his first appearance before the Petrograd Soviet Lenin" declares: "It is being said that I am a partisan of a separ ate peace. I declare that this is slander. I am only 108 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION saying that the war, which was begun by the capital ists of the whole world and Nicholas Romanov, is being carried on by our government, which also con sists entirely of capitalists. The working class does not need the war. Therefore, why not publish the secret treaties and the diplomatic documents of the capitalistic governments? We will not succeed in ending the war so long as we have a capitalistic government. The war can be ended only by a labor revolution of the whole world, which we are advocat ing. Otherwise this snarl cannot be disentangled and humanity cannot be freed from it." Lenin is a Marxian socialist. He believes that the substitution, within the last century and a half, of machine industry for the old system of handicraft industry, such as we still see in China or India, opened a new stage in the development of society. Production by the aid of machinery — i. e., capital istic industry — has not only triumphed over the handicrafts, but constantly industry becomes more capitalistic. Constantly the role of the worker be comes less and the role of mechanism becomes greater. As this occurs, the larger is the propor tion of the whole output that goes as the share of the owners of capital. Thus there is forming in all societies with modern industry a distinct capitalist class, which does nothing whatever in production but which, in virtue of its ownership of the means of production, claims more and more of all wealth produced and wields more and more social power. The getting rid of this kept class, by the substitution of community ownership of the means of pro duction for private ownership, constitutes the "so- LENIN AND HIS SLOGAN 109 cial revolution" which the Marxians are trying to bring about. It is to be borne in mind that col lective ownership of factories, smelters, mines, oil- wells, means of transport, shops, etc., does not call for "community of goods" in the old sense of goods for consumption, nor for equality of the incomes re ceived by the workers, nor for the all-round dedica tion of the individual to the service of the commun ity, as the ante-Marxian communistic proposals were apt to do. Lenin is not only a socialist; he is an internation alist. To him the opposition between nations means very little; the thing of real consequence is the op position between classes. The bourgeoisie own the capital by means of which they "exploit" the great majority of the workers. Relief can come only by substituting public capitalism (i. e., collectivism, or communism) for private capitalism. This funda mental change (revolution) will never come of it self nor by the conversion of the bourgeoisie, or a part of them, to Communism. It will come, if it comes at all, only by the revolutionary efforts of the class-conscious workers. Of its own will the kept class will never give up its privileged position of living without work in virtue of its ownership of the means of production. This means that it must be dispossessed by force. Lenin insists upon the necessity of a dictatorship of the proletariat during the transition process from the old order to the new order. Of what use is it that public bodies should be made up partly of rep resentatives of the workers and partly of the repre sentatives of the kept classes ? No amount of discus- 110 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION sion will bring them into agreement. Compromise will but disappoint both sides, for each would have to give up a part of what it considers essential. While the kept class is in process of being ousted from its privileged position no common purpose is possible to the two elements. Between them there can be nothing but a trial of strength. How foolish it is, then, for the proletariat to admit to its governing bodies representatives of the enemy class, the bour geoisie, to spy upon, trick, confuse, and corrupt them? In the rapid formation of Soviets of workers and soldiers in all the towns of Russia and in the unity of purpose and of interconnection among these Soviets, Lenin sees the shaping of an instrument whereby the dictatorship of the proletariat may be realized. He therefore wishes to wipe out the ex isting governing bodies, municipal dumas, district and provisional zemstvos, and the Provisional Gov ernment, substituting for them a hierarchy of Soviets culminating in the Executive Committee of the All-Russian Congress of Soviets. So from his first arrival in Petrograd he sounds the slogan "All power to the Soviets ! ' ' He opposes the Provisional Government because a group of bourgeoisie will never consent to actions which will destroy the economic foundations of their class. He insists likewise that a coalition govern ment will disappoint expectations and points out that in such ministries the Socialists always come to support bourgeois policies. He is not even in favor of an all-Socialist government because, in relation to those who want to introduce community owner- LENIN AND HIS SLOGAN 111 ship of capital now, those who, like the Menshevik Social Democrats, want it not now but in some in definite future time, will behave the same as non- Socialists. So he labors to disseminate his ideas through the mass of toilers in order to build up in the Soviets a Bolshevik majority which will institute a Bolshevik government. Lenin visualizes two stages in the Revolution. During the first stage the revolutionary proletariat in alliance with the whole peasantry, which he con siders as still dominated by its upper stratum, the kulaks or rich peasants, abolishes by force the power of the landed gentry and the industrial bourgeoisie. It is with the latter than Lenin's Menshevik oppo nents would ally themselves. During the second stage the proletariat, this time in alliance with the poorest peasantry (those who, having httle or no land, have to hire out), overthrows the power of the employing peasantry. The proletarian revolution is then complete. One should remember that Lenin is not an anar chist. Before the Petrograd Soviet he stated in April: "We do not need such a repubhc as exists in other countries, a republic with functionaries, police, and a permanent army. I consider that our Provisional Government emanates from the capitalists. I will be asked : ' Therefore you are against government ? ' No, this is slander. On the contrary, a government is necessary, but it must be the firmest revolutionary government." Interesting in this connection is the protest pub hshed in the Bourse Gazette of May 1st by the Petro- 112 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION grad Club of Anarchists, complaining that Lenin's ideas have been confounded with anarchism. The club says : We consider it necessary to state that while Lenin calls himself a Communist, he does not break with either state socialism nor with social democracy, and therefore he is absolutely foreign to anarchism; his demagogic actions are not acceptable to us. Besides this, while we do not pre sume to accuse Lenin of insincerity, many anarchists have taken a negative stand on Lenin's trip through Germany, calling it an unsuccessful demonstration. Once more we protest against the vulgar understanding of anarchism and against ihe confounding of Lenin's name with the name of anarchy, which is dear to us. We request other newspapers to reprint this. Such are the doctrines now cast like a new fer ment into the minds of the Russian workers and soldiers. This is not the place to pronounce upon them or their author. History will do that. Nikolai Lenin (V Oulianoff) Prime Minister of the Soviet Government fc o S £ I .2 * - c- - o - 0 J i - o c? CHAPTER XII THE MAY CRISIS A COMPLETE contradiction exists between the bourgeois theory of the wax. and the socialist theory and hardly has the first flush of the Revolu tion passed before this brings about a startling con frontation of opposed social classes. According to the bourgeois theory, Germany and Austria, aspir ing to world domination, are trying to subjugate the free democracies of Europe: England, France, and Belgium. To assure them of future security it is necessary for the Allies to win a "complete victory." According to the Socialists the war is a result of the competition of the ruling classes in England, France, and Russia, on the one hand, in Germany and Aus tria on the other, who are aiming to conquer and subjugate foreign lands and peoples. In the course of the last twenty or thirty years these attempts be came more and more apparent and, as neither side wished to yield to the other, both sides industriously increased their armaments. Owing to the growth of armaments since the Russo-Japanese War and the stubbornness of both sides there were several oc casions before 1914 when there was danger of the war breaking out. Just on the eve of this war, in the spring of 1914, Russia had undertaken a military program calling for a huge increase of her forces. It was chiefly this that precipitated the 113 114 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION conflict. Germany and Austria could not afford to postpone the war lest Russia should be able to carry out her great military program. In Russia it is considered indisputable that the Austro-German coalition aims at conquest; but like aims have been displayed during the war by Russia and her allies. From the Russian side statements have been made regarding the intention of obtaining Constantinople, the Dardanelles, Galicia, Armenia, and reannexing Poland, which is being liberated. The British imperialists occupy and wish to retain possession of the German colonies and intend to take Mesapotamia. The French demand Alsace- Lorraine and German territory to the Rhine, also Syria and a part of Asia Minor. Italy is trying to get the Tyrol and Trentino and several districts in the Balkans, while all the Allies wish to dismember Austria and the Balkans in order to subjugate them. The Chauvinists of each side call the realization of all these aims of conquest a "complete victory over the enemy." The Socialists deem the time ripe for attacking the predatory tendencies of the governments of all countries. On March 27th the Petrograd Soviet is sues a proclamation to "Comrade proletarians and all laboring people of all countries," declaring that the time has come to start a decisive struggle against the intentions of conquest on the part of the governments of all countries; the time has eome for the peoples to take into their own hands the decision of the question of war and peace. Conscious of its revolutionary power, the Russian democ racy announces that it will, by every means, resist the policy THE MAY CRISIS 115 of conquest of its ruling classes, and it calls upon the peoples of Europe for concerted decisive actions in favor of peace. •And we are appealing to our brother-proletarians of the Austro-German coalition and first of all to the German proletariat. From the first days of the war you were as sured that by raising arms against autocratic Russia, yon were defending the culture of Europe from Asiatic despo tism. Many of you saw in this a justification of that sup port which you were giving to the war. Now even this justification is gone : democratic Russia cannot be a threat to liberty and civilization. .... Throw off the yoke of your semi-autocratic rulers in the same way that the Russian people shook off the Czar's autocracy; refuse to serve as an instrument of con quest and violence in the hands of kings, landowners, and bankers — and by coordinated efforts we will stop the hor rible butchery, which is disgracing humanity and is be clouding the great days of the birth of Russian freedom. Laboring people of all countries: We are stretching out our hands to you in brotherly fashion over the mountains of corpses of our brothers, across rivers of innocent blood and tears, over the smoking ruins of cities and villages, over the wreckage of the treasures of culture ; we appeal to you for the reestablishment and strengthening of inter national unity. That will be the security for our future victories and the complete liberation of humanity. Proletarians of all countries, unite ! On April 9th the reluctant Government finds it self obliged to do homage to the Socialist formula for ending the war. In an appeal to the citizens of Russia to rally to the defense of their country against the Germans it says : While leaving to the decision of the people, in close unity 116 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION with our Allies, the final solution of all problems connected with the World War and its ending, the Provisional Gov ernment considers it its right and duty to state now that the aim of Free Russia is not the domination of other peoples, the depriving them of their national patrimony, nor the violent seizure of foreign territories, but that its object is to establish a durable peace on the basis of the self-determination of peoples. This declaration, endorsed by the Soviet, is, of course, ambiguous in that "close unity with our Al lies" may not be at all compatible with "the aim of Free Russia." Miliukov, however, is conducting the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on a very different theory. He con siders it of great importance to Russia's economic life that her access to the ocean through the Black Sea should no longer be controlled by the barbarous Turk. That her southern gateway to the world's highways should come into her possession is in the interest of her peasants and workers as well as in the interest of her bourgeoisie. In 1911 Turkey was at war with Italy; the Straits were closed and the peasants of South Russia could not export their wheat. In the Balkan Wars, 1912 and 1913, Turkey was again a combatant and again grain export was held up. So Miliukov is right, but he does not per ceive that the war-weariness of the masses has reached such a pitch that it is too late now to hope for any ^ainsjrom the war. Quite misreading po litical forces, he takes a step which fatally weakens the Provisional Government with the people. The &>vi^i--distrjists Miliukov. and with reason. On April 22d he tells the correspondent of the Man- THE MAY CRISIS 117 Chester Guardian, "Russia must receive the sover eignty of the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles and must be given an opportunity to fortify them." Promptly Skobelev, Vice-Chairman of the Soviet, telegraphs the press of foreign countries: "Rus sian democracy has nothing in common with the aims proclaimed by Miliukov." War Minister Guchkov having declared at Jassy that he is against "ending the war without victory," Skobelev tele graphs the press of the world that "the revolution ary people and the revolutionary army . . . are for the ending of the war without any annexations or indemnities and will not retreat from this decision." Pressure is brought to bear on the Provisional Government to force it to communicate its new at titude on the war to the Allied governments with the request that they consent to a revision of the treaties between themselves and Russia in the spirit of "no annexations or indemnities." Otherwise the Soviet will not support the Liberty Loan campaign which must soon be launched. Miliukov refuses to call for a revision of the treaties but consents to transmit to the Allied governments the Manifesto of April 9th with a covering note. The preparation of this note is kept secret. Although it is agreed to by the entire Cabinet, nothing is said of it to the Soviet leaders and only four days before the note is sent the Provisional Government causes to be printed in its Messenger a flat denial of the state ment published in the Bourse Gazette of April 26th to the effect that a note regarding the aims and objects of the war is being prepared and is soon to be sent to the Allied powers. Why should the Pro- 118 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION visional Government thus prevaricate unless it in tended to betray the democracy and then confront its leaders with a fait accompli? In this note, which bears the date of May 1st, Miliukov assures the Allies that the Revolution will not entail "any slackening on the part of Russia in the common struggle of all the Allies. On the con trary, the nation 's determination to bring the World War to a decisive victory has been accentuated, ow ing to the sense of responsibihty which is shared by all in common and each one of us in particular." He promises that Russia "will maintain a strict re gard for its agreements with the Allies" and closes with an expression of the hope that "the Alhed Democracies will find means of establishing the guarantees and sanctions necessary to prevent any recourse to sanguinary war in the future." The storm breaks when on May 2d the note is published. The executive committee of the Soviet is speedily convened in order to discuss it and the debate lasts from midnight until half-past three o'clock in the morning. Soviet leaders are indig nant at the reappearance of such phrases as "de cisive victory" and "guarantees and sanctions," which may be used to cloak any kind of "imperial istic" designs and are, in fact, intended to screen Miliukov's determination that Russia shall have Constantinople and the Straits. At a session the next day the executive committee decides to find out directly from the Provisional Government its mo tives in adopting the text of the note. On being approached, Prince Lvov agrees and accordingly a joint meeting of the Cabinet, the executive committee THE MAY CRISIS 119 of the Soviet, and the provisional committee of the Duma is called for the evening. Meanwhile, how ever, a sudden flare-up reveals how far class and mass have gone asunder since the halcyon days of the Revolutionary honeymoon. In the Reserve Battalion of the Finland Guard Regiment is a Lett from Riga, Feodor Linde. He is a university man and has been in exile for his political opinions. As a member of the committee of his battalion he makes before a joint meeting of the committees of his regiment a denunciatory report regarding the Miliukov note. He moves that a dem onstration be organized against the note and his motion is unanimously adopted. He then goes to other military units and engages them to join in the demonstration. So here on the afternoon of May 3d the streets shake to the tread of marching regiments — the Fin land, the Moscow, the 180th, the Kexholm, the Bal tic crews, and several others — bearing banners with such inscriptions as "Down with Conquest!" "Down with Imperialistic Policy!" "Down with Miliukov!" "Miliukov must resign," "Long live the Democratic Republic!", etc. These fifteen thousand armed men converge on the square in front of the Marie Palace and send in a deputa tion. None of the ministers are in the palace, but the permanent officials, who imagine that the mani- festants intend mischief, telephone agitatedly for help. The Petrograd commandant, General Korni lov, hurries to the scene as well as certain members of the executive committee. In the meantime mys terious telephone messages— whether from tsarists 120 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION or from German agents we do not know — reach the various barracks, calling upon the men to turn out with their armored cars and machine-guns and over throw the Provisional Government. In the end forty thousand men are astir and the ferment is ar rested only by orders forbidding the men to leave their quarters. From an improvised platform Skobelev and Gotz harangue the excited soldiers, assuring them that their feelings will be considered in dealing with the note, and pointing out the danger of domestic dis sension in the face of a determined enemy. The troops cheer them and then listen to a delegate from the Baltic Fleet who proposes a resolution, censuring Miliukov and calling for his resignation. Finally General Kornilov appears and urges the men to maintain strict discipline and to return quietly to their barracks. The regiments move away, but other regiments arrive as well as processions of factory workers from the other side of the Neva and citizens agitated by the previous events. The demonstration mania seizes upon a large part of the population of the capital. On the Marie Square until late at night meetings are held in which "war aims" and the note are passionately discussed. The friends of the Government now have their innings and shortly after ten o'clock an enormous procession moves into the square and gives Miliukov an ovation when in re sponse to their insistent clamor he appears and speaks. Miliukov says : Citizens, when I learned this morning of the demonstra- THE MAY CRISIS 121 tions which carried banners with the inscription "Down with Miliukov ! " I feared not for Miliukov but for Russia. I tried to imagine what is the condition of Russia if these cries really express the mood of the majority of the citi zens; what would the ambassadors of our Allies say? They would send telegraphic communications to their gov ernments that Russia had betrayed her allies, that Russia had excluded herself from the list of the Allied powers. The Provisional Government cannot adopt such a point of view. I affirm that the Provisional Government and I as the Minister of Foreign Affairs will keep Russia in such a position that nobody will dare accuse her of betrayal. Rus sia will never agree to a separate peace. The Provi sional Government, as I have just said at the meeting, is a sail-boat with its sails spread. This boat can move forward only when there is wind, and we are waiting for your confidence, which will be our favorable wind and which will move our ship. I hope that you will retain your confidence in us and that your confidence will be that sup port for us with which we will be able to lead Russia to the road of freedom and welfare, and preserve the dignity and freedom of great Russia. In the conference on the note, which lasts until four o'clock in the morning, Tcheidze points out that the note contains in it propositions which are utterly unacceptable to the Soviet. Beclouding the aims of the war, the note does not mention the re pudiation of all annexations and indemnities and can give the Allies an absolutely wrong conception of the position which has been adopted by the demo cratic elements of Russia. Miliukov insists that his note is but a paraphrase and development of the statements in the Manifesto of April 9th. He rejects the suggestion to address 122 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION a new note to the Allies. The Provisional Govern ment threatens even to resign rather than thus stul tify itself. The Soviet leaders deprecate such a step and consent that the fresh declaration of Rus sia's war aims shall be addressed to her people, not to the Allied governments. The Cabinet agrees to submit the draft of a declaration at the special meet ing of the Soviet called for the following evening. The events of May 3d prove to be but a dress re hearsal for those of May 4th. The issue between the Provisional Government and the Soviet has stirred the capital to its depths and innumerable demonstrations take place. The slogans on the pla cards and banners show a deep cleft in opinion. There are banners expressing full confidence in the Soviet and other banners appealing for trust in the Provisional Government. There are slogans from "War to Complete Victory" to "Down with the War." The demonstrations of the workers differ sharply from those of the well-to-do. Only one party, the Cadet, summoned its followers to make a street demonstration. The affair is thus described by the Cadet newspaper Ryech: The van of the demonstration was led by an automobile which carried a flag with the inscription: "Confidence in the Provisional Government." In the automobile were members of the Central Committee of the party, M. M. Vinaver and P. V Gerasimov, who made speeches to the people whenever the procession halted. In the rear came an automobile truck with soldiers who were throwing out the appeal of the Party of People's Freedom (Cadets). On this automobile truck were placards with the inscrip tions: "Victory of Free Democracies," "Down with Ger- THE MAY CRISIS 123 man Militarism," "Long Live Miliukov," "Down with Anarchy," "Long Live the Revolutionary People of the Army. ' ' The crowd traversed Liteiny, Nevsky, and Morskaya to the Marie Palace. Along the way the demonstration was joined by other crowds with the same slogans. Among those who joined were especially noted soldiers and officers. The crowd grew all the time, and by the time it arrived at the Marie Palace the number in the demonstration had reached several tens of thousands. In the wake of the parade were thunderous hurrahs in the honor of the Pro visional Government, the army, and in honor of the Allies. On Morskaya the demonstration met two French officers. The officers were lifted on the shoulders of some of the par ticipants of the demonstration and carried into an automo bile in which were the members of the Central Committee. M. M. Vinaver greeted in the French officers our noble ally France. The crowd in reply shouted "Vive la France !" At the Marie Square several speeches were made. The speakers addressed the crowds from a platform and an automobile. The speech of member of the Duma Gerasimov, as well as the speeches of soldiers and officers, created special enthusiasm. The crowd gave an ovation to the members of the First Duma, as represented by Vin aver. The crowd then sought out Guchkov and Miliukov in the War Ministry and gave them a prolonged ovation. As was, however, to be expected, clashes began to occur between manifestants. Ryech says : About noon unusual excitement prevailed on Nevsky. In many places groups of citizens and soldiers appeared who discussed the newspaper descriptions of the events of the previous day. 124 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION The arguments were passionate and the opponents did not hesitate to use strong language, but, in general, until the appearance of the organized demonstrations with armed people, the attitude remained peaceful. About three o'clock in the afternoon the first processions appeared, some with red flags and placards reading: "Long Live the Provisional Government ! ' ' About four o 'clock demonstrating workingmen, who were armed with rifles, appeared on Nevsky. It was said they came from the Petrograd side. Their huge placards bore inscriptions: "Down with the Provisional Government." Near the Kazan Cathedral this demonstration met an other demonstration which carried banners with the inscrip tion ; ' ' Long live the Provisional Government ! " A few shots were heard in the crowd. Then a crowd of soldiers ran into the midst of the demonstration and tore down the placards inscribed: "Down with the Provisional Gov ernment ! ' ' Near the building of the City Duma, about four o'clock, a new encounter took place with another group of demon strators who were carrying a banner with the sentiment "Down with the Provisional Government!" and who had a guard of armed workingmen. This demonstration was met by cries of protest. A huge crowd soon formed which filled up all Nevsky and stopped the movement of street cars and carriages. The crowd made a dash for the dem onstrators and part of the flags were torn down. Among other things, banners were taken away from a group of workingmen of one factory who were following the armed workingmen. Here also shots were fired. It is said that several people, and among them one woman, were wounded. The wounded were placed in an automobile and taken to a hospital. Part of the paraders with rifles, on demand of the public, were compelled to leave Nevsky with flags and placards under the protection of armed workingmen. Everywhere were groups of citizens who were animatedly THE MAY CRISIS 125 discussing events. Individual voices which were demand ing the removal of the Provisional Government were drowned in the protesting cries of citizens, who insisted on full support of the Provisional Government. Soon au tomobile trucks appeared on Nevsky which were filled with citizens with placards reading : ' ' Long Live the Provisional Government ! ' ' The automobiles stopped among the crowds and the speakers appealed to citizens to support heartily the Provisional Government. From some of the automo biles leaflets were being distributed on which were printed well-known telegrams quoting the speech of Wilhelm to his guards when they were being sent to the Russian front. On this day the bourgeoisie, feeling itself on top, does not refrain from rough treatment of proleta rian demonstrators. Izvestia says : Yesterday a crowd of about ten thousand people of the First City District of the Russian Social-Democratic Labor Party, consisting of the workers from the plant of the Society of Carved Articles, the New Cotton-Mill, the tobacco factory of Kolobov & Bobrov, the print shop Kopeika, the print shop of Gershuni, and the cotton-mill Kozhevnikov, at 5:30 in the afternoon went to the Naval Academy, where the Society of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates was meeting, to express solidarity with it and to support it. This demonstration carried banners: "Full Confidence in the Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Dele gates," "Down with Imperialism," "Long Live Socialism," and "All Power to the Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates." On Znamensky Square the demonstration was stopped by two automobile trucks which bore the inscription "Long Live the Provisional Government." The occupants of these trucks demanded that the militia (city police) should not participate in the demonstration. The militia then left the demonstration, but the demonstration was broken 126 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION up as the automobiles, after permitting a part of it to pass, did not let the other part do so. The demonstration from the Rozhdestvensky district, which also came to Znamensky Square, and which consisted almost entirely of women and in which the militia did not participate, was stopped by automobile trucks which bore the same inscription. The banners of the paraders from the Rozhdestvensky district were taken away by the occu pants of the automobiles and torn by the public. On Nevsky, from the demonstrations which carried the banners: 'Full Confidence in the Provisional Government," "Down with Lenin, the Hireling of the Kaiser," "Long Live Miliukov," began to be heard cries that the Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates should not be sup ported, and soon the participants of these demonstrations re sorted to violence. The part of the public on Nevsky, while crying out "Provocateurs!" and "On German Money," destroyed the banners that bore the inscription "Long Live the International Unity of Workers," which was carried by the women workers of the cotton-mill. The women were dispersed and some of them were beaten with sticks. On Moika another encounter took place with an automobile in which were university and high school students. The automobiles rode into the demonstration and its occupants destroyed many banners. Students of the Military Medi cal Academy and of the Institute of Ways of Communica tion, crying out "Provocateurs!" "Leninites!" attempted to take the banners away from the women. The arrival of the member of the executive committee Skobelev created some order. There are many protests against the violence shown demonstrating workers. Thus one letter to Izvestia reads: On May 4th, a group of four thousand comrades, in- THE MAY CRISIS 127 eluding myself, which came from the following factories: Russo-Baltic, Optical, and the Nevsky Yarn Mill, decided to hold a strictly peaceful demonstration for the expression of protest regarding the historic counter-revolutionary note of the Provisional Government. We went through Nevsky to the Nikolai Naval Academy, where the Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates was meeting. We all re solved to go out on the streets unarmed and, in case of meeting hostile paraders, to remain absolutely calm and not to allow any excesses on our part. We came out from Novgorodskaya Street with two ban ners: "Down with the Provisional Government," and "All Power to the Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates," together with the Second Rozhdestvensky District, and the Petersburg Committee of the Russian Social-Democratic Labor Party. We quietly marched to Pushkinskaya Street, where we encountered three automobile trucks filled with invalids, soldiers, officers, volunteer soldiers, university and high school students, and bourgeois young ladies. They had placards reading: "Long Live the Provisional Government," "Down with Lenin," "Lenin & Company back to Germany," etc. Generally speaking, they had everything that they ought to have. The automobile trucks of our opponents, upon seeing us, blocked our way at once. Our protests that we had just as much right as they to parade peacefully, that they were committing vio lence, that they were violating the freedom which was achieved by us, remained fruitless. Our orderliness and calmness infuriated our opponents and they turned from words to actions : forcing our front ranks, they furiously at tacked our banners, mounted riders [probably military] rode down upon us, from all sides, and finally attained a victory after a stubborn struggle of our standard-bearers, and the waving banners were torn into bits by them in a blind fury. Member of the Committee of the Rozhdest- 128 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION vensky District of the Russian Social-Demo cratic Labor Party. Another witness avers: At 3:20 a group of about a thousand workingmen was parading on Nevsky in the direction of the Admiralty. They carried banners with the inscriptions: "Down with the Provisional Government," "Down with War," "Long Live the Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies." Near the Ekaterina Canal the paraders (part of whom were armed) were intersected by a small group consisting mostly of officers, university and high school students, "ladies' hats," and "derbies." The latter group ran to the work ingmen and began taking away their banners and arms, and one officer in a light gray overcoat pulled out his saber and attacked the workingmen. He slashed the head of one. The workingman fell to the ground and remained in this position for fifteen or twenty minutes until he was picked up and taken into the hallway of the house where the Uchetny Bank is located. Another officer, an ensign, in a soldier's overcoat, also violently attacked the workingmen, took away their arms, and led his followers in seeking those workingmen who had run away and were hiding in courtyards, stores, and on the steps of the Catholic Church. Shots were fired at workingmen by the partisans of the Provisional Government. I do not know whether any workingmen were killed by these shots, but I do know that I have seen five of them lying on the car tracks and in the gutter. I confirm that there were no shots fired by workingmen, but there was a struggle for the banners and for arms. When the paraders were dispersed the zealous partisans of the Provisional Government quickly disappeared. c3 fc fl D MC o THE MAY CRISIS 129 The previous day the Soviet issued an appeal to the people to be calm and self-restrained. To-day it sends its representatives in pairs, one worker and one soldier, to the working-men 's districts and to the barracks. While traversing the streets surging with humanity these representatives often say: "Com rades, we know that you are ready to support us in the struggle. We know that you are one with us. We know this without any demonstrations. We knew it before you came out in the streets." At tempts are made to bring the soldiers out on the streets, to bring out to the squares armored auto mobiles with machine-guns, but the executive com mittee sends out word that every order to a military unit to come out in the street must be issued on the stationery of the executive committee, must bear its seal, and must be signed by at least two of seven named persons. Late in the evening of May 4th the Soviet strives to avert anarchy by issuing an order absolutely prohibiting street meetings and demonstrations for two days. The Cadet party acquiesces and withdraws a call for further demon stration on behalf of the Provisional Government which it intended should appear in the newspapers of May 5th. In view of the allegations of bourgeois historians that the hand of Lenin is visible in the anti-war dem onstrations of May 3d and 4th it is significant that none of the Cadet newspapers make any such in sinuation at the time and that the central committee of the Social-Democratic Labor (Bolshevik) party resolves that "during such a time any idea- of civil war is senseless and wild" and calls upon members 130 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION of the party to observe strictly the order of the Soviet forbidding street meetings and demonstra tions for two days. About five o'clock of this eventful day the exec utive committee receives the explanatory declara tion which the Government had agreed to prepare. Under the influence of menacing events the Govern ment has gone farther than it had promised. It withdraws the phrase "decisive victory" save in the sense of the declaration of April 9th and explains that "by guarantees and sanctions" of enduring peace the Government has in view "the reduction of armaments, the establishment of international tribunals, etc." This explanation is to be communi cated to the ambassadors of the Allied powers. By a vote of 34 to 19 the executive committee (which has been enlarged by the addition of repre sentatives of other Soviets so that it no longer speaks for Petrograd alone) approves the explanatory note and recommends it to the plenary meeting of the Petrograd Soviet which occurs this evening. In this meeting Tseretelli, the Menshevik Prince from the Caucasus, ex-member of the Second Duma, who has spent ten years in Siberia, urges that the Soviet support the Provisional Government in every pos sible way. Kemenev, a Bolshevik, opposes the resolution on the ground that there is no reason whatever to trust the Provisional Government. He proposes the formation of a purely Socialist govern ment. On behalf of the Bolsheviks Madame Kolontai of fers this resolution: In order to ascertain the will of the majority of the popu- THE MAY CRISIS 131 ration of Petrograd, it is necessary to take at once a vote of the people in all districts of Petrograd and vicinity regard ing the question of its attitude to the note of the govern ment, regarding the support of the policy of any of the parties, and the kind of provisional government that is desirable. All the party agitators, and factories, regiments on the streets, etc., must advocate these views and this proposition by peaceful discussion and peaceful demon strations and meetings. She insists that it is idle to expect from this bour geois government a faithful carrying out of the wishes of the democracy. After extended debate the Soviet accepts with only thirteen negative votes the recommendation of its executive committee. Thus the note incident is closed, but its effects are far-reaching. The contrast in attitude toward peace between the small comfortably-off classes and the huge undernourished, decimated, suffering, de spairing masses has been staged for all to see. The issue being joined between the Provisional Govern ment and the Soviet, the bourgeoisie has rallied round the Provisional Government, while the democ racy has rallied round the Soviet. The working nine-tenths of the people will mark and inwardly digest the significance of the fact that the bour geois tenth regards the Provisional Government as their government. The specter of cjxLLwar which for two days hovered over the capital vanishes for a season, but it will return. The fact that during the crisis, it was the Soviet rather than the Provisional Government that got it self obeyed by the soldiers and the masses convinces the best men on both sides that something must be 132 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION done to strengthen the Provisional Government with the working people and insure future harmony be tween the two bodies which between them wield what authority remains in Russia. On May 9th Prince Lvov sends the Soviet a formal invitation to par ticipate in the formation of a coalition government. At first the Soviet leaders decline, preferring to be free to play their own hand, to have reaX power but without, responsibility. If they take hold and Rus sia goes to ruin in their charge, their party will be discredited forever. But the sky darkens. Guch kov resigns, declaring himself unable longer "to share responsibility for the grievous sin that is be ing committed against our fatherland." He has been confronted with a declaration of "soldiers' rights" which he would not sanction with his sig nature. At a conference of delegates from the Govern ment Kerensky declares : If we are to save the country, things cannot continue on their present course. It may be the time is near when we must tell you that we cannot give you bread in the quan tity you expect, or maintain the supplies of ammunition on which you have a right to count. My strength is fail ing, because I no longer have my old confidence that we have before us, not revolting slaves, but conscious citizens, creating a new state with an enthusiasm worthy of the Russian nation. Alas that I did not die two months ago, for then I should have died in the splendid dream that once and for all a new life had dawned for Russia ! If the tragedy and disorder of the situation are not at once recog nized, if it is not understood that now responsibility lies on all, if our state organism cannot be made to act as smoothly as a well-oiled machine, then all our dreams, THE MAY CRISIS 133 all our aspirations, will be thrown back for years, and per haps will be drowned in blood.1 Such considerations induce the executive commit tee to relent and appoint a deputation to confer with the Cabinet on the subject. They insist on a new Minister of Foreign Affairs, so Miliukov leaves the Cabinet, declining to take any other portfolio. Tereshchenko takes his place and five representa tives of the Soviet are introduced into the Cabinet, viz., Tchernov, Skobelev, Tseretelli, Peshekhanov, and Pereverzev. The Provisional Government,3 while rejecting all thought of a separate peace, ' ' sets itself as its aim the speediest possible attainment of' a general peace, having as its object neither the tak ing from others of their national possessions, nor the forcible seizure of foreign territories — a peace without annexations or indemnities on the principle of the self-determination of nationahties." It is furthermore agreed that the new socialist ministers are to join the Cabinet as representatives of the Soviet, shall be responsible to it, and shall periodically report to it. The Soviet issues a pro clamation expressing "full confidence" in the new Government and commending it to the nation. So i Wilcox, Russia's Ruin, p. 182. 2 The names of the members of the new Cabinet are : ( 1 ) Premier and Minister of the Interior, Prince Lvov; (2) Minister of Labor, Skobelev (S. D.) ; (3) Minister of Justice, Pereverzev (S. R.) ; (4) Agriculture, Tchernov (S. K.) ; (5) Supplies, Pesbekhonov (Pop- Soc); (6) War and Marine, Kerensky (S. P.); (7) Social Assist ance, Prince Shakhovskoy (Cadet) ; (8) Finance, Shingarev (Cadet) ; (9) Posts and Telegraphs, Tseretelli (S. D.); (1) Commerce and Industry, Konovalov (Progressist); (11) Foreign Affairs, Teresh chenko (non-party) ; (12) Railways and Communications, Nekrassov (Cadet); (13) State-Controller, Godnev (Oct.); (14) Education, Manuilov (Cadet); (14) Synod, Lvov (Oct.). 134 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION with its sjx Socialists to ten bourgeois Liberals the Ministry starts off with renewed vigor; but every day from a thousand street corners and soap-boxes spreads the idea "All power to the Soviets!" CHAPTER XIII THE REVOLUTION AND LABOR IN the brief "honeymoon" period following the March Revolution the putting forward of eco nomic demands was scarcely thought of. A Belgian employer at once assembled his working force to propose to them that a common agreement on cer tain points should be drawn up on the basis of which they would eventually proceed to a revision of the scale of wages which the high cost of living had ren dered necessary. But his workers stopped him be fore he was well under way with his speech, protest ing that there could be no question of discussing such a matter; since the Revolution all were brothers, and they only asked leave to do for their brother what they had heretofore done for their employer.1 It did not take the Russian workmen long, however, to arrive at a less idyllic conception of the social ques tion. With the prices of the necessaries of life mounting by leaps and bounds in response to the constantly augmenting issues of paper, money found necessary for financing the new regime, it was inevitable that wage scales should . frequently be revised upward; and, once the wage-earners realized that no longer were the police there to protect the employer from their strikes and threats of personal violence, they i Vandervelde, Three Aspects of the Russian Revolution p. 41. 135 136 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION sometimes forced their wages up faster even than the cost of living rose. Their compunction was the less from the fact that, thanks to free speech and a free press, they soon be gan to be acquainted with the figures of the extraor dinary profits many of the employers had been reaping. Mrs. Williams, who writes from the Cadet point of view, says : The extravagant economic demands of the miners were to a great extent justified by the fact that, during the war, the mine-owners had been specially bare-faced in their ex ploitation of this laborious kind of work, taking advantage of the workmen being unable to leave. The shareholders got enormous dividends (up to 200 per cent.), while wages were raised at a most parsimonious rate.1 After observing that the hundred-ruble shares of industrial companies were quoted at 300, 400, and even up to 1,000 rubles, indicating an expected yearly return of 18, 24 and, in cases, up to 60 per cent., I finally put this question on five occasions to Ameri can business men with long experience in Russia: "Do you think that under the old regime twenty per cent, per annum was as common a rate of return to Russian factory capital as ten per cent, is in Amer ica?" In every instance the answer was "Yes." From time to time in the Russian newspapers of the spring of 1917 appear financial statements of various banks and industrial enterprises, showing their profits for 1916. From these one can form a notion of how the Russian factory worker will re spond, once the agitators have fixed in his mind the 1 From Liberty to Brest-Litovsk, p. 229. THE REVOLUTION AND LABOR 137 idea that his employer "exploits" him. Here are some of the concerns with their profits for 1916. I cannot say how typical they are. Per f-ent. of Oapital Net Profits annual in Rubles in Rubles profit United Cable Factories 6,000,000 10,299,038 170 Skapshal Bros. Tobacco Co 2,400,000 510,175 21 T. M. Aivaz Machine Construction . . . 4,000,000 4,670,534 117 Russian General Elec. Co 12,000,000 2,807,837 23 Kolumna Co. Machine Construction . . 15,000,000 7,482,832 50 A. S. Lavrov (Gatchina factory) 500,000 176,741 35 Petrovsk Cotton & Textile Mfg. Co. . . 1,200,000 679,719 57 Stodol Woolen Co. of Barishnikov Sons 3,500,000 1,849,735 53 Emil Zindel Mfg. Co 9,000,000 2,962,551 33 S. I. Chepelev Sons, Perfumery Co. . . . 800,000 455,917 57 While foraging in these financial columns one may as wTell cite some figures throwing light on the earn ings of Russian banking capital: Per cent. of Capital Net Profits annual in Rubles in Rubles profit Russo-French Com. Bank Petrograd Branch 18,000,000 4,296,210 24 Azov-Don Commercial Bank 60,000,000 19,256,930 32 Russian Com'l & Ind. Bank 35,000,000 13,328,063 38 Petrograd Uchetrin & Ssudrin Bank . . 30,000,000 12,963,275 43 Russian Bank for Foreign Trade 60,000,000 18,187,089 30 Nijni-Novgorod-Samara Land Bank . . 9,010,500 1,712,133 10 Even without the ruble's loss of purehasirig4iower a general increase of wages was an altogether proper consequence of the Revolution, for it was im possible that free men should consent to be paid such a pittance as the majority of the Russian workers had received. The manufacturers quickly realized their changed plight and offered little resistance to the doubling or trebling of wages. Here and there, however, the workers pushed up their pay to a pre posterous figure. Day-laborers employed in peat- 138 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION cutting in a certain district demanded a thousand rubles per month. The loaders at Tsaritzuin on the lower Volga forced up their pay to thirty-three rubles for a six-hour day ! The workers in one con cern employing five thousand hands concluded that, as they were earning eight rubles a day more than before the Revolution, they had long been done out of this sum by their employers ; so they claimed for each man eight rubles a day back pay for the last three years, — in all a bagatelle of thirty-six million rubles ! Their delegation brought thirteen sacks in which to take away the money, put the staff of the concern under guard in the offices, and left with the avowed intention of returning next day to get the money or else tie up the members of the staff in the sacks and throw them into the Neva. Word was gotten to the Minister of Labor, who brought the men to see the absurdity of their demands and the impropriety of their methods. They withdrew their claim and released the staff and the factory went on as before, the cordial relationship between the man agement and workmen not having suffered in the least ! Yet in a factory near Nijni Novgorod as late as April women and children worked twelve hours for from 20 to 90 kopeks a day. In September I found women in a soap-factory in Kazan earning only 1\'-2 rubles daily, with, however, the privilege of buy ing bread at the old price. A big oil man in Baku confessed to me that, although the wages of the seventy thousand laborers in the Baku oil industry had gone up 460% since the outbreak of the war, the rise in the cost of living had been still greater. THE REVOLUTION AND LABOR 139 In Sormova the work people declared to me that they wrere riot living so well as they had lived six months earlier. However this may be, it is certain a decline in productivity per man set in very soon after the Revolution and presently reached a truly calamitous figure. Having chased off the scene the heavy- handed foreman who had been wont to bully and drive them, the workers were a little disposed to behave like the pupils of a martinet teacher when that teacher is out of the school room. Generally tJBae_ffiages were substituted for piece wages and the employees were not overscrupulous in their use of the time the employer had paid for. Not only was labor interspersed with tea-drinking, smoking, chatting, and talking politics, but, whenever the men felt like it, they held a meeting at the employer's expense. The boss who interfered was likely to be ridden out of the works in a wheelbarrow. Within a fortnight after the Revolution the Petrograd Association of Manufacturers declared that the workers presented demands which could not be sat isfied, violence was often resorted to, and produc tion was disorganized, as a result of which the pro ductivity of the factories had fallen to a low figure. It therefore was resolved to appeal to the Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates, pointing out the urgent necessity of taking immediate measures to reestablish normal life in the factories, and in par ticular the necessity of having the representatives of the Soviet visit the factories periodically in order to impress upon the workers the impossibility of such a state of affairs. 140 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION Before the Seventh Convention of the Cadet party on May 25th Kutler, solicitor of the coal-mine operators of the Donetz Basin, declared: In the great majority of industrial enterprises there is a sharp fall in production. This fall is sometimes ex pressed by 20, 30, and 40 per cent. There are very often cases in Petrograd where the industrial enterprises produce only 40 or even 30 per cent, of their former production. In individual cases this fall in production is expressed in still higher figures. I may point to one factory which at the present time produces 10 per cent, of its former products, using the same number of workers. More impartial, no doubt, is the report made to the combined executive committees of the Soviets by Cherevanin on August 1st: If we look at figures we see the following situation. In the south of Russia out of 64 blast furnaces only 42 are working, producing only 75 per cent, of their normal out put. Out of 98 Martin's furnaces only 67 are working, also producing 75 per cent. The June program was executed only to the extent of 65 per cent, while in July still less will be done. In the Central district the situa tion is not any better. Before the Moscow Conference near the end of August General Kornilov stated that the output of the gun plants and the shell plants had declined 60 per cent, as compared with the last three months of the old regime, while that of the aeroplane factories had fallen off 80 per cent. In August and September the most frequent esti mate of the loss of productivity given me was 50 per cent. In Saratov a labor leader estimated pro- THE REVOLUTION AND LABOR 141 ductivity as 60 or 70 below normal and still declin ing. Coal-miners in the Donetz basin were 36 per cent, less effective than they were a year earlier. The best showing was that of an American company near Moscow which followed American ideals in handling its men and by December had brought pro duction up to 70 per cent, of the old figure. Labor leaders admitted the slump, but insisted that labor should not bear all the blame. Part of it was due to the deterioration of machinery (there being great difficulty in replacement) and to irreg ularity in the supply of raw materials. So far as the men were responsible for it, they looked upon it as only a natural reaction from the forced pace at wliich they formerly worked. Some labor men think that employers are sabotag ing industry in order to bring about a situation which would favor their regaining their former control. At the end of May a delegation of miners from the Donetz region point out that all repair of machines has ceased. No supports are set in the mines. Stocks of coal and coke are hidden away. Mines are allowed to be flooded. Labor leaders suspect that, under plea of inability to obtain sufficient raw ma terial, some manufacturers are trying to get rid of their present labor force in order to build up a new force on their own terms, after labor has experi enced a season of unemployment. They dare not reply to their laborers' demands with a lock-out, for then their factories would be reopened without them, but they may sabotage their production with im punity. The Belgian mission observes: "There are employers who, instead of combating dis- 142 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION order in their workshops, leave it alone, as if they hoped that extreme disorder in production would achieve their purpose and obtain for them again the power which they have lost. ' ' * I noticed in talking over the situation with Rus sian employers that they were more philosophical and less exasperated than I should expect American employers to be in hke circumstances. Their serene confidence that the disease "would soon run its course" may have been based upon their intention to create a situation which would "bring labor to its. senses." In various other directions labor demonstrated its new control over conditions. Within four months after the Revolution the eight-hjour_jvorking day prevailed nearly everywhere and in the larger cities office-workers generally got their day down to six hours. Even the servant girls caught the infection and demanded an eight-hour day as well as certam days "off." The employer in many cases lost the power to "fire." He could get rid of an undesired working- man only with the consent of the factory committee. In case, owing to lack of raw material, it was neces sary to lay off some workers the organized em ployees, not the employer, decided which should be dispensed with. Naturally those dismissed were the least popular rather than the least efficient. There were cases in which labor dictated whom the capitalist should employ. Here, for example, are some of the terms of a collective agreement which the representatives of the hundred large em- i Vandervelde, Three Aspects of the Russian Revolution, p. 109. THE REVOLUTION AND LABOR 143 ploying oil firms at Baku felt obliged to enter into about the end of September. The spokesman of the employers said: They ask that we grant leave on pay for a certain period to a sick employee. Most of us are doing that already. They stipulate that on dismissal an employee shall receive a month's pay for every year he has been in our service, Agreed. They demand that no workman be dismissed without the consent of a committee representing the men. That 's all right. They require that we take on new men from a list submitted by them. That's reasonable enough. They know far better than we can whether or not a fellow is safe to work alongside of in a dangerous business like ours. But when they demand control over the hiring and firing of all our employees, — foremen, superintendents, and managers as well as workmen, — we balk". We don 't see how we can yield that point without losing the control essen tial to discipline and efficiency. Yet if we don't sign to night, they threaten to strike. Dismissal pay was another conquest the revolu tionary proletariat were beginning to make. Under the old regime the Russian employer was legally bound to pay his dismissed employee wages for two weeks beyond the term of employment. It was a sop to the workingmen to make up to them for not having the right to strike and, of course, it was valueless under the tsar. After the Revolution, however, there was an endeavor to enforce this law and to give the dismissed workman a legal right to a month's wages instead of a fortnight's. In a number of industries the month of leeway was estab lished by joint agreement. In the typographic in dustry masters and men agreed to a three-months' 144 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION minimum term of employment. Some groups of workers called for a much broader margin of secur ity. As we have seen, the oil-men demanded and secured a month's dismissal pay for every year of service. A large American manufacturing concern was asked by its men to pay three months' dismissal wages for every year of service. On the break-up of the office force of a certain American life insur ance company, the men put in a claim for six months' pay all around. Other benefits some groups of workers gained were : a fixed annual vacation of two to four weeks with pay; free medical and hospital treatment not only for injuries and maladies arising out of the work, but for all illness of the employee or of his family; and the continuance of wages for an in valid employee, even if his incapacitation in no way arose out of the industry. Of course all these con quests have disappeared in a new regime that has no place for the employing capitalist. Bourgeoisie at work D. Antonov Commander of the Red Guard in the November Revolution CHAPTER XIV THE DECOMPOSITION OP THE ARMY TIE demoralization, break-up, and final melt ing away of the enormous Russian Army — all within the space of nine or ten months — is surely one of the most amazing spectacles history offers. In all the annals of wars and armies there is noth ing to be compared with it. It is customary to offer for the phenomenon a very simple explanation, viz., vicious propaganda, whereas it was, in fact, the outcome of the operation of several factors. Immediately upon the outbreak of the Revolution a cleavage took place in the army between the old- regime officers and the common soldiers and sailors. Under the tsar the officers of the army were drawn from the families of the privileged class. The young men were put in the cadet schools, where they were subjected to a very elaborate system of espion age, and then finished in the special schools of the various branches of the army. All those youths who were liberal in tendency or showed an unwhole some sympathy with the common people were weeded out and sent home. It was the "hard-boiled" lads who were retained and given commands. They were trained in a brutal discipline, taught to serve the tsar rather than the people, and expected after their period of service, provided that their service was found competent, to retire to Petrograd or Mos- 145 146 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION cow and there pass the rest of their lives at ease and in the most delightful social enjoyment. How could the common soldiers believe that such officers in their hearts wished well to the Revolu tion? Colonel Robins, of the American Red Cross, who spoke for the Allied cause before many units in the different arms of the Russian service during the autumn of 1917, found in one barracks a general in command of six regiments of the general's division, the rest being on the front. The general was a count and something like 80 per cent, of the soldiers in the six regiments were from the villages of his estate. If the purposes of the Revolution were ac complished, this general would lose the things for which he had been educated to fight, and he would lose not only them, but also his title, his lands, and his power! If the Revolution were a success, these common soldiers would get the land of the estate belonging to their commanding general. How could there be any moral unity between such commanding officers and such soldiers? One would err in supposing that the Revolution at first grated harshly upon the inbred .loyalties of the officers of aristocratic origin, but that, as time went on, such officers became more reconciled to the new order. It is probable that the current of tend ency ran just the other way. No doubt more officers were friendly to the Revolution in April, when one could look forward to a liberal or bourgeois govern ment, than in September, by which time it had be come clear that the Soviets, reflecting the will of the common people, had the whip hand and intended to effect vast changes in the distribution of wealth THE DECOMPOSITION OP THE ARMY 147 and the position of the propertied. Broad-minded, indeed, must be that officer of pomieshtchik affilia tion who kept his early enthusiasm for the Revolu tion after it had become apparent that it would cer tainly beggar him! Another factor explaining the crumbling away of Russia's military power was the wide diffusion of the "defeatist" doctrine. This doctrine had two aspects. One was the conviction, widely held by revolutionary workers and peasants and the general revolutionary leadership, that until the autocracy had been defeated in some foreign war it could not be overthrown in Russia; and that therefore every lover of his people, no matter how generally patri otic, ought to wish for the defeat of the tsar's armies. This defeatist doctrine was supplemented by a doctrine of defeatism that was philosophical and semi-religious. We see it in the non-resistance teaching of Tolstoy, the idea that the use of force is anti-Christian and always results in injury to the simple people of the land. Owing to the lodgment of these doctrines in the minds of a great many Russians the Russian people never developed so strong and general a will-to-win-the-w7ar as most of the other belligerent peoples. Another element in the disintegration of the Rus sian army, and of the Russian state inasmuch as an effective army is indispensable to the maintenance of such a state, was the widespread opinion that the war was the tsar's war, undertaken for imperialistic purposes. In the general revolutionary mind the war was cursed as the tsar's imperialistic war for the purpose of obtaining the Straits of the Dardan- 148 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION elles and putting the Greek cross above Santa Sophia in Constantinople. I have already shown how Army Order No. 1, is sued not by the Provisional Government but by the Soviet, and intended not for the entire army but for the Petrograd garrison, was distributed all along the front and resulted in every unit forming its committee.1 Within a week Guchkov, Minister of War, issued an order directing that in place of titles such forms of address be used as "Mr. General," "Mr. Cap tain," etc., that soldiers be addressed as "you" in stead of "thou"; and doing away with restrictions which forbade common soldiers to smoke in the streets and in public places, frequent clubs and meet ings, ride inside a tram-car, and belong to societies for political purposes. One of the first acts of Kerensky as Minister of War was to issue an army order which became known as "the Soldiers' Charter." The clauses most doubtful from the point of view of mihtary discipline are the following: (2) Every person serving in the Army has the right to belong to any political, national, religious, economic, or professional organization, society, or union. (3) Every person serving in the Army has the right, i "Order No. 1 was not communicated to any unit nor to any staff. Nevertheless, as soon as it appeared, it was applied in the Petrograd garrison from which it spread with lightning-like speed over all Russia and through the army. In 1905 when I was returning in mid-December from Manchuria I received in the station at Krasno yarsk a like order signed liy the Soviet of delegates of the third battalion of railroad reservists. On comparing the two documents I found that Order No. 1 was the exact copy of that of Krasnoyarsk in 1905." — Uen-ral Monkevitz, La Decomposition de I'armee Russe, p. 38. THE DECOMPOSITION OP THE ARMY 149 when off duty, to utter freely and publicly, orally, or in writing, or in print, his political, religious, social and other views. (12) The obligatory salute ... is abolished and is re placed for all persons serving in the Army by a voluntary and mutual salute. . . . (18) The right of internal self-government, punishment and control in certain strictly defined matters (Army or ders, No. 213 and 274) belongs to the elected army organi zations, committees and courts. The main defect of this ' ' charter ' ' lay in the fact that it conferred "rights" without defining "duties." Kerensky boasted that it bestowed on Russian soldiers privileges such as were not enjoyed by any other soldier in the world. In view of what befell it is not likely that any other people will be in a hurry to deprive the Russian soldiers of this title to distinction. In theory the committees, which soon existed for every grade of army unit great or small, were to look after the soldier's moral and material welfare, protect his legal rights, and see that the men were not moved about by their generals, like pawns on a chessboard, in order to promote some counter revolutionary attempt. Nobody intended that they should meddle with strictly military matters. But, given the distrust the rank and file felt for their officers, and given the ascendency the bold and ready talker was bound to gain over ignorant and illiterate men, it was inevitable that before long the com mittees were debating such topics as the relief of the front-line units, the amount of time to be de voted to exercises and manoeuvers, the reliability of 150 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION the commanding officer, etc. As a Russian general on the Rumanian sector of the front puts it: As one man the whole army talked, talked, talked. . . . In our army above 40,000 men were members of commit tees and they rendered no service save talking. . . . Al though overwhelmed with the preparation of the July of fensive, our Staff was flooded with deputations from the different military units making futile requests and com plaints. Often the committees addressed the commanding general "demanding" the displacement of certain officers on the ground that they were "loyal to the old regime" or "do not recognize the liberties conquered by the peo ple." As to exercises, manosuvers, and the improvement of our positions, one no longer thought of them. In some regi ments the committees had fixed the day's work at six, five, or even four hours. There were cases when whole regiments refused to quit their quarters in order to relieve their com rades in the front line. It was only after long parleys that one persuaded them to obey. The officers, deprived of all authority, were powerless to contend with this state of things.1 An altogether different cause of demoralization was the Bolshevik propaganda, — agitators and lit erature — which went forward rapidly from May on. Their contention was that the war was "capitalistic" and that soldiers ought to fight no more until the secret treaties made by the tsar had been revised and the Allies had accepted the principle of peace "without annexations or indemnities." Under the influence of such teachings the soldiers became at first sullen and suspicious, at last savage and fero- i Monkevitz, op. cit. THE .DECOMPOSITION OP THE ARMY 151 cious toward the oflScers who sought to make them fight. In a speech before the Moscow Soviet on March 12, 1918, Lenin said in reply to the charge of hav ing disorganized the Russian army: Had it not been fon individuals who, like Kerensky, called themselves socialists but, as a matter of fact, were hiding in their pockets secret treaties by which the Russian peo ple were bound to fight until 1918 — then, perhaps, the Rus sian army and the Russian Revolution might have escaped from the intolerable trials and humiliations which we had to endure. If in those days all power had passed to the Soviets, if the compromisers, instead of supporting Ker ensky and sending the army into battle, had proposed then a democratic peace, the army would not have been ruined. They ought to have told the soldiers: "Stand still; hold in one hand your rifle and in the other the torn-up imperial istic covenant and a new proposal of general peace to the whole democratic world; do not break the front." Thus the army and the Revolution could have been saved.1 The factors in the demoralization of the aoldiers appear very clearly in the reports of the representa tives of the front before the Central Executive Com mittee of the Soviets on July 29th. The delegate from the Tenth Army said: . . . There is such a mood of weariness in the regiments as a result of three years of war, and such unwillingness to die, that it is extremely difficult to inspire them to heroic 1 1 have often been asked whether anything could have been done to avert the rotting of the Russian Army and Russia's abandonment of the war. I have always replied: "If in July, 1917, the Allies had issued the declaration of war aims which they permitted President Wilson to make on January 8, 1918, it is possible that Russia might have stayed with the Allies." 152 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION action. In the heart of every soldier from the very be ginning of the war, and since the revolution especially, the dream of peace is invincibly powerful. And if some part was played by the agitation of certain politicial par ties and individuals in this longing for peace that part, however, has been secondary. This agitation simply chimed in with pre-existing sentiment of the army. . . . As to the higher command its definite counter-revolution ary tendency is unquestionable. Being extremely incap able, the higher command opposes all the measures of the government aiming to strengthen the soldiers' organiza tions. . . . The representative of the Ninth Army, who fol lowed him, spoke in like vein : Approximately the same thing happened with us also. The same weariness, the same superiority in technical equipment and numbers over the enemy, the same counter revolutionary tendencies of the command. All the slogans thrown at us from the rear were taken in a very literal and primitive manner, and produced a most original reaction. The revolution was accepted not as a new system but as an end to all the hardships which a state imposes. Freedom meant the opportunity to do anything that one pleased. Equality was understood in a most anar chistic manner. Soldiers and officers must be equal in ab solutely everything. There were even proposals in the committee that all, beginning with the company cook and ending with the War Minister, should receive the same pay, about seven rubles a month. Even the fact that the members of the committees used automobiles in traveling about on their official duties caused protest. Some said: "What kind of equality is it when he rides and I have to walk?" The slogan "Combating 'the bourgeoisie" was THE DECOMPOSITION OP THE ARMY 153 taken in literal and simple fashion : anyone who was placed in better condition was a "bourgeois," a soldier who lived in a better dugout was a "bourgeois." Soldiers in the artillery were considered absolute "bourgeois" as they were somewhat removed from the front-line trenches. The delegate from the Fifth Army declared: During the first revolutionary days all of the army was engulfed by a wave of enthusiasm — now it has gone quite to the bad. The cause is partly disillusionment, owing to the tired and ignorant mass of soldiers having expected from the revolution an immediate conclusion of peace. The Pravda L and the Trench Pravda undoubtedly played a part in the deterioration. The gendarmes and the policemen " played their part as well. They were difficult to deal with, for the things that they advocated met the desires of the weary deteriorating army. The representative of the Twelfth Army observed : . . . The principal causes of all these conditions are general. They are weariness, lack of replacements and the experiences of three years of war. The problem was complicated by the presence of gen, darmes and police propaganda. Gendarmes and police men hiding behind Bolshevik slogans were the leaders and creators of disorganization. They were aided in many things by the Trench Pravda, which flouted the orders of the revolutionary democracy. The critical attitude of the men toward the war presently gave rise to the strangest happenings. i Official organ of the Bolshevik party. 2 These minions of the old regime were promptly sent to the front by the Provisional Government, but they proved to be a most per nicious influence in the army. 154 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION The Galician offensive launched by Kerensky on July 1st opened with brilliant success and thousands of prisoners were taken. But at a critical moment a regiment which had orders to support a threatened point deliberately turned its back upon the enemy and retired, thereby obliging the neighboring sec tions of the front to give way. Retirement degen erated into mad flight and far to the rear mobs of brutalized soldiers inflicted horrors upon women and children. Things had now come to such a pass that the chief preparation for an offensive consisted in per suading these childlike soldiers of the necessity of fighting in order to bring about an early peace. There were many cases in which, when the moment came to go "over the top," only the officers and a few soldiers fired by their example attacked, the rest refusing ; and at the moment these heroes threw themselves upon the enemy those remaining behind shot them in the back ! One general, having heard that one of his regi ments meditated just this thing in the morrow's attack, gathered the men about him and said: "I have heard say that among the soldiers of this valiant regiment there are cowards who have the intention of shooting their officers at the moment of attack. Know that I will not survive such an in famy. I shall be with you when the assault begins and I order you to send your traitorous bullets against me before taking the life of your officers. Let my body bear witness to your cowardice!" At these words the conscience of the soldiers awakened. Troubled voices were lifted, affirming that no such THE DECOMPOSITION OP THE ARMY 155 thing would occur in this regiment. He left after having had their promise that there would be no treason and, in fact, this regiment fought well. By autumn save for rare units the fight was all out of the Russian Army. Dreaming only of peace and home, the soldiers had lost all mihtary bearing. Dirty, unkempt, hands in pockets and a cigarette in the mouth, these slouching men with an insolent, cynical expression on their faces looked more like brigands than citizens defending their country. The soldiers had come to feel for their officers the hate they felt for the bourgeoisie. At first the officers regarded the soldiers as misled children, but in time they returned hate for hate. Just here we see ger minating that ferocity which later will characterize the Red Terror and the White Terror. After the Kornilov attempt, which most of the officers ap proved, the gulf widened and thenceforth the officers were called "Kornilovists."1 Then fraternalization came in to destroy wiiat i On September 16th the Central Executive Committee of the Soviets appealed to the soldiers not to lynch their officers. It said in part: ". . . Soldiers of the Russian Revolution. Restrain your anger. There should be no violence and lawless killing of officers. Among them the great majority are our comrades in the Revolution. And the counter-revolutionary enemy, while jeering at you, will try to set you on your comrades — the Revolutionary officers. In the dis orderly unlawful violence there may be spilling of blood, blood of the innocent, to the joy of the enemies of the Revolution and for the benefit of the German General Staff. Your representatives are vigi lantly watching that the traitors should receive their deserved punishment. "Every one of the traitors — from a general to a soldier — will an swer in court for the rebellion against the Revolutionary government. "The Revolution will punish the traitors, the interests of the Revo lution demand that the ascertainment of guilt should be by means of a public trial. "In the interest of the Revolution abstain from unlawful violence." 156 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION vestiges of soldier morale yet remained. No longer were there patrols or reconnaissances. The Russian soldiers would have deemed it treachery to attack the enemy. The German and Austrian commanders, delighted to take advantage of this mood, formed in each company a special squad, well provided with beer, charged with the duty of entering into relations with the Russians opposite them. Its members re ceived in advance detailed instructions as to what to talk about and what ideas to spread among the Russians. They had quantities of Russian litera ture "made in Germany" which they distributed. They provided letter-boxes and offered to convey letters from the Russian soldiers to their families in the occupied provinces. Naturally by this means they learned everything they wished to know.1 Prom the moment of entering on this phase the i On May 13th Izvestia. printed the following : Yesterday in the newspaper Pravda a resolution was printed which was adopted by the Bolshevik Conference regarding fraternization of soldiers in the trenches. This resolution says in part: "The party of Bolsheviks will especially support the mass fraternization of sol diers of all warring countries at the front, which has already begun, and will aim to turn this elementary exhibition of the solidarity of the oppressed into a conscious and better organized movement for transferring government authority in all the warring countries to the revolutionary proletariat." We consider it necessary to call the at tention of the comrades to this resolution and to warn them that in this resolution is hidden a danger to the cause of the defense of the Revolution at the front. We receive daily from the front telegrams and resolutions about fraternization, and everywhere comrades emphasize that fraterniza tion in the trenches is a dark and dangerous affair. Under the guise of fraternization spying sometimes takes place. Often agents of the German staff, dressed as soldiers, come to fraternize. Those ready to support fraternization take upon themselves a great responsibility for its possible consequences. Against these tactics we warn comrade soldiers, for they will have to pay a great price for them — their lives and their blood! How well events fulfilled this prophecy! THE DECOMPOSITION OP THE ARMY 157 Russian soldiers at the front led an easy life. Whereas formerly their chief desire had been to get to the rear, now they coveted a position at the front, for they were in no danger and had nothing to do, while in the rear there was work to be done in connection with the care of the animals and the getting up of supplies. The instituting of commissaries, which the Pro visional Government, following the example of the French Convention of 1793, sent to the various armies to serve as intermediaries between the com mander and the troops, did not avail to arrest decay. These men were usually tried revolutionaries with a Siberian record, and if any one was entitled to the confidence of the common soldiers it was they. If the root of their trouble had been suspicion of their officers, the fervent and patriotic appeals of these commissaries to fight for the safeguarding of the Revolution against the Kaiser might have stayed its course. But the propaganda against going on with the war fell in too neatly with the soldier's natural desires to be resisted. The Russian is as brave as any other man, but, like all human beings, he feels a distinct preference for remaining alive if he per ceives no worth-while end to be gained by his letting himself be killed. So the time came when the men were as ready to murder a commissary as to murder an officer.1 1 Izvestia of September 15th describes the end of Feodor Linde who instigated the demonstration of the Petrograd garrison on May 3d and who afterward as assistant commissary sought to stem the tide of insubordination at the front. "Linde was killed by infuriated soldiers of the 433d Regiment, of the 11th Infantry Division. This division, after a gas attack of the enemy, refused to drill. Linde went to that division in order to 158 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION Nor did the heroic expedient of the "Women's Battalion of Death" created in May by the woman veteran Maria Botchkareva have the electrifying effect hoped for. It was expected that, set ablaze by the spectacle of three hundred of their sisters going into deadly battle, the Russian front would rise and rush forward as one man. What happened was that the men of the regiment would not advance at the "zero" hour (3 A. M., July 8th), but spent hours in debating whether or not to attack. Finally, late in the afternoon, the officers and best men of the regiment joined with the women in a costly but successful attack. They took the first, second, and third enemy lines, but found themselves in an ex posed position and menaced by counter-attack. The commander telephoned them to hold on, as he was sending the Ninth Corps to their succor. Hours passed, but the aid failed to arrive. The Ninth persuade the soldiers to obey orders, but did not succeed in his mis sion. In view of the complete decomposition of the regiments of this division Linde demanded the following day that the division should surrender the instigators of disorder. The soldiers surrendered twenty-eight instigators, who were placed under arrest. Four com panies who showed resistance were disbanded. Linde made a speech to each company in which he described Russia's difficult position and dwelt upon the duty of the soldier. While so doing two battalions of the 433d Regiment gathered up their arms and sent a delegation to Linde which invited him to visit them. Linde ordered both bat talions to line up, and an hour later entered an automobile and started out on his way to those battalions. When the automobile came out on a forest road shots were fired in quick succession from behind the trees. Several hundred soldiers ran out on the road, and surrounded the automobile. A small Cossack convoy which was escorting the automobile scattered. Linde left the automobile and attempted to reach the nearest earthen hut, but at the door of the hut fell under the blows. The mob engaged in mockery over the corpse, fired at it and stuck bayonets into it. In the evening of the same day the same regiment murdered the Chief of the Division, General Hirschfeld." [Signed] Voitinskt. THE DECOMPOSITION OP THE ARMY 159 Corps left its reserve billets and went forward till it came to the front-line Russian trenches. There it stopped and held a meeting to decide whether or not to go on. The officers implored the men to ad vance, as the calls for help from the Women's Bat talion became more insistent. There was no re sponse. The men declared themselves ready to re sist a German attack, but would engage in no offen sive operation. The women extricated themselves as best they could, having lost a third of their num ber. As the breathless, muddy, blood-bespatter-ed survivors one by one trekked back into their trenches, they found the Ninth Corps still debating whether or not to go to their relief ! In the end the Women's Battalion had to be ab ruptly disbanded in order to save its members from being lynched by the infuriated soldiers, who re garded its keeping up of hostilities against the Ger mans as delaying peace.1 In its final phase of demoralization the Russian Army simply disintegrates. Without permission, the soldier, taking haversack, rifle, and some clips of cartridges, demobilizes himself and starts for home. His uniform entitles him to- free transporta tion and bread at a nominal price, while in all the larger towns there are canteens for the soldier's ac commodation. In the winter of 1917-18 these men by tens of thousands stream along the railroads. The stations are packed. No train moves away from the front without every coupe, aisle, wash-room, vestibule, and platform being packed with soldiers. The men even cluster on the steps of the cars and i See Botchkareva's Yashka, Chapters XIV-XVI. 160 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION pile upon the roof until sometimes it gives way. Much has been made of the occasional brutalities committed by traveling soldiers against civilian pas sengers. With myriads of men in movement and authority crumbling, the wonder is that there were so few excesses.1 In the latter half of 1917 I traveled twenty thou sand miles in Russia without ever witnessing an act of violence. Our train crossing Russia and Siberia December 18-31 left Petrograd as it should, but at the first stop it was flooded with soldiers, most of whom accompanied us for the ensuing two weeks. In that time they had no chance to remove their clothing or wash or lie down or eat a square meal. Yet they endured all with patience, never invaded our coupe in which my comrade lay sick, and acted altogether in a very decent manner. 1 In traveling from Rostov-on-the-Don to Moscow in the last days of November, 1917, I entered the following in my diary: "Last night every car on the train, first- and second-class as well as thisd, was crowded. The coupes held as many as could sit down; the corridors were full of soldiers who would have to stand all night. The platforms and vestibules were packed, even the steps. Soldiers who had been waiting 1 don't know how many hours at a station could find no foothold on the train. Yet here we passengers in the 'Interna tional' sleeping-car were sitting warm in our coupes, eating our fill, sipping our tea, and lying down on a luxurious bed, while the sol diers who had been risking their lives for their country stood up all .night in tjie cold. Several of the berths were unoccupied, the corri dors were free, yet the soldiers did not break the glass in the door and let themselves in. They pounded often on the door and threatened to break in, but still they did not. Nothing whatever would have hap pened to them, I suppose, if they had forced the car door, but yet their respect for property was such they let us bourgeois enjoy in peace the luxury we enjoyed for no otlier reason than that we had the money to pay for it. The astonishing thing in this revolution is not the excesses of the masses, but that the masses in the absence of all restraining authority respect the rights of the possessing class as much as they do." Leon Trotzky People's Commissary of War Political manifestation in favor of the Soviet, July 1, 1917 CHAPTER XV THE JULY RIOTS ON July 16th, 17th and 18th there took place in Petrograd demonstrations and riots which opened a horrifying prospect of civil war and which had for a time a damaging effect upon the standing of the Bolshevist leaders. The facts as they may be gathered chiefly from the Cadet newspaper Ryech appear to be as follows. Early in the evening of July 16th automobiles and trucks filled with armed soldiers and workmen and frequently carrying machine-guns appear on the streets under banners bearing the words "Down with the Capitalist Ministers," "All Power to the Workers' and Peasants' Soviets." Soldiers halt passing automobiles and compel the chauffeurs to drive them about the city. On the Nevsky and other main streets meetings are held denouncing the Pro visional Government and the bourgeoisie. At sev eral of the great factories strikes are called and the workers march toward the central parts of the city. Meanwhile the garrison shows great uneasiness. At seven o'clock in the evening the Moscow Regi ment decides "to come out into the streets at the first call." Whose call? Nobody knows. The Third Machine-Gunners think of leaving their bar racks in a body, but are dissuaded by the Heavy Artillery Division located near by. The commander of the Grenadier Regiment reports at twenty min- 161 162 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION utes past eight that his soldiers are compelling their officers to come out with them into the street. The First Machine-Gun Regiment leaves its barracks in battle array. The Fourth Regiment of Don Cos sacks ride out into the street. Soldiers in an armed automobile dash up to the quarters of the Semeonov Regiment and vainly urge the men to come out. A similar party visits an automobile unit, demanding trucks. When asked on whose order the trucks are to be furnished and for what purpose, the soldiers cannot give an answer. One of their number, a grenadier, explains that the Cossacks have lashed with whips a grenadier regiment at the front and that the Government intends to disband the guard regiments, incorporate their members into line regi ments, and send them into the trenches. He con cludes that the "capitalists" in the Cabinet must be ousted. When the automobilists insist on knowing what the soldiers mean to do with the trucks, they are told that the intention is to go to Mars Field and thence to the Tauride Palace. After that "we will see what to do. ' ' At eight o'clock a band in automobiles with ma chine-guns descends upon the Warsaw Station in tending to seize Kerensky, the Minister of War, be fore his departure for the front. They are twenty minutes too late. Soon after a party present them selves at the apartment of Prince Lvov, Prime Min ister, demanding the surrender of the ministers with him and stating that they are requisitioning govern ment automobiles. Tseretelli goes out to speak to them, but they have disappeared with his automo bile. THE JULY RIOTS 163 With armed men "joy-riding" about the capital on' one of the midsummer "white nights" for which this latitude is famed, clashes are inevitable. All that is needed is for busybodies to tell the occupants of one automobile that the occupants of some ap proaching automobile are "counter-revolutionary." In av casual don't-care spirit the machine-guns will be loosed, and there will be killed and wounded. In some places shooting occurs because street crowds and soldiers attempt to hold up these '"joy-riders." Shortly before midnight a party of anarchists seize the printing plant of the Novoye Vremya, stop the work on the newspaper, and cause to be printed an appeal of their own which says : ' ' Let the people come out armed and demand the over throw of the Provisional Government and the con fiscation of all bourgeois newspapers. Comrades, our side has the physical strength, therefore let us without hesitation take into our hands all factories, shops, land, and other tools of production. . . . Comrades, forward without fear! Long live the social revolution!" They leave the newspaper plant about two o 'clock in the morning. At about nine o 'clock the following evening bodies of soldiers and armed workers fill the streets about the Tauride Palace, now the head quarters of the Soviets. At the demand of the crowd speakers from the Central Executive Committee ad dress them. Tcheidze and Voitinsky, who urge them to disperse to their homes, are ill-received. Trotsky is heartily cheered when he says: "It is necessary to turn over all power to the Soviets of Workers', Soldiers' and Peasants' Delegates. How- 164 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION ever, in order to attain this end it is necessary to use peaceful measures without resort to arms." At midnight the Central and the Petrograd Exec utive Committees meet. Tseretelli and Dan insist that an attempt is being made to force the Soviets at the point of the bayonet to take over all power in the country. Most significant, however, are the remarks of Kokoshkin: "Criminal elements are involved in these disorders. The workers in the Petrograd post-office went on strike. A body of soldiers over forty years of age came to Kerensky demanding permission to return to their homes, but were refused. As soon as one goes into the street one sees that the slogans "All power to the Soviets" are an afterthought. It is not these slogans that have brought the crowd into the streets. Go out and you will hear that the street con versations are not about the rule of the Soviets, but about furloughs, about the Cadet ministers. ... It is necessary to settle the post-office strike and to deal with the question of the forty-year-old soldiers, who are a counter-revolutionary element thinking only of their own skins. Some light on the meaning of events may be gained from the minutes of the meeting of the Workers' Section of the Petrograd Soviet, for this is the meet ing in which the Bjolsligsiks for the first time find themselves in the majority. When it becomes known that soldiers are marching upon the palace, it is moved that the meeting be adjourned and that the members scatter about the city in order to dissuade the workers from coming out. In the ensuing debate Kamenev (Bolshevik) argues, "Once the masses come out into the street, we must give their action a peaceful and organized character." Weinstein THE JULY RIOTS 165 (Menshevik) taunts the Bolsheviks with their inabil ity to restrain the regiments from coming out. Trotsky insists that the day's events are the con sequences of the Government's policy and of the mistakes on the part of those parties which see the counter-revolution threatened from the Left; while, as a matter of fact, it is coming on from the Right. Kamenev offers a resolution that the workers' sec tion favors the taking over of all power by the All- Russian Congress of Soviets and that a com mittee of twenty-five members be elected which shall act in conjunction with the Petrograd and Central Executive Committees, while the rest of the mem bers return to their districts and endeavor to give the movement a peaceful and organized character. After stormy debate the Mensheviks and Social Rev olutionaries leave the hall and the resolution is passed by the Bolsheviks. Much more alarming are the events of the follow ing day. Bodies of troops arrive from Oranien- baum and Peterhof in order to demonstrate. Sail ors, said to be 30,000 in number, come over from Kronstadt, the naval base, and march to the Bolshe vik headquarters, where they call out Lenin for a speech, to Mars Field to visit the graves of the vic tims of the March Revolution and thence to the Tau ride Palace. Regiments march and bodies of work ers "from the Viborg side." Sometimes they are fired upon with rifles and machine-guns from the upper stories and roofs of the houses, and of course they reply with shots. Altogether 56 persons are killed and 650 wounded. The most serious incident is occasioned by shots directed at a troop of Cos- 166 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION sacks which have been ordered to the protection of the Tauride Palace. The shots come close to an infantry regiment just then debouching from a neigh boring street. Supposing that the Cossacks are shooting at them, the soldiers fire a volley which re sults in 6 Cossacks killed and 25 wounded. An immense concourse surround the Tauride Pal ace, where the Executive Committee is in confer ence with the Socialist ministers. Tchernov, Min ister of Agriculture, on going out to pacify the crowd, is jeered, then seized and placed in an auto mobile, the declared intention being to hold him as a hostage. Trotsky, however, makes a speech which brings about Tchernov 's release. At about five o'clock the C. E. C. (Central Ex ecutive Committee) and the Peasants' E. C. (Exec utive Committee) meet, and ninety delegates from Petrograd factories and the Peterhof Soviet are ad mitted who "demand" that all power be taken over by the Soviets and who denounce appeals of the C. E. C. which stigmatize the participants in the street demonstrations as "counter-revolutionists." Meanwhile Government and Soviet have decided to disarm individuals in the streets and to stop the circulation of armed automobiles. In the evening cadets from the military schools, Cossacks, and other cavalrymen are assembled in Palace Square and thence penetrate to strategic points in the city. But after all force plays only a small part in terminating the disorders, for they cease of themselves. It rains and water is deadly to demonstrations. In the words of Miliukov, uttered three weeks later before the Convention of the Cadet party : THE JULY RIOTS 167 Finally the government of non-resistance felt a physical necessity to defend itself. And the Soviets, who came into a state of complete panic and had experienced several minutes equal to a long history, several minutes which brought them from the realization of their might to the thought of complete impotence — the Soviets began to in sist on the use of force. Force appeared. Hastily invalid soldiers came. Volunteers from the public began to organ ize. Finally came the Cossacks, and after the Cossacks — the insurrection having already died out itself, becoming a victim of its own ideal emptiness — came the regiments from the front. But they found no enemy to oppose. The re bellion was defeated by the force of its own absurdity be fore the armed force defeated it. . . . Following the line which the Provisional Govern ment and the dominant element in the Soviets — Men sheviks and Social Revolutionaries — promptly took, all Allied newspaper correspondents and writers have presented these July troubles as the outcome of a Bolshevik plot, — as, in a word, an abortive coup of a minority faction aiming to seize power. The impartial historian finds it difficult to accept this view, for the following reasons. If the Bolsheviks had been lashing the masses and soldiers to rise they naturally would have used their organ the Pravda. But the files of the Pravda contain no hint of the coming storm. The issues of Saturday and Sunday, the fourteenth and fifteenth, are commonplace. The Pravda never appears on Monday. The issue of Tuesday contains no appeal to the people, not even an account of the stirring events of Monday. On the first page there is a blank space as if something had been set up, but at the last minute it had been decided not to print it. 168 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION Lenin, Trotsky, Zinoviev, Kamenev, and other Bolshevik leaders issued no appeals, did not urge the workers or the soldiers to seize the Government. On the contrary, Trotsky in his addresses from the steps of the Tauride Palace urged them to return to their homes and barracks. When on June 23d during the first Convention of Soviets the Bolsheviks planned to conduct a demon stration the slogans of which should be "Down with the Capitalist Ministers!" "All Power to the Sov iets!" the Convention adopted a resolution disap proving such a demonstration. Accordingly the Bol sheviks decided to give up their plan. The only ele ment that protested this action was the Anarchists. They denounced the Bolsheviks as "traitors." Had there been an organized plan to overthrow the Government attempts would have been made to seize strategic points — vital ganglia in a modern capital — telephone exchange, telegraph offices, rail road stations, banks, the ministries, and other gov ernment buildings. The fact is the only seizures of buildings during these days were the temporary taking over of a newspaper plant on two different occasions by anarchists and the capture of a small lighting-station, again by anarchists. Mrs. Williams, who in her book ' ' From Liberty to Brest-Litovsk" falls in with the Cadet theory that the July disorders were a Bolshevik clutch at power, in an article she published in Ryech at the time testi fies to the innocence of her Bolshevik colleagues in the Petrograd Duma. She writes : An appeal to the population must be issued in the name Woman's Battalion of Death guarding the Winter Palace The beginning of the July uprising in Petrograd THE JULY RIOTS 169 of the City Duma. The Bolsheviks begin to object. From all sides men shout at them: "Why do you object? Are you for what is now taking place in the streets?" No, no. They also are against it. But it is necessary to know what is going on. It is difficult to understand what the Bolsheviks fear. It is most likely that they became confused, they do not know whose voices are heard on the streets, their own or alien hostile voices. They sim ply became baffled. And suppose the troops are brought out on the streets by the counter-revolution? They have visions of it everywhere. The fundamental situation becomes outlined still more indubitably — that not a single one of the political parties represented in the City Duma wishes to accept the respon sibility for that blood which has been spilled during this night in the streets of Petrograd. A short appeal to the population is adopted by the City Duma unanimously, by all parties, from the Cadets to the Bolsheviks inclusive. "In the name of the happiness and welfare of our own country" the newly elected Duma ap peals to citizens to maintain calm, not to "spill blood." Three months later, in an addendum to his pam phlet "Can the Bolsheviks Hold the Governmental Power?" Lenin characterizes the July flurry as "the beginning of a civil war which was held back by the Bolsheviks within the limits of a beginning." At the end of July before a joint meeting of the Central Executive Committee and the Peasants' Executive Committee Trotsky said: Already on the July 15th, while we were having a meet ing of the Central Committee, we heard that an outbreak was being planned. This news spread through all the regiments like a spark. In spite of the fact that we were 170 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION well informed we did not know the source of these rumors. I affirm that the sailors and the workers did not know what was going on around the Tauride Palace. I made a speech there and I noticed that near the en trance was standing a crowd of scoundrels. I spoke about this to Comrade Lunacharsky and Comrade Riazanov. I told them that these are members of the "Okhrana," who are attempting to break into the Tauride Palace. When Tchernov came out these scoundrels behind the backs of the masses attempted to arrest Tchernov. When I ran out to them I noticed that there was a group of about ten people engaged in this dirty work. I could identify fhem in a crowd of ten thousand. When I attempted to tell this to the masses it was disclosed that not a single one of the workers or sailors knew them. The band scattered and Tchernov returned to the palace. Nobody knew about Ker ensky 's departure to the front and the attempt to arrest him could have come only from the front. The armed masses did not make an attempt to seize any political insti tution. If this point of view is accepted, then there was no armed rebellion. This proves that the movement was ele mentary and that counter-revolutionary elements got mixed up in it. We are accused of creating the moods of the masses. This is not true ; we are only attempting to formulate them. The masses took up arms because they knew about the counter-revolutionary attempts. Together with you we consider that this was a mistake. From the same platform Comrade Voitinsky (Menshevik) said that the Bolsheviks warned the masses against coming out. But when the masses came out we understood that it is our duty to introduce orderliness in this movement. We said to these masses: "Though your slogans are just, do not come out but return to your homes." Later Trotsky writes : x i The Russian Revolution, pp. 25-27. THE JULY RIOTS 171 The Central Executive Committee, elected at the June Congress and depending for support on the more back ward provinces, was pushing the Petrograd Soviet more and more into the background and was taking into its own hands even the conduct of purely Petrograd affairs. A conflict was inevitable. The workers and soldiers were exerting pressure from below, giving violent expression to their discontent with the official policy of the Soviet, and demanded from our party more drastic action. We con sidered that in view of the still backward condition of the provinces the hour for such action had not yet struck. In the ranks of our party, the attitude toward the events of July 16th 18th was perfectly definite. On the one hand there was the fear that Petrograd might become isolated from the more backward provinces ; on the other hand there was the hope that an active and energetic intervention of Petrograd might save the situation. The party propagan dists in the lower ranks went hand in hand with the masses and carried on an uncompromising agitation. There was still some hope that a demonstration of the revolutionary masses might break down the obstinate doc- trinarism of the Coalitionists and compel them to realize at last that they could only maintain themselves in power if they completely broke with the bourgeoisie. Contrary to what was said and written at the time in the bourgeois press, there was no intention whatever in our party of seiz ing the reins of power by means of an armed rising. It was only a revolutionary demonstration which broke out spontaneously, though guided by us politically. It was from the front that troops had to be fetched. The entire July days, was to gain time so as to enable Kerensky to draw strategy of Tseretelli, Tchernov, and others, during those "reliable" troops into Petrograd. Delegation after delega tion entered the Tauride Palace, which was surrounded by a huge armed crowd, and demanded a complete break with the bourgeoisie, energetic measures of social reform, and 172 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION the commencement of peace negotiations. We, Bolsheviks, met every new detachment of demonstrators, either in the street or in the palace, with harangues, calling on them to be calm, and assuring them that with the masses in their present mood the compromise-mongers would be unable to form a new coalition ministry. The men of Kronstadt were particularly determined, and it was only with difficulty that we could keep them within the bounds of a bare demon stration. On July 17th the demonstration assumed a still more formidable character — this time under the direct leadership of our party. Among the factors responsible for the events of July 16th to 18th the following should be taken into consideration. This was a group of soldiers forty years old and over who were anxious to get back to their villages in time for the harvest. During the meeting of the Petrograd Soviet on July 1st, which took place in the Alexandrinsky Theater and at which the offensive was discussed, a great crowd of these soldiers came to the theater with placards on which was inscribed, ' ' The army needs bread as well as shells." This mob demanded that they be sent home. They had a similar demonstration, which was not organized by any party, on July 15th. The next day a delegation of thirty of these soldiers called on Kerensky and behaved in a most insolent manner during their interview. At the same time, among the troops in Petrograd there was a great deal of dissatisfaction and unrest. When, on taking up the reins, the Provisional Government issued its declara tion, the seventh clause was that the Petrograd gar rison, which participated in the Revolution, should not be disarmed and should remain in Petrograd. There is no doubt that the ordering of the machine- THE JULY RIOTS 173 gun regiment to the front has connection with the fact that the machine-gun regiment was the first to come out on the streets on July 16th and that it sent delegates to other regiments and to factories to fo ment a demonstration. Moreover, the soldiers were roused by stories of the regiments which were dis banded at the front having been fired on and whipped by Cossacks. There was also a great deal of discontent among the workingmen in Petrograd. A strike broke out in the Petrograd post-office on July 16th, the day of the beginning of the disorders. There was a strike in the Sormov factory and a strike was prevented in the Putilov factory only by the efforts of the trade unions. CHAPTER XVI "GERMAN AGENTS" THE law-and-order group, finding that the ideas of the Bolshevik wing of the Social-Democratic party are spreading like wildfire among the factory- hands and the soldiers, make now a most determined attempt to hamstring its propaganda. The build ings used by the Bolsheviks are cut off from tele phone service. The district headquarters of the So cial Democrats, Mensheviks as well as Bolsheviks, is raided. The furniture is smashed and the funds of the party are seized. Cossacks descend upon the great rifle factory at Sestroretsk near Petrograd, arrest the factory committee, and seize a thousand rifles in the hands of the workers. On July 25th the Government issues an order reestablishing cap ital punishment for certain military offenses at the front. Three days later the Bolshevik organ Pravda is closed and its edition for soldiers, The Trench Pravda, is suppressed. The commanders of the army are ordered to close all similar newspapers. Finally Trotsky, Lunacharsky, Kamenev and a con siderable number of their followers are jailed. Madame Kollontai is placed under domiciliary ar rest, while the only reason why Lenin and Zinoviev are not put under lock and key is that they are too clever at hiding. The charge against them is of having instigated "armed action against the authority of the govern- 174 "GERMAN AGENTS" 175 ment estabhshed by the people." However, the en deavor to fix on them responsibility for the July disorders utterly breaks down. Their cases are never even brought to trial. Kamenev is released on August 17th, Lunacharsky on August 21st, while Trotsky remains in jail until September 17th. Imagine how this flash-in-the-pan lends weight to the Bolshevik contention that the masses might as well hope to gather figs from thistles as to expect a government more than half bourgeois to give them the economic reforms they desire. The charge that the July troubles were a Bolshe vik attempt to overthrow the Government at once finds credence among the propertied, but wins no vogue among the soldiers and proletarians, who understand very well what the Bolsheviks' position is. Far more serious in blackening them with the masses is the charge that they are on the pay-roll of the Kaiser. Bourtsev, a veteran revolutionist, famous as the unmasker of the notorious Okhrana terrorist-spy Azev in the Ryech of July 20th declares : Comrades arriving from Sweden have acquainted us with the net of German spies which exists in Stockholm, Christ iania, Copenhagen, and Haparanda. From there German agents by hundreds are being sent into Russia instructed to agitate for a peace at any price, to stir up rebellions, to carry on a struggle with the Provisional Government, and to fan the class struggle. They are showered with German gold for these purposes. Those bound for Russia are recom mended to go hand in hand with the Leninites, to join their organization, and to act in accordance with its spirit. The German General Staff, according to the words of its own 176 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION agents, does not see in Russia better allies for itself than the Bolsheviks. In Germany from the very beginning of the war, even before, when it was only in preparation, the German Gov ernment created special societies to work against the Rus sian Army and the Russian Government. Among other things it utilized for this purpose the services of the well- known renegade Parvus. Member of the Russian Social- Democratic party yesterday, to-day he has become the zeal ous executor of the plans of the German Government and its General Staff. His activity Parvus spreads everywhere ; in Germany, Austria, Italy, Bulgaria, Turkey. Just as before the war, so during the war, he everywhere found for himself willing and active assistants, as for example, the former member of the Second Duma Zurabov, Perazich, and L. Trotsky — all three of whom at present play a prominent part in the Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers Delegates in Petrograd, also of Kolontai, Koslovsky . . . and many others. Thanks in particular to Lenin, Zinoviev, Trotsky et al., during these accursed days of July 16th to 17th, Wilhelm realized his hopes: he wrecked our war loan, he brought mourning into hundreds of homes in Petrograd, he para lyzed the life of the capital and by doing this he delivered a blow against the country and the army. During these days Lenin with his comrades cost us no less than a good-sized plague or cholera. Trotsky promptly counters with a letter in Izves tia in which he shows that he himself was the one who first exposed to Russian Socialists the connec tion of Parvus with the German Government and that he had done this in the columns of a Russian newspaper as early as November, 1914. Then Alexinsky, a former member of the Duma, "GERMAN AGENTS" 177 prints a long series of sixty-four telegrams between Russian Bolsheviks and their confreres in Stockholm and Christiania. Most of these are obviously of the most innocent character, since they relate to per sonal and party matters. Much is sought to be made of telegrams sent by one Ganetzky (Fiirstenberg) a Polish Socialist in Stockholm, who was maintaining a personal and political telegraphic correspondence with Lenin and other Bolshevik leaders, to a Mrs. Sumenson in Petrograd. They press for payment for consignments of drugs, Nestle 's Food, pencils, etc. These commercial "wires" may cover a dark plot, but it is noteworthy that in them it is always a case of getting money out of Russia instead of get ting money into Russia, as would certainly be the case if the Bolshevik leaders are being paid by the German Government. The Army Intelligence secured on May 11th a statement from an ensign of a Siberian regiment, Yermolenko by name. He testifies that he was re leased from a German prison camp on condition of propagating the idea of an early peace with Ger many among the soldiers of the Russian ifronL Officers of the German general staff informed him that a like propaganda is being carried on by Lenin, who is under instructions to undermine the confi dence of the Russian people in the Provisional Gov ernment. On the afternoon of July 17th Pereverzev, Min ister of Justice, communicates to eighty delegates of the Petrograd military units this and other docu ments in his possession which appear to incriminate the Bolshevik leaders, and then turns them over to 178 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION the press. He requests the soldier delegates to tell their regiments about the contents of the documents. In his later exculpatory letter he says : I realized that the publication of this information was certain to create in the soldiers of the garrison a state of mind which would oblige them to abandon their attitude of neutrality. In throwing against the rebels all the troops of Petrograd who had not joined in the rebellion, in inspir ing them with the fury which is necessary to a battle to the death, I saw the means of saving the situation. The bold step of the minister had an effect in rallying the soldiers to the side of the Provisional Government. For the moment the blackening of the character of Lenin and Trotsky was successful. The Soviet, however, was furious, the other min isters were disgusted with the hasty publication of unverified statements and by noon of the next day Prince Lvov required the resignation of Pereverzev. He was succeeded by Zaroudny, who at first, under impulsion from his subordinates, proceeded against the Bolshevik leaders with much energy, but later was obliged to let the cases drop because nothing incriminating could be found. At first the political opponents of the Bolsheviks in the Soviets supported the prosecutions. The Central Executive Commit tee and the Executive Committee of the Peasants' Soviets a week after the riots resolved that: Whereas, the Bolshevik organizations have carried on among the soldiers and workers an irresponsible demagogic agitation, which ended by an open rebellion against the will of the revolutionary majority, aiding by this in the "GERMAN AGENTS" 179 creation of civil war and counter-revolution within the country and defeat at the front ; and that such actions are a crime against the people and the revolution . . . We consider that Lenin and Zinoviev have absolutely no right to evade trial and we demand from the Bolsheviks an immediate categorical condemnation of such behavior of their leaders. Lenin and Zinoviev publish in reply a letter in which they say in substance : Pereverzev openly admits that he let loose unconfirmed charges in order to ' ' raise the fury ' ' of the soldiers against our party. Pereverzev is out, but who will guarantee that the new Minister of Justice will not stoop to like methods? Tiie counter-revolutionary bourgeoisie is attempting to create a new Dreyfus case. It believes just as much in our "espionage" as the leaders of the Russian reaction who created the Beylis case believed that the Jews drink chil dren's blood. There are no guarantees of justice in Russia at the present moment. Within a fortnight it became apparent that the case against the Bolshevik leaders was a "frame up" and protests began to appear. On August 9th Izvestia, although under Menshevik and S.-R. con trol, said: Repressions, arrests, searches are taking place. This repressive activity until now has been too little di rected toward the Right, where in everybody's view is rip ening a counter-revolutionary conspiracy, and it has seized in a most arbitrary manner victims of the Left, interpreting participation in the organization of the rebellion of July 16th to 18th in the broadest possible sense. We could cite 180 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION a long list of names of individuals on the Left, whose ar rest, in the eyes of the widest masses of the workers', sol diers', and peasants' democracy, is nothing but an act of political vengeance. At the same time there are individuals of the Right, known lackeys of the old regime, known con spirators against the Revolution, who are not only at liberty but are proudly posing as new saviors of the Fatherland, and are besmirching with mud everything that is honest in revolutionary Russia. The government has found and is finding sufficient force to suppress that press of the Left, which, in the name of the salvation of the country, it finds harmful during the present exceptional time. But the Narodnaya Gazeta, Zhivoye Slovo, and their ilk, dirty sheets from day to day sowing, lies and slanders and openly undermining the new born revolutionary authority, — why are these organs of political swindle and counter-revolutionary conspiracy al lowed to publish articles which are blows against revolu tionary Russia? . . . By the middle of August the revulsion of popular feeling was so evident that Tseretelli, lately Minis ter of Posts and Telegraphs, said before the Cen tral Executive Committee: "The wholesale charges against all participants in the events of July 16th to 18th of being German spies, and moving to the second place the unquestionable crime — a rebellion against the revolutionary organs of authority, this is a great mistake." Henceforth, it is only outside of Russia that intel ligent men believe that the Bolshevik leaders are German agents.1 In many conversations I held with Russian bourgeoisie in the autumn and winter of i The questions raised later hy the famous "Sisson Documents" will he considered in a subsequent volume. "GERMAN AGENTS" 181 1917 these charges were often mentioned by them, but when I asked the question, "Do you believe that Lenin and Trotsky are German agents?" I never once obtained an affirmative reply. CHAPTER XVII KERENSKY ON July 14th the Cadet members resigned from the Provisional Government, alleging that they could not approve the conceding of an autonomous government to the Ukraine. However, as Prince Lvov admitted to newspaper men two days later, "The Ukrainian problem is only an excuse, the real cause [of resignation] must be sought deeper, — in the differences of points of view between the social ists and the bourgeois." The retirement of the Cadets together with the riots in Petrograd July 16th to 18th led the Provi sional Government on July 20th to vote to carry out the program proposed by the socialist ministers. The chief feature of this program was the taking of the land from the gentry without compensation. The bills introduced by Tchernov, Minister of Agri culture, did not contemplate that the land should be made over to the peasants, but that henceforth its title should be vested in the nation. Only the right of use was granted to the peasant; as soon as he ceased to till it in person h^e lost all right in it. Prince Lvov, who would not countenance this at tack upon the property rights of the class to which he belonged, resigned the next day, alleging that he could not accept Tchernov 's land proposals. Kerensky, who until the May crisis had been Min- 182 KERENSKY 183 ister of Justice and since then Minister of War, undertook to form a new government. The de velopment of suspicion and hostility between the propertied and the working people made his task well-nigh insuperable. Astrov, Kishkin, and Nabu- kov, members of the Cadet party who were invited by Kerensky to take portfolios, joined in a letter in which they laid down the conditions of their enter ing the Cabinet. No ministers should be respon sible to the Soviets. No committees should interfere in the business of government. "Dual authority" should be abolished and a decisive struggle should be carried on with "anarchistic elements." All re-, form of the system of government should be left to the Constituent Assembly. There should be abso lute unity with the Allies in the war and strict dis cipline should be introduced into the army. Kerensky replied reassuringly and on August 6th the "Save the Revolution" Government was launched. It included the Social Revolutionaries Kerensky, Savinkov, Lebedev, Avksentiev and Tchernov; the Social Democrats Skobelev, Nikitin, and Prokopovich; the Socialist-Populist Peshek- hanov ; the Cadets Kokoshkin, Oldenburg, Yurienev, and Kartashev; the Radical Efremov, and three In dependents, Zaroudny, Tereshchenko, and Nekrassov. Here, perhaps, is the place to consider the char acter and role of the man who more than any other embodied the ideals of the first Russian Revolution and who, for two or three months in 1917, was the most conspicuous personage in Russia. Alexander Feodorovitch Kerensky was born thirty-six years before the Revolution, in Simbirsk, 184 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION one of the Volga towns. His father was principal of the secondary school in which the two Oulianovs — Lenin and his elder brother Alexander— studied. Although but five years old at the time, he vibrated to the feeling of horror and dismay which swept through the town when news came of the hanging of Alexander for conspiring to assassinate the most reactionary of tsars. In 1889 the father, probably on account of his political liberalism, was transferred from Simbirsk to Tashkent, so that the lad was prepared for the university in the chief city of Turkestan. Between 1898 and 1904 Kerensky studied law in Petrograd and became an ardent champion of the ideas of the Social Revolutionary party. After he took up the practice of law he had much to do with the defense of the radical members of the Dumas, whom the Government wished to send to Siberia. His success in the courts gave him a name for courage and eloquence in defense of advanced ideas so that in 1913 at the age of thirty-two he was elected to the Fourth Duma from one of the towns in the province of Saratov. The Socialist parties being illegal, he and ten others of his party took the name of Laborites (Troudoviki or Group of Toil), whose ostensible policy was to better the lot of the workers on the economic side only. Ere long he captained the group and became known as a powerful debater. He spoke passionately, pouring out a torrent of in vective at the top of his voice, and accompanying it with violent and unrestrained gestures. Such speaking exhausted him and he would descend from the tribune shaking and drenched in perspiration. KERENSKY 185 No one could accuse him of want of daring. On one occasion when a question referring to a political murder was being discussed Kerensky rose up in the Duma and said: "I may freely express my opin ion with reference to the question under debate, for it is known to all of you that both my political convictions and the principles of the party of which I am a member recognize the right of using terror as a political weapon against our enemies in author ity and justify the assassination of tyrants." The railroading of the Bolshevik members of this Duma to Siberia left Kerensky the chief spokesman of the factory workers. In the industrial districts "on the Viborg side" of the Neva, and in the shipyards and iron-works, "What has Alexander Feodorovitch said!" became the political touchstone. From a certain curious document we obtain a very objective idea of Kerensky 's activities and aims dur ing a calamitous period of the war. Among the Secret-Service (Okhrana) papers brought to light by the Revolution was a report addressed by the head of the Petrograd branch of the Okhrana to the Minister of the Interior in August, 1915. It says: The strikes with a political background which are at present occurring among the workmen, and also the fer ment among them, are the result of the revolutionary ac tivity of members of the Social-Democratic and Labor parties in the Duma, and especially of the leader of the latter, the lawyer Kerensky. The revolutionary propa ganda of Kerensky has expressed itself in the watchword "Struggle for power and for a Constituent Assembly," and has led to a systematic discrediting of the Government in the eyes of the masses. To ensure the success of their demands, Kerensky has recommended the workmen to im- 186 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION provise factory groups for the formation of councils of workers' and soldiers' delegates on the model of 1905, with the object of impelling the movement in a definite di rection, at the given moment, with the cry for a Constituent Assembly, which should take into its hands the defense of the country. To promote this agitation, Kerensky is cir culating among the workmen rumors that he is receiving from the provinces numerous letters demanding that he should overthrow the Romanov dynasty and take its power into his own hand.1 Such testimony explains the success with which this young lawyer rode the storm during the historic days of the Revolution. His role in this crisis was one in which he may well feel pride. As to this I will cite certain passages by Princess Cantacuzene, granddaughter of General Grant, who will not be sus pected of bias in favor of a revolutionist : Singing, howling mobs of workmen and regiments of sol diers poured into the Tauride Palace and its garden, pur porting to be friends of the Duma ; but their wild shouts and violent behavior showed them to be. unreliable and highly inflammable, ready for anything. [Kerensky] with his then sincere enthusiasm undertook the task of quelling this bedlam. He managed to do so amazingly well; and that the Duma was not massacred, it owed to his eloquence. Having a name and personality well known to the masses, and a large sense of patriotism also, he had been given over completely to the mission of handling the, rabble. Time after time, during fifty-two hours, pale, uncombed, unshaved, his clothes in disorder, he was pushed forward ; and he shouted and gesticulated him self into a state of exhaustion. He always finally succeeded in taming those whom he addressed. Then he would col- i Wilcox, Russia's Ruin, p. 192. KERENSKY 187 lapse with fatigue and be cared for, until he was sufficiently restored to go on with his special work again.1 After telling how Kerensky saved the hated tsar ist ministers, Soukhomlinov and Protopopov, from being torn to pieces by guaranteeing that these men should not escape punishment for their crimes, the princess goes on to say : Senators, members of the Council of the Empire, mem bers of the ex-Court and the Government, about two hun dred of them, lived in these crowded rooms for five or six long days. The prisoners were kept constantly on the qui vive, as each morning and evening Kerensky made a tour of the rooms, chose out a few men to be liberated, and a few more to be sent to the Fortress. At one side of the impromptu prison could be heard the discussions and the movements of the Duma's members; while from the other direction came the roar of bedlam let loose, for in the Catherine Hall the deputations of soldiers and workmen held forth — criticizing, threatening, acclaiming; and de manding reports of all that was being done, and the right to veto or approve every measure presented. Many times the lives of all occupants of the palace were in danger ; and always the situation was saved by Kerensky 's eloquence and his clever handling of his clients.2 As Minister of Justice in the first Lvov Cabinet Kerensky won golden opinions by his patriotism, moderation, and lack of personal vanity. He han dled questions concerned with the ex-sovereigns and members of the old regime with a generosity and dignity that won praise from his pohtical opponents. He showed himself a consummate leader of his own 1 Revolutionary Days, p. 132. 2 Ibid., p. 149. 188 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION party and managed its unruly elements with ex traordinary skill. He uttered the noble sentiment "The Revolution will astound the world by its mag nanimity," and did his best to make it true. He abolished the .death penalty. The refusal to appeal to force was, in fact, the most characteristic feature of the first three months of the Revolution. The Provisional Government reasoned with every one whether mutinous soldier, anarchist workman, or separatist town. After Kerensky became Minister of War the Revo lution for a few weeks became incarnate in this one man. He gave vivid and plangent expression to all that was noble and idealistic in it. He became the bearer of the message which revolutionary Russia seemed seeking to communicate to humanity. Transfigured by the vision he saw and filled with faith in his mission, he wrought miracles of word- magic. A seasoned Russian journalist writes thus of Kerensky 's eloquence: Listening to him, you feel that all your nerves are drawn toward him and bound together with his nerves in one nexus. It seems that you yourself are speaking; that on the platform it is not Kerensky but yon who are facing the crowd and dominating its thoughts and feelings; that it and you have only one heart, wide as the world and as beautiful. Kerensky has spoken and gone. You ask your self how long he has spoken — an hour or three minutes? On your honour you cannot say, for time and space had vanished. . . When he stretches out his hands to you — nervous, supple, fiery, all quivering with the enthusiasm of prayer which seizes him — you feel that he touches you, KERENSKY 189 grasps you with those hands, and irresistibly draws you to himself.1 As in June he moved along the front, endeavoring to inspire patriotism and fighting spirit in the Rus sian troops, his passing was that of a comet. Crowds waited for hours to catch a glimpse of him. Soldiers ran for miles after his motor-car in the hope of shaking his hand or kissing the hem of his garment. In those hectic weeks of speaking before the men in uniform, hectoring, pleading, argu ing, he labored like a Titan and men marveled that his frail body could stand it all. Although for reasons already shown the Galician offensive, which began so brilliantly, ended in disas ter and shame, its breakdown casts no reflection on the power of Kerensky 's eloquence. Of this we have fullest acknowledgment in the words of an enemy. Writing some time after the Tarnopol setback, a German journalist declares in the Kolnische Zeitung: In what we hear Kerensky is always in the foreground. His oratorical gift must give him stupendous power. This frail and delicate man is a magician in words. . . . Sol diers have told me again to-day, but I had heard of it often enough before. I had heard it from the people of the oc cupied Galician territory, who had seen Kerensky and listened to him when he flung his fiery speeches into the masses of soldiers in the towns. In Tarnapol, in Kalusz, and in Stanislau I was told about it. The statements of the front soldiers, who saw him among themselves, close be hind the positions, nay, in the front trenchea, confirm it; he was the impulse to the new attack, the tireless inciter, 1 Cited by Wilcox in Russia's Ruin, p. 197. 190 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION working with the power and sweep of his word. ... By the power of this one man . . . and by comprehensive and indefatigable propaganda, the fighting spirit was gener ated.1 After the ghastly Galician debacle Kerensky was another man. Faith in himself and in the triumph of his ideas was gone. No longer could he feel that all that was best in the Revolution was following him. To rid himself of the Bolshevik leaders who were rapidly winning over the urban masses, he de parted from his principles by reintroducing admin istrative arrests and deportations. On August 15th he signed a decree which "in order to put an end to the activity of those individuals who wish to utilize the freedom given by the revolution to all citizens only for the purpose of doing irreparable harm to the cause of the revolution and to the very existence of the Russian state" gave the Minister of War and the Minister of Interior the discretion, by mutual agreement between them: (1) To order the placing under guard individuals whose activity especially threatens the defense of the country, its internal safety, and the freedom won by the revolution. (2) To order individuals mentioned in paragraph No. 1 to leave the limits of the Russian State within a definite period. On condition of non-departure of these individuals or their wilful return they are to be confined under guard in accordance with paragraph No. 1 of this decree. This measure, coming on top of the arrests of Bolshevik leaders and the suppression of Bolshevik newspapers after the July riots, cost him his popu- i Cited by Wilcox in Russia's Ruin, p. 202. KERENSKY 191 larity with labor, which henceforth regarded him as a political enemy whom it would be justified in overthrowing at the first opportunity. Neverthe less, he did not start early enough or go far enough in repression to gain the confidence of the prop ertied. In this national crisis Kerensky 's temper and policies were such as to appeal to a middle class, but, alas, there was as yet no considerable middle class in Russia. So all the propertied and most of the representatives of the Allies pinned their hopes to Kornilov, the "strong man," while the masses abandoned him for Lenin and Trotsky, who promised to give them at once, without waiting for the convo cation of the Constituent Assembly, what they most longed for — peace,, land, and bread. When the test came Kerensky had no popularity whatever. The propertied classes of Russia hate Kerensky because he, a moderate and law-and-order man, let slip by the golden moment when there was still a chance for a coup on behalf of Property. He did nothing to gag the Bolshevik leaders until it was too late. He restrained the reactionary generals from employing the still "reliable" regiments and divi sions to dissolve the army committees, shoot muti neers, crush the Soviets, disarm the workers, put Petrograd and the munition-factories under martial law, and decimate the peasants who were swarming upon the estates of the pomieshtchiks. Perhaps if these things had been done in May the proletarian revolution might have been averted. But two or three months were lost and then it was too late. The process of decomposition had advanced so far 192 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION that in Russia there was left no formidable obedi ence-compelling power save the will of the politically conscious section of the common people. The time came when even Kerensky, romanticist and idealist, awoke to the realities of the situation. In the course of the last interview he gave as Min ister-President he uttered the prophetic words: "Remember, this is not a political revolution. It is not like the French Revolution. It is an economic revolution, and there will be necessary in Russia a profound revaluation of classes. And it is a very complicated process for all the different nationahties in Russia. Remember that the French Revolution took five years and that France is the size of one of our provincial districts. No, the Russian Revo lution is not over — it is just beginning." "Society" hated Kerensky for "truckling" to the Soviets, so the habitues of the salons set afloat all manner of malicious gossip about his mode of life in the Winter Palace. They said that he had di vorced his wife in order to marry an actress. They said that he used the tsar's carriages and motors, drank his champagne, feasted off his gold plate, and slept in his bed. They said that he kept his min isters awake there by singing grand-opera airs at unseemly hours, that in conferences he was some times abrupt and irritable, — as who would not be who was on the verge of a nervous breakdown? The Allied diplomats and military missions, who absorbed the drawing-room tea-table talk and were interested only in Russia's fighting, fell in with this shallow view and little dreamed that the man was in the grasp of a social tornado. Scene from one of the July Bolshevist meetings Inscription on banner "Long Live SociaUam! Long Live the Third International!' A. F. Kerensky Prime Minister of the Provisional Government KERENSKY 193 On assuming power, Lenin is said to have stated to the representative of the Matin: "You may be sure that, whatever may be the vicissitudes of the struggle, we must always in the end prove the stronger, because boldness is on our side, whereas Kerensky — " here Lenin shrugged his shoulders disdainfully — "is nobody. He has never done any thing and he is always vacillating. He was a par tisan of Kornilov and had him arrested. He was an opponent of Trotsky and he allowed him his lib erty. ' ' It is too soon yet to know whether or not this contemptuous judgment is just. Already time has shown that the drawing-room people and the Allied diplomats and officers, who might have held up Kerensky 's government until the Constituent As sembly met, but who were all for Kornilov whose ill-starred attempt turned the masses to Bolshevism, made a terrible mistake. It may be that time will show the same of the workers and soldiers who abandoned Kerensky for Lenin. CHAPTER XVIII GROWING ANARCHY AFTER the dam is broken it is not long before the restrained waters are in motion. Once the powerful centralized organization of police and Cossacks under the Romanovs has been shattered, the long-curbed desires of the poverty-stricken peas ants for the land they have been tilling for the lords, and of the robbed toilers for treatment as men, give rise to headstrong actions. As early as May 3d the Assistant Minister of the Interior calls upon provin cial and county commissaries to report daily to the Militia (Police) Department on the following sub jects : Agrarian disorders and all kinds of violations of landed property rights, attempted unlawful ac tions against landowners and lessees, unlawful plow ing, arson, cutting of forests, stealing of farm im plements, stealing of live stock, destruction of boun dary lines, etc. ; about all kinds of disorders in the factories, such as lock-outs and strikes, with reasons therefor, violations of the rights of the workingmen or the employers, exceptional cases of propaganda against the new government and its officials, incit ing of one part of the population against another on national, religious, or party grounds, any other vio lations of public order committed by crowds, cases in which the local authorities of the new government are prevented from exercising its authority, law less actions of individuals and groups such as arrests 194 GROWING ANARCHY 195 and endeavors to prevent the liberation of those ar rested without due cause. The commissaries are furthermore instructed to report about measures taken to stop such violations. On the same day the Minister-President, Prince Lvov, issues to the Commissaries of the provinces a circular order which clearly reveals the growing difficulties of the privileged classes in asserting their property rights : The Provisional Government has lately received a num ber of personal statements by telegraph regarding the ar rests and arbitrary actions of certain village societies and village committees which prevent the. landowners, large as well as small, from doing their duty forlhe state by sowing their lands. As I cannot tolerate acts of violence against individuals and the wilful solution of the land problem by that part of the population which is concerned with this problem, it is herewith suggested to you that through the provincial committees, county commissaries, and county or ganizations, you arrange to notify the people as widely as possible as to the wrongfulness of depriving any one of liberty save by order of a court, as well as inform them of all the government orders relative to the safeguarding of all food supplies. It is your duty, with the support of all the organized local forces, to prevent any high-handed de cisions which may ruin the unity which is necessary for the strengthening of the new state order. You are requested to use the entire force of the law in order to stop the com mission of violence or robbery. In accordance with the numerous instructions that you are the chief representative of the authority of the Provisional Government in the province, you are authorized to use all measures which you, together with the committee, will find necessary. When the tsarist machine broke down, the em- 196 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION ployers for the first time in their lives found them selves without any means of coercing their men. You still could telephone to the police station, but the new chiefs of "mihtia" soon learned not to fly in the face of the local soviet. An employer said to me with bitterness : "The commissary who represents the Central Government here is a former school-teacher and often calls upon us to yield this or that point 'in the interest of public order' or 'to avert grave dis turbances!' So nowadays we don't consider what are our legal rights ; we consider only how to avoid trouble. ' ' Arthur Bullard tells of a paper manufacturer he met for whom the Revolution was summed up vividly in one incident: * The newly formed "Shop Committee" in his works in vaded his luxuriously furnished private office one morning and told him to get out. They wanted to hold a meeting there. They made themselves at ease in his sanctum, they trampled with their heavy boots on his choice Bokhara rug — they even spat on it. The thing which impressed him most was that they had lost fear of him.1 Late in May, Kutler, the great manufacturer, speaking at a national convention of the Cadet party, laid the palpable disorganization of produc tion to the excesses committed by the workers against the factory administration. He said: It is necessary to note the mass removal of individuals who were at the head of industrial enterprises, directors, and managers of shops and factories. How great this re- 1 The Russian Pendulum, p. 74. GROWING ANARCHY 197 moval is can be seen, for instance, from the Ural mining industry, where there exist over twenty large mining-plants. At the present time in these plants there remain only four managers who have not been removed. This removal of managers is taking place also in the oil-industry, and I received only to-day information that this removal is be coming a general rule. The same is widely practised in other localities, in Petrograd, in Moscow, in the South, and throughout the country in general. Together with the re moval of individuals managing the business, there are also mass removals of secondary technicians, engineers, fore men, etc., who are sometimes not replaced and sometimes replaced through selection, by the workers, of individuals not equal to the job. As for the undisturbed members of the factory administration, they have lost all their in fluence, all their authority over the workers. The slightest reproof, the slightest complaint that the work is not done right leads to threats and violence. As a result, discipline and order in the factories are disappearing. An article in the Izvestia of June 13th declares : . . . All the villages are in a state of fermentation, there are no uniform established relations. In some places the peasants help themselves to the land of the proprietors, they take off war prisoners and other workers employed on estates, and they seize the equipment; in other places the proprietors continue charging the peasants an absurdly ex orbitant rental for ploughland and meadows, and by so doing embitter yet more the relations between themselves and the peasants . . . . . . Occasions are not rare when the village committees are controlled by elements of anarchic inclinations, who egg on the peasants to seize the nobleman's land, without wait ing for the Constituent Assembly, to take the workers away from the estates, to take away from the noblemen their live 198 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION stock, machinery and tools, to cut their forests, and to forage in their fields. . . . Why were these things occurring? It is the fash ion to lay them to the baleful influence of agitators, either fanatics or German agents, who stirred up the peasants to sully the fair fame of the most gen tlemanly Revolution in all history. Thus Mrs. Wil liams considers the growth of disregard for the pomieshtchik's property rights not as something to be expected of people who had experienced what the Russian peasants had experienced, but as the product of Socialist agitators. She writes: The masses seemed to feel that they were being driven to a dangerous course and did not give way at once. Even in the country, where, as in the towns, all the police were immediately arrested and sent to the front, where no new authorities were established to replace the old, the peasants at first assumed an expectant attitude. The expression, "We '11 just wait for the new Law," was a current phrase, which reflected the peasants' habitual wariness. And they actually did wait. They cast longing glances at the land owners' land, cattle and other goods, but abstained from plunder, awaiting the order from the Centre. Then appeared agitators, sometimes Bolsheviks, but more often Social-Revolutionaries, with mandates from the Pet rograd or local Soviet, and explained to the peasants that they had nothing to wait for, but must hasten to execute the will of the people and "expropriate the expropriators," that is, take everything from the landowners. It was just as difficult for peasants to withstand such arguments as it had been for soldiers to maintain discipline after the Order No.. 1. Gradually the Russian country side was turned into a veritable hell. Landowners' houses, GROWING ANARCHY 199 corn-stacks, stables, cattlesheds — all were set ablaze. Their owners were turned out, sometimes murdered. Already, before the November Revolution, some districts had not a single landowner left.1 This does not seem to be a correct interpretation of what occurred. The Social Revolutionary party, which supported the Provisional Government and did not wish to see it set at naught, never urged the off-hand anarchic seizure of estates. Its policy was to restrain the peasants until a general settlement of the land question should be promulgated. It was, then, not the incitement of Social-Revolutionary agi tators which stirred up the peasants to seizures, but the delay in dealing with the land, the cutting and sale of timber by land-owners, and the rumors of the sale of estates to foreigners, who in any case would have to be compensated if the land were to be taken for the peasants. In his letter of resignation on July 20th Prince Lvov reveals the alarm of the noble men regarding what was going on. He complains that the Minister of Agriculture (Tchernov) "does not combat the tendencies to seize land, does not regulate the agrarian relations, but seemingly justi fies the highhanded seizures of land which are taking place all over Russia, legalizes these seizures and, so far as the land problem is concerned, aims to con front the Constituent Assembly with an accom plished fact. ' ' As the summer passed and the Coalition Govern ment, impotent for domestic reform by its solicitude for the war and by its endeavor to be loyal to op- 1 From Liberty to Brest Litovsk, p. 195. 200 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION posed social classes, did nothing, the country fell into uproar. Izvestia observes on October 16th, in an article headed "A Wave of Riots": Daily newspapers bring a long list of tales about riots. Riots are made in cities and villages. Stores and land owners' storehouses are being looted. They are burning, looting, and raping. These ugly riots arise because of the dissatisfaction of the wide masses of the people with their condition: peace did not come as soon as we expected; bread did not get cheaper; there still is no clothing, footwear, agricultural implements. . ." A fortnight later, before the Council of the Re public, the Minister of Provisioning confesses that "anarchy is prevailing throughout the country." Of the eight thousand tons of grain shipped to Pet rograd by water half was held up on the way and looted. He reads telegrams explaining why the grain is not coming through to the army and the cities. From Cherepovetz: "Loads of grain on the 56th and 103d versts above Rybinsk. The peas ants who live along the shore are looting, soldiers cannot stop them, we request that measures be taken to save the freight." From the Olonetz Food Com mittee: "Armed peasants have looted 1,120,000 poods [22,400 tons] of flour. Soldiers refuse to take the flour from the peasants. Please take measures against anarchy." He reports the receipt of sim ilar telegrams from Petrozavodsk and Bielozersk. He declares: . . . Just as it is impossible to carry on a war when there is no discipline, so the provisioning problem cannot GROWING ANARCHY 201 be solved when civil war is spreading throughout the coun try. Grain is produced by one class and is needed by an other. It will be furnished only when one class supports another. But we have no such support, and grain is re fused not only to the cities but also to the army. Besides this, some delegates from the army, which were sent to the villages as agitators, started their agitation as follows: "Brother peasants, do not furnish any grain, then the war will end sooner." The provisioning of the city population is in a still worse condition. Everywhere the peasants say: "We will not give any grain to the cities and to the workers." You see that anarchy and civil war are fatal to the provisioning work. It is interesting to note that this minister of the Provisional Government recommends, as the proper means of overcoming the natural reluctance of the peasants to give up their grain without an equivalent, the measure which later the Bolshevik Government used and which is often presented as a diabolical contrivance of the Bolsheviks, viz., the requisition ing of grain by commissaries backed by detachments of soldiers. \^ Not only was law feeble as against the will of masses, but months before it vanished from the scene the Provisional Government was powerless against the local soviet of workers' and soldiers' delegates^, Thus when in July the American Red Cross Mission was coming in via the Trans-Siberian Railroad, it was stopped and examined at Chita at the instance of the Chita soviet. Then there was a soviet at Krasnoyarsk which had already become Bolshevik and which, it was rumored, intended to halt the train ; 202 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION so the train dashed through Krasnoyarsk in the early morning without stopping. All this despite the strongest credentials from the Kerensky Govern ment. In August Colonel Raymond Robins of the Red Cross was in southern Russia looking after the needs of war refugees. He found in Ekaterinoslav and Kharkov that the local soviet was the real master. When he wanted anything done he had to see the soviet officials. His pockets were full of the strong est authorizations from the Government at Petro grad, but here they were only "stage money." It was from the Soviets, not from the regular authori ties, that he got trains and farm wagons for carry ing his supplies. And if they said he could not have them he did not get them. The reader is not to suppose that the Provisional Government started with a clear field and full au thority and that the Soviets, growing jealous, gradu ally encroached upon its field and whittled away its authority. The truth is that tho Soviets sprang up as early as the Provisional Government and among the masses the latter never had any power as against the will of the Soviets. For some months the real ities of the situation did not appear nakedly, simply because the Soviets were Menshevik in leadership ¦'and disposed, therefore, to coaperate with the Pro visional Government and with the Allies. As tho Soviets lost confidence in the Allies because of their failure to restate their war aims in harmony with .the ideals of Russian democracy and in the Provi- f. sional Government because of its neglect of do- ¦ mestic reforms, they would not longer cooperate GROWING ANARCHY 203 and thereupon it became evident who was really mas ter in the Russian land. With their slogan "All Power to the Soviets!" Lenin and Trotsky were not! so much urging the thing that ought to be as stating. the thing that actually was. CHAPTER XIX CITY ELECTIONS IN Russia the bestowal of universal suffrage finds innumerable "dark" minds as yet quite unfur nished with any ideas whatever upon public ques tions. Either they are not even aware of the exist ence of these questions, or else they have not been able to arrive at opinions about them. Called upon, now, to combine for representation in the municipal dumas (city councils) which are being elected all over Russia in the summer of 1917, these inexperi enced citizens are apt to gather not into true politi cal parties but into groups formed on the lines of common nationality, religion, or economic interest. Hence, besides the candidates of genuine parties we come upon candidates appealing only to those of a certain nationality, e. g., Ukrainians, Esthon- ians, Letts, Armenians, and Jews. Such a group, however, will by no means march always under one banner. In some cities there will be a Ukrainian National Bloc, a Ukrainian Socialist Bloc, perhaps even a Ukrainian Hromada (mass). Tickets will be put up by the Jewish Democracy, the Jewish National Bloc, the Jewish Community, and the Zionists. If a Lett does not care to vote for the can didates named by the Lettish Social Democrats, per haps his ballot will be claimed by an organization calling itself "Just Letts." 204 CITY ELECTIONS 205 There are even cases in which Lutherans or Mus sulmans as such seek representation in the city duma. Queerest of all, however, are certain groupings by occupation or property interest. In Novgorod- Volinsk the Merchants and Manufacturers, the Com mittee for Aiding the Families of Reservists, and the Torbush (Culture) Society nominate their re spective tickets for its duma. And then quite seri ously the "Residents of Zhitomirskaya Street" name a man and later elect him. Sterlitamak is no larger than an ordinary American county-seat town, but let no one suppose its duma will be monochrome. Seven of its members represent the Mussulman Bureau of House-Owners and Apartment-tenants, two speak for the Mussulman House-Owners (Is it the houses that are different?), one for the Women's Democratic Union, and one for the Union of City Employees ! In Yalutorovsk there are three tickets: (1) House-owners, (2) House-owners (another organ ization), (3) a "Bloc" composed of (a) the Union of Commercial-Industrial Employees, (b) the Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates, and (c) the Executive Committee of the Union of Teachers and Tchinovniks. In Ekaterinburg a disciple of Mahomet who owns his home and leans toward socialism must surely be torn by conflicting emotions when he is confronted by the rival tickets of Mussulmans, House-owners, and Menshevik Social Democrats. In Tsaritzuin, besides the genuine pohtical par ties, there participate in the electoral battle organ- 206 THE RUSSIAN BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION ized House-owners, Merchants, Priests, Mussulmans, Lutherans, and Jews. Thanks to political inexperience, the citizens do not cohere into two or three great parties, but form a bewildering variety of groups. In Kharkov there are twelve tickets of nominees for the city duma, in Poltava fourteen, in Kiev eighteen. But incoher ence will touch its apex when in November in Petro grad twenty parties and groups will offer Usts of candidates for membership in the Constituent As sembly. In a word, in the more than seven hundred city elections held between June and September there compete two principles of political grouping. One is the familiar grouping according to opinion on pubhc questions. The other is grouping according to so cial or economic affiliation. The latter prevails far more than with us, not only because there has not yet been time for the cohering of citizens on the basis of common opinion, but also because the formation of Soviets in all centers has familiarized the people with the idea of representation according to economic interest. In these duma elections the drift away from the middle-of-the-road parties stands revealed. At the end of July Ryech points out that the elections show the cities "in the power of a socialistic wave." In Murom the Socialist Bloc (Social Revolutionists and Social Democrats) wins 70 per cent, of the seats, in Sarapul 60 per cent., in Gomel 65 per cent., in Ufa 70 per cent., in Rostov-on-Don 76 per cent., in Khar kov 63 per cent., in Saratov 86 per cent., in Riazan CITY ELECTIONS 207 ("in which the food situation is unusually good") 36 per cent. By the middle of August a review of the elections which have taken place in 276 cities shows that in the provincial capitals the Socialist parties have gained 70 per cent, of the seats, while in the county seats and other cities they have but 37y2 per cent; — a striking indication of the influence of factories and urban concentration upon the political views of the masses. On September 8th a Cadet-leader, Shingarev, com pares the composition of the new Petrograd duma with that of its predecessor elected in May: The Social Revolutionists gained twenty-one seats, the Bolsheviks became incredibly stronger, they gained thirty- four seats. . . . The Toil group and the Populist Social ists, who combined, have lost fifteen seats and have been reduced to insignificant figures, as well as the Yedinstvo group. The Mensheviks almost disappeared, having re ceived eight places instead of forty places previously held. The Party of People's Freedom (Cadets) remained in almost the same place. . . . Instead of 23.5 per cent, of all the deputies it has in the new Duma 21 per cent. There can be no mistaking what this portends. He says: At present the political barometer . . . clearly moves toward "storm." In the groups of revolutionary Socialism supported by the masses of the population of small intelligence are grow ing extremist forces and a spirit of new rebellion. In spite of the sad and disgraceful days of July 16th .to 18th again these tendencies threaten. CHAPTER XX THE MOSCOW CONFERENCE GROWING fear of royalist plots and the German menace caused a feeling of uneasiness regard ing the residence of Nicholas and his family at Tsarskoe Selo. Voices were raised in the Soviet de manding that the ex-tsar have meted out to him the punishment he was so ready to mete out to far bet ter men, i. e., be sent to Siberia and put to work in the mines. Kerensky foresaw the possibility of having to use troops from the front against the Bol shevik workmen of Petrograd and he realized that with Nicholas near at hand his enemies might rep resent his moves as part of a royalist plot. Ac cordingly, it was decided to remove the Romanovs to Tobolsk in northwestern Siberia. Fearing an attack upon the train which might re sult in the assassination of the imperial family, the Government was at great pains to keep the removal secret. Not even the head of the railroad depart ment knew whither the train was bound. This time the gorgeous imperial train was not used. What was provided was an ordinary train of three sleep ing-cars, a dining-car, and several third-class cars, with a second train for baggage and for thirty at tendants. Nicholas was not informed whither he was going and was allowed little time for prepara tion. He inquired whether he was to be sent to the Crimea, where he had a palace and "could Uve like 208 A