15-21 January 1917

Nicholas II at General Headquarters, Baranovichi
(photo State Archive of the Russian Federation)
15 January
Letter from the poet Nikolai Gumilyov to Larisa Reisner
My dear Lerichka,
You will of course be cross with me, I’m writing to you for the first time since I left, and have already received two wonderful letters from you. But on the very first day I got here I found myself in the trenches, firing a machine gun at the Germans as they fired back at me, and two weeks have gone by in this pursuit. Only the most fervent scribbler can write from the trenches: there are no chairs, the ceiling leaks, the table is inhabited by several huge rats that growl at you if you approach. And for entire days I’ve been lying in the snow looking at the stars and drawing a line between us in my head, tracing the outline of your face looking down at me from the heavens. It’s a delightful way to spend time. You must try it somehow … How I now regret those wasted years when I listened to ignorant critics and sought something sincere and heartfelt in my poems rather than practising rondeaus, rondels, lays, virelays and so on … I must act more like the cavalryman, with impudent daring, and believe, as in wartime, in my hussar happiness. And in any case I am happy, because the joy of creativity is mixed with the realisation that without my love for you I couldn’t hope to write such a thing even from this great distance.
I kiss your dear, dear little hands unceasingly,
Your Hafiz
The artist and architect Foma Railyan writes
The general atmosphere today is too depressing for creativity, too oppressive for the poet's soul ... All around is just barbarism and pandemonium, the past is destroyed, there is no present.'
(F. Railyan, 'On the influence of war on creativity', Petrogradaskii Listok
)
16 January
Letter from Lenin in Geneva to the French-born revolutionary Inessa Armand
Dear Friend!
If Switzerland gets dragged into the war, the French will immediately occupy Geneva. So being in Geneva will mean being in France and having relations with Russia. Therefore I’m thinking of handing over to you the party funds (which you should keep in a little bag, sewn up, on your person, because the bank won’t issue money in wartime) … This is only planning, for the moment it’s between us.
I think that we’ll stay in Zurich, that war is unlikely.
Best wishes and handshake!
Your Lenin
18 January
Diary entry of James L. Houghteling, Jr, attaché at the American Embassy, Petrograd
There is no doubt that a revolution is coming. G- says that in the provinces it is regarded as certain, and that people think it will be very bloody. The Tsar's actions alone are enough to provoke a revolt. Last fall he put into office the pro-German Stürmer. The latter immediately attacked the Zemstvo Union as a detriment to the war, but his own Ministers of War and Marine, acting upon representations from Generals Alexeieff, Ruzsky, and Brusiloff, reported that they could not get along without the Union. This fiasco and Miliukoff's denunciation of Stürmer in the Duma, drove him from office, the first time popular opinion has been able to exert such strength. The Tsar is said to have asked for the recall of Sir George Buchanan, the British Ambassador, as an accomplice of Miliukoff, but to have met with a prompt refusal from Great Britain. Then Trepoff went in as a liberal, but the Tsar saddled him with Protopopoff, the worst reactionary of all, as Home Minister controlling the police and the press. While the Premier was expostulating and Nikolas vacillating, Rasputin was killed and the Tsar immediately grew stubborn, confirmed Protopopoff and forced Trepoff out. Now we have a nice old reactionary philanthropist as nominal head of ministry, with Protopopoff as the real government. The Duma has been adjourned and while it is scheduled to assemble on February 27th [14th], the wise ones say it will never meet. Meanwhile the throne has fewer adherents every day.
(James L. Houghteling, Jr, A Diary of the Russian Revolution
, New York 1918)
Diary entry of Alexander Benois, artist and critic
Dinner with the Nabokovs and some dismal, taciturn English military man (a Captain Mortimer, if I'm not mistaken). Tried to touch on the war but failed completely ... The Englishman kept quiet and just smoked his pipe, then muttered something lugubriously about the boches, who obviously should be annihilated to the last man. Elena Ivanovna [Nabokov] has a very sweet new dachshund, the successor to her grouchy old cat. Maybe the cat was more interesting but I have a soft spot for dachshunds.
(Alexander Benois ,
Diary 1916-1918
, Moscow 2006)
19 January
On 19 January an official announcement of imminent bread rationing - as little as one pound per person a day - sparked panic buying. People were now standing so long in line at the bakers' shops that they were suffering from hypothermia. If they were lucky enough to get any, they would hurry off, 'hugging close to themselves the warm piece of bread they had bought, in a vain attempt to receive from it a little heat' ... Hunger was made worse by the continuing sub-zero temperatures affecting the supply of fuel to the city by rail. Rowing boats on the Neva were chopped up for firewood, and even more desperate measures were resorted to: 'at dead of night' people slunk into the nearest cemetery 'to fill whole sacks with the wooden crosses from the graves of poor folk' and take them home for their fires.
(Helen Rappaport, Caught in the Revolution: Petrograd 1917
, London 2016)
20 January
Diary entry of Lev Tikhomirov, revolutionary and later conservative thinker
I'm constantly racking my brains as to how the monarchy can be saved. And truth to tell, I can't see a remedy. The main point is that the Sovereign cannot, of course, become a new person and change his character. With huge force of will and a strong adherence to
one
plan,
one
course of behaviour, generally speaking he could rescue
everything
, and escape this most desperate situation. But this is precisely what he will not do and what he cannot do. He will continue to hesitate and lurch from one plan to the next. And this being the case - in such a muddled situation - it can only end in collapse ... unless there is some providential intervention.
(L.A. Tikhomirov, Diary 1915-1917
, Moscow 2008)
21 January
Great Britain's ambassador, Sir George Buchanan, tells of the Allied Mission that came to Petrograd in January/February 1917 to boost Russia's morale in the war effort
... on [January 21] we were all invited to a gala dinner at the palace at Tsarskoe. As doyen of the diplomatic body, I had the honour of being placed on the Emperor's right, and His Majesty talked to me during the great part of the dinner. The only questions, to which I called his attention, were the food crisis and Russia's man power. As regarded the first, I told him that, according to my reports, there was such a scarcity of foodstuffs in some provinces that the supplies were not expected to last more than a fortnight. With regard to the second question, I observed that Russia was not making the most of her vast man power ... For myself, personally, a melancholy interest attaches to this dinner, for it was the last occasion on which I ever saw the Emperor. At the same time it is some satisfaction to me to remember his marked friendliness at what, unsuspected by either of us, was to be our last interview. It was as if His Majesty wished to show me that not only did he not resent my outspoken language at my recent audience, but that he appreciated the motives which prompted me to speak so frankly to him.
(Sir George Buchanan, My Mission to Russia
, London 1923)
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21 January 2017
A politically charged week with the UK outlining its approach to leaving the European Union, and a new president in the White House. As Russia's involvement in the US presidential elections comes under the microscope and everyone wonders exactly what sort of new world order will emerge under the stewardship of Messrs Putin and Trump, it's interesting to look back a hundred years to the state of Russo-American relations then. In an article in The Atlantic Monthly
a few years after the Revolution, President Woodrow Wilson wrote that it 'was against "capitalism" that the Russian leaders directed their attack. It was capitalism that made them see red; and it is against capitalism under one name or another that the discontented classes everywhere draw their indictment.' In words that have resonance today in debates over globalisation and workers' rights, he continues: 'Is it not ... too true that capitalists have often seemed to regard the men whom they use as mere instruments of profit, whose physical and mental powers it was legitimate to exploit with as slight cost to themselves as possible, either of money or sympathy? ... [Justice] must include sympathy and helpfulness and a willing to forgo self-interest in order to promote the welfare, happiness, and contentment of others and of the community as a whole. This is what our age is blindly feeling after in its reaction against what it deems the too great selfishness of the capitalistic system.' More Obama than Trump, perhaps... An excellent commentary on the contemporary political scene in Russia can be found at The Open Wall
weekly blog.
