summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-27 09:27:33 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-27 09:27:33 -0800
commitfc03ebd056c14bf8373f7f1ddca01ff37d448938 (patch)
tree68fe9f5406b3e485cf4f50b5f012c25a05876358
parent5e752d77171faf4514fe6ad97116eec8fa40b280 (diff)
NormalizeHEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/60173-0.txt2661
-rw-r--r--old/60173-0.zipbin59990 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60173-h.zipbin1204902 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60173-h/60173-h.htm4124
-rw-r--r--old/60173-h/images/cover.jpgbin103017 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60173-h/images/i_024a.jpgbin72719 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60173-h/images/i_024b.jpgbin88198 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60173-h/images/i_033a.jpgbin91012 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60173-h/images/i_033b.jpgbin67682 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60173-h/images/i_056.jpgbin60086 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60173-h/images/i_073.jpgbin79810 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60173-h/images/i_092.jpgbin79124 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60173-h/images/i_093.jpgbin91112 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60173-h/images/i_112.jpgbin88310 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60173-h/images/i_129.jpgbin90641 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60173-h/images/i_148.jpgbin62146 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60173-h/images/i_165.jpgbin58095 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60173-h/images/i_frontispiece.jpgbin94261 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60173-h/images/title.jpgbin15814 -> 0 bytes
22 files changed, 17 insertions, 6785 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..16cf74a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60173 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60173)
diff --git a/old/60173-0.txt b/old/60173-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index ab47e79..0000000
--- a/old/60173-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2661 +0,0 @@
-Project Gutenberg's Russia in the Shadows, by H. G. (Herbert George) Wells
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Russia in the Shadows
-
-Author: H. G. (Herbert George) Wells
-
-Release Date: August 26, 2019 [EBook #60173]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RUSSIA IN THE SHADOWS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- RUSSIA
- IN THE SHADOWS
-
- H. G. WELLS
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- STREET SCENERY IN PETERSBURG:
- SITE OF A DEMOLISHED WOODEN HOUSE
- _Frontispiece_.
-]
-
-
-
-
- RUSSIA IN THE SHADOWS
-
-
- BY
- H. G. WELLS
-
- AUTHOR OF “THE OUTLINE OF HISTORY,” “MR. BRITLING SEES IT THROUGH,”
- ETC., ETC.
-
-
- ILLUSTRATED
-
- NEW [Illustration] YORK
- GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1921,
- BY GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY
-
-
- PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I PETERSBURG IN COLLAPSE 15
-
- II DRIFT AND SALVAGE 41
-
- III THE QUINTESSENCE OF BOLSHEVISM 71
-
- IV THE CREATIVE EFFORT IN RUSSIA 105
-
- V THE PETERSBURG SOVIET: A LEGISLATIVE MASS MEETING 135
-
- VI THE DREAMER IN THE KREMLIN 145
-
- VII THE ENVOY 171
-
-
-
-
- ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PLATE
-
- I STREET SCENERY IN PETERSBURG: SITE OF DEMOLISHED
- WOODEN HOUSE _Frontispiece_
-
- PAGE
-
- II STREET SCENERY IN PETERSBURG 24
-
- MR. WELLS DISCOVERS A STREET UNDER REPAIR 24
-
- III A PETERSBURG STREET CAR EN ROUTE 33
-
- MESSRS. LENIN AND WELLS IN CONVERSATION 33
-
- IV GORKY IN THE GREAT DUMP OF ART AND VIRTUOSITY IN
- PETERSBURG 56
-
- V THE STATUE OF MARX OUTSIDE THE SMOLNY INSTITUTE
- (HEADQUARTERS OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY) 73
-
- VI THE BAKU CONFERENCE SWEARS UNDYING HOSTILITY TO
- CAPITALISM AND BRITISH IMPERIALISM: ZENOVIEFF,
- RADEK AND BELA KUN 92
-
- VII THE BAKU CONFERENCE SWEARS UNDYING HOSTILITY TO
- CAPITALISM AND BRITISH IMPERIALISM: THE BODY OF
- THE HALL 93
-
- VIII PROLETARIANS OF ASIA À LA BAKU 112
-
- IX GUESTS AT THE HOME OF REST FOR WORKMEN ON THE
- KAMENNI OSTROF 129
-
- X THE PETERSBURG SOVIET IN SESSION: LENIN AT THE
- ROSTRUM, ZENOVIEFF AND THE PRESIDENT, OFFICIALS
- AND OFFICIAL VISITORS 148
-
- XI LENIN, GORKY, ZORIN, ZENOVIEFF AND RADEK 165
-
-
-
-
- RUSSIA IN THE SHADOWS
-
-
-
-
- I
- PETERSBURG IN COLLAPSE
-
-
-In January 1914 I visited Petersburg and Moscow for a couple of weeks;
-in September 1920 I was asked to repeat this visit by Mr. Kameney, of
-the Russian Trade Delegation in London. I snatched at this suggestion,
-and went to Russia at the end of September with my son, who speaks a
-little Russian. We spent a fortnight and a day in Russia, passing most
-of our time in Petersburg, where we went about freely by ourselves, and
-were shown nearly everything we asked to see. We visited Moscow, and I
-had a long conversation with Mr. Lenin, which I shall relate. In
-Petersburg I did not stay at the Hotel International, to which foreign
-visitors are usually sent, but with my old friend, Maxim Gorky. The
-guide and interpreter assigned to assist us was a lady I had met in
-Russia in 1914, the niece of a former Russian Ambassador to London. She
-was educated at Newnham, she has been imprisoned five times by the
-Bolshevist Government, she is not allowed to leave Petersburg because of
-an attempt to cross the frontier to her children in Esthonia, and she
-was, therefore, the last person likely to lend herself to any attempt to
-hoodwink me. I mention this because on every hand at home and in Russia
-I had been told that the most elaborate camouflage of realities would go
-on, and that I should be kept in blinkers throughout my visit.
-
-As a matter of fact, the harsh and terrible realities of the situation
-in Russia cannot be camouflaged. In the case of special delegations,
-perhaps, a certain distracting tumult of receptions, bands, and speeches
-may be possible, and may be attempted. But it is hardly possible to
-dress up two large cities for the benefit of two stray visitors,
-wandering observantly often in different directions. Naturally, when one
-demands to see a school or a prison one is not shown the worst. Any
-country would in the circumstances show the best it had, and Soviet
-Russia is no exception. One can allow for that.
-
-Our dominant impression of things Russian is an impression of a vast
-irreparable breakdown. The great monarchy that was here in 1914 and the
-administrative, social, financial, and commercial systems connected with
-it have, under the strains of six years of incessant war, fallen down
-and smashed utterly. Never in all history has there been so great a
-_débâcle_ before. The fact of the Revolution is, to our minds,
-altogether dwarfed by the fact of this downfall. By its own inherent
-rottenness and by the thrusts and strains of aggressive imperialism the
-Russian part of the old civilised world that existed before 1914 fell,
-and is now gone. The peasant, who was the base of the old pyramid,
-remains upon the land, living very much as he has always lived.
-Everything else is broken down, or is breaking down. Amid this vast
-disorganisation an emergency Government, supported by a disciplined
-party of perhaps 150,000 adherents—the Communist Party—has taken
-control. It has—at the price of much shooting—suppressed brigandage,
-established a sort of order and security in the exhausted towns, and set
-up a crude rationing system.
-
-It is, I would say at once, the only possible Government in Russia at
-the present time. It is the only idea, it supplies the only solidarity,
-left in Russia. But it is a secondary fact. The dominant fact for the
-Western reader, the threatening and disconcerting fact, is that a social
-and economic system very like our own and intimately connected with our
-own has crashed.
-
-Nowhere in all Russia is the fact of that crash so completely evident as
-it is in Petersburg. Petersburg was the artificial creation of Peter the
-Great; his bronze statue in the little garden near the Admiralty still
-prances amid the ebbing life of the city. Its palaces are still and
-empty, or strangely refurnished with the typewriters and tables and
-plank partitions of a new Administration which is engaged chiefly in a
-strenuous struggle against famine and the foreign invader. Its streets
-were streets of busy shops. In 1914 I loafed agreeably in the Petersburg
-streets—buying little articles and watching the abundant traffic. All
-these shops have ceased. There are perhaps half a dozen shops still open
-in Petersburg. There is a Government crockery shop where I bought a
-plate or so as a souvenir, for seven or eight hundred roubles each, and
-there are a few flower shops. It is a wonderful fact, I think, that in
-this city, in which most of the shrinking population is already nearly
-starving, and hardly any one possesses a second suit of clothes or more
-than a single change of worn and patched linen, flowers can be and are
-still bought and sold. For five thousand roubles, which is about six and
-eightpence at the current rate of exchange, one can get a very pleasing
-bunch of big chrysanthemums.
-
-I do not know if the words “all the shops have ceased” convey any
-picture to the Western reader of what a street looks like in Russia. It
-is not like Bond Street or Piccadilly on a Sunday, with the blinds
-neatly drawn down in a decorous sleep, and ready to wake up and begin
-again on Monday. The shops have an utterly wretched and abandoned look;
-paint is peeling off, windows are cracked, some are broken and boarded
-up, some still display a few flyblown relics of stock in the window,
-some have their windows covered with notices; the windows are growing
-dim, the fixtures have gathered two years’ dust. They are dead shops.
-They will never open again.
-
-All the great bazaar-like markets are closed, too, in Petersburg now, in
-the desperate struggle to keep a public control of necessities and
-prevent the profiteer driving up the last vestiges of food to incredible
-prices. And this cessation of shops makes walking about the streets seem
-a silly sort of thing to do. Nobody “walks about” any more. One realises
-that a modern city is really nothing but long alleys of shops and
-restaurants and the like. Shut them up, and the meaning of a street has
-disappeared. People hurry past—a thin traffic compared with my memories
-of 1914. The electric street cars are still running and busy—until six
-o’clock. They are the only means of locomotion for ordinary people
-remaining in town—the last legacy of capitalist enterprise. They became
-free while we were in Petersburg. Previously there had been a charge of
-two or three roubles—the hundredth part of the price of an egg. Freeing
-them made little difference in their extreme congestion during the
-home-going hours. Every one scrambles on the tramcar. If there is no
-room inside you cluster outside. In the busy hours festoons of people
-hang outside by any handhold; people are frequently pushed off, and
-accidents are frequent. We saw a crowd collected round a child cut in
-half by a tramcar, and two people in the little circle in which we moved
-in Petersburg had broken their legs in tramway accidents.
-
-The roads along which these tramcars run are in a frightful condition.
-They have not been repaired for three or four years; they are full of
-holes like shell-holes, often two or three feet deep. Frost has eaten
-out great cavities, drains have collapsed, and people have torn up the
-wood pavement for fires. Only once did we see any attempt to repair the
-streets in Petrograd. In a side street some mysterious agency had
-collected a load of wood blocks and two barrels of tar. Most of our
-longer journeys about the town were done in official motor-cars—left
-over from the former times. A drive is an affair of tremendous swerves
-and concussions. These surviving motor-cars are running now on kerosene.
-They disengage clouds of pale blue smoke, and start up with a noise like
-a machine-gun battle. Every wooden house was demolished for firing last
-winter, and such masonry as there was in those houses remains in ruinous
-gaps, between the houses of stone.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- STREET SCENERY IN PETERSBURG.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- MR. WELLS DISCOVERS A STREET UNDER REPAIR.
-]
-
-Every one is shabby; every one seems to be carrying bundles in both
-Petersburg and Moscow. To walk into some side street in the twilight and
-see nothing but ill-clad figures, all hurrying, all carrying loads,
-gives one an impression as though the entire population was setting out
-in flight. That impression is not altogether misleading. The Bolshevik
-statistics I have seen are perfectly frank and honest in the matter. The
-population of Petersburg has fallen from 1,200,000 to a little over
-700,000, and it is still falling. Many of the people have returned to
-peasant life in the country, many have gone abroad, but hardship has
-taken an enormous toll of this city. The death-rate in Petersburg is
-over 81 per 1,000; formerly it was high among European cities at 22. The
-birth-rate of the underfed and profoundly depressed population is about
-15. It was formerly about 30.
-
-These bundles that every one carries are partly the rations of food that
-are doled out by the Soviet organisation, partly they are the material
-and results of illicit trade. The Russian population has always been a
-trading and bargaining population. Even in 1914 there were but few shops
-in Petersburg whose prices were really fixed prices. Tariffs were
-abominated; in Moscow taking a droshky meant always a haggle, ten
-kopecks at a time. Confronted with a shortage of nearly every commodity,
-a shortage caused partly by the war strain,—for Russia has been at war
-continuously now for six years—partly by the general collapse of social
-organisation, and partly by the blockade, and with a currency in
-complete disorder, the only possible way to save the towns from a chaos
-of cornering, profiteering, starvation, and at last a mere savage fight
-for the remnants of food and common necessities, was some sort of
-collective control and rationing.
-
-The Soviet Government rations on principle, but any Government in Russia
-now would have to ration. If the war in the West had lasted up to the
-present time London would be rationing too—food, clothing, and housing.
-But in Russia this has to be done on a basis of uncontrollable peasant
-production, with a population temperamentally indisciplined and
-self-indulgent. The struggle is necessarily a bitter one. The detected
-profiteer, the genuine profiteer who profiteers on any considerable
-scale, gets short shrift; he is shot. Quite ordinary trading may be
-punished severely. All trading is called “speculation,” and is now
-illegal. But a queer street-corner trading in food and so forth is
-winked at in Petersburg, and quite openly practised in Moscow, because
-only by permitting this can the peasants be induced to bring in food.
-
-There is also much underground trade between buyers and sellers who know
-each other. Every one who can supplements his public rations in this
-way. And every railway station at which one stops is an open market. We
-would find a crowd of peasants at every stopping-place waiting to sell
-milk, eggs, apples, bread, and so forth. The passengers clamber down and
-accumulate bundles. An egg or an apple costs 300 roubles.
-
-The peasants look well fed, and I doubt if they are very much worse off
-than they were in 1914. Probably they are better off. They have more
-land than they had, and they have got rid of their landlords. They will
-not help in any attempt to overthrow the Soviet Government because they
-are convinced that while it endures this state of things will continue.
-This does not prevent their resisting whenever they can the attempts of
-the Red Guards to collect food at regulation prices. Insufficient forces
-of Red Guards may be attacked and massacred. Such incidents are
-magnified in the London Press as peasant insurrections against the
-Bolsheviks. They are nothing of the sort. It is just the peasants making
-themselves comfortable under the existing _régime_.
-
-But every class above the peasants—including the official class—is now
-in a state of extreme privation. The credit and industrial system that
-produced commodities has broken down, and so far the attempts to replace
-it by some other form of production have been ineffective. So that
-nowhere are there any new things. About the only things that seem to be
-fairly well supplied are tea, cigarettes, and matches. Matches are more
-abundant in Russia than they were in England in 1917, and the Soviet
-State match is quite a good match. But such things as collars, ties,
-shoelaces, sheets and blankets, spoons and forks, all the haberdashery
-and crockery of life, are unattainable. There is no replacing a broken
-cup or glass except by a sedulous search and illegal trading. From
-Petersburg to Moscow we were given a sleeping car de luxe, but there
-were no water-bottles, glasses, or, indeed, any loose fittings. They
-have all gone. Most of the men one meets strike one at first as being
-carelessly shaven, and at first we were inclined to regard that as a
-sign of a general apathy, but we understood better how things were when
-a friend mentioned to my son quite casually that he had been using one
-safety razor blade for nearly a year.
-
-Drugs and any medicines are equally unattainable. There is nothing to
-take for a cold or a headache; no packing off to bed with a hot-water
-bottle. Small ailments develop very easily therefore into serious
-trouble. Nearly everybody we met struck us as being uncomfortable and a
-little out of health. A buoyant, healthy person is very rare in this
-atmosphere of discomforts and petty deficiencies.
-
-If any one falls into a real illness the outlook is grim. My son paid a
-visit to the big Obuchovskaya Hospital, and he tells me things were very
-miserable there indeed. There was an appalling lack of every sort of
-material, and half the beds were not in use through the sheer
-impossibility of dealing with more patients if they came in.
-Strengthening and stimulating food is out of the question unless the
-patient’s family can by some miracle procure it outside and send it in.
-Operations are performed only on one day in the week, Dr. Federoff told
-me, when the necessary preparations can be made. On other days they are
-impossible, and the patient must wait.
-
-Hardly any one in Petersburg has much more than a change of raiment, and
-in a great city in which there remains no means of communication but a
-few overcrowded tramcars,[1] old, leaky, and ill-fitting boots are the
-only footwear. At times one sees astonishing makeshifts by way of
-costume. The master of a school to which we paid a surprise visit struck
-me as unusually dapper. He was wearing a dinner suit with a blue serge
-waistcoat. Several of the distinguished scientific and literary men I
-met had no collars and wore neck-wraps. Gorky possesses only the one
-suit of clothes he wears.
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- I saw one passenger steamboat on the Neva crowded with passengers.
- Usually the river was quite deserted except for a rare Government tug
- or a solitary boatman picking up drift timber.
-
-At a gathering of literary people in Petersburg, Mr. Amphiteatroff, the
-well-known writer, addressed a long and bitter speech to me. He suffered
-from the usual delusion that I was blind and stupid and being
-hoodwinked. He was for taking off the respectable-looking coats of all
-the company present in order that I might see for myself the rags and
-tatters and pitiful expedients beneath. It was a painful and, so far as
-I was concerned, an unnecessary speech, but I quote it here to emphasise
-this effect of general destitution. And this underclad town population
-in this dismantled and ruinous city is, in spite of all the furtive
-trading that goes on, appallingly underfed. With the best will in the
-world the Soviet Government is unable to produce a sufficient ration to
-sustain a healthy life. We went to a district kitchen and saw the normal
-food distribution going on. The place seemed to us fairly clean and
-fairly well run, but that does not compensate for a lack of material.
-The lowest grade ration consisted of a basinful of thin skilly and about
-the same quantity of stewed apple compote. People have bread cards and
-wait in queues for bread, but for three days the Petersburg bakeries
-stopped for lack of flour. The bread varies greatly in quality; some was
-good coarse brown bread, and some I found damp, clay-like, and
-uneatable.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A PETERSBURG STREET CAR EN ROUTE.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- MESSRS. LENIN AND WELLS IN CONVERSATION.
-]
-
-I do not know how far these disconnected details will suffice to give
-the Western reader an idea of what ordinary life in Petersburg is at the
-present time. Moscow, they say, is more overcrowded and shorter of fuel
-than Petersburg, but superficially it looked far less grim than
-Petersburg. We saw these things in October, in a particularly fine and
-warm October. We saw them in sunshine in a setting of ruddy and golden
-foliage. But one day there came a chill, and the yellow leaves went
-whirling before a drive of snowflakes. It was the first breath of the
-coming winter. Every one shivered and looked out of the double
-windows—already sealed up—and talked to us of the previous year. Then
-the glow of October returned.
-
-It was still glorious sunshine when we left Russia. But when I think of
-that coming winter my heart sinks. The Soviet Government in the commune
-of the north has made extraordinary efforts to prepare for the time of
-need. There are piles of wood along the quays, along the middle of the
-main streets, in the courtyards, and everywhere where wood can be piled.
-Last year many people had to live in rooms below the freezing point; the
-water-pipes froze up, the sanitary machinery ceased to work. The reader
-must imagine the consequences. People huddled together in the ill-lit
-rooms, and kept themselves alive with tea and talk. Presently some
-Russian novelist will tell us all that this has meant to heart and mind
-in Russia. This year it may not be quite so bad as that. The food
-situation also, they say, is better, but this I very much doubt. The
-railways are now in an extreme state of deterioration; the wood-stoked
-engines are wearing out; the bolts start and the rails shift as the
-trains rumble along at a maximum of twenty-five miles per hour. Even
-were the railways more efficient, Wrangel has got hold of the southern
-food supplies. Soon the cold rain will be falling upon these 700,000
-souls still left in Petersburg, and then the snow. The long nights
-extend and the daylight dwindles.
-
-And this spectacle of misery and ebbing energy is, you will say, the
-result of Bolshevist rule! I do not believe it is. I will deal with the
-Bolshevist Government when I have painted the general scenery of our
-problem. But let me say here that this desolate Russia is not a system
-that has been attacked and destroyed by something vigorous and
-malignant. It is an unsound system that has worked itself out and fallen
-down. It was not communism which built up these great, impossible
-cities, but capitalism. It was not communism that plunged this huge,
-creaking, bankrupt empire into six years of exhausting war. It was
-European imperialism. Nor is it communism that has pestered this
-suffering and perhaps dying Russia with a series of subsidised raids,
-invasions, and insurrections, and inflicted upon it an atrocious
-blockade. The vindictive French creditor, the journalistic British oaf,
-are far more responsible for these deathbed miseries than any communist.
-But to these questions I will return after I have given a little more
-description of Russia as we saw it during our visit. It is only when one
-has some conception of the physical and mental realities of the Russian
-collapse that we can see and estimate the Bolshevist Government in its
-proper proportions.
-
-
-
-
- II
- DRIFT AND SALVAGE
-
-
-Among the things I wanted most to see amidst this tremendous spectacle
-of social collapse in Russia was the work of my old friend Maxim Gorky.
-I had heard of this from members of the returning labour delegation, and
-what they told me had whetted my desire for a closer view of what was
-going on. Mr. Bertrand Russell’s account of Gorky’s health had also made
-me anxious on his own account; but I am happy to say that upon that
-score my news is good. Gorky seems as strong and well to me now as he
-was when I knew him first in 1906. And as a personality he has grown
-immensely. Mr. Russell wrote that Gorky is dying and that perhaps
-culture in Russia is dying too. Mr. Russell was, I think, betrayed by
-the artistic temptation of a dark and purple concluding passage. He
-found Gorky in bed and afflicted by a fit of coughing, and his
-imagination made the most of it.
-
-Gorky’s position in Russia is a quite extraordinary and personal one. He
-is no more of a communist than I am, and I have heard him argue with the
-utmost freedom in his flat against the extremist positions with such men
-as Bokaiev, recently the head of the extraordinary commission in
-Petersburg, and Zalutsky, one of the rising leaders of the Communist
-party. It was a very reassuring display of free speech, for Gorky did
-not so much argue as denounce—and this in front of two deeply interested
-English enquirers.
-
-But he has gained the confidence and respect of most of the Bolshevik
-leaders, and he has become by a kind of necessity the semi-official
-salvage man under the new _régime_. He is possessed by a passionate
-sense of the value of Western science and culture, and by the necessity
-of preserving the intellectual continuity of Russian life through these
-dark years of famine and war and social stress, with the general
-intellectual life of the world. He has found a steady supporter in
-Lenin. His work illuminates the situation to an extraordinary degree
-because it collects together a number of significant factors and makes
-the essentially catastrophic nature of the Russian situation plain.
-
-The Russian smash at the end of 1917 was certainly the completest that
-has ever happened to any modern social organisation. After the failure
-of the Kerensky Government to make peace and of the British naval
-authorities to relieve the military situation in the Baltic, the
-shattered Russian armies, weapons in hand, broke up and rolled back upon
-Russia, a flood of peasant soldiers making for home, without hope,
-without supplies, without discipline. That time of _débâcle_ was a time
-of complete social disorder. It was a social dissolution. In many parts
-of Russia there was a peasant revolt. There was chateau-burning often
-accompanied by quite horrible atrocities. It was an explosion of the
-very worst side of human nature in despair, and for most of the
-abominations committed the Bolsheviks are about as responsible as the
-Government of Australia. People would be held up and robbed even to
-their shirts in open daylight in the streets of Petersburg and Moscow,
-no one interfering. Murdered bodies lay disregarded in the gutters
-sometimes for a whole day, with passengers on the footwalk going to and
-fro. Armed men, often professing to be Red Guards, entered houses and
-looted and murdered. The early months of 1918 saw a violent struggle of
-the new Bolshevik Government not only with counter-revolutions but with
-rollers and brigands of every description. It was not until the summer
-of 1918, and after thousands of looters and plunderers had been shot,
-that life began to be ordinarily safe again in the streets of the
-Russian great towns. For a time Russia was not a civilisation, but a
-torrent of lawless violence, with a weak central Government of
-inexperienced rulers, fighting not only against unintelligent foreign
-intervention but against the completest internal disorder. It is from
-such chaotic conditions that Russia still struggles to emerge.
-
-Art, literature, science, all the refinements and elaboration of life,
-all that we mean by “civilisation,” were involved in this torrential
-catastrophe. For a time the stablest thing in Russia culture was the
-theatre. There stood the theatres, and nobody wanted to loot them or
-destroy them; the artists were accustomed to meet and work in them and
-went on meeting and working; the tradition of official subsidies held
-good. So quite amazingly the Russian dramatic and operatic life kept on
-through the extremest storms of violence, and keeps on to this day. In
-Petersburg we found there were more than forty shows going on every
-night; in Moscow we found very much the same state of affairs. We heard
-Shalyapin, greatest of actors and singers, in _The Barber of Seville_
-and in _Chovanchina_; the admirable orchestra was variously attired, but
-the conductor still held out valiantly in swallow tails and a white tie;
-we saw a performance of _Sadko_, we saw Monachof in _The Tzarevitch
-Alexei_ and as Iago in _Othello_ (with Madame Gorky—Madame Andreievna—as
-Desdemona). When one faced the stage, it was as if nothing had changed
-in Russia; but when the curtain fell and one turned to the audience one
-realised the revolution. There were now no brilliant uniforms, no
-evening dress in boxes and stalls. The audience was a uniform mass of
-people, the same sort of people everywhere, attentive, good-humoured,
-well-behaved and shabby. Like the London Stage Society, one’s place in
-the house is determined by ballot. And for the most part there is no
-paying to go to the theatre. For one performance the tickets go, let us
-say, to the professional unions, for another to the Red Army and their
-families, for another to the school children, and so on. A certain
-selling of tickets goes on, but it is not in the present scheme of
-things.
-
-I had heard Shalyapin in London, but I had not met him personally there.
-We made his acquaintance this time in Petersburg, we dined with him and
-saw something of his very jolly household. There are two stepchildren
-almost grown up, and two little daughters, who speak a nice, stiff,
-correct English, and the youngest of whom dances delightfully. Shalyapin
-is certainly one of the most wonderful things in Russia at the present
-time. He is the Artist, defiant and magnificent. Off the stage he has
-much the same vitality and abounding humour that made an encounter with
-Beerbohm Tree so delightful an experience. He refuses absolutely to sing
-except for pay—200,000 roubles a performance, they say, which is nearly
-£15—and when the markets get too tight, he insists upon payment in flour
-or eggs or the like. What he demands he gets, for Shalyapin on strike
-would leave too dismal a hole altogether in the theatrical world of
-Petersburg. So it is that he maintains what is perhaps the last fairly
-comfortable home in Russia. And Madame Shalyapin we found so unbroken by
-the revolution that she asked us what people were wearing in London. The
-last fashion papers she had seen—thanks to the blockade—dated from
-somewhen early in 1918.
-
-But the position of the theatre among the arts is peculiar. For the rest
-of the arts, for literature generally and for the scientific worker, the
-catastrophe of 1917–18 was overwhelming. There remained no one to buy
-books or pictures, and the scientific worker found himself with a salary
-of roubles that dwindled rapidly to less than the five-hundredth part of
-their original value. The new crude social organisation, fighting
-robbery, murder, and the wildest disorder, had no place for them; it had
-forgotten them. For the scientific man at first the Soviet Government
-had as little regard as the first French revolution, which had “no need
-for chemists.” These classes of worker, vitally important to every
-civilised system, were reduced, therefore, to a state of the utmost
-privation and misery. It was to their assistance and salvation that
-Gorky’s first efforts were directed. Thanks very largely to him and to
-the more creative intelligences in the Bolshevik Government, there has
-now been organised a group of salvage establishments, of which the best
-and most fully developed is the House of Science in Petersburg, in the
-ancient palace of the Archduchess Marie Pavlova. Here we saw the
-headquarters of a special rationing system which provides as well as it
-can for the needs of four thousand scientific workers and their
-dependents—in all perhaps for ten thousand people. At this centre they
-not only draw their food rations, but they can get baths and barber,
-tailoring, cobbling and the like conveniences. There is even a small
-stock of boots and clothing. There are bedrooms, and a sort of hospital
-accommodation for cases of weakness and ill-health.
-
-It was to me one of the strangest of my Russian experiences to go to
-this institution and to meet there, as careworn and unprosperous-looking
-figures, some of the great survivors of the Russian scientific world.
-Here were such men as Oldenburg the orientalist, Karpinsky the
-geologist, Pavloff the Nobel prizeman, Radloff, Bielopolsky, and the
-like, names of world-wide celebrity. They asked me a multitude of
-questions about recent scientific progress in the world outside Russia,
-and made me ashamed of my frightful ignorance of such matters. If I had
-known that this would happen I would have taken some sort of report with
-me. Our blockade has cut them off from all scientific literature outside
-Russia. They are without new instruments, they are short of paper, the
-work they do has to go on in unwarmed laboratories. It is amazing they
-do any work at all. Yet they are getting work done; Pavloff is carrying
-on research of astonishing scope and ingenuity upon the mentality of
-animals; Manuchin claims to have worked out an effectual cure for
-tuberculosis, even in advanced cases; and so on. I have brought back
-abstracts of Manuchin’s work for translation and publication here, and
-they are now being put into English. The scientific spirit is a
-wonderful spirit. If Petersburg starves this winter, the House of
-Science—unless we make some special effort on its behalf—will starve
-too, but these scientific men said very little to me about the
-possibility of sending them in supplies. The House of Literature and Art
-talked a little of want and miseries, but not the scientific men. What
-they were all keen about was the possibility of getting scientific
-publications; they value knowledge more than bread. Upon that matter I
-hope I may be of some help to them. I got them to form a committee to
-make me out a list of all the books and publications of which they stood
-in need, and I have brought this list back to the Secretary of the Royal
-Society of London, which had already been stirring in this matter. Funds
-will be needed, three or four thousand pounds perhaps (the address of
-the Secretary of the Royal Society is Burlington House, W.), but the
-assent of the Bolshevik Government and our own to this mental
-provisioning of Russia has been secured, and in a little time I hope the
-first parcel of books will be going through to these men, who have been
-cut off for so long from the general mental life of the world.
-
-If I had no other reason for satisfaction about this trip to Russia, I
-should find quite enough in the hope and comfort our mere presence
-evidently gave to many of these distinguished men in the House of
-Science and in the House of Literature and Art. Upon many of them there
-had evidently settled a kind of despair of ever seeing or hearing
-anything of the outer world again. They had been living for three years,
-very grey and long years indeed, in a world that seemed sinking down
-steadily through one degree of privation after another into utter
-darkness. Possibly they had seen something of one or two of the
-political deputations that have visited Russia—I do not know; but
-manifestly they had never expected to see again a free and independent
-individual walk in, with an air of having come quite easily and
-unofficially from London, and of its being quite possible not only to
-come but to go again into the lost world of the West. It was like an
-unexpected afternoon caller strolling into a cell in a jail.
-
-All musical people in England know the work of Glazounov; he has
-conducted concerts in London and is an honorary doctor both of Oxford
-and Cambridge. I was very deeply touched by my meeting with him. He used
-to be a very big florid man, but now he is pallid and very much fallen
-away, so that his clothes hang loosely on him. He came and talked of his
-friends Sir Hubert Parry and Sir Charles Villiers Stanford. He told me
-he still composed, but that his stock of music paper was almost
-exhausted. “Then there will be no more.” I said there would be much
-more, and that soon. He doubted it. He spoke of London and Oxford; I
-could see that he was consumed by an almost intolerable longing for some
-great city full of life, a city with abundance, with pleasant crowds, a
-city that would give him still audiences in warm, brightly-lit places.
-While I was there, I was a sort of living token to him that such things
-could still be. He turned his back on the window which gave on the cold
-grey Neva, deserted in the twilight, and the low lines of the fortress
-prison of St. Peter and St. Paul. “In England there will be no
-revolution—no? I had many friends in England—many good friends in
-England....” I was loth to leave him, and he was very loth to let me go.
-
-Seeing all these distinguished men living a sort of refugee life amidst
-the impoverished ruins of the fallen imperialist system has made me
-realise how helplessly dependent the man of exceptional gifts is upon a
-securely organised civilisation. The ordinary man can turn from this to
-that occupation; he can be a sailor or a worker in a factory or a digger
-or what not. He is under a general necessity to work, but he has no
-internal demon which compels him to do a particular thing and nothing
-else, which compels him to be a particular thing or die. But a Shalyapin
-must be Shalyapin or nothing, Pavloff is Pavloff and Glazounov is
-Glazounov. So long as they can go on doing their particular thing, such
-men will live and flourish. Shalyapin still acts and sings
-magnificently—in absolute defiance of every Communist principle; Pavloff
-still continues his marvellous researches—in an old coat and with his
-study piled up with the potatoes and carrots he grows in his spare time;
-Glazounov will compose until the paper runs out. But many of the others
-are evidently stricken much harder. The mortality among the
-intellectually distinguished men of Russia has been terribly high. Much,
-no doubt, has been due to the general hardship of life, but in many
-cases I believe that the sheer mortification of great gifts become
-futile has been the determining cause. They could no more live in the
-Russia of 1919 than they could have lived in a Kaffir kraal.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- GORKY IN THE GREAT DUMP OF ART AND VIRTUOSITY IN PETERSBURG
-]
-
-Science, art, and literature are hothouse plants demanding warmth and
-respect and service. It is the paradox of science that it alters the
-whole world and is produced by the genius of men who need protection and
-help more than any other class of worker. The collapse of the Russian
-imperial system has smashed up all the shelters in which such things
-could exist. The crude Marxist philosophy which divides all men into
-bourgeoisie and proletariat, which sees all social life as a stupidly
-simple “class war,” had no knowledge of the conditions necessary for the
-collective mental life. But it is to the credit of the Bolshevik
-Government that it has now risen to the danger of a universal
-intellectual destruction in Russia, and that, in spite of the blockade
-and the unending struggle against the subsidised revolts and invasions
-with which we and the French plague Russia, it is now permitting and
-helping these salvage organisations. Parallel with the House of Science
-is the House of Literature and Art. The writing of new books, except for
-some poetry, and the painting of pictures have ceased in Russia. But the
-bulk of the writers and artists have been found employment upon a
-grandiose scheme for the publication of a sort of Russian encyclopædia
-of the literature of the world. In this strange Russia of conflict,
-cold, famine and pitiful privations there is actually going on now a
-literary task that would be inconceivable in the rich England and the
-rich America of to-day. In England and America the production of good
-literature at popular prices has practically ceased now—“because of the
-price of paper.” The mental food of the English and American masses
-dwindles and deteriorates, and nobody in authority cares a rap. The
-Bolshevik Government is at least a shade above that level. In starving
-Russia hundreds of people are working upon translations, and the books
-they translate are being set up and printed, work which may presently
-give a new Russia such a knowledge of world thought as no other people
-will possess. I have seen some of the books and the work going on.
-“_May_” I write, with no certainty. Because, like everything else in
-this ruined country, this creative work is essentially improvised and
-fragmentary. How this world literature is to be distributed to the
-Russian people I do not know. The bookshops are closed and bookselling,
-like every other form of trading, is illegal. Probably the books will be
-distributed to schools and other institutions.
-
-In this matter of book distribution the Bolshevik authorities are
-clearly at a loss. They are at a loss upon very many such matters. In
-regard to the intellectual life of the community one discovers that
-Marxist Communism is without plans and without ideas. Marxist Communism
-has always been a theory of revolution, a theory not merely lacking in
-creative and constructive ideas, but hostile to creative and
-constructive ideas. Every Communist orator has been trained to contemn
-“Utopianism,” that is to say, has been trained to contemn intelligent
-planning. Not even a British business man of the older type is quite
-such a believer in things righting themselves and in “muddling through”
-as these Marxists. The Russian Communist Government now finds itself
-face to face, among a multiplicity of other constructive problems, with
-the problem of sustaining scientific life, of sustaining thought and
-discussion, of promoting artistic creation. Marx the Prophet and his
-Sacred Book supply it with no lead at all in the matter. Bolshevism,
-having no schemes, must improvise therefore—clumsily, and is reduced to
-these pathetic attempts to salvage the wreckage of the intellectual life
-of the old order. And that life is very sick and unhappy and seems
-likely to die on its hands.
-
-It is not simply scientific and literary work and workers that Maxim
-Gorky is trying to salvage in Russia. There is a third and still more
-curious salvage organisation associated with him. This is the Expertise
-Commission, which has its headquarters in the former British Embassy.
-When a social order based on private property crashes, when private
-property is with some abruptness and no qualification abolished, this
-does not abolish and destroy the things which have hitherto constituted
-private property. Houses and their gear remain standing, still being
-occupied and used by the people who had them before—except when those
-people have fled. When the Bolshevik authorities requisition a house or
-take over a deserted palace, they find themselves faced by this problem
-of the gear. Any one who knows human nature will understand that there
-has been a certain amount of quiet annexation of desirable things by
-inadvertent officials and, perhaps less inadvertently, by their wives.
-But the general spirit of Bolshevism is quite honest, and it is set very
-stoutly against looting and suchlike developments of individual
-enterprise. There has evidently been comparatively little looting either
-in Petersburg or Moscow since the days of the _débâcle_. Looting died
-against the wall in Moscow in the spring of 1918. In the guest houses
-and suchlike places we noted that everything was numbered and listed.
-Occasionally we saw odd things astray, fine glass or crested silver upon
-tables where it seemed out of place, but in many cases these were things
-which had been sold for food or suchlike necessities on the part of the
-original owners. The sailor courier who attended to our comfort to and
-from Moscow was provided with a beautiful little silver teapot that must
-once have brightened a charming drawing-room. But apparently it had
-taken to a semi-public life in a quite legitimate way.
-
-For greater security there has been a gathering together and a
-cataloguing of everything that could claim to be a work of art by this
-Expertise Commission. The palace that once sheltered the British Embassy
-is now like some congested secondhand art shop in the Brompton Road. We
-went through room after room piled with the beautiful lumber of the
-former Russian social system. There are big rooms crammed with statuary;
-never have I seen so many white marble Venuses and sylphs together, not
-even in the Naples Museum. There are stacks of pictures of every sort,
-passages choked with inlaid cabinets piled up to the ceiling; a room
-full of cases of old lace, piles of magnificent furniture. This
-accumulation has been counted and catalogued. And there it is. I could
-not find out that any one had any idea of what was ultimately to be done
-with all this lovely and elegant litter. The stuff does not seem to
-belong in any way to the new world, if it is indeed a new world that the
-Russian Communists are organising. They never anticipated that they
-would have to deal with such things. Just as they never really thought
-of what they would do with the shops and markets when they had abolished
-shopping and marketing. Just as they had never thought out the problem
-of converting a city of private palaces into a Communist
-gathering-place. Marxist theory had led their minds up to the
-“dictatorship of the class-conscious proletariat” and then intimated—we
-discover now how vaguely—that there would be a new heaven and a new
-earth. Had that happened it would indeed have been a revolution in human
-affairs. But as we saw Russia there is still the old heaven and the old
-earth, covered with the ruins, littered with the abandoned furnishings
-and dislocated machinery of the former system, with the old peasant
-tough and obstinate upon the soil—and Communism, ruling in the cities
-quite pluckily and honestly, and yet, in so many matters, like a
-conjurer who has left his pigeon and his rabbit behind him, and can
-produce nothing whatever from the hat.
-
-Ruin: that is the primary Russian fact at the present time. The
-revolution, the Communist rule, which I will proceed to describe in my
-next paper, is quite secondary to that. It is something that has
-happened in the ruin and because of the ruin. It is of primary
-importance that people in the West should realise that. If the Great War
-had gone on for a year or so more, Germany and then the Western Powers
-would probably have repeated, with local variations, the Russian crash.
-The state of affairs we have seen in Russia is only the intensification
-and completion of the state of affairs towards which Britain was
-drifting in 1918. Here also there are shortages such as we had in
-England, but they are relatively monstrous; here also is rationing, but
-it is relatively feeble and inefficient; the profiteer in Russia is not
-fined but shot, and for the English D.O.R.A. you have the Extraordinary
-Commission. What were nuisances in England are magnified to disasters in
-Russia. That is all the difference. For all I know, Western Europe may
-be still drifting even now towards a parallel crash. I am not by any
-means sure that we have turned the corner. War, self-indulgence, and
-unproductive speculation may still be wasting more than the Western
-world is producing; in which case our own crash—currency failure, a
-universal shortage, social and political collapse and all the rest of
-it—is merely a question of time. The shops of Regent Street will follow
-the shops of the Nevsky Prospect, and Mr. Galsworthy and Mr. Bennett
-will have to do what they can to salvage the art treasures of Mayfair.
-It falsifies the whole world situation, it sets people altogether astray
-in their political actions, to assert that the frightful destitution of
-Russia to-day is to any large extent the result merely of Communist
-effort; that the wicked Communists have pulled down Russia to her
-present plight, and that if you can overthrow the Communists every one
-and everything in Russia will suddenly become happy again. Russia fell
-into its present miseries through the world war and the moral and
-intellectual insufficiency of it’s ruling and wealthy people. (As our
-own British State—as presently even the American State—may fall.) They
-had neither the brains nor the conscience to stop warfare, stop waste of
-all sorts, and stop taking the best of everything and leaving every one
-else dangerously unhappy, until it was too late. They ruled and wasted
-and quarrelled, blind to the coming disaster up to the very moment of
-its occurrence. And then, as I will describe in my next paper, the
-Communist came in....
-
-
-
-
- III
- THE QUINTESSENCE OF BOLSHEVISM
-
-
-In the two preceding papers I have tried to give the reader my
-impression of Russian life as I saw it in Petersburg and Moscow, as a
-spectacle of collapse, as the collapse of a political, social, and
-economic system, akin to our own but weaker and more rotten than our
-own, which has crashed under the pressure of six years of war and
-misgovernment. The main collapse occurred in 1917 when Tsarism,
-brutishly incompetent, became manifestly impossible. It had wasted the
-whole land, lost control of its army and the confidence of the entire
-population. Its police system had degenerated into a _régime_ of
-violence and brigandage. It fell inevitably.
-
-And there was no alternative government. For generations the chief
-energies of Tsarism had been directed to destroying any possibility of
-an alternative government. It had subsisted on that one fact that, bad
-as it was, there was nothing else to put in its place. The first Russian
-Revolution, therefore, turned Russia into a debating society and a
-political scramble. The liberal forces of the country, unaccustomed to
-action or responsibility, set up a clamorous discussion whether Russia
-was to be a constitutional monarchy, a liberal republic, a socialist
-republic, or what not. Over the confusion gesticulated Kerensky in
-attitudes of the finest liberalism. Through it loomed various ambiguous
-adventurers, “strong men,” sham strong men, Russian monks and Russian
-Bonapartes. What remained of social order collapsed. In the closing
-months of 1917 murder and robbery were common street incidents in
-Petersburg and Moscow, as common as an automobile accident in the
-streets of London, and less heeded. On the Reval boat was an American
-who had formerly directed the affairs of the American
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE STATUE OF MARX OUTSIDE THE SMOLNY INSTITUTE.
- (Headquarters of the Communist Party.)
-]
-
-Harvester Company in Russia. He had been in Moscow during this phase of
-complete disorder. He described hold-ups in open daylight in busy
-streets, dead bodies lying for hours in the gutter—as a dead kitten
-might do in a western town—while crowds went about their business along
-the sidewalk.
-
-Through this fevered and confused country went the representatives of
-Britain and France, blind to the quality of the immense and tragic
-disaster about them, intent only upon _the_ war, badgering the Russians
-to keep on fighting and make a fresh offensive against Germany. But when
-the Germans made a strong thrust towards Petersburg through the Baltic
-provinces and by sea, the British Admiralty, either through sheer
-cowardice or through Royalist intrigues, failed to give any effectual
-help to Russia. Upon this matter the evidence of the late Lord Fisher is
-plain. And so this unhappy country, mortally sick and, as it were,
-delirious, staggered towards a further stage of collapse.
-
-From end to end of Russia, and in the Russian-speaking community
-throughout the world, there existed only one sort of people who had
-common general ideas upon which to work, a common faith and a common
-will, and that was the Communist party. While all the rest of Russia was
-either apathetic like the peasantry or garrulously at sixes and sevens
-or given over to violence or fear, the Communists believed and were
-prepared to act. Numerically they were and are a very small part of the
-Russian population. At the present time not one per cent. of the people
-in Russia are Communists; the organised party certainly does not number
-more than 600,000 and has probably not much more than 150,000 active
-members. Nevertheless, because it was in those terrible days the only
-organisation which gave men a common idea of action, common formulæ, and
-mutual confidence, it was able to seize and retain control of the
-smashed empire. It was and it is the only sort of administrative
-solidarity possible in Russia. These ambiguous adventurers who have been
-and are afflicting Russia, with the support of the Western Powers,
-Deniken, Kolchak, Wrangel and the like, stand for no guiding principle
-and offer no security of any sort upon which men’s confidence can
-crystallise. They are essentially brigands. The Communist party, however
-one may criticise it, does embody an idea and can be relied upon to
-stand by its idea. So far it is a thing morally higher than anything
-that has yet come against it. It at once secured the passive support of
-the peasant mass by permitting them to take land from the estates and by
-making peace with Germany. It restored order—after a frightful lot of
-shooting—in the great towns. For a time everybody found carrying arms
-without authority was shot. This action was clumsy and bloody but
-effective. To retain its power this Communist Government organised
-Extraordinary Commissions, with practically unlimited powers, and
-crushed out all opposition by a Red Terror. Much that that Red Terror
-did was cruel and frightful, it was largely controlled by narrow-minded
-men, and many of its officials were inspired by social hatred and the
-fear of counter-revolution, but if it was fanatical it was honest. Apart
-from individual atrocities it did on the whole kill for a reason and to
-an end. Its bloodshed was not like the silly aimless butcheries of the
-Deniken _régime_, which would not even recognise, I was told, the
-Bolshevik Red Cross. And to-day the Bolshevik Government sits, I
-believe, in Moscow as securely established as any Government in Europe,
-and the streets of the Russian towns are as safe as any streets in
-Europe.
-
-It not only established itself and restored order, but—thanks largely to
-the genius of that ex-pacifist Trotsky—it re-created the Russian army as
-a fighting force. That we must recognise as a very remarkable
-achievement. I saw little of the Russian army myself, it was not what I
-went to Russia to see, but Mr. Vanderlip, the distinguished American
-financier, whom I found in Moscow engaged in some financial negotiations
-with the Soviet Government, had been treated to a review of several
-thousand troops, and was very enthusiastic about their spirit and
-equipment. My son and I saw a number of drafts going to the front, and
-also bodies of recruits joining up, and our impression is that the
-spirit of the men was quite as good as that of similar bodies of British
-recruits in London in 1917–18.
-
-Now who are these Bolsheviki who have taken such an effectual hold upon
-Russia? According to the crazier section of the British Press they are
-the agents of a mysterious racial plot, a secret society, in which Jews,
-Jesuits, Freemasons, and Germans are all jumbled together in the maddest
-fashion. As a matter of fact, nothing was ever quite less secret than
-the ideas and aims and methods of the Bolsheviks, nor anything quite
-less like a secret society than their organization. But in England we
-cultivate a peculiar style of thinking, so impervious to any general
-ideas that it must needs fall back upon the notion of a conspiracy to
-explain the simplest reactions of the human mind. If, for instance, a
-day labourer in Essex makes a fuss because he finds that the price of
-his children’s boots has risen out of all proportion to the increase in
-his weekly wages, and declares that he and his fellow-workers are being
-cheated and underpaid, the editors of _The Times_ and of the _Morning
-Post_ will trace his resentment to the insidious propaganda of some
-mysterious society at Königsberg or Pekin. They cannot conceive how
-otherwise he should get such ideas into his head. Conspiracy mania of
-this kind is so prevalent that I feel constrained to apologise for my
-own immunity. I find the Bolsheviks very much what they profess to be. I
-find myself obliged to treat them as fairly straightforward people. I do
-not agree with either their views or their methods, but that is another
-question.
-
-The Bolsheviks are Marxists Socialists. Marx died in London nearly forty
-years ago; the propaganda of his views has been going on for over half a
-century. It has spread over the whole earth and finds in nearly every
-country a small but enthusiastic following. It is a natural result of
-world-wide economic conditions. Everywhere it expresses the same limited
-ideas in the same distinctive phrasing. It is a cult, a world-wide
-international brotherhood. No one need learn Russian to study the ideas
-of Bolshevism. The enquirer will find them all in the London _Plebs_ or
-the New York _Liberator_ in exactly the same phrases as in the Russian
-_Pravda_. They hide nothing. They say everything. And just precisely
-what these Marxists write and say, so they attempt to do.
-
-It will be best if I write about Marx without any hypocritical
-deference. I have always regarded him as a Bore of the extremest sort.
-His vast unfinished work, _Das Kapital_, a cadence of wearisome volumes
-about such phantom unrealities as the _bourgeoisie_ and the
-_proletariat_, a book for ever maundering away into tedious secondary
-discussions, impresses me as a monument of pretentious pedantry. But
-before I went to Russia on this last occasion I had no active hostility
-to Marx. I avoided his works, and when I encountered Marxists I disposed
-of them by asking them to tell me exactly what people constituted the
-proletariat. None of them knew. No Marxist knows. In Gorky’s flat I
-listened with attention while Bokaiev discussed with Shalyapin the fine
-question of whether in Russia there was a proletariat at all,
-distinguishable from the peasants. As Bokaiev has been head of the
-Extraordinary Commission of the Dictatorship of the Proletariat in
-Petersburg, it was interesting to note the fine difficulties of the
-argument. The “proletarian” in the Marxist jargon is like the “producer”
-in the jargon of some political economists, who is supposed to be a
-creature absolutely distinct and different from the “consumer.” So the
-proletarian is a figure put into flat opposition to something called
-capital. I find in large type outside the current number of the _Plebs_,
-“The working class and the employing class have nothing in common.”
-Apply this to a works foreman who is being taken in a train by an
-engine-driver to see how the house he is having built for him by a
-building society is getting on. To which of these immiscibles does he
-belong, employer or employed? The stuff is sheer nonsense.
-
-In Russia I must confess my passive objection to Marx has changed to a
-very active hostility. Wherever we went we encountered busts, portraits,
-and statues of Marx. About two-thirds of the face of Marx is beard, a
-vast solemn woolly uneventful beard that must have made all normal
-exercise impossible. It is not the sort of beard that happens to a man,
-it is a beard cultivated, cherished, and thrust patriarchally upon the
-world. It is exactly like _Das Kapital_ in its inane abundance, and the
-human part of the face looks over it owlishly as if it looked to see how
-the growth impressed mankind. I found the omnipresent images of that
-beard more and more irritating. A gnawing desire grew upon me to see
-Karl Marx shaved. Some day, if I am spared, I will take up shears and a
-razor against _Das Kapital_; I will write _The Shaving of Karl Marx_.
-
-But Marx is for the Marxists merely an image and a symbol, and it is
-with the Marxist and not with Marx that we are now dealing. Few Marxists
-have read much of _Das Kapital_. The Marxist is very much the same sort
-of person in all modern communities, and I will confess that by my
-temperament and circumstances I have the very warmest sympathy for him.
-He adopts Marx as his prophet simply because he believes that Marx wrote
-of the class war, an implacable war of the employed against the
-employer, and that he prophesied a triumph for the employed person, a
-dictatorship of the world by the leaders of these liberated employed
-persons (dictatorship of the proletariat), and a Communist millennium
-arising out of that dictatorship. Now this doctrine and this prophecy
-have appealed in every country with extraordinary power to young
-persons, and particularly to young men of energy and imagination who
-have found themselves at the outset of life imperfectly educated,
-ill-equipped, and caught into hopeless wages slavery in our existing
-economic system. They realise in their own persons the social injustice,
-the stupid negligence, the colossal incivility of our system; they
-realise that they are insulted and sacrificed by it; and they devote
-themselves to break it and emancipate themselves from it. No insidious
-propaganda is needed to make such rebels; it is the faults of a system
-that half-educates and then enslaves them which have created the
-Communist movement wherever industrialism has developed. There would
-have been Marxists if Marx had never lived. When I was a boy of fourteen
-I was a complete Marxist, long before I had heard the name of Marx. I
-had been cut off abruptly from education, caught in a detestable shop,
-and I was being broken in to a life of mean and dreary toil. I was
-worked too hard and for such long hours that all thoughts of
-self-improvement seemed hopeless. I would have set fire to that place if
-I had not been convinced it was over-insured. I revived the spirit of
-those bitter days in a conversation I had with Zorin, one of the leaders
-of the Commune of the North. He is a young man who has come back from
-unskilled work in America, a very likable human being and a humorous and
-very popular speaker in the Petersburg Soviet. He and I exchanged
-experiences, and I found that the thing that rankled most in his mind
-about America was the brutal incivility he had encountered when applying
-for a job as packer in a big dry goods store in New York. We told each
-other stories of the way our social system wastes and breaks and maddens
-decent and willing men. Between us was the freemasonry of a common
-indignation.
-
-It is that indignation of youth and energy, thwarted and misused, it is
-that and no mere economic theorising, which is the living and linking
-inspiration of the Marxist movement throughout the world. It is not that
-Marx was profoundly wise, but that our economic system has been stupid,
-selfish, wasteful, and anarchistic. The Communistic organisation has
-provided for this angry recalcitrance certain shibboleths and passwords:
-“Workers of the World unite,” and so forth. It has suggested to them an
-idea of a great conspiracy against human happiness concocted by a
-mysterious body of wicked men called capitalists. For in this mentally
-enfeebled world in which we live to-day conspiracy mania on one side
-finds its echo on the other, and it is hard to persuade a Marxist that
-capitalists are in their totality no more than a scrambling disorder of
-mean-spirited and short-sighted men. And the Communist propaganda has
-knitted all these angry and disinherited spirits together into a
-world-wide organisation of revolt—and hope—formless though that hope
-proves to be on examination. It has chosen Marx for its prophet and red
-for its colour.... And so when the crash came in Russia, when there
-remained no other solidarity of men who could work together upon any but
-immediate selfish ends, there came flowing back from America and the
-West to rejoin their comrades a considerable number of keen and
-enthusiastic young and youngish men, who had in that more bracing
-Western world lost something of the habitual impracticability of the
-Russian and acquired a certain habit of getting things done, who all
-thought in the same phrases and had the courage of the same ideas, and
-who were all inspired by the dream of a revolution that should bring
-human life to a new level of justice and happiness. It is these young
-men who constitute the living force of Bolshevism. Many of them are
-Jews, because most of the Russian emigrants to America were Jews; but
-few of them have any strong racial Jewish feeling. They are not out for
-Jewry but for a new world. So far from being in continuation of the
-Jewish tradition the Bolsheviks have put most of the Zionist leaders in
-Russia in prison, and they have prescribed the teaching of Hebrew as a
-“reactionary” language. Several of the most interesting Bolsheviks I met
-were not Jews at all, but blonde Nordic men. Lenin, the beloved leader
-of all that is energetic in Russia to-day, has a Tartar type of face and
-is certainly no Jew.
-
-This Bolshevik Government is at once the most temerarious and the least
-experienced governing body in the world. In some directions its
-incompetence is amazing. In most its ignorance is profound. Of the
-diabolical cunning of “capitalism” and of the subtleties of reaction it
-is ridiculously suspicious, and sometimes it takes fright and is cruel.
-But essentially it is honest. It is the most simple-minded Government
-that exists in the world to-day.
-
-Its simple-mindedness is shown by one question that I was asked again
-and again during this Russian visit. “When is the social revolution
-going to happen in England?” Lenin asked me that, Zenovieff, who is the
-head of the Commune of the North, Zorin, and many others.
-
-Because it is by the Marxist theory all wrong that the social revolution
-should happen first in Russia. That fact is bothering every intelligent
-man in the movement. According to the Marxist theory the social
-revolution should have happened first in the country with the oldest and
-most highly developed industrialism, with a large, definite, mainly
-propertyless, mainly wages-earning working class (proletariat). It
-should have begun in Britain, and spread to France and Germany, then
-should have come America’s turn and so on. Instead they find Communism
-in power in Russia, which really possesses no specialised labouring
-class at all, which has worked its factories with peasant labourers who
-come and go from the villages, and so has scarcely any “proletariat”—to
-unite with the workers of the world and so forth—at all. Behind the
-minds of many of these Bolsheviks with whom I talked I saw clearly that
-there dawns now a chill suspicion of the reality of the case, a
-realisation that what they have got in Russia is not truly the promised
-Marxist social revolution at all, that in truth they have not captured a
-State but got aboard a derelict. I tried to assist the development of
-this novel and disconcerting discovery. And also I indulged in a little
-lecture on the absence of a large “class-conscious proletariat” in the
-Western communities. I explained that in England there were two hundred
-different classes at least, and that the only “class-conscious
-proletarians” known to me in the land were a small band of mainly Scotch
-workers kept together by the vigorous leadership of a gentleman named
-MacManus. Their dearest convictions struggled against my manifest
-candour. They are clinging desperately to the belief that there are
-hundreds of thousands of convinced Communists in Britain, versed in the
-whole gospel of Marx, a proletarian solidarity, on the eve of seizing
-power and proclaiming a British Soviet Republic. They hold obstinately
-to that after three years of waiting—but their hold weakens.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE BAKU CONFERENCE SWEARS UNDYING HOSTILITY TO CAPITALISM AND BRITISH
- IMPERIALISM.
- Zenovieff (_by the bell_); to the right of him (_i.e._ on his left)
- are Radek (_spectacles_) and Bela Kun (_rather foggy_).
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE BAKU CONFERENCE SWEARS UNDYING HOSTILITY TO CAPITALISM AND BRITISH
- IMPERIALISM:
- The Body of the Hall.
-]
-
-Among the most amusing things in this queer intellectual situation are
-the repeated scoldings that come by wireless from Moscow to Western
-Labour because it does not behave as Marx said it would behave. It isn’t
-red—and it ought to be. It is just yellow.
-
-My conversation with Zenovieff was particularly curious. He is a man
-with the voice and animation of Hilaire Belloc, and a lot of curly
-coal-black hair. “You have civil war in Ireland,” he said.
-“Practically,” said I. “Which do you consider are the proletarians, the
-Sinn Feiners or the Ulstermen?” We spent some time while Zenovieff
-worked like a man with a jigsaw puzzle trying to get the Irish situation
-into the class war formula. That jigsaw puzzle remained unsolved, and we
-then shifted our attention to Asia. Impatient at the long delay of the
-Western proletarians to emerge and declare themselves, Zenovieff,
-assisted by Bela Kun, our Mr. Jack Quelch, and a number of other leading
-Communists, has recently gone on a pilgrimage to Baku to raise the
-Asiatic proletariat. They went to beat up the class-conscious wages
-slaves of Persia and Turkestan. They sought out factory workers and slum
-dwellers in the tents of the steppes. They held a congress at Baku, at
-which they gathered together a quite wonderful accumulation of white,
-black, brown, and yellow people, Asiatic costumes and astonishing
-weapons. They had a great assembly in which they swore undying hatred of
-Capitalism and British imperialism; they had a great procession in which
-I regret to say certain batteries of British guns, which some careless,
-hasty empire-builder had left behind him, figured; they disinterred and
-buried again thirteen people whom this British empire-builder seems to
-have shot without trial, and they burnt Mr. Lloyd George, M. Millerand,
-and President Wilson in effigy. I not only saw a five-part film of this
-remarkable festival when I visited the Petersburg Soviet, but, thanks to
-Zorin, I have brought the film back with me. It is to be administered
-with caution and to adults only. There are parts of it that would make
-Mr. Gwynne of the _Morning Post_ or Mr. Rudyard Kipling scream in their
-sleep. If so be they ever slept again after seeing it.
-
-I did my best to find out from Zenovieff and Zorin what they thought
-they were doing in the Baku Conference. And frankly I do not think they
-know. I doubt if they have anything clearer in their minds than a vague
-idea of hitting back at the British Government through Mesopotamia and
-India, because it has been hitting them through Kolchak, Deniken,
-Wrangel, and the Poles. It is a counter-offensive almost as clumsy and
-stupid as the offensives it would counter. It is inconceivable that they
-can hope for any social solidarity with the miscellaneous discontents
-their congress assembled. One item “featured” on this Baku film is a
-dance by a gentleman from the neighbourhood of Baku. He is in fact one
-of the main features of this remarkable film. He wears a fur-trimmed
-jacket, high boots, and a high cap, and his dancing is a very rapid and
-dexterous step dancing. He produces two knives and puts them between his
-teeth, and then two others which he balances perilously with the blades
-dangerously close to his nose on either side of it. Finally he poises a
-fifth knife on his forehead, still stepping it featly to the distinctly
-Oriental music. He stoops and squats, arms akimbo, sending his nimble
-boots flying out and back like the Cossacks in the Russian ballet. He
-circles slowly as he does this, clapping his hands. He is now rolled up
-in my keeping, ready to dance again when opportunity offers. I tried to
-find out whether he was a specimen Asiatic proletarian or just what he
-symbolised, but I could get no light on him. But there are yards and
-yards of film of him. I wish I could have resuscitated Karl Marx, just
-to watch that solemn stare over the beard, regarding him. The film gives
-no indication of his reception by Mr. Jack Quelch.
-
-I hope I shall not offend Comrade Zorin, for whom I have a real
-friendship, if I thus confess to him that I cannot take his Baku
-Conference very seriously. It was an excursion, a pageant, a Beano. As a
-meeting of Asiatic proletarians it was preposterous. But if it was not
-very much in itself, it was something very important in its revelation
-of shifting intentions. Its chief significance to me is this, that it
-shows a new orientation of the Bolshevik mind as it is embodied in
-Zenovieff. So long as the Bolsheviki held firmly with unshaken
-conviction to the Marxist formula they looked westward, a little
-surprised that the “social revolution” should have begun so far to the
-east of its indicated centre. Now as they begin to realise that it is
-not that prescribed social revolution at all but something quite
-different which has brought them into power, they are naturally enough
-casting about for a new system of relationships. The ideal figure of the
-Russian republic is still a huge western “Worker,” with a vast hammer or
-a sickle. A time may come, if we maintain the European blockade with
-sufficient stringency and make any industrial recuperation impossible,
-when that ideal may give place altogether to a nomadic-looking gentleman
-from Turkestan with a number of knives. We may drive what will remain of
-Bolshevik Russia to the steppes and the knife. If we help Baron Wrangel
-to pull down the by no means firmly established Government in Moscow,
-under the delusion that thereby we shall bring about “representative
-institutions” and a “limited monarchy,” we may find ourselves very much
-out in our calculations. Any one who destroys the present law and order
-of Moscow will, I believe, destroy what is left of law and order in
-Russia. A brigand monarchist government will leave a trail of fresh
-blood across the Russian scene, show what gentlemen can do when they are
-roused in a tremendous pogrom and White Terror, flourish horribly for a
-time, break up and vanish. Asia will resume. The simple ancient rhythm
-of the horseman plundering the peasant and the peasant waylaying the
-horseman will creep back across the plains to the Niemen and the
-Dniester. The cities will become clusters of ruins in the waste; the
-roads and railroads will rot and rust; the river traffic will decay....
-
-This Baku Conference has depressed Gorky profoundly. He is obsessed by a
-nightmare of Russia going east. Perhaps I have caught a little of his
-depression.
-
-
-
-
- IV
- THE CREATIVE EFFORT IN RUSSIA
-
-
-In the previous three papers I have tried to give my impression of the
-Russian spectacle as that of a rather ramshackle modern civilisation
-completely shattered and overthrown by misgovernment, under-education,
-and finally six years of war strain. I have shown science and art
-starving and the comforts and many of the decencies of life gone. In
-Vienna the overthrow is just as bad; and there too such men of science
-as the late Professor Margules starve to death. If London had had to
-endure four more years of war, much the same sort of thing would be
-happening in London. We should have now no coal in our grates and no
-food for our food tickets, and the shops in Bond Street would be as
-desolate as the shops in the Nevsky Prospect. Bolshevik government in
-Russia is neither responsible for the causation nor for the continuance
-of these miseries.
-
-I have also tried to get the facts of Bolshevik rule into what I believe
-is their proper proportions in the picture. The Bolsheviks, albeit
-numbering less than five per cent of the population, have been able to
-seize and retain power in Russia because they were and are the only body
-of people in this vast spectacle of Russian ruin with a common faith and
-a common spirit. I disbelieve in their faith, I ridicule Marx, their
-prophet, but I understand and respect their spirit. They are—with all
-their faults, and they have abundant faults—the only possible backbone
-now to a renascent Russia. The recivilising of Russia must be done with
-the Soviet Government as the starting phase. The great mass of the
-Russian population is an entirely illiterate peasantry, grossly
-materialistic and politically indifferent. They are superstitious, they
-are for ever crossing themselves and kissing images,—in Moscow
-particularly they were at it—but they are not religious. They have no
-will in things political and social beyond their immediate
-satisfactions. They are roughly content with Bolshevik rule. The
-Orthodox priest is quite unlike the Catholic priest in Western Europe;
-he is himself typically a dirty and illiterate peasant with no power
-over the wills and consciences of his people. There is no constructive
-quality in either peasant or Orthodoxy. For the rest there is a
-confusion of more or less civilised Russians, in and out of Russia, with
-no common political ideas and with no common will. They are incapable of
-producing anything but adventures and disputes.
-
-The Russian refugees in England are politically contemptible. They
-rehearse endless stories of “Bolshevik outrages”: chateau burnings by
-peasants, burglaries and murders by disbanded soldiers in the towns,
-back street crimes—they tell them all as acts of the Bolshevik
-Government. Ask them what government they want in its place, and you
-will get rubbishy generalities—usually adapted to what the speaker
-supposes to be your particular political obsession. Or they sicken you
-with the praise of some current super-man, Deniken or Wrangel, who is to
-put everything right—God knows how. They deserve nothing better than a
-Tsar, and they are incapable even of deciding which Tsar they desire.
-The better part of the educated people still in Russia are—for the sake
-of Russia—slowly drifting into a reluctant but honest co-operation with
-Bolshevik rule.
-
-The Bolsheviks themselves are Marxists and Communists. They find
-themselves in control of Russia, in complete contradiction, as I have
-explained, to the theories of Karl Marx. A large part of their energies
-have been occupied in an entirely patriotic struggle against the raids,
-invasions, blockades, and persecutions of every sort that our insensate
-Western Governments have rained upon their tragically shattered country.
-What is left over goes in the attempt to keep Russia alive, and to
-organise some sort of social order among the ruins. These Bolsheviks
-are, as I have explained, extremely inexperienced men, intellectual
-exiles from Geneva and Hampstead, or comparatively illiterate manual
-workers from the United States. Never was there so amateurish a
-government since the early Moslem found themselves in control of Cairo,
-Damascus, and Mesopotamia.
-
-I believe that in the minds of very many of them there is a considerable
-element of dismay at the tremendous tasks they find before them. But one
-thing has helped them and Russia enormously, and that is their training
-in Communistic ideas. As the British found out during the submarine war,
-so far as the urban and industrial population goes there is nothing for
-it during a time of tragic scarcity but collapse or collective control.
-We in England had to control and ration, we had to suppress profiteering
-by stringent laws. These Communists came into power in Russia and began
-to do at once, on principle, the first most necessary thing in that
-chaos of social wreckage. Against all the habits and traditions of
-Russia, they began to control and ration—exhaustively. They have now a
-rationing system that is, on paper, admirable beyond cavil; and perhaps
-it works as well as the temperament and circumstances of Russian
-production and consumption permit. It is easy to note defects and
-failures, but not nearly so easy to show how in this depleted and
-demoralised Russia they could be avoided. And things are in such a state
-in Russia now that even if we suppose the Bolsheviks overthrown and any
-other Government in their place, it matters not what, that Government
-would have to go on with the rationing the Bolsheviks have organised,
-with the suppression of vague political experiments, and the punishment
-and shooting of profiteers. The Bolsheviki in this state of siege and
-famine have done upon principle what any other Government would have had
-to do from necessity.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PROLETARIANS OF ASIA À LA BAKU.
-]
-
-And in the face of gigantic difficulties they are trying to rebuild a
-new Russia among the ruins. We may quarrel with their principles and
-methods, we may call their schemes Utopian and so forth, we may sneer at
-or we may dread what they are doing, but it is no good pretending that
-there is no creative effort in Russia at the present time. A certain
-section of the Bolsheviks are hard-minded, doctrinaire and unteachable
-men, fanatics who believe that the mere destruction of capitalism, the
-disuse of money and trading, the effacement of all social differences,
-will in itself bring about a sort of bleak millennium. There are
-Bolsheviki so stupid that they would stop the teaching of chemistry in
-schools until they were assured it was “proletarian” chemistry, and who
-would suppress every decorative design that was not an elaboration of
-the letters R.S.F.S.R. (Russian Socialist Federal Soviet Republic) as
-reactionary art. I have told of the suppression of Hebrew studies
-because they are “reactionary”; and while I was with Gorky I found him
-in constant bitter disputes with extremist officials who would see no
-good in any literature of the past except the literature of revolt. But
-there were other more liberal minds in this new Russian world, minds
-which, given an opportunity, will build and will probably build well.
-Among men of such constructive force I would quote such names as Lenin
-himself, who has developed wonderfully since the days of his exile, and
-who has recently written powerfully against the extravagances of his own
-extremists; Trotsky, who has never been an extremist, and who is a man
-of very great organising ability; Lunacharsky, the Minister for
-Education; Rikoff, the head of the Department of People’s Economy;
-Madame Lilna of the Petersburg Child Welfare Department; and Krassin,
-the head of the London Trade Delegation. These are names that occur to
-me; it is by no means an exhaustive list of the statesmanlike elements
-in the Bolshevik Government. Already they have achieved something, in
-spite of blockade and civil and foreign war. It is not only that they
-work to restore a country depleted of material to an extent almost
-inconceivable to English and American readers, but they work with an
-extraordinarily unhelpful personnel. Russia to-day stands more in need
-of men of the foreman and works-manager class than she does of
-medicaments or food. The ordinary work in the Government offices of
-Russia is shockingly done; the slackness and inaccuracy are
-indescribable. Everybody seems to be working in a muddle of unsorted
-papers and cigarette ends. This again is a state of affairs no
-counter-revolution could change. It is inherent in the present Russian
-situation. If one of these military adventurers of the Yudenitch or
-Deniken type were, by some disastrous accident, to get control of
-Russia, his success would only add strong drink, embezzlement, and a
-great squalour of kept mistresses to the general complication. For
-whatever else we may say to the discredit of the Bolshevik leaders, it
-is undeniable that the great majority lead not simply laborious but
-puritanical lives.
-
-I write of this general inefficiency in Russia with the more asperity
-because it was the cause of my not meeting Lunacharsky. About eighty
-hours of my life was consumed in travelling, telephoning, and waiting
-about in order to talk for about an hour and a half with Lenin and for
-the some time with Tchitcherin. At that rate, and in view of the
-intermittent boat service from Reval to Stockholm, to see Lunacharsky
-would have meant at least a week more in Russia. The whole of my visit
-to Moscow was muddled in the most irritating fashion. A sailor-man
-carrying a silver kettle who did not know his way about Moscow was put
-in charge of my journey, and an American who did not know enough Russian
-to telephone freely was set to make my appointments in the town.
-Although I had heard Gorky arrange for my meeting with Lenin by
-long-distance telephone days before, Moscow declared that it had had no
-notice of my coming. Finally I was put into the wrong train back to
-Petersburg, a train which took twenty-two hours instead of fourteen for
-the journey. These may seem petty details to relate, but when it is
-remembered that Russia was really doing its best to impress me with its
-vigour and good order, they are extremely significant. In the train,
-when I realised that it was a slow train and that the express had gone
-three hours before while we had been pacing the hall of the guest house
-with our luggage packed and nobody coming for us, the spirit came upon
-me and my lips were unsealed. I spoke to my guide, as one mariner might
-speak to another, and told him what I thought of Russian methods. He
-listened with the profoundest respect to my rich incisive phrases. When
-at last I paused, he replied—in words that are also significant of
-certain weaknesses of the present Russian state of mind. “You see,” he
-said, “the blockade——”
-
-But if I saw nothing of Lunacharsky personally, I saw something of the
-work he has organised. The primary material of the educationist is human
-beings, and of these at least there is still no shortage in Russia, so
-that in that respect Lunacharsky is better off than most of his
-colleagues. And beginning with an initial prejudice and much distrust, I
-am bound to confess that, in view of their enormous difficulties, the
-educational work of the Bolsheviks impresses me as being astonishingly
-good.
-
-Things started badly. Directly I got to Petersburg I asked to see a
-school, and on the second day of my visit I was taken to one that
-impressed me very unfavourably. It was extremely well equipped, much
-better than an ordinary English grammar school, and the children were
-bright and intelligent; but our visit fell in the recess. I could
-witness no teaching, and the behaviour of the youngsters I saw indicated
-a low standard of discipline. I formed an opinion that I was probably
-being shown a picked school specially prepared for me, and that this was
-all that Petersburg had to offer. The special guide who was with us then
-began to question these children upon the subject of English literature
-and the writers they liked most. One name dominated all others. My own.
-Such comparatively trivial figures as Milton, Dickens, Shakespeare ran
-about intermittently between the feet of that literary colossus. Being
-questioned further, these children produced the titles of perhaps a
-dozen of my books. I said I was completely satisfied by what I had seen
-and heard, that I wanted to see nothing more—for indeed what more could
-I possibly require?—and I left that school smiling with difficulty and
-thoroughly cross with my guides.
-
-Three days later I suddenly scrapped my morning’s engagements and
-insisted upon being taken at once to another school—any school close at
-hand. I was convinced that I had been deceived about the former school,
-and that now I should see a very bad school indeed. Instead I saw a much
-better one than the first I had seen. The equipment and building were
-better, the discipline of the children was better, and I saw some
-excellent teaching in progress. Most of the teachers were women, very
-competent-looking middle-aged women, and I chose elementary geometrical
-teaching to observe because that on the blackboard is in the universal
-language of the diagram. I saw also a heap of drawings and various
-models the pupils had done, and they were very good. The school was
-supplied with abundant pictures. I noted particularly a well-chosen
-series of landscapes to assist the geographical teaching. There was
-plenty of chemical and physical apparatus, and it was evidently put to a
-proper use. I also saw the children’s next meal in preparation—for
-children eat at school in Soviet Russia—and the food was excellent and
-well cooked, far above the standard of the adult rations we had seen
-served out. All this was much more satisfactory. Finally by a few
-questions we tested the extraordinary vogue of H. G. Wells among the
-young people of Russia. None of these children had ever heard of him.
-The school library contained none of his books. This did much to
-convince me that I was seeing a quite normal school. I had, I now begin
-to realise, been taken to the previous one not, as I had supposed in my
-wrath, with any elaborate intention of deceiving me about the state of
-education in the country, but after certain kindly intrigues and
-preparations by a literary friend, Mr. Chukovsky the critic,
-affectionately anxious to make me feel myself beloved in Russia, and a
-little oblivious of the real gravity of the business I had in hand.
-
-Subsequent enquiries and comparison of my observations with those of
-other visitors to Russia, and particularly those of Dr. Haden Guest, who
-also made surprise visits to several schools in Moscow, have convinced
-me that Soviet Russia, in the face of gigantic difficulties, has made
-and is making very great educational efforts, and that in spite of the
-difficulties of the general situation the quality and number of the
-schools _in the towns_ has risen absolutely since the Tsarist _régime_.
-(The peasant, as ever, except in a few “show” localities, remains
-scarcely touched by these things.) The schools I saw would have been
-good middle schools in England. They are open to all, and there is an
-attempt to make education compulsory. Of course Russia has its peculiar
-difficulties. Many of the schools are understaffed, and it is difficult
-to secure the attendance of unwilling pupils. Numbers of children prefer
-to keep out of the schools and trade upon the streets. A large part of
-the illicit trading in Russia is done by bands of children. They are
-harder to catch than adults, and the spirit of Russian Communism is
-against punishing them. And the Russian child is, for a northern child,
-remarkably precocious.
-
-The common practice of co-educating youngsters up to fifteen or sixteen,
-in a country as demoralised as Russia is now, has brought peculiar evils
-in its train. My attention was called to this by the visit of Bokaiev,
-the former head of the Petersburg Extraordinary Commission, and his
-colleague Zalutsky to Gorky to consult him in the matter. They discussed
-their business in front of me quite frankly, and the whole conversation
-was translated to me as it went on. The Bolshevik authorities have
-collected and published very startling, very shocking figures of the
-moral condition of young people in Petersburg, which I have seen. How
-far they would compare with the British figures—if there are any British
-figures—of such bad districts for the young as are some parts of East
-London or such towns of low type employment as Reading I do not know.
-(The reader should compare the Fabian Society’s report on prostitution,
-_Downward Paths_, upon this question.) Nor do I know how they would show
-in comparison with preceding Tsarist conditions. Nor can I speculate how
-far these phenomena in Russia are the mechanical consequence of
-privation and overcrowding in a home atmosphere bordering on despair.
-But there can be no doubt that in the Russian towns, concurrently with
-increased educational effort and an enhanced intellectual stimulation of
-the young, there is also an increased lawlessness on their part,
-especially in sexual matters, and that this is going on in a phase of
-unexampled sobriety and harsh puritanical decorum so far as adult life
-is concerned. This hectic moral fever of the young is the dark side of
-the educational spectacle in Russia. I think it is to be regarded mainly
-as an aspect of the general social collapse; every European country has
-noted a parallel moral relaxation of the young under the war strain; but
-the revolution itself, in sweeping a number of the old experienced
-teachers out of the schools and in making every moral standard a subject
-of debate, has no doubt contributed also to an as yet incalculable
-amount in the excessive disorder of these matters in present-day Russia.
-
-Faced with this problem of starving and shattered homes and a social
-chaos, the Bolshevik organisers are _institutionalising_ the town
-children of Russia. They are making their schools residential. The
-children of the Russian urban population are going, like the children of
-the British upper class, into boarding schools. Close to this second
-school I visited stood two big buildings which are the living places of
-the boys and of the girls respectively. In these places they can be kept
-under some sort of hygienic and moral discipline. This again happens to
-be not only in accordance with Communist doctrine, but with the special
-necessities of the Russian crisis. Entire towns are sinking down towards
-slum conditions, and the Bolshevik Government has had to play the part
-of a gigantic Dr. Barnardo.
-
-We went over the organisation of a sort of reception home to which
-children are brought by their parents who find it impossible to keep
-them clean and decent and nourished under the terrible conditions
-outside. This reception home is the old Hotel de l’Europe, the scene of
-countless pleasant little dinner-parties under the old _régime_. On the
-roof there is still the summertime roof garden, where the string
-quartette used to play, and on the staircase we passed a frosted glass
-window still bearing in gold letters the words _Coiffure des Dames_.
-
-Slender gilded pointing hands directed us to the “Restaurant,” long
-vanished from the grim Petersburg scheme of things. Into this place the
-children come; they pass into a special quarantine section for
-infectious diseases and for personal cleanliness—nine-tenths of the
-newcomers harbour unpleasant parasites—and then into another section,
-the moral quarantine, where for a time they are watched for bad habits
-and undesirable tendencies. From this section some individuals may need
-to be weeded out and sent to special schools for defectives. The rest
-pass on into the general body of institutionalized children, and so on
-to the boarding schools.
-
-Here certainly we have the “break-up of the family” in full progress,
-and the Bolshevik net is sweeping wide and taking in children of the
-most miscellaneous origins. The parents have reasonably free access to
-their children in the daytime, but little or no control over their
-education, clothing, or the like. We went among the children in the
-various stages of this educational process, and they seemed to us to be
-quite healthy, happy, and contented children. But they get very good
-people to look after them. Many men and women, politically suspects or
-openly discontented with the existing political conditions, and yet with
-a desire to serve Russia, have found in these places work that they can
-do with a good heart and conscience. My interpreter and the lady who
-took us round this place had often dined and supped in the Hotel de
-l’Europe in its brilliant days, and they knew each other well. This lady
-was now plainly clad, with short cut hair and a grave manner; her
-husband was a White and serving with the Poles; she had two children of
-her own in the institution, and she was mothering some scores of little
-creatures. But she was evidently keenly proud of the work of her
-organisation, and she said that she found life—in this city of want,
-under the shadow of a coming famine—more interesting and satisfying than
-it had ever been in the old days.
-
-I have no space to tell of other educational work we saw going on in
-Russia. I can give but a word or so to the Home of Rest for Workmen in
-the Kamenni Ostrof. I thought that at once rather fine and not a little
-absurd. To this place workers are sent to live a life of refined ease
-for two or three weeks. It is a very beautiful country house with fine
-gardens, an orangery, and subordinate buildings. The meals are served on
-white cloths with flowers upon the table and so forth. And the worker
-has to live up to these elegant surroundings. It is a part of his
-education. If in a forgetful moment he clears his throat in the good old
-resonant peasant manner and spits upon the floor, an attendant, I was
-told, chalks a circle about his defilement and obliges him to clean the
-offended parquetry. The avenue approaching this place has been adorned
-with decoration in the futurist style, and there is a vast figure of a
-“worker” at the gates resting on his hammer, done in gypsum, which was
-obtained from the surgical reserves of the Petersburg hospitals.... But
-after all, the idea of civilising your workpeople by dipping them into
-pleasant surroundings is, in itself, rather a good one....
-
-[Illustration:
-
- GUESTS AT THE HOME OF REST FOR WORKMEN ON THE KAMENNI OSTROF.
-]
-
-I find it difficult to hold the scales of justice upon many of these
-efforts of Bolshevism. Here are these creative and educational things
-going on, varying between the admirable and the ridiculous, islands at
-least of cleanly work and, I think, of hope, amidst the vast spectacle
-of grisly want and wide decay. Who can weigh the power and possibility
-of their thrust against the huge gravitation of this sinking system? Who
-can guess what encouragement and enhancement they may get if Russia can
-win through to a respite from civil and foreign warfare and from famine
-and want? It was of this re-created Russia, this Russia that may be,
-that I was most desirous of talking when I went to the Kremlin to meet
-Lenin. Of that conversation I will tell in my sixth paper.
-
-
-
-
- V
- THE PETERSBURG SOVIET: A LEGISLATIVE MASS MEETING
-
-
-On Thursday the 7th of October we attended a meeting of the Petersburg
-Soviet. We were told that we should find this a very different
-legislative body from the British House of Commons, and we did. Like
-nearly everything else in the arrangements of Soviet Russia it struck us
-as extraordinarily unpremeditated and improvised. Nothing could have
-been less intelligently planned for the functions it had to perform or
-the responsibilities it had to undertake.
-
-The meeting was held in the old Winter Garden of the Tauride Palace, the
-former palace of Potemkin, the favourite of Catherine the Second. Here
-the Imperial Duma met under the Tsarist _régime_, and I visited it in
-1914 and saw a languid session in progress. I went then with Mr. Maurice
-Baring and one of the Benckendorffs to the strangers’ gallery, which ran
-round three sides of the hall. There was accommodation for perhaps a
-thousand people in the hall, and most of it was empty. The president
-with his bell sat above a rostrum, and behind him was a row of women
-reporters. I do not now remember what business was in hand on that
-occasion; it was certainly not very exciting business. Baring, I
-remember, pointed out the large proportion of priests elected to the
-third Duma; their beards and cassocks made a very distinctive feature of
-that scattered gathering.
-
-On this second visit we were no longer stranger onlookers, but active
-participants in the meeting; we came into the body of the hall behind
-the president’s bench, where on a sort of stage the members of the
-Government, official visitors, and so forth find accommodation. The
-presidential bench, the rostrum, and the reporters remained, but instead
-of an atmosphere of weary parliamentarianism, we found ourselves in the
-crowding, the noise, and the peculiar thrill of a mass meeting. There
-were, I should think, some two hundred people or more packed upon the
-semicircular benches round about us on the platform behind the
-president, comrades in naval uniforms and in middle-class and
-working-class costume, numerous intelligent-looking women, one or two
-Asiatics and a few unclassifiable visitors, and the body of the hall
-beyond the presidential bench was densely packed with people who filled
-not only the seats but the gangways and the spaces under the galleries.
-There may have been two or three thousand people down there, men and
-women. They were all members of the Petersburg Soviet, which is really a
-sort of conjoint meeting of its constituent soviets. The visitors’
-galleries above were equally full.
-
-Above the rostrum, with his back to us, sat Zenovieff, his right-hand
-man Zorin, and the president. The subject under discussion was the
-proposed peace with Poland. The meeting was smarting with the sense of
-defeat and disposed to resent the Polish terms. Soon after we came in
-Zenovieff made a long and, so far as I could judge, a very able speech,
-preparing the minds of this great gathering for a Russian surrender. The
-Polish demands are outrageous, but for the present Russia must submit.
-He was followed by an oldish man who made a bitter attack upon the
-irreligion of the people and government of Russia; Russia was suffering
-for her sins, and until she repented and returned to religion she would
-continue to suffer one disaster after another. His opinions were not
-those of the meeting, but he was allowed to have his say without
-interruption. The decision to make peace with Poland was then taken by a
-show of hands. Then came my little turn. The meeting was told that I had
-come from England to see the Bolshevik _régime_; I was praised
-profusely; I was also exhorted to treat that _régime_ fairly and not to
-emulate those other recent visitors (these were Mrs. Snowden and Guest
-and Bertrand Russell) who had enjoyed the hospitality of the republic
-and then gone away to say unfavourable things of it. This exhortation
-left me cold; I had come to Russia to judge the Bolshevik Government and
-not to praise it. I had then to take possession of the rostrum and
-address this big crowd of people. This rostrum I knew had proved an
-unfortunate place for one or two previous visitors, who had found it
-hard to explain away afterwards the speeches their translators had given
-the world through the medium of the wireless reports. Happily, I had had
-some inkling of what was coming. To avoid any misunderstanding I had
-written out a short speech in English, and I had had this translated
-carefully into Russian. I began by saying clearly that I was neither
-Marxist nor Communist, but a Collectivist, and that it was not to a
-social revolution in the West that Russians should look for peace and
-help in their troubles, but to the liberal opinion of the moderate mass
-of Western people. I declared that the people of the Western States were
-determined to give Russia peace, so that she might develop upon her own
-lines. Their own line of development might be very different from that
-of Russia. When I had done I handed a translation of my speech to my
-interpreter, Zorin, which not only eased his task but did away with any
-possibility of a subsequent misunderstanding. My speech was reported in
-the _Pravda_ quite fully and fairly.
-
-Then followed a motion by Zorin that Zenovieff should have leave to
-visit Berlin and attend the conference of the Independent Socialists
-there. Zorin is a witty and humorous speaker, and he got his audience
-into an excellent frame of mind. His motion was carried by a show of
-hands, and then came a report and a discussion upon the production of
-vegetables in the Petersburg district. It was a practical question upon
-which feeling ran high. Here speakers arose in the body of the hall,
-discharging brief utterances for a minute or so and subsiding again.
-There were shouts and interruptions. The debate was much more like a big
-labour mass meeting in the Queen’s Hall than anything that a Western
-European would recognise as a legislature.
-
-This business disposed of, a still more extraordinary thing happened. We
-who sat behind the rostrum poured down into the already very crowded
-body of the hall and got such seats as we could find, and a white sheet
-was lowered behind the president’s seat. At the same time a band
-appeared in the gallery to the left. A five-part cinematograph film was
-then run, showing the Baku Conference to which I have already alluded.
-The pictures were viewed with interest but without any violent applause.
-And at the end the band played the _Internationale_, and the audience—I
-beg its pardon!—the Petersburg Soviet dispersed singing that popular
-chant. It was in fact a mass meeting incapable of any real legislative
-activities; capable at the utmost of endorsing or not endorsing the
-Government in control of the platform. Compared with the British
-Parliament it has about as much organisation, structure, and working
-efficiency as a big bagful of miscellaneous wheels might have beside an
-old-fashioned and inaccurate but still going clock.
-
-
-
-
- VI
- THE DREAMER IN THE KREMLIN
-
-
-My chief purpose in going from Petersburg to Moscow was to see and talk
-to Lenin. I was very curious to see him, and I was disposed to be
-hostile to him. I encountered a personality entirely different from
-anything I had expected to meet.
-
-Lenin is not a writer; his published work does not express him. The
-shrill little pamphlets and papers issued from Moscow in his name, full
-of misconceptions of the labour psychology of the West and obstinately
-defensive of the impossible proposition that it is the prophesied
-Marxist social revolution which has happened in Russia, display hardly
-anything of the real Lenin mentality as I encountered it. Occasionally
-there are gleams of an inspired shrewdness, but for the rest these
-publications do no more than rehearse the set ideas and phrases of
-doctrinaire Marxism. Perhaps that is necessary. That may be the only
-language Communism understands; a break into a new dialect would be
-disturbing and demoralising. Left Communism is the backbone of Russia
-to-day; unhappily it is a backbone without flexible joints, a backbone
-that can be bent only with the utmost difficulty and which must be bent
-by means of flattery and deference.
-
-Moscow under the bright October sunshine, amidst the fluttering yellow
-leaves, impressed us as being altogether more lax and animated than
-Petersburg. There is much more movement of people, more trading, and a
-comparative plenty of droshkys. Markets are open. There is not the same
-general ruination of streets and houses. There are, it is true, many
-traces of the desperate street fighting of early 1918. One of the domes
-of that absurd cathedral of St. Basil just outside the Kremlin gate was
-smashed by a shell and still awaits repair. The tramcars we found were
-not carrying passengers; they were being used for the transport of
-supplies of food and fuel. In these matters Petersburg claims to be
-better prepared than Moscow.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE PETERSBURG SOVIET IN SESSION.
- Lenin at the rostrum; below him are the women stenographers;
- immediately behind him is Zenovieff and the President.
- Behind these again are officials and ministerial persons, official
- visitors and the like.
-]
-
-The ten thousand crosses of Moscow still glitter in the afternoon light.
-On one conspicuous pinnacle of the Kremlin the imperial eagles spread
-their wings; the Bolshevik Government has been too busy or too
-indifferent to pull them down. The churches are open, the kissing of
-ikons is a flourishing industry, and beggars still woo casual charity at
-the doors. The celebrated miraculous shrine of the Iberian Madonna
-outside the Redeemer Gate was particularly busy. There were many peasant
-women, unable to get into the little chapel, kissing the stones outside.
-
-Just opposite to it, on a plaster panel on a house front, is that now
-celebrated inscription put up by one of the early revolutionary
-administrations in Moscow: “Religion is the Opium of the People.” The
-effect this inscription produces is greatly reduced by the fact that in
-Russia the people cannot read.
-
-About that inscription I had a slight but amusing argument with Mr.
-Vanderlip, the American financier, who was lodged in the same guest
-house as ourselves. He wanted to have it effaced. I was for retaining it
-as being historically interesting, and because I think that religious
-toleration should extend to atheists. But Mr. Vanderlip felt too
-strongly to see the point of that.
-
-The Moscow Guest House, which we shared with Mr. Vanderlip and an
-adventurous English artist who had somehow got through to Moscow to
-execute busts of Lenin and Trotsky, was a big, richly-furnished house
-upon the Sofiskaya Naberezhnaya (No. 17), directly facing the great wall
-of the Kremlin and all the clustering domes and pinnacles of that
-imperial inner city. We felt much less free and more secluded here than
-in Petersburg. There were sentinels at the gates to protect us from
-casual visitors, whereas in Petersburg all sorts of unauthorised persons
-could and did stray in to talk to me. Mr. Vanderlip had been staying
-here, I gathered, for some weeks, and proposed to stay some weeks more.
-He was without valet, secretary, or interpreter. He did not discuss his
-business with me beyond telling me rather carefully once or twice that
-it was strictly financial and commercial and in no sense political. I
-was told that he had brought credentials from Senator Harding to Lenin,
-but I am temperamentally incurious and I made no attempt whatever to
-verify this statement or to pry into Mr. Vanderlip’s affairs. I did not
-even ask how it could be possible to conduct business or financial
-operations in a Communist State with anyone but the Government, nor how
-it was possible to deal with a Government upon strictly nonpolitical
-lines. These were, I admitted, mysteries beyond my understanding. But we
-ate, smoked, drank our coffee and conversed together in an atmosphere of
-profound discretion. By not mentioning Mr. Vanderlip’s “mission,” we
-made it a portentous, omnipresent fact.
-
-The arrangements leading up to my meeting with Lenin were tedious and
-irritating, but at last I found myself under way for the Kremlin in the
-company of Mr. Rothstein, formerly a figure in London Communist circles,
-and an American comrade with a large camera who was also, I gathered, an
-official of the Russian Foreign Office.
-
-The Kremlin as I remembered it in 1914 was a very open place, open much
-as Windsor Castle is, with a thin trickle of pilgrims and tourists in
-groups and couples flowing through it. But now it is closed up and
-difficult of access. There was a great pother with passes and permits
-before we could get through even the outer gates. And we filtered and
-inspected through five or six rooms of clerks and sentinels before we
-got into the presence. This may be necessary for the personal security
-of Lenin, but it puts him out of reach of Russia, and, what perhaps is
-more serious, if there is to be an effectual dictatorship, it puts
-Russia out of his reach. If things must filter up to him, they must also
-filter down, and they may undergo very considerable changes in the
-process.
-
-We got to Lenin at last and found him, a little figure at a great desk
-in a well-lit room that looked out upon palatial spaces. I thought his
-desk was rather in a litter. I sat down on a chair at a corner of the
-desk, and the little man—his feet scarcely touch the ground as he sits
-on the edge of his chair—twisted round to talk to me, putting his arms
-round and over a pile of papers. He spoke excellent English, but it was,
-I thought, rather characteristic of the present condition of Russian
-affairs that Mr. Rothstein chaperoned the conversation, occasionally
-offering footnotes and other assistance. Meanwhile the American got to
-work with his camera, and unobtrusively but persistently exposed plates.
-The talk, however, was too interesting for that to be an annoyance. One
-forgot about that clicking and shifting about quite soon.
-
-I had come expecting to struggle with a doctrinaire Marxist. I found
-nothing of the sort. I had been told that Lenin lectured people; he
-certainly did not do so on this occasion. Much has been made of his
-laugh in the descriptions, a laugh which is said to be pleasing at first
-and afterwards to become cynical. This laugh was not in evidence. His
-forehead reminded me of someone else—I could not remember who it was,
-until the other evening I saw Mr. Arthur Balfour sitting and talking
-under a shaded light. It is exactly the same domed, slightly one-sided
-cranium. Lenin has a pleasant, quick-changing, brownish face, with a
-lively smile and a habit (due perhaps to some defect in focussing) of
-screwing up one eye as he pauses in his talk; he is not very like the
-photographs you see of him because he is one of those people whose
-change of expression is more important than their features; he
-gesticulated a little with his hands over the heaped papers as he
-talked, and he talked quickly, very keen on his subject, without any
-posing or pretences or reservations, as a good type of scientific man
-will talk.
-
-Our talk was threaded throughout and held together by two—what shall I
-call them?—_motifs_. One was from me to him: “What do you think you are
-making of Russia? What is the state you are trying to create?” The other
-was from him to me: ‘Why does not the social revolution begin in
-England? Why do you not work for the social revolution? Why are you not
-destroying Capitalism and establishing the Communist State?” These
-_motifs_ interwove, reacted on each other, illuminated each other. The
-second brought back the first: “But what are you making of the social
-revolution? Are you making a success of it?” And from that we got back
-to two again with: “To make it a success the Western world must join in.
-Why doesn’t it?”
-
-In the days before 1918 all the Marxist world thought of the social
-revolution as an end. The workers of the world were to unite, overthrow
-Capitalism, and be happy ever afterwards. But in 1918 the Communists, to
-their own surprise, found themselves in control of Russia and challenged
-to produce their millennium. They have a colourable excuse for a delay
-in the production of a new and better social order in their continuation
-of war conditions, in the blockade and so forth, nevertheless it is
-clear that they begin to realise the tremendous unpreparedness which the
-Marxist methods of thought involve. A hundred points—I have already put
-a finger upon one or two of them—they do not know what to do. But the
-commonplace Communist simply loses his temper if you venture to doubt
-whether everything is being done in precisely the best and most
-intelligent way under the new _régime_. He is like a tetchy housewife
-who wants you to recognise that everything is in perfect order in the
-middle of an eviction. He is like one of those now forgotten
-suffragettes who used to promise us an earthly paradise as soon as we
-escaped from the tyranny of “man-made laws.” Lenin, on the other hand,
-whose frankness must at times leave his disciples breathless, has
-recently stripped off the last pretence that the Russian revolution is
-anything more than the inauguration of an age of limitless experiment.
-“Those who are engaged in the formidable task of overcoming capitalism,”
-he has recently written, “must be prepared to try method after method
-until they find the one which answers their purpose best.”
-
-We opened our talk with a discussion of the future of the great towns
-under Communism. I wanted to see how far Lenin contemplated the dying
-out of the towns in Russia. The desolation of Petersburg had brought
-home to me a point I had never realised before, that the whole form and
-arrangement of a town is determined by shopping and marketing, and that
-the abolition of these things renders nine-tenths of the buildings in an
-ordinary town directly or indirectly unmeaning and useless. “The towns
-will get very much smaller,” he admitted. “They will be different. Yes,
-quite different.” That, I suggested, implied a tremendous task. It meant
-the scrapping of the existing towns and their replacement. The churches
-and great buildings of Petersburg would become presently like those of
-Novgorod the Great or like the temples of Paestum. Most of the town
-would dissolve away. He agreed quite cheerfully. I think it warmed his
-heart to find someone who understood a necessary consequence of
-collectivism that many even of his own people fail to grasp. Russia has
-to be rebuilt fundamentally, has to become a new thing....
-
-And industry has to be reconstructed—as fundamentally?
-
-Did I realise what was already in hand with Russia? The electrification
-of Russia?
-
-For Lenin, who like a good orthodox Marxist denounces all “Utopians,”
-has succumbed at last to a Utopia, the Utopia of the electricians. He is
-throwing all his weight into a scheme for the development of great power
-stations in Russia to serve whole provinces with light, with transport,
-and industrial power. Two experimental districts he said had already
-been electrified. Can one imagine a more courageous project in a vast
-flat land of forests and illiterate peasants, with no water power, with
-no technical skill available, and with trade and industry at the last
-gasp? Projects for such an electrification are in process of development
-in Holland and they have been discussed in England, and in those
-densely-populated and industrially highly-developed centres one can
-imagine them as successful, economical, and altogether beneficial. But
-their application to Russia is an altogether greater strain upon the
-constructive imagination. I cannot see anything of the sort happening in
-this dark crystal of Russia, but this little man at the Kremlin can; he
-sees the decaying railways replaced by a new electric transport, sees
-new roadways spreading throughout the land, sees a new and happier
-Communist industrialism arising again. While I talked to him he almost
-persuaded me to share his vision.
-
-“And you will go on to these things with the peasants rooted in your
-soil?”
-
-But not only are the towns to be rebuilt; every agricultural landmark is
-to go.
-
-“Even now,” said Lenin, “all the agricultural production of Russia is
-not peasant production. We have, in places, large scale agriculture. The
-Government is already running big estates with workers instead of
-peasants, where conditions are favourable. That can spread. It can be
-extended first to one province, then another. The peasants in the other
-provinces, selfish and illiterate, will not know what is happening until
-their turn comes....”
-
-It may be difficult to defeat the Russian peasant _en masse_; but in
-detail there is no difficulty at all. At the mention of the peasant
-Lenin’s head came nearer to mine; his manner became confidential. As if
-after all the peasant _might_ overhear.
-
-It is not only the material organisation of society you have to build, I
-argued, it is the mentality of a whole people. The Russian people are by
-habit and tradition traders and individualists; their very souls must be
-remoulded if this new world is to be achieved. Lenin asked me what I had
-seen of the educational work afoot. I praised some of the things I had
-seen. He nodded and smiled with pleasure. He has an unshaken confidence
-in his work.
-
-“But these are only sketches and beginnings,” I said.
-
-“Come back and see what we have done in Russia in ten years’ time,” he
-answered.
-
-In him I realised that Communism could after all, in spite of Marx, be
-enormously creative. After the tiresome class-war fanatics I had been
-encountering among the Communists, men of formulæ as sterile as flints,
-after numerous experiences of the trained and empty conceit of the
-common Marxist devotee, this amazing little man, with his frank
-admission of the immensity and complication of the project of Communism
-and his simple concentration upon its realisation, was very refreshing.
-He at least has a vision of a world changed over and planned and built
-afresh.
-
-He wanted more of my Russian impressions. I told him that I thought that
-in many directions, and more particularly in the Petersburg Commune,
-Communism was pressing too hard and too fast, and destroying before it
-was ready to rebuild. They had broken down trading before they were
-ready to ration; the co-operative organisation had been smashed up
-instead of being utilised, and so on. That brought us to our essential
-difference, the difference of the Collectivist and Marxist, the question
-whether the social revolution is, in its extremity, necessary, whether
-it is necessary to overthrow one social and economic system completely
-before the new one can begin. I believe that through a vast sustained
-educational campaign the existing Capitalist system could be _civilised_
-into a Collectivist world system; Lenin on the other hand tied himself
-years ago to the Marxist dogmas of the inevitable class war, the
-downfall of Capitalist order as a prelude to reconstruction, the
-proletarian dictatorship, and so forth. He had to argue, therefore, that
-modern Capitalism is incurably predatory, wasteful, and unteachable, and
-that until it is destroyed it will continue to exploit the human
-heritage stupidly and aimlessly, that it will fight against and prevent
-any administration of national resources for the general good, and that
-it will inevitably make wars.
-
-I had, I will confess, a very uphill argument. He suddenly produced
-Chiozza Money’s new book, _The Triumph of Nationalisation_, which he had
-evidently been reading very carefully. “But you see directly you begin
-to have a good working collectivist organisation of any public interest,
-the Capitalists smash it up again. They smashed your national shipyards;
-they won’t let you work your coal economically.” He tapped the book. “It
-is all here.”
-
-And against my argument that wars sprang from nationalist imperialism
-and not from a Capitalist organisation of society he suddenly brought:
-“But what do you think of this new Republican Imperialism that comes to
-us from America?”
-
-Here Mr. Rothstein intervened in Russian with an objection that Lenin
-swept aside.
-
-And regardless of Mr. Rothstein’s plea for diplomatic reserve, Lenin
-proceeded to explain the projects with which one American at least was
-seeking to dazzle the imagination of Moscow. There was to be economic
-assistance for Russia and recognition of the Bolshevik Government. There
-was to be a defensive alliance against Japanese aggression in Siberia.
-There was to be an American naval station on the coast of Asia, and
-leases for long terms of sixty or fifty years of the natural resources
-of Khamchatka and possibly of other large regions of Russian Asia. Well,
-did I think that made for peace? Was it anything more than the beginning
-of a new world scramble? How would the British Imperialists like this
-sort of thing?
-
-[Illustration:
-
- LENIN.
- Behind him stands Gorky: to the right of Gorky (_i.e._ on his left)
- are Zorin (_hat_) and Zenovieff. Behind with cigarette is Radek.
-]
-
-But some industrial power had to come in and help Russia, I said. She
-cannot reconstruct now without such help....
-
-Our multifarious argumentation ended indecisively. We parted warmly, and
-I and my companion were filtered out of the Kremlin through one barrier
-after another in much the same fashion as we had been filtered in.
-
-“He is wonderful,” said Mr. Rothstein. “But it was an indiscretion——”
-
-I was not disposed to talk as we made our way, under the glowing trees
-that grow in the ancient moat of the Kremlin, back to our Guest House. I
-wanted to think Lenin over while I had him fresh in my mind, and I did
-not want to be assisted by the expositions of my companion. But Mr.
-Rothstein kept on talking.
-
-He was still pressing me not to mention this little sketch of the
-Russian American outlook to Mr. Vanderlip long after I assured him that
-I respected Mr. Vanderlip’s veil of discretion far too much to pierce it
-by any careless word.
-
-And so back to No. 17 Sofiskaya Naberezhnaya, and lunch with Mr.
-Vanderlip and the young sculptor from London. The old servant of the
-house waited on us, mournfully conscious of the meagreness of our
-entertainment and reminiscent of the great days of the past when Caruso
-had been a guest and had sung to all that was brilliant in Moscow in the
-room upstairs. Mr. Vanderlip was for visiting the big market that
-afternoon—and later going to the Ballet, but my son and I were set upon
-returning to Petersburg that night and so getting on to Reval in time
-for the Stockholm boat.
-
-
-
-
- VII
- THE ENVOY
-
-
-In these seven papers I have written in the first person and in a
-familiar style because I did not want the reader to lose sight for a
-moment of the shortness of our visit to Russia and of my personal
-limitations. Now in conclusion, if the reader will have patience with me
-for a few final words, I would like in less personal terms and very
-plainly to set down my main convictions about the Russian situation.
-They are very strong convictions, and they concern not merely Russia but
-the whole present outlook of our civilisation. They are merely one man’s
-opinion, but as I feel them strongly, so I put them without weakening
-qualifications.
-
-First, then, Russia, which was a modern civilisation of the Western
-type, least disciplined and most ramshackle of all the Great Powers, is
-now a modern civilisation _in extremis_. The direct cause of its
-downfall has been modern war leading to physical exhaustion. Only
-through that could the Bolsheviki have secured power. Nothing like this
-Russian downfall has ever happened before. If it goes on for a year or
-so more the process of collapse will be complete. Nothing will be left
-of Russia but a country of peasants; the towns will be practically
-deserted and in ruins, the railways will be rusting in disuse. With the
-railways will go the last vestiges of any general government. The
-peasants are absolutely illiterate and collectively stupid, capable of
-resisting interference but incapable of comprehensive foresight and
-organisation. They will become a sort of human swamp in a state of
-division, petty civil war, and political squalour, with a famine
-whenever the harvests are bad; and they will be breeding epidemics for
-the rest of Europe. They will lapse towards Asia.
-
-The collapse of the civilised system in Russia into peasant barbarism
-means that Europe will be cut off for many years from all the mineral
-wealth of Russia, and from any supply of raw products from this area,
-from its corn, flax, and the like. It is an open question whether the
-Western Powers can get along without these supplies. Their cessation
-certainly means a general impoverishment of Western Europe.
-
-The only possible Government that can stave off such a final collapse of
-Russia now is the present Bolshevik Government, if it can be assisted by
-America and the Western Powers. There is now no alternative to that
-Government possible. There are of course a multitude of
-antagonists—adventurers and the like—ready, with European assistance, to
-attempt the overthrow of that Bolshevik Government, but there are no
-signs of any common purpose and moral unity capable of replacing it. And
-moreover there is no time now for another revolution in Russia. A year
-more of civil war will make the final sinking of Russia out of
-civilisation inevitable. We have to make what we can, therefore, of the
-Bolshevik Government, whether we like it or not.
-
-The Bolshevik Government is inexperienced and incapable to an extreme
-degree; it has had phases of violence and cruelty; but it is on the
-whole honest. And it includes a few individuals of real creative
-imagination and power, who may with opportunity, if their hands are
-strengthened, achieve great reconstructions. The Bolshevik Government
-seems on the whole to be trying to act up to its professions, which are
-still held by most of its supporters with a quite religious passion.
-Given generous help, it may succeed in establishing a new social order
-in Russia of a civilised type with which the rest of the world will be
-able to deal. It will probably be a mitigated Communism, with a
-large-scale handling of transport, industry, and (later) agriculture.
-
-It is necessary that we should understand and respect the professions
-and principles of the Bolsheviki if we Western peoples are to be of any
-effectual service to humanity in Russia. Hitherto these professions and
-principles have been ignored in the most extraordinary way by the
-Western Governments. The Bolshevik Government is, and says it is, a
-Communist Government. And it means this, and will make this the standard
-of its conduct. It has suppressed private ownership and private trade in
-Russia, not as an act of expediency but as an act of right; and in all
-Russia there remain now no commercial individuals and bodies with whom
-we can deal who will respect the conventions and usages of Western
-commercial life. The Bolshevik Government, we have to understand, has,
-by its nature, an invincible prejudice against individual business men;
-it will not treat them in a manner that they will consider fair and
-honourable; it will distrust them and, as far as it can, put them at the
-completest disadvantage. It regards them as pirates—or at best as
-privateers. It is hopeless and impossible therefore for individual
-persons and firms to think of going into Russia to trade. There is only
-one being in Russia with whom the Western world can deal, and that is
-the Bolshevik Government itself, and there is no way of dealing with
-that one being safely and effectually except through some national or,
-better, some international Trust. This latter body, which might
-represent some single Power or group of Powers, or which might even have
-some titular connection with the League of Nations, would be able to
-deal with the Bolshevik Government on equal terms. It would have to
-recognise the Bolshevik Government and, in conjunction with it, to set
-about the now urgent task of the material restoration of civilised life
-in European and Asiatic Russia. It should resemble in its general nature
-one of the big buying and controlling trusts that were so necessary and
-effectual in the European States during the Great War. It should deal
-with its individual producers on the one hand, and the Bolshevik
-Government would deal with its own population on the other. Such a Trust
-could speedily make itself indispensable to the Bolshevik Government.
-This indeed is the only way in which a capitalist State can hold
-commerce with a Communist State. The attempts that have been made during
-the past year and more to devise some method of private trading in
-Russia without recognition of the Bolshevik Government were from the
-outset as hopeless as the search for the North-West passage from England
-to India. The channels are frozen up.
-
-Any country or group of countries with adequate industrial resources
-which goes into Bolshevik Russia with recognition and help will
-necessarily become the supporter, the right hand, and the consultant of
-the Bolshevik Government. It will react upon that Government and be
-reacted upon. It will probably become more collectivist in its methods,
-and, on the other hand, the rigours of extreme Communism in Russia will
-probably be greatly tempered through its influence.
-
-The only Power capable of playing this _rôle_ of eleventh-hour helper to
-Russia single-handed is the United States of America. Other Powers than
-the United States will, in the present phase of world-exhaustion, need
-to combine before they can be of any effective use to Russia. Big
-business is by no means antipathetic to Communism. The larger big
-business grows the more it approximates to Collectivism. It is the upper
-road of the few instead of the lower road of the masses to Collectivism.
-
-The only alternative to such a helpful intervention in Bolshevik Russia
-is, I firmly believe, the final collapse of all that remains of modern
-civilisation throughout what was formerly the Russian Empire. It is
-highly improbable that the collapse will be limited to its boundaries.
-Both eastward and westward other great regions may, one after another,
-tumble into the big hole in civilisation thus created. Possibly all
-modern civilisation may tumble in.
-
-These propositions do not refer to any hypothetical future; they are an
-attempt to state the outline facts and possibilities of what is going
-on—and going on with great rapidity—in Russia and in the world generally
-now, as they present themselves to my mind. This in general terms is the
-frame of circumstance in which I would have the sketches of Russia that
-have preceded this set and read. So it is I interpret the writing on the
-Eastern wall of Europe.
-
-
- THE END
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
-
-
- 1. Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
- 2. Retained anachronistic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as
- printed.
- 3. Footnotes have been re-indexed using numbers.
- 4. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Russia in the Shadows, by
-H. G. (Herbert George) Wells
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RUSSIA IN THE SHADOWS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 60173-0.txt or 60173-0.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/6/0/1/7/60173/
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/60173-0.zip b/old/60173-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 4f042f9..0000000
--- a/old/60173-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60173-h.zip b/old/60173-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index a42f3b1..0000000
--- a/old/60173-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60173-h/60173-h.htm b/old/60173-h/60173-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index c9d9aee..0000000
--- a/old/60173-h/60173-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,4124 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
- <title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Russia in the Shadows, by H. G. Wells</title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css">
- body { margin-left: 8%; margin-right: 10%; }
- h1 { text-align: center; font-weight: bold; font-size: xx-large; }
- h2 { text-align: center; font-weight: bold; font-size: x-large; }
- .pageno { right: 1%; font-size: x-small; background-color: inherit; color: silver;
- text-indent: 0em; text-align: right; position: absolute;
- border: thin solid silver; padding: .1em .2em; font-style: normal;
- font-variant: normal; font-weight: normal; text-decoration: none; }
- p { text-indent: 0; margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; text-align: justify; }
- sup { vertical-align: top; font-size: 0.6em; }
- .sc { font-variant: small-caps; }
- .large { font-size: large; }
- .small { font-size: small; }
- .ol_1 li {padding-left: 1em; text-indent: -1em; }
- ol.ol_1 {padding-left: 0; margin-left: 2.78%; margin-top: .5em;
- margin-bottom: .5em; list-style-type: decimal; }
- div.footnote > :first-child { margin-top: 1em; }
- div.footnote p { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: 0.25em; margin-bottom: 0.25em; }
- div.pbb { page-break-before: always; }
- hr.pb { border: none; border-bottom: thin solid; margin-bottom: 1em; }
- @media handheld { hr.pb { display: none; } }
- .chapter { clear: both; page-break-before: always; }
- .figcenter { clear: both; max-width: 100%; margin: 2em auto; text-align: center; }
- div.figcenter p { text-align: center; text-indent: 0; }
- .figcenter img { max-width: 100%; height: auto; }
- .id001 { width:30%; }
- .id002 { width:60%; }
- @media handheld { .id001 { margin-left:35%; width:30%; } }
- @media handheld { .id002 { margin-left:20%; width:60%; } }
- .ic001 { width:100%; }
- div.ic001 p { text-align:left; }
- .ig001 { width:100%; }
- .table0 { margin: auto; margin-top: 2em; }
- .nf-center { text-align: center; }
- .nf-center-c0 { text-align: left; margin: 0.5em 0; }
- p.drop-capa0_0_6 { text-indent: -0em; }
- p.drop-capa0_0_6:first-letter { float: left; margin: 0.100em 0.100em 0em 0em;
- font-size: 250%; line-height: 0.6em; text-indent: 0; }
- @media handheld {
- p.drop-capa0_0_6 { text-indent: 0; }
- p.drop-capa0_0_6:first-letter { float: none; margin: 0; font-size: 100%; }
- }
- .c000 { margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
- .c001 { margin-top: 4em; }
- .c002 { margin-top: 1em; }
- .c003 { page-break-before: always; margin-top: 4em; }
- .c004 { margin-top: 2em; }
- .c005 { page-break-before:auto; margin-top: 4em; }
- .c006 { vertical-align: top; text-align: right; padding-right: 1em; }
- .c007 { vertical-align: top; text-align: left; text-indent: -1em;
- padding-left: 1em; padding-right: 1em; }
- .c008 { vertical-align: bottom; text-align: right; }
- .c009 { margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 0.25em; }
- .c010 { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: 0.25em; margin-bottom: 0.25em; }
- .c011 { text-decoration: none; }
- div.tnotes { padding-left:1em;padding-right:1em;background-color:#E3E4FA;
- border:1px solid silver; margin:2em 10% 0 10%; font-family: Georgia, serif;
- }
- .covernote { visibility: hidden; display: none; }
- div.tnotes p { text-align:left; }
- @media handheld { .covernote { visibility: visible; display: block;} }
- .section { clear: both; page-break-before: always; }
- .ol_1 li {font-size: .9em; }
- @media handheld {.ol_1 li {padding-left: 1em; text-indent: 0em; } }
- body {font-family: Georgia, serif; text-align: justify; }
- table {font-size: .9em; }
- .footnote {font-size: .9em; }
- div.footnote p {text-indent: 2em; margin-bottom: .5em; }
- .figcenter {font-size: .9em; }
- div.titlepage {text-align: center; page-break-before: always;
- page-break-after: always; }
- div.titlepage p {text-align: center; text-indent: 0em; font-weight: bold;
- line-height: 1.5; margin-top: 3em; }
- .ph1 { text-indent: 0em; font-weight: bold; font-size: xx-large;
- margin: .67em auto; page-break-before: always; }
- .right {text-align: center; display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: 0em;
- width: 50%; }
- </style>
- </head>
- <body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's Russia in the Shadows, by H. G. (Herbert George) Wells
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Russia in the Shadows
-
-Author: H. G. (Herbert George) Wells
-
-Release Date: August 26, 2019 [EBook #60173]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RUSSIA IN THE SHADOWS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-
-<p class='c000'><b>Transcriber’s Note:</b></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='section ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>RUSSIA</div>
- <div>IN THE SHADOWS</div>
- <div class='c002'>H. G. WELLS</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div id='Frontispiece' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_frontispiece.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>STREET SCENERY IN PETERSBURG:<br />SITE OF A DEMOLISHED WOODEN HOUSE<br /><span class='right'><em>Frontispiece</em>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='titlepage'>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c003'>RUSSIA IN THE SHADOWS</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>BY</div>
- <div><span class='large'>H. G. WELLS</span></div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='small'>AUTHOR OF “THE OUTLINE OF HISTORY,” “MR. BRITLING SEES IT THROUGH,” ETC., ETC.</span></div>
- <div class='c004'>ILLUSTRATED</div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='large'>NEW <img src='images/title.jpg' width='60' alt='' /> YORK</span></div>
- <div><span class='large'>GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>COPYRIGHT, 1921,</div>
- <div>BY GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY</div>
- <div class='c004'>PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary='CONTENTS'>
- <tr>
- <th class='c006'><span class='small'>CHAPTER</span></th>
- <th class='c007'>&nbsp;</th>
- <th class='c008'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></th>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>I</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Petersburg in Collapse</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_15'>15</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>II</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Drift and Salvage</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_41'>41</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>III</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Quintessence of Bolshevism</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_71'>71</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>IV</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Creative Effort in Russia</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_105'>105</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>V</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Petersburg Soviet: A Legislative Mass Meeting</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_135'>135</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>VI</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Dreamer in the Kremlin</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_145'>145</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>VII</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Envoy</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_171'>171</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary='ILLUSTRATIONS'>
- <tr>
- <th class='c006'><span class='small'>PLATE</span></th>
- <th class='c007'>&nbsp;</th>
- <th class='c008'>&nbsp;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>I</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Street Scenery in Petersburg: Site of Demolished Wooden House</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><em><a href='#Frontispiece'>Frontispiece</a></em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='c006'></th>
- <th class='c007'>&nbsp;</th>
- <th class='c008'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></th>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>II</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Street Scenery in Petersburg</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_24'>24</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mr. Wells Discovers a Street under Repair</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_24'>24</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>III</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>A Petersburg Street Car En Route</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_33'>33</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Messrs. Lenin and Wells in Conversation</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_33'>33</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>IV</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Gorky in the Great Dump of Art and Virtuosity in Petersburg</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_56'>56</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>V</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Statue of Marx outside the Smolny Institute (Headquarters of the Communist Party)</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_73'>73</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>VI</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Baku Conference Swears Undying Hostility to Capitalism and British Imperialism: Zenovieff, Radek and Bela Kun</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_92'>92</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>VII</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Baku Conference Swears Undying Hostility to Capitalism and British Imperialism: The Body of the Hall</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_93'>93</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_viii'>viii</span>VIII</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Proletarians of Asia à la Baku</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_112'>112</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>IX</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Guests at the Home of Rest for Workmen on the Kamenni Ostrof</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_129'>129</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>X</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Petersburg Soviet in Session: Lenin at the Rostrum, Zenovieff and the President, Officials and Official Visitors</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_148'>148</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>XI</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Lenin, Gorky, Zorin, Zenovieff and Radek</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_165'>165</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='section ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>RUSSIA IN THE SHADOWS</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>I<br /> <span class='large'>PETERSBURG IN COLLAPSE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>In January 1914 I visited Petersburg and
-Moscow for a couple of weeks; in September
-1920 I was asked to repeat this visit
-by Mr. Kameney, of the Russian Trade
-Delegation in London. I snatched at this
-suggestion, and went to Russia at the end
-of September with my son, who speaks a
-little Russian. We spent a fortnight and a
-day in Russia, passing most of our time in
-Petersburg, where we went about freely by
-ourselves, and were shown nearly everything
-we asked to see. We visited Moscow, and
-I had a long conversation with Mr. Lenin,
-which I shall relate. In Petersburg I did
-not stay at the Hotel International, to which
-foreign visitors are usually sent, but with my
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>old friend, Maxim Gorky. The guide and
-interpreter assigned to assist us was a lady
-I had met in Russia in 1914, the niece of
-a former Russian Ambassador to London.
-She was educated at Newnham, she has
-been imprisoned five times by the Bolshevist
-Government, she is not allowed to leave
-Petersburg because of an attempt to cross
-the frontier to her children in Esthonia,
-and she was, therefore, the last person likely
-to lend herself to any attempt to hoodwink
-me. I mention this because on every hand
-at home and in Russia I had been told that
-the most elaborate camouflage of realities
-would go on, and that I should be kept in
-blinkers throughout my visit.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>As a matter of fact, the harsh and terrible
-realities of the situation in Russia cannot
-be camouflaged. In the case of special delegations,
-perhaps, a certain distracting tumult
-of receptions, bands, and speeches may
-be possible, and may be attempted. But it is
-hardly possible to dress up two large cities
-for the benefit of two stray visitors, wandering
-observantly often in different directions.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>Naturally, when one demands to see a school
-or a prison one is not shown the worst. Any
-country would in the circumstances show the
-best it had, and Soviet Russia is no exception.
-One can allow for that.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Our dominant impression of things Russian
-is an impression of a vast irreparable
-breakdown. The great monarchy that was
-here in 1914 and the administrative, social,
-financial, and commercial systems connected
-with it have, under the strains of six years
-of incessant war, fallen down and smashed
-utterly. Never in all history has there been
-so great a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">débâcle</span></i> before. The fact of the
-Revolution is, to our minds, altogether
-dwarfed by the fact of this downfall. By
-its own inherent rottenness and by the
-thrusts and strains of aggressive imperialism
-the Russian part of the old civilised
-world that existed before 1914 fell, and is
-now gone. The peasant, who was the base
-of the old pyramid, remains upon the land,
-living very much as he has always lived.
-Everything else is broken down, or is breaking
-down. Amid this vast disorganisation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>an emergency Government, supported by a
-disciplined party of perhaps 150,000 adherents—the
-Communist Party—has taken
-control. It has—at the price of much shooting—suppressed
-brigandage, established a
-sort of order and security in the exhausted
-towns, and set up a crude rationing system.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>It is, I would say at once, the only possible
-Government in Russia at the present
-time. It is the only idea, it supplies the
-only solidarity, left in Russia. But it is a
-secondary fact. The dominant fact for the
-Western reader, the threatening and disconcerting
-fact, is that a social and economic
-system very like our own and intimately connected
-with our own has crashed.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Nowhere in all Russia is the fact of that
-crash so completely evident as it is in Petersburg.
-Petersburg was the artificial creation
-of Peter the Great; his bronze statue in
-the little garden near the Admiralty still
-prances amid the ebbing life of the city.
-Its palaces are still and empty, or strangely
-refurnished with the typewriters and tables
-and plank partitions of a new Administration
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>which is engaged chiefly in a strenuous
-struggle against famine and the foreign invader.
-Its streets were streets of busy shops.
-In 1914 I loafed agreeably in the Petersburg
-streets—buying little articles and
-watching the abundant traffic. All these
-shops have ceased. There are perhaps half
-a dozen shops still open in Petersburg.
-There is a Government crockery shop where
-I bought a plate or so as a souvenir, for
-seven or eight hundred roubles each, and
-there are a few flower shops. It is a wonderful
-fact, I think, that in this city, in which
-most of the shrinking population is already
-nearly starving, and hardly any one possesses
-a second suit of clothes or more than
-a single change of worn and patched linen,
-flowers can be and are still bought and sold.
-For five thousand roubles, which is about
-six and eightpence at the current rate of
-exchange, one can get a very pleasing bunch
-of big chrysanthemums.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>I do not know if the words “all the shops
-have ceased” convey any picture to the
-Western reader of what a street looks like
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>in Russia. It is not like Bond Street or
-Piccadilly on a Sunday, with the blinds neatly
-drawn down in a decorous sleep, and
-ready to wake up and begin again on Monday.
-The shops have an utterly wretched
-and abandoned look; paint is peeling off,
-windows are cracked, some are broken and
-boarded up, some still display a few flyblown
-relics of stock in the window, some
-have their windows covered with notices;
-the windows are growing dim, the fixtures
-have gathered two years’ dust. They are
-dead shops. They will never open again.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>All the great bazaar-like markets are
-closed, too, in Petersburg now, in the desperate
-struggle to keep a public control of
-necessities and prevent the profiteer driving
-up the last vestiges of food to incredible
-prices. And this cessation of shops makes
-walking about the streets seem a silly sort
-of thing to do. Nobody “walks about” any
-more. One realises that a modern city is
-really nothing but long alleys of shops and
-restaurants and the like. Shut them up, and
-the meaning of a street has disappeared.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>People hurry past—a thin traffic compared
-with my memories of 1914. The electric
-street cars are still running and busy—until
-six o’clock. They are the only means of
-locomotion for ordinary people remaining
-in town—the last legacy of capitalist enterprise.
-They became free while we were in
-Petersburg. Previously there had been a
-charge of two or three roubles—the hundredth
-part of the price of an egg. Freeing
-them made little difference in their extreme
-congestion during the home-going hours.
-Every one scrambles on the tramcar. If
-there is no room inside you cluster outside.
-In the busy hours festoons of people hang
-outside by any handhold; people are frequently
-pushed off, and accidents are frequent.
-We saw a crowd collected round a
-child cut in half by a tramcar, and two people
-in the little circle in which we moved in
-Petersburg had broken their legs in tramway
-accidents.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The roads along which these tramcars run
-are in a frightful condition. They have not
-been repaired for three or four years; they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>are full of holes like shell-holes, often two
-or three feet deep. Frost has eaten out
-great cavities, drains have collapsed, and
-people have torn up the wood pavement for
-fires. Only once did we see any attempt to
-repair the streets in Petrograd. In a side
-street some mysterious agency had collected
-a load of wood blocks and two barrels of
-tar. Most of our longer journeys about the
-town were done in official motor-cars—left
-over from the former times. A drive is an
-affair of tremendous swerves and concussions.
-These surviving motor-cars are running
-now on kerosene. They disengage
-clouds of pale blue smoke, and start up with
-a noise like a machine-gun battle. Every
-wooden house was demolished for firing last
-winter, and such masonry as there was in
-those houses remains in ruinous gaps, between
-the houses of stone.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>
-<img src='images/i_024a.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>STREET SCENERY IN PETERSBURG.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_024b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>MR. WELLS DISCOVERS A STREET UNDER REPAIR.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>Every one is shabby; every one seems to
-be carrying bundles in both Petersburg and
-Moscow. To walk into some side street in
-the twilight and see nothing but ill-clad
-figures, all hurrying, all carrying loads,
-gives one an impression as though the entire
-population was setting out in flight.
-That impression is not altogether misleading.
-The Bolshevik statistics I have seen
-are perfectly frank and honest in the matter.
-The population of Petersburg has fallen
-from 1,200,000 to a little over 700,000, and
-it is still falling. Many of the people have
-returned to peasant life in the country,
-many have gone abroad, but hardship has
-taken an enormous toll of this city. The
-death-rate in Petersburg is over 81 per
-1,000; formerly it was high among European
-cities at 22. The birth-rate of the
-underfed and profoundly depressed population
-is about 15. It was formerly about 30.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>These bundles that every one carries are
-partly the rations of food that are doled out
-by the Soviet organisation, partly they are
-the material and results of illicit trade. The
-Russian population has always been a trading
-and bargaining population. Even in
-1914 there were but few shops in Petersburg
-whose prices were really fixed prices.
-Tariffs were abominated; in Moscow taking
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>a droshky meant always a haggle, ten kopecks
-at a time. Confronted with a shortage
-of nearly every commodity, a shortage
-caused partly by the war strain,—for Russia
-has been at war continuously now for six
-years—partly by the general collapse of
-social organisation, and partly by the blockade,
-and with a currency in complete disorder,
-the only possible way to save the
-towns from a chaos of cornering, profiteering,
-starvation, and at last a mere savage
-fight for the remnants of food and common
-necessities, was some sort of collective control
-and rationing.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The Soviet Government rations on principle,
-but any Government in Russia now
-would have to ration. If the war in the
-West had lasted up to the present time London
-would be rationing too—food, clothing,
-and housing. But in Russia this has
-to be done on a basis of uncontrollable peasant
-production, with a population temperamentally
-indisciplined and self-indulgent.
-The struggle is necessarily a bitter one. The
-detected profiteer, the genuine profiteer who
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>profiteers on any considerable scale, gets
-short shrift; he is shot. Quite ordinary
-trading may be punished severely. All trading
-is called “speculation,” and is now illegal.
-But a queer street-corner trading
-in food and so forth is winked at in Petersburg,
-and quite openly practised in Moscow,
-because only by permitting this can the
-peasants be induced to bring in food.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>There is also much underground trade
-between buyers and sellers who know each
-other. Every one who can supplements his
-public rations in this way. And every railway
-station at which one stops is an open
-market. We would find a crowd of peasants
-at every stopping-place waiting to sell milk,
-eggs, apples, bread, and so forth. The passengers
-clamber down and accumulate bundles.
-An egg or an apple costs 300 roubles.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The peasants look well fed, and I doubt
-if they are very much worse off than they
-were in 1914. Probably they are better off.
-They have more land than they had, and
-they have got rid of their landlords. They
-will not help in any attempt to overthrow
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>the Soviet Government because they are
-convinced that while it endures this state
-of things will continue. This does not prevent
-their resisting whenever they can the
-attempts of the Red Guards to collect food
-at regulation prices. Insufficient forces of
-Red Guards may be attacked and massacred.
-Such incidents are magnified in the London
-Press as peasant insurrections against the
-Bolsheviks. They are nothing of the sort.
-It is just the peasants making themselves
-comfortable under the existing <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">régime</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>But every class above the peasants—including
-the official class—is now in a state of
-extreme privation. The credit and industrial
-system that produced commodities has
-broken down, and so far the attempts to
-replace it by some other form of production
-have been ineffective. So that nowhere are
-there any new things. About the only things
-that seem to be fairly well supplied are tea,
-cigarettes, and matches. Matches are more
-abundant in Russia than they were in England
-in 1917, and the Soviet State match is
-quite a good match. But such things as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>collars, ties, shoelaces, sheets and blankets,
-spoons and forks, all the haberdashery and
-crockery of life, are unattainable. There is
-no replacing a broken cup or glass except by
-a sedulous search and illegal trading. From
-Petersburg to Moscow we were given a
-sleeping car de luxe, but there were no
-water-bottles, glasses, or, indeed, any loose
-fittings. They have all gone. Most of the
-men one meets strike one at first as being
-carelessly shaven, and at first we were inclined
-to regard that as a sign of a general
-apathy, but we understood better how things
-were when a friend mentioned to my son
-quite casually that he had been using one
-safety razor blade for nearly a year.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Drugs and any medicines are equally unattainable.
-There is nothing to take for a
-cold or a headache; no packing off to bed
-with a hot-water bottle. Small ailments develop
-very easily therefore into serious
-trouble. Nearly everybody we met struck
-us as being uncomfortable and a little out
-of health. A buoyant, healthy person is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>very rare in this atmosphere of discomforts
-and petty deficiencies.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>If any one falls into a real illness the outlook
-is grim. My son paid a visit to the big
-Obuchovskaya Hospital, and he tells me
-things were very miserable there indeed.
-There was an appalling lack of every sort
-of material, and half the beds were not in
-use through the sheer impossibility of dealing
-with more patients if they came in.
-Strengthening and stimulating food is out
-of the question unless the patient’s family
-can by some miracle procure it outside and
-send it in. Operations are performed only
-on one day in the week, Dr. Federoff told
-me, when the necessary preparations can
-be made. On other days they are impossible,
-and the patient must wait.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Hardly any one in Petersburg has much
-more than a change of raiment, and in a
-great city in which there remains no means
-of communication but a few overcrowded
-tramcars,<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c011'><sup>[1]</sup></a> old, leaky, and ill-fitting boots
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>are the only footwear. At times one sees
-astonishing makeshifts by way of costume.
-The master of a school to which we paid a
-surprise visit struck me as unusually dapper.
-He was wearing a dinner suit with a
-blue serge waistcoat. Several of the distinguished
-scientific and literary men I met
-had no collars and wore neck-wraps. Gorky
-possesses only the one suit of clothes he
-wears.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c010'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. I saw one passenger steamboat on the Neva crowded
-with passengers. Usually the river was quite deserted except
-for a rare Government tug or a solitary boatman picking
-up drift timber.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'>At a gathering of literary people in
-Petersburg, Mr. Amphiteatroff, the well-known
-writer, addressed a long and bitter
-speech to me. He suffered from the usual
-delusion that I was blind and stupid and
-being hoodwinked. He was for taking off
-the respectable-looking coats of all the company
-present in order that I might see for
-myself the rags and tatters and pitiful expedients
-beneath. It was a painful and,
-so far as I was concerned, an unnecessary
-speech, but I quote it here to emphasise this
-effect of general destitution. And this underclad
-town population in this dismantled
-and ruinous city is, in spite of all the furtive
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>trading that goes on, appallingly underfed.
-With the best will in the world the Soviet
-Government is unable to produce a sufficient
-ration to sustain a healthy life. We went
-to a district kitchen and saw the normal food
-distribution going on. The place seemed to
-us fairly clean and fairly well run, but that
-does not compensate for a lack of material.
-The lowest grade ration consisted of a basinful
-of thin skilly and about the same quantity
-of stewed apple compote. People have
-bread cards and wait in queues for bread,
-but for three days the Petersburg bakeries
-stopped for lack of flour. The bread varies
-greatly in quality; some was good coarse
-brown bread, and some I found damp, clay-like,
-and uneatable.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>
-<img src='images/i_033a.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>A PETERSBURG STREET CAR EN ROUTE.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_033b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>MESSRS. LENIN AND WELLS IN CONVERSATION.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>I do not know how far these disconnected
-details will suffice to give the Western reader
-an idea of what ordinary life in Petersburg
-is at the present time. Moscow, they
-say, is more overcrowded and shorter of fuel
-than Petersburg, but superficially it looked
-far less grim than Petersburg. We saw
-these things in October, in a particularly
-fine and warm October. We saw them in
-sunshine in a setting of ruddy and golden
-foliage. But one day there came a chill,
-and the yellow leaves went whirling before
-a drive of snowflakes. It was the first
-breath of the coming winter. Every one
-shivered and looked out of the double windows—already
-sealed up—and talked to us
-of the previous year. Then the glow of
-October returned.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>It was still glorious sunshine when we
-left Russia. But when I think of that coming
-winter my heart sinks. The Soviet Government
-in the commune of the north has
-made extraordinary efforts to prepare for
-the time of need. There are piles of wood
-along the quays, along the middle of the
-main streets, in the courtyards, and everywhere
-where wood can be piled. Last year
-many people had to live in rooms below the
-freezing point; the water-pipes froze up, the
-sanitary machinery ceased to work. The
-reader must imagine the consequences. People
-huddled together in the ill-lit rooms, and
-kept themselves alive with tea and talk.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>Presently some Russian novelist will tell us
-all that this has meant to heart and mind in
-Russia. This year it may not be quite so
-bad as that. The food situation also, they
-say, is better, but this I very much doubt.
-The railways are now in an extreme state of
-deterioration; the wood-stoked engines are
-wearing out; the bolts start and the rails
-shift as the trains rumble along at a maximum
-of twenty-five miles per hour. Even
-were the railways more efficient, Wrangel
-has got hold of the southern food supplies.
-Soon the cold rain will be falling upon these
-700,000 souls still left in Petersburg, and
-then the snow. The long nights extend and
-the daylight dwindles.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>And this spectacle of misery and ebbing
-energy is, you will say, the result of Bolshevist
-rule! I do not believe it is. I will deal
-with the Bolshevist Government when I have
-painted the general scenery of our problem.
-But let me say here that this desolate Russia
-is not a system that has been attacked and
-destroyed by something vigorous and malignant.
-It is an unsound system that has
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>worked itself out and fallen down. It was
-not communism which built up these great,
-impossible cities, but capitalism. It was
-not communism that plunged this huge,
-creaking, bankrupt empire into six years of
-exhausting war. It was European imperialism.
-Nor is it communism that has pestered
-this suffering and perhaps dying Russia
-with a series of subsidised raids, invasions,
-and insurrections, and inflicted upon it an
-atrocious blockade. The vindictive French
-creditor, the journalistic British oaf, are far
-more responsible for these deathbed miseries
-than any communist. But to these questions
-I will return after I have given a little more
-description of Russia as we saw it during
-our visit. It is only when one has some
-conception of the physical and mental realities
-of the Russian collapse that we can see
-and estimate the Bolshevist Government in
-its proper proportions.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>II<br /> <span class='large'>DRIFT AND SALVAGE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>Among the things I wanted most to
-see amidst this tremendous spectacle
-of social collapse in Russia was the work of
-my old friend Maxim Gorky. I had heard
-of this from members of the returning labour
-delegation, and what they told me had whetted
-my desire for a closer view of what was
-going on. Mr. Bertrand Russell’s account
-of Gorky’s health had also made me anxious
-on his own account; but I am happy to say
-that upon that score my news is good. Gorky
-seems as strong and well to me now as he
-was when I knew him first in 1906. And as
-a personality he has grown immensely. Mr.
-Russell wrote that Gorky is dying and that
-perhaps culture in Russia is dying too. Mr.
-Russell was, I think, betrayed by the artistic
-temptation of a dark and purple concluding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>passage. He found Gorky in bed and afflicted
-by a fit of coughing, and his imagination
-made the most of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Gorky’s position in Russia is a quite extraordinary
-and personal one. He is no
-more of a communist than I am, and I have
-heard him argue with the utmost freedom
-in his flat against the extremist positions
-with such men as Bokaiev, recently the head
-of the extraordinary commission in Petersburg,
-and Zalutsky, one of the rising leaders
-of the Communist party. It was a very reassuring
-display of free speech, for Gorky
-did not so much argue as denounce—and
-this in front of two deeply interested English
-enquirers.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>But he has gained the confidence and respect
-of most of the Bolshevik leaders, and
-he has become by a kind of necessity the
-semi-official salvage man under the new
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">régime</span></i>. He is possessed by a passionate
-sense of the value of Western science and
-culture, and by the necessity of preserving
-the intellectual continuity of Russian life
-through these dark years of famine and war
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>and social stress, with the general intellectual
-life of the world. He has found a
-steady supporter in Lenin. His work illuminates
-the situation to an extraordinary
-degree because it collects together a number
-of significant factors and makes the
-essentially catastrophic nature of the Russian
-situation plain.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The Russian smash at the end of 1917
-was certainly the completest that has ever
-happened to any modern social organisation.
-After the failure of the Kerensky Government
-to make peace and of the British naval
-authorities to relieve the military situation
-in the Baltic, the shattered Russian armies,
-weapons in hand, broke up and rolled back
-upon Russia, a flood of peasant soldiers
-making for home, without hope, without
-supplies, without discipline. That time of
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">débâcle</span></i> was a time of complete social disorder.
-It was a social dissolution. In many
-parts of Russia there was a peasant revolt.
-There was chateau-burning often accompanied
-by quite horrible atrocities. It was an
-explosion of the very worst side of human
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>nature in despair, and for most of the abominations
-committed the Bolsheviks are about
-as responsible as the Government of Australia.
-People would be held up and robbed
-even to their shirts in open daylight in the
-streets of Petersburg and Moscow, no one
-interfering. Murdered bodies lay disregarded
-in the gutters sometimes for a whole
-day, with passengers on the footwalk going
-to and fro. Armed men, often professing
-to be Red Guards, entered houses and looted
-and murdered. The early months of 1918
-saw a violent struggle of the new Bolshevik
-Government not only with counter-revolutions
-but with rollers and brigands of every
-description. It was not until the summer of
-1918, and after thousands of looters and
-plunderers had been shot, that life began to
-be ordinarily safe again in the streets of
-the Russian great towns. For a time Russia
-was not a civilisation, but a torrent of lawless
-violence, with a weak central Government
-of inexperienced rulers, fighting not
-only against unintelligent foreign intervention
-but against the completest internal disorder.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>It is from such chaotic conditions
-that Russia still struggles to emerge.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Art, literature, science, all the refinements
-and elaboration of life, all that we mean by
-“civilisation,” were involved in this torrential
-catastrophe. For a time the stablest
-thing in Russia culture was the theatre.
-There stood the theatres, and nobody wanted
-to loot them or destroy them; the artists
-were accustomed to meet and work in them
-and went on meeting and working; the tradition
-of official subsidies held good. So quite
-amazingly the Russian dramatic and operatic
-life kept on through the extremest
-storms of violence, and keeps on to this day.
-In Petersburg we found there were more
-than forty shows going on every night; in
-Moscow we found very much the same state
-of affairs. We heard Shalyapin, greatest
-of actors and singers, in <cite>The Barber of
-Seville</cite> and in <cite>Chovanchina</cite>; the admirable
-orchestra was variously attired, but the conductor
-still held out valiantly in swallow tails
-and a white tie; we saw a performance of
-<cite>Sadko</cite>, we saw Monachof in <cite>The Tzarevitch
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>Alexei</cite> and as Iago in <cite>Othello</cite> (with Madame
-Gorky—Madame Andreievna—as Desdemona).
-When one faced the stage, it was
-as if nothing had changed in Russia; but
-when the curtain fell and one turned to the
-audience one realised the revolution. There
-were now no brilliant uniforms, no evening
-dress in boxes and stalls. The audience
-was a uniform mass of people, the same
-sort of people everywhere, attentive, good-humoured,
-well-behaved and shabby. Like
-the London Stage Society, one’s place in
-the house is determined by ballot. And for
-the most part there is no paying to go to
-the theatre. For one performance the tickets
-go, let us say, to the professional unions,
-for another to the Red Army and their
-families, for another to the school children,
-and so on. A certain selling of tickets goes
-on, but it is not in the present scheme of
-things.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>I had heard Shalyapin in London, but
-I had not met him personally there. We
-made his acquaintance this time in Petersburg,
-we dined with him and saw something
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>of his very jolly household. There are two
-stepchildren almost grown up, and two little
-daughters, who speak a nice, stiff, correct
-English, and the youngest of whom dances
-delightfully. Shalyapin is certainly one of
-the most wonderful things in Russia at the
-present time. He is the Artist, defiant
-and magnificent. Off the stage he has much
-the same vitality and abounding humour that
-made an encounter with Beerbohm Tree so
-delightful an experience. He refuses absolutely
-to sing except for pay—200,000
-roubles a performance, they say, which is
-nearly £15—and when the markets get too
-tight, he insists upon payment in flour or
-eggs or the like. What he demands he gets,
-for Shalyapin on strike would leave too
-dismal a hole altogether in the theatrical
-world of Petersburg. So it is that he maintains
-what is perhaps the last fairly comfortable
-home in Russia. And Madame
-Shalyapin we found so unbroken by the
-revolution that she asked us what people
-were wearing in London. The last fashion
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>papers she had seen—thanks to the blockade—dated
-from somewhen early in 1918.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>But the position of the theatre among the
-arts is peculiar. For the rest of the arts,
-for literature generally and for the scientific
-worker, the catastrophe of 1917–18 was overwhelming.
-There remained no one to buy
-books or pictures, and the scientific worker
-found himself with a salary of roubles that
-dwindled rapidly to less than the five-hundredth
-part of their original value. The
-new crude social organisation, fighting robbery,
-murder, and the wildest disorder, had
-no place for them; it had forgotten them.
-For the scientific man at first the Soviet
-Government had as little regard as the first
-French revolution, which had “no need for
-chemists.” These classes of worker, vitally
-important to every civilised system, were reduced,
-therefore, to a state of the utmost
-privation and misery. It was to their assistance
-and salvation that Gorky’s first efforts
-were directed. Thanks very largely to him
-and to the more creative intelligences in the
-Bolshevik Government, there has now been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>organised a group of salvage establishments,
-of which the best and most fully developed
-is the House of Science in Petersburg, in
-the ancient palace of the Archduchess Marie
-Pavlova. Here we saw the headquarters of
-a special rationing system which provides as
-well as it can for the needs of four thousand
-scientific workers and their dependents—in
-all perhaps for ten thousand people. At this
-centre they not only draw their food rations,
-but they can get baths and barber, tailoring,
-cobbling and the like conveniences. There
-is even a small stock of boots and clothing.
-There are bedrooms, and a sort of hospital
-accommodation for cases of weakness and
-ill-health.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>It was to me one of the strangest of my
-Russian experiences to go to this institution
-and to meet there, as careworn and unprosperous-looking
-figures, some of the great
-survivors of the Russian scientific world.
-Here were such men as Oldenburg the orientalist,
-Karpinsky the geologist, Pavloff
-the Nobel prizeman, Radloff, Bielopolsky,
-and the like, names of world-wide celebrity.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>They asked me a multitude of questions
-about recent scientific progress in the world
-outside Russia, and made me ashamed of
-my frightful ignorance of such matters. If
-I had known that this would happen I would
-have taken some sort of report with me. Our
-blockade has cut them off from all scientific
-literature outside Russia. They are without
-new instruments, they are short of
-paper, the work they do has to go on in unwarmed
-laboratories. It is amazing they do
-any work at all. Yet they are getting work
-done; Pavloff is carrying on research of
-astonishing scope and ingenuity upon the
-mentality of animals; Manuchin claims to
-have worked out an effectual cure for tuberculosis,
-even in advanced cases; and so on.
-I have brought back abstracts of Manuchin’s
-work for translation and publication here,
-and they are now being put into English.
-The scientific spirit is a wonderful spirit.
-If Petersburg starves this winter, the House
-of Science—unless we make some special
-effort on its behalf—will starve too, but
-these scientific men said very little to me
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>about the possibility of sending them in supplies.
-The House of Literature and Art
-talked a little of want and miseries, but not
-the scientific men. What they were all keen
-about was the possibility of getting scientific
-publications; they value knowledge more
-than bread. Upon that matter I hope I may
-be of some help to them. I got them to form
-a committee to make me out a list of all the
-books and publications of which they stood
-in need, and I have brought this list back to
-the Secretary of the Royal Society of London,
-which had already been stirring in this
-matter. Funds will be needed, three or four
-thousand pounds perhaps (the address of
-the Secretary of the Royal Society is Burlington
-House, W.), but the assent of the
-Bolshevik Government and our own to this
-mental provisioning of Russia has been secured,
-and in a little time I hope the first
-parcel of books will be going through to
-these men, who have been cut off for so
-long from the general mental life of the
-world.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>If I had no other reason for satisfaction
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>about this trip to Russia, I should find quite
-enough in the hope and comfort our mere
-presence evidently gave to many of these
-distinguished men in the House of Science
-and in the House of Literature and Art.
-Upon many of them there had evidently
-settled a kind of despair of ever seeing or
-hearing anything of the outer world again.
-They had been living for three years, very
-grey and long years indeed, in a world that
-seemed sinking down steadily through one
-degree of privation after another into utter
-darkness. Possibly they had seen something
-of one or two of the political deputations
-that have visited Russia—I do not know;
-but manifestly they had never expected to
-see again a free and independent individual
-walk in, with an air of having come quite
-easily and unofficially from London, and of
-its being quite possible not only to come but
-to go again into the lost world of the West.
-It was like an unexpected afternoon caller
-strolling into a cell in a jail.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>All musical people in England know the
-work of Glazounov; he has conducted concerts
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>in London and is an honorary doctor
-both of Oxford and Cambridge. I was very
-deeply touched by my meeting with him.
-He used to be a very big florid man, but
-now he is pallid and very much fallen away,
-so that his clothes hang loosely on him. He
-came and talked of his friends Sir Hubert
-Parry and Sir Charles Villiers Stanford.
-He told me he still composed, but that his
-stock of music paper was almost exhausted.
-“Then there will be no more.” I said there
-would be much more, and that soon. He
-doubted it. He spoke of London and Oxford;
-I could see that he was consumed by
-an almost intolerable longing for some great
-city full of life, a city with abundance, with
-pleasant crowds, a city that would give him
-still audiences in warm, brightly-lit places.
-While I was there, I was a sort of living
-token to him that such things could still be.
-He turned his back on the window which
-gave on the cold grey Neva, deserted in the
-twilight, and the low lines of the fortress
-prison of St. Peter and St. Paul. “In England
-there will be no revolution—no? I had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>many friends in England—many good
-friends in England....” I was loth to
-leave him, and he was very loth to let me go.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Seeing all these distinguished men living
-a sort of refugee life amidst the impoverished
-ruins of the fallen imperialist system
-has made me realise how helplessly dependent
-the man of exceptional gifts is upon a
-securely organised civilisation. The ordinary
-man can turn from this to that occupation;
-he can be a sailor or a worker in a
-factory or a digger or what not. He is
-under a general necessity to work, but he
-has no internal demon which compels him
-to do a particular thing and nothing else,
-which compels him to be a particular thing
-or die. But a Shalyapin must be Shalyapin
-or nothing, Pavloff is Pavloff and Glazounov
-is Glazounov. So long as they can go on
-doing their particular thing, such men will
-live and flourish. Shalyapin still acts and
-sings magnificently—in absolute defiance of
-every Communist principle; Pavloff still
-continues his marvellous researches—in an
-old coat and with his study piled up with the
-potatoes and carrots he grows in his spare
-time; Glazounov will compose until the paper
-runs out. But many of the others are evidently
-stricken much harder. The mortality
-among the intellectually distinguished men
-of Russia has been terribly high. Much, no
-doubt, has been due to the general hardship
-of life, but in many cases I believe that the
-sheer mortification of great gifts become futile
-has been the determining cause. They
-could no more live in the Russia of 1919
-than they could have lived in a Kaffir kraal.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>
-<img src='images/i_056.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>GORKY IN THE GREAT DUMP OF ART AND VIRTUOSITY IN PETERSBURG</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>Science, art, and literature are hothouse
-plants demanding warmth and respect and
-service. It is the paradox of science that
-it alters the whole world and is produced
-by the genius of men who need protection
-and help more than any other class of worker.
-The collapse of the Russian imperial
-system has smashed up all the shelters in
-which such things could exist. The crude
-Marxist philosophy which divides all men
-into bourgeoisie and proletariat, which sees
-all social life as a stupidly simple “class
-war,” had no knowledge of the conditions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>necessary for the collective mental life. But
-it is to the credit of the Bolshevik Government
-that it has now risen to the danger of
-a universal intellectual destruction in Russia,
-and that, in spite of the blockade and
-the unending struggle against the subsidised
-revolts and invasions with which we and the
-French plague Russia, it is now permitting
-and helping these salvage organisations.
-Parallel with the House of Science is the
-House of Literature and Art. The writing
-of new books, except for some poetry, and
-the painting of pictures have ceased in Russia.
-But the bulk of the writers and artists
-have been found employment upon a grandiose
-scheme for the publication of a sort of
-Russian encyclopædia of the literature of
-the world. In this strange Russia of conflict,
-cold, famine and pitiful privations there
-is actually going on now a literary task that
-would be inconceivable in the rich England
-and the rich America of to-day. In England
-and America the production of good
-literature at popular prices has practically
-ceased now—“because of the price of paper.”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>The mental food of the English and American
-masses dwindles and deteriorates, and
-nobody in authority cares a rap. The Bolshevik
-Government is at least a shade above
-that level. In starving Russia hundreds of
-people are working upon translations, and
-the books they translate are being set up
-and printed, work which may presently give
-a new Russia such a knowledge of world
-thought as no other people will possess. I
-have seen some of the books and the work
-going on. “<em>May</em>” I write, with no certainty.
-Because, like everything else in this ruined
-country, this creative work is essentially
-improvised and fragmentary. How this
-world literature is to be distributed to the
-Russian people I do not know. The bookshops
-are closed and bookselling, like every
-other form of trading, is illegal. Probably
-the books will be distributed to schools and
-other institutions.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>In this matter of book distribution the
-Bolshevik authorities are clearly at a loss.
-They are at a loss upon very many such
-matters. In regard to the intellectual life
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>of the community one discovers that Marxist
-Communism is without plans and without
-ideas. Marxist Communism has always been
-a theory of revolution, a theory not merely
-lacking in creative and constructive ideas,
-but hostile to creative and constructive ideas.
-Every Communist orator has been trained
-to contemn “Utopianism,” that is to say,
-has been trained to contemn intelligent
-planning. Not even a British business man
-of the older type is quite such a believer in
-things righting themselves and in “muddling
-through” as these Marxists. The Russian
-Communist Government now finds itself
-face to face, among a multiplicity of
-other constructive problems, with the problem
-of sustaining scientific life, of sustaining
-thought and discussion, of promoting
-artistic creation. Marx the Prophet and his
-Sacred Book supply it with no lead at all
-in the matter. Bolshevism, having no
-schemes, must improvise therefore—clumsily,
-and is reduced to these pathetic attempts
-to salvage the wreckage of the intellectual
-life of the old order. And that life is very
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>sick and unhappy and seems likely to die
-on its hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>It is not simply scientific and literary work
-and workers that Maxim Gorky is trying
-to salvage in Russia. There is a third and
-still more curious salvage organisation associated
-with him. This is the Expertise
-Commission, which has its headquarters in
-the former British Embassy. When a social
-order based on private property crashes,
-when private property is with some abruptness
-and no qualification abolished, this does
-not abolish and destroy the things which
-have hitherto constituted private property.
-Houses and their gear remain standing, still
-being occupied and used by the people who
-had them before—except when those people
-have fled. When the Bolshevik authorities
-requisition a house or take over a deserted
-palace, they find themselves faced by this
-problem of the gear. Any one who knows
-human nature will understand that there
-has been a certain amount of quiet annexation
-of desirable things by inadvertent officials
-and, perhaps less inadvertently, by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>their wives. But the general spirit of Bolshevism
-is quite honest, and it is set very
-stoutly against looting and suchlike developments
-of individual enterprise. There has
-evidently been comparatively little looting
-either in Petersburg or Moscow since the
-days of the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">débâcle</span></i>. Looting died against
-the wall in Moscow in the spring of 1918.
-In the guest houses and suchlike places we
-noted that everything was numbered and
-listed. Occasionally we saw odd things
-astray, fine glass or crested silver upon tables
-where it seemed out of place, but in many
-cases these were things which had been sold
-for food or suchlike necessities on the part
-of the original owners. The sailor courier
-who attended to our comfort to and from
-Moscow was provided with a beautiful little
-silver teapot that must once have brightened
-a charming drawing-room. But apparently
-it had taken to a semi-public life in a quite
-legitimate way.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For greater security there has been a
-gathering together and a cataloguing of
-everything that could claim to be a work
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>of art by this Expertise Commission. The
-palace that once sheltered the British Embassy
-is now like some congested secondhand
-art shop in the Brompton Road. We
-went through room after room piled with
-the beautiful lumber of the former Russian
-social system. There are big rooms crammed
-with statuary; never have I seen so many
-white marble Venuses and sylphs together,
-not even in the Naples Museum. There are
-stacks of pictures of every sort, passages
-choked with inlaid cabinets piled up to the
-ceiling; a room full of cases of old lace,
-piles of magnificent furniture. This accumulation
-has been counted and catalogued.
-And there it is. I could not find out that
-any one had any idea of what was ultimately
-to be done with all this lovely and elegant
-litter. The stuff does not seem to belong
-in any way to the new world, if it is indeed
-a new world that the Russian Communists
-are organising. They never anticipated that
-they would have to deal with such things.
-Just as they never really thought of what
-they would do with the shops and markets
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>when they had abolished shopping and
-marketing. Just as they had never thought
-out the problem of converting a city of private
-palaces into a Communist gathering-place.
-Marxist theory had led their minds
-up to the “dictatorship of the class-conscious
-proletariat” and then intimated—we discover
-now how vaguely—that there would
-be a new heaven and a new earth. Had
-that happened it would indeed have been a
-revolution in human affairs. But as we saw
-Russia there is still the old heaven and the
-old earth, covered with the ruins, littered
-with the abandoned furnishings and dislocated
-machinery of the former system, with
-the old peasant tough and obstinate upon
-the soil—and Communism, ruling in the
-cities quite pluckily and honestly, and yet,
-in so many matters, like a conjurer who has
-left his pigeon and his rabbit behind him,
-and can produce nothing whatever from the
-hat.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Ruin: that is the primary Russian fact
-at the present time. The revolution, the
-Communist rule, which I will proceed to describe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>in my next paper, is quite secondary
-to that. It is something that has happened
-in the ruin and because of the ruin. It is of
-primary importance that people in the West
-should realise that. If the Great War had
-gone on for a year or so more, Germany
-and then the Western Powers would probably
-have repeated, with local variations,
-the Russian crash. The state of affairs we
-have seen in Russia is only the intensification
-and completion of the state of affairs
-towards which Britain was drifting in 1918.
-Here also there are shortages such as we had
-in England, but they are relatively monstrous;
-here also is rationing, but it is relatively
-feeble and inefficient; the profiteer in
-Russia is not fined but shot, and for the
-English D.O.R.A. you have the Extraordinary
-Commission. What were nuisances
-in England are magnified to disasters in
-Russia. That is all the difference. For all I
-know, Western Europe may be still drifting
-even now towards a parallel crash. I
-am not by any means sure that we have
-turned the corner. War, self-indulgence,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>and unproductive speculation may still be
-wasting more than the Western world is producing;
-in which case our own crash—currency
-failure, a universal shortage, social
-and political collapse and all the rest of it—is
-merely a question of time. The shops of
-Regent Street will follow the shops of the
-Nevsky Prospect, and Mr. Galsworthy and
-Mr. Bennett will have to do what they can to
-salvage the art treasures of Mayfair. It
-falsifies the whole world situation, it sets
-people altogether astray in their political
-actions, to assert that the frightful destitution
-of Russia to-day is to any large extent
-the result merely of Communist effort; that
-the wicked Communists have pulled down
-Russia to her present plight, and that if you
-can overthrow the Communists every one
-and everything in Russia will suddenly become
-happy again. Russia fell into its present
-miseries through the world war and the
-moral and intellectual insufficiency of it’s
-ruling and wealthy people. (As our own
-British State—as presently even the American
-State—may fall.) They had neither the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>brains nor the conscience to stop warfare,
-stop waste of all sorts, and stop taking the
-best of everything and leaving every one
-else dangerously unhappy, until it was too
-late. They ruled and wasted and quarrelled,
-blind to the coming disaster up to the very
-moment of its occurrence. And then, as I
-will describe in my next paper, the Communist
-came in....</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>III<br /> <span class='large'>THE QUINTESSENCE OF BOLSHEVISM</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>In the two preceding papers I have tried
-to give the reader my impression of Russian
-life as I saw it in Petersburg and Moscow,
-as a spectacle of collapse, as the collapse
-of a political, social, and economic system,
-akin to our own but weaker and more
-rotten than our own, which has crashed under
-the pressure of six years of war and
-misgovernment. The main collapse occurred
-in 1917 when Tsarism, brutishly incompetent,
-became manifestly impossible.
-It had wasted the whole land, lost control
-of its army and the confidence of the entire
-population. Its police system had degenerated
-into a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">régime</span></i> of violence and brigandage.
-It fell inevitably.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>And there was no alternative government.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>For generations the chief energies of Tsarism
-had been directed to destroying any
-possibility of an alternative government. It
-had subsisted on that one fact that, bad as
-it was, there was nothing else to put in its
-place. The first Russian Revolution, therefore,
-turned Russia into a debating society
-and a political scramble. The liberal forces
-of the country, unaccustomed to action or
-responsibility, set up a clamorous discussion
-whether Russia was to be a constitutional
-monarchy, a liberal republic, a socialist republic,
-or what not. Over the confusion
-gesticulated Kerensky in attitudes of the
-finest liberalism. Through it loomed various
-ambiguous adventurers, “strong men,”
-sham strong men, Russian monks and Russian
-Bonapartes. What remained of social
-order collapsed. In the closing months
-of 1917 murder and robbery were common
-street incidents in Petersburg and Moscow,
-as common as an automobile accident in the
-streets of London, and less heeded. On the
-Reval boat was an American who had formerly
-directed the affairs of the American</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>
-<img src='images/i_073.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THE STATUE OF MARX OUTSIDE THE SMOLNY INSTITUTE.<br />(Headquarters of the Communist Party.)</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>Harvester Company in Russia. He had
-been in Moscow during this phase of complete
-disorder. He described hold-ups in
-open daylight in busy streets, dead bodies
-lying for hours in the gutter—as a dead kitten
-might do in a western town—while
-crowds went about their business along the
-sidewalk.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Through this fevered and confused country
-went the representatives of Britain and
-France, blind to the quality of the immense
-and tragic disaster about them, intent only
-upon <em>the</em> war, badgering the Russians to
-keep on fighting and make a fresh offensive
-against Germany. But when the Germans
-made a strong thrust towards Petersburg
-through the Baltic provinces and by sea,
-the British Admiralty, either through sheer
-cowardice or through Royalist intrigues,
-failed to give any effectual help to Russia.
-Upon this matter the evidence of the late
-Lord Fisher is plain. And so this unhappy
-country, mortally sick and, as it were, delirious,
-staggered towards a further stage of
-collapse.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>From end to end of Russia, and in the
-Russian-speaking community throughout
-the world, there existed only one sort of
-people who had common general ideas upon
-which to work, a common faith and a common
-will, and that was the Communist party.
-While all the rest of Russia was either apathetic
-like the peasantry or garrulously at
-sixes and sevens or given over to violence or
-fear, the Communists believed and were prepared
-to act. Numerically they were and
-are a very small part of the Russian population.
-At the present time not one per
-cent. of the people in Russia are Communists;
-the organised party certainly does not
-number more than 600,000 and has probably
-not much more than 150,000 active members.
-Nevertheless, because it was in those terrible
-days the only organisation which gave men
-a common idea of action, common formulæ,
-and mutual confidence, it was able to seize
-and retain control of the smashed empire.
-It was and it is the only sort of administrative
-solidarity possible in Russia. These
-ambiguous adventurers who have been and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>are afflicting Russia, with the support of
-the Western Powers, Deniken, Kolchak,
-Wrangel and the like, stand for no guiding
-principle and offer no security of any sort
-upon which men’s confidence can crystallise.
-They are essentially brigands. The Communist
-party, however one may criticise it,
-does embody an idea and can be relied upon
-to stand by its idea. So far it is a thing
-morally higher than anything that has yet
-come against it. It at once secured the
-passive support of the peasant mass by permitting
-them to take land from the estates
-and by making peace with Germany. It
-restored order—after a frightful lot of
-shooting—in the great towns. For a time
-everybody found carrying arms without authority
-was shot. This action was clumsy
-and bloody but effective. To retain its power
-this Communist Government organised
-Extraordinary Commissions, with practically
-unlimited powers, and crushed out all
-opposition by a Red Terror. Much that
-that Red Terror did was cruel and frightful,
-it was largely controlled by narrow-minded
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>men, and many of its officials were inspired
-by social hatred and the fear of counter-revolution,
-but if it was fanatical it was
-honest. Apart from individual atrocities it
-did on the whole kill for a reason and to
-an end. Its bloodshed was not like the silly
-aimless butcheries of the Deniken <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">régime</span></i>,
-which would not even recognise, I was told,
-the Bolshevik Red Cross. And to-day the
-Bolshevik Government sits, I believe, in
-Moscow as securely established as any Government
-in Europe, and the streets of the
-Russian towns are as safe as any streets in
-Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>It not only established itself and restored
-order, but—thanks largely to the genius of
-that ex-pacifist Trotsky—it re-created the
-Russian army as a fighting force. That we
-must recognise as a very remarkable achievement.
-I saw little of the Russian army myself,
-it was not what I went to Russia to
-see, but Mr. Vanderlip, the distinguished
-American financier, whom I found in Moscow
-engaged in some financial negotiations
-with the Soviet Government, had been treated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>to a review of several thousand troops,
-and was very enthusiastic about their spirit
-and equipment. My son and I saw a number
-of drafts going to the front, and also
-bodies of recruits joining up, and our impression
-is that the spirit of the men was
-quite as good as that of similar bodies of
-British recruits in London in 1917–18.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Now who are these Bolsheviki who have
-taken such an effectual hold upon Russia?
-According to the crazier section of the British
-Press they are the agents of a mysterious
-racial plot, a secret society, in which Jews,
-Jesuits, Freemasons, and Germans are all
-jumbled together in the maddest fashion.
-As a matter of fact, nothing was ever quite
-less secret than the ideas and aims and methods
-of the Bolsheviks, nor anything quite
-less like a secret society than their organization.
-But in England we cultivate a peculiar
-style of thinking, so impervious to
-any general ideas that it must needs fall
-back upon the notion of a conspiracy to explain
-the simplest reactions of the human
-mind. If, for instance, a day labourer in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>Essex makes a fuss because he finds that the
-price of his children’s boots has risen out of
-all proportion to the increase in his weekly
-wages, and declares that he and his fellow-workers
-are being cheated and underpaid,
-the editors of <cite>The Times</cite> and of the <cite>Morning
-Post</cite> will trace his resentment to the
-insidious propaganda of some mysterious society
-at Königsberg or Pekin. They cannot
-conceive how otherwise he should get such
-ideas into his head. Conspiracy mania of
-this kind is so prevalent that I feel constrained
-to apologise for my own immunity.
-I find the Bolsheviks very much what they
-profess to be. I find myself obliged to treat
-them as fairly straightforward people. I
-do not agree with either their views or their
-methods, but that is another question.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The Bolsheviks are Marxists Socialists.
-Marx died in London nearly forty years
-ago; the propaganda of his views has been
-going on for over half a century. It has
-spread over the whole earth and finds in
-nearly every country a small but enthusiastic
-following. It is a natural result of world-wide
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>economic conditions. Everywhere it
-expresses the same limited ideas in the same
-distinctive phrasing. It is a cult, a world-wide
-international brotherhood. No one need
-learn Russian to study the ideas of Bolshevism.
-The enquirer will find them all in
-the London <cite>Plebs</cite> or the New York <cite>Liberator</cite>
-in exactly the same phrases as in the
-Russian <cite>Pravda</cite>. They hide nothing. They
-say everything. And just precisely what
-these Marxists write and say, so they attempt
-to do.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>It will be best if I write about Marx
-without any hypocritical deference. I have
-always regarded him as a Bore of the extremest
-sort. His vast unfinished work, <cite>Das
-Kapital</cite>, a cadence of wearisome volumes
-about such phantom unrealities as the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bourgeoisie</span></i>
-and the <i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">proletariat</span></i>, a book for ever
-maundering away into tedious secondary
-discussions, impresses me as a monument of
-pretentious pedantry. But before I went
-to Russia on this last occasion I had no active
-hostility to Marx. I avoided his works,
-and when I encountered Marxists I disposed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>of them by asking them to tell me exactly
-what people constituted the proletariat.
-None of them knew. No Marxist knows. In
-Gorky’s flat I listened with attention while
-Bokaiev discussed with Shalyapin the fine
-question of whether in Russia there was a
-proletariat at all, distinguishable from the
-peasants. As Bokaiev has been head of the
-Extraordinary Commission of the Dictatorship
-of the Proletariat in Petersburg, it was
-interesting to note the fine difficulties of the
-argument. The “proletarian” in the Marxist
-jargon is like the “producer” in the jargon
-of some political economists, who is supposed
-to be a creature absolutely distinct
-and different from the “consumer.” So the
-proletarian is a figure put into flat opposition
-to something called capital. I find in
-large type outside the current number of the
-<cite>Plebs</cite>, “The working class and the employing
-class have nothing in common.” Apply
-this to a works foreman who is being taken
-in a train by an engine-driver to see how
-the house he is having built for him by a
-building society is getting on. To which of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>these immiscibles does he belong, employer
-or employed? The stuff is sheer nonsense.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>In Russia I must confess my passive objection
-to Marx has changed to a very active
-hostility. Wherever we went we encountered
-busts, portraits, and statues of Marx.
-About two-thirds of the face of Marx is
-beard, a vast solemn woolly uneventful
-beard that must have made all normal exercise
-impossible. It is not the sort of beard
-that happens to a man, it is a beard cultivated,
-cherished, and thrust patriarchally
-upon the world. It is exactly like <cite>Das Kapital</cite>
-in its inane abundance, and the human
-part of the face looks over it owlishly as if it
-looked to see how the growth impressed
-mankind. I found the omnipresent images
-of that beard more and more irritating. A
-gnawing desire grew upon me to see Karl
-Marx shaved. Some day, if I am spared, I
-will take up shears and a razor against <cite>Das
-Kapital</cite>; I will write <cite>The Shaving of Karl
-Marx</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>But Marx is for the Marxists merely an
-image and a symbol, and it is with the Marxist
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>and not with Marx that we are now dealing.
-Few Marxists have read much of <cite>Das
-Kapital</cite>. The Marxist is very much the
-same sort of person in all modern communities,
-and I will confess that by my temperament
-and circumstances I have the very
-warmest sympathy for him. He adopts
-Marx as his prophet simply because he believes
-that Marx wrote of the class war, an
-implacable war of the employed against the
-employer, and that he prophesied a triumph
-for the employed person, a dictatorship of
-the world by the leaders of these liberated
-employed persons (dictatorship of the proletariat),
-and a Communist millennium arising
-out of that dictatorship. Now this doctrine
-and this prophecy have appealed in
-every country with extraordinary power to
-young persons, and particularly to young
-men of energy and imagination who have
-found themselves at the outset of life imperfectly
-educated, ill-equipped, and caught
-into hopeless wages slavery in our existing
-economic system. They realise in their own
-persons the social injustice, the stupid negligence,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>the colossal incivility of our system;
-they realise that they are insulted and sacrificed
-by it; and they devote themselves to
-break it and emancipate themselves from it.
-No insidious propaganda is needed to make
-such rebels; it is the faults of a system that
-half-educates and then enslaves them which
-have created the Communist movement
-wherever industrialism has developed. There
-would have been Marxists if Marx had never
-lived. When I was a boy of fourteen I was
-a complete Marxist, long before I had heard
-the name of Marx. I had been cut off
-abruptly from education, caught in a detestable
-shop, and I was being broken in to a life
-of mean and dreary toil. I was worked too
-hard and for such long hours that all
-thoughts of self-improvement seemed hopeless.
-I would have set fire to that place if
-I had not been convinced it was over-insured.
-I revived the spirit of those bitter
-days in a conversation I had with Zorin, one
-of the leaders of the Commune of the North.
-He is a young man who has come back from
-unskilled work in America, a very likable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>human being and a humorous and very popular
-speaker in the Petersburg Soviet. He
-and I exchanged experiences, and I found
-that the thing that rankled most in his mind
-about America was the brutal incivility he
-had encountered when applying for a job
-as packer in a big dry goods store in New
-York. We told each other stories of the
-way our social system wastes and breaks
-and maddens decent and willing men. Between
-us was the freemasonry of a common
-indignation.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>It is that indignation of youth and energy,
-thwarted and misused, it is that and no
-mere economic theorising, which is the living
-and linking inspiration of the Marxist movement
-throughout the world. It is not that
-Marx was profoundly wise, but that our
-economic system has been stupid, selfish,
-wasteful, and anarchistic. The Communistic
-organisation has provided for this angry
-recalcitrance certain shibboleths and passwords:
-“Workers of the World unite,” and
-so forth. It has suggested to them an idea
-of a great conspiracy against human happiness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>concocted by a mysterious body of wicked
-men called capitalists. For in this mentally
-enfeebled world in which we live to-day
-conspiracy mania on one side finds its echo
-on the other, and it is hard to persuade a
-Marxist that capitalists are in their totality
-no more than a scrambling disorder of mean-spirited
-and short-sighted men. And the
-Communist propaganda has knitted all these
-angry and disinherited spirits together into
-a world-wide organisation of revolt—and
-hope—formless though that hope proves to
-be on examination. It has chosen Marx for
-its prophet and red for its colour....
-And so when the crash came in Russia,
-when there remained no other solidarity of
-men who could work together upon any but
-immediate selfish ends, there came flowing
-back from America and the West to rejoin
-their comrades a considerable number of
-keen and enthusiastic young and youngish
-men, who had in that more bracing Western
-world lost something of the habitual impracticability
-of the Russian and acquired a
-certain habit of getting things done, who
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>all thought in the same phrases and had the
-courage of the same ideas, and who were all
-inspired by the dream of a revolution that
-should bring human life to a new level of
-justice and happiness. It is these young men
-who constitute the living force of Bolshevism.
-Many of them are Jews, because most
-of the Russian emigrants to America were
-Jews; but few of them have any strong racial
-Jewish feeling. They are not out for Jewry
-but for a new world. So far from being in
-continuation of the Jewish tradition the Bolsheviks
-have put most of the Zionist leaders
-in Russia in prison, and they have prescribed
-the teaching of Hebrew as a “reactionary”
-language. Several of the most interesting
-Bolsheviks I met were not Jews at all, but
-blonde Nordic men. Lenin, the beloved leader
-of all that is energetic in Russia to-day,
-has a Tartar type of face and is certainly
-no Jew.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This Bolshevik Government is at once the
-most temerarious and the least experienced
-governing body in the world. In some directions
-its incompetence is amazing. In
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>most its ignorance is profound. Of the diabolical
-cunning of “capitalism” and of the
-subtleties of reaction it is ridiculously suspicious,
-and sometimes it takes fright and is
-cruel. But essentially it is honest. It is
-the most simple-minded Government that
-exists in the world to-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Its simple-mindedness is shown by one
-question that I was asked again and again
-during this Russian visit. “When is the social
-revolution going to happen in England?”
-Lenin asked me that, Zenovieff, who
-is the head of the Commune of the North,
-Zorin, and many others.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Because it is by the Marxist theory all
-wrong that the social revolution should happen
-first in Russia. That fact is bothering
-every intelligent man in the movement.
-According to the Marxist theory the social
-revolution should have happened first in the
-country with the oldest and most highly developed
-industrialism, with a large, definite,
-mainly propertyless, mainly wages-earning
-working class (proletariat). It should have
-begun in Britain, and spread to France and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>Germany, then should have come America’s
-turn and so on. Instead they find Communism
-in power in Russia, which really possesses
-no specialised labouring class at all,
-which has worked its factories with peasant
-labourers who come and go from the villages,
-and so has scarcely any “proletariat”—to
-unite with the workers of the world and so
-forth—at all. Behind the minds of many
-of these Bolsheviks with whom I talked I
-saw clearly that there dawns now a chill
-suspicion of the reality of the case, a realisation
-that what they have got in Russia is not
-truly the promised Marxist social revolution
-at all, that in truth they have not captured
-a State but got aboard a derelict. I tried
-to assist the development of this novel and
-disconcerting discovery. And also I indulged
-in a little lecture on the absence of
-a large “class-conscious proletariat” in the
-Western communities. I explained that in
-England there were two hundred different
-classes at least, and that the only “class-conscious
-proletarians” known to me in the
-land were a small band of mainly Scotch
-workers kept together by the vigorous leadership
-of a gentleman named MacManus.
-Their dearest convictions struggled against
-my manifest candour. They are clinging
-desperately to the belief that there are hundreds
-of thousands of convinced Communists
-in Britain, versed in the whole gospel
-of Marx, a proletarian solidarity, on the eve
-of seizing power and proclaiming a British
-Soviet Republic. They hold obstinately to
-that after three years of waiting—but their
-hold weakens.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>
-<img src='images/i_092.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THE BAKU CONFERENCE SWEARS UNDYING HOSTILITY TO CAPITALISM AND BRITISH IMPERIALISM.<br />Zenovieff (<em>by the bell</em>); to the right of him (<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">i.e.</span></i> on his left) are Radek (<em>spectacles</em>) and Bela Kun (<em>rather foggy</em>).</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>
-<img src='images/i_093.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THE BAKU CONFERENCE SWEARS UNDYING HOSTILITY TO CAPITALISM AND BRITISH IMPERIALISM:<br />The Body of the Hall.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>Among the most amusing things in this
-queer intellectual situation are the repeated
-scoldings that come by wireless from Moscow
-to Western Labour because it does not
-behave as Marx said it would behave. It
-isn’t red—and it ought to be. It is just
-yellow.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>My conversation with Zenovieff was particularly
-curious. He is a man with the
-voice and animation of Hilaire Belloc, and
-a lot of curly coal-black hair. “You have
-civil war in Ireland,” he said. “Practically,”
-said I. “Which do you consider
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>are the proletarians, the Sinn Feiners or
-the Ulstermen?” We spent some time
-while Zenovieff worked like a man with a
-jigsaw puzzle trying to get the Irish situation
-into the class war formula. That
-jigsaw puzzle remained unsolved, and we
-then shifted our attention to Asia. Impatient
-at the long delay of the Western
-proletarians to emerge and declare themselves,
-Zenovieff, assisted by Bela Kun,
-our Mr. Jack Quelch, and a number of
-other leading Communists, has recently
-gone on a pilgrimage to Baku to raise the
-Asiatic proletariat. They went to beat up
-the class-conscious wages slaves of Persia
-and Turkestan. They sought out factory
-workers and slum dwellers in the tents of
-the steppes. They held a congress at
-Baku, at which they gathered together a
-quite wonderful accumulation of white,
-black, brown, and yellow people, Asiatic
-costumes and astonishing weapons. They
-had a great assembly in which they swore
-undying hatred of Capitalism and British
-imperialism; they had a great procession
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>in which I regret to say certain batteries
-of British guns, which some careless, hasty
-empire-builder had left behind him, figured;
-they disinterred and buried again thirteen
-people whom this British empire-builder
-seems to have shot without trial, and they
-burnt Mr. Lloyd George, M. Millerand,
-and President Wilson in effigy. I not
-only saw a five-part film of this remarkable
-festival when I visited the Petersburg
-Soviet, but, thanks to Zorin, I have brought
-the film back with me. It is to be administered
-with caution and to adults only.
-There are parts of it that would make
-Mr. Gwynne of the <cite>Morning Post</cite> or Mr.
-Rudyard Kipling scream in their sleep. If
-so be they ever slept again after seeing it.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>I did my best to find out from Zenovieff
-and Zorin what they thought they were
-doing in the Baku Conference. And frankly
-I do not think they know. I doubt
-if they have anything clearer in their minds
-than a vague idea of hitting back at the
-British Government through Mesopotamia
-and India, because it has been hitting them
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>through Kolchak, Deniken, Wrangel, and
-the Poles. It is a counter-offensive almost
-as clumsy and stupid as the offensives
-it would counter. It is inconceivable that
-they can hope for any social solidarity with
-the miscellaneous discontents their congress
-assembled. One item “featured”
-on this Baku film is a dance by a gentleman
-from the neighbourhood of Baku. He
-is in fact one of the main features of
-this remarkable film. He wears a fur-trimmed
-jacket, high boots, and a high
-cap, and his dancing is a very rapid and
-dexterous step dancing. He produces two
-knives and puts them between his teeth,
-and then two others which he balances
-perilously with the blades dangerously
-close to his nose on either side of it. Finally
-he poises a fifth knife on his forehead,
-still stepping it featly to the distinctly
-Oriental music. He stoops and squats,
-arms akimbo, sending his nimble boots flying
-out and back like the Cossacks in the
-Russian ballet. He circles slowly as he
-does this, clapping his hands. He is now
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>rolled up in my keeping, ready to dance
-again when opportunity offers. I tried to
-find out whether he was a specimen Asiatic
-proletarian or just what he symbolised, but
-I could get no light on him. But there
-are yards and yards of film of him. I wish
-I could have resuscitated Karl Marx, just
-to watch that solemn stare over the beard,
-regarding him. The film gives no indication
-of his reception by Mr. Jack Quelch.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>I hope I shall not offend Comrade Zorin,
-for whom I have a real friendship, if I
-thus confess to him that I cannot take his
-Baku Conference very seriously. It was
-an excursion, a pageant, a Beano. As a
-meeting of Asiatic proletarians it was preposterous.
-But if it was not very much
-in itself, it was something very important
-in its revelation of shifting intentions. Its
-chief significance to me is this, that it
-shows a new orientation of the Bolshevik
-mind as it is embodied in Zenovieff. So
-long as the Bolsheviki held firmly with
-unshaken conviction to the Marxist formula
-they looked westward, a little surprised
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>that the “social revolution” should have
-begun so far to the east of its indicated
-centre. Now as they begin to realise that
-it is not that prescribed social revolution
-at all but something quite different which
-has brought them into power, they are naturally
-enough casting about for a new
-system of relationships. The ideal figure
-of the Russian republic is still a huge
-western “Worker,” with a vast hammer or
-a sickle. A time may come, if we maintain
-the European blockade with sufficient
-stringency and make any industrial recuperation
-impossible, when that ideal may
-give place altogether to a nomadic-looking
-gentleman from Turkestan with a number
-of knives. We may drive what will remain
-of Bolshevik Russia to the steppes and
-the knife. If we help Baron Wrangel to
-pull down the by no means firmly established
-Government in Moscow, under the
-delusion that thereby we shall bring about
-“representative institutions” and a “limited
-monarchy,” we may find ourselves very
-much out in our calculations. Any one
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>who destroys the present law and order of
-Moscow will, I believe, destroy what is
-left of law and order in Russia. A brigand
-monarchist government will leave a trail of
-fresh blood across the Russian scene, show
-what gentlemen can do when they are
-roused in a tremendous pogrom and White
-Terror, flourish horribly for a time, break
-up and vanish. Asia will resume. The
-simple ancient rhythm of the horseman
-plundering the peasant and the peasant
-waylaying the horseman will creep back
-across the plains to the Niemen and the
-Dniester. The cities will become clusters of
-ruins in the waste; the roads and railroads
-will rot and rust; the river traffic will
-decay....</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This Baku Conference has depressed
-Gorky profoundly. He is obsessed by a
-nightmare of Russia going east. Perhaps
-I have caught a little of his depression.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>IV<br /> <span class='large'>THE CREATIVE EFFORT IN RUSSIA</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>In the previous three papers I have
-tried to give my impression of the
-Russian spectacle as that of a rather ramshackle
-modern civilisation completely shattered
-and overthrown by misgovernment,
-under-education, and finally six years of
-war strain. I have shown science and art
-starving and the comforts and many of
-the decencies of life gone. In Vienna
-the overthrow is just as bad; and there too
-such men of science as the late Professor
-Margules starve to death. If London had
-had to endure four more years of war,
-much the same sort of thing would be happening
-in London. We should have now
-no coal in our grates and no food for our
-food tickets, and the shops in Bond Street
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>would be as desolate as the shops in the
-Nevsky Prospect. Bolshevik government
-in Russia is neither responsible for the causation
-nor for the continuance of these
-miseries.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>I have also tried to get the facts of
-Bolshevik rule into what I believe is their
-proper proportions in the picture. The
-Bolsheviks, albeit numbering less than five
-per cent of the population, have been able
-to seize and retain power in Russia because
-they were and are the only body of
-people in this vast spectacle of Russian
-ruin with a common faith and a common
-spirit. I disbelieve in their faith, I ridicule
-Marx, their prophet, but I understand
-and respect their spirit. They are—with
-all their faults, and they have abundant
-faults—the only possible backbone now
-to a renascent Russia. The recivilising
-of Russia must be done with the Soviet
-Government as the starting phase. The
-great mass of the Russian population is
-an entirely illiterate peasantry, grossly
-materialistic and politically indifferent.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>They are superstitious, they are for ever
-crossing themselves and kissing images,—in
-Moscow particularly they were at it—but
-they are not religious. They have
-no will in things political and social beyond
-their immediate satisfactions. They
-are roughly content with Bolshevik rule.
-The Orthodox priest is quite unlike the
-Catholic priest in Western Europe; he is
-himself typically a dirty and illiterate peasant
-with no power over the wills and consciences
-of his people. There is no constructive
-quality in either peasant or Orthodoxy.
-For the rest there is a confusion
-of more or less civilised Russians, in and
-out of Russia, with no common political
-ideas and with no common will. They are
-incapable of producing anything but adventures
-and disputes.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The Russian refugees in England are
-politically contemptible. They rehearse
-endless stories of “Bolshevik outrages”:
-chateau burnings by peasants, burglaries
-and murders by disbanded soldiers in the
-towns, back street crimes—they tell them
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>all as acts of the Bolshevik Government.
-Ask them what government they want in
-its place, and you will get rubbishy generalities—usually
-adapted to what the speaker
-supposes to be your particular political
-obsession. Or they sicken you with the
-praise of some current super-man, Deniken
-or Wrangel, who is to put everything right—God
-knows how. They deserve nothing
-better than a Tsar, and they are incapable
-even of deciding which Tsar they desire.
-The better part of the educated people
-still in Russia are—for the sake of Russia—slowly
-drifting into a reluctant but honest
-co-operation with Bolshevik rule.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The Bolsheviks themselves are Marxists
-and Communists. They find themselves
-in control of Russia, in complete contradiction,
-as I have explained, to the theories
-of Karl Marx. A large part of their
-energies have been occupied in an entirely
-patriotic struggle against the raids, invasions,
-blockades, and persecutions of every
-sort that our insensate Western Governments
-have rained upon their tragically
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>shattered country. What is left over goes
-in the attempt to keep Russia alive, and
-to organise some sort of social order among
-the ruins. These Bolsheviks are, as I have
-explained, extremely inexperienced men,
-intellectual exiles from Geneva and Hampstead,
-or comparatively illiterate manual
-workers from the United States. Never
-was there so amateurish a government
-since the early Moslem found themselves
-in control of Cairo, Damascus, and Mesopotamia.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>I believe that in the minds of very many
-of them there is a considerable element
-of dismay at the tremendous tasks they
-find before them. But one thing has helped
-them and Russia enormously, and that is
-their training in Communistic ideas. As
-the British found out during the submarine
-war, so far as the urban and industrial
-population goes there is nothing for it
-during a time of tragic scarcity but collapse
-or collective control. We in England had
-to control and ration, we had to suppress
-profiteering by stringent laws. These Communists
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>came into power in Russia and
-began to do at once, on principle, the
-first most necessary thing in that chaos
-of social wreckage. Against all the habits
-and traditions of Russia, they began to
-control and ration—exhaustively. They
-have now a rationing system that is, on
-paper, admirable beyond cavil; and perhaps
-it works as well as the temperament
-and circumstances of Russian production
-and consumption permit. It is easy to
-note defects and failures, but not nearly
-so easy to show how in this depleted and
-demoralised Russia they could be avoided.
-And things are in such a state in Russia
-now that even if we suppose the Bolsheviks
-overthrown and any other Government in
-their place, it matters not what, that Government
-would have to go on with the
-rationing the Bolsheviks have organised,
-with the suppression of vague political experiments,
-and the punishment and shooting
-of profiteers. The Bolsheviki in this
-state of siege and famine have done upon
-principle what any other Government would
-have had to do from necessity.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>
-<img src='images/i_112.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>PROLETARIANS OF ASIA À LA BAKU.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>And in the face of gigantic difficulties
-they are trying to rebuild a new Russia
-among the ruins. We may quarrel with
-their principles and methods, we may call
-their schemes Utopian and so forth, we
-may sneer at or we may dread what they
-are doing, but it is no good pretending
-that there is no creative effort in Russia
-at the present time. A certain section of
-the Bolsheviks are hard-minded, doctrinaire
-and unteachable men, fanatics who believe
-that the mere destruction of capitalism,
-the disuse of money and trading, the effacement
-of all social differences, will in itself
-bring about a sort of bleak millennium.
-There are Bolsheviki so stupid that they
-would stop the teaching of chemistry in
-schools until they were assured it was “proletarian”
-chemistry, and who would suppress
-every decorative design that was not
-an elaboration of the letters R.S.F.S.R.
-(Russian Socialist Federal Soviet Republic)
-as reactionary art. I have told of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>suppression of Hebrew studies because they
-are “reactionary”; and while I was with
-Gorky I found him in constant bitter disputes
-with extremist officials who would
-see no good in any literature of the past
-except the literature of revolt. But there
-were other more liberal minds in this new
-Russian world, minds which, given an opportunity,
-will build and will probably
-build well. Among men of such constructive
-force I would quote such names as
-Lenin himself, who has developed wonderfully
-since the days of his exile, and who
-has recently written powerfully against the
-extravagances of his own extremists; Trotsky,
-who has never been an extremist, and
-who is a man of very great organising ability;
-Lunacharsky, the Minister for Education;
-Rikoff, the head of the Department
-of People’s Economy; Madame Lilna of
-the Petersburg Child Welfare Department;
-and Krassin, the head of the London Trade
-Delegation. These are names that occur
-to me; it is by no means an exhaustive list
-of the statesmanlike elements in the Bolshevik
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>Government. Already they have
-achieved something, in spite of blockade
-and civil and foreign war. It is not only
-that they work to restore a country depleted
-of material to an extent almost inconceivable
-to English and American readers,
-but they work with an extraordinarily
-unhelpful personnel. Russia to-day stands
-more in need of men of the foreman and
-works-manager class than she does of medicaments
-or food. The ordinary work in
-the Government offices of Russia is shockingly
-done; the slackness and inaccuracy
-are indescribable. Everybody seems to be
-working in a muddle of unsorted papers
-and cigarette ends. This again is a state
-of affairs no counter-revolution could
-change. It is inherent in the present Russian
-situation. If one of these military
-adventurers of the Yudenitch or Deniken
-type were, by some disastrous accident, to
-get control of Russia, his success would
-only add strong drink, embezzlement, and a
-great squalour of kept mistresses to the
-general complication. For whatever else
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>we may say to the discredit of the Bolshevik
-leaders, it is undeniable that the great majority
-lead not simply laborious but puritanical
-lives.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>I write of this general inefficiency in
-Russia with the more asperity because it
-was the cause of my not meeting Lunacharsky.
-About eighty hours of my life
-was consumed in travelling, telephoning,
-and waiting about in order to talk for about
-an hour and a half with Lenin and for the
-some time with Tchitcherin. At that rate,
-and in view of the intermittent boat service
-from Reval to Stockholm, to see Lunacharsky
-would have meant at least a week more
-in Russia. The whole of my visit to Moscow
-was muddled in the most irritating
-fashion. A sailor-man carrying a silver
-kettle who did not know his way about
-Moscow was put in charge of my journey,
-and an American who did not know enough
-Russian to telephone freely was set to make
-my appointments in the town. Although
-I had heard Gorky arrange for my meeting
-with Lenin by long-distance telephone
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>days before, Moscow declared that it had
-had no notice of my coming. Finally I was
-put into the wrong train back to Petersburg,
-a train which took twenty-two hours
-instead of fourteen for the journey. These
-may seem petty details to relate, but when
-it is remembered that Russia was really doing
-its best to impress me with its vigour
-and good order, they are extremely significant.
-In the train, when I realised that it
-was a slow train and that the express had
-gone three hours before while we had
-been pacing the hall of the guest house with
-our luggage packed and nobody coming for
-us, the spirit came upon me and my lips
-were unsealed. I spoke to my guide, as
-one mariner might speak to another, and
-told him what I thought of Russian methods.
-He listened with the profoundest
-respect to my rich incisive phrases. When
-at last I paused, he replied—in words that
-are also significant of certain weaknesses
-of the present Russian state of mind. “You
-see,” he said, “the blockade——”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>But if I saw nothing of Lunacharsky
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>personally, I saw something of the work
-he has organised. The primary material
-of the educationist is human beings, and
-of these at least there is still no shortage
-in Russia, so that in that respect Lunacharsky
-is better off than most of his colleagues.
-And beginning with an initial prejudice
-and much distrust, I am bound to confess
-that, in view of their enormous difficulties,
-the educational work of the Bolsheviks
-impresses me as being astonishingly good.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Things started badly. Directly I got to
-Petersburg I asked to see a school, and
-on the second day of my visit I was taken
-to one that impressed me very unfavourably.
-It was extremely well equipped,
-much better than an ordinary English
-grammar school, and the children were
-bright and intelligent; but our visit fell in
-the recess. I could witness no teaching, and
-the behaviour of the youngsters I saw
-indicated a low standard of discipline. I
-formed an opinion that I was probably
-being shown a picked school specially prepared
-for me, and that this was all that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>Petersburg had to offer. The special guide
-who was with us then began to question
-these children upon the subject of English
-literature and the writers they liked most.
-One name dominated all others. My own.
-Such comparatively trivial figures as Milton,
-Dickens, Shakespeare ran about intermittently
-between the feet of that literary
-colossus. Being questioned further, these
-children produced the titles of perhaps a
-dozen of my books. I said I was completely
-satisfied by what I had seen and
-heard, that I wanted to see nothing more—for
-indeed what more could I possibly require?—and
-I left that school smiling with
-difficulty and thoroughly cross with my
-guides.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Three days later I suddenly scrapped
-my morning’s engagements and insisted
-upon being taken at once to another school—any
-school close at hand. I was convinced
-that I had been deceived about the
-former school, and that now I should see a
-very bad school indeed. Instead I saw a
-much better one than the first I had seen.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>The equipment and building were better,
-the discipline of the children was better,
-and I saw some excellent teaching in progress.
-Most of the teachers were women,
-very competent-looking middle-aged women,
-and I chose elementary geometrical
-teaching to observe because that on the
-blackboard is in the universal language of
-the diagram. I saw also a heap of drawings
-and various models the pupils had
-done, and they were very good. The
-school was supplied with abundant pictures.
-I noted particularly a well-chosen
-series of landscapes to assist the geographical
-teaching. There was plenty of chemical
-and physical apparatus, and it was
-evidently put to a proper use. I also saw
-the children’s next meal in preparation—for
-children eat at school in Soviet Russia—and
-the food was excellent and well
-cooked, far above the standard of the
-adult rations we had seen served out. All
-this was much more satisfactory. Finally
-by a few questions we tested the extraordinary
-vogue of H. G. Wells among the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>young people of Russia. None of these
-children had ever heard of him. The school
-library contained none of his books. This
-did much to convince me that I was seeing
-a quite normal school. I had, I now begin
-to realise, been taken to the previous
-one not, as I had supposed in my wrath,
-with any elaborate intention of deceiving
-me about the state of education in the
-country, but after certain kindly intrigues
-and preparations by a literary friend, Mr.
-Chukovsky the critic, affectionately anxious
-to make me feel myself beloved in Russia,
-and a little oblivious of the real gravity
-of the business I had in hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Subsequent enquiries and comparison of
-my observations with those of other visitors
-to Russia, and particularly those of Dr.
-Haden Guest, who also made surprise
-visits to several schools in Moscow, have
-convinced me that Soviet Russia, in the
-face of gigantic difficulties, has made and
-is making very great educational efforts,
-and that in spite of the difficulties of the
-general situation the quality and number
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>of the schools <em>in the towns</em> has risen absolutely
-since the Tsarist <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">régime</span></i>. (The
-peasant, as ever, except in a few “show”
-localities, remains scarcely touched by
-these things.) The schools I saw would
-have been good middle schools in England.
-They are open to all, and there is an
-attempt to make education compulsory.
-Of course Russia has its peculiar difficulties.
-Many of the schools are understaffed,
-and it is difficult to secure the attendance
-of unwilling pupils. Numbers of children
-prefer to keep out of the schools and
-trade upon the streets. A large part of
-the illicit trading in Russia is done by
-bands of children. They are harder to
-catch than adults, and the spirit of Russian
-Communism is against punishing them.
-And the Russian child is, for a northern
-child, remarkably precocious.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The common practice of co-educating
-youngsters up to fifteen or sixteen, in a
-country as demoralised as Russia is now,
-has brought peculiar evils in its train.
-My attention was called to this by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>visit of Bokaiev, the former head of the
-Petersburg Extraordinary Commission, and
-his colleague Zalutsky to Gorky to consult
-him in the matter. They discussed their
-business in front of me quite frankly, and
-the whole conversation was translated to
-me as it went on. The Bolshevik authorities
-have collected and published very
-startling, very shocking figures of the moral
-condition of young people in Petersburg,
-which I have seen. How far they would
-compare with the British figures—if there
-are any British figures—of such bad districts
-for the young as are some parts of
-East London or such towns of low type
-employment as Reading I do not know.
-(The reader should compare the Fabian
-Society’s report on prostitution, <cite>Downward
-Paths</cite>, upon this question.) Nor do
-I know how they would show in comparison
-with preceding Tsarist conditions.
-Nor can I speculate how far these phenomena
-in Russia are the mechanical
-consequence of privation and overcrowding
-in a home atmosphere bordering on despair.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>But there can be no doubt that in the
-Russian towns, concurrently with increased
-educational effort and an enhanced intellectual
-stimulation of the young, there is
-also an increased lawlessness on their part,
-especially in sexual matters, and that this
-is going on in a phase of unexampled
-sobriety and harsh puritanical decorum so
-far as adult life is concerned. This hectic
-moral fever of the young is the dark side
-of the educational spectacle in Russia. I
-think it is to be regarded mainly as an
-aspect of the general social collapse; every
-European country has noted a parallel
-moral relaxation of the young under the
-war strain; but the revolution itself, in
-sweeping a number of the old experienced
-teachers out of the schools and in making
-every moral standard a subject of debate,
-has no doubt contributed also to an as
-yet incalculable amount in the excessive
-disorder of these matters in present-day
-Russia.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Faced with this problem of starving and
-shattered homes and a social chaos, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>Bolshevik organisers are <em>institutionalising</em>
-the town children of Russia. They are
-making their schools residential. The
-children of the Russian urban population
-are going, like the children of the British
-upper class, into boarding schools. Close
-to this second school I visited stood two
-big buildings which are the living places of
-the boys and of the girls respectively. In
-these places they can be kept under some
-sort of hygienic and moral discipline.
-This again happens to be not only in
-accordance with Communist doctrine, but
-with the special necessities of the Russian
-crisis. Entire towns are sinking down
-towards slum conditions, and the Bolshevik
-Government has had to play the part of a
-gigantic Dr. Barnardo.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>We went over the organisation of a sort
-of reception home to which children are
-brought by their parents who find it
-impossible to keep them clean and decent
-and nourished under the terrible conditions
-outside. This reception home is the old
-Hotel de l’Europe, the scene of countless
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>pleasant little dinner-parties under the old
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">régime</span></i>. On the roof there is still the
-summertime roof garden, where the string
-quartette used to play, and on the staircase
-we passed a frosted glass window still
-bearing in gold letters the words <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Coiffure
-des Dames</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Slender gilded pointing hands directed
-us to the “Restaurant,” long vanished from
-the grim Petersburg scheme of things.
-Into this place the children come; they
-pass into a special quarantine section for
-infectious diseases and for personal cleanliness—nine-tenths
-of the newcomers harbour
-unpleasant parasites—and then into
-another section, the moral quarantine,
-where for a time they are watched for bad
-habits and undesirable tendencies. From
-this section some individuals may need to
-be weeded out and sent to special schools
-for defectives. The rest pass on into
-the general body of institutionalized children,
-and so on to the boarding schools.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Here certainly we have the “break-up
-of the family” in full progress, and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>Bolshevik net is sweeping wide and taking
-in children of the most miscellaneous
-origins. The parents have reasonably free
-access to their children in the daytime, but
-little or no control over their education,
-clothing, or the like. We went among the
-children in the various stages of this
-educational process, and they seemed to
-us to be quite healthy, happy, and contented
-children. But they get very good
-people to look after them. Many men and
-women, politically suspects or openly discontented
-with the existing political conditions,
-and yet with a desire to serve
-Russia, have found in these places work
-that they can do with a good heart and
-conscience. My interpreter and the lady
-who took us round this place had often
-dined and supped in the Hotel de l’Europe
-in its brilliant days, and they knew each
-other well. This lady was now plainly clad,
-with short cut hair and a grave manner;
-her husband was a White and serving with
-the Poles; she had two children of her own
-in the institution, and she was mothering
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>some scores of little creatures. But she
-was evidently keenly proud of the work of
-her organisation, and she said that she
-found life—in this city of want, under the
-shadow of a coming famine—more interesting
-and satisfying than it had ever been in
-the old days.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>I have no space to tell of other educational
-work we saw going on in Russia.
-I can give but a word or so to the Home of
-Rest for Workmen in the Kamenni Ostrof.
-I thought that at once rather fine and not a
-little absurd. To this place workers are
-sent to live a life of refined ease for two or
-three weeks. It is a very beautiful country
-house with fine gardens, an orangery, and
-subordinate buildings. The meals are
-served on white cloths with flowers upon
-the table and so forth. And the worker
-has to live up to these elegant surroundings.
-It is a part of his education. If in a forgetful
-moment he clears his throat in the
-good old resonant peasant manner and
-spits upon the floor, an attendant, I was
-told, chalks a circle about his defilement
-and obliges him to clean the offended
-parquetry. The avenue approaching this
-place has been adorned with decoration in
-the futurist style, and there is a vast figure
-of a “worker” at the gates resting on his
-hammer, done in gypsum, which was
-obtained from the surgical reserves of the
-Petersburg hospitals.... But after all,
-the idea of civilising your workpeople by
-dipping them into pleasant surroundings
-is, in itself, rather a good one....</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>
-<img src='images/i_129.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>GUESTS AT THE HOME OF REST FOR WORKMEN ON THE KAMENNI OSTROF.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>I find it difficult to hold the scales of
-justice upon many of these efforts of
-Bolshevism. Here are these creative and
-educational things going on, varying between
-the admirable and the ridiculous,
-islands at least of cleanly work and, I
-think, of hope, amidst the vast spectacle of
-grisly want and wide decay. Who can
-weigh the power and possibility of their
-thrust against the huge gravitation of this
-sinking system? Who can guess what
-encouragement and enhancement they may
-get if Russia can win through to a respite
-from civil and foreign warfare and from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>famine and want? It was of this re-created
-Russia, this Russia that may be, that I
-was most desirous of talking when I went
-to the Kremlin to meet Lenin. Of that
-conversation I will tell in my sixth paper.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>V<br /> <span class='large'>THE PETERSBURG SOVIET: A LEGISLATIVE MASS MEETING</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>On Thursday the 7th of October we attended
-a meeting of the Petersburg
-Soviet. We were told that we should find
-this a very different legislative body from
-the British House of Commons, and we
-did. Like nearly everything else in the
-arrangements of Soviet Russia it struck us
-as extraordinarily unpremeditated and improvised.
-Nothing could have been less
-intelligently planned for the functions it
-had to perform or the responsibilities it
-had to undertake.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The meeting was held in the old Winter
-Garden of the Tauride Palace, the former
-palace of Potemkin, the favourite of
-Catherine the Second. Here the Imperial
-Duma met under the Tsarist <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">régime</span></i>, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>I visited it in 1914 and saw a languid
-session in progress. I went then with Mr.
-Maurice Baring and one of the Benckendorffs
-to the strangers’ gallery, which ran
-round three sides of the hall. There was
-accommodation for perhaps a thousand
-people in the hall, and most of it was empty.
-The president with his bell sat above a
-rostrum, and behind him was a row of
-women reporters. I do not now remember
-what business was in hand on that occasion;
-it was certainly not very exciting business.
-Baring, I remember, pointed out the large
-proportion of priests elected to the third
-Duma; their beards and cassocks made a
-very distinctive feature of that scattered
-gathering.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>On this second visit we were no longer
-stranger onlookers, but active participants
-in the meeting; we came into the body of
-the hall behind the president’s bench, where
-on a sort of stage the members of the
-Government, official visitors, and so forth
-find accommodation. The presidential
-bench, the rostrum, and the reporters
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>remained, but instead of an atmosphere of
-weary parliamentarianism, we found ourselves
-in the crowding, the noise, and the
-peculiar thrill of a mass meeting. There
-were, I should think, some two hundred
-people or more packed upon the semicircular
-benches round about us on the
-platform behind the president, comrades
-in naval uniforms and in middle-class and
-working-class costume, numerous intelligent-looking
-women, one or two Asiatics
-and a few unclassifiable visitors, and the
-body of the hall beyond the presidential
-bench was densely packed with people who
-filled not only the seats but the gangways
-and the spaces under the galleries. There
-may have been two or three thousand people
-down there, men and women. They were
-all members of the Petersburg Soviet,
-which is really a sort of conjoint meeting
-of its constituent soviets. The visitors’
-galleries above were equally full.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Above the rostrum, with his back to us,
-sat Zenovieff, his right-hand man Zorin,
-and the president. The subject under
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>discussion was the proposed peace with
-Poland. The meeting was smarting with
-the sense of defeat and disposed to resent
-the Polish terms. Soon after we came in
-Zenovieff made a long and, so far as I could
-judge, a very able speech, preparing the
-minds of this great gathering for a Russian
-surrender. The Polish demands are outrageous,
-but for the present Russia must
-submit. He was followed by an oldish
-man who made a bitter attack upon the
-irreligion of the people and government of
-Russia; Russia was suffering for her sins,
-and until she repented and returned to
-religion she would continue to suffer one
-disaster after another. His opinions were
-not those of the meeting, but he was
-allowed to have his say without interruption.
-The decision to make peace with Poland
-was then taken by a show of hands. Then
-came my little turn. The meeting was told
-that I had come from England to see the
-Bolshevik <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">régime</span></i>; I was praised profusely;
-I was also exhorted to treat that <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">régime</span></i>
-fairly and not to emulate those other recent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>visitors (these were Mrs. Snowden and
-Guest and Bertrand Russell) who had
-enjoyed the hospitality of the republic and
-then gone away to say unfavourable things
-of it. This exhortation left me cold; I
-had come to Russia to judge the Bolshevik
-Government and not to praise it. I had
-then to take possession of the rostrum and
-address this big crowd of people. This
-rostrum I knew had proved an unfortunate
-place for one or two previous
-visitors, who had found it hard to explain
-away afterwards the speeches their translators
-had given the world through the
-medium of the wireless reports. Happily,
-I had had some inkling of what was coming.
-To avoid any misunderstanding I had
-written out a short speech in English, and
-I had had this translated carefully into
-Russian. I began by saying clearly that
-I was neither Marxist nor Communist,
-but a Collectivist, and that it was not to a
-social revolution in the West that Russians
-should look for peace and help in their
-troubles, but to the liberal opinion of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>moderate mass of Western people. I
-declared that the people of the Western
-States were determined to give Russia
-peace, so that she might develop upon her
-own lines. Their own line of development
-might be very different from that of
-Russia. When I had done I handed a
-translation of my speech to my interpreter,
-Zorin, which not only eased his task but
-did away with any possibility of a subsequent
-misunderstanding. My speech was
-reported in the <cite>Pravda</cite> quite fully and
-fairly.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Then followed a motion by Zorin that
-Zenovieff should have leave to visit Berlin
-and attend the conference of the Independent
-Socialists there. Zorin is a witty and
-humorous speaker, and he got his audience
-into an excellent frame of mind. His
-motion was carried by a show of hands,
-and then came a report and a discussion
-upon the production of vegetables in the
-Petersburg district. It was a practical
-question upon which feeling ran high.
-Here speakers arose in the body of the hall,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>discharging brief utterances for a minute
-or so and subsiding again. There were
-shouts and interruptions. The debate was
-much more like a big labour mass meeting
-in the Queen’s Hall than anything that a
-Western European would recognise as a
-legislature.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This business disposed of, a still more
-extraordinary thing happened. We who
-sat behind the rostrum poured down into
-the already very crowded body of the hall
-and got such seats as we could find, and
-a white sheet was lowered behind the
-president’s seat. At the same time a band
-appeared in the gallery to the left. A
-five-part cinematograph film was then run,
-showing the Baku Conference to which I
-have already alluded. The pictures were
-viewed with interest but without any violent
-applause. And at the end the band
-played the <cite>Internationale</cite>, and the audience—I
-beg its pardon!—the Petersburg Soviet
-dispersed singing that popular chant. It
-was in fact a mass meeting incapable of
-any real legislative activities; capable at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>the utmost of endorsing or not endorsing
-the Government in control of the platform.
-Compared with the British Parliament
-it has about as much organisation,
-structure, and working efficiency as a big
-bagful of miscellaneous wheels might have
-beside an old-fashioned and inaccurate but
-still going clock.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>VI<br /> <span class='large'>THE DREAMER IN THE KREMLIN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>My chief purpose in going from Petersburg
-to Moscow was to see and talk
-to Lenin. I was very curious to see him,
-and I was disposed to be hostile to him.
-I encountered a personality entirely different
-from anything I had expected to meet.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Lenin is not a writer; his published
-work does not express him. The shrill
-little pamphlets and papers issued from
-Moscow in his name, full of misconceptions
-of the labour psychology of the West
-and obstinately defensive of the impossible
-proposition that it is the prophesied Marxist
-social revolution which has happened
-in Russia, display hardly anything of the
-real Lenin mentality as I encountered it.
-Occasionally there are gleams of an inspired
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>shrewdness, but for the rest these publications
-do no more than rehearse the set
-ideas and phrases of doctrinaire Marxism.
-Perhaps that is necessary. That may be
-the only language Communism understands;
-a break into a new dialect would
-be disturbing and demoralising. Left
-Communism is the backbone of Russia
-to-day; unhappily it is a backbone without
-flexible joints, a backbone that can be bent
-only with the utmost difficulty and which
-must be bent by means of flattery and
-deference.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Moscow under the bright October sunshine,
-amidst the fluttering yellow leaves,
-impressed us as being altogether more lax
-and animated than Petersburg. There is
-much more movement of people, more
-trading, and a comparative plenty of droshkys.
-Markets are open. There is not the
-same general ruination of streets and
-houses. There are, it is true, many traces
-of the desperate street fighting of early
-1918. One of the domes of that absurd
-cathedral of St. Basil just outside the
-Kremlin gate was smashed by a shell and
-still awaits repair. The tramcars we found
-were not carrying passengers; they were
-being used for the transport of supplies of
-food and fuel. In these matters Petersburg
-claims to be better prepared than
-Moscow.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>
-<img src='images/i_148.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THE PETERSBURG SOVIET IN SESSION.<br />Lenin at the rostrum; below him are the women stenographers; immediately behind him is Zenovieff and the President.<br />Behind these again are officials and ministerial persons, official visitors and the like.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>The ten thousand crosses of Moscow
-still glitter in the afternoon light. On one
-conspicuous pinnacle of the Kremlin the
-imperial eagles spread their wings; the
-Bolshevik Government has been too busy
-or too indifferent to pull them down. The
-churches are open, the kissing of ikons is
-a flourishing industry, and beggars still
-woo casual charity at the doors. The
-celebrated miraculous shrine of the Iberian
-Madonna outside the Redeemer Gate was
-particularly busy. There were many peasant
-women, unable to get into the little
-chapel, kissing the stones outside.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Just opposite to it, on a plaster panel on
-a house front, is that now celebrated inscription
-put up by one of the early revolutionary
-administrations in Moscow: “Religion
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>is the Opium of the People.” The
-effect this inscription produces is greatly
-reduced by the fact that in Russia the
-people cannot read.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>About that inscription I had a slight
-but amusing argument with Mr. Vanderlip,
-the American financier, who was lodged
-in the same guest house as ourselves. He
-wanted to have it effaced. I was for retaining
-it as being historically interesting,
-and because I think that religious toleration
-should extend to atheists. But Mr.
-Vanderlip felt too strongly to see the
-point of that.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The Moscow Guest House, which we
-shared with Mr. Vanderlip and an adventurous
-English artist who had somehow
-got through to Moscow to execute busts
-of Lenin and Trotsky, was a big, richly-furnished
-house upon the Sofiskaya Naberezhnaya
-(No. 17), directly facing the
-great wall of the Kremlin and all the
-clustering domes and pinnacles of that imperial
-inner city. We felt much less free
-and more secluded here than in Petersburg.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>There were sentinels at the gates to protect
-us from casual visitors, whereas in
-Petersburg all sorts of unauthorised persons
-could and did stray in to talk to me.
-Mr. Vanderlip had been staying here, I
-gathered, for some weeks, and proposed to
-stay some weeks more. He was without
-valet, secretary, or interpreter. He did
-not discuss his business with me beyond
-telling me rather carefully once or twice
-that it was strictly financial and commercial
-and in no sense political. I was told
-that he had brought credentials from Senator
-Harding to Lenin, but I am temperamentally
-incurious and I made no attempt
-whatever to verify this statement or to
-pry into Mr. Vanderlip’s affairs. I did
-not even ask how it could be possible to
-conduct business or financial operations in
-a Communist State with anyone but the
-Government, nor how it was possible to
-deal with a Government upon strictly nonpolitical
-lines. These were, I admitted,
-mysteries beyond my understanding. But
-we ate, smoked, drank our coffee and conversed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>together in an atmosphere of profound
-discretion. By not mentioning Mr.
-Vanderlip’s “mission,” we made it a portentous,
-omnipresent fact.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The arrangements leading up to my
-meeting with Lenin were tedious and irritating,
-but at last I found myself under
-way for the Kremlin in the company of
-Mr. Rothstein, formerly a figure in London
-Communist circles, and an American
-comrade with a large camera who was also,
-I gathered, an official of the Russian Foreign
-Office.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The Kremlin as I remembered it in
-1914 was a very open place, open much
-as Windsor Castle is, with a thin trickle
-of pilgrims and tourists in groups and
-couples flowing through it. But now it
-is closed up and difficult of access. There
-was a great pother with passes and permits
-before we could get through even the outer
-gates. And we filtered and inspected
-through five or six rooms of clerks and
-sentinels before we got into the presence.
-This may be necessary for the personal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>security of Lenin, but it puts him out of
-reach of Russia, and, what perhaps is more
-serious, if there is to be an effectual dictatorship,
-it puts Russia out of his reach.
-If things must filter up to him, they
-must also filter down, and they may undergo
-very considerable changes in the process.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>We got to Lenin at last and found him,
-a little figure at a great desk in a well-lit
-room that looked out upon palatial spaces.
-I thought his desk was rather in a litter.
-I sat down on a chair at a corner of the
-desk, and the little man—his feet scarcely
-touch the ground as he sits on the edge of
-his chair—twisted round to talk to me,
-putting his arms round and over a pile of
-papers. He spoke excellent English, but
-it was, I thought, rather characteristic of
-the present condition of Russian affairs
-that Mr. Rothstein chaperoned the conversation,
-occasionally offering footnotes and
-other assistance. Meanwhile the American
-got to work with his camera, and unobtrusively
-but persistently exposed plates.
-The talk, however, was too interesting for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>that to be an annoyance. One forgot
-about that clicking and shifting about quite
-soon.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>I had come expecting to struggle with
-a doctrinaire Marxist. I found nothing of
-the sort. I had been told that Lenin lectured
-people; he certainly did not do so
-on this occasion. Much has been made of
-his laugh in the descriptions, a laugh
-which is said to be pleasing at first and
-afterwards to become cynical. This laugh
-was not in evidence. His forehead reminded
-me of someone else—I could not
-remember who it was, until the other
-evening I saw Mr. Arthur Balfour sitting
-and talking under a shaded light. It is
-exactly the same domed, slightly one-sided
-cranium. Lenin has a pleasant, quick-changing,
-brownish face, with a lively
-smile and a habit (due perhaps to some
-defect in focussing) of screwing up one
-eye as he pauses in his talk; he is not very
-like the photographs you see of him because
-he is one of those people whose change of
-expression is more important than their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>features; he gesticulated a little with his
-hands over the heaped papers as he talked,
-and he talked quickly, very keen on his
-subject, without any posing or pretences
-or reservations, as a good type of scientific
-man will talk.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Our talk was threaded throughout and
-held together by two—what shall I call
-them?—<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">motifs</span></i>. One was from me to him:
-“What do you think you are making of
-Russia? What is the state you are trying
-to create?” The other was from him to
-me: ‘Why does not the social revolution
-begin in England? Why do you not work
-for the social revolution? Why are you
-not destroying Capitalism and establishing
-the Communist State?” These <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">motifs</span></i>
-interwove, reacted on each other, illuminated
-each other. The second brought
-back the first: “But what are you making
-of the social revolution? Are you making
-a success of it?” And from that we got
-back to two again with: “To make it a
-success the Western world must join in.
-Why doesn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>In the days before 1918 all the Marxist
-world thought of the social revolution as
-an end. The workers of the world were to
-unite, overthrow Capitalism, and be happy
-ever afterwards. But in 1918 the Communists,
-to their own surprise, found themselves
-in control of Russia and challenged
-to produce their millennium. They have a
-colourable excuse for a delay in the production
-of a new and better social order
-in their continuation of war conditions, in
-the blockade and so forth, nevertheless it
-is clear that they begin to realise the
-tremendous unpreparedness which the
-Marxist methods of thought involve. A
-hundred points—I have already put a
-finger upon one or two of them—they do
-not know what to do. But the commonplace
-Communist simply loses his temper
-if you venture to doubt whether everything
-is being done in precisely the best
-and most intelligent way under the new
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">régime</span></i>. He is like a tetchy housewife
-who wants you to recognise that everything
-is in perfect order in the middle of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>an eviction. He is like one of those now
-forgotten suffragettes who used to promise
-us an earthly paradise as soon as we escaped
-from the tyranny of “man-made
-laws.” Lenin, on the other hand, whose
-frankness must at times leave his disciples
-breathless, has recently stripped off the
-last pretence that the Russian revolution
-is anything more than the inauguration of
-an age of limitless experiment. “Those
-who are engaged in the formidable task
-of overcoming capitalism,” he has recently
-written, “must be prepared to try method
-after method until they find the one which
-answers their purpose best.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>We opened our talk with a discussion of
-the future of the great towns under Communism.
-I wanted to see how far Lenin
-contemplated the dying out of the towns
-in Russia. The desolation of Petersburg
-had brought home to me a point I had
-never realised before, that the whole form
-and arrangement of a town is determined
-by shopping and marketing, and that the
-abolition of these things renders nine-tenths
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>of the buildings in an ordinary town
-directly or indirectly unmeaning and useless.
-“The towns will get very much smaller,”
-he admitted. “They will be different.
-Yes, quite different.” That, I suggested,
-implied a tremendous task. It meant the
-scrapping of the existing towns and their
-replacement. The churches and great buildings
-of Petersburg would become presently
-like those of Novgorod the Great or like
-the temples of Paestum. Most of the
-town would dissolve away. He agreed
-quite cheerfully. I think it warmed his
-heart to find someone who understood a
-necessary consequence of collectivism that
-many even of his own people fail to grasp.
-Russia has to be rebuilt fundamentally,
-has to become a new thing....</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>And industry has to be reconstructed—as
-fundamentally?</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Did I realise what was already in hand
-with Russia? The electrification of Russia?</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For Lenin, who like a good orthodox
-Marxist denounces all “Utopians,” has succumbed
-at last to a Utopia, the Utopia
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>of the electricians. He is throwing all his
-weight into a scheme for the development
-of great power stations in Russia to serve
-whole provinces with light, with transport,
-and industrial power. Two experimental
-districts he said had already been electrified.
-Can one imagine a more courageous project
-in a vast flat land of forests and illiterate
-peasants, with no water power, with no
-technical skill available, and with trade
-and industry at the last gasp? Projects
-for such an electrification are in process
-of development in Holland and they have
-been discussed in England, and in those
-densely-populated and industrially highly-developed
-centres one can imagine them as
-successful, economical, and altogether beneficial.
-But their application to Russia is an
-altogether greater strain upon the constructive
-imagination. I cannot see anything
-of the sort happening in this dark
-crystal of Russia, but this little man at the
-Kremlin can; he sees the decaying railways
-replaced by a new electric transport, sees
-new roadways spreading throughout the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>land, sees a new and happier Communist
-industrialism arising again. While I talked
-to him he almost persuaded me to share
-his vision.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>“And you will go on to these things
-with the peasants rooted in your soil?”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>But not only are the towns to be rebuilt;
-every agricultural landmark is to go.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>“Even now,” said Lenin, “all the agricultural
-production of Russia is not peasant
-production. We have, in places, large scale
-agriculture. The Government is already
-running big estates with workers instead
-of peasants, where conditions are favourable.
-That can spread. It can be extended
-first to one province, then another. The
-peasants in the other provinces, selfish and
-illiterate, will not know what is happening
-until their turn comes....”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>It may be difficult to defeat the Russian
-peasant <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en masse</span></i>; but in detail there is
-no difficulty at all. At the mention of the
-peasant Lenin’s head came nearer to mine;
-his manner became confidential. As if after
-all the peasant <em>might</em> overhear.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>It is not only the material organisation
-of society you have to build, I argued, it
-is the mentality of a whole people. The
-Russian people are by habit and tradition
-traders and individualists; their very souls
-must be remoulded if this new world is to
-be achieved. Lenin asked me what I had
-seen of the educational work afoot. I
-praised some of the things I had seen.
-He nodded and smiled with pleasure. He
-has an unshaken confidence in his work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>“But these are only sketches and beginnings,”
-I said.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>“Come back and see what we have done
-in Russia in ten years’ time,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>In him I realised that Communism could
-after all, in spite of Marx, be enormously
-creative. After the tiresome class-war
-fanatics I had been encountering among
-the Communists, men of formulæ as sterile
-as flints, after numerous experiences of the
-trained and empty conceit of the common
-Marxist devotee, this amazing little man,
-with his frank admission of the immensity
-and complication of the project of Communism
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>and his simple concentration upon
-its realisation, was very refreshing. He at
-least has a vision of a world changed over
-and planned and built afresh.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>He wanted more of my Russian impressions.
-I told him that I thought that in
-many directions, and more particularly in
-the Petersburg Commune, Communism was
-pressing too hard and too fast, and destroying
-before it was ready to rebuild.
-They had broken down trading before they
-were ready to ration; the co-operative
-organisation had been smashed up instead
-of being utilised, and so on. That brought
-us to our essential difference, the difference
-of the Collectivist and Marxist, the question
-whether the social revolution is, in its extremity,
-necessary, whether it is necessary
-to overthrow one social and economic system
-completely before the new one can
-begin. I believe that through a vast sustained
-educational campaign the existing
-Capitalist system could be <em>civilised</em> into a
-Collectivist world system; Lenin on the
-other hand tied himself years ago to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>Marxist dogmas of the inevitable class war,
-the downfall of Capitalist order as a prelude
-to reconstruction, the proletarian dictatorship,
-and so forth. He had to argue,
-therefore, that modern Capitalism is incurably
-predatory, wasteful, and unteachable,
-and that until it is destroyed it will
-continue to exploit the human heritage stupidly
-and aimlessly, that it will fight
-against and prevent any administration of
-national resources for the general good,
-and that it will inevitably make wars.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>I had, I will confess, a very uphill argument.
-He suddenly produced Chiozza
-Money’s new book, <cite>The Triumph of Nationalisation</cite>,
-which he had evidently been
-reading very carefully. “But you see directly
-you begin to have a good working
-collectivist organisation of any public interest,
-the Capitalists smash it up again.
-They smashed your national shipyards;
-they won’t let you work your coal economically.”
-He tapped the book. “It is
-all here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>And against my argument that wars
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>sprang from nationalist imperialism and not
-from a Capitalist organisation of society
-he suddenly brought: “But what do you
-think of this new Republican Imperialism
-that comes to us from America?”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Here Mr. Rothstein intervened in Russian
-with an objection that Lenin swept
-aside.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>And regardless of Mr. Rothstein’s plea
-for diplomatic reserve, Lenin proceeded to
-explain the projects with which one American
-at least was seeking to dazzle the imagination
-of Moscow. There was to be economic
-assistance for Russia and recognition
-of the Bolshevik Government. There was
-to be a defensive alliance against Japanese
-aggression in Siberia. There was to be an
-American naval station on the coast of
-Asia, and leases for long terms of sixty or
-fifty years of the natural resources of
-Khamchatka and possibly of other large
-regions of Russian Asia. Well, did I think
-that made for peace? Was it anything
-more than the beginning of a new world
-scramble? How would the British Imperialists
-like this sort of thing?</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>
-<img src='images/i_165.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>LENIN.<br />Behind him stands Gorky: to the right of Gorky (<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">i.e.</span></i> on his left) are Zorin (<em>hat</em>) and Zenovieff. Behind with cigarette is Radek.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>But some industrial power had to come
-in and help Russia, I said. She cannot
-reconstruct now without such help....</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Our multifarious argumentation ended
-indecisively. We parted warmly, and I
-and my companion were filtered out of the
-Kremlin through one barrier after another
-in much the same fashion as we had been
-filtered in.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>“He is wonderful,” said Mr. Rothstein.
-“But it was an indiscretion——”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>I was not disposed to talk as we made
-our way, under the glowing trees that
-grow in the ancient moat of the Kremlin,
-back to our Guest House. I wanted to
-think Lenin over while I had him fresh
-in my mind, and I did not want to be
-assisted by the expositions of my companion.
-But Mr. Rothstein kept on talking.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>He was still pressing me not to mention
-this little sketch of the Russian American
-outlook to Mr. Vanderlip long after I assured
-him that I respected Mr. Vanderlip’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>veil of discretion far too much to pierce
-it by any careless word.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>And so back to No. 17 Sofiskaya Naberezhnaya,
-and lunch with Mr. Vanderlip
-and the young sculptor from London.
-The old servant of the house waited on
-us, mournfully conscious of the meagreness
-of our entertainment and reminiscent of
-the great days of the past when Caruso
-had been a guest and had sung to all that
-was brilliant in Moscow in the room upstairs.
-Mr. Vanderlip was for visiting the
-big market that afternoon—and later going
-to the Ballet, but my son and I were
-set upon returning to Petersburg that night
-and so getting on to Reval in time for
-the Stockholm boat.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>VII<br /> <span class='large'>THE ENVOY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>In these seven papers I have written in
-the first person and in a familiar style
-because I did not want the reader to lose
-sight for a moment of the shortness of
-our visit to Russia and of my personal
-limitations. Now in conclusion, if the reader
-will have patience with me for a few
-final words, I would like in less personal
-terms and very plainly to set down my
-main convictions about the Russian situation.
-They are very strong convictions, and
-they concern not merely Russia but the
-whole present outlook of our civilisation.
-They are merely one man’s opinion, but as
-I feel them strongly, so I put them without
-weakening qualifications.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>First, then, Russia, which was a modern
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>civilisation of the Western type, least disciplined
-and most ramshackle of all the
-Great Powers, is now a modern civilisation
-<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">in extremis</span></i>. The direct cause of its downfall
-has been modern war leading to physical
-exhaustion. Only through that could
-the Bolsheviki have secured power. Nothing
-like this Russian downfall has ever happened
-before. If it goes on for a year
-or so more the process of collapse will be
-complete. Nothing will be left of Russia
-but a country of peasants; the towns will
-be practically deserted and in ruins, the
-railways will be rusting in disuse. With the
-railways will go the last vestiges of any
-general government. The peasants are absolutely
-illiterate and collectively stupid,
-capable of resisting interference but incapable
-of comprehensive foresight and organisation.
-They will become a sort of
-human swamp in a state of division, petty
-civil war, and political squalour, with a
-famine whenever the harvests are bad;
-and they will be breeding epidemics for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>the rest of Europe. They will lapse towards
-Asia.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The collapse of the civilised system in
-Russia into peasant barbarism means that
-Europe will be cut off for many years
-from all the mineral wealth of Russia, and
-from any supply of raw products from
-this area, from its corn, flax, and the like.
-It is an open question whether the Western
-Powers can get along without these supplies.
-Their cessation certainly means a
-general impoverishment of Western Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The only possible Government that can
-stave off such a final collapse of Russia
-now is the present Bolshevik Government,
-if it can be assisted by America and the
-Western Powers. There is now no alternative
-to that Government possible. There
-are of course a multitude of antagonists—adventurers
-and the like—ready, with European
-assistance, to attempt the overthrow
-of that Bolshevik Government, but there
-are no signs of any common purpose and
-moral unity capable of replacing it. And
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>moreover there is no time now for another
-revolution in Russia. A year more
-of civil war will make the final sinking
-of Russia out of civilisation inevitable.
-We have to make what we can, therefore,
-of the Bolshevik Government, whether we
-like it or not.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The Bolshevik Government is inexperienced
-and incapable to an extreme degree;
-it has had phases of violence and cruelty;
-but it is on the whole honest. And it
-includes a few individuals of real creative
-imagination and power, who may with opportunity,
-if their hands are strengthened,
-achieve great reconstructions. The Bolshevik
-Government seems on the whole to
-be trying to act up to its professions, which
-are still held by most of its supporters with
-a quite religious passion. Given generous
-help, it may succeed in establishing a new
-social order in Russia of a civilised type
-with which the rest of the world will be
-able to deal. It will probably be a mitigated
-Communism, with a large-scale handling
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>of transport, industry, and (later)
-agriculture.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>It is necessary that we should understand
-and respect the professions and principles
-of the Bolsheviki if we Western
-peoples are to be of any effectual service
-to humanity in Russia. Hitherto these
-professions and principles have been ignored
-in the most extraordinary way by
-the Western Governments. The Bolshevik
-Government is, and says it is, a Communist
-Government. And it means this, and will
-make this the standard of its conduct. It
-has suppressed private ownership and private
-trade in Russia, not as an act of expediency
-but as an act of right; and in
-all Russia there remain now no commercial
-individuals and bodies with whom we can
-deal who will respect the conventions and
-usages of Western commercial life. The
-Bolshevik Government, we have to understand,
-has, by its nature, an invincible prejudice
-against individual business men; it
-will not treat them in a manner that they
-will consider fair and honourable; it will
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>distrust them and, as far as it can, put them
-at the completest disadvantage. It regards
-them as pirates—or at best as privateers.
-It is hopeless and impossible therefore for
-individual persons and firms to think of going
-into Russia to trade. There is only
-one being in Russia with whom the Western
-world can deal, and that is the Bolshevik
-Government itself, and there is no way
-of dealing with that one being safely and
-effectually except through some national
-or, better, some international Trust. This
-latter body, which might represent some
-single Power or group of Powers, or which
-might even have some titular connection
-with the League of Nations, would be able
-to deal with the Bolshevik Government on
-equal terms. It would have to recognise
-the Bolshevik Government and, in conjunction
-with it, to set about the now
-urgent task of the material restoration of
-civilised life in European and Asiatic Russia.
-It should resemble in its general nature
-one of the big buying and controlling
-trusts that were so necessary and effectual
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>in the European States during the Great
-War. It should deal with its individual
-producers on the one hand, and the Bolshevik
-Government would deal with its own
-population on the other. Such a Trust
-could speedily make itself indispensable to
-the Bolshevik Government. This indeed is
-the only way in which a capitalist State can
-hold commerce with a Communist State.
-The attempts that have been made during
-the past year and more to devise some
-method of private trading in Russia without
-recognition of the Bolshevik Government
-were from the outset as hopeless as the
-search for the North-West passage from
-England to India. The channels are frozen
-up.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Any country or group of countries with
-adequate industrial resources which goes
-into Bolshevik Russia with recognition and
-help will necessarily become the supporter,
-the right hand, and the consultant of the
-Bolshevik Government. It will react upon
-that Government and be reacted upon. It
-will probably become more collectivist in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>its methods, and, on the other hand, the
-rigours of extreme Communism in Russia
-will probably be greatly tempered through
-its influence.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The only Power capable of playing this
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">rôle</span></i> of eleventh-hour helper to Russia single-handed
-is the United States of America.
-Other Powers than the United States will,
-in the present phase of world-exhaustion,
-need to combine before they can be of any
-effective use to Russia. Big business is by
-no means antipathetic to Communism. The
-larger big business grows the more it approximates
-to Collectivism. It is the upper
-road of the few instead of the lower road
-of the masses to Collectivism.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The only alternative to such a helpful
-intervention in Bolshevik Russia is, I firmly
-believe, the final collapse of all that remains
-of modern civilisation throughout what was
-formerly the Russian Empire. It is highly
-improbable that the collapse will be limited
-to its boundaries. Both eastward and westward
-other great regions may, one after
-another, tumble into the big hole in civilisation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>thus created. Possibly all modern
-civilisation may tumble in.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>These propositions do not refer to any
-hypothetical future; they are an attempt
-to state the outline facts and possibilities
-of what is going on—and going on with
-great rapidity—in Russia and in the world
-generally now, as they present themselves
-to my mind. This in general terms is the
-frame of circumstance in which I would
-have the sketches of Russia that have
-preceded this set and read. So it is I
-interpret the writing on the Eastern wall
-of Europe.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>THE END</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</h2>
-</div>
- <ol class='ol_1 c004'>
- <li>Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
-
- </li>
- <li>Retained anachronistic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as printed.
-
- </li>
- <li>Footnotes have been re-indexed using numbers.
- </li>
- </ol>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Russia in the Shadows, by
-H. G. (Herbert George) Wells
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RUSSIA IN THE SHADOWS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 60173-h.htm or 60173-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/6/0/1/7/60173/
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
- </body>
- <!-- created with ppgen.py 3.57c on 2019-07-28 21:43:06 GMT -->
-</html>
diff --git a/old/60173-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/60173-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 780fa57..0000000
--- a/old/60173-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60173-h/images/i_024a.jpg b/old/60173-h/images/i_024a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 047c0f8..0000000
--- a/old/60173-h/images/i_024a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60173-h/images/i_024b.jpg b/old/60173-h/images/i_024b.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 934aef7..0000000
--- a/old/60173-h/images/i_024b.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60173-h/images/i_033a.jpg b/old/60173-h/images/i_033a.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 020b4e3..0000000
--- a/old/60173-h/images/i_033a.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60173-h/images/i_033b.jpg b/old/60173-h/images/i_033b.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 6093155..0000000
--- a/old/60173-h/images/i_033b.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60173-h/images/i_056.jpg b/old/60173-h/images/i_056.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index cca6459..0000000
--- a/old/60173-h/images/i_056.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60173-h/images/i_073.jpg b/old/60173-h/images/i_073.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index a4689db..0000000
--- a/old/60173-h/images/i_073.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60173-h/images/i_092.jpg b/old/60173-h/images/i_092.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index dc73e7c..0000000
--- a/old/60173-h/images/i_092.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60173-h/images/i_093.jpg b/old/60173-h/images/i_093.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index c8391a8..0000000
--- a/old/60173-h/images/i_093.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60173-h/images/i_112.jpg b/old/60173-h/images/i_112.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index fbb9443..0000000
--- a/old/60173-h/images/i_112.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60173-h/images/i_129.jpg b/old/60173-h/images/i_129.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index fbf9f65..0000000
--- a/old/60173-h/images/i_129.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60173-h/images/i_148.jpg b/old/60173-h/images/i_148.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 43562be..0000000
--- a/old/60173-h/images/i_148.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60173-h/images/i_165.jpg b/old/60173-h/images/i_165.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 45ce823..0000000
--- a/old/60173-h/images/i_165.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60173-h/images/i_frontispiece.jpg b/old/60173-h/images/i_frontispiece.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index f282192..0000000
--- a/old/60173-h/images/i_frontispiece.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60173-h/images/title.jpg b/old/60173-h/images/title.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 61dbcc3..0000000
--- a/old/60173-h/images/title.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ