17-23 September 1917

The man with whom the moderates urged caution, Kerensky, remained pitifully weak, and growing weaker. He struggled, lashed out to shore up his authority. On 18 September he pronounced the dissolution of the Central Committee of the Baltic Fleet. The sailors responded simply that his order was 'considered inoperative'. The Democratic Conference, too, strained for relevance ... The proceedings were outdoing their own absurdity.
(China Miéville, October: The Story of the Russian Revolution
, London 2017)
17 September
All power to the Soviets – such is the slogan of the new
movement… All power to the imperialist bourgeoisie – such is the slogan of the
Kerensky Government. There is no room for doubt. We have two powers before us:
the power of Kerensky and his government, and the power of the Soviets and the
Committees. The fight between these two powers is the characteristic feature of
the present moment. Either the power of the Kerensky Government – and then the
rule of the landlords and capitalists, war and chaos. Or the power of the
Soviets – and then the rule of the workers and peasants, peace and the liquidation
of chaos.
(J. Stalin, ‘All Power to the Soviets’, The Russian Revolution
, London 1938)
18 September
Letter from Sofia Yudina in Petrograd to her friend Nina Agafonnikova in Vyatka
I don’t know much about art, I’d love to know more. If you
were here and there was no war, we’d go to the Hermitage, everywhere, and we’d
learn. Arkasha would go with us the first few times and teach us how to look,
how to see and find the beauty in paintings … But unfortunately, sadly, we
can’t do any of this. The Hermitage is closed: it’s being evacuated and only,
probably, in about four or five years will it be possible to see pictures in
the Hermitage again…
(Viktor Berdinskikh, Letters from Petrograd: 1916-1919
, St Petersburg 2016)
19 September
Report in the Times headed ‘Good work of Democratic conference’
The conference has lost much of its nervousness and seems to
be finding itself. There was a good deal of wandering from the main point,
which is to decide the form of government which will be in control until the
meeting of the Constituent Assembly. Nor is this to be wondered at when it is
considered how little experience the Russian masses have had in conducting
politics. There is no doubt that the Conference is realizing the terrible
situation in which the country finds itself, and is trying to the utmost to
bend its energies in the direction of a solution.
(‘Coalition Probable in Russia’, The Times (from our
correspondent))
20 September
Diary entry of Joshua Butler Wright, Counselor of the American Embassy, Petrograd
Yesterday’s conference was typical of the political chaos
now reigning in this distracted country. First vote was for coalition, second
to eliminate those implicated with Kornilov, third to eliminate Kadets, and
fourth (submitted for no perceivable reason) overwhelmingly against coalition! Whereupon the
somewhat dazed ‘presidium’ decided to enlarge itself and to adjourn conference
until 6.00 PM today. The two outstanding facts were the extreme unpopularity of
the Kadets and the quiet power of the Maximalist [Bolshevik] faction. I forgot
to say yesterday that a charming piece of German propaganda is to have a cartoon
and the Russian words ‘Why fight for capitalistic England’ on every sheet of
toilet paper in the Russian latrines at the front.
( Witness to Revolution: The Russian Revolution Diary and Letters of J. Butler Wright
, London 2002)
21 September
Sir George Buchanan, British Ambassador to Russia
The Bolsheviks, who form a compact minority, have alone a definite political programme. They are more active and better organized than any other group, and until they and the ideas which they represent are finally squashed, the country will remain a prey to anarchy and disorder ... If the Government are not strong enough to put down the Bolsheviks by force, at the risk of breaking altogether with the Soviet, the only alternative will be a Bolshevik Government.
(Sir George Buchanan, My Mission to Russia , London 1923)
22 September
Report in The Times
Russia is a woman labouring in childbirth, and this is the moment chosen by Germany to strike her down. Whatever may be the strict rights of the case, the spirit of history will never forgive her. The liberty which has been painfully born in Russia will rise to vindicate her in the coming generation, and will become the most implacable foe of a future Germany.
(‘Reprisals’, The Times)
23 September
Diary entry of Louis de Robien, attaché at the French Embassy
In the provinces, the hostility of the peasants towards the workers is increasing and the moujiks are refusing to sell their products to feed the workers, whom they accuse of having caused the economic crisis through their idleness. The workers are doing less and less work because it does not provide them with a living, and because on their part they do not want to do anything for the peasants who refuse to supply them. It is a vicious circle which makes the economic situation more serious every day. The result is armed conflict, pogroms, and disorders of every kind.
(Louis de Robien, The Diary of a Diplomat in Russia 1917-1918
, London 1969)
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23 September 2017
Party conference season is upon us and excitement is rising to an almost noticeable level. Actually, that's not entirely fair. There is a good deal of anticipation this year, thanks to Corbyn fever and Maybot uncertainty, with Brexit looming large over everything. The stakes are higher than normal, just as they were for the All-Russian Democratic Conference in Petrograd a hundred years earlier. (Corbyn is no Stalin, but a small amendment to the 17 September quotation has a certain resonance: Either the power of the May Government – and then the rule of the landlords and capitalists, war and chaos. Or the power of the Labour left – and then the rule of the workers and peasants, peace and the liquidation of chaos. ) Nobody really suspected that a month after this conference the country would be in greater turmoil than ever before (though the British ambassador, Buchanan, seems to make a good stab at such a prediction, in a book published six years later). Descriptions of the conference reveal all factions to be in various degrees of confusion and internal strife. Perhaps if its representatives had talked about transitional arrangements that avoided a cliff-edge scenario, leading to a new promised land of fairness and prosperity for all, things might have been different... Soft, not hard, revolution then.
