Not
everything worth reading is hot off the press. In this section,
Nicholas Reid recommends "something old" that is still well worth
reading. "Something old" can mean anything from a venerable and antique
classic to a good book first published five or more years ago.
“WITNESSES OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION” by Harvey Pitcher (first
published 1994; revised edition 2001)
Isn’t
hindsight a lovely faculty? You can look back on the dreams and hopes and
predictions of people nearly 100 years ago and you can see just how dead wrong
they were about so many things. And then you’re tempted to feel superior.
Surely you wouldn’t make the same mistakes in their circumstances, would you?
I found plenty of opportunities
for that smug exercise of hindsight when I first read Harvey Pitcher’s Witnesses of the Russian Revolution twelve
years ago.
A revised edition of the book
Pitcher produced in the early 1990s, Witnesses
of the Russian Revolution is a compendium, with commentary, of all the
things that foreign journalists were writing about the two Russian revolutions
(February and October 1917) while they were actually in progress - and not
years later, when greater perspective was possible, but also when myth-making
was well under way.
So we are treated to newspaper
accounts of the chaotic downfall of tsarism in February and March, the shaky
existence of the Provisional Government, the dominance of Kerensky, the
manoeuvres of foreign diplomats to keep Russia fighting in the European war,
the failed Bolshevik attempt to seize power in the “July Days”, the failed
right-wing coup of Kornilov, the Bolshevik coup in October/November and (after
democratic elections had been held), the Bolshevik closure of the Constituent
Assembly, establishment of a dictatorship and stamping-out of anything
resembling democracy.
The book chronicles what the
likes of Arthur Ransome and Morgan Philips Price and the New Zealander Harold
Williams sent to their British and American newspapers from Moscow and
Petrograd in 1917. Some of these journalists were surprising beasts. Ransome is
now best known for his delightful, and delightfully English middle-class,
series of children’s books Swallows and
Amazons. But in 1917 he was a dedicated and idealistic left-winger who
cheered the revolution on and later married one of Trotsky’s secretaries. By
contrast, Williams was opposed to the Bolsheviks from the first, realizing
(correctly as it turned out) that, once in control, they would establish a
dictatorship rather than sharing power with other left-wing parties.
Naturally some heroic revolutionary
myths come tumbling down as one reads this book and sees how things were
reported, before they were air-bushed in later propaganda and mythology.
Numerous film documentaries would
have us believe that Lenin’s return to the Finland Station was a great popular
catharsis, like the storming of the Winter Palace. In fact at the time when
Lenin returned, hardly anybody noticed, apart from a small band of his hard-core
Bolshevik supporters. There was no major popular demonstration and no gaping
crowds to listen to the man’s words of wisdom.
As for the so-called “storming”
of the Winter Palace, it really is a fiction, promoted by the unreliable
journalism of the American radical John Reed in his colourful, but often
mendacious, book Ten Days That Shook the
World, and by the film “reconstruction” which Sergei Eisenstein organised
for his film October, made ten years
after the event. Bolsheviks walked into the place virtually unopposed, with
scarcely a shot fired. The Provisional Government had already collapsed along
with its military strong points. This is one of those places where the legend
still seems unable to be dislodged, however, even after the collapse of the
Soviet Union. Too many millions of people have seen Eisenstein’s fiction
(hordes of heroic armed proletarians rushing in against volleys of gunfire) for
it to be removed from the collective psyche. Look up Orlando Figes’ masterly
history of the Russian Revolution, A
People’s Tragedy, and you will discover that the Winter Palace suffered more
damage from Eisenstein’s film crew than it did from the historical event they
were supposedly reconstructing.
Our smug hindsight comes most
into play when we read the silly despatches of Robert Wilton, the London Times correspondent who kept trying to
promote the Russian war effort when it had clearly collapsed, and then tried to
make a hero of the reactionary General Kornilov. Or the equally undiscerning
despatches of Arthur Ransome, who fondly imagined that Lenin would form a nice
coalition government with the Mensheviks and Social Revolutionaries. Or Harold
Williams clinging to his belief that the middle-class Kadets, who had already
been overwhelmed by the February Revolution, were going to somehow revive and
lead a government.
What most surprises in this
compendium is the way Alexander Kerensky was popularly conceived of as the
strong socialist centrist who would save Russia. It is simply not true, as many
subsequent history books claim, that Kerensky was seen as a theatrical,
bungling poser from the first. In 1917 itself, even his enemies respected him,
he had a strong and effective oratorical style and a much larger popular following
that Lenin ever did.
And then, just when our smug
hindsight is getting out of hand in reading this book, something draws us up
short. There was, for example, the hard-headed British military attaché Alfred
Knox, who actually counted the guns and gave a realistic assessment of Russia’s
fighting capacity in the war when more idealistic journalists were still
applauding the revolution of brotherly love. Or the peasant interviewed by the
American correspondent Ernest Poole at the end of 1917. With fearful accuracy,
the peasant predicted that the new Bolshevik government would be quite willing
to starve the peasants in order to feed the small urban working class that
supported it. The peasant understood that years of civil war and terror would
follow. Sadly, he was dead right.
In their predictions, these two
people were more prescient than any of the theorising editorials that are
quoted.
Journalists are sometimes prone
to patting themselves on the back and referring to their news stories as “the
first draft of history”. In reality, the real historian’s task is much more
exacting than the journalist’s, involving more extensive combing of archives
and comparison of sources. But journalism – even factually inaccurate journalism
– can give us a strong sense of what people were feeling and believing at a
given time. Witnesses of the Russian
Revolution is one of those books that forcefully remind us of this.
Interesting footnote: When Harvey Pitcher was first putting this
book together in the 1990s, the post-Soviet Russian government was still very
shaky, and there was still the possibility of a coup to reimpose Communism.
When Pitcher discusses how Kerensky dealt with various crises in 1917, he
therefore often makes comparisons with how Gorbachev and Yeltsin and others
dealt with similar threats after 1989-90. Journalism is highly topical, but
history books are also written in specific historical circumstances, and they
too have their freight of topicality. In this case, however, the comparisons
add to the piquancy of Pitcher’s interpretations.
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