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Title: The Russian Revolution; The Jugo-Slav Movement
Author: Kerner, Robert Joseph, 1887-1956, Petrunkevitch, Alexander, 1875-1964, Harper, Samuel N. (Samuel Northrup), 1882-1943, Golder, Frank Alfred, 1877-1929
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "The Russian Revolution; The Jugo-Slav Movement" ***


RUSSIAN REVOLUTION

By Alexander Petrunkevitch, Samuel Northrup, Harper Frank,And Alfred
Golder


THE JUGO-SLAV MOVEMENT

By Robert Joseph Kerner



PREFACE

Whatever may be its final outcome the Russian Revolution of 1917
bids fair to remain one of the great events of modern history. Its
consequences are still immeasurable and today to many they appear as
fraught with menace as with hope. They have within less than a year
led a mighty empire to the brink of dissolution and no man can foretell
where and how the process will end for worse or for better. The Russian
Revolution saved the Central Powers at the moment when their prospect
looked darkest, but on the other hand it facilitated the entrance of the
United States into the war as one for liberty and democracy. Time has
yet to show whether the loss or the gain has been the greater for the
Allied cause and for mankind. It will be paid for at a heavy price but
our hope cannot easily be shaken that sooner or later an event so full
of promise for the misruled millions of the autocratic empire of the
Tsar will mark a step forward, not backward, in the progress of the
world. The whole story of the sudden out-break in Petrograd which in
little more than a day swept away the fabric of imperial government will
not soon be told, if ever. All real information on the subject is timely
and valuable. We need such studies as those contained in the present
volume, in order that we may understand what has happened, and why it
has happened.

The rise of the modern Jugo-Slav movement offers us a very different
picture. The subject and even the name are new to most people, the
scale is much smaller; the events have been less dramatic. But the
unconquerable resistance which a small disjointed nationality has
offered throughout the ages to ill fortune, oppression, and to attempts
to obliterate it entirely arouses our admiration. The movement too was
intimately connected with the outbreak of the present world war which
cannot be understood without taking it into account. It still represents
only an ardent hope for the future but when the day of peace and justice
comes no permanent allotment can be made of the lands east of the
Adriatic that shall not give it at least some satisfaction.

ARCHIBALD CARY COOLIDGE.



MARCH 18, 1918. THE ROLE OF THE INTELLECTUALS IN THE LIBERATING MOVEMENT
IN RUSSIA

By Alexander Petrunkevitch

In an interview dated November 21, and published in the _New York
Times_ in a special cable from Petrograd, Leon Trotzky in defending the
attitude of the people toward the Bolsheviki _coup d'etat_ is reported
to have said substantially the following: "All the bourgeoisie is
against us. The greater part of the intellectuals is against us or
hesitating, awaiting a final outcome. The working class is wholly with
us. The army is with us. The peasants, with the exception of exploiters,
are with us. The Workmen's and Soldiers' government is a government
of workingmen, soldiers, and peasants against the capitalists and
landowners."

On the other hand my father, Ivan Petrunkevitch, floorleader of the
Constitutional Democratic party in the first Duma and since that time
owner and publisher of the Petrograd daily _Rech_ writes in a private
letter dated June 12: "... the present real government, i. e., the
Council of Soldiers' and Workmen's Deputies, whose leaders are neither
soldiers nor workmen, but intellectuals, etc." Nothing has happened
during the months intervening between the letter and the interview
to change the composition of the Council appreciably. It is true that
Kerensky who was vice-president of the Council has been meanwhile
deposed; that Tshcheidze had to relinquish the presidency in the Council
to Trotzky long before Kerensky's downfall; but the leaders of the
Council still are intellectuals, are well educated men, some of them
well known writers on political and economic questions and withal very
different from the masses which they lead and which they purport to
represent. In justice to those who had to give way to the Lenine-Trotzky
crowd of supporters, I wish to state emphatically that I do not want to
put them on the same plane. Tseretelli, Plekhanov, Tshcheidze, and
their co-workers are men of great courage, high ideals, and personal
integrity. On the other hand their successors in power are men of a
totally different type. The integrity of many of their number has been
openly questioned, the accusations, published & broadcast, remained
unanswered, and no suit for libel was brought by the men thus accused.
Lenine was put under suspicion of having accepted German help and of
having planned with Germany's agents the disorganization of the Russian
army. It has been even charged on apparently good evidence that the
leaflets distributed at the front were printed with German money.
Trotzky was accused by Miliukov in the _Rech_ (June 7) of having
received $10,000 from German-Americans for the purpose of organizing the
attack on Kerensky's government. Ganetsky was forced to leave Denmark
by an order of the Danish government, having been convicted of dishonest
dealings in a Danish court. Zinoviev is accused of forgery. Others are
also under suspicion which has been only increased by the arrest and
imprisonment of Burtzev who is known for his untiring efforts to
hunt down traitors to the cause of the Russian Revolution and who had
important evidence in his possession. It is also a remarkable fact that
the majority of the present leaders are known broadly only under
assumed names. Lenine's true name is Uljanov, Trotzky's--Bronstein,
Zinoviev's--Apfelbaum, Sukhanov's--Gimmer, Kamenev's--Rosenfeld,
Steklov's--Nakhamkis, and a number of others whose identity is not
even always known. Trotzky's assertion that the Workmen's and Soldiers'
Government is a government of workingmen, soldiers, and peasants is
therefore nothing but a perversion of facts.

There is, however, nothing extraordinary in the fact itself that
intellectuals are the real leaders of all Russian parties. Better
education and wider knowledge of the affairs of the world have always
appealed to the dark masses who realize only dimly their own desires and
grasp at any concrete formulation of reforms which contains a tangible
promise or seems to express those desires. At the same time they often
put their own meaning into the words of their leaders, which is true
even of factory workers in the larger cities. As for the peasants,
representing about 90 per cent of the entire population, they are still
very poorly educated, questions of national import remain outside their
horizon, and even their language is not the language of the educated
Russian, inasmuch as it lacks the rich vocabulary of modern life and
is devoid of the very conceptions to which this vast treasury of words
applies. Their mind, great as it is in its potentialities, still moves
in the furrows of familiar ideas abhorring things too much at variance
with inherited traditions or actual experience. Yet in the turmoil of
revolutionary activity the peasants are going to have their say and
may become the decisive factor, because they are voters and are casting
their votes for those leaders whose words they believe to contain the
greatest promise and the least menace of a general disruption of their
accustomed mode of life.

We are thus brought back, for the present at least, to the necessity
of recognizing that even the state of anarchy under which Russia is
laboring, even the rule of the renowned proletariat so much trumpeted
about by Lenine and Trotzky, is in reality the work of intellectuals,
an answer of the masses to the call of their leaders, a groping for
principles beyond their perception.

It suffices a very casual examination of the programs and resolutions of
various political parties to see the truth of this statement. They
are expressive of the opinions of the leaders, not of the masses; are
couched in the language of the educated Russian, not in that of the
workman or peasant and, except for the concluding slogans like "Peace,
Bread, and Land," are alien to the very spirit of the masses. In this
respect all parties are confronted with the same difficulty since all
strive to get the support of the masses, yet have to express principles
evolved through careful and extensive study of national, political, and
economic problems, strange to the uneducated mind. For the same reason
the methods of surmounting the difficulty differ in many respects and
are characteristic of each party.

The Conservative Intellectuals of Russia early realized the necessity of
meeting the peasant on his own ground and the advantage of appealing
to him in his own language. The idea of a benevolent ruler, an
all-suffering motherland, and an all-unifying church exercised a
powerful appeal upon the imagination, for a long time superseding and
forcing into the background the growing, elemental, and unfulfilled
longing for more land. The ideology of a perfect monarchy is so simple
and its shortcomings so easily attributable to dishonesty of officials,
that it answered the peasant's thoughts as long as he was not able to
see the folly of distinguishing between the system and its realization,
but separated in his mind the image of his loving monarch from the cruel
reality of everyday life as he still distinguishes between the faith and
the priest. The great mistake of all conservatives is that they seek to
bring about a state of perfect justice by improving only the quality
of the ruling body without changing the conditions of life of the ruled
mass. Yet even so the Conservatives had quite a following among the
peasants up to the time of the revolution of 1917 and in a way may still
have a future before them.

The Octoberists find no support in the masses and do not make any
serious attempt to gain it. They frankly acknowledged themselves as the
party of industry and trade, having no wider interests at heart than the
maintenance of order and law throughout the country. Their leaders were
forced into a revolutionary attitude only at the time when there was
danger of a universal collapse of Russia if the tsar's government
persisted, and they may be forced to join in a counter-revolution,
if their interests are again endangered. Their ideology is that of
a capitalistic class and their power depends entirely on the future
development of industry and trade in Russia. For the present they are
nowhere. Unable to find a new basis for their activity in place of
class interest, they lack unity of purpose and are deserted by their
own former supporters among their employees. Trade and industry are
disorganized and the party may never be resurrected.

The Constitutional Democrats are in this respect better off. They find
their support chiefly among more or less educated people of various
pursuits: lawyers, bankers, brokers, journalists, teachers, artists,
scientists, etc. Their program embraces the interests of all classes
and demands political, judicial, economic, industrial and agrarian
legislation of a very radical and extensive kind. Their horizon of
vision includes the sufferings and aspirations of the often incongruous
elements of the vast whole, but their ideology is still based on the
long outworn idealistic capitalism and for this reason alone does not
and cannot appeal to not-owning classes. Their agrarian program is in
this respect the most striking example. It is worked out in great detail
and is aimed at a betterment of the condition of peasants without deep
injury to the present landowners. It recognizes the right of the peasant
to more land, it provides for future state ownership of land to prevent
it from falling into wrong hands, but does not condemn the principle
of landownership, nor the injustice of present ownership, and for that
reason elaborates a method of compensation for compulsorily alienated
land through universal taxation.

To avoid excessive burden to the impoverished peasant the compensation
is to be in the shape of bonds representing the average value of the
land in each particular case, only the interest on these bonds to be
paid yearly from universal taxes--a topsy-turvy mortgage system, as it
were, in which the state becomes the proprietor and mortgagor of the
land, while its present owners are turned into forced mortgagees. Under
this system the peasants will get all land available, but 90 per cent
will have to pay for what is owned by a small fraction of even the
remaining 10 per cent of the entire population. The proposed scheme
proved to be too radical for the tsar's government in 1906 and caused
the downfall of the first Duma. It provoked at the time bitter comment
in Germany also, where the conservative and national-liberal press
accused the Russian Constitutional Democratic party of putting forward
impossible demands and of attacking the very principle of property
ownership. Yet the principle underlying the proposed reform is
unquestionably capitalistic and is the chief cause of the hatred and
contempt which the party enjoys on the part of Social-Democrats.

In the beginning of the sixties the conservative land committee
appointed by Alexander II, composed of hereditary landowners, avowed
enemies of any economic liberation of peasants, out of fear that private
ownership of land might enrich the peasants and make them dangerous to
the established order, devised a scheme of communal ownership of land
and unconsciously taught the peasants the principles of socialism. In
1907 Constitutional Democrats opposed the bill of the Government for the
dissolution of land communities and substitution of private for communal
land ownership at the request of individual peasants. The objection
raised was on the ground that peasants suddenly possessed of a chance
to get ready money would sell their land to a few exploiters and being
unable to put it to good use would rapidly become paupers. The best
men in the Duma opposed Stolypin's bill, and the law was introduced by
stealth and promulgated during a forced recess of the Duma. Contrary
to expectation the law neither led to the results desired by the
Government, nor to those feared by Constitutional Democrats. It
remained a dead letter. Few members of peasant communities applied for
separation. The Government tried to boost its scheme by building at its
own expense model, fake peasant homes. The peasants had already their
own idea as to remedies in regard to land shortage and did not want any
substitute.

The difficulty of making the peasant respect the principle of private
ownership of land is due to many causes. The most liberal minded
landowners were usually those who spent their winters in various
occupations in large cities and used their estates as summer homes and
a partial source of income. The work of supervision was only too often
intrusted to utterly unscrupulous and uneducated managers belonging to
the peasant class, while the neighboring peasants were employed as
day laborers in the field and garden. This kind of labor was already
available, because peasants were unable to derive sufficient income from
their own land to pay the heavy taxes and to support their families.
Scarcely any landowners understood anything of agriculture and few paid
any attention to it. I know splendid estates which brought in miserable
incomes, not normal even under the antiquated system of four year crop
rotation and quite absurd if measured by standards of modern American
farming, yet sufficient to place at the disposal of the owners a
splendid mansion in Moscow or Petrograd and a no less splendid summer
home on their estate. There, during the hot summer days, the owners were
enjoying their comfort in idleness and talking of reforms necessary for
the benefit of the peasants, while peasant women were cutting the wheat
for them with sickles, stooping and sweating under the scorching rays of
the sun. The superintendents of those estates enriched themselves at the
expense of the blind or careless and carefree owners under the very eyes
of the peasants who hated the superintendents, pitied or despised the
liberal owners, as the case might be, and gloomily compared their own
poverty and labor with the ease and wealth of their employers.

The more thrifty and less liberal owners, who remained the greater part
of the year on their estates, were perhaps more respected but still less
liked. Any attempt at careful management of the estate was invariably
considered to be a sign of stinginess or of hardheartedness. The idea of
property is not clearly defined in the mind of the average peasant who
considers plants that are not planted but grow wild to be a gift of God.
In disputes involving such cases the line between rightful possession
and theft is difficult to draw, and men who took the controversy to
court were invariably hated. A glaring example of this kind was an
otherwise liberal minded landowner, a well known professor of sociology,
who spent three-quarters of a year in lecturing at a foreign university
of which he was a member and who was finally murdered on his own estate.

The home life of even liberal intellectuals was another barrier between
them and the masses. Not only was coarse food considered to be good
enough for domestics, but they seldom, if ever, had a decent corner
for themselves in the house and their miserable wages were out of all
proportion with the long hours of service required. Many families had
guests almost daily, the company sitting around a samovar, discussing
and conversing until one or two in the morning, while the sleepy
domestics were stealing a nap in the anteroom, ready to appear at the
call of the mistress. The table had to be cleared after the guests and
the family retired for the night and the breakfast had to be prepared,
boots polished, stoves heated, rooms cleaned in the early morning. For
the master might rest until ten or eleven, but the children have to be
at school by eight and the servants must be ready to serve them. And
though many families kept professional servants, the country homes
depended almost entirely in winter as well as in summer on local help.

Attempts to improve the condition of peasants were numerous and in
some respects successful, but found an obstacle on the one hand in the
attitude of the Government and on the other in the conservatism and
suspicion of the peasants themselves. Fire insurance and cooperative
enterprises helped to a certain degree, but an almost complete absence
of expert agriculturists in the ranks of the landowners prevented them
from demonstrating on their own estates the value of applied knowledge
as well as from teaching the peasants how to increase the productivity
of the land through intensive farming. Thus it came to pass that the
vast majority of landowners, both conservative and liberal, remained
strangers to the people among whom they lived, whose labor they
employed, and for whose welfare many were in earnest concerned. The
Constitutional Democratic party is strong in the cities. In the country
it has no followers and in the sweeping incendiary fires of 1905-06
estates were burned which belonged in several cases to men who spent
their life in fighting for freedom against the tsar's government.

No less unfortunate is the party in its relation to the class of factory
workers. That part of its program which relates to the labor question
embraces a number of important reforms meeting almost all demands of the
working class. The barrier between them is the capitalistic principle.
A perusal of the lists of Constitutional Democrats who have subscribed
large sums for the Russian liberty loan will show why workmen speak of
them as capitalists even though the party has accepted the principle of
progressive income taxation. There is a feeling of intense hatred toward
all Constitutional Democrats on the part of all workmen.

Nothing is more instructive than the rapid change in the position which
the Constitutional Democratic party occupied in the eyes of the people
after the revolution. Before the outbreak of hostilities all parties
were against war. But soon, under the influence of the German methods
of warfare in Belgium, France, and Russia, the feeling changed. Even the
Mensheviki among the Social-Democrats declared themselves in favor of
war and the only party remaining firm in condemning all war was that
of the Bolsheviki. The entrance of the Turks into the war was almost
considered a godsend by the Constitutional Democrats, Octoberists,
and Conservatives in the Duma because it cleared the way for a final
settlement of the Balkan problem and promised the elimination of Turkey
from Europe. Long after Sazonov was removed, when the consent of England
and France to give Russia free hand in Constantinople and the Straits
was read in a telegram before the Duma, a general outburst of enthusiasm
took place, the members demanding to know why Sazonov, who was justly
credited with this achievement, was in retirement and not in charge
of the foreign office which he should have held by right. Miliukov's
speeches and writings on the future settlement of the Balkan problem
were jokingly spoken of as his dissertation for the degree of foreign
secretary. At home the party was pursuing a policy of patient endurance,
postponing strife for the future until the crimes of the tsar's
government made further silence impossible. At that time the whole
tissue of treason was not yet known, but enough was in evidence
to demand vigorous protest. Not being a revolutionary party the
Constitutional Democrats abstained from any action not strictly within
the law and merely condemned the activity of the Government. They
desired amelioration of the fundamental laws, but even that they would
have preferred to accomplish by persuasion rather than by force. In fact
they considered socialist demands unreasonable, socialization of Russia
premature, and any violent overthrow unwise and hazardous. For the
latter opinion they found support in the failure of the uprising of
the working class in 1905-06, when the punitive expeditions proved the
loyalty of the army to the throne. Consequently the attitude of the army
in the memorable days of the March revolution was a great surprise to
them. At the same time they attributed to themselves the lion share in
the overthrow, presumably on the ground that masses follow leaders and
the Constitutional \ Democrats were the only ones who had a chance for
open protest in the Duma and made use of it. This delusion led to a
series of tactical errors and cost them dearly. In all elections they
polled a comparatively small vote. Trying to save Russia for the Allies
they failed to meet the Russian Socialists on their own ground and were
forced to explain away differences of opinion much too thoroughgoing
to be explained away. In a country which is in the throes of the
most remarkable revolution ever witnessed, they tried to apply
non-revolutionary methods and drew on themselves the suspicion of
the masses of being counter-revolutionists. From the very moment when
Miliukov announced the passing of the supreme power from the Tsar to
Grand Duke Michail, when his words were answered by angry shouts
in favor of a democratic republic, the position of the party became
precarious. They had either to revise their own program and to catch up
with the rush of the progressive current, or else to find themselves in
the rôle of inundated rocks over which the waters flow. The announcement
that the party would support a demand for a republic was too late
to change the first impression, while the proposition to accept
unconditional expropriation of land in place of the compensation plan
was defeated in heated debate at the party convention. Under normal
circumstances the party would have probably been steadily losing
support, but the arrest and imprisonment of the best and highly honored
leaders by the Bolsheviki is bound to put fresh vigor into their efforts
and give new life to their cause.

The leaders of the Bolsheviki themselves have fallen into error of
a different kind. Being primarily a party of the wage earning day
laborers, the program of the Bolsheviki puts the interest of the
proletariat above everything else. From insufficient observation of
peasant life and the fact that peasants want socialization of land,
they jump to the conclusion that the country is ready for complete
socialization. Only the more educated leaders among them realize that
such a conclusion is premature. But to bring about the necessary change
in as near a future as possible, the leaders of the Bolsheviki have
fanned hatred of the proletariat toward the "bourgeois" classes. One
must give them credit in this respect. They know the value of simple
language when they put this hatred into words. Listen to the Russian
Marseillaise: "Rise, brothers, all at once against the thieves, the
curs--the rich ones! Against the vampire Tsar! Beat them, kill them--the
cursed evil-doers! Glow, dawn of better life!" The simple ideology, the
easy catch phrases in which the language of this ideology is couched,
the primeval character of the passion aroused, contribute to the success
which the party enjoys among working people and homeless paupers.
Therein lies the power of the Bolsheviki. But reaction is bound to come
and here again the peasants will play the chief rôle. All accounts of
conversations with peasants tend to show that they have very vague ideas
of socialism. In fact the Social-Democrats have not taken the trouble
to acquaint the peasants with the principles of their teaching, leaving
that field almost entirely to the influence of socialist-revolutionists.

Among the intellectuals none have come nearer to the understanding of
peasant psychology than those men and women who from the first espoused
the cause of the peasant. Realizing the space separating educated
men from their less fortunate brothers, they gave up their life as
intellectuals and "went among the people." They donned peasant garb and
acquired peasant tongue. From this group of workers for freedom later
the Socialist-revolutionary party developed. "All land for the peasant"
is their slogan, while their promise to expropriate all land without
any compensation naturally meets with approval on the part of the
land-hungry peasants. Moreover, their program does not demand immediate
complete socialization of Russia, leaving that to a gradual process of
evolution and change of existing conditions. In the ten years preceding
the first revolution thousands of young intellectuals joined the party
and fought the tsar's regime. They showed a degree of self-abnegation
found only in people whose heart is kindled with the true spirit of
devotion to a great cause. The revolution of 1905 would never have taken
place but for their organized "terror from below." The high regard held
for them by the widest circles has caused their rise in power during
the first two months of the revolution of 1917. But tactical errors
committed by the leaders of the party as well as dissensions within the
party itself contributed to a rather rapid change of sentiment toward
them on all sides. In a measure as the Constitutional Democrats
vigorously objected to their policy to put into life as soon as possible
the agrarian reforms promised by them, the Social-Democrats on their
part attacked them for their moderation in other demands. For some
reason not yet clear, Kerensky was slighted in the very beginning of
his political career when his nomination to the executive council of the
Socialist-revolutionist party was opposed by a large majority. Just as
the Constitutional Democrats made a series of tactical errors due to the
fact that they thought themselves representative of the spirit of
the Russian people, whereas in reality they stood sponsors only for
a relatively small minority, even so the Socialist-revolutionists
misjudged the attitude of other parties toward themselves. They
overrated the ability of the masses to distinguish between their
attitude toward war in general and the necessity to continue the present
war. They overrated the ability of the soldiers to distinguish between
slavish obedience and military discipline. They tried to play the
rôle of a center. They tried to mediate between Social-Democrats and
Constitutional Democrats and naturally failed in this attempt. Some of
their leaders, notably Mr. Tschernov, were accused by Constitutional
Democrats of being pro-German if not actual German agents. Others,
including Kerensky himself and even Mme. Breshkovsky, were accused
by the Bolsheviki of having been almost bribed by the capitalistic
interests of America, England, and France. Needless to say that the
accusations had no basis whatever in actual facts and represent simply
an ugly outgrowth of misguided jealousy of the masses to guard their
dearly won right to a social revolution against those whom they consider
the worst enemies of socialism, and the desire of unscrupulous leaders
to profit by it. Thus the Socialist-revolutionists were gradually
relegated in the mind of the extremists to the great body of the hated
"bourgeois." Only in their rightful element, among the peasants, they
continue to enjoy a great deal of popularity, and the returns to the
Constituent Assembly show that theirs will be the absolute majority even
though they lost some of their popularity.

The progress of the Russian Revolution presents a sad spectacle of an
almost complete failure on the part of the majority of intellectuals to
understand the spirit of the times and to guide the masses through the
labyrinth of errors. In days past the Russian intellectuals were the
forefighters for freedom and the Russian people will ever be indebted
to them for this. They prepared the soil for the revolution by spreading
ideas of freedom by all means at their disposal. They weakened the
tsar's power and thus contributed to its overthrow by persistent attacks
upon the system of autocratic government. They helped to awaken the
spirit of self-consciousness in the masses. But they did not evolve new
principles. They did not open wide avenues for the development of a
new order of social organization. They misunderstood the masses and
consequently were unable to control the forces set loose. And if Russia
is going to be saved from utter ruin amidst the clamor and strife of
party leaders and to evolve a new democratic system, it will be due not
to the intellectuals, but to the great spirit of the dark masses of the
Russian peasants.



FORCES BEHIND THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION FORCES BEHIND THE RUSSIAN
REVOLUTION

By Samuel N. Harper

One was struck by the remarkable unity that characterized the short
first period of the Russian Revolution of last March. One knew, however,
that there were two distinct sets of forces behind the movement,
operating through two kinds of organizations. There were first the
already existing and parliamentary institutions which had become
revolutionary in spirit and methods of action. On the other hand there
were the institutions produced by the revolution itself, emerging from
the chaos in the midst of which the other, already functioning bodies,
were trying to take a new and directing line. The most prominent of the
first type of institution was the Duma, the legislative parliament
of the old regime, and of the second type, the Petrograd Council of
Workmen's and Soldiers' Deputies.

The Duma, however, was only one of several legal institutions that had
developed under the old regime, and represented the first stages of
parliamentary, popular government. There were the local provincial and
municipal councils, and also the officially recognized war-industry
committees, which had come to have semi-governmental functions.
Finally one could bring under this category, with a little forcing, the
cooperative societies, which had assumed enormous importance during the
two and a half years of war.

In these institutions we had self-government, and participation in
public affairs, and also the idea of cooperation between the various
classes and political tendencies--the idea of coalition. The election
law of the Duma provided for the representation of all group interests
of the community, and representation by an actual member of the group,
by a _bona fide_ peasant in the case of the peasantry. The seats in the
assembly were distributed specifically to landlords, manufacturers,
the smaller bourgeoisie, workmen, and peasants. The election law of the
local government bodies made similar provision for group representation.
On the war-industry committees, the workmen had elected representatives,
sitting with the representatives of the manufacturers and owners. In the
coöperative movement the bourgeois-intellectual element had taken the
initiative, but had always emphasized the direct participation of the
workmen and peasants in the actual management of the societies, as the
theory of the movement demanded.

Thus the broader democratic classes of the country, the workmen and
peasants, were represented in the somewhat popular institutions that had
developed under the old regime. But the actual control was in the hands
of the less democratic elements--the landlords, the manufacturers, men
of the liberal professions, and of the so-called Intelligentsia class.
Most of these men were of liberal and democratic tendencies, but
they were in actual fact, as compared with the broader masses, of
the privileged classes. They had emphasized always the essentially
democratic character of the activity of the institutions in which
they were the leaders. They put particular stress on the fact that the
activities of the local provincial councils, for example, were
directed mainly toward the amelioration of conditions of life among the
peasantry. But the fact that the control over these institutions, even
in the cooperative movement (so far as independent control was
allowed by the bureaucracy of the old regime), was secured to the
less democratic elements of the community, did contradict the idea of
coalition, of the bringing together of all interests and forces. These
institutions had been permitted to exist and develop only because
they were controlled by the more conservative groups. The cooperative
societies represented more truly the idea of coalition. Here in the
cooperative movement the leaders of political liberalism had always
noted with relief that one was gradually attaining the end toward
which they knew they must work--the organic union between the so-called
Intelligentsia, and the "people," meaning the broader, democratic
classes.

When the anarchy resulting from the incompetence, stupidity and perhaps
treason of the old bureaucracy reached such an acute stage in the first
weeks of March that the leaders of the Russian public saw that some
action must be taken by some one, it was the Duma that assumed the
initiative, acting in a revolutionary manner, through an executive
committee. The municipal and provincial councils, organized in unions
for war-work, and the war-industry committees, turned without delay to
the revolutionary parliament, in which many of their leading workers
were members. The leaders of the coöperative movement could not act with
such rapidity and precision. They had not been permitted to organize a
central committee, to coordinate the work of the thousands of small
and scattered societies. These first leaders of the revolution felt
justified in taking the initiative because they alone were organized.
Also they thought they could speak in the name of all classes, including
the most democratic, because the institutions through which they acted
did include representatives of all classes. To emphasize its special
anxiety that the more democratic groups feel their direct participation
in the movement of which it had taken the leadership, the Executive
Committee of the Duma not only accepted but encouraged the development
of the revolutionary institutions of the second category, of which the
first to emerge was the Petrograd Council of Workmen's and Soldiers'
Deputies.

This Council was organized during the very first days of the revolution;
it was in fact the resurrection of a revolutionary body of the 1905
revolution. The Duma invited the Council to share its own convenient
quarters. Perhaps the invitation was an afterthought, for the workmen
and soldiers of Petrograd in revolt had gravitated toward the Duma,
had calmly entered and taken possession of the large corridors of the
palace. The Council was a strictly revolutionary, and a very democratic
body, composed of directly elected delegates from the factories and
garrison regiments of Petrograd. It immediately became the organizing
center for what came to be called the "revolutionary democracy," as
opposed to the "bourgeoisie."

The Executive Committee of the Duma consulted with the Council of
Workmen's and Soldiers' Deputies on the composition of the proposed
Provisional Government, and on the political program to be announced.
For as we saw, it was the first thought of these leaders to secure
unity of action. They recognized that the Council did in fact represent
"revolutionary democracy," at least of Petrograd. As the workmen and
soldiers of Petrograd were completely out of hand, armed and fighting
on the streets, arresting officers, ministers and police, and showing a
tendency to start general and anarchic pillaging, the Duma leaders saw a
restraining authority in the Council of these same workmen and soldiers.
They therefore either did not wish, or did not dare, to object at the
time to the famous order No. 1 to the garrison of Petrograd, issued by
the Council, and not by the Executive Committee of the Duma. Many have
claimed that this particular order, which was extended to the front,
was responsible for the later demoralization of the whole Russian army.
Others, the leaders of revolutionary democracy, have insisted that this
order prevented the immediate and complete collapse of the whole army.

In preparing the slate for the new government, the Executive Committee
of the Duma selected one of the presiding officers of the Council,
Kerensky. When Miliukov, the Duma leader, announced the composition of
the new provisional government to the crowd, composed largely of workmen
and soldiers gathered in the main corridors of the Duma, he emphasized
the cooperation between Duma and Council, the consent of Kerensky to
enter the government, and also the fact that most of the members of the
new government had worked in and through institutions, in which peasants
and workmen also had been represented.

Though the word "coalition" was not used during the first weeks of the
revolution, one had constantly in mind the idea of "bringing together
all the vital forces of the country." In this last expression I quote
one of the first and most emphasized slogans of the revolution. But the
problem proved most difficult, complicated by the fact that one had to
solve at one and the same time two most stupendous tasks. One had to
consolidate the conquests of the revolution, and also prosecute the
war. The prosecution of the war required the acceptance of a strong
authority, vested in the Provisional Government. But naturally the
first aim of the revolution was to extend its ideas to the rest of the
country, for the actual overthrow of the old order had been largely
the work of Petrograd. The two tasks were closely associated with one
another, because one could not reorganize the country for the war until
the new ideas had taken root.

The first parliamentary leaders wished to use as the basis for carrying
out both tasks the old institutions, the municipal and provincial
councils, and the coöperative societies, at the same time taking steps
gradually to democratize them. But the strictly revolutionary leaders
wished to democratize immediately, and put this forward as the first
object to be accomplished. So they demanded and promoted the organizing
of revolutionary democracy all over the country, through councils
of workmen, soldiers, and peasants, through army committees, land
committees, professional unions, and so forth. The champions of this
immediate democratization policy were almost exclusively members of the
various socialist parties, some of them representing the most extreme
views. The majority of them were not consciously striving to undermine
the authority of the Provisional Government. They recognized and in fact
advocated the compromise represented in the first group of leaders.
They trusted most of them, but wished at the same time to organize
revolutionary democracy, for self-protection for the moment, and perhaps
for self-assertion at a later date. But a minority of the socialist
leaders did not take this constructive line. From the very start they
professed to distrust the first Provisional Government, for they did
not believe in "coalition"--the co-operation between the various group
interests of the community. Their theory was that of class struggle;
they proclaimed this to be their aim, and worked to give to the
revolution this character. Though a minority, they were a very active
and energetic group, and tended to give the tone in the meetings and
resolutions of revolutionary democracy, thus dulling the spirit of
cooperation, which characterized the first period of the revolution.

The extremists wished a social revolution, "permanent revolution," class
struggle, and they agitated openly and with energy. The workmen and
soldiers of Petrograd had borne the brunt of the physical side of the
revolution. Only workmen and soldiers had been killed fighting for
the revolution during that first week. These particular groups were
therefore proclaimed the "pride and flower of the revolution," and
told that they must establish the dictatorship of the proletariat,
thus consolidating the conquests of the revolution, which should not be
allowed to remain a mere bourgeois affair.

The moderate, constructive socialists did not accept this extreme view,
but they nevertheless recognized the need for an effective organization
of revolutionary democracy all over the country, to ensure the adoption
of truly democratic policies. So they also set about to strengthen and
extend the councils and committees that had emerged with the revolution,
coordinating them in conferences and formal congresses. Much of the
activity along these lines was in fact of a constructive character.
But class and party considerations were always in the foreground at all
these congresses. Also the constructive socialists did not accept the
idea of a formal coalition at the beginning. They did not participate as
organizations in the first government. Kerensky was a socialist, but
he entered the first government as a member of the Duma, and not as the
representative of the Council of Workmen's and Soldiers' Deputies.

The resolution of a conference of the Council of Workmen's and Soldiers'
Deputies, called during the fourth week of the revolution, summarizes
the attitude of revolutionary democracy toward the problem of the
moment. The full text of the resolution, given in a literal translation
to preserve as far as possible the style of the original, is an
interesting document:

"Whereas the Provisional Government, that was brought into power by the
overthrow of the autocracy, represents the interests of the liberal and
democratic bourgeoisie, but shows a tendency to follow the right line,
in the declaration published by it in agreement with the representatives
of the Council of Workmen's and Soldiers' Deputies, therefore the
all-Russian Conference of Councils of Workmen's and Soldiers' Deputies,
while insisting on the need of constant pressure being brought to
bear on the Provisional Government to arouse it to the most energetic
struggle with the counter-revolutionary forces, and to decisive measures
in the direction of an immediate democratization of the entire Russian
life, nevertheless recognizes that political expediency dictates support
of the Provisional Government by the Council of Workmen's and Soldiers'
Deputies _so long_ as the Provisional Government, in agreement with the
Council, moves inflexibly toward the consolidation of the conquests of
the revolution and the extension of these conquests."

The expression "so long as," emphasized in the translation of the
resolution, has been one of the most far-reaching of the formulae
produced by the revolution. Around this phrase has centered the struggle
of these last months. The extremists decided from the very start that
the condition had not been fulfilled. The more moderate socialists took
an attitude of constant watchfulness, and latent distrust.

"Revolutionary Democracy" could not be organized in a week or a
month, so for the first period it was represented by the revolutionary
democracy of Petrograd, through the Petrograd Council of Workmen's and
Soldiers' Deputies, supplemented by delegates from similar councils of
other cities, and by representatives from the army at the front. It was
more difficult to organize the peasants scattered through the country,
and not concentrated in barracks or factories. The workmen and soldiers
of Petrograd therefore assumed to represent all revolutionary democracy,
and they had the physical force behind them. They were there on the
spot, at the administrative and political center inherited from the
old regime, ready to act without delay when they decided that the
Provisional Government should no longer be supported. And the workmen
and soldiers of Petrograd were being won over gradually to the
extremists, the Bolsheviki.

As the Provisional Government was aiming first of all to preserve
social peace, adopting a policy of conciliation, it did not oppose the
supervision exercised by the Council. In fact it realized that only
recognition of such supervision would ensure any measure of common
action. The Duma committee had been asked to efface itself, for as
an institution of the old regime it aroused the suspicions of the
revolutionary bodies. The efficiency of the local government bodies was
sacrificed to the idea of immediate democratization. The establishment
of revolutionary committees all over the country, and in the army even,
was countenanced and accepted, though perhaps only because it was seen
that it could not be prevented except by repressive measures, to which
the first leaders were unwilling to resort. Perhaps also the latter
realized that physical force was not on their side.

The Council of Workmen's and Soldiers' Deputies acted on the principle
of a direct mandate from the whole people. It issued orders to
revolutionary democracy, as we saw. It insisted on the exercise of a
real control, even on the right to countersign, as it were, some of the
orders of the Provisional Government. Then it definitely questioned the
policy and measures of the Minister of Foreign Affairs and the Minister
of War. When these two men were forced to resign, the other members
of the government demanded that revolutionary democracy share in the
responsibility of government, if it insisted on such a measure of
control. The Councils at first refused, but later agreed, and a frankly
and officially recognized coalition government was formed. Socialists
entered the government not only as members of their respective parties,
but as representatives of revolutionary democracy organized in the
Councils, which now contained delegates from the peasantry, hurriedly
brought in by a somewhat artificial system of representation.

The first Coalition Government drew up a program of policy. As this
program was somewhat vaguely worded, coalition in the strict and true
sense of the word was not secured. The socialists had entered the
coalition under pressure, as we saw. Some of them felt called upon to
justify the step in a statement, later discovered and made public, to
socialists of other countries. In the statement they explained that they
had entered the government, in order to "deepen and extend the class
struggle." And this is what some of them did actually start in to do,
using their authority and powers as ministers to turn the organs of
revolutionary democracy in this direction, promoting suspicion of and
antagonism toward the bourgeoisie. The socialist ministers also held
themselves directly responsible to the Councils. Finally the socialist
members of the government tried to force immediate decisions on
questions of a fundamental nature, which should be decided only by the
Constituent Assembly, thus not adhering to the program drawn up as the
basis for the coalition. The position of the non-socialist members of
the government therefore became untenable, and a whole group of them
resigned.

The resignation of the most influential bourgeois group of the first
Coalition Government coincided quite accidentally with an armed uprising
which the extremists, the Bolsheviki, had been planning for several
weeks. For the extremists were again putting forward their demand,
this time supported by armed force, that all the "capitalist" ministers
resign, and that all authority pass into the hands of the Councils. But
the Councils refused to take over authority, the constructive majority
replying that they would not accept the responsibility. In their
judgment only a government representing all the vital forces of the
country, that is a coalition government, could succeed. The moderate
socialists prevailed in the Councils, and a second coalition was formed,
this time under the presidency of a socialist, Kerensky. Some
weeks elapsed before the new government was finally organized. The
non-socialist groups were willing to enter a coalition government led
by a socialist, but only on a definite program, which would exclude all
fundamental legislation. Objection was raised also to certain individual
socialists, whose record in the first coalition government made one
doubt their willingness to adhere honestly to any coalition program.
This objection was withdrawn later; but the non-socialists gave
only their second-best men as members of the new government. The
non-socialists also had demanded that the Provisional Government be
absolutely independent, its members not responsible to any councils or
party committees. For the Councils of Workmen's and Soldiers' Deputies
were as we saw exclusively socialistic, and had become mere party
bodies.

In the meantime the democratization of local government bodies was
going on apace, and very successfully in view of the chaotic conditions
produced by revolution and war. As the new local municipal and
provincial councils, elected by universal suffrage, began to convene,
the revolutionary committees and councils were expected gradually to
disappear. The elections for the Constituent Assembly were to take place
as soon as the new local governing bodies could verify and correct the
lists of voters. The Constituent Assembly was to replace definitely not
only all revolutionary councils and committees, but also the Duma,
which continued to exist legally, though without functioning. The
main objective of the constructive elements was to hold the situation
together until the Constituent Assembly could be convened; the date had
been advanced, even at a sacrifice of regularity in election procedure.
And a coalition government seemed to be the only possible solution,
despite the difficulties already encountered in applying the principle.

The councils, the land committees and the other organizations that had
come into existence with and in the course of the revolution were, as we
saw, almost exclusively socialist in their political affiliations.
This was true even of the peasant congresses, though it was generally
admitted that the bulk of the peasantry was not consciously socialistic.
Of all the revolutionary bodies the peasant councils were clearly the
least representative. This was particularly true of the first alleged
all-Russian Peasant Congress. The peasantry, the great mass of the
population, became articulate very slowly. The non-socialist groups were
striving to bring about a more true expression of peasant views;
and their moderate program was making headway, though they found
it difficult to compete with the extremists, who made most generous
promises. But the non-socialist groups were beginning to take a
stronger line, as they saw the experiments of the extremists lead to
disillusionment. They proposed to organize councils and congresses of
the non-socialist elements. This project was immediately branded as
counter-revolutionary by "revolutionary democracy." Perhaps to ward off
the contemplated move of the non-socialists, Kerensky issued a general
invitation for a state conference at Moscow of all parties, groups,
and organizations, at which the opinions of all could be expressed,
presumably for the guidance of the Coalition Government.

The Moscow Conference did in fact give to all organizations, Duma,
Councils of Workmen's and Soldiers' Deputies, the recently elected
local-government bodies, coöperative and professional unions, in
fact every group, socialist and non-socialist, revolutionary and
pre-revolutionary institutions, the opportunity to express views.
The speeches did perhaps help the Coalition Government to sense the
situation with which it had to deal, though the Conference showed that
the Coalition Government was unstable, and that the extreme ideas of
the Bolsheviki had penetrated deeply in the broader masses. Again
the Bolsheviki attacked the principle of coalition, and demanded that
revolutionary democracy take over all authority.

Then came the Kornilov affair, which in its conception was an effort on
the part of the constructive groups, including the moderate socialists,
to discredit the extremists, and establish a stronger government, free
from party ties and party programs, representing a national movement
to organize "all the vital forces of the country," to use again the
phraseology of the revolution. But there was a misunderstanding, and
also perhaps it was premature--"revolutionary democracy" was not yet
sufficiently sobered to accept a program of common constructive effort.
The movement had the opposite effect; it split the country into two
openly hostile camps, and brought revolutionary democracy still more
under the influence of the extremists. The Coalition Government fell to
pieces, and a Directorate of Five, with almost dictatorial powers, still
headed by Kerensky, assumed authority.

The Bolsheviki now demanded the absolute and final renunciation of
the principle of coalition, and the formation of a purely socialistic
government. Kerensky and the constructive socialists refused to
participate in such a government, and opened negotiations with the
non-socialist leaders, to attempt once more the coalition form of
government. The extremists then sent out a call to "revolutionary
democracy" to meet in another conference, which they called a Democratic
Conference, as opposed to the State Conference of Moscow. They declared
that no bourgeois, counter-revolutionary group would be admitted to
the conference. Kerensky allowed the conference to meet. It passed
contradictory resolutions, first voting against the principle of a
coalition form of government, but later seeming to advocate and support
this principle. The moderate socialists fought hard for the coalition
idea, and Kerensky and his followers seemed at last to have won out. In
any case, at the beginning of October, Kerensky formed a third coalition
government, and convened a preliminary parliament in which all parties
were represented. This time a definitely outlined program, as the basis
for coöperation, was accepted by the socialists, which made it possible
for the non-socialists to give their best men to the new combination.
The Provisional Government of October 8, at least the fifth since the
revolution, and the third Coalition Government, unquestionably brought
together the strongest and most representative group of men since the
revolution. The Bolsheviki declared their intention to break it up as
quickly as possible, and there was not much optimism in non-socialist
circles; one felt that it would not survive many weeks. But this third
Coalition Government gave a greater promise of success than any previous
attempt. There was hope that it would last, and hold the situation
together, at least until the Constituent Assembly could meet.

This hope was not realized, as we know, and the break-up of the
government came within a month, when the Bolsheviki at last accomplished
their long-planned armed uprising, and by force established what they
called the dictatorship of the proletariat. Acting on the very eve of
the opening of the Constituent Assembly, the elections for which were
already in progress, the Bolsheviki showed clearly their contempt for a
really national, popular form of government. The Bolshevik uprising was
followed by civil war. But this was the aim of the extremists, for they
were against social peace, cooperation, coalition, and were striving for
class war.

Until this last month the Russian Revolution, though marked by extreme
antagonisms, and much wrangling, was nevertheless comparatively peaceful
in character. There was no extensive violence, such as would justify
the use of the term "civil war." It was to avoid civil war that such
constant, and on the whole honest, efforts were made to "unite all
the vital forces of the country." For it was seen that civil war would
perhaps ruin the revolution, and in any case would eliminate Russia as
a factor in the war, and the constructive leaders constantly emphasized
that on the successful outcome of the war depended also the success of
the revolution. But the efforts of the more constructive and moderate
groups failed. This very short outline of the attempts to solve the
problems with which revolutionary Russia was confronted by applying the
principle of coalition gives an interpretation of the recent events in
Russia from another angle. In any case one has tried to point out the
forces in conflict during these last months, perhaps suggesting one of
many possible issues from the present chaos.



THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION

By Frank Alfred Golder

The intelligent public that has been watching the erratic courses which
the Russian ship of state has been sailing during the last few years
suspected that something was wrong with it, but not until after
the March revolution did it become fully known what incompetent and
irresponsible officers were in command. It was then learned that a great
part of the time the Emperor was either drunk or doped, that the Empress
was hysterical and on the verge of a mental breakdown, and that they
were assisted by senile Sturmer, mentally unbalanced Protopopov, and
profligate Rasputin, none of whom could read a compass nor lay out a
course and steered the ship as they willed. All the passengers, first,
second, and third class, grand dukes, intelligentsia, and laborers saw
the danger and shouted warning but the officers neither saw nor heard.
In order to save themselves and the vessel each class of passengers,
quite independent of the other, resolved that at the first opportune
moment it would throw the officers overboard and take charge of the
ship; but while they were plotting the crew mutinied, arrested the
officers, and left the ship to drift in sight of the breakers.

Nicholas Romanov is to blame for the plight of his country and for his
own misfortunes. He was warned, he was given his chances, but he abused
them all. When he entered on his reign he was popular and had the good
will of his people with him. For some reason or other it was assumed
that he was liberal minded and that under him the people would breathe
a little more freely than under his autocratic father. This hope was so
strong that it was unconsciously accepted as a fact. Stories were told
that the Tsar fraternized with students and workmen and that he was
determined to destroy the bureaucratic wall which kept the people from
him. It was on the strength of this report that the Zemstvo of Tver
petitioned him that in the future it might have direct access to him and
have a say in the government. Here was a great opportunity but he turned
it against himself. His reply was, "It has come to my attention that
recently some people have been carried away by senseless dreams that the
representatives of the zemstvos should take part in internal affairs.
Let it be known to all that I shall guard the autocracy as firmly as did
my father." This was his program and it deeply disappointed the
people. On the top of this came the tragedy at Moscow on the day of his
coronation when hundreds of people lost their lives in the attempt to
obtain a loving cup which was promised them in commemoration of the
event. Then followed the wholesale killing of the factory hands at
Iaroslav, of the peasants in Kharkov, the miners on the Lena, and other
such massacres and pogroms. Nicholas himself withdrew to his palaces and
left the affairs of state in the hands of the court clique which dragged
Russia into the Japanese war and brought on the revolution of 1905.
Before it was over the Emperor promised a constitution but as soon as
the disturbance was quelled he went back on his word.

It was known that he was weak and he now proved that he was also a liar.
He dismissed one Duma after another, he created an upper house to act as
a brake, he juggled with the electoral laws so that whereas according to
the law of December 24, 1905 the working classes and the peasants were
entitled to 68 per cent of the Duma's representation, by the law of June
14, 1907 they were allowed only 36 per cent, Poland's delegation was cut
down from 37 to 12 per cent, Caucasus' from 29 to 9, Siberia's from 21
to 14, and Central Asia's from 23 to 1. In fact he did everything to
make the Duma ineffective and a laughing stock. But that was not enough,
his pride was hurt and he wanted to be revenged, and the number of
people arrested, imprisoned, exiled, and executed for political crimes
was greater than before.

It has been said that Nicholas was not cruel and the blame for the
bloody deeds in his reign was laid to his ministers. Indeed, there
is something in his face that is kindly and makes a very good first
impression. But those who knew him better had learned to distrust that
smile. When the Emperor was most gracious to one of his ministers it was
a sign that his resignation would be called for the next day. In this
respect Nicholas II was like Alexander I. The following story tells
something of the real character of the man who had the lives of millions
of people at his mercy. The committee appointed by the Duma to take
charge of the papers of the Tsar found that many important documents
of state, such as reports from the commanders-in-chief, ministers, and
others, he had never read, and some he had not even looked at. They
did, however, come across a notebook which had been carefully kept and
guarded. On opening it they noted that Nicholas, with his own hand,
wrote down the names of those revolutionists who, in 1905-06, were
executed, the kind of execution, and other such details. [FN:
This story was told to the writer by a member of the committee.] That
interested him, but matters of state he left to his time servers, to
his hysterical wife, yes, to Grigory Rasputin, a dirty, ignorant, and
licentious peasant, until the country blushed with shame and it became a
saying, "Now we have Grigory I [Rasputin] as tsar."

The present war was declared by the Tsar but the people approved it
because they hoped that the defeat of Germany would mean the defeat of
the German reactionary influence in Russia, especially about the court,
and a closer union with democratic England and France. I was present at
the capital at the time that the war broke out and heard the cheers when
the Emperor made the declaration. It seemed as if Nicholas by coming out
against Germany had redeemed himself in the eyes of his people who were
willing to wipe out the past, and give him another chance. During the
first months of the war he was as popular as during the first weeks of
his reign. It was not like the Japanese war when the soldiers refused
service; in this German war, the men called to colors went without a
murmur, they hoped that something good would come out of it. Offers of
help from individuals as well as commercial and civic bodies poured in
on the Government. The ministers said that everything was ready, that in
a few months the Russians would be in Berlin. At first, all went
well, but soon news came of the catastrophe in eastern Prussia, of
the traitorous acts of the Minister of War, of the campaign in the
Carpathians where the Russians were slaughtered like sheep because they
had no guns, no ammunition, and no supplies. Again the poor people were
betrayed and a cry of horror and vengeance went up as on January 9,
1905, Bloody Sunday. The Tsar would probably have been overthrown there
and then had it not been for the war and the hatred of Germany. The
liberals and patriots of all kinds thought that all was not yet lost
and they went to work with a will, giving themselves, their money, their
strength, and their lives, but they soon became convinced that it was
all in vain so long as Rasputin, the Empress, and their clique ran the
government.

     [FN: Several months before the revolution the following
     confidential conversation took place between Alexeiev, the
     Russian commander-in-chief, and a journalist:

     ALEXEIEV: I can get nothing from them [ministers]. My
     supplies are decreasing.... It is even necessary to think.
     Through the Duma they begged the Emperor to put in ministers
     whom the people could trust, but he, as if to show his
     contempt for public opinion, selected men of low character,
     one worse than the other, men with whom even decent
     monarchists would not shake hands, and in shame withdrew
     from court.]

     [FN: about bread. We are already cutting down the allowance.
     They have forgotten about food for the horses....]

JOURNALIST: What are you going to do about it?

A. What shall I do? With these people there is nothing that can be done.

J. Have you said anything to the Tsar about it?

A. I have... but it does no good.

J. Why?

A. While you talk to him he pays attention, gets worked up, is eager to
do something... but as soon as he leaves you he forgets about it. All
kinds of pressure are brought to bear upon him, he is not a free man.

J. Is it true that the Tsarina has much influence?

A. It is only too true. Her influence is irresistible. What is worse she
never comes out in the open. She interferes with everybody, but works
behind their backs. You never can tell what she will do next. Every time
she comes here she makes new trouble.

J. Do the ministers ever consult you?

A. They come, they talk. What can they do? The honest ministers leave
and the worthless remain.... If it were not for the war I would resign
too. If I should leave what would not they do with the army? Do I not
understand that Sturmer and Company are thinking only of an alliance
with Germany?... The home situation is serious. They [ministers]
are purposely instigating hunger disturbances in order to provoke a
revolution so as to have an excuse for breaking away from the Allies and
end the war. Our army is now in condition to crush Germany and without
that there can be no real peace in Europe. But a permanent peace is not
wanted by Sturmer and Protopopov, they wish to keep the people under
the heel of a strong Germany. Apart from the Germans no one will protect
them from the revolution. The pity of it all is that at the head of
the government there still are men who are interested in crushing the
people.]

     [FN: Princess Vasilchikov, a prominent court lady, became
     convinced that the Empress and her ministers were ruining
     the country and therefore wrote her a courteous letter,
     pleading with her to save Russia. For her pains she received
     an order to retire to her estate, and her husband, who held
     a very prominent position, left the capital with her.
     (_Novoe Vremia_, March 11-24, 1917.)]

Members of the royal family and the grand dukes urged the Tsar to change
his course and not ruin the country and the dynasty but he, drugged by
Dr. Badmaev and duped by Rasputin, Protopopov and Company, sent them all
out of the capital with orders not to return until sent for. They became
so desperate that they murdered Rasputin but the Empress remained and
the government policy became more reactionary than ever and as Prince
Iusupov said the country was drifting to destruction or to a state of
anarchy. It was quite evident that the only way to save the country was
through a revolution and it was merely a question whether it would come
first from the top or from the bottom and when.

     [FN: As late as October, 1916, the old Empress saw her son
     at Kiev and pointed to him that Rasputin and the other
     members of the court circle would overthrow the dynasty and
     destroy the country but it did no good. Only a few days
     before the outbreak of the revolution his own brother,
     Mikhail Alexandrovich, pleaded with him along the same lines
     and with the same success. (_Rech_, March 7-20, 1917.)]

     [FN: The old and scholarly Grand Duke Nicholas
     Mikhailovich went to see the Emperor about November 1, 1916,
     and in order to impress him with the critical situation of
     the country he wrote out his ideas so as to leave them. He
     was received in a kindly manner by the Tsar who listened to
     the reading of the letter and then took it over so as to
     read it to the Empress. When he came to the place where her
     name was mentioned she snatched it from him and tore it up.
     In the course of the conversation that followed the old Duke
     said some sharp things but he could not get anything but
     smiles from the Tsar, and when the old man's cigarette went
     out the Tsar lighted it for him. It was impossible to get an
     out and out talk, or satisfaction of any kind, and Nicholas
     Mikhailovich left the court in disgust. Two days later he
     was requested to retire to his estate for two months. Here
     is the Grand Duke's letter:

     "You have said more than once that you would carry on the
     war to a successful finish. Do you believe that with the
     conditions as they exist at present in the rear this can be
     done? Are you acquainted with the internal situation, not
     only in the interior of the Empire but also on the outskirts
     (Siberia, Turkestan, Caucasus)? Are you told all the truth
     or is some of it concealed from you? Where is the root of
     the evil? Allow me to tell you briefly the essentials of the
     case.

     "So long as your method of selecting ministers was known to
     a limited circle only affairs went on somehow, but from the
     moment your system became generally known it is stupid to
     govern Russia in that way. Repeatedly you have told me that
     you could trust no one, that you were being deceived. If
     that is true then the same influences are at work on your
     wife, dearly beloved by you, who is led astray by [--].

     [FN: the evil circle that surrounds her. You trust Alexandra
     Fedorovna--that is easy to understand. But that which comes
     out of her mouth is the result of clever fabrication and not
     the truth. If you are not strong enough to remove these
     influences from her, at least put yourself on guard against
     this steady and systematic interference of those who act
     through your beloved. If your persuasion is ineffective, and
     I am certain that you have more than once fought against
     this influence, try some other means so as to end with this
     system once for all. Your first impulses and decisions are
     always unusually true and to the point, but as soon as
     another influence comes in you begin to hesitate and end up
     by doing something different from what you originally
     decided. If you should succeed in removing this continuous
     invasion of the dark forces there would take place at once
     the birth of a new Russia, and there would return to you the
     confidence of the greater number of your subjects. All other
     matters would soon settle themselves. You would find people
     who under different conditions would be willing to work
     under your personal leadership. At the proper time, and that
     is not far distant, you can of your own free will organize a
     ministry which should be responsible to you and to
     constitutional institutions. This can be done very simply,
     without any force from outside as was the case with the act
     of October 17, 1905. I hesitated a long time before
     venturing to tell you this truth, and I finally consented
     when your mother and sister urged me to do so. You are at
     the beginning of a new era of disturbances, I will go
     farther, at the beginning of a new era of attempts at
     assassination. Believe me that in trying to loosen you from
     the chains that bind you I do it from no motives of personal
     interest and of this you and Her Majesty are convinced, but
     in the hope and in the expectation of saving you, your
     throne, and our dear native land from some very serious and
     irreparable consequences." (_Rech_, March 9-22, 1917.)

     [FN: "An important rôle was played at court by Dr. Badmaev,
     Rasputin's friend. There were many rumors afloat in court
     and it is difficult to tell the truth. But this I can say
     that Nicholas Alexandrovich was drugged with different drugs
     from Thibet. In this Rasputin took part. During the last
     days they brought the Emperor to a state of almost total
     insanity and his will power was completely gone. In all
     matters of state he consulted the Empress who led him to the
     edge of the precipice." Interview given out by Prince
     Iusupov, in _Novoe Vremia_, March 14-27, 1917.]

     [FN: One of the editors of the _Novoe Vremia_ who has large
     acquaintance in the aristocratic circles of the capital told
     the writer that for months before the revolution it was
     commonly talked about in the homes of military leaders and
     fashionable circles that for the good of Russia the Empress
     must be killed. Last fall (1916) there came to his home one
     of his friends, an aide-de-camp of one of the grand dukes,
     and confided to him that he was meditating an act of
     terrorism in order to get a certain person out of the way.
     Another topic of conversation was the revolution after the
     war.]

     [FN: "I will say this--at court there reigned a kind of
     nightmare, each day fewer and fewer people remained there.
     If the revolution had not broken out from the bottom it
     would have from the top." Interview given out by Prince
     Iusupov, in _Novoe Vremia_, March 14-27, 1917.]

It is only since the political upheaval that the activities and plans of
the grand dukes have become public, but the cry for a revolution on
the part of the great mass of intelligent people was heard before and
everywhere. On my return to Russia, in February, 1916, after an absence
of a little more than two years, I noticed many changes but none greater
than in the public opinion in regard to the administration. On the
way across Siberia, I met with many Russians, some of whom were army
officers, and one and all bitterly criticized the government for its
mismanagement of the war, for the betrayal of Russia as they called it,
for its incompetency, and general worthlessness. At the capital, it was
the same, everywhere, street, car, and public places, the government was
denounced; there was no attempt at concealment. In the archives where I
worked, which are almost under the very nose of the imperial family,
the criticism was as open as in private homes. In fact there was no
exception. When mention was made of the Court, of Rasputin, and of the
Empress, there was a kind of a painful smile; it was not a subject that
self-respecting patriotic Russians liked to talk about in public or
before strangers; it was like dirty linen that ought not to be hung out
for public view.

There was reason enough and suffering enough to justify the complaining.
Petrograd was overcrowded owing to the thousands of refugees who had
been driven there, rooms and apartments were difficult to find and very
expensive, and the cost of living had gone up so high that it was hard
for the poor to make ends meet. It was almost impossible to get about in
the city, as the war had reduced the number of cabs and the few that did
business asked such exorbitant fares that only the rich could afford to
ride in them. The street car situation was in a hopeless tangle. Even
before the war there were not enough accommodations for the public, but
since the opening of hostilities many of the cars had broken down and
there were no mechanics to repair them and no new cars to replace them.
At a time when the population increased, the transportation facilities
decreased. Passengers poured into the cars like a stream, filled the
seats, blocked the aisles, jammed the entrance, stood on the steps, hung
on behind, and clung to anything that might bear them along. Difficult
as it was to get into the car, it was worse to get out, and it is easier
to imagine than to describe the pushing, swearing, tearing, and fighting
that one witnessed. The railways were in an equally bad condition. One
had to wait weeks for a ticket. Men and women were crowded into the same
coupés; the cars were packed so full of human beings that they suggested
cattle cars, except that they were not so sanitary, for they contained
people suffering from contagious diseases and were without fresh air.

The food situation was very serious. For many years, Russia had been
the granary of Europe but during the winter of 1916-17 suffered from
shortage of food. Passengers told how in southern Russia grain and flour
were rotting and yet in northern Russia the inhabitants were starving
owing to the breakdown of the transportation system. It was pointed out
that while the railway officials refused to give cars for bringing in
the necessities of life, yet articles of luxury, expensive fruits, and
such things did come into the city--a state of affairs which meant,
of course, that some one was grafting. Sugar could be obtained only by
cards and in very limited quantities; flour could not be bought at all,
and black, sour bread could often be had only by standing in long lines
and for hours at a time. There were no shoes and people asked what
became of the hides of the thousands of animals that were annually
slaughtered and shot. It was said that these, like other things, were
sold to Germany.

As usual the poorer classes suffered the most. The well-to-do sent their
servants who after a time returned with bread; at the worst it was only
an inconvenience, but the workman had no servants to run his errands.
In the morning, the laborer left his home for his work with little or
no breakfast, at noon there was no luncheon for him because his wife was
standing in the bread or sugar line, and when he returned in the evening
there may have been bread enough but little else. The wife was tired and
discouraged, the children crying and hungry, and life became a burden.

We may say that the conditions in Russia were no worse than in France
or Germany. This is doubtless true, but there is this difference:
the people of France and Germany had confidence in their leaders and
realized that they were doing the best that they could, while the
Russians knew they could put no trust in their Government, that the
suffering was unnecessary and was due to corruption, favoritism, and
incompetency. The Russians have as much patriotism and patience as any
other people, but when they saw themselves abused and imposed upon they
had a right to complain.

In addition to the criticism of the Government the other favorite topic
of conversation was the revolution that would come after the war. This
was discussed as openly as the problems of war; the two were bound up
together, first a successful ending of the war, and then a change in
government.

This public denunciation and open discussion of a _coup d'état_ came
as a shock to me, for I remembered quite vividly how the same people
cheered the Emperor when he declared war. Three years ago no one would
have dared to talk like that. To be sure enough was said then of
the desirability of a more liberal government, but it was a far-off
question, one that the next generation might have to deal with. Now the
talk was of an overturn immediately after the war.

The court circle was not ignorant of what was being said for the spies
kept them fully informed. In conversation with a journalist two months
before the outbreak of the revolution, the Minister of the Interior,
Protopopov, a protégé of Rasputin, said that he was aware of the
revolutionary propaganda and that he was ready to face any attempt that
might be made to overthrow the government.

"I will not stop at anything," he remarked,... "the first thing that I
shall do is to send them [revolutionaries] from the capital by the car
loads. But I will strangle the revolution no matter what the cost may
be." [FN: _Novoe Vremia_, March 19-April 1, 1917.] He had no doubt
that he could handle the situation and he inspired those about him with
the same confidence, particularly the Emperor whom he assured that the
discontent was confined chiefly to the intelligentsia and to a small
number of the gentry, and that the common people and the army were
devoted to the autocracy.

To the question that arises why the revolution, which was expected after
the war, came off before its conclusion, the answer is that the present
revolution was not planned nor desired by any one of importance; it came
as a surprise to all. It just happened. If some one must have the credit
or blame, it is Protopopov who was at the time suspected of being queer
mentally and who has since lost his reason entirely. He was so sure of
himself and of his ability to put down the uprising and thereby
show himself a real statesman that he concluded not to wait for the
revolution to come in the ordinary course of events, but to hurry it a
bit. Although there is no conclusive proof for this statement, there
is plenty of convincing circumstantial evidence. We know that it was
proposed to have the workmen of Petrograd strike on February 27, the day
of the opening of the Duma, as a protest against the government; we
know also that to meet this situation, the Minister of the Interior had
placed machine guns in the garrets, in steeples, on housetops, and other
such places where they could command the important streets and shoot
down the mob. The rising did not take place because Miliukov, the great
liberal leader, learned that the Government was behind this move and
that preparations had been made to slaughter the unsuspecting workmen.
He, therefore, addressed them in an open letter calling on them not to
make any demonstration, and they did not. For the time being the strike
was off, but the air was full of discontent and restlessness, and it was
difficult to say when trouble would break out again. With this in view,
a number of representatives of various organizations met to discuss
the situation and to determine what attitude they should take and what
counsel they should give to the labor leaders. Miliukov and a few
others urged that all uprisings should be discouraged because they would
interfere with the war, would cost the lives of many innocent persons,
and would accomplish nothing. There were, however, others, especially
Anisimov, who argued strongly in favor of a strike, saying that this was
the opportune time to overthrow the present regime and to establish a
democratic government.[FN: I have this story from Miliukov.] When
the revolution came off and the papers of the secret police were seized,
it was discovered that Anisimov, who urged the revolt, was the paid
agent of the Government and was doubtless doing its bidding. This shows
that the Government instigated and abetted the uprising. But this is not
all the evidence. Between February 27 and the outbreak of the revolution
men impersonating Miliukov went to the factories, calling on the
workmen to rise against the Government.[FN: I have this story from
Miliukov.] There is still another bit of evidence. In order to give
the laboring classes cause for revolt, the food supply in the factory
districts was reduced and many people suffered from hunger and in their
desperation came out into the streets. During the revolutionary week
little, if any, food came in, but immediately after it the soldiers
found 250,000 "puds" of flour, [FN: _Russkaia Svoboda_, 1917. No.
3, p. 24.] enough to last Petrograd ten days, meat, besides other food
hidden in police stations and elsewhere out of reach of the public. It
has been said that the Government instigated the uprising in order to
bring about a separate peace with Germany. No direct proof has as yet
been produced to substantiate this charge, and the only testimony that
I have bearing on this case is the statement made by commander-in-chief
Alexeiev in a confidential interview with a journalist already quoted.
[FN: There is not the least bit of evidence to show that the
Emperor himself was mixed up in these intrigues. Among the papers of the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs there is but one document that throws
any light on the question of a separate peace during the time of the
monarchy. It is a letter from the minister of the German Court to the
minister of the Russian Court insinuating a separate peace. This letter
was shown, as was intended, to the Tsar, who read it, put it aside, and
did not answer it. This, however, does not mean that Sturmer, Protopopov
and the clique of the Empress were not planning to bring about a
situation which would compel a separate peace.]

These four points--the encouragement of a revolt by the secret agents,
the impersonation of Miliukov, the concealment of food in the factory
districts, the desire of a separate peace with Germany--make out a
fairly good case to show that the Government was behind the disturbance.
Aside from the reason already given for the desire of a separate peace,
the other reason for the action of the ministry was this: It feared that
the revolutionary movement, if permitted to take its natural course,
would develop such strength that it could not be put down when it broke
out, and, therefore, the Minister of the Interior decided to take it in
hand and at the right moment crush it with such force that it would be
a long time before it could raise its head again. Before it was over he
hoped to drag in prominent members of the Duma (or the Duma itself) and
other revolutionary leaders, and make an end of them. This plan need not
astonish us, for this method, in one form or another, had been made use
of by the autocracy time and again. Protopopov overreached himself, his
scheme miscarried, the soldiers about the capital went back on him, and
the little comedy that he had staged in which he was to play the leading
part became a tragedy and the shot which was intended for the revolution
hit his royal master and brought autocracy to the ground. In view of the
fact that Protopopov has since become insane, one wonders whether the
man was mentally well balanced at the time that he was in office. But
the Tsar has only himself to blame for his plight; he was warned against
this nominee of Rasputin, but he would not take advice.

Early in the week of March 5-12, 1917, the trouble began in the factory
districts. There were bread riots, car stoning, window smashing, and
other such acts, which are more or less common and no one paid much
attention to them. On Thursday, the disturbances spread to other parts
of the city and crowds began to gather on the Nevski, but the throng was
orderly and the police seemed to have little difficulty in keeping it
on the move. Friday the crowd was more bold: it marched up and down
the streets, calling for bread, singing revolutionary songs, and
occasionally waving a red flag and quickly snatching it back again.
This, too, did not make much impression for it is well known that
in Russia strikes and disturbances have in view political as well as
economic betterment. Late Friday afternoon, while I was walking on
the Nevski, a company of mounted police and a large number of Cossacks
dashed by on the way to disperse a procession that was coming towards
me. When I came up to the Fontanka Bridge I noticed the crowd was
gathered about the Cossacks; it patted the horses and cheered their
riders, while the police were nowhere in sight. I listened to what was
being said and heard that the police tried to use their whips and swords
on the people and this angered the Cossacks so much that they attacked
the police, killed the captain, and drove them all away. It was no
secret that there was bad blood between the soldiers and the police;
the former complained that while they were suffering and fighting at
the front, the latter were having an easy time, enriching themselves
by graft, and oppressing the soldiers' families. The soldiers and the
strikers started out with one idea--hatred of the police. When the
police had been dispersed, the Cossacks and soldiers begged the people
to move on, but they, especially the young women students who were
numerous, went up to them and pleaded with them to espouse their cause.
"Comrades," they would say, "come over on our side, our cause is your
cause." The rough, ignorant warriors were disturbed; they did not like
their jobs, and in a kindly way begged the men and women to go home,
but, as it did no good, for they massed again, the Cossacks rode in a
body into their midst and kept turning and turning until the crowd
was forced from the street onto the sidewalk. In the meantime, another
company of Cossacks formed a line across the street, from wall to
wall, and swept everybody before it into stores, courtyards, and other
openings. Even this did not do much good, for as soon as the horsemen
passed, the mob fell in behind and cheered the Cossacks. There was no
roughness, but at the same time it was easy to see that the crowd did
not yet know to what extent the army could be trusted.

By Saturday the inhabitants of the city began to feel the effect of
the disorder; cars were not running, telephones were barely working,
factories and shops were closed, banks and stores were locked, there was
little to eat, for the only provision on hand was water; every one who
could filled the tubs for fear the water mains would be blown up.
The crowd on the streets was larger than ever, more red flags were in
evidence, but all this failed to give the impression of a revolution.
Such demonstrations had been seen before; revolutionary talk was cheap
and was not taken seriously. As on the day before, the soldiers and
Cossacks tried by gentle means to disperse the crowd, but failed, for
the men and women in the crowd complained that they were hungry and
pleaded with the military for the sake of their own families to stand by
the people. It was easy to see that these guardians of the peace were in
trouble, they knew that every word said was true, and what was more to
the purpose, members of their own families were in the crowd. An officer
who was sent with his company to shoot on the people told how that same
morning his own sister took part in the demonstration and called for
bread for her children. This was no exceptional case. But as soldiers
they must do their duty and keep order. Realizing that the stratagems of
the day before failed in their purpose, the Cossacks tried other tactics
on this day. They fell behind the procession, and discharged their
pistols in the air and dashed at full speed into the mob. Woe unto him
who did not get out of the way. But they all did; in a second there was
not a person on the street. It is still a wonder how it was all done so
quickly. As soon as the horsemen passed, the crowd dropped behind them
and raising their hats cheered them. "Comrades," they said, "come over
to us, you know that the government is bad, you know how the soldiers
have been killed through its incompetency, you know that our wives and
children are hungry," and more such pleas. The Cossacks and the other
soldiers who tried to keep order were caught, they begged the crowd to
break up and go home, they pointed out that they had to do their duty
and that somebody might get hurt. It was reported that in some places
the soldiers did fire and kill several persons. During Saturday, men
were sent, it is not clear by whom, to the different factories to
persuade the workers to join in a great demonstration on Sunday. The
military commander of the city telegraphed to the Emperor for orders
and the latter sent word to shoot, if necessary, and to put down the
uprising at any cost, and that accounts for the posters that were put up
on Sunday morning warning the inhabitants not to gather in the streets
because the soldiers would shoot to kill. This had happened before and
was no joke, and many people would not leave their homes that day.
Those who did had to walk; there was no other way of getting about. Few
people, on the whole, were on the street that morning aside from the
soldiers and Cossacks who were guarding the bridges and keeping an eye
out for disturbances. After luncheon I started to make a call and as
I passed the barracks of the Volynski regiment, situated near where I
lived, I saw a company of soldiers lined up, heard the command to load,
to shoulder arms, to march, and off they went to the Nevski. I followed
them for a distance and then turned aside and went my way. In returning
I had to cross the Nevski and found that all avenues thither were
guarded and that no one was allowed to go in that direction. I managed,
however, by showing my American passport, to get through the line and
reach the street. Excited people were moving up and down and from them I
learned that about three o'clock a number of people forced their way to
the Nevski and were fired upon by the soldiers and the machine guns that
were concealed. Among the killed of the day was a captain of police who
was knocked down by a Cossack.

Sunday night was full of excitement and fear and there were not many
who slept soundly. Firing was heard at different times but what it
portended, none of us could tell. It became evident that the situation
was becoming serious, yet we all felt that the Government could handle
it. When I went out on the street Monday morning, the first thing I saw
was the placard of the military commander announcing that unless the
workmen went to the shops, they would be sent to the front the following
day. Groups of people were talking excitedly and from them I learned
that the Volynski regiment had revolted and had killed its officers,
because the day before they had commanded the soldiers to shoot on the
people. It seems that the soldiers returned home much excited over
their deed and full of remorse. In the course of the night some of
the revolutionary soldiers from the city upbraided them and they were
greatly incensed with their officers and the Government. They, as well
as other regiments, were particularly worked up over the report that
hirelings of the secret police dressed in soldiers' uniforms went about
firing on the crowd and that the new recruits, under penalty of death,
were commanded to shoot on the people in the streets. When in the
morning the officers congratulated the men on their deed of yesterday,
they jumped on them and murdered them. I heard that other regiments had
also revolted; but there were so many rumors afloat that it was not easy
to know what to believe. About four in the afternoon, I started for home
and found the Nevski full of frightened and nervous people, and hardly
any soldiers. No one seemed to know what to expect. Sounds of shooting
were heard and they were explained as the battle between the regiments
that had revolted and those that had remained loyal. In the distance
columns of smoke were seen and report had it that palaces were burning.
Again it was difficult to know the truth. As I proceeded on my way, I
was joined by the little minister of the British American Church, where
I had attended services the day before, where he had prayed fervently
for the Tsar and his family and asked God to put down the anarchists,
and other lawless men. We were discussing the situation, not knowing
exactly what to make of it. Perhaps the word revolution passed our lips
but neither of us nor those about us took it seriously. Near the Liteiny
a gate opened and about two dozen armed soldiers led by a petty officer
stepped out and marched towards the center of the street. Immediately
the crowd, excited and scared, scattered and ran for their lives but
the soldiers motioned for them to stop and told them that they would
not shoot. We left them, and proceeded on our way, trying as before
to interpret what we saw. While in the midst of our discussion we were
struck by a new and unfamiliar sound--tra-ta-ta, tra-ta-ta, and we
instinctively knew that a machine gun was firing. In a flash the streets
were cleared and my minister and I found ourselves sticking like posters
against the wall. It was my first "baptism of fire" and I had enough
presence of mind to observe its effect upon myself and others.
Physically there was no effect for no one seemed hit. I tried to locate
the gun and the man behind it, but did not succeed. When the firing
ceased, I went on my way. As I neared the Nicholas station, there came
rushing forth from around the corner a crowd of hoodlums and soldiers,
with drawn swords, which they had taken from the officers, and
such other weapons as they could pick up, shouting, "Down with the
Government!" Then it dawned upon me that the revolution was on in
earnest, that the anarchists of yesterday's prayer had become the heroes
of a great cause. What struck me most of all was the kind of men and
women who made this world event. I watched them during the week, and
they seemed to be in great part boys and girls, hoodlums, students,
poorly dressed men and women, without organization, plans, or leaders.
It is difficult to analyze the various motives that brought them out
into the street. Not one of the so-called revolutionists was seen,
heard, shot, or wounded. When it was all over they appeared on the
scene, rushing from Switzerland, the United States, France, and other
parts of the world, to make speeches and to divide the spoils. It was
a revolution without revolutionists, unless you call the soldiers that,
but they were not consciously making a revolution, and when it was done,
they were thoroughly surprised and frightened. There are a number
of reasons why the Government collapsed so easily. It was not really
overthrown but it toppled over like a rotten tree, and until it fell,
the people did not realize how decayed it actually was. Its misconduct
of the war, scandals like that of Rasputin, ministers such as Protopopov
discredited and disgraced the dynasty and when the end came, it had few
friends who shed tears.

Another important factor in helping the revolution was the large number
of students and liberals who served in the army. To fill the ranks
and to provide educated men for officers, it was necessary to call on
university students, experts in various fields of engineering, all of
whom, more or less, desired a liberal government. These men worked among
the soldiers and officers with a view to creating a feeling of distrust
in the Emperor, and the Government, and its incompetence and corruption
gave plenty of material for the propagandists. Loyalty to the dynasty
was undermined and as soon as one prop was removed, as soon as one
company of soldiers went over, the others followed and the whole edifice
came tumbling down.

Still another factor was the large number of new recruits that were
stationed in the capital; they were as yet not well disciplined,
obedience had not yet become a second nature to them. Many of them had
come from the factories, some of them were personally acquainted with
the men and women who were in the demonstrations and therefore would not
fire on them. Had there been at the time in the city three or four old
and well-disciplined regiments, or had the Cossacks who were on hand not
interfered with the police, the uprising would have been crushed quickly
and effectively as similar affairs had been before.

Yet one other factor contributed to the success of the revolution and
that was the over-confidence of the Government. The soldiers had been
loyal until now and it never occurred to those in power that they might
not always be so. They made no special preparations other than placing
machine guns on roofs. They did not even make use of the armored cars.
When they realized that the army in the city could not be trusted, they
called for troops from the front but they came too late.

From the point of view of the monarchy it was unfortunate that
Protopopov sent the Emperor to the front after having secured from him
a signed blank to dismiss the Duma; for if the Tsar had been at Tsarskoe
Selo, he might have been prevailed upon to make some concessions and
saved the dynasty for a time at least.

By Tuesday morning, March 13, the revolution was generally accepted as
a _fait accompli_; it was believed that the old despotism was gone never
to return. This was followed by an outburst of idealism and patriotism
such as comes but once or twice in the life of a nation. Every Russian
was bubbling over with enthusiasm over the glorious future of his
country. Liberty so greatly desired, so long worked for, so much
suffered for had at last come. The intelligent and persecuted Russians,
they who had spent years under the shadow of the police, in prison,
in exile, and in Siberia, had their day at last and they were eager
to realize their Utopia. Their first demand was that all prison doors
should be opened and that the oppressed the world over should be freed.
The Russian Revolution was not a class revolution, it was brought about
neither by the proletariat nor by the bourgeoisie and the aristocracy;
all classes contributed, it was a national revolution. So worthless had
the monarchy become that all the people were glad to get rid of it and
see it go. They who helped to bring about its ruin were the first to
deny it and seek safety; and even the Synod, in an almost unseemly
haste, took out the names of the imperial family from the prayer book.

The revolution was picturesque and full of color. Nearly every morning
one could see regiment after regiment, soldiers, Cossacks, and sailors,
with their regimental colors, and bands, and revolutionary flags,
marching to the Duma to take the new oath of allegiance. They were
cheered, they were blessed, handerchiefs were waved, hats were raised,
cigarettes were distributed as mark of appreciation and gratitude to
these men, without whose help there would have been no revolution. The
enthusiasm became so contagious that men and women, young and old,
high and low, fell in alongside or behind, joined in the singing of the
Marseillaise, and walked to the Duma to take the oath of allegiance and
having taken it they felt as purified as if they had partaken of the
communion. Another picturesque sight was the army trucks filled with
armed soldiers, red handkerchiefs tied to their bayonets, dashing up and
down the streets, ostensibly for the purpose of protecting the citizens
but really for the mere joy of riding about and being cheered. One of
these trucks stands out vividly in my mind: it contained about twenty
soldiers, having in their midst a beautiful young woman with a red
banner, and a young hoodlum astride the engine, a cigarette in one
hand and a sword in the other. The streets were full of people, or
"tovarishchi" (comrades), as they called one another, not only the
sidewalks but in the very center, for the tramways were not running.
Great events were transpiring and every one who could came out to hear
and to see what was going on. There were no newspapers and the street
was the news center. Automobiles came dashing through scattering
proclamations and copies of the _Izvestiia_ (a news-sheet published by
a committee of newspaper men with the authority of the Duma); and as
the crowd made a rush to pick these up it looked for a moment as if the
whole world was walking on its head and feet at the same time. Those who
were fortunate enough to seize a paper ran home with it to read it to
the family, those who were not gathered around one of the many bonfires,
made from the wooden imperial eagles, crowns, and other insignia of
royalty, to listen to the reading of the news, usually by a student. The
part played by the students during the revolution has not received the
attention it deserves. When all others were hiding or excited it was
the students who took charge of the leaderless soldiers, found food for
them, collected money for their welfare, and told them what to do. It
was interesting to watch with what deference the soldiers looked up to
them and hung upon their words. This importance was not wholly lost upon
the students, both men and women, and they read the proclamations as if
they were tablets of law handed down from heaven. After the reading
came the discussion. One of the favorite topics was the comparative
bloodlessness of the revolution (something like 169 killed and 1264
wounded) which proved that the Russian Revolution was superior to the
French or any other. Having started in this vein the discussion turned
on the mighty and noble deeds Russia was going to do now. Just as it
once freed Europe from the yoke of Napoleon so will it now liberate her
from the militarism and barbarism of William and give freedom to all the
world, to all nationalities, races, and creeds. The light of the world
is to come from Russia. The crowd meant it. The soldiers were in earnest
and patriotic--the praise showered upon them and the responsibility
placed upon them seemed to uplift them--the man with the hoe became a
free citizen and behaved as such. On Wednesday, March 14, the soldiers
posted bulletins in different parts of the city calling on their
comrades to abstain from liquor and violence and to prevent others from
committing lawless deeds. Not satisfied with mere words small companies
of militia visited the places where drinks were sold and emptied the
barrels and bottles into the gutter. For days the Astoria Hotel looked
and smelled like a wrecked saloon after Carrie Nation and her associates
had stoned it.

For some time the whereabouts and intentions of the Tsar were unknown
and numerous rumors were afloat. Some said that he had committed
suicide, that he was in the city, that he was on the way, that he was
under arrest, that he had fled the country. Another interesting question
was the form of the new government, should it be a republic or a
constitutional monarchy. Many of the educated classes and members of
the Duma advocated a constitutional monarchy of the English type, while
others, particularly the socialistic groups, favored a republic, a
democratic republic; whatever they meant by that is not clear. Needless
to say the great mass of people did not know the difference between one
kind of government and another but they shouted as loudly as those who
knew. One soldier demanded a republic like that of England, another
insisted on a republic with a tsar at the head, the wife of the porter
of the house where I lived cried as if her heart would break because
"they wanted a republic," and some of the peasant women in the country
clamored for the tsar because "if they take away the tsar they will also
take away God and what will then become of the muzhik." In one place at
the front several regiments almost came to blows over this question. An
orator ended his eloquent speech by saying that "from now on Russia
will have but one monarch, the revolutionary proletariat." This phrase
puzzled the soldiers, they also misunderstood the word "monarch" which
they thought to be "monakh" (monk). They therefore concluded that it was
planned to put a monk on the throne, and an argument arose whether they
would have a monk or not. Some were in favor and others opposed. By the
time it got to the next regiment the question was whether they would
have the monk Iliodor as their ruler. It was no longer a question
whether Russia was to have a tsar but whether the tsar should be a monk
or not, and whether it should be Iliodor or some other one.

Strange to say, as evening came a kind of fear seized the population,
particularly the more ignorant. It was difficult for them to shake
off the terror of the old police; all the time that they were talking
against the tsar they had a feeling that they were doing wrong, and that
some one was denouncing them. It was hard for them to believe that all
that they saw and heard during the day was real and that the old regime
was powerless. Some one would start a rumor that a monarchist general
with an army was marching on the city and that he would kill and burn.
Early Friday evening, March 16, as I was walking down the street,
soldiers ran by me shouting for every one to get under cover for several
hundred police from Tsarskoe Selo were coming and that there would
be street fighting. Frightened mothers grabbed their little ones and
hurried home, storekeepers closed the shops, porters barricaded the
gates, housewives extinguished the lights, and the streets became as
dark and as silent as a cemetery. This lasted for an hour or more and
then came more soldiers announcing that all was well, that the supposed
policemen were revolutionary soldiers who had come to take the oath of
allegiance.

The exultation reached its highest point when the first temporary
government, with Prince Lvov at the head, was announced. Every one
was pleased with the men selected, they were without doubt the ablest
leaders of the country, men who had always fought for the cause of
liberty and for the interests of the public. There was nothing but
praise for them and assurances of support. The fact that there was a
"pravitelstvo" (government) calmed the people and they gradually went
back to their old occupations, but as new men, with broader outlooks and
with higher aspirations.

The taking of the oath of office by the new Ministry was the last act of
that wonderful week to be unanimously approved by the people. When the
temporary government attempted to govern it was interfered with by the
Council of Workmen's and Soldiers' Deputies; the cry was raised by the
Socialist groups that it was they who had won the revolution and that
they, therefore, should have all the power. Since then the country has
become more and more divided against itself, love has turned into hate,
joy into sorrow.



THE JUGO-SLAV MOVEMENT

By Robert J. Keener

     [FN: As used in this paper, the term Jugo-Slav comprehends
     the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, but not the Bulgars. It is
     not necessary here to consider whether the latter are Slavs
     or Slavicized Tartars, but merely to point out that since
     the Congress of Berlin in 1878, the Bulgars have taken no
     part in the movement which has resulted in the creation of
     Jugo-Slav nationalism. The word "jug" means "south" in
     Slavic. It is also written "youg" and "[iu]g."]

If there are miracles in history, the Jugo-Slav movement is a miracle.
It is the story of a nation which entered its new home in the Balkans in
the seventh century and became divided geographically and politically,
in faith and written language, and in economic and social life, until
at last its spokesmen could truthfully say that it was divided
into thirteen separate administrative units dependent upon fifteen
legislative bodies. [FN: In 1915 the Slovenes inhabiting Carniola,
Carinthia, Styria, Istria, and Goerz-Gradisca, and the Serbo-Croats of
Istria and Dalmatia, were under the direct rule of Austria. Trieste and
its district were a part of Austria. The Serbs of Hungary belonged to
Hungary proper for the most part; the Croats by a fundamental agreement
were entitled to autonomy in Croatia. Fiume, the seaport of Croatia and
Hungary, had an administration of its own. Bosnia-Herzegovina possessed
a diet and was under the dual rule of Austria and Hungary. All the
provinces or districts mentioned above were governed by the two
parliaments at Vienna and Budapest. There were, in addition, two
independent Serb states, Serbia and Montenegro. Down to 1912 Turkey
ruled over a large number of Serbs.] How did it come about that this
evolution of twelve centuries, beginning with primeval unity and passing
through a political, economic, and social decomposition of a most
bewildering character, has once more arrived at national unity and
is even now demanding the last step--political amalgamation? Is it a
doctrine or a dream or is it a reality?


I

When the Jugo-Slavs first occupied the western half of the Balkan
peninsula, they were one in speech, in social customs and ancestry, and
were divided only into tribes. The Slovenes, who settled in the northern
end of the west Balkan block, were not separated from their Croat and
Serb kinsmen by the forces of geography, but rather by the course of
political evolution. On the other hand, the Croats became separated from
the Serbs by forces largely geographical, though partially economic and
political, in nature.

The Slovenes gave way before the pressure of the Germans who swept
through the Alps and down the Danube and forced the Slovene vojvodes
to acknowledge their suzerainty and accept their religion. The Germans
would doubtless have succeeded in obliterating them had not the Magyar
invasion weakened their offensive. The Slovenes, however, were left a
wrecked nationality whose fate became blended with that of the Habsburg
possessions and who against the forces of geography--which firmly bound
them to the Croats--were politically riveted to the Habsburg north.
This division was therefore the result of forces created by man and
changeable by him. The Croats settled in the northwestern half of the
territory south of the Slovenes; the Serbs roughly in the southeastern
part of it. Here geographical influences--the direction of the rivers
and the Dinaric ridges--combined with divergent political and economic
possibilities, produced a dualism. The Croats on the Save and its
tributaries naturally expanded westward and aspired to closer
connection with the sea where their struggle with the remnants of
Roman civilization and a superior culture absorbed their energies.
They developed out of their tribal state more quickly, while the Serbs,
further inland and amid more difficult surroundings, developed more
slowly. The people who lived along the Save aspired to control the
Dalmatian coast which military and geographical authorities claim can
best be held from the mainland. The people who lived in Montenegro
or along the Morava, which was the gateway to the peninsula, would
naturally expand south and east toward the other cultural center,
Constantinople, and thus seek to dominate the Balkan peninsula. In both
cases, the attraction proved too much for feudal kings and led to the
formation of cosmopolitan empires instead of strong national monarchies.

The kingdoms of Croatia and Serbia thus parted company politically. The
former became a separate kingdom attached to Hungary in 1102 and to the
Habsburg dynasty in 1527, while the Serbs began their expansion under
the Nemanja dynasty late in the twelfth century and almost realized
the dominion over the Balkans under Stephen Du[s]an in the fourteenth
century.

This political, geographical, and economic dualism became still greater
when in 1219 the Serbs cast their lot with orthodoxy. The Croats, like
the Slovenes, adopted Roman Catholicism, the Latin alphabet, and the
culture of Rome. The Serbs accepted Greek Orthodoxy, the Cyrillic
alphabet, and the culture of Constantinople.

The Slovenes became a part of the Austrian possessions of the Habsburgs;
the Croats fell under the dominion of the Hungarian crown and the
republic of Venice; and the Serbs succumbed to the Turks by the middle
of the fifteenth century. The loss of political independence brought
with it ultimately the loss of the native nobility, the sole guardians
of the constitutional and historical rights of the nations down into
the nineteenth century in central Europe. In addition, many towns were
Germanized and the middle class disappeared. The Jugo-Slavs, like the
Czecho-Slovaks, appeared in modern times as a nation which had lost
its native nobility and had been reduced to a disarmed, untutored, and
enserfed peasantry. In the absence of these leaders, the nation turned
to its clergy who in order to retain their hold on the peasantry must
needs ever remain national. But here again the misfortune which awaited
the Jugo-Slavs was that historically three religions had taken deep
root, the Catholic among the Slovenes and Croats, and the Mohammedan and
Orthodox among the Serbs. We may therefore conclude the first half of
the historical evolution of the Jugo-Slavs with the observation that
political, economic, social, and geographical divisions led to their
downfall as a nation and that if they ever desired to become one, each
one of these chasms would have to be bridged. A solution for each of
these problems--the most difficult which ever faced a nation--would
have to be found; meanwhile the policy of the four masters, the German,
Venetian, Magyar, and Turk, would always be "divide and rule," in other
words, to perpetuate the divergencies.


II

The history of the evolution of the Jugo-Slavs from the sixteenth to the
twentieth century has been an effort to find the means of melting down
these differences until finally one--nationalism--accomplished the
purpose. Unity came first in the imagination and the mind, next in
literature and speech, and finally in political action. The four hundred
years beginning with the fifteenth and ending with the eighteenth
century will be remembered by the Jugo-Slavs as the age of humiliation.
Only Slavicized Ragusa and indomitable Montenegro kept alive the
imagination of the nation which was brought back to life by the
half-religious, half-national Slovene poets of the sixteenth century, by
the Ragusan epic poet [Gundulic], by the incessant demands of successive
diets of the ever-weakening Croatia in the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries, and by the progressive and zealous Serbs of Hungary, who ever
since the fifteenth century in increasing numbers made their home there,
refugees from the oppression of the Turk, but who ever longed to push
out from the frontier and rebuild Serbia anew. [Krizanic], a Croat
Catholic Dalmatian priest, a firm believer in Jugo-Slav and Slavic unity
in general, appealed to the rising Russian empire to help save dying
Slavdom.

While the Turkish and the Venetian empires decayed, the Austrian and the
Russian gained courage. By the end of the seventeenth century the house
of Habsburg had won back all except the Banat and in the eighteenth
century aspired to divide the Balkan peninsula in halves with the
Russians. Along with this future foreign interference in the affairs
of the Balkans came the Germanizing and centralizing "reforms" of Maria
Theresa and Joseph II, whose result was to cripple still further the few
constitutional and historical rights which remained to the Jugo-Slavs.
But these "reforms" had nevertheless salutary effects upon the nation
of peasants. The enlightened despots, spurred on by the loss of
Silesia--which was at the same time a great loss in revenue as well as
prestige--sought to make good the loss by the economic betterment and
education of the peasantry. How else could an agrarian state increase
its revenue and supply able-bodied men for the numerous armies which
the overarmaments of Frederick II had brought upon central Europe?
[FN: Emphasis on this fundamental fact of Habsburg history in the
eighteenth century cannot be too strong. The writer of this paper
hopes soon to present archival proof of the far-reaching results of the
seizure of Silesia. The documents are to be found in the archives of the
_Hofkammer_ and _Ministerium des Innern_ in Vienna.] Centralization and
Germanization really helped to awaken the Slavs. Enlightened despotism
gave them the weapons of political struggle--education and economic
resources.

Of the Jugo-Slavs, the Serbs of Hungary were the first to achieve
national and cultural consciousness. In the absence of a native
nobility, but with unusual economic opportunities at their command, they
developed a wealthy middle class--a rare thing among Slavs before the
middle of the nineteenth century. This class came into contact with
nationalized western Europe and found that the bulwark against national
oppression was education for the masses. The nation must be educated and
must be economically sound in order to undertake the political struggle
against the Germans, the Magyars, and the Turks. That was the background
of Dositej Obradovi[c]'s literary labors as he raised spoken
Serbian ultimately to the literary language of the Jugo-Slavs and of
Karad[z]i[c]'s efforts which resulted in that wonderful collection of
Serbian national poems, and which clinched for all time the literary
supremacy of the _[S]to_ dialect. Serbian Hungary was the starting place
for Kara George's revolution which brought partial freedom in 1804 and
autonomy in 1830 and thus planted the germ of the modern Greater Serbia.
Napoleon's Illyria, created in 1809, joined for the first time Slovenes
and Croats in one political unit, and the excellent administration and
the schools left an undying memory of what might be if the Habsburgs
cared. Vodnik, the Slovene poet, sang of Illyria and her creator, but it
was the meteoric Croat, Ljudevit Gaj, in the thirties, who so eloquently
idealized it as he poured heated rhetoric into the camp of the
Magyars, who after the Diet of 1825 began their unfortunate policy
of Magyarization. Illyria, though short-lived, became the germ of the
Greater Croatia idea, which, with Greater Serbia, existed as the two,
not necessarily hostile, solutions of the Jugo-Slav problem down to the
Congress of Berlin. It was as yet a friendly rivalry with the possible
formation of two separate units. The occupation of Bosnia in 1878 led to
actual friction between them. On the other hand, the annexation of the
same province in 1908 had just the opposite effect, for from that time
the ultimate ideal was no longer Greater Croatia or Greater Serbia in
any selfish sense, but Jugo-slavia, because, to use a platitude, Bosnia
had scrambled the eggs. Evidence of the fairly amicable relations
between Slovenes, Croats, and Serbs at the time of Gaj is not lacking.
It was Gaj who reformed Croatian orthography on the basis of the
Serbian. Bleiweis and Vraz endeavored to do the same in Slovene.

The revolution of 1848 demonstrated still further the friendly relations
of these potential rivals as national unifiers. For the first time,
the Croats and Serbs publicly fraternized and showed that the seemingly
insurmountable barrier of religious difference tended to disappear in
the struggle for national independence. In this sense the events of
1848--when the hand of the foreign master was for the while taken
away--have given confident hope to those who believe that Jugo-Slav
differences are soluble. Jela[c]i[c], Ban of Croatia, the idol of the
Serbo-Croats, was proclaimed dictator and supported by the Croatian Diet
at Zagreb (Agram) and the Serbian assembly at Karlovac (Karlowitz). The
Serb Patriarch Raja[c]i[c] and the young and gifted Stratimirovi[c],
provisional administrator of the Serb Vojvodina, attended the Croatian
Diet and the High Mass where Bishop O[z]egovi[c] sang the Te Deum in Old
Slavic. After Gaj, Raja[c]i[c], and Stratimirovi[c] had failed at Vienna
and Pressburg to bend the dynasty or the defiant Kossuth, Jela[c]i[c]
was empowered to defend the monarchy and bring back the historical
rights of the Triune Kingdom and the Serb Vojvodina. The dynasty and
the monarchy survived, but Jugo-Slav hopes and the promises they
had received were unfulfilled or soon withdrawn, as for instance the
Vojvodina in 1861. Absolutism reigned supreme from 1849 to 1860.

This disappointment led the Croats and Serbs to try cooperation with the
Magyars, who under Deák and Eötvös appeared to be anxious to conciliate
the non-Magyars in those uncertain years which began in 1859 and ended
in dualism. Austria lacked a great statesman, and the Prusso-Austrian
rivalry led the fearful and impatient Francis Joseph into the Compromise
(Ausgleich) of 1867. It was a work of haste and expediency and bound
with it the fate of the dynasty. Thereafter, the German minority in
Austria and the Magyar minority in Hungary were the decisive factors
in the problems confronting the Jugo-Slavs. Dalmatia was handed over to
Austria; Croatia, by a compromise, which it has never really accepted,
to Hungary.

The Ausgleich between Austria and Hungary and Hungary and Croatia opened
in 1868 a period which ended in 1905--it was a period, on the one hand
of the greatest decay and decomposition in the political life of the
Jugo-Slavs, and, on the other, of the greatest literary and intellectual
unity as shaped by Bishop Strossmayer and Peter II and Nicholas of
Montenegro.

Bishop Strossmayer and the Slovene, Croat, and Serb academies, matica,
and learned societies, as well as men of literature, spoke, wrote, and
pleaded for unity in this period, in vain. But they and the universities
of Prague and Zagreb produced a younger generation which later took up
the fight for national unity and which abandoned individual political
foibles and looked over the boundaries of their provinces for
inspiration.

Among the Slovenes, politics degenerated into the struggle for minor
concessions from the court at Vienna in regard to the Slovene language
and schools, while political parties multiplied freely through personal
and social differences. The lines which bound them to their kinsmen in
the south were weakest during this period.

The Croats found themselves no match for the astute Magyars who resorted
to packed diets, gerrymandering, bribery, and forgery. The Compromise
(Nagoda) of 1868 was as decisive as the murder of the farsighted Prince
Michael of Serbia in that year. It will be remembered that, in spite
of his many faults, he had made an agreement with Montenegro for
the ultimate merging of their states and, after allying himself with
Rumania, had carried out an agreement with the Bulgarian committee for
the amalgamation of Bulgaria with Serbia, thus obtaining a commanding
influence in the Balkans. With his death, Serbia fell into the hands of
Milan and Alexander, whose weak and erratically despotic reigns ushered
in an era in Serbian history from which she emerged in 1903, through
the assassination and the extinction of the last of the Obrenovics, a
country without a good name, a nation which, through no special fault of
its own, had become degraded.

It was in the midst of this political decay that the Bosnians revolted
in 1875 and that Serbia, Montenegro, Russia, and Rumania became involved
in the Russo-Turkish war. Space forbids but the most hasty survey of the
occupation and administration by Austria of Bosnia and the Herzegovina
by virtue of the Treaty of Berlin in 1878.

Bismarck, Francis Joseph, and Andrassy were swayed by differing motives
whose total result was that Austria was to become a Balkan power--the
outpost of the German _Drang nach Osten_--and that it was worth while
making a greater Serbia impossible, even at the cost of increasing the
number of Slavs in the Habsburg monarchy, which, now reenforced by
the Ausgleich, could stand the strain of advancing democracy and the
necessity, therefore, of granting further rights to the Slavs.

The occupation of Bosnia led to the first real quarrels in modern times
between Croat and Serb, for the former wanted Bosnia in Greater Croatia
in order to have connection with Dalmatia; the latter wished it annexed
to Greater Serbia, because it was Serbian. Magyar and German, further,
quarreled as to the status of Bosnia and left it unsettled. But one
thing was settled by the occupation in 1879 and the annexation in
1908. Neither Greater Croatia nor Greater Serbia were any longer truly
possible as a final solution, only a Jugo-Slavia. The Greater Croatia
received a mortal blow by the addition of Serbs up to more than one
third of the number of Croats in Austria-Hungary, and Serbia faced the
future either as a vassal or as a territory which must be annexed. From
that time until the present the Habsburg monarchy, largely owing to
the predominance of the Magyars in Croatia, adopted a policy of
prevention--Jugo-Slav nationality was to be prevented. Viewed in that
light the rule of Count Khuen-Hedérv[a]ry, Ban of Croatia from 1883
to 1903, in which time, according to Croats, he corrupted a whole
generation, turned Serb against Croat, and played out the radical
demands of the party of Star[c]evi[c] and Frank, is intelligible. The
policy of Count Khuen, which was based on corruption and forgery, on
press-muzzling and career-exploding, has since been imitated, and its
imitation has been largely responsible for this war.

It was not until the Serbs and Croats formed their coalition in 1905
that the trial of strength had come. In Serbia, Peter Karageorgevitch
ascended the throne and reversed the pro-Austrian policy of his
predecessor. This it will be remembered was influenced until then by
the Bulgarian policy of Russia and by Serbia's defeat at the hands of
Bulgaria in 1885. The commercial treaty with Bulgaria in 1905, and the
tariff war which Austria began immediately afterward, pointed out which
way the wind was blowing.

An era big with decisive events arrived. The Jugo-Slavs had learned
that union meant victory, division foreign mastery. Petty politics
and religious fanaticism were forgotten, and Jugo-Slav nationality was
formed in the fierce fires of Austro-Magyar terrorism and forgery and in
the whirlwind reaped from the Balkan wars.

It was too late to talk of trialism unless it meant independence, and,
when it meant that, it did not mean Austrian trialism. The treason trial
by which Baron Rauch hoped to split the Serbo-Croat coalition, and
which was to furnish the cause of a war with Serbia on the annexation of
Bosnia in 1908, collapsed. It rested on forgeries concocted within the
walls of the Austro-Hungarian legation in Belgrade where Count Forgách
held forth. The annexation of Bosnia in 1908 completed the operation
begun in 1878 and called for the completion of the policy of prevention.
It was the forerunner of the press campaign in the first Balkan war,
the Prohaska affair, the attack by Bulgaria upon Serbia and Greece, the
rebuff to Masaryk and Pa[s]i[c], the murder of Francis Ferdinand, and
the Austro-Hungarian note to Serbia. The mysteries connected with the
forgeries and this chain of events will remain a fertile field for
detectives and psychologists and, after that, for historians. For us,
it is necessary to note that, as the hand of Pan-Germanism became more
evident, the Slovenes began to draw nearer to the Croats and the Serbs.
It remained only for the Serbs to electrify the Jugo-Slavs--"to
avenge Kossovo with Kumanovo"--in order to cement their loyalty to
the regenerated Serbs. Religious differences, political rivalries,
linguistic quibbles, and the petty foibles of centuries appeared to be
forgotten in the three short years which elapsed from Kumanovo to
the destruction of Serbia in 1915. The Greater Serbia idea had really
perished in 1915, as had the Greater Croatia idea in 1878. In their
place emerged Jugo-Slavia--the kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and
Slovenes--implied by the South Slav Parliamentary Club in Austria in
their Declaration of May 30, 1917, and formulated by the Pact of Corfu
of July 7, 1917, which Pasié, premier of Serbia, and Trumbié, the head
of the London Jugo-Slav Committee, drew up. The evolution had been
completed. Nationalism had proved stronger than geography, stronger than
opposing religions, more cohesive than political and economic interests.
For this, the Jugo-Slavs have not only themselves and modern progress,
like railroad-building, to thank, but also the policy of the Habsburg
monarchy, the hopeful, though feeble, Note of the Allies to President
Wilson, the Russian Revolution, and the entry of the United States into
the war.

For the historian, it remains to examine the depth and the character of
the movement. He should neither lament that it succeeded, nor frown upon
it that it did not come long ago when his own nation achieved its unity.
That it is a reality is proved by the fact that the Central Powers
believed its destruction worth this catastrophic war. A nation of eleven
or twelve millions holds the path to the Adriatic and the Aegean and the
gateway to the Orient and world dominion. It can help to make impossible
the dream of mid-Europe or of Pan-Germany.

The Jugo-Slav movement has ended in the formation of a nation which is
neither a doctrine, nor a dream, but a reality.



APPENDICES DECLARATION OF THE JUGO-SLAV CLUB OF THE AUSTRIAN PARLIAMENT

ON MAY 30, 1917

"The undersigned deputies, assembled as the 'Jugo-slav Club,' taking
their stand on the principle of nationalities and on the rights of the
Croatian state, declare that they demand that all the countries in which
Slovenes, Croats, and Serbs live shall be united in an independent
and democratic state organism, free from the domination of any foreign
nation and placed under the sceptre of the dynasty Habsburg-Lorraine.
They declare that they will employ all their forces to realize this
demand of their single nation. The undersigned will take part in the
parliamentary labor after having made this reserve...."

     [FN: Referring to the Declaration of the Jugo-Slav Club, May
     30, 1917, in the Vienna Parliament J. J. Grgurevich,
     Secretary of the South Slavic National Council, Washington,
     D. C., writes:

     "In order to understand correctly this Declaration, it is
     necessary to state that the same was presented in the Vienna
     Parliament during war time, when each, even the most
     innocent, word in regard to rights, principles of
     nationality, and liberty of peoples, was considered and
     punished as a crime and treason, by imprisonment, even
     death.

     "Were it not for these facts, this Declaration would never
     contain the words: 'and placed under the sceptre of the
     dynasty Habsburg-Lorraine.' It was, therefore, necessary to
     insert these words in order to make possible the public
     announcement of this Declaration; it was necessary to make a
     moral sacrifice for the sake of a great moral and material
     gain, which was secured through this Declaration among the
     people to which it was addressed and which understood it in
     the sense and in the spirit of the Declaration of Corfu."]



APPENDIX II

THE PACT OF CORFU

At the conference of the members of the late (Serbian) Coalition Cabinet
and those of the present Cabinet, and also the representatives of the
Jugo-Slav Committee in London, all of whom have hitherto been working
on parallel lines, views have been exchanged in collaboration with the
president of the Skupstina, on all questions concerning the life of the
Serbs, Croats and Slovenes in their joint future State.

We are happy in being able once more on this occasion to point to the
complete unanimity of all parties concerned.

In the first place, the representatives of the Serbs, Croats and
Slovenes declare anew and most categorically that our people constitutes
but one nation, and that it is one in blood, one by the spoken and
written language, by the continuity and unity of the territory in which
it lives, and finally in virtue of the common and vital interests of its
national existence and the general development of its moral and material
life.

The idea of its national unity has never suffered extinction, although
all the intellectual forces of its enemy were directed against its
unification, its liberty and its national existence. Divided between
several States, our nation is in Austria-Hungary alone split up into
eleven provincial administrations, coming under thirteen legislative
bodies. The feeling of national unity, together with the spirit
of liberty and independence, have supported it in the never-ending
struggles of centuries against the Turks in the East and against the
Germans and the Magyars in the West.

Being numerically inferior to its enemies in the East and West, it was
impossible for it to safeguard its unity as a nation and a State, its
liberty and its independence against the brutal maxim of "might goes
before right" militating against it both East and West.

But the moment has come when our people is no longer isolated. The war
imposed by German militarism upon Russia, upon France and upon
England for the defense of their honor as well as for the liberty and
independence of small nations, has developed into a struggle for the
Liberty of the World and the Triumph of Right over Might. All nations
which love liberty and independence have allied themselves together for
their common defense, to save civilization and liberty at the cost
of every sacrifice, to establish a new international order based upon
justice and upon the right of every nation to dispose of itself and
so organize its independent life; finally to establish a durable peace
consecrated to the progress and development of humanity and to secure
the world against a catastrophe similar to that which the conquering
lust of German Imperialism has provoked.

To noble France, who has proclaimed the liberty of nations, and to
England, the hearth of liberty, the Great American Republic and the
new, free and democratic Russia have joined themselves in proclaiming
as their principal war aim the triumph of liberty and democracy and
as basis of the new international order the right of free
self-determination for every nation.

Our nation of the three names, which has been the greatest sufferer
under brute force and injustice and which has made the greatest
sacrifices to preserve its right of self-determination, has with
enthusiasm accepted this sublime principle put forward as the chief aim
of this atrocious war, provoked by the violation of this very principle.

The authorized representatives of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, in
declaring that it is the desire of our people to free itself from every
foreign yoke and to constitute itself a free, national and independent
State, a desire based on the principle that every nation has the right
to decide its own destiny, are agreed in judging that this State should
be founded on the following modern and democratic principles:

(1) The State of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, who are also known
as the Southern Slavs or Jugo-Slavs, will be a free and independent
kingdom, with indivisible territory and unity of allegiance. It will
be a constitutional, democratic and parliamentary monarchy under the
Karageorgevitch Dynasty, which has always shared the ideas and the
feelings of the nation, placing liberty and the national will above all
else.

(2) This State will be named "THE KINGDOM OF THE SERBS, CROATS, AND
SLOVENES." And the style of the Sovereign will be "KING OF THE SERBS,
CROATS, AND SLOVENES."

(3) The State will have a single coat-of-arms, a single flag, and a
single crown. These emblems will be composed of the present existing
emblems. The unity of the State will be symbolized by the coat-of-arms
and the flag of the Kingdom.

(4) The special Serb, Croat, and Slovene flags rank equally and may be
freely hoisted on all occasions. The special coat-of-arms may be used
with equal freedom.

(5) The three national designations--Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes--are
equal before the law throughout the territory of the Kingdom, and
everyone may use them freely upon all occasions of public life and in
dealing with the authorities.

(6) The two alphabets, the Cyrillic and the Latin, also rank equally,
and everyone may use them freely throughout the territory of the
Kingdom. The royal authorities and the local self-governing authorities
have both the right and the duty to employ both alphabets in accordance
with the wishes of the citizens.

(7) All recognized religions may be freely and publicly exercised. The
Orthodox, Roman Catholic and Mussulman faiths, which are those chiefly
professed by our nation, shall rank equally and enjoy equal rights with
regard to the State.

In consideration of these principles the legislative will take special
care to safeguard religious concord in conformity with the spirit and
tradition of our whole nation.

(8) The calendar will be unified as soon as possible.

(9) The territory of the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
will include all the territory inhabited compactly and in territorial
continuity by our nation of the three names. It cannot be mutilated
without detriment to the vital interests of the community.

Our nation demands nothing that belongs to others. It demands only
what is its own. It desires to free itself and to achieve its unity.
Therefore it consciously and firmly refuses every partial solution of
the problem of its national liberation and unification. It puts forward
the proposition of its deliverance from Austro-Hungarian domination
and its union with Serbia and Montenegro in a single State forming an
indivisible whole.

In accordance with the right of self-determination of peoples, no part
of this territorial totality may without infringement of justice be
detached and incorporated with some other State without the consent of
the nation itself.

(10) In the interests of freedom and of the equal right of all nations,
the Adriatic shall be free and open to each and all.

(11) All citizens throughout the territory of the Kingdom shall be equal
and enjoy the same rights with regard to the State and before the Law.

(12) The election of the Deputies to the National Representative body
shall be by universal suffrage, with equal, direct and secret ballot.
The same shall apply to the elections in the Communes and other
administrative units. Elections will take place in each Commune.

(13) The Constitution, to be established after the conclusion of peace
by a Constituent Assembly elected by universal suffrage, with direct
and secret ballot, will be the basis of the entire life of the State;
it will be the source and the consummation of all authority and of all
rights by which the entire life of the nation will be regulated.

The Constitution will provide the nation with the possibility of
exercising its special energies in local autonomies delimited by
natural, social and economic conditions.

The Constitution must be passed in its entirety by a numerically defined
majority in the Constituent Assembly. The Constitution, like all other
laws passed by the Constituent Assembly, will only come into force after
having received the Royal sanction.

The nation of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, thus unified, will form
a State of about twelve million inhabitants. This State will be the
guarantee for their independence and national development, and their
national and intellectual progress in general, a mighty bulwark against
the German thrust, an inseparable ally of all the civilized nations and
states which have proclaimed the principle of right and liberty and
that of international justice. It will be a worthy member of the new
Community of Nations.

Drawn up in Corfu, July 7/20, 1917.

The Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Serbia and Minister for Foreign
Affairs

(Sgd.) NIKOLA P. PASHITCH,

The President of the Jugo-Slav Committee

(Sgd.) DR. ANTE TRUMBIC,

Advocate, Deputy and Leader of the Croatian National Party in the
Dalmatian Diet, late Mayor of Split (Spalato), late Deputy for the
District of Zadar (Zara) in the Austrian Parliament. BIBLIOGRAPHICAL
HINTS

THE following bibliography is nothing but a selected list and it has
not seemed advisable to include material which is to be found in
periodicals. [FN: For further information the investigator may
consult _Slavic Europe: A Selected Bibliography in the Western European
Languages comprising History, Languages, and Literature_. By R. J.
Kerner. In press.]

Perhaps the most recent and best general statement of the Jugo-Slav
problem as a whole is to be found in A. H. E. Taylor's _The Future of
the Southern Slavs_ (New York, 1917). Another useful general work is by
the Serb, V. R. Savi[c]. The title is, _South-Eastern Europe: The Main
Problem of the Present World Struggle_ (New York, 1918). This is an
American edition, revised and enlarged, of the author's English work:
_The Reconstruction of South-Eastern Europe_ (London, 1917). The noted
French historian, to whom the western world owes much of its knowledge
about Slavic history, Ernest Denis, presents an able survey of the
general problem in his _La grande Serbie_ (Paris, 1915). It is written
largely around Serbia, like Savi[c]'s book. B. Vo[s]njak in _A Bulwark
against Germany_ (London, 1917), and _A Dying Empire_ (London, 1918),
presents to western readers, for the first time, the development of the
Slovene districts of Austria and their relation to that empire and to
the Jugo-Slavs.

With regard to Austria-Hungary and the Jugo-Slavs in particular, the
west owes most to the penetrating studies of R. W. Seton-Watson,
who formerly wrote under the name of Scotus Viator. Before the war,
Seton-Watson wrote _The Southern Slav Problem and the Habsburg Monarchy_
(London, 1911), wherein he discusses the whole problem from the point
of view of the Croats, in contrast to the Serbs. The author subsequently
rectified this point of view in _The Balkans, Italy, and the Adriatic_
(London, 1915); _German, Slav, and Magyar_ (London, 1916); and _The Rise
of Nationality in the Balkans_ (London, 1917).

Numerous writers on Austrian and Balkan affairs have devoted parts of
their general works to the Jugo-Slav movement. Only a few typical
ones can be mentioned here. Paul Samassa, _Der Völkerstreit im
Habsburgerstaat_ (Leipzig, 1910), may be taken as representative of
the German of the German Empire. T. von Sosnosky's _Die Politik
im Habsburgerreiche_ (Berlin, 1912-13, 2 vols.) is the work of an
Austrophil, as is also W. von Schierbrand's _Austria-Hungary: The
Polyglot Empire_ (New York, 1917); H. W. Steed's _The Habsburg Monarchy_
(London, 1914, 2d ed.) is one of the ablest surveys in the English
language. It is thoroughly worked out in the general features, but
slights many of the national and provincial aspects of the Austrian
question. V. Gayda's _La crisi di un impero_ (2d ed., 1915), English
ed., _Modern Austria_ (New York, 1915) is an unusually able work by
an Italian who sees clearly on every question except that of Italia
Irredenta. A. Toynbee's _Nationality and the War_ (London, 1915)
is another very useful summary of the question. The official
Austro-Hungarian point of view has been stated in such works, among many
others, as Hitter von Sax, _Die Wahrheit über die serbische Frage und
das Serbentum in Bosnien_ (Vienna, 1909); L. Mandl, _Oesterreich-Ungarn
und Serbien_ (Vienna, 1911); C. M. Knachtbull-Hugessen, _The Political
Evolution of the Hungarian Nation_ (London, 1908, 2 vols.); and numerous
official publications and dossiers.

The works thus far mentioned were based on numerous studies in Slavic
and other languages, only a few of which can be mentioned here.

For the Slovenes one will look into Josef Apih's _Slovenci in 1848 leto_
(Lubla[n], 1888); Lon[c]ar's _Politi[c]no [z]ivljenje Slovencei_ (in
Bleiweis's _Zbornik._ Published by the Matica Slovenska, Lubla[n],
1909); and Vos[n]jak's _Spomini_ (Lubla[n], 1906, 2 vols.).

The following will be found useful for the Croats: V. Klai[c], _Povjest
Hrvata_ (Zagreb, 1899 ff., 5 vols.); R. Horvat, _Najnovije doba
hrvatske povjesti_ (Zagreb, 1906); Milan Marjanovi[c], _Hrvatski
pokret_ (Dubrovnik, 1903-04, 2 vols.); L. V. Berezin, _Khorvatsï[ia],
Slavonï[ia], Dalmatsï[ia] i Voenna[ia] Granitsa_ (St. Petersburg, 1879);
I. Kulakovskï[i], _Illirizm_ (Warsaw, 1894); T. Smi[c]iklas, _Hrvatska
narodna ideja_ (Rad Jugo-Slavenski Akad. 1xxx); V. Zagorsky, _François
Ra[c]ki et la renaissance scientifique et politique de la Croatie
1828-1894_ (Paris, 1909).

For the Serbs, a few of the fundamental works are: L. Kova[c]evi[c] and
L. Jovanovi[c], _Istorija srpskoga naroda _(Belgrade, 1893-94, 2
vols.); S. Stanojevi[c], _Istorija srpskoga naroda_ (Belgrade, 1908); J.
Risti[c], _Diplomatska istorija srbije, 1875-1878_ (Belgrade, 1896-98);
V. V. Ra[c]i[c], _Le royaume de Serbie. Étude d'histoire diplomatique
et de droit international_ (Paris, 1901); F. P. Kanitz, _Das Königreich
Serbien und das Serbenvolk von der Römerzeit bis zur Gegenwart_
(Leipzig, 1904-09, 2 vols.); S. Gop[c]evi[c], _Geschichte von Montenegro
und Albanien_ (Gotha, 1914); F. S. Stevenson, _A History of Montenegro_
(London, 1912).[FN: Lack of space forbids special mention of
works by such scholars as Loiseau, Vellay, Laveleye, Hron, Masaryk,
Spalajkovi[c], Barré, [FN (cont.): Kallay, Marczali, Prezzolini,
Sokolovi[c], Novakovi[c], Chéradame, Evans, Erdeljanovi[c].

The Jugo-Slav propaganda societies have published in English: _The
Southern Slav Appeal; Jugo-Slav Nationalism_ by B. Vo[s]njak; _The
Strategical Significance of Serbia_ by N. Zupani[c]; _The Southern Slav
Programme; A Sketch of Southern Slav History; Southern Slav Culture;
Political and Social Conditions in Slovene Lands; Austro-Magyar Judicial
Crimes--Persecutions of the Jugo-Slavs._ In French: _Ceux dont on ignore
le martyre (Les Yougo-Slaves et la guerre)_; _Les Yougo-Slaves--Leur
union nationale; Les Slovenes_ by Q. Krek; and the periodical _Bulletin
Yougoslave_.

H. Hinkovi[c] has written the most concise statement of the case of the
Jugo-Slavs in _The Jugo-Slav Problem_. Reprinted from the _World Court
Magazine_ (1917).]

There is a good survey of the history of the Jugo-Slavs in Russian: G.
Il'inskï[i], _Kratk'ï[i] kurs istorï[i] [iu]zhnikh slav[ia]n_ (Kharkov,
1909).





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