16-22 July 1917

We would like to know, why did [Kerensky] consider it
necessary to move into the Winter Palace? Why was it necessary to eat and sleep
like a tsar: to tread on
elegance and luxury when the only real right to do this was the people’s; for in the
future it was to be theirs, as the Museum of Alexander III, as the Hermitage
and Tretyakov Gallery. Had Kerensky not been in the palace, the people’s rage
wouldn’t have touched a single trinket. Did the prime minister really not know
that the political struggle could, at any moment, fling him if not from
Nicholas II’s couch, then at least from his chair, that he was putting artistic
treasures in the most perilous danger by daring to live amongst them.
(L.M. Reisner in A.F.
Kerensky: Pro et Contra
, St Petersburg 2016)
16 July
Diary entry of an anonymous Englishman
I believe the Emperor and his family have been sent to
Siberia. I heard this last night. I wonder what effect it will have on the
people. I think Kerenski will make himself dictator.
( The Russian Diary of an Englishman, Petrograd 1915-1917
, New York 1919)
17 July
Memoir by the Menshevik Nikolai Sukhanov
Now the question that naturally and inevitably arose was
that of a dictatorship. Indeed, three days after Kerensky’s ‘appointment’ as
Premier, the Star Chamber appeared before the Central Executive Committee with
a demand for a dictatorship.
(N.N. Sukhanov, The Russian Revolution 1917: a Personal Record
, Oxford 1955)
18 July
Diary entry of Louis de Robien, attaché at the French Embassy
I met Kerensky again today, in his khaki uniform (he still
does not dare dress like a Cossack), installed like the Emperor in the Imperial
Rolls-Royce, with an aide-de-camp covered in shoulder-knots on his left, and a
soldier sitting next to the chauffeur … the great man of the Russian revolution
is in reality nothing but an inspired fanatic, a case, and a madman: he acts
through intuition and personal ambition, without reasoning and without weighing
up his actions, in spite of his undoubted intelligence, his forcefulness and,
above all, the eloquence with which he knows how to lead the mob – all of which
shows how dangerous he is … Fortunately, the career of a personality such as
this can only be precarious. Nevertheless, for the moment he is the only man on
whom we can base our hope of seeing Russia continue to fight the war, so
therefore we must make use of him ... but I fear that he has some terrible
disappointments in store for us, in spite of his blustering and in spite of the
Draconian measures he has proclaimed. And yet, in Russia you never can tell …
perhaps the people will lie down like good dogs as soon as they see the stick.
(Louis de Robien, The Diary of a Diplomat in Russia 1917-1918
, London 1969)
19 July
Diary of Nicholas II
It’s three years since Germany declared war on us; it’s as
if we had lived a whole lifetime in those three years! Lord, help and save
Russia!
(Sergei Mironenko, A Lifelong Passion
, London 1996)
Statement by the Provisional Government to the Allied Powers
In the inflexible decision to continue the war until the
complete victory of ideals proclaimed by the Russian Revolution, Russia will
not retreat before any difficulties … We know that upon the result of this
struggle depends our freedom and the freedom of humanity.
( Russian-American Relations:
March 1917-March 1920
, New York 1920)
Around the country, peasant revolts grew in violence and
anarchy continued, especially over the hated war, the catastrophic offensive
costing hundreds of thousands of lives. On 19 July, in Atarsk, a district
capital in Saratov, a group of angry ensigns waiting for a train to the front
smashed the station lanterns and went hunting their superiors, guns at the
ready, until a popular ensign took charge, and ordered the officers’ arrest.
Rioting soldiers detained, threatened and even killed their officers … By the
19th … the new commander-in-chief [Kornilov] bluntly demanded total
independence of operational procedures, with reference only ‘to conscience and
to the people as a whole’ … Kerensky began to fear that he had created a
monster. He had.
(China Miéville, October: The Story of the Russian Revolution
, London 2017)
20 July
Diary entry of Joshua Butler Wright, Counselor of the American Embassy, Petrograd
The shadow of a military dictator grows larger and larger –
and I am not disinclined to believe that it is the solution of the question.
( Witness to Revolution: The Russian Revolution Diary and Letters of J. Butler Wright
, London 2002)
Diary entry of an anonymous Englishman
Kislovodsk. The Grand Duchess [Vladimir] received me in her
cabinet de travail, and we counted the money which I had brought her in my
boots from Petrograd! It was in revolutionary thousand-rouble notes, which she
had never seen before.
( The Russian Diary of an Englishman, Petrograd 1915-1917
, New York 1919)
21 July
Resolution from soldiers of the 2nd Caucasus Engineering
Regiment
[Our regiment] has allowed its ranks to commit a series of
tortures and murders of our citizens over nothing but freedom of speech. Within
its ranks there are ignorant men who have trampled upon all the Great human and
civil rights; they have dragged speakers off tribunes and even beaten up those
who suffered under the old regime for trying to attain freedom … We propose
immediately discovering the direct participants in all the crimes … and
arresting them and handing them over for trial without mercy or leniency. We
will not and cannot allow ignorant people who beat freedom fighters to death in
free Russia to go unpunished.
(Mark D. Steinberg, Voices of
Revolution, 1917
, New Haven and London 2001)
22 July
Diary entry of Joshua Butler Wright, Counselor of the American Embassy, Petrograd
We awoke to an extraordinary situation of no government this
morning! The ministry all resigned last night – being in session until 5.00 AM
this morning.
( Witness to Revolution: The Russian Revolution Diary and Letters of J. Butler Wright
, London 2002)
Arthur Ransome in a letter to his family in England
You do not see the bones sticking through the skin of the
horses in the street. You do not have your porter’s wife beg for a share in
your bread allowance because she cannot get enough to feed her children. You do
not go to a tearoom to have tea without cakes, without bread, without butter,
without milk, without sugar, because there are none of these things. You do not
pay seven shillings and ninepence a pound for very second-rate meat. You do not
pay forty-eight shillings for a pound of tobacco. If ever I do get home, my
sole interest will be gluttony.
(Helen Rappaport, Caught in the Revolution
, London 2017)
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22 July 2017
Lenin called Kerensky a ‘Bonapartist’, other contemporary
commentators referred to him as a ‘little Napoleon’. The references to
dictatorship in this week’s extracts are compelling. In retrospect, Kerensky's decision to move into the Winter Palace
in July 1917 on becoming prime minister seems a bit strange. He occupied
the former rooms of Alexander III, and was soon nicknamed ‘Alexander IV’.
Rumours that he slept in the imperial bed were not true; in fact Kerensky
removed the grandest pieces of furniture and portraits, and went around in his
trademark semi-military jacket. In his Interpreting
the Russian Revolution
, Orlando Figes describes the care Kerensky took over
his personal appearance as ‘all part of his vanity – and of his awareness of
the importance of public image to the revolutionary minister’. He even wore his
right arm in a sling during his tours of the Front, the result, people joked,
of too much hand-shaking. He was often photographed in this ‘Napoleonic pose’.
Perhaps the imperial instinct was not entirely foreign to Kerensky. The wife of
the ex-minister of Justice (whom Kerensky replaced) recalled him expressing a
change of attitude after visiting the tsar in Tsarskoe Selo, even admitting
regret that people had not really appreciated Nicholas II’s qualities. (There
were later rumours of Kerensky helping to fund an unsuccessful attempt to free the
imperial family a few weeks later, when they were already in Tobolsk – but
these remain unsubstantiated.) A ‘little Napoleon’, assuming the trappings of
office, making speeches in royal palaces – perhaps M. Macron, the new president
of France, should take heed…
