26 March - 1 April 1917

Photograph published in The Illustrated London News
in April 1917, showing the Duma
with an empty frame that had contained the portrait of Nicholas II
Georgy Rimsky-Korsakov, Russian army
officer
During these months I could only partly grasp the political
situation in the country. Of course we wanted the Provisional Government to
take hold and carry out the necessary reforms, and most importantly bring a
speedy end to the war. I came across a piece in a newspaper, Kopeika I think, that described how
Germany was conducting the war with the aim, in the event of victory, of
concluding a profitable trade agreement with Russia, and in this way the
Russian people was dying on behalf of the capitalists. It was stunningly
simple, and true. Nobody, of course, wanted Germany to win, but nor did anyone
want to continue fighting. Kerensky’s calls for further military offensive
seemed pitiful. He himself had no authority with us soldiers. It was all just a
complete muddle.
(From
the memoirs of G.A. Rimsky-Korsakov, Russia in
1917 in first-person testimony
, Moscow 2015)
26 March
Sunday Times article
The question which interests everybody more than anything
else is Russia’s future attitude towards the war. There have been misgivings
about the possibility of a separate peace. But to suppose that Russia would now
seek to conclude a peace without the consent of the Allies is to misunderstand
the whole course of the Revolution. The Revolution bound people and Army
together in an indissoluble union, resulting in a firm resolve to win a
decisive victory. It is true that that a section of Socialists, now on the
Committee of Workmen Soldiers’ Delegates, express the wish for immediate peace.
But they have no majority on the committee, and still less influence in the
country.
(‘Russian War Aims: What the Socialists Demand’, from our own correspondent, Petrograd)
Letter to Minister of Justice Kerensky from worker and deserter A. Zemskov, Kuban region, 26 March 1917
Kind sir, Mr Minister,
Allow me, a poor worker living in Russia’s hinterlands, to express myself, if only in a letter, on the subject of past and present events in the current historical moment. In addressing you, an individual who professes proletarian worldviews and is a defender of the interests of the working classes, I must nonetheless ask you to forgive me, an insignificant worker, for being so bold as to address to you, a great political figure whose name is covered in glory, a letter in which I set forth only my own personal opinions and worldviews and, regrettably, for taking up a minute of your very valuable time, the minute you take to read my letter … Ever since the last Russian autocrat fell from his high throne, you have been hearing on all sides laudatory hymns to the new state order and freedom … Aren’t you singing the praises of new chains that are only going by the name of freedom? … You (I am addressing the Provisional Government) have the audacity to say that freedom has come. But isn’t your current power over the people a power that the bourgeoisie delivered to you, based on coercion? … In professing a lie to the world, you, gentlemen, the new rulers, think that the working masses are so intoxicated by your lie that everyone is accepting it as truth without exception. No, gentlemen, in this you are mistaken … The details of my person are these: I am a former Moscow worker of peasant origin from Vladimir Province, Suzdal Uezd, surname Zemskov. As a deserter I’ve been hiding in the Kuban steppes for more than two years … With deep apologies,
Worker A. Zemskov
(Mark D. Steinberg, Voices of Revolution, 1917 , New Haven and London 2001)
27 March
At 3:20 p.m. on March 27, thirty-two Russian emigres left
the Zurich railway station for the German frontier. Among the passengers were
Lenin, Krupskaia, Grigorii Zinoviev with his wife and child, and Inessa Armand.
On its journey across Germany, their train received the highest priority.
Contrary to legend it was not sealed, but in conformance with the agreement, no
Germans entered the car.
(Richard Pipes, A Concise History of the Russian Revolution
, London 1995)
Statement by the Provisional Government regarding the War
Leaving to the will of the people, in close union with our Allies,
the final decision of
all questions connected with the world war and its ending, the Provisional
Government considers it its right and duty to declare that the purpose of free
Russia is not domination over other peoples, nor spoliation of their national
possessions, nor the violent occupation of foreign territories, but the establishment
of a permanent peace on the basis of self-determination of all peoples … These
principles will be made the basis of the foreign policy of the Provisional
Government, which will firmly carry out the will of the people and will protect
the rights of our fatherland at the same time fully observing all obligations made
in regard to our allies.
Signed by Minister-Chairman, Prince G.E. Lvov
( Russian-American Relations March 1917-March 1920
, New York
1920)
Diary entry of Georges-Maurice Paléologue, French Ambassador to Russia
The Soviet demands that the Government shall immediately
join with its allies in opening peace negotiations on the following basis: ‘No
annexations, no indemnities, and the free development of the nations.’ I
fortified Miliukov to the best of my ability by pointing out that the Soviet’s
demands amount to the defection of Russia, and if that came to pass it would be
an eternal disgrace to the Russian people … ‘I’m so entirely in sympathy with
your view,’ Miliukov protested, ‘that if the Soviet got its way I should resign
my office at once!’ A proclamation which the Provisional Government addresses
to the Russian people and has published this morning tries to evade the
difficulty be veiling its intention to continue the war in nebulous phrases.
When I pointed out the inconsistency and timorousness of these phrases to
Miliukov, he replied: ‘I think I achieved a great triumph in getting them
inserted in the proclamation. We are obliged to tread very warily in dealing
with the Soviet; we cannot yet rely on the garrison to defend us.’ Can it be
that the Soviet is the master of Petrograd!
(Maurice Paléologue, An Ambassador's Memoirs 1914-1917
,
London 1973)
28 March
Memoir by the Menshevik Nikolai Sukhanov
At this time Stalin appeared in the Ex[ecutive] Com[mittee]
for the Bolsheviks, in addition to Kamenev. This man was one of the central
figures of the Bolshevik Party and perhaps one of the few individuals who held
the fate of the revolution and of the State in their hands. Why this is so I
shall not undertake to say: ‘influence’ in these exalted and irresponsible
spheres, remote from the people and alien to publicity, is so capricious. But
at any rate Stalin’s role is bound to be perplexing. The Bolshevik Party, in
spite of the low level of its ‘officers’ corps’, had a whole series of most
massive figures and able leaders among its ‘generals’. Stalin, however, during
his modest activity in the Ex. Com. produced – and not only on me – the
impression of a grey blur, looming up now and then dimly and not leaving any
trace. There is really nothing more to be said about him.
(N.N. Sukhanov, The Russian Revolution 1917: a Personal Record
, Oxford 1955)
30 March
Diary entry of Joshua Butler Wright, Counselor of the American Embassy, Petrograd
The news from the front seems reluctantly to improve; from
the socialist workers in Petrograd remains disquieting; and from the navy at
Kronstadt to cause worry generally. Our military attaché is watching the first;
we are preparing a sort of propaganda … to meet the second; and our naval
attaché took a quiet little trip of observation to Helsingfors to verify the
third. Many people … are refusing to be reassured and bombard the embassy for
news. The Germans certainly can’t get up the Neva until the ice goes out; they
can’t dig trenches in this weather; they
would not push a slender column on Petrograd alone; and the enormous British
drive in Flanders is gaining steadily.
( Witness to Revolution: The Russian Revolution Diary and Letters of J. Butler Wright
, London 2002)
31 March
Diary entry of Alexander Benois, artist and critic
Akitsa just harps on about peace and is sent into raptures by the socialist papers which she believes like the Gospels ... Meanwhile the world, and in particular the Russian, tragedy is approaching its fatal moment of crisis. Decrees based on common sense and the most noble humanity, which were entirely pertinent when Russia was establishing its new order (how strange! It already feels that the revolution took place not a month ago, but five years ago), are now silenced in the face of the total mess that's been made ... Any question of patriotism is corrupted by the unlimited cruelty of the British, its systematic and cunning avarice, its stupidity; they're not only terrifying, they're outrageous. I remember how loathsome I thought that war poster in London was, showing Kitchener's face blown up and the words at the top: 'This is your hope!' He's now at the bottom of the ocean but it turns out that he and his accomplices have so managed to defile, enslave and plunder 'the land of freedoms' that it's now a more sinister, more enslaving place than Prussia itself!
(Alexander Benois ,
Diary 1916-1918
, Moscow 2006)
Resolution of the workers of the Putilov metal and machine
factory, Petrograd, 31 March 1917
Considering the fact that the rumours being spread by the
bourgeois press to the effect that workers are striking and leaving the army
without shells are a foul lie and are being spread to weaken the revolution and
sow strife between the working class and the army, the workers of the Putilov
factory resolve:
1. To address a request through their representatives to the
Soviet of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies demanding that the Provisional
Government make statements in the press saying that these kinds of rumours are
a foul lie and take measures to put a stop to these rumours.
2. Because the bourgeois newspapers … are a mighty weapon in
the hands of the bourgeoisie, to boycott these bourgeois newspapers, while
trying in every possible way to support and disseminate our workers’ press.
3. To have our comrade workers from all the other plants,
factories and workshops of Petrograd join us in our resolution to support the
boycott.
(Mark D. Steinberg, Voices of Revolution, 1917
, New
Haven and London 2001)
1 April
Diary entry of Louis de Robien, attaché at the French Embassy
The famous Allied socialist deputies arrived yesterday at
Finland Station. Representing France: Cachin, Lafont, and Moutet – two
professors of philosophy and a lawyer. Representing England: O’Grady and
Thorne, a cabinet-maker and a plumber … I decidedly prefer the English
socialists!
(Louis de Robien, The Diary of a Diplomat in Russia 1917-1918
, London 1969)
Diary entry of Georges-Maurice Paléologue, French Ambassador to Russia
…French socialism is thus represented by intellectuals with
a classical education, English socialism by manual workers, ‘matter-of-fact
men’. Theory on one side, practice on the other … When [the French socialists]
left me, they went to the Champ-de-Mars to lay a wreath on the grave of the
victims of the revolution, just as in the old days the envoys of the French
Republic used to go to the Fortress of SS. Peter and Paul to place a wreath on
the tomb of Alexander III. As Sainte-Beuve wrote: ‘Life is nothing but seeing
everything and the reverse of everything.’
(Maurice Paléologue, An Ambassador's Memoirs 1914-1917
,
London 1973)
Diary entry of Nicholas II
Forgot to mention that yesterday we said goodbye to 46 of
our servants who were finally released from the Alexander Palace to [go to]
their families in Petrograd. The weather was nice with a strong southern wind.
Walked until breakfast. During the day started to break the ice as usual by the
bridge over a stream; [with us] worked Tatiana, Valya and Nagorny. Took a nap
until dinner. Gave each other gifts of [Easter] eggs and photos. At 11 ½ went
to the beginning of the midnight service.
(Sergei Mironenko, A Lifelong Passion
, London 1996)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4 April 2017
Posting later every week. Terrible day yesterday for St Petersburg - a suicide bomber, or so it seems, on the metro, ten people dead, possibly more. The messages were immediate and from all over the world. Through the Likhachev alumni came an outpouring of horror and compassion for a city that is close to so many.
