20-26 August 1917

Column of Russian prisoners captured in the fighting near Riga, August 1917 (© IWM Q 86647)
It was not only the hard right considering martial law under
Kornilov. In anguish, lugubriously, incoherently, bizarrely, grasping at a
possible way out, so was Kerensky himself … agitated at the possibility of
Bolshevik uprising, [he] was split between opposition to martial law, and a
belief in its necessity.
(China Miéville, October: The Story of the Russian Revolution
, London 2017)
21 August
On 21 August another blow to Russia’s war effort came with
news that the strategically important Baltic port of Riga, 350 miles to the
south-west, had fallen to the Germans – or, rather, its Russian defenders had
simply abandoned it to them without a fight. Despite this, a state of denial
about the Russian army’s disintegration persisted in the capital. Willem
Oudendijk had gone to the opera that evening with his wife to hear Chaliapin
sing in Rimsky Korsakov’s Rusalka:
the audience had been wildly enthusiastic, rushing forward from their seats and
‘recalling Chaliapin before the footlights over and over again at the end of
every Act. There seemed no thought of revolution, or the Germans, or war that
evening. Petrograd was now in the war zone; but what did it matter? Here was
Chaliapin singing! Cheer! And applaud! Bravo, Chaliapin!’
(Helen Rappaport, Caught in the Revolution: Petrograd 1917
, London 2017)
22 August
On the morning of August 22, [conservative Vladimir] Lvov
paid a visit to Kerensky. He implied in veiled terms that he represented an
influential party which believed the government should be strengthened with the
addition of public figures close to the military. Kerensky subsequently claimed
that the instant the interview was over, he dismissed it from his mind. Lvov,
however, proceeded to Mogilev to sound out Kornilov.
(Richard Pipes, A Concise History of the Russian Revolution
, London 1995)
23 August
Diary entry of Louis de Robien, attaché at the French Embassy
People tell scandalous stories about [Kerensky], and the
latest pretext for these is his divorce, and his re-marriage to one of his
sisters-in-law, who is a very young student at the Conservatoire. Amongst the
people, it is said that he has got divorced to marry the Tsar’s daughter, and
that his is going to become Regent. It’s the kind of story they love here, and
the Slav imagination is busy embroidering on these fantastic themes … we shall
see it all later on at the opera with some Chaliapin, or at the ballet with
some Karsavina.
(Louis de Robien, The Diary of a Diplomat in Russia 1917-1918
, London 1969)
24 August
Account by Vladimir Lvov, member of the State Duma for Samara Region
I arrived at Stavka [Army HQ] on 24 August; no
vehicles met us so Dobrynsky and I took a cab … to the hotel where I had to share a room with the Cossack captain
Rodionov … From his first words Rodionov knocked me sideways by saying that the
supreme commander had signed Kerensky’s death warrant … although Kerensky had
not officially asked me to conduct talks with Kornilov, I decided that I could
speak on his behalf, since he had shown willingness to reorganize the
government … To my question as to whether it was true that the armed
forces would not support the government in the event of a Bolshevik uprising,
Kornilov reassured me by saying that the situation was very difficult but it
would not get to this stage; the troops would do their duty and support the
government.
(V.N. Lvov, 'My Talks with Kerensky and Kornilov', A.F. Kerensky: Pro et Contra, St Petersburg 2016)
Diary entry of Joshua Butler Wright, Counselor of the American Embassy, Petrograd
A Bolshevik
uprising is now looked for by Sunday. We are forced to take the first
preparatory steps looking to the removal of our most important archives to a
place of safety.
( Witness to Revolution: The Russian Revolution Diary and Letters of J. Butler Wright
, London 2002)
25 August
Account by Vladimir Lvov, member of the State Duma for Samara Region
My second meeting with Kornilov took place on the morning of
25 August … He started by elaborating the general situation: Riga was taken,
Rumania could be cut off at any moment, the mood in the ranks was despondent,
the army was wanting to pin the blame on those responsible for its ignominy at
the front and rear … Kornilov then added: ‘From 27 August to 1 September a
Bolshevik insurrection is expected, their plan being to overthrow the
government and replace them,
and conclude an immediate separate peace … Do not think I say this on my own
account, but in order to save the country I see no other option but to transfer
all military and civilian power into the hands of a supreme commander.’
(V.N. Lvov, 'My Talks with Kerensky and Kornilov', A.F. Kerensky: Pro et Contra, St Petersburg 2016)
26 August
Diary entry of Louis de Robien, attaché at the French Embassy
The internal situation is still far from brilliant. One has
the feeling that there is increasing disagreement between Kerensky and
Kornilov, and that the extremist parties are taking advantage of it to gain
ground … The populace, which had at first accepted the fall of Riga
philosophically, is now seized with panic and is trying to get out of Petrograd
at all costs. In Kanyuchennaya Street I saw a hundred-yard-long queue of people
waiting for tickets outside the Wagons-lits office. There was such a scramble
at the Nicholas Station yesterday that several people were suffocated by the
crowd and killed.
(Louis de Robien, The Diary of a Diplomat in Russia 1917-1918
, London 1969)
Letter to Kerensky from G. Korotkov, a worker in the
provincial town of Slaviansk, Kharkov Province
To Mr. War Minister Kerensky
I will be brief, Mr. War Minister.
I consider it my sacred duty to inform you that the
Provisional Government should expect a new counterrevolution. The mood among
the popular masses is decidedly counterrevolutionary in view of the failure in
battle of the Russian Army. The peasants arriving in the town of Slaviansk say
openly that only the tsar can save Russia and bring all the food prices down;
they are extremely embittered against the bourgeoisie and the workers, who are
constantly engaged in party struggle, they are embittered against the soldiers,
who to their disgrace have fled from the Germans…
P.S. Once you have read this all the way through, Mr. War
Minister, you may think I am right-wing, like Purishkevich and so on. No! I am
a simple worker who sympathises with the popular socialists, but above all I am
a citizen of Russia.
G. Korotkov, Slaviansk, 26 August 1917
(Mark D. Steinberg, Voices of Revolution, 1917
, New Haven and London 2001)
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26 August 2017
The concept of the strong, forceful leader is a
consistent one in Russian history. A tsar shows weakness, he is replaced by
someone with a bit more grit (Peter III
by Catherine the Great for example). In 1917 this process was accelerated and
accentuated. Nicholas, for all his authoritarian impulses, is seen to be weak.
He is replaced by the energetic, apparently decisive Kerensky. But over the
summer Kerensky starts to look more vulnerable. His appeals to the troops not
to ‘vote for peace with their legs’ fall increasingly on deaf ears, he fails to
make any real progress with land reform, his government veers from crisis to
crisis. And when, in July and August, the dual threat to Petrograd of German
advances and Bolshevik uprisings becomes impossible to ignore, another strong
man puts himself in the line of succession: Lavr Kornilov, general and
putative dictator of Russia. Who knows what would have happened if his coup had
been successful, but the strongman model is equally familiar to historians of
the Soviet period. Allow some light and shade into the fortress mentality of
the Kremlin (e.g. Gorby) and the whole thing can come crashing down. History being, as someone said, just one damned thing after another, it’s hardly
surprising that the latest Russian strongman is not far from ratcheting up a
quarter of a century in power. He’s done his research.
