12-18 February 1917

Demonstration at the Putilov Factory, Petrograd
13 February
Diary entry of James L. Houghteling, Jr, attaché at the American Embassy, Petrograd
At Mikhailoff’s fur store this evening, I talked with a
Belgian who was in Moscow in 1905. He described to me the riots, barricades and
miscellaneous murder of that exciting time. The government picked out its most
unruly regiments of Cossacks to quell the disturbance, and they shot at
everything in sight. A man standing next to my informant in a side street
leaned out to look up the Tverskaya and exposed his head and one hand; his hand
was drilled clean through with a bullet. Lucky it wasn’t his head! The word
‘Cossack’ originally meant bandit and these fellows live up to their name. I
shouldn’t be surprised if the revolution which is coming will begin with a
massacre of the Cossacks comparable only to that of the Janissaries, or to
Peter the Great’s slaughter of the Streltsi.
(James L. Houghteling, Jr, A Diary of the Russian Revolution
, New York 1918)
Diary entry of Lev Tikhomirov, revolutionary and later conservative thinker
They’re saying terrible things about our rulers. I don’t
even want to note them down. Everything is against the Empress. The Emperor
still gets sympathy. And all this is being said by the crowd as they stand in
queues, completely openly, not
even hiding it from the police who are in attendance. I don’t know what to think about the future
of Russia. Tomorrow, finally, the State Duma is convening. But what good will
that be? Russia has rarely been in such a terrifying situation, not even in the
Time of Troubles. And the most terrifying thing of all is that the Emperor is
apparently unable to surround himself with trustworthy people who love Russia.
Meanwhile I carry on with my writing. What else can I do? I have no means of
helping Russia, and what’s more I’m completely wrung out physically… So I sit
and do my work, which I can do half-ill, in my study, amongst books rather than
people. Truth to tell, there are books I need. I should go to the library, but
I can’t go out. The work's
dragging.
(L.A. Tikhomirov, Diary 1915-1917
, Moscow 2008)
14 February
Diary entry of Joshua Butler Wright, Counselor of the
American Embassy, Petrograd
No disturbances yesterday – as is usually the case when
there is so much preliminary talk. The military have every where been in
evidence lately, particularly the Cossacks who have openly patrolled the
streets. The people have a very wholesome respect for the Cossacks; and I
hardly blame them for they are a formidable looking lot of men. Went to the
opening of the Duma at 2.00PM, at which everyone expected that a demonstration
of some kind would occur. It was jammed as I have never seen a hall filled
before and the deliberations were rather uninteresting. The gallery
accommodations are very inadequate, the Diplomatic Loge having only twelve
chairs in it. The Allied ambassadors were in front and applauded by the Duma.
Uchida – Japanese ambassador – has arrived.
( Witness to Revolution: The Russian Revolution Diary and Letters of J. Butler Wright
, London 2002)
Sir George Buchanan, British Ambassador to the Imperial Court
… the Duma met, and the opening sitting, which I attended,
passed off so quietly that I thought I could safely take a short holiday in
Finland. During the ten days which I spent there no rumours reached me of the
coming storm.
(Sir George Buchanan, My Mission to Russia
, London 1923)
15 February
Report in The Times
, ‘Food Supply and Reform in Russia’
Rumours of impending trouble in connexion with the opening
of the Duma have been falsified. Quiet prevails outside and inside the Tauris
Palace. The most unpopular Ministers refrained from appearing. The House was
moved only by the presidential address to the Army and Navy, in which M. Rodzianko
assured the soldiers that their sufferings and exploits were duly appreciated
and all efforts would be exerted by the nation to help its gallant Army to victory
by doing what they could … Although an open collision between the Government
and the Duma has been avoided the belief prevails among members of the House
that their labours will not be of long duration. Food supplies are coming in
more freely, thanks to the cessation of the snowstorms, which have severely
impeded road and railway transport.
( The Times
, 'From our own correspondent, Petrograd')
Diary entry of Georges-Maurice Paléologue, French Ambassador to Russia
From whatever point of view the Russian be regarded, whether
political, intellectual, moral or religious, he always presents the paradoxical
spectacle of extreme docility combined with a spirit of revolt which is very
strongly marked … All who study the history and theology of the Russian
Orthodox Church, ‘the True Church of Christ’, realise that its essential
characteristics are its conservative instincts, the immutable rigidity of its
creed, reverence for canon law, the importance of forms and rites, routine
devotions, sumptuous ceremonial, an imposing hierarchy, and humble, blind
submission on the part of the faithful. By way of contrast, the great sect of
the Raskol which separated from the official Church in the XVIIth century and has
no less than eleven million adherents, shows us the abolition of the
priesthood, a primitive rough-and-ready form of worship and a negative and
subversive radicalism … These two sides of the Russian nature appear equally
well in the sphere of morals and private life. I know no country where the
social fact is so impregnated with the spirit of tradition and religion;
domestic life so solemn, patriarchal, inspired by so much tenderness and
affection, enveloped in so much poetry and reverence … On the other hand, in no
other country are individual revolts more frequent and sudden, and nowhere do
they create such a sensation.
(Maurice Paléologue,
An Ambassador's Memoirs 1914-1917
, London 1973)
16 February
Diary entry of Alexander Benois, artist and critic
Today leaving the editorial office after a gloomy political
conversation with
[Iosif] Gessen
[editor of Rech’
] , I stopped him as he was hurrying off somewhere
and said (obviously without expecting my words to have any real effect): ‘I beg
you to give up on Constantinople’, in other words from waging war till final
victory. I got a pretty symptomatic response; first he turned back towards me
with a dejected look, then a sad smile and finally he intoned: ‘It makes no
difference now anyway, everything’s going to hell in a handcart!’ It seems the
warmongers have finally realised it. So why carry on confusing and misleading
public opinion by continuing to campaign in the paper for the continuation of
the war? What is harrying them to their own destruction?
(Alexander Benois ,
Diary 1916-1918
, Moscow 2006)
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18 February 2017
British Ambassador Buchanan and weather forecaster Michael Fish are perhaps not obvious soulmates, but taking a holiday to Finland on the eve of the February Revolution is not so far removed from the 'hurricane that isn't on the way' in 1987. There is a patronising tone to some of the foreign observers' writing about Russia and Russians which could be seen as 'of its time' were it not for the parallels with attitudes to the country in 2017. You don't have to be a Putinista to feel that the western press and those who pontificate about Russia have, at best, a particular viewpoint they wish to put across (even if not always accompanied by the grinding of an axe). A more recent Ambassador to Moscow, Tony Brenton, brings a notably calm and rational - and informed - take on current relations. In the Daily Telegraph
last August he wrote: '...it is crucial that we walk back from where we now are. Russia sees the UK as a leading Western hawk. A thawing of our relations with them would be an important step. I am not arguing that we should let our guard down entirely. Russia’s recent actions have revealed a disturbing readiness to break international law and seize national advantage when the opportunity offers. We need to be absolutely clear on Nato’s united readiness to stand firm against such adventures and to support our more exposed allies as and when necessary. But to get the temperature down we also need to be looking for areas where we can expand cooperation.'
