21-27 May 1917

Arnold Lakhovsky, Square in a Provincial Town, 1917
Memoir by the Menshevik Nikolai Sukhanov
There were indeed many excesses, perhaps more than before.
Lynch-law, the destruction of houses and shops, jeering at and attacks on
officers, provincial authorities, or private persons, unauthorized arrests,
seizures, and beatings-up – were recorded every day by tens and hundreds. In
the country burnings and destruction of country houses became more frequent.
The peasants were beginning to ‘regulate’ land-tenure according to their own
ideas, forbidding the illegal felling of trees, driving off the landlords’
stock, taking the stock of grain under their own control, and refusing to
permit them to be taken to stations and wharves.
(N.N. Sukhanov, The Russian Revolution 1917: a Personal Record
, Oxford 1955)
21 May
Diary entry of Joshua Butler Wright, Counselor of the American Embassy, Petrograd
Spring has suddenly turned into summer overnight – and the
trees are shooting forth green faster than any foliage I ever saw. It tempted
the ambassador and myself to the country to play golf in the afternoon – a poor
course but lovely country. My first glimpse of suburban life and found it
greatly resembles our western towns in many ways; ill kept small places, swarms
of children, log houses, etc. Surely among all the people that we saw in the
country and in the large parks of Petrograd there seemed no sign of anarchy or
violence. The people seemed rather to be emerging from a rather dazed state of
surprise at the complete liberty which they suddenly gained.
( Witness to Revolution: The Russian Revolution Diary and Letters of J. Butler Wright
, London 2002)
Article in The Times
on the Labour conference in Leeds
Mr Ramsay MacDonald moved the first resolution,
congratulating the Russian people on a Revolution which had overthrown tyranny
… ‘We share,’ he added, ‘the aspirations of the Russian democracy. They turn to
us for counsel and support. Let us go to them and say “In the name of
everything you hold sacred, restrain the anarchy in your midst; find a cause
for unity, maintain your Revolution, stand by your principles, put yourselves
at the head of the democracies of Europe, give us inspiration so that you and
we together, shoulder to shoulder, will march out, bringing humanity still
further upward.’
‘Socialists on War Aims’, The Times
From the protocol of a general meeting of workers of the
Okulovsky Paper Factory and local peasants of Krestetsk Uezd, Novgorod
Province, 21 May 1917
Let our socialist comrades in the Ministry as well as in the
Petrograd Soviet of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies know that even in the
remote provinces we hear their summons to save free Russia and know their work
and devotion to the people and with them burn with the desire to work for the
common goal –the Salvation of Free Democratic Russia.
(Mark D. Steinberg, Voices of Revolution, 1917
, New Haven and London 2001)
22 May
On the 22nd
[Lenin] addressed the delegates [of the First All-Russian Congress of Peasants’
Soviets] in person, hammering home his support for the poorest peasants and
demanding the redistribution of land.
(ChinaMiéville, October: The Story of the Russian Revolution
, London 2017)
The opening
day of this first Labour Parliament of Russia was very memorable. From an early
hour in the morning the corridors and halls of the Naval Cadet Corps in the
Vassily Ostroff were filled with delegates arriving from East and West. Each
group as it arrived bore the mark of the region from which it hailed. Here was
a picturesque group of Ukrainians round a samovar and an accordion. There was a
group of sunburnt soldiers from the garrisons in Central Asia. There were some
dark-eyed natives from the Caucasus. There were lusty soldiers from the trenches,
and serious-looking officers; there were artizans from the Moscow factories and
mining representatives from the Don.
(M.P. Price, My Reminiscences of the Russian Revolution
, London 1921)
24 May
Diary entry of Louis de Robien, attaché at the French Embassy
Kerensky
has occasional bursts of energy and is trying to take the army in hand again:
he has reorganized the courts-martial and ordered them to severely punish all
attempts at desertion. All requests to resign presented by officers are refused
and General Gurko, who, because of the growing lack of discipline has asked to
be relieved of his command of the central group of armies, has been put at the
head of a mere division. Generalissimo Alexeiev has been replaced by General
Brussilov, the victor of Galicia. But what can all these measures accomplish
against the forces of anarchy which are causing the army to disintegrate, and
against which all words are useless?
(Louis de Robien, The Diary of a Diplomat in Russia 1917-1918
, London 1969)
Diary entry of an anonymous Englishman
Felix
Yusupov and his wife to tea in the loggia. Afterwards, in the garden, he told
me the whole story of the murder of Rasputin.
( The Russian Diary of an Englishman, Petrograd 1915-1917
, New York 1919)
25 May
Letter from Sofia Yudina in Petrograd to her friend Nina Agafonnikova in Vyatka
Today the
weather is fine: sky as blue as blue, white clouds. I’m sitting by the open
window: the lightest of breezes, the smell of the garden, the long grass gently
moving, the ceaseless chirping of the birds – the warblers and chaffinches. And
so many nightingales at night! And frogs!.. Mama is tired from the journey,
Papa is okay, feels fine, just worried by the chaos in our household. Lena
doesn’t know where to put herself, she’s reading Tolstoy’s ‘War and Peace’. We
don’t hear a word from her.
(Viktor Berdinskikh, Letters from Petrograd: 1916-1919
, St Petersburg 2016)
26 May
Article in The Times
When Russia
stepped forth from her prison she stepped into Utopia, and she has not yet
discovered that it is Utopia. All this is quite natural, but it is embarrassing
and dangerous. If it be not corrected Russia will fall away from the great
Alliance against barbarism or will stultify the Alliance by an inadequate
peace. Our difficulty is Germany’s opportunity, and she has not been slow to
use her opportunity. Into the Russian lines German aeroplanes have dropped multiplied
forgeries. These purport to be copies of letters from Russian homes to Russian
soldiers – letters which fell into German hands when the soldiers to whom they
were addressed become prisoners of war. Here is one of those forgeries: –'Dear
Soldiers, – You ought to know that Russia would have concluded peace long ago
had it not been for England, but we want peace – we are thirsting for it.
Working men, who have now the opportunity of making their wishes known, are
demanding peace. Nobody has the right to say that the Russian workman is
against peace. England has no right to say that. Whatever the outcome of this
evil war, we cannot expect any gratitude from England. Therefore we must shake
ourselves free of England. This is the demand of the people. This is its holy
will. I have nothing more to write. I am well, and hope the same of you. Your
loving brother, Nicolai'.
('The New Russia: From Prison into Utopia' by C. Hagberg Wright, The Times
)
27 May
Diary entry of Alexander Benois, artist and critic
I've recently become indifferent to everything. An elemental tragedy is almost certain to be played out, and what its outcome will be, nobody for the moment can say.
(Alexander Benois ,
Diary 1916-1918
, Moscow 2006)
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27 May 2017
Narodnaya volya (People’s Will) was the revolutionary
organisation behind the assassination of Alexander II in 1881 and many other
terrorist acts in the decades leading up to the 1917 Revolution. Lenin’s
brother, Alexander Ulyanov, was involved with one of its subsequent
incarnations, and was hanged at the age of seventeen. Lenin’s ferocious
commitment to overthrowing the tsarist regime has often been ascribed to this
event, an extreme example, perhaps, of unintended consequences.
In the week of the Manchester bombing, it would be wrong to equate Russia’s revolutionary movement with Islamist fanaticism, the one committed to the demise of a brutal authoritarian government, the other blindly waging war against those who enjoy the freedoms of democratic government. But lessons of unintended consequences are often ignored by those in power, and it can be important to take a step back. The instinct of people to come together, to look for mutual reassurance and seek out the good in the face of inexplicable horror, was witnessed in the vigil in Manchester’s Albert Square, and in particular Tony Walsh’s poem ‘ This is the Place ’ – a stirring tribute to the city’s contribution to the world, an acknowledgement of the hurt, but most of all a reminder that people coming together, and working together, can create a place where a Muslim man supports his elderly Jewish neighbour as they stand united in grief.
