6-12 August 1917

Life at Tobolsk during the first few months was another idyll of domestic calm and undisturbed tranquillity. The ex-Tsar breakfasted, studied, walked, lunched, exercised, dined, taught history to Alexis, and held family reunions in the evening to an extent never possible before. Special religious services were held for the royal family in the town church and they were permitted to leave the house for that purpose. The children prepared and enacted dramatic pieces in French and English. The townspeople showed themselves courteous and sympathetic, frequently sending gifts, particularly fresh food, and saluting the members of the family respectfully or blessing them with the sign of the cross when they appeared at the windows of the Palace. It was only the unending monotony, the drab Siberian monotony, that oppressed, together with the almost complete absence of news.
(Edmund Walsh, 'The Last Days of the Romanovs', The Atlantic
, March 1928)
6 August
Memoir of Pierre Gilliard, tutor to the tsar's children
What reasons had the Council of Ministers for transporting
the Imperial family to Tobolsk? It is difficult to say definitely. When
Kerensky told the Tsar of the proposed transfer he explained the necessity by
saying that the Provisional Government had resolved to take energetic measures
against the Bolsheviks; this would result in a period of disturbance and armed
conflict of which the Imperial family might be the first victims; it was
therefore his duty to put them out of danger. It has been claimed in other
quarters that it was an act of weakness in face of the Extremists, who, uneasy
at seeing in the army the beginnings of a movement in favour of the Tsar,
demanded his exile to Siberia. However this may be, the journey of the Imperial
family from Tsarskoe Selo to Tobolsk was effected under comfortable conditions
and without any noteworthy incidents.
(Sergei Mironenko, A Lifelong Passion
, London 1996)
7 August
Diary entry of Louis de Robien, attaché at the French Embassy
We only know a few details about the Imperial family’s
journey. The departure from Tsarskoye took place in the early morning … The
town of Tobolsk, where the Tsar and his family are to be interned, is a long
way from the railway. Rasputin was born near there. The Grand Duchesses are
supposed to have told Kerensky that the Empress’s dearest wish is to build a
big church there, so that people can pray to God for the martyr … Saint Grischa
Rasputin, the patron saint of the tovariches
… it’s just what they need. In fact, one had to admit that there is something
impressive about the fulfilment of the prophecies of this man who never ceased
to foretell that, if he met with a violent death, the Empire would collapse
during the month after his disappearance.
(Louis de Robien, The Diary of a Diplomat in Russia 1917-1918
, London 1969)
9 August
Train 293 for Finland arrived at Udelnaya Station. The
driver was Guro Jalava, railywayman, conspirator, committed Marxist. ‘I came to
the edge of the platform’, he later recalled, ‘whereat a man strode from among
the trees and hoisted himself up into the cab. It was, of course, Lenin,
although I hardly recognised him. He was to be my stoker.’ The photograph in
the fake passport with which Lenin – ‘Konstantin Petrovich Ivanov’ – travelled
has become famous. With a cap perched high on a curly wig, the contours of his
beardless mouth unfamiliar, wryly upturned, his deep small eyes are all that is
recognisable.
(China Miéville, October: The Story of the Russian Revolution
, London 2017)
Letter to the Central Executive Committee of Soviets on
behalf of positional soldiers
Comrade Soldiers and Workers,
All of us positional troops ask you as our comrades to
explain to us who these Bolsheviks are and what party they belong to because we
don’t know them or their opinion. Our provisional government has come out very
much against the Bolsheviks. But we, positional soldiers, don’t find any fault
with them at all … We are little by little going over entirely to the side of
the Bolsheviks. But in order for us to find out exactly about the Bolsheviks,
we are turning to you, comrades, as our advisors – explain all this to us.
With respect, all the positional Soldiers, 9 August 1917,
Active Army, Sirebrov, Soldier
(Mark D. Steinberg, Voices of Revolution, 1917
, New Haven and London 2001)
10 August
Mistrust between prime minister [Kerensky] and general
[Kornilov] was such that Kornilov arrived with a substantial and provocative
bodyguard. This was a body of Turkmen fighters from the so-called Savage
Division of volunteer soldiers from across the Caucasus … As Kerensky watched
in alarm from the Winter Palace, the red-robed warriors came jogging into view
down the wide streets, surrounding Kornilov’s car, brandishing scimitars and
machine-guns. They took up positions around the palace door like enemies
preparing for a parlay.
(China Miéville, October: The Story of the Russian Revolution
, London 2017)
Resolution of the Conference of Public Figures
[representatives of business and industry, the nobility, educated society and
former officers, convened in Moscow between 8-10 August]
The time has come openly to admit that the country … is on
the verge of ruin. The government, if it realises its duty, must acknowledge
that it has led the state on the wrong road, which must be abandoned at once
for the sake of saving the country and freedom … The only government is one
that cuts itself free of all traces of dependence on committees, soviets and
other similar organisations.
( The Russian Revolution 1917-1921
, ed. Ronald
Kowalski, London 1997)
11 August
Memoir by the Menshevik Nikolai Sukhanov
I got into a train at one of the stations before Yaroslavl
but the train was already overflowing, and in all classes you had to stand up
all night. In Yaroslavl, by using my title of Central Ex. Com. member, I
penetrated into an almost empty military carriage. I was delighted at my
success, but something rather disagreeable happened as a result. I was naïve
enough to remove my boots, which were gone when I happened to wake up an hour
or two later … In Moscow, astounding the crowd with my stockinged feet, I made
my way to the station-master and spent about two hours telephoning to people at
random, to see whether some friend could bring a pair of boots to the station
for me. This was all quite typical of travelling at this time.
(N.N. Sukhanov, The Russian Revolution 1917: a Personal Record
, Oxford 1955)
12 August
Diary entry of Louis de Robien, attaché at the French Embassy
There is again a certain amount of excitement in the town.
Cossack patrols and machine-gun carriers are massed in the Winter Palace
square, ready to intervene. During the last few days one has felt that things
were going badly again. … One feels it, like one does when one knows that a
storm is coming, even though one cannot yet hear the thunder.
(Louis de Robien, The Diary of a Diplomat in Russia 1917-1918
, London 1969)
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12 August 2017
