18-24 June 1917

Soldiers at the political demonstration in Petrograd on 18 June 1917
The collapse of the offensive dealt a fatal blow to the
Provisional Government and the personal authority of its leaders. Hundreds of
thousands of soldiers were killed. Millions of square miles of territory were
lost. The leaders of the government had gambled everything on the offensive in
the hope that it might rally the country behind them in the national defence of
democracy. The coalition had been based on this hope; and it held together as
long as there was a chance of military success. But as the collapse of the
offensive became clear, so the coalition fell apart.
(Orlando Figes, A People's Tragedy
, London 1996)
18 June
A clear, windy morning. Workers and soldiers assembled
early. That day sister demonstrations were planned in Moscow, Kiev, Minsk,
Riga, Helsingfors (Helsinki), Kharkov, and across the empire. At 9 a.m., a band
struck up the Marseillaise, the French national anthem that had become an
international hymn to freedom. The parade began its procession down Nevsky
Prospect.
(China Miéville, October: The Story of the Russian Revolution
, London 2017)
Memoir by the Menshevik Nikolai Sukhanov
It was on a magnificent scale. All worker and soldier
Petersburg took part in it. But what was the political character of this
demonstration? ‘Bolsheviks again,’ I remarked, looking at the slogans, ‘and
there behind them is another Bolshevik column.’
(N.N. Sukhanov, The Russian Revolution 1917: a Personal Record
, Oxford 1955)
Resolution of the workers of the ‘Old Parviainen’ metal and
machine factory, Petrograd
We, the workers of the ‘Old Parviainen’ factory, having
discussed Comrade Yevdokimov’s report at the general meeting of both shifts on
15 June, consider the policy of appeasement with our country’s capitalists, and
through them with capitalists worldwide as well, to be ruinous for the cause of
Russian and international revolution … Long live the power of the revolutionary
proletariat and peasantry! … Peace to the hovels! War against the palaces! …
Down with the ten capitalist ministers! … No separate peace with Wilhelm, no
secret agreements with the English and French capitalists!
(Mark D. Steinberg, Voices of Revolution, 1917
, New Haven and London 2001)
19 June
Letter from Sofia Yudina in Polyana to her friend Nina Agafonnikova in Vyatka
Dear Ninochka!
Our luggage has arrived, and we are all so happy – so, so
happy! And why wouldn’t we be! My music
has come, my books, and everything else. And the luggage is fine, not damaged
at all. Though of course it did take a month to get here…
Nothing much has changed with us. I’ve read six books by
Diogenes, I practise my music – half of it diligently, but the other half I
don’t have time or energy. There’s no time to draw, when I do I will draw
something for you as well, but for the moment I’ve not tried to draw anything…
It’s sweltering
here and dry, there’s been no rain to speak
of, just one storm with rain but it didn’t wet the ground much. The
strawberries are going over, the raspberries are ripening, the currents and so
forth. We’ve had all sorts of vegetables for some time now. The roses are
blooming. We swim every day…
I’m eating
a lot, putting on weight, getting fat – Mamochka is happy…
Everyone’s
well, we’re just being eaten by mosquitoes, midges and so on and so on. We go
barefoot all day….
With all my
kisses!
Write, my
dearest: you have more time for letters, I have so little.
Say hello
to everyone!
Your S.
(Viktor Berdinskikh, Letters from Petrograd: 1916-1919
, St Petersburg 2016)
Olga, Nicholas II's eldest daughter, to P.
Petrov, Tsarskoe Selo
We go for a
walk in the afternoons from 2 o’clock until 5. We each do something in the
garden. If it’s not too close, Mama also comes out, and lies on a couch under
the tree by the water. Papa goes (with several others) deep into the garden
where he fells and saws up dead trees. Alexei plays on the ‘children’s island’,
runs around barefoot and sometimes swims … Lessons continue as normal. Maria
and I are studying English together. She reads aloud to me, and if it’s not too
hot, will do a dictation … Twice a week Anastasia and I study medieval history.
It is much more difficult, as I have a terrible memory for all those events,
though she isn’t any better.
Your pupil
no. 1, Olga
(Sergei Mironenko, A Lifelong Passion
, London 1996)
21 June
Diary entry of an anonymous Englishman
A procession of soldiers went up the Nevski at noon. In the
afternoon to visit the Felix Yusupovs. He showed me exactly where Rasputin was
killed, the blood-stained Polar bear skin, and how it happened. We then walked
to the Nevski, where Felix left me.
(The Russian Diary of an Englishman, Petrograd 1915-1917
, New York 1919)
22 June
This morning we were all rested and in good spirits.
Camp-fires have been lit and water is plentiful. One or two of us Sisters
washed and ironed our laundry. But before long our peace was disturbed by
shouting and the noise of creaking vehicles … there were soldiers everywhere,
hundreds of them. The ground was covered with their tents. The 45th and 46th
Siberian Regiments have encamped in our wood, awaiting reinforcements.
(Florence Farmborough, Nurse at the Russian Front: A Diary 1914-18
, London 1974)
23 June
Diary entry of Louis de Robien, attaché at the French Embassy
This evening I watched a demonstration of territorials,
several thousand in number, who marched along the Nevsky Prospekt demanding ‘Bread
and Peace’. It is hard to imagine anything more dishevelled and dirty than this
troop of ragged men with long hair and shaggy beards, their pale, vacant eyes
staring out of weatherbeaten hairy faces … They carried red notice-boards with
inscriptions in watery ink, and as they marched they gnawed hunks of black
bread or chewed sunflower seeds. This tatterdemalion army made a lamentable
impression of poverty, savagery and fatalism. It is a crime to take men away
from their homes and their work, and then leave them in a state of total want:
the first thing to do is to demobilise all these poor wretches, who are quite
justified in their demands for bread, and who are of no use in the war.
(Louis de Robien, The Diary of a Diplomat in Russia 1917-1918
, London 1969)
24 June
A resolution passed by the Congress of Soldiers’ and
Workmens’ Delegates condemns the anti-Jewish agitation in Russia, in which it
sees a danger to the revolutionary movement.
Imperial and Foreign News Items, The Times
24 June 2017
In her recent Reith lectures, Hilary Mantel says that ‘Facts
are not truth, though they are part of it – information is not knowledge. And
history is not the past – it is the method we have evolved of organising our
ignorance of the past … It’s what’s left in the sieve when the centuries have
run through it – a few stones, scraps of writing, scraps of cloth.’ The scraps of cloth
I’ve pinned to this particular notice-board are perhaps even more misleading
than most ‘versions’ of history. One thinks they tell a truth because they are
often first-hand accounts, or at least written in recent memory of the events
they describe. But then you read our ‘anonymous Englishman’ describing his
encounter with Rasputin’s murderer, Yusupov, and it seems likely that the myth-ship
surrounding the monk’s death had already launched. What hope do we have of
gleaning the truth a century later when people were already composing their
own, often self-regarding, accounts just a few months after an event? Perhaps
what we can take from these scraps of cloth are the details, the notice-boards
inscribed with ‘watery ink’ that the starved marchers are carrying, the raspberries
that have ripened in the summer heat, just as they have done for many years before
and continue to do so today – but somehow so appreciated in June 1917 by the
girl on her country estate.
