MAROON IN MOSCOW M^ MARGUERITE E.HARRISO LIBRARY THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SANTA BARBARA PRESENTED BY MR.& MRS. GODWIN J.PELISSERO MAROONED IN MOSCOW MARGUERITE E. HARRISON Fkuto by Jeamie E. Bennett, Baltimore, Md. MARGUERITE E. HARRISON MAROONED IN MOSCOW THE STORY OF AN AMERICAN WOMAN IMPRISONED IN RUSSIA BY MARGUERITE E. HARRISON NEW XBJr YORK GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY COPYRIGHT, T921, BY GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA FOREWORD In the early part of February, 1920, I crossed into Russia through the Polish Front, as correspondent of the Baltimore Sim and the Associated Press, intending to remain for six weeks. I stayed for eighteen months, ten of which were spent in prison. This was due to the manner in which I entered the country, and my actions while there, which I shall describe fully in the following pages telling what happened to me as well as what I heard and saw in Russia. My treatment while in prison was no different from that accorded any other pris- oners, native or foreign, and I can honestly say that I have come through it all with absolutely no personal bitterness and with what I believe to be a purely impartial view of conditions in the Soviet Republic. My account of my experiences is written entirely from memory, as I was permitted to take no notes out of the country when I was released on July 28, upon the acceptance by the Soviet government of the terms of the American Relief Association for famine relief in Russia, which was made conditional on the release of all American prisoners. Marguerite E. Harrison. CONTENTS PAGE Foreword v CHAPTER I Warsaw to No Man's Land ..... . . ii II A Red Army Billet . i8 III Work and Play in the Red Army ...... 2,y IV A Trip in a Box Car . 36 V An Unwelcome Guest 45 VI News Gathering in Moscow . 52 VII The Gods and Their Machine 67 VIII The Woman's Part .......... 78 IX Soviet Weddings 86 X BouRjEoi 93 XI Under Suspicion 106 XII Bureaus and Bureaucrats 118 XIII Ikons and Anti-Christ 130 XIV Radical Anti-Reds 140 XV SOUKHAREVKA I50 XVI Moscow Foyers and Salons . 158 XVII A Provincial Junket 170 XVIII Pageants and Plots 180 XIX A Modern Babel . 188 XX Al Fresco Adventures 201 XXI The Shadow of the Checka ..... . . . 209 XXII The Trap is Sprung .; , 225 XXIII Odinochka 232 XXIV Close Quarters 238 vii Vlll CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE XXV Prison Holidays .......:.,... 250 XXVI The Mills of the Gods . . .; . . .« « . . 250 XXVII An Attic Cell „ .., . 271 XXVIII Wherein a Jailbird Turns Jailer ..,..,. 281 XXIX Prison de Luxe .: . 292 XXX Release Number 2961 300 Afterword 308 Appendix the RUSSIAN socialist FEDERAL SOVIET REPUBLIC . 317 COUNCIL OF people's COMMISSARS 317 SOCIALIST PARTIES IN RUSSIA 320 TRADES UNIONS 322 COOPERATIVES . . . .. . .. . . i.; . . 322 MAROONED IN MOSCOW CHAPTER I WARSAW TO NO MAN'S LAND To get into any country by the back door, after having been refused permission to come in by the front way, does not sound like a simple thing to do, yet, as a matter of fact, I accomplished the feat without any great difficulty in February, 1920, when I entered Soviet Russia from Poland while a state of war existed between the two nations. My method was simplicity itself — I passed through the Polish lines into No Man's Land, and gave myself up to the first Red Army patrol. By this means I succeeded two weeks later in reaching Mos- cow, where I stayed for eighteen months, during which I was arrested twice by the Checka, living for six months under surveillance and for nearly ten in prison. Under the circumstances I consider that I fared rather well. If, as an American citizen, I had tried to get into Germany through the front lines from France after diplomatic relations had been broken off between the United States and that country, I doubt if I would have been as lucky with either the French or the Boches, for I would have run a pretty good chance of being taken for a spy by both sides. My decision to get into Russia by the underground route was reached only after I had tried and failed to get in by legitimate means. I had been in Germany as the correspondent of the Baltimore Sun during the six months of readjustment and revolution immediately following the Armistice, and there, II 12 MAROONED IN MOSCOW through persons identified with the SociaHst movement, I had heard many things, which made me reaHze that we, in Western countries, knew little or nothing of what was actually hap- pening in Soviet Russia. I wanted to see something at close range of the great social experiment of the Bolsheviks. Con- sequently on my return to America in the early autumn of 1 9 19 I applied at the Martens Bureau in New York for permission to enter Russia for the Baltinwre Sun of which I was a staff correspondent, the A^^^t^ York Evening Post, which had given me credentials as occasional traveling correspondent, and Underwood & Underwood, for whom I had agreed to take pictures in Europe. I was told flatly that this would be impossible. The Soviet government at that time was not en- couraging the entrance of bourgeois press correspondents. It was felt that the privileges accorded correspondents in Russia had been so often abused by deliberate misstatements intended to further anti-Bolshevik propaganda that, with few exceptions, the Foreign Office was refusing permission to the representatives of non-Socialist papers. I was even warned that it would be extremely unwise for me to attempt to get into the country. In spite of this fact I started for Europe in October deter- mined to try my luck. In London I had a conversation, con- firmed later in writing, with Mr. Collins, European manager of the Associated Press, who had agreed to accept my services as Moscow correspondent should I succeed in entering Russia. The refusal of the Martens Bureau closed the only legitimate routes through Esthonia, Finland and the Soviet courier serv- ice via Murmansk. It also barred me from applying to the only other agency which could have given me permission — Litvinov's bureau at Copenhagen. There remained another possibility — entrance through one of the countries with which Soviet Russia was then at war, Latvia, Lithuania or Poland. I chose the last named route, not because it was the easiest, but because it promised the most interesting experiences, and laid my plans accordingly. I wish to emphasize these facts because they had an important bearing on what happened to me later. I was deliberately WARSAW TO NO MAN'S LAND 13 taking a desperate risk, and I had no one but myself to blame for the consequences. I arrived in Warsaw in December with no very definite plans except that somehow or other I was determined to get to Russia. At that time I spoke very little Russian, so the first thing that was absolutely essential was an interpreter. It was necessary to find someone who would be acceptable to the Bolsheviks and at the same time did not have too bad a standing with the Polish authorities. For some time I failed to find anyone meeting these requirements. Then by chance I met Doctor Anna Karlin, She was a Russian who had emigrated to the United States some ten years previously, had taken out American citizenship papers, and lived for some time in Chicago, where she was identified with Socialist activi- ties. At the beginning of the revolution she had gone to Russia via Siberia and had worked for a year as a Red Army phy- sician, being assigned to duty in Galicia. When the Poles occupied this territory in the Autumn of 1919 she was made a prisoner, but as she claimed American citizenship she was allowed to go unmolested to Warsaw. For some months she tried to obtain an American passport, but without success. I found her out of work, unable to return to the United States and practically destitute. She still retained her Red Army papers, and I felt that, once in Russia, she would be able to take care of herself. I suggested that she should accompany me to Russia as an interpreter. She agreed, and we left to- gether for Minsk, then occupied by Polish troops in command of General Jelikovski. My first difficulties were encountered when I applied for a permit for her to leave Warsaw. As a Jewess, and as a person who had formerly been in the service of the Red Army, the Polish authorities were naturally inclined to be suspicious of her, and it took me some time to obtain the necessary papers. On my arrival in Minsk I called on General Jelikovski, ex- plained to him that I was anxious to get into Soviet Russia and asked for a safe conduct through the Polish lines on that sector of the Beresina front. I was met with a point-blank refusal. In the first place, the general told me, he would not 14 MAROONED IN MOSCOW be responsible for my personal safety. If I crossed the front in that manner I would certainly be shot as a spy by the Bolshe- viks. In addition I would naturally learn much about the disposition of the Polish troops, and either unwittingly, or under pressure, I might give valuable information to the Reds. As for taking with me a Jewish woman, who had been with the Red Army and afterwards lived in Warsaw, that was ut- terly preposterous ! After several interviews I realized that General Jelikovski knew his own mind and that it was impossible to do anything with him. Meanwhile I had made many acquaintances in Minsk among the Jews who were bitterly antagonistic to the Polish occupation on account of the unjust persecutions to which they were subjected. While not Communists by con- viction, most of them secretly sympathized with the Bolshe- viks on account of the attitude of the Poles. As Minsk was formerly a Russian province, nearly all of them had ties con- necting them with Soviet Russia. There was a flourishing trade in contraband between the Jews in Minsk and their co-reli- gionists in Russia, and a well organized underground railroad of communication between the Russian and Polish branches of various Jewish benevolent organizations such as the *'Oze" and the "Jdkopo." Most of these people crossed the lines through the Beresina sector, because it was the least guarded of all the fronts and also because it was used for the repatria- tion of Germans, and for exchange of hostages between the Poles and Russians. For this purpose a sort of tacit armistice had been established. On all other sectors of the front while there was no actual fighting there were frequent skirmishes and to cross between the lines was much more difficult. I had determined that if I was unsuccessful in getting a safe con- duct from the military authorities I would throw in my luck with the Jewish contrabanders, but if I had been caught this would have blocked all my future chances of getting into Russia through Poland. I had heard that General Szeptitzki, who was In command of the Vilna sector, was a much more approachable person. I therefore determined to go to Vilna and try to get a permit WARSAW TO NO MAN'S LAND 15 from him. So, leaving Dr. Karlin at Minsk I started for Vilna. At that time travel in eastern Poland was anything but luxurious. I made the trip from Minsk to Vilna in a fourth-class car, packed with Polish soldiers and a large convoy of Bolshevik prisoners. The trip, which in normal times is a matter of three hours or so, took us just twenty- two hours, owing to the sabotage of the railroad emplo3^ees, all of whom were White Russians and bitterly antagonistic to the Polish occupation. At Moledechno, midway between Minsk and Vilna, the engine crew struck and we were held up for four or five hours while the Polish officers in command of the train tried in vain to secure another crew. Finally they collected a purse of two thousand marks and presented it to the strikers, upon which they condescended to take us to Vilna. Some days after my arrival I had an interview with General Szeptitzki, and told him what I had in mind. At first he emphatically refused, but I finally succeeded in persuading him to give me a safe conduct through the Polish lines. Armed with this I returned to Minsk determined to give the slip to General Jelikovski and cross through his sector. The best route was from Minsk through Smolovichi to Borisov. There I had Jewish friends who were in constant communication with persons across the border and they would be able to give me letters of introduction which would help me considerably in Russia. I calculated that once on the front a permit from General Szeptitzki, who was well known and much loved throughout the entire army, would be sufficient to induce the officer in command of the front line troops to pass me through unless he received orders from Minsk to the contrary. So as a military permit was necessary to travel on the train to Borisov we left Minsk early one morning in a sleigh furnished us by Jewish contrabanders. We covered the one hundred and twenty versts to Borisov in a day, arriving late at night by a circuitous route, so that we would not be challenged by Polish sentries. The next morning I interviewed the commanding officer, showed my permit from General Szeptitzki, carefully conceal- ing the fact that I had come from Minsk and it was arranged 16 MAROONED IN MOSCOW that I should be conducted through the front lines on the following day. Having accomplished this much, my only anxiety, as far as the Poles were concerned, was that I might be searched for letters before leaving the country. On the way to Poland I had received several letters of introduction for Moscow from Paul Birukov, a Russian, friend and biographer of Tolstoi, whom I had met in Geneva. One was to Brons Brouyevitch, who was associated with Lunacharsky, Com- missioner of Education; another to Krupkaya, wife of Lenin. Besides I had a letter from a well known Polish Communist, and a number of personal letters from Jewish people in Poland to their relatives in Russia. The latter, for all I knew, might be a disadvantage to me with the Bolsheviks as well, for in most cases I had no idea of the politics of the people who had given them to me. I even had three thousand Kerensky roubles from a Doctor Szabad of Vilna, for his wife, who was living in Petrograd, and letters from members of Jewish benevolent associations to fellow members in Orscha, Vitebsk, Smolensk and Moscow. Much to my relief the subject was never brought up, and as a matter of fact I was not searched until my arrival in Moscow. We left Borisov for the front in a sleigh early on the morning of February 8th, with a Polish soldier who acted as our escort during an exciting drive of seven versts, along a rough highway rutted by heavy motor lorries, through a winding track in a dense forest where we often had to stop and bridge the trenches with spruce boughs to permit the passage of our sleigh. We finally arrived at a dugout built of logs, camouflaged with evergreens where I found an officer who had been notified of our coming from staff headquarters at Borisov. He was none too cordial and evidently did not relish his task of conducting me to No Man's Land. We had coffee together and all the while he entertained me with ac- counts of Bolshevik atrocities, predicting that I would prob- ably be shot within twenty-four hours and suggesting that perhaps I should like to change my mind and go back to Bo- risov. Finding me adamant, he started out leading the way WARSAW TO NO MAN'S LAND 17 through a network of barbed wire entanglements with my carryall slung over his shoulder. I followed with my suitcase and knapsack, and the little doctor, who was very fat and short of breath, brought up the rear. Finally we emerged from the woods and I found myself on the edge of No Man's Land, a wide open expanse of snow- covered fields dotted here and there with peasant villages. Ap- parently it was absolutely uninhabited. There were no signs of life, not even an occasional peasant or a village dog — dead silence brooded over everything. I knew that somewhere, just beyond, were detachments of the Red Army, but there was no evidence of their proximity. Some distance away was a small settlement of about six houses and the officer informed me that there we would be able to find a sleigh to take us to the nearest village. We covered the distance in a few minutes and knocked at the door of one of the houses, a rough board structure with a thatched roof. A bearded peasant with a sheepskin coat and astrakhan cap appeared at the door. He eyed my escort in a rather unfriendly manner and was de- cidedly disgruntled when ordered to bring out his sleigh and take us to the nearest village, where, I was told, I would probably meet the Red Army patrol in a few hours. Presently he brought up a moth-eaten horse and a broken down sleigh into which we piled our bags, following him on foot to the village which we reached after a half-hour tramp. We stopped in front of a schoolhouse, the only decent building in the place, where we were received by the teacher, a very pretty Russian girl who spoke Polish well, and seemed to be on ex- cellent terais with my officer. They had a long conversation during which she evidently gave him a certain amount of im- portant information for which he paid several pounds of chocolate and a package of tea. Then he said good-bye to me, wishing me luck, and Doctor Karlin and I were left to await the arrival of the Red Army patrol. CHAPTER II A RED ARMY BILLET The room in which we were sitting served as the teacher's living and bedroom. It was large and cheerful, with geraniums in the windows, a comfortable drugget on the floor, and a big porcelain stove in the comer that made us forget the intense cold outside — in fact several degrees below zero. In a few minutes, with true Russian hospitality, the teacher brought in a bubbling samovar, some small oaten cakes with bacon fat instead of butter, and invited us to have a cup of real tea, which she had probably received on a previous visit from our officer. It was all very different from what I had imag- ined. I had thought that I would find No Man's Land a deso- late waste, but here was no sign of war and destruction — even comparative comfort. To tell the truth, I never had the feeling that I was in the zone of military operations, either on the Polish or Russian front lines. To anyone who was at all familiar with the Western Front in the great war, the Beresina front was like going back to the days of, say. Napoleon. The Poles had an irregular line of entrenchments and barbed wire entanglements, seven versts east of the Beresina, a few batteries of light artillery and machine guns. Their supplies were brought to within a few versts of the advanced posts by a small number of decrepit motor lorries, which had much difficulty in ploughing their way through the heavy snow. Then they were loaded on sleighs or carried in packs to the front line trenches. There were no narrow gauge lines, no funny little dummy engines, no strings of supply trains passing one another. Everything was primitive and simple to a degree; there was none of the paraphernalia of modern war. The soldiers were poorly i8 A RED ARMY BILLET 19 armed, poorly equipped, and lived in the rudest shelters imaginable. The Bolsheviks did not even pretend to have a line of en- trenchments. Betvifeen them and the Poles was a wide stretch of open territory, perhaps five versts across in the narrowest portion. Behind this debatable ground were the scattered villages, in which the Red Army detachments were billeted. On that sector of the Russian front I never saw a trench or a dugout. The entire army was like a flying squadron, ready to advance or retreat at a moment's notice. Of course the Russian climate makes a winter campaign prac- tically impossible, and the Bolsheviks were quite safe as they were. Besides, both sides at that time confidently expected peace in the spring, and were simply maintaining an attitude of watchful waiting. So far I had seen no evidences of the presence of the Red Army, but in about an hour the door opened and three men in rough khaki colored coats, high boots and astrakhan caps came in. Each wore on his cap a five-pointed star, and one had pinned to his coat the Communist insignia, a star surrounded by a silver wreath. He was a splendid looking fellow, of the peasant type, with clear blue eyes and a whole- some, ruddy skin, very young and very much impressed with the importance of his office, for he was a political commissar. I explained to him in my very best Russian, that I had come from America to learn the truth about the Soviet Government, and that I wished to go on to Moscow. "That is very good of you," he said simply, with the friendliest smile imaginable, "but I have no authority to let you go farther. I must telephone to the company commander in Lochnitza, the next village. Meanwhile we will do all we can to make you comfortable here." While we were waiting for a reply the teacher invited me to have a look at the schoolroom across the hall. School was over for the day, and I found a meeting of the village Soviet going on. There were women as well as men gathered around the chairman, who was reading a decree from Moscow order- ing the mobilization of all men of the classes of 1883, 1884 20 MAROONED IN MOSCOW and 1885 to cut and haul wood for the railroads and the army. This was followed by the announcement that all villagers who had not a sufficient supply of wood to last through the winter would be allotted a certain amount, and a list of names of those in need of wood was read. Instantly several hands were raised. "My neighbor, Dmitri Pavlovitch, is not on the list," said one man. "He has not enough wood to last a month," Dmi- tri's name was promptly written down, as was that of a woman who claimed that she had been overlooked, and various other matters affecting the commune were taken up one by one. Few of the members could read or write, and yet they were governing themselves in an orderly and efficient manner. "We are doing our best," said the young commissar, who had come back with the news that I was to be sent to the com- pany command fifteen versts away, "but we are greatly handicapped because of the lack of cooperation of the intelli- gent classes. We want them to work with us." Our trip was made in two requisitioned sleighs, Doctor Karlin and I occupying the first, the second containing our baggage and two soldiers. The way led down the broad highroad that runs from Minsk to Moscow, which I had already traveled on the Polish side. It was built by Catherine the Great ; to this day it is bordered in many places by double rows of birch trees planted in her time, and the peasants still call it the "Ekaterina Chaussee." Our driver was a typical moujik, big, blond, gentle and childlike, with a certain underly- ing shrewdness. He was extremely talkative and the fact that I was a foreigner gave him an added degree of confidence. Indeed he was childishly eager to explain his perplexities and get my advice. "We are a dark people, Barina," he said; "we know little beyond our own villages. It was bad for us under our father, the Tsar, that much we know. Now we have a new government. Will it be better for us, do you think?" I told him it would be hard for me, as a foreigner, to judge, and asked him how the people of his village had been treated by the Red Army. According to his accoiiiiis, on the whole, they had fared A RED ARMY BILLET 21 much better since the revohition. A commissar had taken charge, and had made a Hst of foodstuffs and hve stock avail- able. Each peasant had been allowed enough for his needs, and the surplus had been requisitioned for the army. There had been no robbery and no lawlessness. On certain days he was compelled to report for work with his horse and sleigh, but otherwise he was left free to attend to his own affairs. In his village, he told me, there was enough food, with the exception of salt, but salt was extremely expensive, and al- most unobtainable. Parties constantly crossed the Polish lines to smuggle in supplies, but they were frequently arrested and shot by the Poles. As for the soldiers of the Red Army, they had as a rule been very good to the peasants, often sharing their supplies with them, or giving salt in return for eggs, milk and bacon. Other peasants with whom I talked in the districts through which we passed, which are among the poorest agricultural regions in Russia, told the same story with variations. In some villages there was no surplus and often a shortage of food supply, and there requisitions had been made very spar- ingly. There was some dissatisfaction over the failure of the government to provide food, but no antagonism to the admin- istration as such. Among the few richer moujiks who owned good-sized tracts of land there was a strong sentiment against nationaliza- tion, but as a matter of fact the government had decided the previous year to leave the question of nationalization in abeyance. Actually, under the Soviet Government there is less communism in the matter of land holdings than there was under the Tsar. Under the old system much land was owned in common by the villages and parcelled out among the peas- ants. At present the peasants are in posssesion of their farms. Many of them are dubious about this free gift from the gov- ernment, and officials are often approached by the peasants with offers to pay for their newly acquired interests. The peasants may be dissatisfied with taxes or requisitions, they may complain of the lack of the government to supply them with seeds, farm implements and manufactured goods, but they 22 MAROONED IN MOSCOW will never rise en masse against any government which leaves them in possession of the land. Meanwhile they are actually rich as far as money goes, and nearly every peasant has his hoard of "Nikolai" roubles tucked in his boots or hidden under the family feather bed on the stove. At present, however, his money does him no good. Many of the village cooperatives are closed or are operating on a restricted basis on account of lack of supplies. We arrived after dark in a driving snowstorm and stopped in front of an "izba" that served as company headquarters. It had two rooms. In the first a family of moujiks was living An enormous earthenware stove, on top of which the grand- mother and children had already gone to bed, was the most prominent article of furniture in the room. The father and several grown up sons were sitting on a long wooden bench, smoking pipes, filled with a vile weed called "mahorka," the peasant substitute for tobacco. In front of the fire the mother was spinning flax on a spinning wheel that looked as if it might have been made in the seventeenth century. The other room served as living and sleeping quarters for the comman- dant and his political commissar. The latter was at first inclined to be somewhat suspicious and put me through a rigid cross-examination, but as he showed no intention of having me shot on the spot, I began to feel slightly encouraged, especially as I knew something of army psychology. These Red Army men on the Beresina were very much like our own troops on the Western front — they were lonely and homesick; they had news and mail only inter- mittently. Life was very dull between the intervals of hostili- ties and they were thirsty for news and amusement. I was the first person who had come to them from the outside world. Most of them had never seen a Western European, much less an American woman, before. It was curiosity and boredom, coupled, perhaps, with a certain admiration of my audacity, that carried me through the Red Army from this small village on the edge of No Man's Land to Division Headquarters at Vitebsk. Having successfully passed through the ordeal of cross- A RED ARMY BILLET 23 examination we were received with simple unaffected friendli- ness, and deluged with questions with regard to happenings in the outside world. Why did the Entente wish to prevent Russia from settling her own affairs in her own way? What was the attitude of the American people with regard to their Russian comrades? Who would be the next American presi- dent? When would the blockade be lifted? When would Russia have peace ? While I was endeavoring to answer in my limited Russian, with the help of my interpreter, supper was brought in. There were no plates, and we shared a community dish of delicious country bacon with black bread, butter and hot tea with milk. After supper the commander himself took us to our billet in an "izba" across the way. It was quite a luxurious one, boast- ing three rooms. Ours was the best in the house, the principal articles of furniture being a wooden bed with big down pillows and an American sewing machine. The entire family as- sembled to greet us, and from that moment we were never left alone. They had never seen an American woman before and their curiosity was flattering if a bit overwhelming. Every piece of baggage was inspected and I undressed and went to bed before a breathlessly interested audience. The women of the family gathered in my room to watch the process, and the men, I felt sure, peeped through the cracks in the wooden partition. In the morning my sponge bath in a small tin basin was a source of untold entertainment. We had a break- fast of pancakes and tea, after which the commander appeared. It was ten o'clock and he had just gotten up. Nobody in Russia ever wants to go to bed or get up in the morning, and reveille is unknown in the Red Army. Soldiers and officers get up when they please. He invited me to go out and inspect the schools and the hospital. "School!" I said. "Is it possible that you have a school here?" for we were only fifteen versts from No Man's Land. "Yes, indeed," he answered, "and we have more pupils than before the Revolution." I found that there had formerly been one primary school in 24 MAROONED IN MOSCOW Lochnitza, with sixty-five pupils. At that time four hundred pupils were registered in the primary schools and the gymna- sium or secondary school. The entire equipment for the gym- nasium had been gotten together very hurriedly. There were three class rooms in each of which I found about thirty pupils hard at work. The benches had been knocked together from boards, with log supports. Similar benches, a little higher, served as desks. The blackboards were home-made and the pupils were doing their exercises on sheets of wrapping paper, cut the required size, with pencils that had been divided into three to make them go around. The schoolmaster was teaching a class in geometry when I came in. He had only two text books. He was an elderly man who had formerly taught in one of the gymnasia. All his life he had had theories about education which he had never been allowed to put into practice, and here he was in this out of the way place, within range of the Polish guns, carrying out his life's ambition with next to nothing in the way of equipment. He had planned for his pupils an up-to-date course, corresponding to that in our high schools, including modern languages, bookkeeping, scientific and agricultural courses. He was very much interested in the American public- school system and asked me when I thought they would be able to get some pedagogical books from the United States. His attitude towards the Soviet Government was purely non- political, but I think it was rather favorable than otherwise. In the primary schools there was the same lack of technical equipment. I talked to one of the teachers who was the daugh- ter of a pom^stchik, one of the former landlords in the neigh- borhood. She was frankly uninterested in her work and resentful at being obHged to teach French and German to the children of her father's moujiks. Nothing good could come of it, she said, and I could easily see that here was the sabo- tage of which I had already heard. From the schools we went to the hospital. It was a well- arranged building, with light, airy wards, each containing twenty beds, a dispensary and an operating room, but it was absolutely empty. There was not a piece of linen, a yard of A RED ARMY BILLET 25 surgical dressings, a pound of soap or disinfectant nor an ounce of medicine. The physician in charge told me that it was impossible to receive patients. "All I can do is to handle a few surgical cases in the dis- pensary," he said, "and yet the number of new cases of typhus averages twenty a week." Before we finished our tour of inspection a regular bliz- zard was raging, and it was bitterly cold, so we decided to remain in Lochnitza for another night, I had just started to give the commander an English lesson, after explaining the delightful mysteries of my folding typewriter, when he was called to the telephone. He came back with a rueful ex- pression. "I have bad news for you," he said. "Here's where we go back over the border," I thought, but it proved that he had orders to send us on at once to regi- mental headquarters at Nacha, twenty-five versts away; so we bundled up and set off in two sleighs down the long, broad Chaussee. Our hosts flatly refused to accept money for our meals and lodgings, the old mother only begging me to take a letter to her son in New York. She had lost the address, but she was quite sure that I would be able to find him, and I hadn't the heart to undeceive her. We reported at regimental headquarters, where the political commissar offered us his own billet, a warm, comfortable room in a clean little "izba," where we had supper with him and the commander of the regiment. They were an interesting pair. The commander, Shevilof, was an actor by profession, and an artist to his finger tips, and the commissar, Shefchenko, who was an ardent Communist, had been an upholsterer. The lat- ter told me much about the activities of the Communist party in the army, "Every officer shares authority with a political commissar, who is invariably a Communist," he said. "We are placed in the army to guard against purely military authority. All complaints, all matters of regimental discipline, and all ques- tions affecting relations between the army and the civilian population must be referred to us, although with regard to 26 MAROONED IN MOSCOW technical matters the officer has full liberty of action. It is required of an officer simply that he must be an expert in his line, and that he shall attend to his business. Under this sys- tem it is possible for us to make use of former army officers, irrespective of their political convictions, because their activi- ties are controlled. There are, in addition, Communists among the enlisted men in every regiment, and we choose some of our best men for that job, because we realize the importance of propaganda." The commander was plainly not interested in politics, and our talk drifted to music, the theater, books and finally to Russian songs. One after another he sang lovely folk melodies, boat songs from the Volga, harvest songs from the Ukraine, songs of forgotten heroes. Soon a crowd of sol- diers gathered at the door and we all joined in the chorus. Then followed revolutionary songs, such as the splendid funeral march of the Communists, the famous "Varschavianka" and the "Doubinushka," perhaps the finest of all Russian folk songs, for it is the heart cry of the Russian people. For generations the untranslatable chorus was sung by factory workers toiling twelve hours a day, by the slaves of the ^pontestchiki and by the political prisoners in the Siberian mines, who were kept from dropping at their tasks by the steady rhythm. The hours slipped by and it was five o'clock in the morning before we wished each other "Spakoinye noche," a peaceful night. We were left to sleep undisturbed until nearly noon, when the commissar knocked at our door. He had communicated with brigade headquarters at Krupki, some twenty-five versts away, and had received instructions to send us on as soon as possible. From there, he told us, we would get direct rail communications with Moscow. So far we had traveled entirely by sleigh, as the railroad had been torn up in anticipation of the Polish offensive. At Krupki we would be behind the front lines and would find much more comfortable accommodations. CHAPTER III WORK AND PLAY IN THE RED ARMY Kmpki, as brigade headquarters, was quite an important town, with a correspondingly important staff. The command- ing officer was away at the time of our arrival, and we were received by the political commissar, a Pole named Sinkiewicz. I had n:uch more difficulty in getting by the first examination with him than with the other commissars, for he was both inquisitiye and suspicious, besides being exceedingly intelli- gent, and a devoted Communist. Finally, however, he decided to let us stay at Krupki, I rather think in order that he might observe us himself. He gave up his own room to me, and left nothing undone to make us comfortable. We stayed for nearly a week, and I grew to know him very well. Before the war he had been a joiner, and he had had only a rudi- mentary education, but he had natural ability, real enthusiasm, and unlimited capacity for work. No detail was too small to receive his attention. He worked from nine or ten of one morning till three or four of the next, and the soldiers, while not fond of him, for he was a rather unapproachable person, respected him greatly. Outwardly in his command there was very little of what we would call discipline; the soldiers never stood at attention or saluted; there were apparently no fixed hours for anything, but when he gave an order it was instantly obeyed. With him I visited many of the enlisted men's billets. They were comfortably housed, and there was none of the over- crowding which I had noticed in the Polish army. The men's equipment was excellent, though not uniform. Each man had two suits of underwear, a uniform consisting of a flannel blouse or an army tunic somewhat on the American pattern, loose, baggy trousers, stout leather boots or shoes and felt 27 28 MAROONED IN MOSCOW boots for extreme weather, called vdlinki, an Astrakhan cap, a greatcoat or a sheepskin jacket. Their rifles were in good order, but not of the latest pattern, and mostly remade. There was no army kitchen, each man receiving his rations in bulk, and preparing them in his own billet. The officers had a mess in the schoolhouse across the way from my own billet, and I was invited to share their meals. They received the same rations as the men, but employed a woman to cook for them, and pooled their suppHes. I prepared my breakfast in my room, but had dinner and supper with them. The fonner meal consisted of a meat soup, meat cutlets, with potatoes or kasha, the Russian national dish (a cereal, usually whole wheat, buckwheat or millet), tea, with occasion- ally marmalade. Supper was soup, kasha, tea, and sometimes bacon. There were few officers at headquarters, most of them being stationed in adjoining towns, but they often came into Krupki for orders and I met many of them. Most of them were former imperial army officers, soldiers by profession, who had no political ideas, and cared little for whom they fought as long as they got their pay; others may have been working against the Soviet Government, hoping for a chance to put something over, but on the surface everything worked smoothly, and the political commissar's word was law. The only place where I noticed sabotage or friction was in the Red Cross, which is in charge of the Red Army Sanitary Service, and there also I began to observe evidences of discontent among the Jews, which is far more prevalent in Soviet Russia than people on the outside believe. Many of the physicians and a large proportion of the personnel were Jews, few of them were Communists, nearly all of the men had entered the sanitary service to escape active duty, and there was plenty of sabotage. The Synagogue had been converted into an emergency field hospital, the church being spared, which caused a great deal of feeling among the Jewish population. This was almost invariably the case in small towns unprovided with sufficient hospital facilities, and with no large buildings except the church and synagogue. It was quite natural that WORK AND PLAY IN THE RED ARMY 29 the latter should have been chosen as it was always lighter and dryer than the church, but the Jews did not appreciate this fact and were in many cases very bitter against the army authorities. The head physician at Krupki was a most entertaining person, who played the harmonica like a virtuoso, and regaled me with roast goose and baked apples in his billet, but he was very slipshod in his methods and profoundly indifferent. The hospital, while well equipped with medicines and supplies, was very dirty, and ran itself without any system whatever. The peasants at Krupki I found exactly like the others I had met — they were very well pleased at owning their land, dumbly submissive to the requisition system, which they evaded whenever they could, totally apolitical, and only vaguely conscious of the great changes that had come to Russia. They had always been in the fighting zone since the beginning of the war, military rule prevailed then, and it was still in force. Their food ration had been getting steadily shorter, supplies of manufactured goods less and less, but then that was war. They had the land, their children were getting a better educa- tion, that was the Revolution. On the whole they were rather pleased than otherwise with the change. It was easy to see that if they were left in posses- sion of their fields, and received a scant supply of salt and manufactured articles, they would care very little about the form of government in far-away Moscow or even in the pro- vincial capital of Vitebsk. The members of the village Soviet were simple, hardworking men for the most part; a few of them, however, were Communist propaganda workers who took the lead, and the others let them run things. The Jewish population, composed entirely of former small tradespeople, was, on the other hand, bitterly discontented. Their stores had been closed, they were compelled to do work for the army in order to draw their rations; speculation was punished with arrest or imprisonment. Many of them were very poor, far worse off indeed than the peasants. In the small towns in the war zone there are not multifarious commissariats in which the Jews can find comfortable jobs; 30 MAROONED IN MOSCOW they do not care for hard physical work and many of them existed on secreted supplies or devious and dangerous contra- band trade with Poland. While in Krupki I had an opportunity of seeing one of the Red Army schools for illiterates. These schools are splendidly organized. There is a school for every two hundred and fifty men throughout the entire Red Army. Attendance is compulsory and by an intensive system of teaching, illiterates are taught to read the newspapers and to write a fairly legible hand in six weeks. In the class I saw there were about fifteen pupils, mostly sturdy young boys of the peasant class from nineteen to twenty- four. They sat around a big table, at the head of which stood the teacher. He distributed a number of cardboard letters among the pupils, then formed with the letters which he had retained a word of one syllable. After all had taken a good look at it, he swept the letters into a pile in the center of the table and then a race started among the pupils to form the word from memory, the man who made it first and correctly winning the game. They were as keen about it as children, a score was kept and there was hot rivalry among them to see who would come out ahead at the end of the lesson. It was very interesting to note that while teaching the sol- diers the alphabet, the teacher also inculcated the first principles of Communism. Words employing all vowels and consonants were most cleverly brought into the lesson, each chosen with a view to propaganda. A more advanced class was using a primer for adult illiterates, which had been published by the department of education. The first sentence was: "Mui ne rabui — mui radi." "We are not slaves — we are glad." Then follows (this time I will only give the English translation) : "We are all equal — our masters are sorry." "We used to work for our masters, now we work for ourselves." "We elect our Soviets." "The Soviets are the tocsin of the people." "Our army is an army of workers and peasants," and so on. When words of three syllables were reached there were a num- ber of short expositions of the principles of soviet government, the relation between town and city workers and finally a brief WORK AND PLAY IN THE RED ARMY 31 sketch of the growth of the Communist movement from the foundation of the First International. The first "piece" was a speech of Trotzki. Reading of dates and numbers was taught by such his- torical landmarks as the birth of La Salle and Karl Marx, the Decembrist revolution, the assassinations of Alexander the Second and Stolypin, the March and October Revolutions and the meetings of the International. The educational system in the army is so well organized that I believe that every man who serves six months or more in the Red Army will go home with at least a rudimentary education. Social amusements as well are not lacking in the Red Army. One night while I was at Krupki I was invited to a ball in the brigade recreation center, a short distance outside of the town. This was a house which formerly belonged to one of the large landowners in the neighborhood. On the first floor were recreation and lounge rooms for the soldiers, well supplied with newspapers and propaganda hterature. Upstairs a large room had been converted into a combination theater and ball- room. All the stage settings had been designed and made by the soldiers themselves. The curtain was made of strips of muslin, which Russian soldiers are in the habit of wrapping around their feet instead of stockings under their high boots or vdlinki. The ball was preceded by three one-act plays, in which the women's parts were taken by girls from the village. The first two plays were the production of local Red Army talent. One was a sort of condensed version of "Ten Nights in a Barroom," the other frankly militaristic propaganda about a boy who re- deems a worthless past by valiant service in the Red Army. The third, much to my amusement, was a conventional society farce with all the earmarks of Class, and it was played and applauded with more zest than either of the others. After the performance chairs were pushed back and the dance began, the music being furnished by a regimental band, which alternated Russian national dances with American rag- time. We had "A Hot Time in the Old Town," "On the Mis- 88 MAROONED IN MOSCOW: sissippi," Sousa's marches, including the "Stars and Stripes Forever," and I danced the two-step for the first time in ten years. The Russian dances were far more intricate and proved a great tax on my adaptabihty, but I managed to get through without any serious mistakes. Officers and enHsted men mingled indiscriminately, for when not on duty no distinction of rank is officially recognized. The uniforms are supposed to be all the same, the only differ- ence being that the officer wears on his left arm the Red stars and bars, the insignia of rank. But I found that practice in this rule was not always strictly observed ; the officers' uniforms were usually of better quality than those of the men. Some of them sported British uniforms or tunics and Sam Brown belts, from army stores captured in Siberia or Archangel. The word "officer" is never used in the Red Army, being replaced by the word "Commander"; thus a company com- mander is addressed "Comrade Company Commander," a gen- eral "Comrade Division Commander." The organization of the army is similar to the organization of other armies, begin- ning with the rota or company and going to the division which consists of a minimum of ten thousand men. Several divisions form an "army," which is a slightly larger unit than an Ameri- can division. There were forty thousand men in the Seven- teenth Army, whose guest I was, and which had its head- quarters at Smolensk. In the middle of the party dancing stopped and we played a game called "Post Office." Pencils and paper were dis- tributed, each guest was given a small slip of paper on which was written a number. These we pinned on our chests, and then proceeded to write letters to the people we wanted to meet, addressing them by number, and signing our own numbers. The letters were dropped in a mail bag and distributed by a soldier postman. If Citizeness 27 received a letter from Citi- zen 17 she was supposed to ask him to dance. I had a number of letters, some of them very touching in their naive joy at seeing someone who brought news from the outside world. Others welcomed me simply and heartily to Soviet Russia, and some were very amusing. One man WORK AND PLAY IN THE RED ARMY 33 wrote in English, ''You danced very well." I promptly asked him to try it with me and then inquired where he had learned English. He told me that he had been a sailor on the Russian- American Steamship Company's boats which ran between New York and Libau. The first question he asked me about the United States was "Is Coney Island still running?" In the intervals between dancing we often adjourned to the buffet where tea was dispensed from a big brass samovar, and sausage and cheese sandwiches served. The girls at the party were all from the town or daughters of the peasants in the neighborhood. For the most part they were well dressed and looked rosy and happy. I talked to several girls as well as parents in Krupki and other towns in the army zone, and I never heard of an instance of women being outraged by Red Army men. The relation between the men and the girls was one of comradeship and absolute equality. There were many army weddings, both civil and religious, A few days later I was invited to amateur theatricals fol-' lowed by a dance at Bober, another army post a short distance from Krupki. My interpreter and I drove over in a sleigh, after an ineffectual attempt to take me in a motorcycle. There were very few motorcycles or lorries in the army, and mes- sages and supplies were usually carried by sleigh, but in our battalion there was one decrepit English motorcycle. The young officer who operated it was as proud of it as a child, and in spite of the heavy snow assured me that he could take me the thirty-five versts to Bober and back. I was ready on time, and watched him while he tinkered with the machine for an hour. Finally he announced that it was working all right. I got in and we started off at the rate of about sixty miles an hour, but suddenly something went wrong, we slackened speed, puffed and snorted, turned around three times and finally tried to climb up the steps of the village school. Then we made another start, bumped into a telegraph pole, and skidded off into a snow drift. I got out and pushed from behind while the driver tried to get every possible ounce of power out of his wheezy engine. Suddenly he started unexpectedly. I gave a flying leap and landed on all fours in the side car, but we 34 MAROONED IN MOSCOW decided that while the going was good it would be better to go back to Krupki and take a sleigh to Bober. At Bober I had dinner with an army physician and his wife. Officially they were not married, for it is forbidden for a man and wife to serve in the same unit in the Red Army, but she acted as his secretary, and what is more, the entire family consisting of three children, a cow, a pet goat and six bantam chickens accompanied them from one army post to another. It was an instance of "pull," which is not confined, as I dis- covered, only to capitalistic countries. Indeed, there is no place where it is more flourishing at the present time than in Russia. They were both very intelligent; he, while not at all in sympathy with the existing regime, was devoted to his work. The evacuation hospital under his care was at that time mainly devoted to typhus and pneumonia cases as there was practically an armistice on that sector of the front, and the men wounded some weeks previously had all been sent to the rear. He told me that some of the most necessary medicines were lacking, but that they obtained many drugs through contraband trade with the Poles. Actually the Red Army was being supplied with a considerable quantity of drugs and surgical supplies by its enemies, Polish officers sometimes engaging in the underground traffic. At Orscha, a few days later, I saw a large room filled with American Red Cross supplies that had been bought from officers in the Polish Army. The play at Bober was a classical comedy, very well acted and staged with considerable ingenuity, for everything had been made by the soldiers themselves. There was one boy of nineteen, a real artist, who played exquisitely on the violin, giving a number of Russian dances and folk songs as well as one of Wieniawski's Caprices, which he interpreted in a masterly manner. Afterwards I was invited to supper at the Aviators' Club, The aviators were all old Imperial army officers; most of them spoke French or German, and we had a very jolly time. From their manners and conversation they might have been still in their old environment. Their squadron possessed, they told me, only five old French planes of the WORK AND PLAY IN THE RED ARMY 35 1 91 7 model, petrol was scarce and the winter storms did not permit them to do much flying. Altogether, they said, the air force of the Red Army was insignificant and could only be counted on for a small amount of scout work. CHAPTER IV A TRIP IN A BOX CAR We had a funny time getting away from Krupki. It was an extremely good illustration of the Russians' quality of never being exact about anything, and their utter lack of system. Our train was to leave at twelve o'clock by the new daylight saving schedule which went into force on the day fixed for our departure, but the army failed to move up its clocks to correspond with the railroads, and we arrived just an hour late. Incidentally the Bolsheviks go in rather extensively for daylight saving. The difference between summer and winter time is two and a half hours. The next day we were on time, but the commander of the battalion had ordered places re- served for us in the post-office car. The official in charge of the car refused to admit us without authorization from the Commissariat of Posts and Telegraphs, and while he and the Red Army men who accompanied us to the station were disputing the train moved off. As it was the only train that day, we were obliged to spend another twenty-four hours in Krupki. Near the station I inspected a German repatriation echelon, loaded with civilians and prisoners of war, who were being repatriated through Poland. It was an up-to-date sanitary train, complete in every particular, with hospital, kitchen and refrigerator cars, steam heated and lighted by electricity. I also saw on a siding an ugly looking armored train, rather amateurishly constructed from converted flat cars, the guns being camouflaged with logs to make it appear like a lumber train. We left Krupki in a box car with the members of a forestry- commission and two Soviet officials who had been purchasing sole leather intended for the Polish army, from Polish officers 36 A TRIP IN A BOX CAR 37 on the Beresina front. There were ten of us in all, eight men, my interpreter and myself. The six foresters were the first civilian employees of the Soviet Government with whom I had been thrown in contact. They were not in the least interested in politics, and the only member of the party who was thor- oughly discontented with the present regime was a Jew. The paymaster was an old man whom they called babushka, grand- father. He sat up in a corner day and night on his money chest, smoked mahorka and never said a word, but the others were very talkative, and I got to know them well on the trip to headquarters at Vitebsk, which took three days and two nights, including a stop of some hours at Orscha. Our housekeeping arrangements were, to say the least, primitive. At both ends of the car were wide board shelves covered with clean hay, on which we slept, five on a side. In the center was a small sheet metal stove, around which was a bench roughly knocked together out of unplaned boards. We did all our cooking on this stove. The toilet arrangements consisted of a tin bucket and a dipper. In the morning when I washed my face and hands I followed the example of the others, leaning out of the door of the car, and cupping my hands while one of the "comrades" poured in water, with which I splashed my face. We made tea and pancakes on the stove, and heated cans of excellent meats which, with tea, black bread and sugar, were the army traveling rations. My companion and I were provided with these at Krupki. After supper in the evening we sat around the stove, told stories and the soldiers sang Russian songs for us by the hour to the accompaniment of a balalaika with one string missing. At Orscha I was met at the station by the chairman of the local Ispolkom (executive committee), to whom I had sent a telegram, as I had a letter for him from his mother, an old Jewish lady who lived in Borisov. He took us to his home, where he gave us a wonderful dinner : "tschi," a Russian vege- table soup, roast goose with potatoes and onions, Jewish style, pancakes, with sour cream, tea and cakes and apples for dessert. All the while he kept telling me about the terrible 38 MAROONED IN MOSCOW food shortage in the towns. With him I visited one of the "People's Universities," where they had very good technical courses, and classes for adult illiterates, and the hospital, which lacked the most necessary medicines and supplies. Everything available in that line had been requisitioned by the army and the civilian population was suffering greatly in consequence. While waiting for our box car, or tieplushka, to be attached to the next train which was shortly due, I was invited to have a look at the "Agit Punkt," the army recreation and propa- ganda center, of which there is one in every large town through which troops pass. It was a large, airy room, for- merly the first-class waiting room. As soon as I entered it I was struck with its resemblance to something I had seen before, then it occurred to me that it was as nearly as possible like an American "Y" center. There was the same arrange- ment of tables spread with periodicals and magazines, the same type of decorations on the walls, red flags and banners and portraits of Lenin replacing the stars and stripes and pictures of President Wilson, an American graphophone, a moving pic- ture machine, and a platform with a piano and arrangements for impromptu theatricals. I soon found out why. The director was an old American "Y" man — a Russian by birth, it was true, but he had worked with the American Y. M. C. A. in Siberia and Russia for three years, drifting into the Red Army to carry on the same work after the departure of the American workers. He had been with them long enough to become thoroughly imbued with American ideas and was genuinely homesick for his old environment. We arrived in Vitebsk early in the morning, and the doctor and I accompanied by an army dentist who had traveled with us from Orscha, went to report at Division Headquarters. We had all this time been traveling from place to place on army safe conducts, which carried us as far as Vitebsk, and it was necessary, we were told, for us to get permission from the general headquarters of the Seventeenth Army at Smolensk to take us through to Moscow. Division headquarters were in a large ramshackle building which had formerly been used as A TRIP IN A BOX CAR 89 a hotel, all the rooms being occupied by staff offices. The political commissar, a pleasant but rather ignorant man, who struck me as being much too young and inexperienced for his job, interviewed us, asking comparatively few questions, and promised to telegraph immediately for a permit for us to proceed to Moscow. He told us that his wife had been anxious for some time to go to Moscow, but had been unable to obtain permission as she had no business there which would entitle her to a Commandirovka, as official traveling orders are called in Russia, and that sending her as our escort would be an excellent pre- text for getting her there. While we were waiting we were shown over headquarters, inspecting the commissary department, where we found a very efficient looking officer examining samples of flour for army use. He was well qualified for his job, for he had been a baker before the Revolution. The topographical section was well equipped with maps, and the communications seemed to be in excellent working order, judging from the number of telegraph and telephone instruments in operation. The com- manding general was an austere looking man, evidently a former Imperial officer, for he clicked his heels together and made a stiff little bow when we were presented to him. He had perfect manners, but seemed rather diffident and uncom- municative. My judgment was that he was decidedly uncom- fortable in his present position, and was watched rather closely, for the political commissar never left us for a minute and did most of the talking. The permit for us to go to Moscow arrived within an hour, and we were told that the train would leave at seven in the evening. Meanwhile perhaps we would like to see the town. We said that we would very much, and set out in a sleigh, with a pleasant young commissar as our escort. The first place we visited was the military hospital which was clean and very well run, situated on a high hill, where are grouped most of the churches, former government buildings and the houses of the bourgeoisie. The buildings were sub- stantial structures of stone or concrete, painted pink or white, 40 MAROONED IN MOSCOW some of them beautiful examples of the Russian Empire style dating from the early days of the nineteenth century. The streets in this part of the town were broad and fairly clean, with trees, public squares and picturesque glimpses of the frozen Dnieper winding around the foot of the hill where were the railroad station and the dirty, forlorn buildings of the lower town. These consisted mostly of small Jewish shops, nearly all of which were closed, though "free trade" was still nom- inally in force in Vitebsk. In the shops which were still open the shelves were nearly bare of general merchandise, but the food stores exhibited geese and chickens, some meat, white bread, cakes and a few withered apples. Here and there a cafe was open. In one of these we had imitation coffee flavored with saccharin and watered milk, and some insipid little cakes, the former three hundred roubles a glass, the latter five hundred roubles apiece. The place was literally infested with beg- gars and apparently no effort was made to control them. They were mostly Jews, for Vitebsk was on the edge of what was known as the Jewish Pale, the extreme Eastern limit of the zone wherein Jews were permitted to live in the old days, and it was a lively trading center between Central Russia and Poland. The Revolution had put all these small traders out of busi- ness, there were neither factories nor a multiplicity of Soviet offices to absorb the workers, and those who were not con- scripted for the Red Army or employed in one of the govern- ment departments were living in direst poverty. The offi- cial bread ration for those not classed as heavy workers was one-half a pound of black bread a day, and a little soup and kasha, which they obtained at the Soviet dining rooms. The fare in the children's dining rooms was better than that for adults, but they had no fats and no milk. Salt was almost impossible to get and the people were desperate for lack of it. We had dinner in the dining room for the employees of the general staff. It consisted of cabbage soup and kasha, and the employees had to bring their own bread. Typhus was epidemic in the town, there were practically no disinfectants, soap or medicines, and the hospitals were A TRIP IN A BOX CAR 41 not able to accommodate even a small percentage of the vic- tims. In the afternoon, when we were left to wander about by ourselves, we visited a civilian hospital with a capacity of one hundred beds, which contained two hundred and forty patients, all ill with typhus. They were lying on straw pallets on the floors in the wards and in the hallways. On many of the beds the linen had not been changed for over a month; some of the patients were lying in bed quite naked, or covered with filthy rags. In spite of the frightful appearance of everything the doc- tor told us that the death rate among the patients was not over ten per cent., as they were mostly peasants. Typhus has been endemic so long in Russia that the lower classes are semi-immunized and the death rate is always in inverse ratio to the intelligence of the population. Among persons of the upper class it is twenty per cent and it is highest among the medical personnel, who are usually in poor condition to resist attacks from epidemics, owing to the fact that they are all overworked and undernourished. The death rate among doc- tors in Russia during the past three years has been nearly forty per cent. Two of the most interesting places we visited in Vitebsk were the Army Political School and the Vitebsk branch of the Commissariat of Nationalities. The former was for Red Army officers, men and political commissars. It was in a large building formerly used as a gymnasium or high school by the Russian government. Daily classes were held in history, political economy, the history of the Socialist movement, Marxism, the principles of the Communist Dictatorship, and Communist propaganda workers were trained for field service in the army and among the peasant population. There were also classes in journalism for those who wished to acquire the art of writing the propaganda leaflets and brochures with which Russia is deluged at the present time, and art classes for designers of Bolshevik posters. We saw a rehearsal by the dramatic club, of a Revolutionary play which was to be given at the main theater in a few weeks. The Commissariat of Nationalities was divided into four 42 MAROONED IN MOSCOW sections, Russian, White Russian, Polish and Jewish. I found that the Soviet Government was placing no bar in the way of nationalistic feeling or aspirations. Each nationality was permitted to issue its own bulletins, and its own books and pamphlets, whenever the limited supply of paper and printers' ink permitted their publication, and the schools were conducted in all four languages. There was even a Polish school, where the little Poles, however, were taught to become good Com- munists. The churches were in the same position, and Catho- lic, Uniate and Orthodox churches flourished side by side with the synagogues. There had been no very great effort to introduce a strictly Communistic system; free trade was per- mitted because the Soviet stores were obviously unable to give the people merchandise; many people had been left in undis- turbed possession of their own homes, because there was no demand for lodgings, many of the population having emigrated further east owing to the proximity of Vitebsk to the war zone. The general impression I got was of great squalor and misery caused by the war and the blockade, of general con- fusion and impermanence, with no evidence of either the benefits or disadvantages caused by Soviet rule. We left Vitebsk that evening, traveling in the army staff car with the commissar's lady, who proved a very good- natured but stupid companion, and a soldier who was detailed to carry our luggage and wait on us generally. As far as Orscha we occupied an ordinary second-class compartment, but there we changed to a staff sleeping car which was to take us the thirty-six-hour journey to Moscow. At Orscha, where we arrived in the middle of the night, and had to wait for six hours, we found several regiments on the move. The station was literally one mass of filthy humanity. Every inch of floor space was covered with sleeping soldiers with indescribably dirty bedding rolls, bags and knapsacks. They slept over- lapping, and the air was foul beyond description. Fortunately I found my "Y" man, who had not yet gone to bed, and he let us into the recreation room which had been locked up for the night, where we slept on benches until it was time for our train to leave. A TRIP IN A BOX CAR 43 Our quarters in the staff car were close, to say the least, but we were lucky, it seemed, to have those. A compartment for two was reserved for the four of us, and there, with the exception of a few venturesome visits to the toilet, we spent the next thirty-six hours. I occupied the lower berth, the doctor and the commissar's wife the upper berth, and the soldier slept on the floor. It was stiflingly hot, and the window was hermetically sealed. Standing in the corridor was impos- sible, because it was already filled with a solid mass of sol- diers, who insisted in defiance of discipline on occupying it. They made it almost impossible for us to open the door and our escort had to fight his way out to get hot water to make our tea from the samovar machines that are in operation at each station. The rest of the train, which was entirely composed of box cars, was packed, people even sitting on the roofs, and bumpers, and there were fights at every station between persons trying to get on and off. The country through which we passed was mostly flat and uninteresting, though it had a certain historical interest for me as the region through which Napoleon passed in his Russian campaign. I had fol- lowed pretty much the same general route as the Imperial jEagles, all the way from Borisov, where there was a column to commemorate his crossing of the Beresina, and a small house just outside the town, where tradition has it that he spent the night. We arrived at the Alexandrovsky Station, Moscow, early in the morning of the second day. There the army's respon- sibility for us ended, and as I had no credentials to stay in Moscow I asked the doctor to telephone to the Foreign Office to announce our arrival. She was told rather shortly that a representative of the Western Section would be sent to meet us and that we were not to leave the station until his arrival. Meanwhile I tried to spell out the news in the "Pravda," which I had purchased at the news stand, for a limited number of papers were on public sale in Moscow at that time, and I wondered what was coming next. So far so good, but the Foreign Office at least was utterly unaware of the fact that 44 MAROONED IN MOSCOW I had already spent two weeks in Soviet Russia. Whether my presence was known or not to the secret poHce of the Extraor- dinary Commission, they certainly had done nothing so far to stop me. CHAPTER V AN UNWELCOME GUEST In about half an hour I saw a small thin, dark, nervous- looking man with a pronounced stoop that made him appear almost like a hunchback enter the waiting room, glancing about as if he were looking for someone. "That is the man from the Foreign Office," I thought. In two seconds he had singled me out, and made straight for the corner where I was sitting. "Good morning," he said curtly in excellent English, "I'm Rosenberg, head of the Western Section of the Foreign Office. Will you be good enough to tell me how you got to Moscow?" I explained while he stood holding his despatch case, nervously biting his underlip, a characteristic gesture. When I had fin- ished he looked at me severely. "Do you know that you have done a perfectly illegal and very dangerous thing in coming to Moscow without permission?" he demanded. I replied that I had traveled openly with safe conducts from the Red Army, and that if it had chosen it could have stopped me and sent me back at any time. "That is true," he returned, "and for that reason we will give you a hearing. You are not entirely to blame, and those who were responsible for your entering the country will be held to account, but I warn you that you have rendered yourself liable to immediate deportation if not something worse" — this with a searching look that gave me a decidedly uncomfortable feeling — "come this way, please," and so saying he led the way to a small room which belonged to one of the station officials. Once there he carefully closed the door. "Now hand over your passport and all your papers," he said. I obeyed, pulling out letters of introduction, credentials, letters to private persons and the notes I had niade whiV with the Red Army. 45 46 MAROONED IN MOSCOW "Is that all?" he asked. I assured him that it was. "And who is this woman?" he inquired, turning to the little doctor, who had stood all the while, very red in the face, not daring to say a word. She handed over her papers, which he glanced at and tucked in his despatch case. Then he explained to me that the present policy of the Foreign Office was to admit but a small number of correspon- dents from bourgeois papers, and then only after their cre- dentials had been carefully passed on by Chicherin; that he had already refused admission to representatives of the Asso- ciated Press and the Evening Post, and that my presence would be a source of considerable embarrassment to the Foreign Office. I presented my side of the case as well as I knew how, and the upshot of it all was that he agreed to put the matter before Chicherin, and to permit me to remain in Moscow for the night, pending his decision. He retained the papers, but the rest of our luggage was packed into a waiting limousine, in which we were whirled away to the government guest house, where I was to be virtually under house arrest until the Foreign Office had decided what was to be done with me. My first glimpse of Moscow did not produce the impres- sion of utter desolation that most travelers experience on their arrival in Russia at the present time. It was probably because I had become accustomed by degrees to ruin and disrepair through long sojourn in war-ridden countries. I had been in Germany and Belgium immediately after the Armistice ; in the previous December I had passed through Vienna which was almost as badly off as Moscow; then I had spent over two months in Minsk and Vilna, which had been despoiled in turn by Germans and Bolsheviks, and finally turned over to the none too tender mercies of the Polish occupation. Boarded shops, deserted streets, houses with the paint peehng off their mouldy fagades, snow blocked pavements, long lines of pa- tient citizens waiting outside government shops for rations were no new sight to me. The people I saw on the street, every other one of whom was dragging a little sled laden with wood, bundles or provi- sions, were for the most part better dressed and seemed better AN UNWELCOME GUEST 47 nourished than the people I had seen in Minsk or Vienna. Out- side of the station and in the public squares there were plenty of sleighs, with their picturesque isvostchiks, or Russian cab- bies, in long coats of black, green, or blue cloth, belted with metal-studded girdles or barbaric colored sashes. Occasionally well dressed men and women dashed by in luxurious sleighs with tinkling bells and fur robes. The only sinister impression I received was from the flocks of ravens who hovered over the city, sat in the bare branches of the trees in the parks and on the eaves of all the buildings. They are as thick in Moscow during the winter as the pigeons around St. Paul's in London or in the Piazza of St. Mark in Venice, and almost as tame. All the public buildings were decorated with red flags and banners, for it was the second anniversary of the founding of the Red Army, and Moscow was in festival attire. Many of them displayed huge canvases showing brawny workers holding aloft the banner of the proletariat against a background of smoking factories and workmen's homes. At every comer were propaganda placards urging support of the working army, for an early peace with Poland was anticipated, peace with Esthonia had recently been signed, and the government was conducting a great campaign in support of Trotzki's plan for the re-mobilization of the Red Army in a vast scheme of recon- struction. Here and there were posters against the Entente, showing the capitalists of the world sitting on their money bags and lording it over the workers, Lloyd George handing out toy battleships and cannon to Yudenitch and Denikin, caricatures of the "Big Four" at Versailles, and various other cartoons of that character. Most of them were crudely but vigorously drawn, startling as to color and design, but remarkably direct in their conveyance of a concrete idea. We passed swiftly down the Tverskaya, Moscow's former shopping thoroughfare, into the Kusnetsky Most, where were formerly the great jewelers, and the most exclusive shops, up the Miasnitskaya, where I noticed the closed offices of the Westinghouse Company and the Singer Sewing Machine, and into a small side street, the Mali Haritonevski, where we 48 MAROONED IN MOSCOW stopped before number ten, the government guest house which was to be my home, though I did not reahze it at the time, with a few interludes, for eight months. It had been the private residence of a German named Roelich, who was one of Moscow's richest merchants. Though it had suffered severely in the anti-German riots of 191 5, when it was attacked by a mob, and had been further despoiled during the early days of disorder following the October Revo- lution, it was still comfortably, even luxuriously, furnished. We were taken into a beautiful oak-paneled dining room where our baggage was courteously searched by an employee of the Foreign Office. I was allowed to retain my typewriter, and nothing was taken but my kodak and films. After this for- mality we were shown to a large room with a brass bed with box springs which looked good to me after my Red Army experiences, comfortable arm chairs, an electric bed lamp, and an enormous sofa which was to serve as the bed for the doctor. Soon dinner was announced, and in the dining room I met the other foreign guests, Michael Farbman, then correspondent of the Chicago Daily News, a Norwegian business man named Jonas Lied, and a Korean, Pak, who was the official delegate to Russia of the Korean Socialist party. There were also several Russians, among whom was a man called Siriazhnikov, who had lived for some time in the United States and organized the first Russian cooperatives on the Pacific Coast. The re- maining guests were several Russians employed in the Foreign Office and a potentate from Boukhara who ate all his meals, prepared by a native attendant, in his room. He had many visitors, but rarely appeared himself, except to flit to and fro from his bath wearing a gorgeous smoking jacket, a round embroidered cap and stealthy velvet slippers. Dinner, which was typical of the meals served in other guest houses and hotels for government employees, was as follows : A thin meat soup, thickened with cereal or noodles made of rye flour, mashed potatoes or kasha, tea, black bread and sugar. It was served at two o'clock. Supper, at nine o'clock, consisted of Soviet macaroni, kasha or mashed pota- AN UNWELCOME GUEST 49 toes, black bread and tea. Breakfast, between nine and ten, was tea or Soviet coffee, black bread and margarine or butter, and two teaspoons of sugar. This was substantially my diet for my entire stay, except when I purchased eggs, milk, fruit or other luxuries in the markets, or when I was invited to private homes or patronized illegal restaurants. Once or twice a week our dinner menu was varied by the addition of boiled salt pork, horse or mutton, either as a sepa- rate dish, or, more often, incorporated sparingly in the mashed potatoes. Occasionally we had a small tin of canned fish or a piece of cheese for supper, and about once in two weeks we had stewed fruit in season. In winter it was Russian cran- berries, thickened with potato flour and flavored with saccha- rin. When sugar was scarce we had two bonbons with our tea instead of sugar. This was far better than the average ration of the ordinary citizen in Moscow at that time. We also received as part of our ration twenty-five cigarettes every other day. Despite the uncertainty as to my fate I spent the first evening very agreeably, and enjoyed a fine rest in the comfor- table bed. When I asked if I might take a bath in the beautiful tiled bathroom I was told that there was hot water every Wednesday, and that I would have to wait until then if I wanted it hot. The scramble for the bath on Wednesdays was very amusing. No one made any engagements for that afternoon if possible, as hot water was on tap only from twelve noon till eight in the evening, and it was necessary to hang around and watch for your turn. I was fully prepared to do my own chamberwork the next morning, as I had imagined that in Soviet Russia there were no servants, but I discovered that we had four. The heavy work was done by prisoners who were sen- tenced to compulsory labor for speculation or violation of other decrees of the Soviet Government. They came in squads periodically with armed guards, and washed floors and win- dows. The house servants were apparently not subject to the rules regulating the employment of labor, for they worked from eight in the morning till eleven or twelve at night, and 50 MAROONED IN MOSCOW scarcely ever had any time off. Occasionally they were given tickets to the theater. They received a small stipend, their clothes, and the regular workers' payok or rations, supple- mented by tips and presents of food from the foreign guests. The laundress slaved from early morning till late evening doing all the house wash as well as the personal laundry of the guests, who varied in number from ten to fourteen. Once during the summer the Foreign Office attempted to cut off their payok on the ground that as many of the guests frequently stayed out for meals what was left over from our table would be sufficient for them, but they struck, and kept their rations, which they sent home to their families. This state of affairs struck me as rather inconsistent, but I later found that the servant class, like many other bourgeois institutions, had by no means disappeared in Russia. Many of my Russian friends kept at least one maid, and I knew of several commissars who did the same. Once I received a visit from a girl who had been employed at the Savoy Hotel, also a government guest house, where I spent several weeks. She was a Lett, and was anxious to secure a position as cook to the Russian mission, then leaving for Riga with a retinue of servants to negotiate peace with Poland. She asked me to recommend her to Yoffe, chief of the mission, who often visited the Haritonevski, and gave as a reference Mme. Steklov, wife of the editor of the Isvestia, with whom she had lived for over a year, and she told me that they employed three servants. The Trotzkis also keep several serv- ants, and I often saw the Trotzki children in a private victoria with a very correct looking coachman driving through the streets of Moscow. Of course all this is in direct contradiction to Marxian theories, but the Communists in practice are not averse to accepting the services of that portion of the proletariat which has not yet become class conscious, and is perfectly content to remain as "hired help.' In justice to Soviet principles it must be said, however, that the authorities recognize the fact that brain workers must have time free for work in their special field, and that they do not object to the employment AN UNWELCOME GUEST 61 of labor to do the manual tasks for those engaged in more important activities. Eventually, in an ideal Communist state, the Communists say, there will be no need for labor of this class. All meals will be served in the public dining rooms, all washing done in the community laundries, children will be all cared for in Soviet homes and nurseries, apartments heated from a central plant, and cleaned by government workers. But at present it is im- possible to organize things on this basis. Domestic service is a relic of capitalism which will disappear in due time, but mean- while it is not worth while to regulate it, as it is only a tem- porary phase. Shortly after breakfast Rosenberg appeared with a car, and took me to the Foreign Office, where I was told that Chicherin had determined to allow me to remain in Moscow for two weeks. I sent a radio to the Associated Press an- nouncing my arrival, arranged for an interview with Chicherin for the next day, and settled down to life in my new quarters, which were most comfortable. We had a billiard room, and there was a big garden behind the house, to which access was had from a terrace opening out of the dining room. The table linen was of the best, and we used real silver forks and knives for some time, when some of the cutlery was stolen, which resulted in the substitution of plated ware. Our bed linen was changed every two weeks, and all our laundry was done in the house. At first we paid nothing at all for this service, but afterwards the Foreign Office instituted a tariff of seven hundred and fifty roubles a day, explaining rather naively as the reason that Soviet emissaries in other countries were invariably charged for their accommodations. CHAPTER VI NEWS GATHERING IN MOSCOW On the morning after my arrival, having been provided with the necessary documents of identity, I started to take a walk through the town, and happened to see a most picturesque ceremony, the funeral of the Commissar of Posts and Tele- graphs. It took place from the building of the Moscow Soviet, a beautiful early nineteenth century structure facing what is now known as the Soviet square, which is adorned with a new monument commemorating the Revolution. He was to be buried in the Red Square, at the base of the Kremlin, with the victims of the October Revolution. Long before the time appointed for the funeral the employees of the various departments of the commissariat began to assemble in the square, each section carrying its own banner draped in black. There must have been several thousand of them. All along the route of the cortege Red Armists, as the Red Army soldiers are called in Russia, were stationed at intervals, and cavalry- men with khaki coats and the bright pink trousers of the old imperial cavalry dashed up and down giving orders, and hold- ing back the crowds which began to gather early from all direc- tions. Then delegations from workmen's clubs and trades unions commenced to arrive carrying banners and standards; among them I even noticed an Anarchists' Club with a huge black flag, curiously somber and menacing in the blur of red. An old white hearse, harnessed with six white horses, and attended by six professional pallbearers in white frock coats and gloves and antiquated white silk beaver hats, was waiting to receive the coffin, but when it emerged from the building, carried on the shoulders of ten sturdy Red Armists, covered with a red flag like a huge blood spot, I could not help thinking how out of place and incongruous it would look on the preten- 52 NEWS GATHERING IN MOSCOW 53 tious bier that had probably carried many an Imperial func- tionary to his last resting place. The commissar's comrades evidently thought so too, for they never even glanced in the direction of the waiting hearse with its plumes and outriders, but turned slowly down the street, followed by the huge silent cortege with bared heads. In front of the coffin marched a Red Army band, playing the glorious funeral march of the Nihilists, which has been adopted by the Communists as their own. At intervals other bands took up the hymn, one by one, as they filed into line. In the Red Square a guard of honor was assembled around the open grave, and the Commissar was laid to rest with his dead comrades without benefit of clergy, according to Karl Marx, Kamenev, the president of the Moscow Soviet, and other speakers paying warm tributes to his singleness of purpose and devotion to the cause of Communism. The grave was filled, the bare earth covered with a mass of green wreaths and Red streamers, and the simple ceremony was over. A little more than half a year later another funeral took place in the Red Square, but I was not there to see it, being at that time in prison. It was that of John Reed, the leader of the American Communist party. My interview with Chicherin took place on the evening of my second day in Moscow. The appointment was at twelve o'clock, for Chicherin only works at night, and it was nearly two before I was finally shown into his room, where he sat in front of a huge table desk buried under an avalanche of documents and papers. I had expected to see a tall, self-confi- dent, rather masterful looking person, but instead I saw a thin, delicate looking man of about forty-eight, with sandy hair, decidedly thin around the temples, and a small pointed blond beard and mustache. Around his neck was a woolen muflfler which almost concealed his chin. During the entire winter and well into the spring I never saw him without it. His pale greenish-blue eyes had the strained expression that comes from overwork, and as he talked to me he kept interlacing his long sensitive fingers, that, without a further glance at his physi- ognomy, proclaimed him what he essentially is, a man of cul- 54 MAROONED IN MOSCOW ture and a gentleman. There seem to be so many misapprehen- sions about many of the People's Commissars that I will re- peat here what should be known to all intelligent persons, that Chicherin, like many leading Communists, is a man of very good family, and a real Russian. He is related by marriage to several old Polish families, among them that of Count Czapski, who was at one time secretary to Mr. Hugh Gibson, our minis- ter to Poland. His cousin, Countess Plater, whom I met in Vilna, was in the habit of referring to him as "That devil, my cousin Chicherin," but there was nothing diabolical about his appearance as he sat at his desk facing me, though he at once gave me the impression of being an exceedingly subtle personality. He spoke English almost as well as an Eng- lishman. After asking me how I had managed to fool the Foreign Office by coming uninvited into Russia and telling me that in spite of my illegal status he had decided to permit me to take up my work as correspondent in Moscow, we proceeded to talk about other things. While inflexible in his devotion to Com- munism, I believe that Chicherin has always been in favor of a more liberal policy with regard to the foreign affairs than many of his colleagues, but things often get beyond his control, and he is not always listened to. Several times while I was in Moscow he was severely censured by the more intransi- geant Communists, and his report on his foreign policy to the Moscow Soviet last year was carried by an insignificant mi- nority. At the same time he is the only man in Russia today who has the experience and knowledge to handle the affairs of the Foreign Office. His notes are often masterpieces in their way, and he has a genius for showing up the weak side of European diplomatists. I consider that when it came to the matter of the retort courteous in the correspondence between Lord Curzon and Chicherin that Chicherin usually got the better of his British opponent. He is less inclined than some of his fellow commissars to have a supreme disregard for truth in his statements, though he often sanctions the publi- cation of utterly misleading reports in the Soviet bulletins. For example, last year when it was reported in the Soviet NEWS GATHERING IN MOSCOW 55 wireless that the cathedral of St. Vladimir and the water works at Kiev had been blown up by the retreating Poles, he never contradicted it, though it was later proved to be false. I also tried to get through him confirmation of the published report that officers of the American Red Cross with the Polish Army had refused to attend the Red Army wounded, but failed. However, after all this is not Chicherin's business. He does actually censor and supervise matter sent out to the foreign press, but this is officially the responsibility of the government news agency, the Rosta, of which I shall have more to say later on. My conversation with Chicherin was chiefly confined to the prospects of peace with Poland, for which he confidently hoped at that time, and for which I believe he was sincerely working. That his efforts were blocked was due principally to the attitude of the Poles themselves, backed by France and England, and in part to other causes originating in Russia. He regarded the attitude of America as frankly inconsistent, declar- ing that President Wilson had been the first to advocate the principle of self-determination and the first to depart from it. Russia, he said, was the only country that had consistently lived by this doctrine. He was prepared to make important conces- sions to Poland in return for peace, which he regarded as vital at the moment, and stated that he wished to see the country free to devote itself to the problems of economic reconstruction. Beside Chicherin the men who have the most flexible and farseeing minds among those who are directing the affairs of the Soviet Republic are Lenin, Krassin, and Karl Radek. Shortly after my talk with Chicherin I had an interview with Krassin, who was then Commissar of Ways and Com- munications, but who expected soon to leave on his London mission. He made an exceedingly frank and interesting state- ment of the desperate state of the Russian railroads, expressed the hope of a trade agreement with England and America, and outlined the policy of the government towards concessions. There would be no difficulty, he said, for Russia, in doing busi- ness with foreign nations, once a standard of value had been fixed as the basis of payment or exchange. Instead of trans- 56 MAROONED IN MOSCOW acting business with a number of small capitalists, foreign interests would be dealing with one great capitalist, the Soviet Republic. While he did not believe there were enough raw materials on hand to begin trade to any great extent with out- side countries, he was of the opinion that if Russia were given peace, the possibility of economic and industrial development and allowed to purchase the locomotives, for which he claimed there was sufficient gold on hand, she would soon be able to furnish raw materials, though he considered that even under the most favorable circumstances it would be many years before Russia could produce any manufactured articles for export. He spoke excellent German, which was natural, for he spent many years in Germany, and for some time was general agent of the Siemens Electric Company of Berlin, which, with the General Electric Company, formerly furnished practically all electrical supplies and machinery used in Russia. He is a man of education and refinement, and there is nothing about him to suggest the Jew, although it has been said that he is of Jewish ancestry. A few days later I saw Karl Radek, who is the "Peck's Bad Boy" of the Soviet Government, always making indiscreet utterances, always getting into trouble and wriggling out again with his clever tongue, but with such wit and talent as a publi- cist and propagandist that the Soviet Government cannot do without him. He is a Polish Jew, and was active in the Spar- ticist revolts in Germany in 191 9, and only adopted Russia after his release from prison in Berlin in the summer of that year. We chatted for a while about German affairs, and then he began with the most amazing frankness to discuss the Polish question, declaring that Poland wanted the war, but even if she did not, she would be indirectly provoked to it by Russia, for whom it was absolutely essential to have contact with Germany. This could only be done by the conquest of Poland, not so much by arms as by propaganda, and he was firmly convinced that an invasion would be followed by a revolution in Poland. If the German Communist revolution did not come off he believed that a profitable deal could be made with the NEWS GATHERING IN MOSCOW 57 German Junkers to join with Russia against the Entente. For the future he envisaged a possible alliance of Germany and Russia into which perhaps the United States would be drawn as a protection against the "yellow menace" of Japan, He also had a vision of the development of South America into a great power, which, backed by England, would rob America of her foreign trade and the domination of the Western Hemisphere. It was a most entertaining interview. I wrote it, and, as required, I gave one copy to the press censorship of the Foreign Office for revision, and sent the other to Radek for correction. Needless to say I never received either back again. When I called Radek up by telephone he told me that he had O. K.'d my copy and returned it to the Foreign Office, but it got mysteriously lost, and the interview was never put on the wireless. Meanwhile I had taken up my routine as Moscow cor- respondent of the Associated Press, my work centering in the Western Section of the Foreign Office under Rosenberg, who was in charge of all press correspondents. Rosenberg was generally unpopular with correspondents. In the first place, he was physically unprepossessing, typically Jewish in appearance, with vile manners, and a frank contempt for bourgeois ideals, which he was at no pains to conceal. He had no conception of newspaper ethics, and regarded newspaper work as simply an arm of propaganda. Objective statements or constructive criticism did not appeal to him. Once I summarized the main facts in a very interesting article on the situation of Russian railroads, which had ap- peared in Economic Life, emphasizing certain data which seemed to me important, and drawing my own conclusions, in my radio telegram. At the same time another story was written by an American newspaper man then in Moscow, based on the same facts, but drawing conclusions more favorable to the Soviet Government. I turned in my dispatch, the other correspondent did the same. Rosenberg read them both, then he turned to me and said, "Mrs. Harrison, your article is per- fectly correct in every particular, but I prefer Mr. Blank's ar- ticle. It is more favorable to us. If they both came out 58 MAROONED IN MOSCOW in the American press at the same time it might produce a bad impression. I will send his first and hold yours for twenty-four hours." I He was also ignorant of current newspaper phraseology in America and was suspicious of every unusual expression. In one of my stories dealing with the trades unions I used the expression "labor turnover." He was quite convinced that I meant that there was a tendency towards counter-revolution in the unions, and I had a very difficult time to explain away the idea. At the same time, after a while I grew to admire his savage loyalty, his fanatical devotion to Communism, for he was absolutely sincere and single-hearted in his work for the cause, and he never spared himself. Like Chicherin, he lived simply at the Hotel Metropole, never giving a thought to his own health or comfort, and he was a constant sufferer from a serious form of anaemia that threatened to develop into tuberculosis. Besides Rosenberg, I soon made the acquaintance of many other employees of the Foreign Office. They were an inter- esting lot, many of them trained in the Imperial diplomatic service, others people who had drifted into Russia for various reasons, some who had been involuntarily detained and who preferred service with the Soviet Government to sitting in prison. On the staff of the Western Section was "Joe Fein- berg," a well-known Jewish Socialist agitator from London, who spoke English better than he did Russian, He acted as interpreter for the British Labor delegation, and was a red-hot Communist to such an extent that he usually expressed his feelings by wearing a red shirt. Therefore I christened him Garibaldi II. Then there was Rozinsky, also an East Side London Jew, who was interpreter for many of the English and American correspondents. At times his knowledge of English stood him in good stead for other purposes than in- terpreting, as when, for example, in the uniform of a Red Armist he accompanied Mr. Pate and Mr. Walker of the American Relief Administration on their journey from Minsk to Moscow. They had received permission from the Soviet authorities during the Polish armistice negotiations to go to NEWS GATHERING IN MOSCOW 59 Moscow for a preliminary survey with a view to undertaking relief work in Russia, and stayed for ten days at my guest house. When they pointed out their escort, telling me that he was a nice little fellow but it was a pity he spoke no English, I was greatly amused. Second in command to Chicherin was Kharakhan, who was sent, after the signing of the peace treaty, as the Soviet emis- sary to Poland. He is an Armenian, and is known in Moscow as "Kharakhan the Beautiful" on account of his undeniable good looks. He is one of the new aristocracy among the commissars and lives in the palace of the former Sugar King Horitonev, where Claire Sheridan, Washington Vanderlip, Arthur Ransome, the English writer, George Lansbury, of the Daily Herald, and other foreigners who were 'especially hon- ored guests of the Soviet Government lived during their stay in Moscow. He came to the Foreign Office every day in the beautiful Rolls Royce reserved for his exclusive use. Chi- cherin, on the other hand, used to get a car when he needed one, from the garage of the Central Executive Committee. Once, I remember, he showed up late at a very important meeting because he was unable to get a car. The Foreign Office is situated in a wing of the former Hotel Metropole, on the square facing the Grand Opera house. The hotel proper, now known as the Second House of the Soviets, is used by Soviet employees and commissars. The offices, mostly converted bedrooms, are crowded and not overly convenient, and a number of the women employees sleep on the mezzanine floor, where are also the offices of the Western Section. There, during the day, credentials and passports of arriving and departing foreigners were examined by Rosen- berg and his assistant. They actually obtained leave to depart or a "permis de sejour," from another department presided over by Yakobovitch, whose pretty secretary. Mile. Lov, is half English, From six until nine or ten in the evening the office was closed, and at about eleven o'clock the press cor- respondents began to gather and wait, gossiping meanwhile, for the official Soviet bulletin in French, which appeared at midnight. If we had had any interviews or collected any in- 60 MAROOXED IX MOSCOW formation during the day -^-e brought our finished stories at that time and submitted them to Rosenberg for his approval, otherw-ise we waited for the news biilletin, which was a transla- tion of the most important items and leading articles in the daily papers, together with the text of Chicherin's notes and military- bulletins from the Polish and Wrangel fronts. We sat in a small room, the floor of which was covered with a superb oriental rug much too large, furnished with a nondescript collection of chairs and sofas taken from rooms of the hotel, and a big deal table. Later we were given the room next door, formerly the sitting room of a siite de luxe. It possessed a marble top table, an ornate Florentine mirror, gilded pseudo Louis Fifteenth fiimiture covered with green brocade, and a boudoir lamp with a yellow silk shade. Into these incongruous surroimdings we brought several broken down typewriters from the next room and t}-peJ our radio messages. At twelve o'clock a samovar, glasses and Soviet tea were brought in. I sometimes contributed real tea, other correspondents brought sugar, and we often had ver>' jolly midnight parties. Among the correspondents in these early days were Griffin Barry, an -\merican who was writing for the London Daily Herald, a man from the Londan Chronicle who was doing Russia because he had been told to do so, and was bored to death with the whole business ; John Claj-ton of the Chicago Tribune; Lambert of the London Express, and George Lansbury, owner of the Herald. Mr. Lansbury was a charming, but most credulous old gentleman. His Com- munism, which was based on a literal interpretation of the teachings of Christianity-, rather than on the principles of Karl Marx, was of the idealistic tv-pe. He believed implicitly every- thing that was told him, and surrounded it with a Uttle halo of his own making. Poor Lansbur}-, who was a very good friend of the So^^et Government, was made fim of behind his back by the more materialistic Conmiunists ; a quotation from a speech he made after his return to England in which he was reported to have said, "All is well with Russia, the churches are still open,'" caused great merriment at the Foreign Office. Our despatches to our papers, after being read by Rosen- NEWS GATHERING IX MOSCOW 61 berg, who often made changes or erasures, were sent to Chicherin for approval, with the result that there were some- times further cuts. Then they had to pass the "Militar}- Censorship," which meant in plain English that they were subjected to the scrutiny of an agent of the Extraordinary' Commission, after which such portions as were considered tit to print were sent out by the government radio, to take their chances, if favorable to the Soviet Government, of being picked up and intercepted by various governments en route. The Soviet Government is not entirely to blame for the fact that so little of the truth has gotten out about Russia. In many in- stances perfectly fair despatches. giWng absolutely truthful accounts of actual conditions are intercepted, marked secret and filed in the records of Downing Street, the \\'ilhelm Strasse or the Quai d'Orsay. From the Russian end it was impossible for us to write amthing except straight news or interviews unless we went in for tendential stuff favorable to Communism. The Foreign Office told us quite frankly, and tmforrunately there was some truth in the statement, that fair messages were often garbled and changed so as to be \-iolent anti-Bolshevik propaganda. After some time I acquired a better knowledge of Rus- sian, and I foimd that through the Rosta, the Russian govern- ment news agency. I could get bulletins of the news items to appear in the next morning papers, thereby beating the other foreign correspondents b}- twenty-four hours on spot news ; and, having received permission from Chicherin. I went to the Central Office of the Rosta in the Lubianka, cop}-ing and translating anNthing that might be of interest to the out- side world. There, too, I got an insight not to be had in any other way of what was going on in various parts of Russia. The Rosta has agencies in ever}- town and cit}- and receives full reports of local happenings all over the countn.-. There were often accounts of strikes, peasant uprisings, meetings and events imimportant in themselves, but straws pointing which way the wind in the pro^-inces was blo-vs-ing. which were either suppressed for various reasons, or not printed for lack of room in the next day's papers, and I was able to read them alL 62 MAROONED IN MOSCOW I fancy that this was one of the activities which later made me unpopular with the Extraordinary Commission. The Rosta, which derives its name from its official title, The Russian Socialist Telegraph Agency, is undoubtedly the most remarkable organization of its kind in the world. It is not only devoted to the collecting and collating of news, but to educational and cultural work, and it is the chief arm of the Communist propaganda system. I obtained an excellent idea of the tremendous scope of the work of the Rosta from my visit to an exhibition in the Kremlin, which was intended only for the members of the Ninth Communist Convention then in session. I went with Francis McCullagh, a well-known Eng- lish journalist, who had been with General Knox's Mission in Siberia, as an Intelligence Officer, and had been caught at Omsk in the Kolchak retreat, where he resumed his civilian status and came to Moscow as correspondent of the Man- chester Guardian. I shall later tell how Mr. McCullagh and I both got into prison at the same time, owing to our prying proclivities. We had met Kerzhentsev, head of the Rosta, at the office in the Lubianka, and he had told us of the exhibition. By using his name we felt sure that we would have no difficulty in getting into the exhibition if we could once get to the Kremlin. Admission to the Kremlin was exceedingly difficult to obtain, and no one, from the most important commissar to the humblest peasant bringing in food supplies, can get through one of its well guarded gates without proper creden- tials. I had been there once, however, to see Radek; so, when I applied at the gate, Mr. McCullagh and I showed our credentials as foreign journalists, stating at the same time that we had an appointment with Radek. The girl who issued permits at the gate said that she would call him up. If she had succeeded in getting him I had determined to tell him that I wished to discuss some points in our previous inter- view before sending it out. But I was banking on the fact that it was very difficult to get telephone connections and that she would probably become discouraged and let us in anyway. This was exactly what happened. We soon found our- NEWS GATHERING IN MOSCOW 63 selves inside the sacred enclosure and located the exhibition in one of the rooms of the Commissariat of Justice. The walls were covered with charts and diagrams showing the branches of the Rosta all over the country. Articles were tabulated and classified, showing the results produced. The name of every correspondent was given with the number of his published articles, and his efficiency was estimated according to a scientific percentage system. The Rosta from its central office in the Lubianka, issues all the press matter used in Russia; its activities embrace not only the principal news- papers, such as the Praz^da, Isz'estia_, Economic Life, Com- munistic Work, Byednotd, but the innumerable provincial papers, and the wall newspapers, of which there are over four hundred. The last named are pasted in railroad stations, gov- ernment offices and public places and are usually devoted to special propaganda. There were also propaganda issues of the principal papers written to produce a certain effect at a given time. Provincial correspondents of the Rosta send in their news items by radio. These are edited and colored with the necessary propaganda tint and returned for local publica- tion. Foreign news is dealt with in the same manner, and the morale of the people is largely kept up by systematic re- ports of revolutions and labor crises in other countries, de- signed to produce the impression of the unity of the world proletariat. One of the activities of the Rosta is the oral newspaper. This is used in country districts where the peasants are still for the most part illiterate. On certain days at an appointed time an agent of the Rosta reads aloud to the assembled peasants the important news of the day, interpreting it after his own fashion. These agents are invariably Communists and trained propaganda workers. Among the journalists who write for the Rosta are many old Russian newspaper men. In addition it employs the services of a great many former lawyers, and some of the best technical and professional men in the country. As a rule these men are poorly paid, and they are obliged to have several jobs in order to earn a living. I knew a former newspaper man in Moscow, who worked as 64 MAROONED IN MOSCOW one of the night editors at the Central Bureau of the Rosta. In addition he gave lectures on journalism in the courses of the Proletcult, and wrote propaganda pamphlets for the Centro Pechati, the central government printing bureau, under the Department of Education. By this means he managed to make enough, working fourteen or fifteen hours a day, to keep body and soul together. The Soviet newspapers are usually very serious affairs. There are no sensational stories, no accounts of murders or conjugal infidelities. They are conducted first with a view to propaganda, second with a view to education, culture and technical information. The headlines are often extraordi- narily effective. For example the section devoted to economic reconstruction is headed "The Working Front." Among the most popular of the means employed by the Rosta for the spread of Communist propaganda are cartoons illustrating current events. They are posted weekly in all large towns and cities and at several points in Moscow. They are done with water colors, in crude tints on enormous sheets of wrap- ping paper, and are somewhat Cubistic in character. Under- neath each cartoon are pungent comments and witticisms which everybody can understand. The Bolsheviks will undoubtedly have to get out a diction- ary in the near future. They have made excellent and impor- tant reforms in spelling such as inaugurating the use of only two forms of the letter "i," where formerly four were used; one letter "e," instead of three, and they have abolished the "tvyordisnak,'' the hard sign formerly used after words terminating in hard consonants. In many instances they have also simplified spelling. For this all Russians and all for- eigners who study the language certainly owe them a debt of gratitude. On the other hand they have instituted a number of abbreviations for the names of commissariats and govern- mental departments which make it almost impossible for the uninitiated to read the newspapers. I will give a few examples. The Commissariat of Public Health, ''Narodni Commissariat Zdravoochranenya," is called "Narkomsdrav" ; the Food Com- missariat, "Narodni Commissariat Prodovolstvya," is "Nar- NEWS GATHERING IN MOSCOW 65 komprod." Its provincial branches are the "Gubprodkoms," "Gubiernskii Prodovolstvennii Kommiteti.' The Supreme Economic Council, ''Vuische Soviet Narodnovo Hozaistva," is the "Sovnarhos." News is distributed by radio or wireless telephone. The transmitting station for sending news abroad and to the prov- inces is the great wireless station at Hodinka in the suburbs of Moscow which I visited with Nikolaiev, the superintendent, who was formerly employed at the Eiffel Tower in Paris. There I saw a splendid apparatus in perfect working order, in communication with four hundred and fifty radio stations in Russia, with Copenhagen, Nauen, Paris, Peterhead, Bo- logna and many other stations throughout the world. New radio stations were being constructed all over Russia and the system when completed will comprise eight hundred and fifty stations. Incoming messages were received at Dyetskoe Selo, the new name for Tzarskoe Selo, a suburb of Petrograd, formerly the summer home of the Imperial family, and from there passed first through the military censorship, then to the office of the Rosta and finally all over Russia. The antennae of the wireless station at Dyetskoe Selo are synchronized so as to pick up messages from the wireless stations of any country, and it employs a corps of experts who are able to decipher practically every code in use at the present time. Outgoing messages were treated in the same manner. Many local messages were handled by wireless telephone, which the Bolsheviks have developed extensively during the last few years. While at Hodinka I was allowed to talk to the operator in Tashkend, eight hundred versts from Moscow. When I had finished my work for the night at the Foreign Office I returned to the Horitonevski on foot, frequently alone, rarely earlier than two or three in the morning. I continued to do this with few interruptions for eight months, and during that entire time I was never once spoken to or molested in any way on the street, nor did I ever see anyone else stopped or interfered with. Order was absolutely preserved by the militia- men who patrolled the streets, instead of policemen, with 66 MAROONED IN MOSCOW rifles instead of revolvers. At first I often heard shots and imagined that they were fired at nocturnal marauders, but I later discovered that it was the militiamen's way of signalling to one another, replacing the policemen's whistles in use in other countries. Robberies on a large scale were very rare, though there was a great deal of petty thievery, particularly in the markets. After getting home in the wee small hours we were often hungry, and adjourned to my room, where I made scrambled eggs on a little coal oil stove, tea, and occasionally when some- one had recently arrived from abroad, cocoa. Our Russian friends used to join us at these parties, and we frequently talked till it was nearly light, discussing everything under the sun. The Russians are great all-night sitters, and everyone falls naturally into the same habit in Russia. CHAPTER VII THE GODS AND THEIR MACHINE During my first weeks in Moscow I did very largely the things that are done by every other foreigner, visiting Soviet institutions, particularly schools, hospitals, Soviet stores and public dining rooms, and getting a very good idea of the edu- cational, public health and rationing systems. Later I made some unofficial visits to these places on my own account and supplemented what I had learned from official sources by my own observations, and conversations with private individuals. It happened that during the first part of my stay there was a succession of public meetings and congresses, which gave me an insight into the workings of the Communist party machine. Shortly after my arrival the elections for the Moscow Soviet took place, resulting in a Communist membership of over twelve hundred out of the fifteen hundred members. One hundred and forty-eight Mensheviks were elected, and the remainder were non-partisans. There were no independent party lists except that of the Mensheviks. Voting, which was conducted under the Soviet industrial franchise system, was by acclamation, and such was the domination of the Com- munist element that few people dared to hold up their hands against the Communist candidates. Those who were particu- larly strong minded simply refrained from voting, that was all. In order to secure an overwhelming majority for the government, offices where there were a number of non-parti- sans or opposition Socialist voters were grouped with others where Communists predominated. For example, employees of the Moscow Food Administration voted with the employees of the Moscow branch of the Checka, the Extraordinary Com- mission. At the open meeting of the Moscow Soviet, which was held 67 68 MAROONED IN MOSCOW in the Opera House, I had my first glimpse of Lenin, who made the opening address. It was devoted to the government's pro- gram for reconstruction, which was then occupying attention to the exclusion of nearly everything else. He told of the or- ganization of the Working Army, of the project of the govern- ment to institute one-man control by experts in factories in~ stead of the Work Councils, and gave a clear, impartial picture of the exigencies of the economic situation. When I saw him come out on the stage my first feeling was one of disappoint- ment. He is a short, thick set, unimposing looking little man, with colorless hair and complexion, a small, pointed beard, piercing gray-blue eyes, and a quiet, unemotional, almost monot- onous manner of delivery. He wore a suit of rough English tweeds, and looked like nothing so much as a fairly prosperous, middle class business man. After the first few words, how- ever, I, like everyone else, began to listen attentively. It was not magnetic eloquence that held me, it was the impression of tremendous sincerity, utter self-confidence and quiet power that Lenin creates. He is so absolutely sure of himself and of his idea, so utterly logical in hit Auctions. In his writings and brochures Lenin is often dry and tedious, and uses unusual words and involved expressions, but when he speaks to the peo- ple he has a talent for picking out the simplest possible words to express his meaning, without, however, degenerating into colloquialisms. Of all public speakers in Russia he is the easiest for a foreigner to follow and understand. The Soviet meeting was planned with the instinct for dra- matic effect which is strong in every Russian. Red flags were everywhere ; the motto of the Red Republic, ''Proletariat of the World, Unite," written in half a dozen languages, appeared on a multitude of banners which decorated the stage, at the back of which was an enormous allegorical back drop repre- senting the triumph of the world proletariat. Portraits of the triumvirate, Lenin, Trotzki and Karl Marx, surrounded by garlands, appeared everywhere — on the stage, in the lobby, over the boxes. I do not object to Lenin and Trotzki, but from the first I had a spite against Karl Marx. He was omnipresent, and he always had the same ruminative, echt deutsch stolid expres- THE GODS AND THEIR MACHINE 69 sion. Nothing will ever make me believe that that man v^^as as clever as his apostles believed him to be. I shall always have a suspicion that he was just a pedantic old German professor. If he had lived a bit longer I am sure he would have proved a great drawback to the execution of his own theories. Above all I despised his benevolent looking beard. No man who ad- vocates brute force exercised by a minority on the majority has the right to a benevolent expression and a grand fatherly beard. The grand opera orchestra, which is one of the finest in the world, played the "International" at the beginning and end of each speech, and as it is always sung standing we were con- tinually bobbing up and down. I soon learned the chorus, and used to join in vigorously. The members of the Soviet were all seated on the ground floor, the Imperial box was reserved for People's Commissars and members of the Central Execu- tive Committee; others for representatives of the Central Council of Trades Unions, and the unions themselves, repre- sentatives of the Red Army, foreign delegations and press correspondents, while the proletariat occupied the less desirable boxes and the galleries. Admission was by card only, armed guards were stationed in all the corridors, and the space in front of the Opera House was roped off and guarded by Red Army cavalry and infantrymen. These precautions are al- ways observed whenever Lenin and Trotzki appear, and have been in force ever since the attempt on Lenin's life in the autumn of 1918. Trotzki also spoke at the same meeting. As it was the first time I had seen him I was very curious as to the impres- sion I would receive of his personality. When he appeared he was greeted, as usual, with a tremendous ovation. Until it was time for him to speak he sat at the long red table on the stage with members of the prsesidium, or presiding body, of which Kamenev was the chairman. He sat with his head bent, scribbling industriously on a pad in front of him, and I could only see his high forehead with its mass of dark, curly chestnut hair and the sharp line of demarcation between the upper part of his forehead, which had been protected by a cap, and the lower part of his face, which was tanned by life in 70 MAROONED IN MOSCOW the open with the Red Army. When it was time for him to speak he pushed back his chair with a quick, restless move- ment and advanced to the front of the platform. I saw a broad-shouldered man of middle height, slightly inclined to stoutness at the waistline, but erect and military in his bearing. He had gray-green eyes, a prominent chin, brought still more into relief by a dark chestnut goatee, and close-clipped dark mustache. The line of his mouth was hard, cynical, almost forbid- ding, until he began to speak, and then I suddenly realized that there was something magnetic and compelling about the man's personality. Squaring his shoulders, he stood with his hands behind his back and spoke in short, terse, pithy sen- tences, interspersed with real flashes of humor. He under- stood the art of drawing and riveting the attention of the public. There was something almost exultant in his expres- sion as his eyes swept the enormous crowd in front of him, and it seemed to me that subconsciously it was mingled with a certain amount of racial pride. I could almost imagine him as saying, "For the first time since the days of the Maccabees, I, a Jew, am the head of a great army." Later, when I heard him speak before the graduating class of the general staff school, and at the military parade in honor of the Third In- ternational, the same idea obtruded itself on my imagination. While I never had a formal interview with Trotzki I had an informal talk with him, which was much more diverting. Interviews with Lenin and Trotzki are usually very disap- pointing affairs. Correspondents are, as a rule, required to make application in writing, giving a number of questions to which they wish to receive the answers. These are pre- pared by the secretary and handed out at the interview, the great man adding a few words along the same lines, but that is all. My conversation with Trotzki, however, was quite a different matter. After my visit with Mr. McCullagh to the exhibition of the Rosta in the Kremlin, we strolled aroimd looking at the historic buildings and convents, wandering unmolested in and out of courtyards and passageways. Everything was much THE GODS AND THEIR MACHINE 71 the same as in the old days. The imperial palace, to which admission may be had on Sundays, and the churches, which are also shown on Thursdays to those armed with permits from the Foreign Office or the Commissariat of Education, have been kept intact. The meetings of the Third Interna- tional are held in the audience chamber of the Imperial palace. As we were crossing the great square between the building which is now the Commissariat of Justice, and the Cavalry Corps, the former quarters of the officers of the Imperial Guard, now the residence of several of the People's Commis- sars, I saw a familiar figure just ahead of me, walking quickly in the direction of the latter building. "That's Trotzki," I said to Mr. McCullagh. "I am going to speak to him," and I started off at a run. When I was within speaking distance I called rather breathlessly: "Citizen Commissar, may I speak to you for a moment?" Citizen, by the way, is the correct form of address at present in Russia. The word tovarisch — comrade — is only used be- tween party members or in the army. He turned around, evidently very much astonished at being halted in such a manner by an unknown, and evidently for- eign, female; but he did not look at all forbidding. I told him that I would like to have him tell me something of his plans for the Working Army ; that I could speak Russian very badly and would prefer to talk in French, English or German. He chose the first, which he speaks exceedingly well, to tell me that it was impossible for him at that time to give out any- thing for publication, but he added that he believed that the project would receive the unanimous support of the army, and that the men were impressed with the fact that winning the economic war was of equal importance with victory over Kolchak, Yudenitch or Denikin. He did not anticipate any trouble in holding the men after the cessation of hostilities. Then he asked me a few questions about conditions in America and my impressions of Soviet Russia. While we were talking a messenger, who evidently did not recognize the People's Commissar for War in the genial looking officer with whom I was chatting so informally, stopped to ask him 72 MAROONED IN MOSCOW the way to the quarters of one of the commissars. "Excuse me for a moment," he said, and took the trouble to explain to the boy in detail how to get there, even pointing the way. After which he turned to me, expressed pleasure at having had a little chat with a bourgeoise who had braved the dis- comforts of life in Soviet Russia to see what was going on in there. I held out my hand. To my amazement he took it, kissed it, like any conventional Russian of the old regime. *Au revoir, and a pleasant visit, Madame," he said. Then, with a military salute, he turned on his heel and was gone. Among my friends in Moscow was a lady, a violent mon- archist, by the way, who happened to be living in the country not far from a communal farm to which Trotzki was to pay a visit of inspection. The agricultural expert in charge of the work, wishing to entertain him properly on his visit, and being unmarried, asked her to act as hostess for him during Trotzki's stay. "What, talk to that brutal Bolshevik?" said my friend, "never." But finally curiosity got the better of prejudice and she went. At dinner, for she was an exceedingly pretty woman, he devoted himself to her, talking conventional small talk so de- lightfully that she forgot entirely, as she told me, that he was her natural enemy. "Actually, he was just like any other civilized person," she said in wonderment. Trotzki's adventures are the source of considerable enter- tainment in Moscow, and many stories are whispered about him in and out of Soviet circles. On the part of his inamorata they are not always disinterested, a fact of which the great commissar is well aware. In prison I met a young Ukrainian girl of great beauty and charm who had been his mistress for a few weeks when he was directing the campaign against Petlura in 191 9. "Trotzki told me once," she said, "that I was the only woman with whom he had had an affair who never asked him for food supplies." To return to the Congresses. The meeting of the Mos- cow Soviet was followed by the annual Communist party con- THE GODS AND THEIR MACHINE 73 vention, to which I secured admission through Angelica Bala- banova, then secretary of the Third International. I sat on the stage with the Russian journaHsts and a few correspondents of foreign Sociahst papers, and I was the only non-Socialist present, a fact which was scored against me at the Checka, as I afterwards discovered. From a journalistic standpoint the meeting was not of particularly great interest, as the really secret things were not discussed openly, but in committee, and the foreign policies of the party played a minor role in the debates. The most important matters discussed were the in- auguration of the one-man system in factories, the working army, and the possible question of the nationalization of the land. It was easy to see at that time the tendency in the Com- munist party to split on these questions, all hinging on central- ization or decentralization. One-man control of factories and the control of the industrial forces of the country through mobilization were opposed by many Communists who believed in the vesting of the principal power in the Soviets and trades unions, but the Centralists were the victors. Later, at the meeting of the AU-Russian Council of Trades Unions, I had an opportunity of seeing how party discipline worked. The unions nominated on their prsesidium, or execu- tive body, a majority opposed to one-man control of factories. These candidates would have undoubtedly been elected, but before the elections the council was told that the Central Executive Committee of the Communist party did not approve its ticket. A majority in favor of the new policy would have to be on the prgesidium. Otherwise the council would be dis- solved pending reorganization. This policy was actually car- ried out with regard to the Printers' and Bakers' Unions, which struck a little later. Their executive committees were arrested and the unions reorganized along Communist lines. From my standpoint one of the most interesting illustra- tions of the workings of the Communist party machine was in connection with Lord Robert Cecil's proposal to send an investigating committee to Russia from the League of Na- tions. It was much discussed in government circles, and a number of influential liberals in the party were in favor of 74 MAROONED IN MOSCOW permitting the visit of the committee. Therefore, when it was announced that the matter would be debated at a meeting of the Ispolkom, the All-Russian Central Executive Commit- tee, of about two hundred members, which is the actual gov- erning body of the country, and that press correspondents were to be present, I anticipated a very interesting time. The meeting was to be held in the assembly hall of the Commis- sariat of Justice in the Kremlin at six in the evening. I ar- rived early, took a front seat, and awaited developments. Six o'clock came and only about forty members were in their places. There was no sign of Lenin, Trotzki, or any of the others, and a few minutes afterwards Chicherin appeared on the platform, accompanied by the secretary of the Ispolkom. He announced that at a meeting of the Central Executive Committee of the Communist party, held an hour previously, the text of the reply to Lord Robert Cecil had been drawn up and approved. He would read it to the Ispolkom and ask for their sanctioning vote. The note was read, approved without discussion or debate by the few members present, and the proposal of the League of Nations was officially turned down. The most picturesque of the many congresses at this time was that of the Red Cossacks, which was held at the head- quarters of the All-Russian Council of Trades Unions, in what was formerly the meeting place of Moscow's assembly of nobles. There were about three hundred and fifty dele- gates, from all parts of Russia and Siberia, and it was a most colorful gathering. The Cossacks wore their high, peaked caps, long caftans of black, brown or blue, with hoods lined with brilliant color thrown back over their shoulders ; gold chased cartridges were stuck in the bandoliers which crossed their chests, and most of them wore daggers in their belts and wonderful swords inlaid with gold and precious stones. They were a tumultuous, noisy gathering. Few of them impressed me as having any clear idea of the principles of Communism ; what appealed to them was the assurance that under the new government they would be able to maintain their ancient boast of being the ''free people." THE GODS AND THEIR MACHINE 75 Through their sympathy with and understanding of the local nationalistic feeling of Russia's conglomerate popula- tion, the Bolsheviks have secured the loyalty of numbers of distinct racial groups. The "Federative Republic" is not a mere figure of speech. Counting the Ukraine, which is by far the largest, it actually includes nineteen autonomous republics. The Cossacks have not as yet received autonomy owing to the fact that there has been, and still is to some extent, civil war in the Donski Oblast, where the majority of the Cossack popu- lation is concentrated, and many of their leaders are still counter-revolutionary. If the Cossacks should decide to sup- port the Communist Government they would have great weight in stabilizing political conditions in Southeastern Rus- sia, as they are better educated, more vigorous and energetic and more intelligent than the Central Russian peasant popula- tion. The great majority of them are professional soldiers, and should their loyalty be secured they would undoubtedly support the militaristic wing of the Communist party. One of the features of the Congress was a Cossack ex- hibit which presented in a most attractive form a complete survey of agriculture, industry, education, and social condi- tions among all the Cossack tribes in Russia. It was illus- trated with a number of diagrams in color, and, of course, showed most advantageously what the government had done and was doing for the Cossacks since the Revolution. Then there were a number of inspiring revolutionary posters and a news stand where propaganda literature was distributed. One of the most original devices was an electric sign board, fur- nished with plugs over which were printed the questions the average person asks about the Soviet form of government. "What is a Soviet?" "How are the Soviets elected ?" "What is the dictatorship of the proletariat?" "What are the aims of the world revolution?" By pressing the button below any question the corresponding answer was flashed on the board in letters about three inches high, and not only the inquirer but all who happened to be passing by could read it. I often went to the Trades Union headquarters, the "Dom Soyusov," where, in addition to the Cossack Congress I have 76 MAROONED IN MOSCOW already described, I attended a number of meetings and con- certs. It was there that I heard Krassin make his first public report on the progress of negotiations for the reopening of trade with England, and at the same meeting I heard a speech by Kalenin, president of the All-Russian Council of Soviets. While not as well known outside of Russia as many of the other Bolshevik leaders, Kalenin, who is a peasant himself, is probably better known personally to the peasants, who make up ninety per cent, of Russia's population, than any of the Soviet oligarchy, not even excepting Lenin and Trotzki. He spends very little time in Moscow, living for the most part on his special train, on which he goes from one section of the coun- try to the other. Whenever there is trouble among the peas- ants, Kalenin is always the man to straighten it out, because he understands peasant psychology. He is a loose-knit, scrag- gly man with an unkempt blond beard, gentle blue eyes, and speaks with a rough eloquence that compels confidence. He and Krassin formed an incongruous pair — the former a thor- ough cosmopolitan in his correct suit of English tweeds, with his close-clipped beard and well-groomed appearance, his con- cise, well-balanced phrases and the air of a prosperous busi- ness man. Losovski, president of the All-Russian Council of Trades Unions, and Melnichanski, the secretary, are two equally con- trasting types. Losovski, whom I knew very well, is a Rus- sian revolutionary of the old school. He spent many years in exile and in Siberian prisons. He is an incorrigible idealist, and a man of broad general culture. Melnichanski, on the other hand, belongs to a type of the younger generation of Communists which is often met with in Russia. Emigrating to the United States when a mere boy, he worked in American factories and absorbed American initiative and business meth- ods. His radicalism is of the American stamp. Under the name of Melchner he was one of the ringleaders in the Pat- terson strike some years ago, and returned to Russia at the beginning of the Revolution to introduce American union methods of organization. He was very proud of his system for registering the trades THE GODS AND THEIR MACHINE 77 union membership, which is now over five million in Russia, and he showed me all the departments of the Trades Union Bureau, which seemed to be working with order and despatch. In the great banquet hall of the Dom Soyusov he arranged during the summer a remarkable historical, technical and scien- tific survey of the trades union movement in Russia, illus- trated with splendid diagrams and enlivened by vivid propa- ganda posters. The meetings at the Dom Soyusov took place in the great ballroom where the nobility of Moscow gave its superb fetes in the old days. It is a beautiful room, decorated in white and gold, and hung with huge crystal chandeliers. Around the dancing floor is a row of boxes upholstered in crimson brocade. Behind are luxurious dressing-rooms and a special suite reserved for the Czar and his family when they attended these functions. Now it serves as a meeting and recreation hall for thousands of plain workmen. The mirrors in the magnificent foyers reflect linen blouses, frieze coats and cotton frocks, instead of gold lace, velvets and satins. In the former gaming room a corps of clerks is busy filing records, and the Holy of Holies, the room where the nobles held their meet- ings, is reserved for the sessions of the Executive Committee. In the chairs around the huge round table, on the back of which are still the inlaid coats of arms of the great nobles with hereditary rights to sit in the assembly, metal workers, textile and transport workers hold their deliberations. CHAPTER VIII THE WOMAN'S PART Naturally, when I arrived in Russia I was much interested as a woman in finding out all I could about the position of women in the Soviet Republic, and one of the first persons I met was Alexandra Kolontai, the only great woman publicist among the Communists. As a rule the Communist women, wives of commissars and other prominent individuals, devote themselves rather to constructive and educational work than propaganda, but Balabanova and Kolontai are the exceptions. I found them both very attractive personalities. Strangely enough, they are both bourgeoise by birth. Kolontai is the daughter of a noted imperial general, and is a lady to her finger tips. When she is in Moscow she lives at the National Hotel, where I found her in her room recovering from a re- cent severe illness. She was wearing an exquisite boudoir gown of green velvet trimmed with sable, her little feet were encased in velvet slippers of the same shade, and she was altogether chic and charming. Evidently she has great regard for her personal appearance, and although not young, she is still an extremely pretty woman of the rather fragile blonde type. We talked principally about the education of children, which is her chief hobby. Like many other thoughtful Communists, she believes the present generation is hopeless so far as making conscious Communists of the masses is concerned and that, as the Com- munists express it, "the children are our future." She told me that she considered family life absolutely subversive to the interests of the Commune, that children should from birth be regarded as the property of the State, that they would de- velop a much more genuine sense of social responsibility in the atmosphere of the institution reproducing the Commune 78 THE WOMAN'S PART 79 than in the home which is under the influence of the patri- archal system. As regards the relationship of the sexes she felt that it should exist merely for the purpose of reproducing the race, without restraints except those imposed by observ- ance of the laws of eugenics. In pursuance of her theories she has planned a new system of motherhood endowment with pre-natal and post-natal care for mothers and babies. It was all very interesting, though I mentally took issue with her on every point. She also told me something about educational work among women which she found rather discouraging, and of her page in the Sunday Pravda, which was devoted to women's work and interests. While acknowledging that much must be done in the way of civic education among women, Kolontai was not inclined to treat the participation of women in politics as a separate prob- lem. "We have organized political propaganda work among women," she said. "Here in Moscow there are weekly meet- ings of women delegates from the large factories once a week. But women are encouraged to go to all political meetings and to work in conjunction with and on equal footing with men." This is quite true — there is no feminism in Russia, there are no laws, disadvantages, or disabilities operating against women. I first had an opportunity of observing large masses of women together on March 8, International Women's Day. In Moscow all offices employing women were closed at 2 o'clock in the afternoon, there was a special edition of the Pravda, devoted entirely to women's interests, and women's mass meetings were held in every section of the town. I went to two with Angelica Balabanova, who was the principal speaker at both. The first meeting was at the Kremlin, in the amphitheater of the Palace of Justice, a beautiful room in the style of the late eighteenth century. Originally the walls and columns were pure white, but the interior at present suggests a con- fectionery store at Christmas time more than anything else. The columns have been turnd into huge candy canes by diag- onal wrappings of red bunting and the spaces between into 80 MAROONED IN MOSCOW red and white striped lozenges by means of strips of the same material stamped with revolutionary mottoes. It was filled with women employees of the government offices in the Krem- lin, wearing the inevitable bright-colored shawl wound tightly around their heads with an end thrown over one shoulder. I have often wondered if the Russian women sleep in their shawls. Our little maid was never without hers, and one day when I visited the women's ward of a large hospital practi- cally every patient was wearing one in bed. When we arrived a government official was in the midst of a long, tedious speech. The women were listening with the patience characteristic of Russian audiences, but it was evident that they were bored. Many were half asleep, others staring at the walls and ceiling, still others trying to quiet their rest- less babies. The instant Balabanova stepped on the stage there was a slight rustle as everyone leaned forward to get a close look, for hers is a personality that compels attention. They saw a dumpy little woman, slightly bent, wearing a man's coat many sizes too large, the big fur collar touching the edges of an astrakhan cap pulled far down over her ears, and carrying a long ebony cane with an ivory handle. Little else about her was visible except a pair of wonderful dark eyes. Throwing off her coat and tossing her cap on the table, she started to speak, and every woman in the hall was galvan- ized into instant interest. She talked not about the doctrines of Communism but of its practical application to their imme- diate problems, explaining the reasons for the many hardships they are enduring at present and describing what the Soviet Government is trying to do for them and their children. "You all remember the days when a washerwoman was a washerwoman and nothing more," she said. "She could never be anything else. Now she can be anything she pleases. The working women of Russia have come into their kingdom." Finally she outlined in the simplest possible words the prin- ciples of the International. As she walked up and down the platform, her hands in her pockets, her head thrown back, her tired face with its sensitive mouth and luminous eyes aglow with enthusiasm. THE WOMAN'S PART 81 she was a curiously moving figure, and even the fact that her hair came down and fell in two long braids over her shoulders did not detract from the dignity of her small person. Some- thing of her spirit seemed to catch the audience, for there was much applause when she had finished, but that the response was emotional rather than intellectual was shown by the notes written by women in the audience and sent to the platform during her speech. There were some intelligent questions, but the majority were queries such as, ''Where can I get a pair of shoes?" "When will we get more bread?" or "Why are there so many churches in Moscow ?" She shook her head as she read them over. "It is hard to make women appreciate ideals when they are cold and hungry," she said, "especially women of this type — unskilled workers, former servants and members of the small bourgeoisie. You will see a different attitude among the industrial workers." I found this to be true at the next meeting, held at the famous Prokorov factory, where the revolution of 1905 started in Moscow. Formerly it was one of the largest tex- tile plants in Russia, with a yearly production of over 13,000,- 000 pieces of cotton goods — enough, as the foreman told me, "to wrap the world around three times." At that time the factory had some raw material but no fuel, and except for a small force employed in putting the machinery in order work was at a standstill. When we entered the factory dining room where the meet- ing was to take place it was already half full, though it was nearly an hour ahead of time, and while waiting we had a chat with the chairman, herself a factory worker. Following the modern revolutionary fashion, she wore her hair cut short like a man, but there was a feminine touch in her rhinestone earrings that seemed singularly out of place, emphasizing her rather masculine features. She had a fine, intelligent face, a keen, alert manner, and she conducted the meeting in a way that showed a thorough knowledge of parliamentary pro- cedure. The audience was responsive to every word, and there was none of the apathy I had noticed in the meeting 82 MAROONED IN MOSCOW at the Kremlin. Several of the speakers were factory women, and they handled their subjects in a way that would have done credit to a college graduate. As we left the meeting I noticed that Balabanova seemed utterly exhausted, and I found out that she had not eaten anything since breakfast. "I never thought about it," she said simply. Like most of the women workers in the Communist party she never spared herself, often speaking at three or four meet- ings a day, besides working several hours at her office. In addition she found time to keep up with current events in Italy, where she spent more than twenty years, and also acted as interpreter for foreign labor delegations. \ The wives of most of the People's Commissars are doing constructive work, among them Trotzkaya, who is in charge of all the museums in Moscow and arranges popular exhibits ; Lunacharskaya, who has the supervision of a number of chil- dren's homes ; Semaskaya, wife of the Commissioner of Public Health, who works as a nurses' aid in the Novo Alex- androffsky Hospital, and Krupkaya, the wife of Lenin, who is directing the work of primary education in Russia and founded the rural colonies for children. While there are trained women workers in all political parties in Russia, religion still plays a great part in the lives of most Russian women, and they are politically apathetic. The proportion of illiteracy is far greater among women than men, and they have not the opportunities of overcoming this handicap which are given every man in the Red Army. The women of the former bourgeoisie naturally hold aloof from politics. The vast majority of working women are still densely ignorant and too much absorbed in their immediate problems to be susceptible to educational propaganda. When you work from six to eight hours a day, spend three or four standing in line outside one of the cooperatives waiting for food and clothing issued on cards, or dragging a hand sled loaded with wood for several versts, cook your own meals, feeding four mouths where there is enough for two, you have little time for anything else. In many cases the male members of the family are in the army and the entire responsibility devolves THE WOMAN'S PART 83 on the mothers and wives. The women of Russia have borne the brunt of the war, the blockade and the economic crisis. Until normal conditions are restored, there can be no extensive development of the work of training them for citizenship. There has been much talk in America and Western Europe about the immorality and sex demoralization brought about by the Revolution in Russia. As a matter of fact, the aris- tocracy and the intellectuals were always extraordinarily lib- eral with regard to sex relationships; among the former divorce was far more common than in any other European country, and among the latter irregular relationships entailed no loss of social standing. As is well known, an enormous number of professional prostitutes existed in Czarist Russia, under government regulation, with their famous "yellov tickets." This class has been entirely abolished by the Soviet Government. At first these women were summarily dealt with. Large numbers, who were hopelessly diseased, were shot as the easiest form of prophylaxis, others were isolated, still others put to work. Those belonging to the aristocracy of the underworld made their escape to foreign countries. As a result, there is no open soliciting in the streets of Moscow. What might be characterized as predatory vice has also disap- peared. Painted ladies no longer maintain luxurious estab- lishments, or lay their decoy nets — the women of the lower classes are all workers, self-supporting and independent, with the same wage scale as men. Types, such as the old roues and the gilded youth who haunted the cafes and boulevards in former days are nonexistent, but to a certain, though lesser extent, a new type has arisen to take their place. Every department of every commissariat contains many of these gentry who constitute what has often been spoken of as the New Bourgeoisie. Some of these men manage to live within the law or to keep from being found out, others are adept at bribery or blackmail, and enjoy immunity, for a con- siderable time, at least. Often they are Jews, occasionally former hourgeoi who have been clever opportunists, and who have managed to construct a fair imitation of their former life. These men have plenty of money, hoards of Nikolai 84 MAROONED IN MOSCOW roubles, gold and jewels tucked away In safe places — ^above all, they have access to inexhaustible food supplies. The girls who work in Soviet bureaus have none of these things. Often they have nonworkers to support on their scanty pay and scantier rations, they need food, clothing, fuel, and they have the irresistible feminine love for pretty things. The rich speculators can give them everything they want — it is the same old story of economic pressure about which such hue and cry is raised in capitalistic countries, that drives them to irregular relationships with their associates or depart- ment chiefs. The number of kept women in the Soviet offices is enormous, but as a rule these liaisons are more or less perma- nent affairs, and there is not much promiscuity. Numbers of girls with whom I talked were engaged to the men with whom they were living, and they were waiting for better times before getting married. It was difficult to find living quarters — perhaps the man had an old father and mother to take care of, the girl several brothers and sisters. It was impossible to set up a separate establishment, therefore they both lived at home and met whenever they could. Many women told me frankly that they did not want a home or children under present living conditions. On the other hand, I ran across a peculiar form of graft, if it can be called by such a term. There are a number of women among the lower classes who deliberately have as many children as they possibly can because of the special privileges they enjoy. They receive special diet after the first few months of pregnancy, which is continued for some time after the birth of the child. They also enjoy a holiday of three months with full wages and rations and receive thirty arsheens of material for the baby's outfit. If they do not care to keep the child it can be put in an institution. As these women are usually healthy animals, they do not mind the physical dis- comforts, and the State relieves them of any moral responsi- bility for their offspring. It is an easy way of making a comfortable living. In the foyers of the vaudeville theaters where the rich commissars and their mistresses congregate I saw wonderful THE WOMAN'S PART 85 jewels and superb costumes. The women were often marvel- ously bedizened and painted, but they lacked the chic of the professional courtesan. I saw few who appeared to belong definitely to this class. Many of them were obviously work- ing women who were apeing the manners and morals of their former employers. I once heard a rather amusing story in this connection. A Red workman in Petrograd took a seat in a trolley car next to a gorgeously gowned, highly perfumed lady who fairly exuded luxury. He began to reproach her for being a bour- geoise, accusing her of belonging to the class that had lived so long on the blood of the proletariat. "And you are still at your old tricks," he cried, "still man- aging to keep your furs and fine clothes, by crooked means, no doubt, while honest working women in Petrograd are going without coats and shoes." "Aw, keep your mouth shut," she answered in the Russian vernacular, "I'm the mistress of a fool of a workman like you !" On the whole, however, except for juvenile immorality, of which I shall have something to say in another chapter, I am inclined to think that the Revolution had rather a stabilizing effect on morals than otherwise. The often repeated story of nationalization of women is regarded as a joke in Russia by those who have seen articles published abroad on the subject. The vast majority of the people stare at you in blank, incom- prehending amazement if you allude to it. The theory was advanced in a little newspaper published in Saratov by a small group of Anarchists, but purely as a speculative fancy, and even they did not take it seriously. CHAPTER IX SOVIET WEDDINGS As a matter of fact, people get married and divorced by Soviet decrees in Russia very much as they do in any other country. The government recognizes only civil marriages performed before a magistrate, and the fact of such a mar- riage entitles the married couples to mutual legal rights. For example, in case a husband and wife wish to separate, they must appear before the magistrate, state the reasons, arrange for an equable division of their personal effects, for the dis- position of the children, who, if they are not of an age to choose for themselves, may be awarded to either parent or committed to one of the children's institutions at the discre- tion of the magistrate. Questions, such as to which one shall occupy the apartment where both have been living together, are also settled before the magistrate. It is very simple to get married and equally simple to get divorced. Persons desiring to be married appear before one of the judges of the People's Court in their "Rayon," or police district, bringing two witnesses who certify that they have known the contracting parties for some time and that there is no obstacle to their marriage. Then they are registered by the magistrate as man and wife. In most cases the wife re- tains her maiden name. This is partly because the women consider it a sign of independence, partly because there are regulations forbidding husband and wife to work in the same bureau. The wives of the great commissars are usually known by their maiden names; thus the wife of Lenin, who is much interested in the organization of the children's colo- nies, is known as Krupkaya; Gorky's wife as Peschkova. Kolontai has had any number of husbands, the last being a soldier twenty years younger than herself, who recently de- serted her, but she has always kept her own name. 86 SOVIET WEDDINGS 87 A divorce may be obtained in the same manner before a judge of the People's Court in a very short time — three weeks, with the consent of both parties; in six months if one of the parties disagrees. There are no legal disabihties attached to illegitimate children, and the father is forced to assume the responsibility for them should occasion arise. Neither is an irregular relationship looked upon askance. Among the lower classes, however, old-fashioned ideas still prevail. I had an illustration of this one day when I was walking along the Tverskaya. There was a great commotion in a side street, and a woman came running out, her hair down, her face scratched, screaming like a maniac. She was pursued by a good-sized crowd, in the center of which was another woman, the embodiment of one of the furies. She and the rest of the crowd were sending showers of stones after the fugitive. I ducked one which came perilously near me, then, retiring to the shelter of a doorway, awaited develop- ments. The first woman ran straight into the arms of a militiaman, who halted the entire mob, and began to ask ques- tions of the second woman, who was evidently the aggressor. "Paugh," she said, spitting violently, a habit of the Rus- sians when either frightened or angry, "she is a worthless wench. I go out to work and I come home and find her with my husband. I will tear her to pieces ; let me get at her," and she made a threatening gesture, cheered on by the crowd, which was entirely in sympathy with her righteous indigna- tion. The militiaman was impartial and led them both off to settle their differences in the People's Court. There are still many church weddings in Moscow. I often used to drop in at various churches while weddings were going on, and once I was a guest at a regular old-fashioned Russian wedding. It was at the home of a Mme. B , whose hus- band was formerly one of the most fashionable tailors in Mos- cow. He had been arrested nearly a year before I made their acquaintance, because in a raid on the apartment in which they lived a circular letter written in Kerensky's time, recom- mending the Moscow merchant tailors to organize in order to combat the excessive demands of the workmen, had been 88 MAROONED IN MOSCOW found among his papers. He was held for two months in the Checka, where he died of typhus before his case came up for trial. Taking advantage of the decree, which, with variations, has always been in force, permitting the existence of small "artels," or workshops, consisting of from ten to fifty indi- viduals, all of whom worked together on a cooperative basis, and being over the legal working age himself, he had main- tained his business in a small way and managed to support his family very comfortably. The business was carried on after his death by Mme. B , her two nieces and her son, who was serving his term in the Red Army, but had managed through pull to secure an assignment to duty in the War Office at Moscow, where he served for only a few hours each day, being free the rest of the time to devote his attention to the workshop. They had a great many orders from rich commissars, who do not pur- chase all their clothes from the Soviet stores by any means. One day when I dropped into the shop I saw a good-looking young man being fitted for a suit of English tweeds. When he left Mme. B. told me that he had ordered nine suits, an overcoat and a fur-lined ulster for his trousseau, as he ex- pected to be married very shortly. Mme. B.'s niece was to be married in a few weeks, and I was invited to the wedding, which took place at five o'clock in the afternoon at a large church not far from her apartment on the Povarskaya, formerly one of the most fashionable resi- dence streets of Moscow. I went to their home and walked to the church, which was only a short distance away, with an elderly friend of the family. The bridal party was driven in carriages. My escort was very correct in a frock coat of sonlewhat antiquated pattern, it is true, and the cousin of the bride was smart in an English morning coat and striped trou- sers, with a white boutonniere in his buttonhole. The same costume was worn by the groom, a prosperous young enpneer, and his best man. On entering the church, the bride, with her attendants, ten pretty bridesmaids in white frocks, carrying large bouquets of phlox, accompanied by the members of her family and inti- SOVIET WEDDINGS 89 mate friends, turned to the left of the door and waited. The family of the groom occupied the lower right-hand corner of the church. In a few minutes the doors of the sanctuary, flanked by innumerable pictures of saints which take the place of an altar in the Greek church, opened to admit the priest, who advanced down the main aisle of the basilica. He was an imposing old man with a long flowing grey beard and a fiine patriarchal face. He wore a gorgeous robe of green and gold brocade, and carried a superb prayerbook in his hands. On his head was a curious miterlike headdress of gold galoon encrusted with real or imitation stones. He advanced to where the groom was standing with his best man, took him by the hand and led him across to the bride, placing his hand in hers. Then, turning, he led the way to the sanctuary, fol- lowed by the bridal couple, the attendants and family, among whom I was included, while a wedding march was chanted by the choir. In the Russian churches there are no organs, but the unaccompanied Gregorian chant is often very beautiful, and it was superb on this occasion, for this particular church had one of the finest choirs in Moscow. The ceremony was long and exceedingly complicated. Dur- ing the entire time the best man and maid of honor held huge gilt crowns over the heads of the bride and groom, there were many prayers and a short homily on the married state by the priest. Then, followed by the bridal couple and their two attendants, still holding the crowns over their heads, he marched three times around the huge Bible on a gilded lectern which stood in the center of the church just outside the sanc- tuary rail. During the entire ceremony the guests and spec- tators remained standing, for there are no pews or chairs in Orthodox churches. There were many places in the service where they all bowed and crossed themselves several times. After the final blessing everybody present kissed the priest's hand, and the Bible, filing in line before the lectern, then the priest and all the guests kissed the bride and we all went home to a beautiful wedding supper. It consisted of cold meats, delicious Russian salad, hot meat croquettes with fried potatoes, white rolls, elaborate 90 MAROONED IN MOSCOW cakes of all kinds, bonbons and fruit, followed by coffee. We drank kvass, a plebeian drink, something like a cross betv/een poor beer and cider, which is the Russian 2,75 in a country of prohibition. There had been much discussion before hand as to whether we should have champagne, but as there were at least fifty guests, and the price of champagne, plenty of which could be bought from Soviet bootleggers, was about 35.000 roubles a bottle, it was decided that it would be unjustifiable extravagance under the circumstances. We were seated at a long, narrow table extending around three sides of Mme. B 's handsome dining room, beautifully decorated with bowls of cut summer flowers. The bride looked very pretty in a real white satin gown with white silk stockings and white kid slippers. There were innumerable speeches, the bride's health was drunk in kvass, then the table was taken away by the young men-of the party and we danced to the music of a graphophone, alternating with French waltzes and Russian dances played on the piano by one of the guests, and the party did not break up until long after mid- night. In view of the high prices and scarcity of everything in Revolutionary Moscow, a rough estimate of the cost of the party is rather interesting. To begin with there was the bride's costume. Her satin frock was homemade, but the material cost about eighty thousand roubles, the silk stockings eighteen thousand roubles a pair, the kid slippers forty thou- sand. The bridesmaids' frocks, also homemade, and of silk mull, cost about thirty thousand roubles apiece, their bouquets five thousand each, and the flowers on the table represented roughly twenty thousand roubles. The priest received ten thousand roubles as his fee, the choir about the same and then there was the expense of lighting and cleaning the church and the verger's fee, which amounted to several thousand roubles more. The supper, Mme. B told me, cost over half a million. In all she calculated that she had spent nearly a mil- lion roubles on the wedding. She had not had to buy a dress for herself as she had many costumes left over from the old days which could be made over. SOVIET WEDDINGS 91 Among the guests at the wedding was a pretty young girl who was a student at the Moscow Conservatory of Music. Her father, who was a well-known general, had died some years previously, and her three brothers, all guard officers, had been shot at the beginning of the Revolution. She and her mother lived in one room and kept themselves from starving by selling their old clothes, household linen and jewelry, though they did the latter at considerable risk, as selling gold or pre- cious stones is illegal. Nevertheless, her hair was waved and arranged in a tousled mass of curls, Russian fashion; she wore a black velvet dress that had seen better days, and a handsome white fox around her neck, though the wedding was in mid- summer. Such incongruities are features of Soviet fashions. People wear what they have, irrespective of the seasons, and it is no uncommon sight to see women wearing superb sable furs in midsummer, covering ragged gowns, and silk frocks during working hours in government offices. The young couple were given a bedroom and sitting-room in Mme. B 's seven-room apartment, which she had man- aged to keep intact through personal friendship with the chair- man of the housing committee. They took no wedding trip. It is impossible to secure permits to travel in Russia without all sorts of passes, and unless they were traveling on official business it would not have been possible for them to secure accommodations in government hotels, so they just said good- night to the guests and settled down in their rooms, which had been painted and repapered for them by Mme. B . It is hard to live in Russia at the present time, but it is equally hard to die decently, as I found out upon the death of the father of one of my friends, a former Imperial general of an old and historic family. Great commissars and party lead- ers are accorded magnificent funerals like that of the Commis- sar of Posts and Telegraphs, whose obsequies I have already described, for in such cases reverence is accorded to the idea and not the person. But in the case of ordinary individuals the dead are disposed of like so much waste paper. When the gen- eral died his family were most anxious to have him buried according to the rites of the Orthodox church, and this entailed 92 MAROONED IN MOSCOW no end of red tape and trouble. In the first place, after obtain- ing the certificate of death they had to secure permission to keep the body in the house beyond the fixed period of twenty- four hours after his decease, and they were obliged to procure special permission to hold religious services in their apart- ment. Ordinarily officials from the Department of Health would have come to their home, placed the body in a rough board coffin, and have carried it on a dray with the bodies of other persons who had died during the preceding twenty-four hours, to one of the public cemeteries. There it would have been dumped in a common grave and the coffin, in all probabil- ity, saved to do service again. All this would have been done without any expense whatever to the family. As it was, the State provided nothing. The general's daughter was obliged to go out, buy boards for a coffin, find a carpenter to make it, and bring it to their apartment on a pushcart. Then a cart and horse had to be hired to take the body to the cemetery, a man found to dig the grave and permission secured from the authorities for separate burial. All this took eight days and cost the family over a hundred thousand roubles. I saw several cemeteries in Moscow, among them the ceme- tery of Novodievoche, where the composer Scriabine, Tchekov the playwright, the members of the Stolypin family and many other noted Russians are buried. Here the anarchist prince, Peter Kropotkin, who died during my stay in Moscow, was buried in consecrated ground. I also noticed the graves of a number of Communists within the enclosure distinguishable from the others only by the fact that they lacked the Greek cross which forms the headstone of every Orthodox grave. The cemetery was in good condition, none of the graves had been disturbed in any way, and many of them were decorated with growing plants and flowers. In this as in many other respects the Russians are slow to abandon tradition, and no amount of materialistic teaching will ever stamp out their rev- erence for their dead. CHAPTER X BOURJEOI After I had been in Moscow for a few weeks I got tired of doing purely official things, made friends outside the narrow circle of the Foreign Office around which the life of most cor- respondents revolves, and began to get an idea of how the average family lives in Russia. The people who lived best in Moscow were the big specu- lators. They were quite different from the small fry that haunted the markets or engaged in house-to-house trade. There was a certain class that dealt in foreign exchange and Czar roubles, turning over millions every day. You could get a quotation on almost every sort of foreign currency, the ex- change fluctuating according to the political and international situation. Before the departure of large repatriation echelons, francs, pounds and dollars were always greatly in demand and increased in value accordingly. Many persons were engaged, in cooperation with Letts and Esthonians, in smuggling rugs, paintings, jewels and bibelots out of the country. This was comparatively easy to do, as Lettish and Esthonian subjects, under the terms of the peace treaties, had the right to take their personal belongings with them, and they could claim as their own articles later to be sold in Reval or Riga, the money to be deposited in a bank to the credit of the Russian owner after the middleman had deducted his commission. I knew a woman in Moscow who made over two millions a month in this business. Other people, fantastic as it may seem, bought and sold real estate, on paper, of course, for future delivery when the right of private property would be re-established. A flour- ishing trade was done in passports to foreign countries, per- mits to travel on the railroads, food cards and Soviet food supplies. 93 94 MAROONED IN MOSCOW While official demoralization is undoubtedly widespread in Russia I do not think it quite fair to attribute the corruption in official circles entirely to the Bolshevik regime. It was an accepted fact under the old regime that bribery played an im- portant part in all business or official transactions, and things have remained very much the same. To live on Soviet rations was next to impossible but nearly everyone in Moscow had other sources from which to buy food supplies. Few people had the right sort of food, how- ever, and the shortage of fats and sugar caused a great deal of anaemia and under-nourishment. On the whole, I believe that during my stay in Moscow, while many people were half starved, there were no actual deaths from starvation, and the available food supplies were equably distributed. There was never a time when people who had money could not buy prac- tically everything they wished. One day, quite by accident, I dropped into one of the many little mushroom shops which had sprung up in Moscow, where varenyets, or curdled milk, could be bought in glasses, and white rolls and pastry were sold at fabulous prices. The man who waited on me was a distinguished looking old gentleman, evidently very superior to his present job. I began to talk with him and found out that he was a former Colonel in the Russian Army. Being above the age limit, he was not obliged to work in a Soviet office, and he had agreed to keep shop a certain number of hours each day for a Jew who was running the place. He invited me to his house, where I was afterwards a frequent visitor. His wife worked in one of the branches of the Department of Education, his only son had just taken his degree in medi- cine at the University of Moscow and was a Red Army physi- cian. His daughter was employed as a clerk in the "Glav Kozh," Leather Central, a branch of the Centro Soyous, which controls distribution in Russia. Between them, therefore, they had three payoks, or food rations. The son was drawing Red Army rations, which were about double those obtained by civilian employees. They were living in their old apartment of six rooms, four of which they occupied, two being assigned BOURJEOI 95 to other persons. That they had so much room was due to the fact that the Colonel's wife was chairman of the "Hous- ing Committee," which exists in every dwelling and apartment house in Moscow, under a department of the Commissariat of Labor. According to the regulations of the Central Housing Committee, each citizen is allowed a certain number of cubic feet for his lodgings, but these regulations are often honored more in the breach than the observance. Those who know how to get on the good side of the regional commissar, by bribery or otherwise, are frequently allowed to keep their old quarters, and if they give up any of their rooms, to choose their own tenants, and this was the case with my friends. They kept no servant, the mother and daughter doing all the cooking. They received their food rations through the offices where they worked, supplementing them by selling off their clothes, furniture and jewelry. They had to make all the repairs themselves in this apartment. If the plumbing system broke down the father had to mend it; if a window was broken it had to be patched with paper. They had man- aged to buy enough wood to keep fires in the kitchen and in two of the rooms, the wood assigned them, which they were obliged to go some distance to get and bring home themselves, not being sufficient to keep one stove going for more than three months of the year. It was given them in the form of logs, which the father or the son had to saw into the proper lengths in the courtyard of the apartment and carry up four flights of stairs as no elevators have run in Moscow for sev- eral years. To procure the wood was a matter of time and endless formalities. First it was necessary to have a Trudo- vaya Knizhka, or workers' book, showing where the appli- cant for wood was employed. Everyone in Moscow between the ages of sixteen and fifty must be provided with one of these books, otherwise it is not only impossible for him to ob- tain lodgings, food or clothing from the government stores, but he may be arrested at any time as a work deserter and condemned for a period of months to compulsory labor. Until recently it was not possible for workers to choose their place of employment. They were registered at the Work 96 MAROONED IN MOSCOW Exchange and assigned to work where they were most needed. Often this system caused great hardships, as in the case of a friend of mine, a widow with one child, who was assigned to work in an office at least six versts from her residence. As she had no relatives with whom she could leave him, and was unwilling to put him in a children's home, she endeavored to find work in an office nearer her lodgings, and secured a tenta- tive offer from a Soviet official for employment at a higher salary than what she was then getting, provided she could be released from her old position. Not only was release refused her, but she was arrested on a charge of insubordination and condemned to six months of compulsory work, which consisted of cleaning toilets in government offices. She was a highly educated person and could speak five languages, but she was obliged to do this disgusting work as the price for her temerity. In addition to the workers' book, it was also necessary, in order to secure wood, to have an order from your place of employment which was to be presented at the regional office of the Moscow Fuel Committee and exchanged for an order signed by the committee, after which you had to wait until there was a distribution of fuel in your region, then go to the appointed place, stand in line and wait your turn for fuel. Sometimes, if you were not early, the supply gave out and you were obliged to come back another day. The same process must be gone through in order to pur- chase shoes, clothing or household utensils or furnishings, and to draw the weekly food rations on cards. Actually this sys- tem did much to hinder the efficiency of government offices, as the employees lost a number of days in each month collecting their supplies and rations. My friends told me that frequently supplies assigned on cards were either not given out at the appointed time or that all were gone, and if they needed anything at once they were compelled to go to the Soukharevka, Moscow's illegal market, and purchase them at speculative prices. Once they received no bread for seventeen days from their local distributing center, while people in other parts of Moscow were receiving their regular ration. During this time they were obliged to buy BOURJEOI 97 bread in the open market for five hundred roubles a pound. The working hours of the mother and daughter were from ten till five daily, until two o'clock on Saturdays, with Sundays free. The daughter was studying dancing at the Moscow Ballet School, receiving her tuition free, and she attended her classes after office hours. The mother did all the housework and cooking, the daughter did the laundry work in her odd moments, but they both managed to keep well, even elegantly dressed, and still used silver on their table, which they care- fully secreted whenever there was a raid on the apartment, which happened occasionally. The Colonel had also managed to conceal his commission, his sword and many relics of army days. They had few pleasures, occasionally receiving tickets for the theater from the office where they worked, but they were usually too tired to go out at night. They could go to a public library to read and could take out books for home read- ing if they pertained to the work of their department, but they could buy no books or other reading matter. The mother and father lived mainly in the past. The daughter belonged to a club in her office, which sometimes gave dances and informal parties, spent her meager salary on perfumes, and powdered her nose like any New York stenographer. I was often a guest at the five o'clock dinner which was their only real meal during the twenty-four hours. A typical menu was potato soup, black bread, kasha, butter and tea. They had a litde real tea, which they hoarded very carefully. Usually there was no sugar for tea, and they substituted rai- sins. Salt herrings, prepared with artificial vinegar, cucum- bers and potatoes were luxuries. One day when I arrived at dinner time they told me that they had a real treat for me, and the daughter produced a pound of butter which she had bought in exchange for a pair of silk stockings and a tiny piece of chocolate given to her by the chief of her department, with whom she was on very good terms. They were all officially bes partini, nonpartisans, but they spent their time in abusing the Soviet Government and bemoaning the past. They were absolutely without patriotism or national feeling, hoped the Poles would begin active hostilities and take Moscow, had a 98 MAROONED IN MOSCOW fairly superstitious reverence for all foreigners, and a humility that was almost servile and which I found rather repulsive. This is typical of the attitude of the middle class bourgeois Russian. A favorite expression of these unhappy bourgeois with re- gard to present-day conditions in Russia was Koschemar, a corruption of the French word, "Cauchemar" — nightmare. Many of them felt that they were indeed living in the midst of a terrible dream. Through them I met General Brusilov, whom I found to be of a very different stamp. I often visited him and his wife at their apartment at number fourteen Mansoursky Pereoulak. While the career of Brusilov since the Revolution has been the theme of much speculation, and of many absurd articles in the foreign press, very few people outside of Russia have any idea as to what he has been doing. People who followed the war news on the Eastern Front remember him as the leader of the brilliant Galician offensive in 1916, which annihilated the Austrian Army on that front and made active assistance to Germany from that quarter impossible. With the exception of the few advantages gained in the East Prussian campaign at the beginning of the war it was the only substantial military success achieved by the Imperial Army. Much of the territory acquired during Brusilov's advance was lost later, owing to lack of arms and ammunition and the increasing demoraliza- tion in the army. Brusilov himself told me of those terrible days, when he realized that the army was going to pieces, and sent frantic telegrams to the War Ministry at Petrograd, asking for the help that never came. His enemies claim that he was and always has been an opportunist, that he was one of the Czar's boot-licking sycophants, that he afterwards curried favor with Kerensky and later with the Bolsheviks, and it is undoubtedly true that he is despised by the old monarchists and members of the Cadet party, who loathe him as a traitor. Some day he intends to write his memoirs in justification and explanation of his conduct; meanwhile this is his story as he told it to me. He had always been inclined to sympathize with the Cadets BOURJEOI 99 who supported the idea of a constitutional monarchy in Rus- sia, and was intimate with many of their leaders in the Douma, During the dark days at the end of 191 6 he became convinced that Russia could not stay in the war under the utterly inca- pable, weak and vaccillating rule of Nicholas II, and when the March Revolution came, actuated solely by patriotism, he offered his services to Kerensky. He remained in command of the Eighth Army until shortly before the October Revolu- tion, when he was removed on account of difference of opinion with Kerensky, who was yielding to the demands of the French, and the English Ambassador, Sir George Buchanan, to keep up the war and sending mutinous, unarmed, half- naked men to stop the Grerman bullets. At the end of the October Revolution he was living quietly in Moscow and was wounded by a bomb dropped by an aero- plane, which fell in his apartment. He was taken to the hos- pital at the Kremlin, where he remained for several months, after which he was placed under arrest and held for six months in the Kremlin prison, being treated, however, with every consideration, owing to his weakened condition. Subse- quently he was allowed to return to his home but was kept under house arrest until the late autumn of 19 19, when he agreed to accept a position in the archives office of the Red Army staff to supervise the compilation of a history of Rus- sia's part in the Great War. He was living on his pay of three thousand five hundred roubles a month, supplemented by the Red Army ration and occasional gifts from his old soldiers, many of whom were prosperous peasants living near Moscow, and they never came to town without bringing him butter, honey, milk, or sour cream, of which the Russians are inordi- nately fond. I happened to be dining with them one day when they had received such a windfall. We had sorrel soup with sour whipped cream floating on top, kasha with butter, black bread and tea with honey instead of sugar. Brusilov's attitude towards the Soviet Government was frankly antagonistic as far as the principles on which it was based were concerned, but he was intensely nationalistic in feeling and violently opposed to intervention. 100 MAROONED IN MOSCOW "We got ourselves into this mess," he often said to me, "through our own indifference and selfishness and corruption, and our utter inability to read the signs of the times. It is up to us to get ourselves out of it. If we are unable to do this we deserve any form of government that may be imposed upon us." He despised the emigrants who were always hatching out- side plots, safely ensconced in London, Berlin or Paris, and when the Poles began their offensive he wrote the famous letter to the Commissariat of War offering his services to the Government. He was made chairman of an advisory commission to the General Staff, of which Polivanov, former Minister of War, and General Klembovski were also members. They were never trusted by the Red Army General Staff, however, and their activities were confined to advising measures to facilitate transportation of food supplies and troop movements from the reserve bases to the fighting front. They also received and made recommendations on thousands of letters from former Imperial officers who were in internment camps offering to serve in the Red Army against the Poles. General Brusilov estimated, at the beginning of the Polish offensive, that ap- proximately 100,000 former officers were interned. Most of them were actuated by nationalistic feeling, but there were undoubtedly numbers who hoped by this means to bring about a counter-revolution. Brusilov himself never believed in this possibility, and I know for a fact that he steadily re- fused secret offers to place himself at the head of such a move- ment. Something of the sort was actually organized, culminat- ing in the late summer of 1920 in the arrest of an entire de- partment of the General Staff and a number of distinguished officers, among whom was General Klembovski. While not trusting Brusilov to the extent of giving him any real responsibility, the government did not hesitate to make use of him for furthering enlistment propaganda against the Poles. Despatches stating that Brusilov was at Kiev, on the Beresina, or at the Wrangel front were published in the Isvestia or the Pravda, often on the very day when I was BOURJEOI 101 having tea with him and his wife in their apartment in Mos- cow, and we used to laugh about it together. "Actually," he said, "I probably know less about the situation on the front than you do, for you hear the gossip at the Foreign Office." Madame Brusilov, who had a sister in America, Mrs. Vera Johnston of Brooklyn, and who was a niece of Mme. Blavatsky, enjoyed hearing my accounts of life in America, and I spent many happy hours at their house. I was also an intimate friend of the wife of their only son, a young officer who had joined the Red Army and who disappeared on the Denikin front in the summer of 1919. They had never heard a word as to his fate. The Red Army authorities simply re- ported him as missing, but there were many rumors with re- gard to his disappearance. Some people asserted that he had attempted to pass over to the Whites and had been killed by the Bolsheviks, others that he had been taken prisoner and executed by Denikin, still others that he was fighting with Wrangel under an assumed name. Young Mme. Brusilov was herself employed in the War Department and managed to live very comfortably, supplementing her rations by selling the many beautiful things she had inherited from her grandmother, who belonged to one of the oldest and richest families in Mos- cow. She kept an apartment of two rooms, kitchenette and bath in what was formerly her grandmother's home, part of the house being used by a section of the Commissariat of War and the remaining rooms occupied by M, Ugrimov, a distin- guished Russian engineer and an old friend of the family. She very often gave informal parties, at which there were wives of former generals, professors and army men. Many of her friends were in prison and she spent much of her time taking food packages to the Checka, the Butierki, and other prisons. One of them was Professor Yakovlev of the Uni- versity of Petrograd, who had been condemned to death in connection with a counter-revolutionary plot at the time of the Yudenitch offensive, but had not been executed owing to the fact that he was desperately ill with a heart affection. His wife, whom I often saw at the house of Madame Brusilov, was arrested late in the summer because she lived with Mme. 102 MAROONED IN MOSCOW Rodzianko, whose husband was, and still is, very active in fomenting counter-revolutionary plots in Poland against the Bolsheviks. Mme. Brusilov's uncle, Professor Kotlerevsky of the University of Moscow, was arrested later and placed on trial for his life in connection with the activities of the so- called Tactical Center, a nonpartisan organization which had for its avowed object the fight for free speech, free press and free party activity in Russia. I attended the trial, which was most dramatic, with Mme. Brusilov. It was held in the amphitheater of the Moscow Polytechnic School and the public was admitted. It lasted for four days. The three judges sat at a plain deal table covered with red bunting on the stage facing the audience. The accused, twenty-eight in number, were placed in the space usually occupied by the orchestra at theatrical performances, separated from the audience by two rows of vacant seats which had been roped off and were guarded by a detachment of the militiamen of the Extraordinary Commission. The public prosecutor, Krilienko, a brilliant speaker, was also one of the judges, which seemed to me a most unfair arrangement. Each prisoner was allowed to make a speech in his own defense, and they were represented by M. Mouraviev, head of the Political Red Cross, a former well-known lawyer in Moscow. Among them were many notable persons, including Chep- kin, a well-known leader of the Cadet party, whose brother served on the recently formed and almost as promptly dis- solved Russian Famine Relief Committee; Prince Ourosov, at whose house, as nearly as I can recollect, the murder of Lenin was attempted, and Alexandra Lvovna Tolstoi, youngest daughter of the great novelist. Professor Kotlerevski, who was intensely nervous throughout the trial, broke down under the grilling of Krilienko and made a full confession. He was sentenced to three years' internment, but was released on parole immediately after the trial. Alexandra Lvovna Tolstoi made a brilliant speech in her own defense, stating that she had joined the movement not as a counter-revolutionary but as a believer in her father's doc- trine of pacifism. She opposed the Soviet Government on BOURJEOI 103 these grounds, and also as an individualist, in favor of ma- jority rule and against the dictatorship of any minority. She then added, with a fine gesture, that they might do what they pleased with her body, that she would always be free morally and spiritually, no matter how long she might be kept in prison. One of the other prisoners, a man named Morosov, in his defense expressed the opinion of a number of the intellectuals who have remained in Russia throughout the Revolution. He said that unfortunately he had spent most of his time in prison since the Revolution and was therefore not able to carry out his intentions, but that if released he would be willing to de- vote his energies to working with, though not for, the Soviet Government out of love for Russia, because he realized that cooperation with the existing administration was the only way to prevent the utter collapse of Russia's economic and in- dustrial system, and untold misery to the Russian people. There are thousands of nonpartisan workers in every depart- ment of the Soviet administration today who share the same views. They admit that the political domination of the Com- munist party is absolute and complete, but they foresee an eventual political change following the inevitable economic breakdown. They believe that they can best serve their country by keeping the work of the various governmental departments going, so that when the change comes there will not be utter demoralization and anarchy. All public improvements which are possible under the present regime, all schemes such as the electrification of the villages, reconstruction of railroads and bridges, installation of new power plants and factories, new and scientific methods in the departments of public health, agriculture and education, are being carried on principally by these men. They regard it as no disloyalty to do this, be- lieving that they can be of more use to their country at the present time by doing such work than by engaging in useless counter-revolutionary activities. Although an attempt was made to prove that the Tactical Center was counter-revolutionary, it served merely for the interchange of ideas between men and women of this type, 104 MAROONED IN MOSCOW and the government was, I believe, fully aware of this fact, but it suited the purpose of the Checka at the time to hold a trial and make an apparently generous gesture by releasing all the prisoners, knowing all the while that it was perfectly safe to do so. If they had been really dangerous conspirators they would have had short shrift and a secret trial. The maximum sentence imposed was ten years in an internment camp for the four alleged leaders, and all were released on parole within a short time. I had met Alexandra Lvovna Tolstoi before her arrest at the home of Vladimir Tchertkov, a charming old gentleman, who was a close friend of Count Tolstoi, who had made him his literary executor. A family quarrel had arisen over this matter. Count Ilya Tolstoi, the eldest son, and his other chil- dren maintaining that Tchertkov had no right to renunciation of all rights of publication of Tolstoi's works and the royalties therefrom, which Tchertkov had made in accordance with the wishes of his friend. Tchertkov is today the leader of the remnant of Tolstoians in Russia, and the head of a nonsecta- rian league, composed of various denominations, all of whom are pacifists. They had until recently an office on the Pokrovka in Mos- cow and were left undisturbed until they became active in supporting conscientious objectors to army service, of whom there are a considerable number in Russia. For a time Tchertkov acted as head of an advisory board to the General Staff to pass on such cases, for the Soviet Government recog- nizes the validity of the claims of conscientious objectors if based on the tenets of the religious sect to which they belong; but Tchertkov wished to push the matter further and secure the recognition of cases of individual objectors. He had many tilts with the War Office over this matter, but his age and his friendship with Tolstoi, for whose memory even the Com- munists have considerable veneration, secured him immunity. He and his wife were desperately poor, for they lived on the utterly inadequate ration given to persons over the legal working age, and I really believe that they would have starved to death if it had not been for the gifts of the peasants from BOURJEOI 105 Tolstoi's estate near Colomna, about sixty versts from Moscow, who came all the way on foot to bring them enough food to keep them aHve. Tchertkov was constantly working on some Utopian scheme or other, and he managed to publish some pacifist brochures, which he distributed among the militia and members of the Moscow garrison. He was always running about Moscow on some such errand, and was also working on a new and revised edition of Tolstoi's works to be published by the Commissariat of Education. At his house I renewed my acquaintance with Paul Birukov, Tolstoi's biographer, whom I had known in Switzerland. He and his wife and son returned to Moscow during the summer and the son became a Communist, but Birukov, like many another old revolu- tionary, was bitterly disappointed in the Revolution. CHAPTER XI UNDER SUSPICION My first arrest, which occurred on Good Friday, April 4th, was not, I must confess, entirely unexpected. At this time the political situation, which had been much improved when I first arrived, was growing more unstable day by day. It had been confidently expected that the secret armistice with Poland would develop into a formal cessation of hostilities, followed by peace negotiations. The death penalty was abolished; ar- rests by the Checka had been much less frequent, people thought less about plots and spies, and more about reconstruc- tion. Denikin was defeated, the Seventh Army, the Third Army and many other individual army units had been turned into working battalions. The papers published despatches every day from the "bloodless front"; there was much talk of the rebuilding of industry, public improvements, and the Russians were just beginning to breathe more freely and react from war psychosis. The underground organization of the Right and Left Social Revolutionaries was beginning to func- tion, the Mensheviks were seeking more recognition for the trades unions and a modification of Communist tactics, when it became evident that the Poles, backed by France, were about to start an offensive. Repressive measures were immediately taken, the attitude of the government towards its political op- ponents became more severe, arrests of all persons who had re- cently arrived from Poland began, and I was one of them. In addition, I had committed many imprudences. In the first place, I had associated openly with people who were known to be hostile to the Soviet Government. I had rendered myself absolutely independent of the Foreign Office and its interpreters, I had changed foreign money illegally to get the advantage of the higher rate of exchange, I had attended the Communist party conference where I had no earthly right J06 UNDER SUSPICION 107 to be, and had gone with Mr. McCullagh to the secret exhibi- tion of the Rosta in the Kremlin which was meant only for delegates to the conference. For some time I had been given suspicious freedom of movement and I had several times felt that the Checka was only giving me rope to hang myself. About a week before my arrest and that of Mr, McCullagh, which took place on the same night, Dr. Karlin, he and I were moved from our comfortable quarters in the Horitonevski on the pretense that it was to be used by the English Labor dele- gation, not due until June, to the Savoy, also a government guest house. The Savoy, which was formerly one of the largest hotels in Moscow, was a place where arrests were fre- quently made and it contained a number of strange foreign guests, many of them like ourselves under suspicion. An arrest in a large place like the Savoy is apt to pass unnoticed and causes less comment than in a small place like the Hori- tonevski. We rather suspected something was wrong when we went there, but at first it was rather amusing. My room was large and cheerful, well heated, but in a shocking state of disrepair; there was a comfortable mattress, but no sheets on the bed, which was infested with hosts of insect pests, against whom boiling water and kerosene were powerless. The plumbing was out of order and there were no bathing facilities. Nevertheless I was so much diverted by the strange conglomerate company among which I found myself at meal times in the dining room, where our fare was very similar to that in our former quarters, that I forgot to fuss over the increased discomfort or trouble my head over the suspicious circumstances of our transfer. The Savoy was very convenient, being close to the Foreign Office, and I did not have the long half -hour walk home in the wee small hours, which was rather pleasant. One night I had stayed there very late as usual, and was crossing the broad theater Boulevard between the Metropole and the Rozhestvenka where the Savoy was located, when a soldier stepped up to me and asked very politely: "Vasha familiaf — your name?" "Garrison," I answered, that being the name by which I 108 MAROONED IN MOSCOW was known in Russia as the Russian language has no letter "h." "Your Christian name?" he continued. "Marguerita Bernardnova," I answered. "You're arrested," he announced cheerfully, much in the same way he would have told me I was taking the wrong turn in the street had he been a London bobby instead of a Moscow Checkist. I accompanied him to the office of the secret section of the Checka at Lubianka 2, where I was placed in solitary confinement and put through two rigid cross-examinations dur- ing which I was grilled about my friends in Moscow, my Polish connections and various other matters. Meanwhile Dr. Karlin and Mr. McCullagh had been ar- rested at the Savoy. My room had been searched and all my baggage and papers seized. I will not enter into my experi- ences during my first sojourn in the Checka, as I shall describe conditions at the Lubianka more fully when I tell of my second arrest. The upshot of it all was that as I had taken no part in any party activities or plots against the Soviet Government, and convinced the prassidium that I was not a Polish spy, I was released after being detained for forty-eight hours, allowed to return to the Savoy and given back all my baggage and my typewriter. I was told that I would be free to pursue my work, but that permission to leave the country could not be given me for any definite period, certainly not until the Polish situation cleared up. This was a measure of ordinary prudence under the circumstances, for had I so chosen, if permitted to leave the country, I could have undoubtedly furnished valuable infor- mation to the Polish Government. I promised at that time to avoid certain places and people and to do certain things. These promises, candidly, I could not and did not keep. This furnished full justification for my arrest six months later. I never had any personal feeling against the Checka or the Soviet Government for their action with regard to me. Beset as they were at that time by enemies on all sides within and without, it was quite natural to anyone who understood their methods and psychology. Many other foreigners who had come to Moscow with the full permission UNDER SUSPICION 109 of the Soviet Government were arrested on much more trivial charges. The day after my own release I was rejoined by Mr. Mc- Cullagh, whose real identity had not been discovered by the Checka. I first met him in March when he arrived from Siberia with a safe conduct from Jansen, Soviet Commissar at Omsk. He had convinced them that he was merely a harm- less newspaper man of unpractical, dreamy tendencies with a proclivity for getting himself innocently into awkward situ- ations. A mass of notes, distinctly unfavorable to the Kol- chak regime, w^hich he had made during his trip across Siberia, helped to bolster up his case, and he was hoping to make a quick getaway under the pretext that it was very important for him to get his book on Kolchak out as soon as possible. He also had an enormous amount of interesting matter with regard to the murder of the Czar and the Imperial family at Ekater- inenbourg, all of which, like many other data, he had not writ- ten down fully in his notes. An English echelon of civilians and prisoners of war released under the Litvinov-O'Grady ar- rangement was leaving very shortly, and he planned to leave at the same time. With this end in view, he was a frequent visitor at the home of the Reverend Frank North, the Anglican clergyman at Moscow who had been unofficially in charge of the interests of British citizens, and of British Red Cross work for political prisoners and prisoners of war, since the rupture of relations between Great Britain and Russia in the latter part of 1918. With only a few supplies from England he managed to look after all the English prisoners and a number of dependent civilians, collecting large sums to purchase food in Moscow by the following method : He took from English and Russian subjects Soviet or Czar or Kerensky roubles, giving them receipts payable in sterling at the Bank of England at a fixed rate of exchange. The Russians took chances on hiding these receipts and smuggling them out of the country. Some of those who did business with Mr. North in this manner were caught and paid the penalty in terms of imprisonmef^-, but the majority escaped, and I know of several instances Vn 110 MAROONED IN MOSCOW which very considerable sums were transferred to safety in this manner. The Britishers at first hid their receipts also and took them out of the country, but at the time of the departure of the last two echelons, searches were growing- more strict, and Mr. North advised them to remember the amounts and destroy them, promising to furnish them with duphcates as soon as the Finnish frontier was crossed. The officers of General Knox's Siberian Mission who were captured at Omsk, whom Mr. North kept well supplied with comforts and even luxuries, were in the Andronovski prison camp. They were allowed a considerable amount of freedom, sev- eral of them coming in every Sunday to service at the British church. One afternoon, by invitation, with the permission of the Foreign Office, I went to tea with the officers in the camp. The Andronovski, which was formerly a monastery, is the place where many of the American prisoners were confined. It is a picturesque agglomeration of buildings on a high hill on the right bank of the Moskva river, which divides the city into two parts. Around the enclosure runs a high white wall, for all monasteries were built in a semi-fortified manner, at first to protect them against the ever present menace of Tartar and Polish invasions, later to guard them and their treasures against internal disturbances. Inside there are large grounds with old fruit trees and the remains of flower and vegetable gardens. In the center court where the prisoners take their exercise are the tombs of the former monks with their ornate iron crosses. Entrance to the court is through an imposing gateway with beautiful wrought iron gates, crowned by a tall bell tower. On the right is the church, on the left what was formerly the residence of the Abbot, now the office of the Commandant. We presented our permits at the wicket, and were shown into the courtyard by the Red soldier on guard. The officers' quarters were in a long building on the left side of the court which had served as living quarters for the monks. Their beds were in a spacious dormitory on the second floor. They had their own stove, for which they cut the wood themselves, and they did their own cooking. Adjoining the dormitory was UNDER SUSPICION 111 a large recreation room where there was a piano. On Sunday afternoons they were allowed to receive visitors, and many Russian girls as well as members of the English colony used to gather there for informal tea parties. I was allowed to talk to the officers quite freely, though always in the presence of the representative of the Foreign Office who accompanied us, and I was given good English tea with white bread and buttef and English cigarettes. The officers told me that, all things considered, they were very comfortable. Once a week they were taken in a big motor lorry to the opera or the theater, and they were frequently permitted to go into Moscow with an escort in groups of twos or threes to do their shopping or to visit Mr. North at the Rectory. They were not supposed to visit their friends in private fami- lies, but as a matter of fact they often did so, and stayed to supper if they happened to have an obliging guard. The other prisoners in the Andronovski, political prisoners and hostages, among whom were a number of Hungarian officers, were not allowed as much liberty as the British officers and occupied different quarters. At that time there were two Americans there. Dr. Lambie, a well-known Moscow dentist, who had lived in Russia for nearly thirty years, and Alfred Hipman, formerly doorkeeper at the American Consulate. They de- clared that they were held as hostages ; the Bolshevik authori- ties insinuated that they were held for speculation. No charges were ever preferred against them, however, and after three months both were released. I was also once invited to meet the British officers at the opera where they occupied the former Imperial box. Before the departure of the English echelons I spent much time at the rectory, doing typewriting for Mr. North, making out receipts for the money he had received from private individuals, and lists of the passengers. After many delays the last train finally left early in May. Mr. North and his wife, before leaving, were subjected to a rather disagreeable ordeal in which they were compelled to appear several times before the Checka, on the charge that he had handled some of the money alleged to have been spent in counter-revolutionary activities 112 MAROONED IN MOSCOW by Paul Dukes, but he always claimed that he had no knowl- edge whatever of the uses to which these funds were to be put. The Checka, however, was very anxious to discredit Mr. North, and being unable to get anything incriminating from him, pub- lished an alleged confession of Mrs. North, in which she was said to have revealed her husband's connection with Dukes. They were satisfied with instituting a civil suit against Mr. North, and allowed him to leave the country before the case came to trial. The English Rectory was taken over by the Foreign Office and subsequently assigned to the Danish Red Cross. Dr. Karlin was detained for about a week after which she spent a short time with me at the Savoy and then, having secured an appointment as a Red Army physician once more, she left for the Polish front and I never saw her again. I re- mained at the Savoy for several weeks and took up my old life just the same as ever. An indefinite stay in Russia was opening before me, but I was determined to make the best of it and accept the inevitable. Besides life was intensely interest- ing and by no means devoid of excitement and amusement. The official host at the Savoy was an employee of the Foreign Office, Sabanyin by name, a man of very good family, who had formerly been in the Czar's diplomatic service. Other employees of the Foreign Office who lived there were a Soviet courier, who made the trip several times a month from Moscow to Murmansk, and Dmitri Florinsky, a Russian of cosmopoli- tan experience, who had been at one time in the office of the Russian Vice Consul in New York and had many friends in America. His father, a Ukrainian nobleman, had been shot at Kiev at the beginning of the revolution. While spiritually converted to Communism, so he averred, Florinsky was in ap- pearance a typical boulevardier. He was always dressed in the pink of perfection, with matching ties, handkerchiefs and socks; his life was miserable until he discovered a Chinese laundry where he could have his collars done at three hundred roubles apiece. He was very fond of a hand of bridge or a good game of poker, and he never got up until eleven or twelve in the morning. Then there were a solemn Czech Communist UNDER SUSPICION 113 who was writing a book on Soviet Russia, several Swedish business men, a German working men's delegation, Dr. Barra- katula, a well-known Hindu professor, who later departed on a mysterious mission in the direction of Boukhara and Khiva, where a revolution shortly after occurred ; a Hindu nationalist, Dr. Mansur, whom strangely enough I had seen and heard speak at a meeting in Berlin during the previous year, and a former Austrian general staff officer, Meyerhoeffer, who was in Russia to negotiate an agreement for the repatriation of Aus- trian prisoners of war. There was also a mysterious Russian gentleman who said very little but looked and listened a lot. I afterwards made his acquaintance in the Checka. Some weeks later I got back my room at the Horitonevski. There I found several new guests, among them Dr. Alfons Goldschmidt, a German publicist, who was compiling a book on trades unions in Russia; and a Japanese journaHst, Fusi of the Osaka Mainichi, who had come to Moscow with per- mission of the Soviet Government but was regarded with grave suspicion on account of the fact that he had, before the Revo- lution, been attached to the Japanese embassy in Petrograd as an Intelligence Officer. He was placed under house arrest only, thanks to the intervention of the Foreign Office, which is not always able to protect its guests against the Checka. Fusi was occasionally allowed to go out with an escort, but almost all of his information was based on what he read in the papers. Apropos of the news furnished by the Soviet papers the Bol- sheviks themselves have a saying which I often heard repeated with great gusto. The two leading papers in Moscow are the Isvestia, which means "news," and the Pravda\, meaning "truth." The saying is, "There is no news in the truth, and no truth in the news." At this time the situation in the Near East was very inter- esting. Georgia and Azerbazjan had gone Red; the nation- alist movements in Anatolia and Northern Persia were well under way; the Siberian Far Eastern Republic had just en- tered into existence ; a Pan-Mohammedan Congress was being held at the Foreign Office. The proceedings of this Congress were shrouded in mystery, but they concerned the vast Asiatic 114 MAROONED IN MOSCOW nationalist conspiracy, sponsored by the Bolsheviks, of which I saw many evidences during my stay in Russia. Consequently I was often obliged to go to the Eastern Section of the Foreign Office for news and information. When I first arrived in Moscow it was in charge of a Left Social Revolutionary, named Vosnesyensky. He was an experienced diplomatist, trained under Nicholas II, and had spent most of his time when not in prison for his revolutionary activities, in diplomatic posts in India, China and Japan. He spoke four or five Eastern languages and several dialects fluently; there was even something oriental about his mask-like impas- sive face with its parchment skin, and high domed forehead and deepset grey eyes. He was always at loggerheads with the government but Chicherin employed him because he could not find anyone who was as well fitted for the position. Vosnesyensky dreamed of a Soviet imperialism that would make Russia mistress of all Asia. He had a propaganda map, which he once let me see in which centers of Bolshevik agita- tion were marked with little red circles. They extended all over Asia and there were even several of them in the Philip- pines. Under his supervision men were trained and sent out to each of these countries, and he supervised the publication of an immense amount of propaganda literature in every oriental language. Vosnesyensky was frankly a militarist. He be- lieved in taking the offensive against Japan and backing open revolt of the nationalists in Persia, India and Asia Minor; he favored supporting the southern Chinese government, and stimulating a revolution in Korea. "If my plans are followed," he said to me once, "within a year all Asia will be aflame." They were not followed, how- ever. The policy of Chicherin was too subtle and opportunistic for Vosnesyensky; he failed to take the economic situation of Russia into account in his calculations. Finally he got himself so hopelessly embroiled with the Foreign Office that he was threatened with arrest but was eventually allowed to resign and retire to the country where he was living with his wife at the time of my second arrest. Like many other Soviet intran- sigeants, I lirinly believe that Vosnesyensky was an unconscious UNDER SUSPICION 115 nationalist; his aim was to see the Slav and Slav influence pre- dominant in Europe and in Asia. It was in Vosnesyensky's office that I met Krasnoschokov, the head of the Far Eastern Republic. Krasnoschokov was quite well known in America. He lived for many years in Chicago under the name of Tobelson, where he was the head of a Jewish orphan asylum and I believe practiced law as well. He was a man of extremely liberal views, recognizing the fact that a coalition government in Siberia was absolutely necessary, and he fought the matter out successfully with Mos- cow. Krasnoschokov is a man in the late forties, a Jew of the blond type, smooth-shaven, with a firm, square jaw and keen grey eyes. Naturally he speaks English very well. He believed it would be a long time before the majority of the population in Siberia would come to accept a Soviet Govern- ment based on strictly Communistic principles, and considered that it was wiser to first build up the resources of the country under a modified capitalistic system. Personally I believe that Krasnoschokov is an extremely good politician and something of an opportunist. He will steer a middle course in Siberia as long as he can, then swing to the right or left, according to the state of the political barometer. The Commissar from Omsk who succeeded Vosnesyensky as head of the Eastern Section of the Foreign Office was a very liberal man and he was responsible for safe conducts issued to many Americans and Englishmen who later arrived in Moscow with his permission and were decidedly unwelcome guests of the Soviet Government. Occasionally I had fantastic experiences w^hich gave me queer glimpses into the underworld of intrigue and propa- ganda in Moscow. Once I was called on the telephone by a mysterious person who asked me if I would he willing to trans- late an article from an English magazine into German. "Certainly," I answered, "but before I can state my terms, I must see the article and know with whom I am dealing." "My principal cannot tell his name," was the answer. By this time my curiosity was aroused, so I told the man 116 MAROOXED IX MOSCOW to bring me the article. It proved to be an article on the cq)bers in use in the British War Office and the publication in which it appeared was the British Army Journal. I cannot imagirte what use it would have been to the ov»Tier, as the British certainly do not publish the keys to their most secret ciphers, but there was evidently some reason which I could not fathom. I put a prohibitive price on my services and never heard anything more from my mysterious German friend. Among my acquaintances was a German aviation officer who had flown to Russia in the autumn of 1919 with the first drugs and medical supplies brought from Germany. His plane had fallen near Mtebsk and he had been badlj^ injured, but after his recover}- he remained in ^loscow for many months, well treated and apparenth- on a mission from the German junkers who were undoubtedly intriguing with the Soviet Government at the time of the Kapp Putsch in Berlin. I also met a Hungarian, posing as the agent of the Red Cross, universally condemned as an international crook and speculator, and yet he seemed to enjoy pecuHar immunit}', coming and going between Russia and Berlin with great fre- quenc}-. The German officer lived at his apartment Such dues picked up from time to time were ver}* interesting to me. I wondered if, after all, the Allies had only scotched their snake, not killed him. Many stray bits of evidence seemed to point to the fact that Pan-Germanism is slowly and painfully beginning to blaze a new trail from Berlin to Bagdad, via Moscow and Tashkend. Once I had a telephone message from a Russian who re- fused to give his name and asked me to meet him at an ap- pointed time on a certain street comer. Curiosity got the better of prudence and I went. There I found a young man exceedingly well dressed, of rather prepossessing appearance. He had a short, curly beard, and when I looked at him more closely I saw that it was false. This at once aroused my suspicions. He proceeded to tell me, with an apparent amaz- ing lack of caution, without stopping to find out my own political opinions, that he was a counter-re\-olutionar}-, in fact UNDER SUSPICION 117 a Monarchist. His father and two brothers had been shot, he told me, under the most brutal circumstances, and his one thought was revenge. He was connected with a counter-revo- lutionary Russian group in Berlin, of whom the head was a man whose name, as I recall it, was General Bitkopski; he would be undyingly grateful to me if, on leaving Russia I would agree to take a letter through to the general. I told him that his confidence in a stranger was over- whelming, to say the least. "Moreover," I added, "if you are trying to conceal your identity you should be a little more careful about the way you put on that false beard." He was nothing more or less than an agent of the Moscow Checka who had been sent to test my political opinions. CHAPTER XII BUREAUS AND BUREAUCRATS Endless visits to commissars, commissariats and Soviet institutions form part of the regular routine of foreign cor- respondents in Moscow. They usually take up a tremendous amount of time and energy, owing partly to the fact that no Russian has the faintest value of time and partly to the enormous distances to be covered. The street railway system does not operate between October and the end of April, and when the cars started running they were always so crowded that it was as much as one's life was worth to get on, much less secure a seat, as there was a tremendous car shortage. Isvostchiks were outrageously expensive. I never understood why, in view of the utterly inadequate transportation facilities, the Soviet Government did not nationalize the cabbies. They were the most brazen profiteers in Moscow. It was impossible even after bargaining for at least ten minutes to induce one to take you anywhere for less than fifteen hundred roubles, this at a time when a rouble was twenty-five hundred to the dollar, and a trip of any length cost from ten to twelve thousand roubles. Occasionally we were promised a government auto- mobile, but it frequently failed to show up altogether or ar- rived an hour or two late. Kerosene was the only motor fuel, all cars were in bad condition and we often got stuck in the snow, or broke down by the roadside. Consequently I made most of these excursions on foot. It often happened that commissars forgot their engage- ments or absented themselves without a word of apology as in the case of H. N. Brailsford, the distinguished English jour- nalist, who stayed at my guest house. Although he was writ- ing for the London Daily Herald, which was said to be sub- sidized by the Soviet Government, he left Russia without see- ing either Lenin or Lunacharsky, the two men he particularly Il8 BUREAUS AND BUREAUCRATS 119 wished to see, with both of whom he had engagements which were broken at the last minute. I was more fortunate, owing to the fact that I spent a much longer time in Russia than most correspondents, and was able to accommodate myself to Rus- sian habits of procrastination. Perhaps the most interesting of my interviews with various commissars was one with Djerzhinsky, Commissar of Internal Affairs and Chairman of the Extraordinary Commission, popularly known as the Checka, who, as it afterwards proved, was my jailer for nearly a year. He was probably meditating locking me up when I called on him in the early Spring at his office in the headquarters of the Extraordinary Commission, a ramshackle building on the Lubianka. I arrived at the ap- pointed time, and was escorted up a narrow stairway into a rather gloomy room with two windows looking out into a small court. There was apparently only one door, that by which I had come in, two sides were lined with bookcases reaching almost to the ceiling. I was told by a clerk that the Commissar would see me in a few minutes. In a little while a desk telephone rang, the clerk got up, and much to my amaze- ment, opened the door of one of the bookcases and asked me to walk in. It was a secret passage leading to Djerzhinsky's office, a tiny cabinet with one window. Seated at a huge desk was a mild looking little blond man, whom I at first took for Djerzhinsky's secretary, and it was at least a minute before I realized that I was talking to the most feared man in all Russia. Djerzhinsky is a Pole of very good family and inherited estates near Svenchiani in the province of Vilna. He has been a Revolutionary since before the Revolution of 1905 and spent eleven years in prison under Nicholas 11. As I looked at him I recalled what I had read of the frailty and refinement of Robespierre. He is slender, slightly under the middle height, with fair hair, rather thin around the temples, a small pointed beard, clean cut, aristocratic features, skin as smooth as a child's and cheeks flushed with hectic color, for he contracted tuberculosis while in prison. I had dozens of questions to ask him, but he forestalled them all by describing to me the activi- 120 MAROONED IN MOSCOW ties of the Extraordinary Commission since its creation in the early days of the Revolution, stating quite frankly that it was an organization duplicating in many respects, the Okhrana, the Czar's secret police, but that it was both justified and neces- sitated by post-revolutionary conditions. He claimed, and I believe this to be substantially true, that the majority of exe- cutions in Russia at the present time, are not political, but chiefly for banditism, speculation, espionage and army de- sertion. It is perfectly true that the Checka has succeeded in re- storing order in the great cities. Moscow and Petrograd are safer for the average citizen, as far as highway robbery and lawlessness are concerned, than any of the large cities of Europe or America, but, on the other hand, he is never safe from arrest. Two stories which came to my personal knowledge will serve to illustrate the methods of the Checka. A commissar in charge of issuing food cards devised a scheme, with the cooperation of six of his employees, of issuing three hundred food cards to fictitious individuals. The supplies collected in this manner were sold by the gang on the open market, the commissar receiving sixty per cent of the proceeds and his confederates the remainder. In time of partial famine, such as actually then existed in Moscow, there could be no greater crime against the community. The man was detected by the Checka and shot. He certainly richly deserved his fate. On the other hand, I knew of two brothers who were ar- rested for counter-revolutionary activities. They had no ac- complices and the only way to convict them was to get one to implicate the other. After repeated cross-examinations the examining judge found that the elder brother was of a far more nervous temperament than his junior, so he resorted to strategy. He informed him that his brother had been shot and that the only way for him to save himself was to confess his part in the affair. The man refused to believe him. "Very well," said the judge, "we will show you his dead body." Meanwhile he compelled the younger brother to undress BUREAUS AND BUREAUCRATS 121 and had ordered his clothes put on the body of a man who had really been shot. It was placed in a dimly lighted room, the face of the corpse being purposely disfigured by gunshot wounds, that would make identification difficult, but the two men were very similar in build. Being completely unnerved the elder brother was not disposed to be too minute in his examination of the body and believing it to be that of his brother he made a full confession. He was then taken to his cell where he awaited his release. After three weeks he was summoned by one of the Checka guards and taken to a court- room of the Revolutionary tribunal where he was confronted with his brother against whom he was the principal witness. With regard to shootings which actually occurred in Moscow during my stay, I believe the monthly statistics pub- lished by the Checka to be approximately correct. There were several hundred each in March, April and May, increasing to about six hundred in June, and eight hundred in July, owing to the Polish offensive. Few people were shot as counter- revolutionists, the majority being committed to internment camps. No one is shot at the present time on sight, so to speak, and all accused prisoners go through some form of trial either before the Revolutionary Tribunals or the Prsesidium, the governing body of the Checka. People were arrested and often held for months for the most trivial reasons, frequently as witnesses or again simply for the purpose of isolation during political agitations. The whole system is bad in theory, in practice it is subject to many abuses, and often misused for the gratification of personal grievances. But terrorism as we understand the word does not exist except in provincial prisons where cruel or unscrupulous officials often order unjustified executions without the knowledge or sanction of Moscow. Many liberal Communists are much opposed to the Checka and it is planned to eventually abolish it altogether, putting the entire administration of justice in the hands of the People's Courts, with right of appeal to the Central Executive Com- mittee sitting as the Supreme Court. But the Checka has a strong hold and is supported by the ultramontane elements in the Communist party. Whenever there is an agitation for the 122 MAROONED IN MOSCOW abolishment of the Extraordinary Commission or curbing its power to inflict the death sentence, the Pravda and Isvcstia are filled with accounts of dangerous conspiracies frequently said to be instigated from abroad. Unfortunately there is just enough truth in them to support the claim of the Checka that it is a necessary institution. Kursky, the Commissar of Justice, formerly a well-known lawyer, who is in charge of the People's Courts, told me that he was working on a scheme for a code of laws based on the decrees of the Council of People's Commissars and other ad- ministrative bodies, which for the present take the place of laws. They are constantly changing and are frequently inno- cently violated by people who have not had time or who are unable to read them as published in the newspapers pasted on the walls, which are their only source of information. Once I took an all day trip with Rickov, then Chairman of the Supreme Economic Council, to inspect a new electric power plant in process of construction some sixty versts from Moscow. In our party were Losovsky, Chairman of the AU- Russian Council of Trades Unions, a number of engineers and several foreign correspondents. On the train I had a long conversation with Rickov, who was formerly one of the heads of the cooperatives. He told me something of the organization of the Supreme Council, which at that time had fifty depart- ments controlling nearly five thousand nationalized industries, and all the cooperatives, comprising the entire machinery of production and distribution in Russia. He was a delightful host, but he struck me as being a rather vague and unpractical person. The plant we visited was one of the links in the vast scheme for the electrification of Russia, planned by the great engineer Kryzianovski, which if it is carried out, will perhaps in twenty-five years' time supply light and power to every city, town and village in Russia. Rail- roads, plants and factories will be operated by electricity and such a tremendous saving of labor will be effected that no one will have to work more than three or four hours a day. Rickov explained all this to me with enthusiasm while showing us over the plant. BUEEAUS AND BUREAUCRATS 123 It was being built close to large peat deposits which were to supply the fuel and where machines for cutting and drying peat were already installed. The power house which was to furnish seven thousand kilowatts daily was nearly finished, and as they were not able to get turbines, the constructing engineers had utilized two turbines from dismantled battle- ships at Kronstadt. A short distance away was a model work- men's village with attractive wooden cottages, a large com- munity dining hall, a splendid schoolhouse and a recreation center. It was a Utopian scheme in miniature. Meanwhile Rickov was actually facing a shortage of fuel, raw material and labor which had closed practically all the factories in Russia except the most essential industries. The cumbrous departments of the Supreme Economic Council were overburdened with red tape, the cooperatives were unable to supply the needs of the people, the transportation system was utterly inadequate, but Rickov and his associates with charac- teristic Russian idealism were dreaming of a future millennium. I found the same attitude of mind on the part of Sereda, Commissar of Agriculture, whose pet scheme is the organiza- tion of the rural farm communes which so far have not proved a success. The wonderful propaganda and educational work of the Commissariat is overbalanced by the fact that they lack the practical arguments, seeds, agricultural implements, and farm machinery to convert the peasants to Communist methods and to stimulate agricultural production. Schmidt, the Commissar of Labor, is quite an able man and a German by birth. He lives in the Kremlin and his mother, who was formerly a cook in the palace of one of the Russian Grand Duchesses, says that she doesn't know much about the Revolution, but she knows that her boy has certainly got a fine position. Her favorite amusement is to sit at her window on the ground floor of her apartment and hand out home-made cakes to passing Red Army men. Every Russian citizen between the ages of eighteen and fifty for men and eighteen and forty for women, must be a worker and must register through the work exchange of the Com- missariat of Labor which acts in cooperation with the Trades 124 MAROONED IN MOSCOW Unions. Efficiency of industrial labor has been tremendously decreased owing to living conditions, conscriptions for the army, exodus of skilled workers to the country, where they obtain better food and pay, and the influx of unskilled peasant workers who have no means of cultivating their land. Many of the best factory workers are Communists and are excused to do propaganda work. In the Commissariats there is much sabotage, much pad- ding of payrolls and much inefficiency, largely due to the complicated bureaucratic system, and there is an enormous amount of official corruption, an inheritance from the old regime. One of my friends at the Foreign Office was the head of the financial section. He was a middle-aged man with a taste for old porcelain and furniture. One day when I was in his office to collect a draft sent me by radio from the office of the Associated Press at Copenhagen, he showed me all his treasures, comprising two beautiful Sevres vases and a silver-inlaid musket, which had belonged to Peter the Great. The next time I inquired for him I was told he was out, and I afterwards discovered that he had been arrested, convicted and shot for speculation. In several Commissariats, such as that of Posts and Tele- graphs and that of Ways and Communications, which handles rail and water transportation, the old personnel has remained to a large extent. In the former the same employees in the Foreign Mail Censorship department who examined all out- going letters for the Czar's Okhrana are performing the identi- cal service for the Checka. One of the most efficient Commissariats is that of Public Health, under Dr. Semashko, who is a remarkably capable, hard-working man, and he has done wonders with the limited means at his disposal. He is tremendously handicapped by the shortage of physicians and medical and surgical supplies. All physicians are nationalized and the best have been taken into the army sanitary service. A feature of the work of the Public Health department is its educational campaign. It gets out an enormous amount of literature in popular form. One of the most amusing of its pamphlets was one written in BUREAUS AND BUREAUCRATS 125 verse, in which it described how disease is spread by vermin. A number of disinfecting and deloiising plants have been con- structed in Moscow, Petrograd and other cities, and periodical "Weeks of Cleanliness" and "Bath Weeks" are held, but sani- tary conditions in all Russian cities are bad, owing to the com- plete or partial breakdown of plumbing and water supply sys- tems, lack of repair material, skilled workmen and the utter disregard by the majority of the people of the observance of ordinary rules of cleanliness or decency. I doubt if they are much worse in this respect than they were in the old days. The most interesting of all the Commissariats to me was the Commissariat of Education, which is indirectly one of the most important political factors in Russia at the present time. It has done more than anything else to keep up the morale of the people during a period of intolerable suffering and priva- tion and it is teaching the people of Russia to think for them- selves. Until its work is accomplished there can never be any form of genuine popular government in Russia. Lunacharsky, Commissar of Education, is an extremely cultivated man, who speaks nearly all European languages fluently. Although a Communist by training he is far more of a Maximalist by instinct, and an artist and individualist to his finger tips. When I saw him in his apartment in the Kremlin, in a seventeenth century palace, alluringly christened the "Pal- ace of Little Pleasures," and formerly the residence of the commander of the Kremlin, he talked to me chiefly of the Prolet-cult, his great scheme for making world culture access- ible to the masses of the people, and little of the general plan of education. He was enthusiastic about the formation of dramatic clubs for workmen and sent me to the director of this department, through whom I later saw some very interest- ing performances of this character. Lunacharsky told me that he believed the best of the world's dramas and literature should be placed within the reach of the people, without any intermediate preparatory stage, trusting to what he is con- vinced is their own unerring and uncorrupted aesthetic sense. In some cases his theories have worked out with startling results, though not always in the way he intended. For 126 MAROONED IN MOSCOW example, he had an idea that the peasants would enjoy the ballet, and sent the ballet from the Grand Opera House in Moscow to make a provincial tour in small towns where nothing of the sort had ever been seen before. Instead of being entranced by the beauty and color of the thing, the peasants were profoundly shocked by the display of the bare arms and legs of the coryphees and left the performances before they were over, thoroughly disgusted. While I was talking to Lunacharsky, his two children, a boy and girl about nine and twelve years old, respectively, came in, asking permission to go to a performance at the children's theater. I found that they did not live in one of the many children's homes, but with their parents, and attended day school like any other children in capitalist countries. Con- trary to general opinion, the placing of children in homes or other institutions is not compulsory in Russia, but it is easier for the average parents who are compelled to work all day and who find it difficult to take proper care of their children and to go through the red tape necessary to collect the rations and clothing given out on cards. The public school system in Rus- sia is magnificent in theory; according to the general plan of education every Russian citizen will eventually be able to ob- tain an education absolutely free, under a uniform school sys- tem, extending from the kindergarten grade to the most highly specialized technical or professional training. At present it is hampered by material difficulties. I knew of many children who were not able to go to school at all, owing to the fact that they had no shoes or clothing; others who lived in districts where the schools were closed on account of disrepair or lack of fuel for heating purposes. Hundreds of them spent their days in the streets, speculating or stealing, while their parents were at work, and the amount of juvenile immorality among children of this class was appalling. Thou- sands more lived in the children's homes, which, as a whole, were very well run and exceedingly interesting. They were usually in the former residences of rich bourgeois and were organized on the cottage plan, not more than twenty children to a house. They were of both sexes, ranging in age from BUREAUS AND BUREAUCRATS 127 three to sixteen, in order to give the atmosphere of normal family life. The boys and girls slept in separate rooms, the little ones being taken care of by the larger ones, who did most of the manual work. The older children went to school, the little ones being taught at home, often in a thoroughly modern manner, by teachers trained in the Montessori system. Great attention was given to developing originality and initiative, and of course the authorities saw to it that they received thor- ough grounding in the principles of Communism. If the Soviet Government remains in power for some years it will be very interesting to see what hold the Communistic idea gets on the younger generation, starting out without any preconceived ideas or prejudices. In one of the homes I saw a Httle girl about five years old playing with a doll. "What a pretty dolly," I said. "Is she yours?" "Oh, no," was the quick reply, "she isn't my dolly, she's our dolly." In another home I saw an impromptu performance of one of the fables of Krelov, the Russian La Fontaine, by tots between four and six. Each child wore a crudely painted muslin mask representing one of the animal characters. Not one forgot or stumbled over a line, and the way they entered into the spirit of the thing was remarkable. The wolf was ill-natured and snarling, the bear delightfully clumsy, the little fox had just the right mixture of servility and cunning, and the lamb was appropriately meek and terrified in such strange company. In the suburbs I saw a well run home for tubercular chil- dren equipped in a thoroughly up-to-date manner, a home for orthopedic cases and a sanatorium for children physically under par, where they received particularly nourishing food and spent part of each day during the Summer lying naked in the sun. There was also a fascinating school in Moscow for children who showed unusual aptitude for music, drawing or dancing. Dancing was taught by the Dalcroz method and some of the little pupils gave really remarkable exhibitions of interpreta- tive dancing. I also saw a splendid home for defective chil- dren. The food in these institutions and in the primary and 128 MAROONED IN MOSCOW secondary schools, where every registered pupil gets one hot meal a day, is far above the average of that obtained in adult dining-rooms, though it is not sufficient by any means. It varies greatly, depending upon the supplies on hand in the Moscow Food Administration and the honesty of the indi- vidual superintendent. One day I dropped in unannounced at two dining-rooms not far apart, where the rations for the day should have been similar. At one the children had a good thick soup, roast pork with kasha, and a large piece of black bread; at the other they had a soup like warm dishwater, a small portion of kasha, and nothing more. Registration in the University of Moscow was enormous, amounting to about five thousand pupils, but the attendance was relatively very small owing to the fact that the buildings could not be properly heated. I found many of the old pro- fessors in charge of the courses, and they fared tolerably well as they obtained the academic payok, a food ration superior to the average. They were terribly handicapped in many cases by the lack of textbooks and laboratory material. The students were, as a rule, not actively interested in politics, in distinct contrast to the old days, and if they had any political opinions at all they were inclined to be reactionary rather than otherwise. The working schools which are run in connection with the public school system, where the children receive practical voca- tional and technical training, are very interesting. I saw some of the concrete results of this training at an exhibition at the Strogonov Institute, where there were some excellent samples of textile designing and weaving, pottery, woodcuts, litho- graphs, toys, furniture and mechanical models made by boys and girls from twelve to sixteen, I have already spoken of the classes for adult illiterates in the Red Army. These have been extended to the civilian popu- lation and are part of the Communist propaganda, many party workers volunteering as teachers in clubs or factories. Many of the teachers in Soviet schools and institutions are non-Communists. Numbers of them have been engaged in educational work for many years. While bitterly opposed to the Soviet Government on principle, they are absorbed in BUREAUS AND BUREAUCRATS 129 their work and very happy in being able, even with the tremen- dous material difficulties existing at the present time, to carry out their theories and ideas, for in all matters connected with art, science or education the Soviet Government is remarkably, often exaggeratedly, liberal. It is always willing to try new methods; many of those in practical operation at the present time were thought out by idealists many years ago under the Czar's regime and cherished in secret. Altogether, the new system of education in Russia is admirable in theory. "But," the average foreigner will ask, "to what extent are the Bol- sheviks putting it into practice ?" Roughly speaking, I should say that in the parts of Russia where reasonably normal con- ditions exist, possibly forty per cent, of the children are re- ceiving an education. In Moscow and Petrograd the percent- age is much higher, in the country districts very much lower as a rule. CHAPTER XIII IKONS AND ANTI-CHRIST One of the facts that struck me most forcibly in Moscow- was that the churches were invariably packed to the doors at the services. I often dropped in at vespers or high mass on Sunday at churches in various parts of the city, and there was always an enormous congregation. It occurred to me that it would be extremely interesting to find out about the position of the church from other than government officials. So, having learned from some of my Russian friends that the Patriarch Tikhon was living in Moscow under house arrest in the palace of the former Metropolitan Bishop, I went to call on him, ac- companied by Francis McCullagh. The Metropolitan's palace, which is tucked away behind one of the boulevards, was hard to find, but we managed to locate it by means of a street map, rang the bell and were ushered in by an ancient flunkey in faded dark blue knicker- bockers and coat adorned with gold lace, and wearing worn- out buckled slippers, to the office of a deacon who was acting as his secretary. At first the latter was not at all inclined to even take in our names to the Patriarch, but when he found that Mr. McCullagh was a Catholic, and was leaving shortly for England, he consented to ask him if he would receive us. The Patriarch, even in the old days, was known as a man of exceedingly liberal views, and one of his dreams has always been a federation of the three great Christian denominations — Orthodox, Anglican and Catholic churches. He believes that only by some such cooperation can Christianity be saved and the present wave of social unrest be stayed in Europe and America. After a short absence the deacon returned to say that the Patriarch would see us, and we were shown upstairs to the 130 IKONS AND ANTI-CHRIST 131 Metropolitan's audience chamber, a once beautiful room with walls of pale blue brocade adorned with portraits of former Bishops and church dignitaries, with rococo gilt furniture up- holstered in the same delicate shade, but a bit down at the heel like the old retainer and everything else in the house. There was evidently not enough coal to heat the building, for we could see our breaths as we sat on a sofa at the end of a long gilt table with a superb inlaid top and waited for the Patriarch. In a few minutes the ancient retainer, who seemed to con- stitute the Patriarch's sole retinue, flung open the door at the end of the room with a low bow, and Tikhon came in, looking every inch a prince of the church and showing no ill effects from his confinement. He was dressed in a long cassock of rich black silk. Around his neck was a jeweled chain terminat- ing in a superb cross, on his index finger was his ring, which Mr. McCullagh kissed devoutly. He wore on his head the traditional headdress of the Greek church, a close-fitting helmet-like cap of white velvet beautifully embroidered in seed pearls, with long rounded tabs that fell on either side of his full grey beard, and surmounted by a gold cross studded with diamonds and rubies. Such ceremony seemed rather futile under actual conditions, but I could not help admiring the old gentleman's fine spirit and his insistence on keeping up the semblance of pomp and circumstance. He greeted us in Russian, apologizing at the same time for the fact that he had forgotten most of his French, and was much relieved when he found we understood the Russian language. **I also once spoke a little English," he added, "but that was many years ago when I was Bishop of Alaska, and I remember very well visiting Minneapolis when it was a small town. I suppose it is a great city now." We asked him to give us an idea of the position of the Orthodox Church and its relation to the Soviet Government. He told us that while he was a constitutional Monarchist, and on those as well as on ecclesiastical grounds, bitterly opposed to Bolshevism, he believed that the Bolsheviks had done one good thing for the Russian church, by bringing about the separation 132 MAROONED IN MOSCOW of church and state. Formerly the priest was merely a gov- ernment functionary, working as such, generally without any sense of particular fitness for his vocation. Sons of priests inherited the right to go to seminaries and become candidates for the priesthood. Most of them were lazy, inefficient; they were often immoral and great drunkards. Discipline of the clergy by the church itself was very difficult if a priest hap- pened, as was often the case, to have the protection and patron- age of one of the great nobles. The people were compelled to support the priest, and his parish visits were made mainly with the object of collecting his tithes in kind and money. Now, the people, when they supported their priest, did so voluntarily and at great personal sacrifice to themselves. He had to give them of his best, and be a very superior sort of man at that in order to keep his parish. The Soviet Government allowed in each parish as many priests and churches as the parishioners were willing to sup- port, and had left all the churches in possession of their ikons, robes and sacramental vessels, many of which were of great beauty and represented untold millions in value, although it had dispossessed the church of all its lands and revenues. The church treasures Vvcre technically the property of the state, but were held in trust for it by the priest. Duplicate lists of the contents of every church were made by a commissar acting for the Soviet Government, one copy being retained by the priest. Once a year the list was checked over by the priest and commissar to see that nothing was missing. A number of priests had been arrested for counter-revolutionary activi- ties and as far as he had been able to compile a list, which was difficult owing to poor facilities for communications, three hundred and twenty-two bishops and priests had been executed since the beginning of the Revolution. At the moment the Patriarch believed that the influence of the church on the lives of the people was stronger than it had ever been in all its history, but he was dubious as to its future if the Communist dictatorship kept up too long. In the first place, he said, it was impossible to hold convocations of the clergy for the purpose of ordaining priests or bishops to take IKONS AND ANTI-CHRIST 133 the places of those who died or were arrested or executed, as priests and ecclesiastical dignitaries were not permitted to travel. Secondly, all the seminaries and theological schools had been closed and there would be no new generation of priests to take the place of the others. Then the church was obliged to give up all its parish schools and the Soviet admin- istration was conducting a strong anti-religious propaganda among the school children. Parents, however, could instruct their children in religion and send them to the priests for indi- vidual teaching. As regarded his own part in the movement against Bol- shevism, I gathered that he was content for the time at least to rest on his laurels. He had, about a year before, gotten out an encyclical against Bolshevism, but he realized, like the intellectuals, that the time for active propaganda was not ripe, and that any conspirative action would not only be quite use- less, but would remove from the people one of their great sources of strength and consolation. My estimate of him was that he was absolutely sincere, with a fine conception of the dignity of his office and his mission, but a man of limited in- tellectual capacity and rather passive in character. He spoke to us with the enthusiasm of an idealistic dreamer about the union of the churches. As to his treatment by the Soviet authorities he said that he had nothing of which he could com- plain, and he was rather inclined to be reserved about anything touching on political matters. My own observations bore out his assertions, though I be- lieve that he rather underestimated the strength of the religious movement in Russia at the present time. In the provinces as well as in Moscow the churches were always crowded, and I talked to a number of provincial priests, who told me that they had never lived so well on tithes as they were then living on the voluntary contributions of their parishioners. In the Church of St. Horiton, just across the way from my guest house, sev- eral artists from the Moscow Grand Opera sang in the choir. I was often astonished at the piles of five hundred and thou- sand-rouble notes heaped on the plate during the offertory. Sometimes, standing during the long sen-^ices, I was struck by 134 MAROONED IN MOSCOW the rapt devotion on the faces of the people around me, many of whom were Red Armists in uniform. In the children's homes run by the Soviet Government I frequently noticed ikons, or sacred images, tied to the heads of the beds. In the churches, in spite of the high price of kerosene and the fact that many homes in Moscow were actually in darkness on ac- count of the inability of families to purchase fuel for lamps, I saw hundreds of votive candles, and at all hours of the day there were always scores of devout worshipers with votive offerings before the shrine of the Virgin of Iberia at the en- trance to the Red Square, in full view of the often quoted sign on the Moscow municipal building, just across the way, that "Rehgion Is Opium to the People." I was much interested in the effect produced by the open- ing of the "mostchi," or bodies of the saints, which was under- taken by the Soviet Government some two years ago to prove to the people that their sacred relics were dummies of old clothes, papier-mache, cotton-wool and straw. It was given the widest possible publicity by pamphlets, newspaper articles and motion pictures, but on the whole produced very little effect. The great mass of the people never knew anything about it, owing to the fact that they could not read, and movies and propaganda workers could not reach the country districts. Some were bitterly disillusioned and turned against the church, others were simply indifferent, and many devout persons be- lieved with touching naivete, as one old peasant said to me, "Barischna, our holy saints disappeared to heaven and substi- tuted rags and straw for their relics when they found that their tombs were to be desecrated by nonbelievers. It was a great miracle." I once had an opportunity of seeing how the dispossessed nuns who still adhere to their vows are living at the present time, when I accompanied young Madame Brusilov to the con- vent of Novo Dievotche on the outskirts of Moscow, which was once a fashionable boarding-school, and where she was her- self a pupil. A great many of the convents and monasteries have been taken over by the government as internment camps, but there are certain ones in Moscow and throughout the prov- IKONS AND ANTI-CHRIST 185 inces where the monks and nuns are allowed to remain un- disturbed in part of their old quarters, the remainder being occupied by working people. This was the case with the nuns at Novo Dievotche. They were permitted to live in one of the houses inside the huge red wall surrounding the convent enclosure, which shelters five churches, a tall bell tower, and a number of buildings formerly used by the nuns, lay sisters, and boarding pupils. The mother superior, about twenty nuns and as many lay sisters still occupied the building formerly reserved for the lay sisters only. I had tea with one of the nuns in her little room, which was spotlessly clean. She gave us delicious tea, made on a beautiful old brass samovar, and apologized for not being able to offer us anything but her scanty supply of black bread, which we refused to eat, for we had brought our own bread, and sugar, which we shared with her, for she had none. She was a sweet-faced, gentle-voiced woman, utterly resigned to her fate, utterly uncomprehending of the great movement that had swept away her world, and she lived on a bit bewildered by all the changes, clinging instinctively to the shelter of the familiar walls, her long black robe and medieval headdress. She told me that the nuns were given their quarters free by the Soviet Government, that they were quite unmolested and had excellent relations with the working people who occupied the rest of the convent buildings, but that they received no food, fuel or clothing rations, and were debarred from work in all government offices or institutions. She particularly regretted being cut off from work among the children whom she loved. The nuns supported themselves, she said, by going out for the day as domestic servants or seamstresses, and doing fine needle- work, making underclothes and summer dresses for the wives of the rich commissars. Their former pupils brought them donations of money and food and thus they managed to get along, living from hand to mouth. In the cathedral of the convent I found all the treasures, including the famous, reputedly miraculous image of the Vir- gin of Smolensk, absolutely intact, altliough they represented many thousands of dollars in value. The Virgin of Smolensk 136 MAROONED IN MOSCOW is a typical Byzantine madonna of the sixteenth century, and she is fairly engulfed in an enormous headdress of gold wire strung with pearls in an intricate lace pattern, studded with huge emeralds, diamonds, rubies and other precious stones. In the same church are other ikons of almost equal value, and over the tombs of many of the Czaritzas, including the wife and two sisters of Peter the Great, are still hung their personal ikons, which they used during their lives, several of them ex- quisitely painted and set in frames studded with precious stones or enriched with the wonderful old Russian enamels. I have often heard it said that many of the stones in the ikons are imitation, having been replaced years ago by unscrupulous priests. How true this is I do not know ; perhaps the Bolsheviks do ; but I saw many superb vessels which were evidently of real silver or gold and which had not been touched. Among the ecclesiastics in general in Moscow I found many interesting tendencies, for there is now, as always, a great latitude of opinion among the higher clergy. Bishop Turkestanov, one of the most eloquent preachers in the Ortho- dox Church, was very fearless in his upholding of the old order and his denunciation of the existing regime. Bishop Vamava, an equally well known prince of the church, had de- clared himself to be a Christian Communist and it was whis- pered by many people that he was an agent of the much dread- ed Checka. An Archimandrite whom I met. Father Arsene by name, consoled himself with metaphysical speculations and the writing of erotic verse, which he read to me with great gusto. Other priests were deeply interested in theosophy and spiritualism, which, in Russia, as in other war-ridden coun- tries, has taken a great hold on the popular imagination. The Catholic church is also quite strong in Russia. Acting on instructions from Rome, the Catholic clergy have taken no part in any political activities or preached against Bolshevism, and they are allowed to work undisturbed. In Minsk, Vitebsk and in Western Russia I found the Uniats, who are very close to the Catholic church, were steadily but quietly enlarging their membership. There were three Catholic churches in Moscow, all Polish, but in spite of this disadvantage, during the days of IKONS AND ANTI-CHRIST 137 the Polish offensive they managed to keep open and escape any suspicion of political activity. I knev^ the Polish priest of the largest church, in the Mali Lubianka within a stone's throw of the prison of the Checka, very well. He was a delight- ful man, a hopeless invalid, and a great philosopher. As a Pole he deplored the Polish offensive as a source of great in- ternal danger to Poland through the embarking on a militaristic policy, which he believed would sooner or later lead to revo- lution, and as the cause of a reinforcement of Bolshevik morale by the creation of intense national feeling. There was also a small Russian Catholic group in Moscow in which I was much interested. It was headed by Father Vladimir, one of the Abrikosovs who were among the fabulously rich merchants of old Russia. His followers, several hundred in number, were known as the Abrikosi, and went back in their observances to the early days of the Catholic church, following the liturgy of the Christian martyrs and practicing an extreme asceticism. Starting from Galicia, in the days of Petlura, the Catholic church began an active propaganda in the Ukraine which was productive of great results and has not entirely ceased at the present time. That the Bolsheviks still fear this propaganda was shown by the publication last summer of documents alleged to have been discovered in the Ukraine by agents of the Extraordinary Commission, disclosing the existence of a secret agreement between the Pope and Petlura. The story was as follows : During the war the Vatican was said to have loaned con- siderable sums of money to the Italian Government, which the latter was unable to pay at its close, turning over instead to His Holiness a large quantity of leftover munitions. Count Tuskievitch, then emissary of Petlura to Rome, offered to take them off the Pope's hands. He agreed, stipulating for compensation to the Catholic church for losses sustained in the Ukraine during the Civil War, the creation of an Ukrainian cardinalate and the right to conduct Catholic propaganda, in addition to a cash sum. Part payment was made, and some munitions were delivered to Petlura, but the contract was never 138 MAROONED IN MOSCOW fulfilled in its entirety owing to the fact that Petlura was defeated and driven out into Poland. Next to the Catholics, the Baptists have made more prog- ress than any other sect in Russia during the past few years. They are very strong in the neighborhood of Saratov and gen- erally in Southeastern Russia, and there are still numbers of Old Believers among the Don Cossacks. There are also evan- gelistic movements in Moscow and Petrograd and other parts of the country, but these are regarded as counter-revolutionary. A Christian brotherhood organized in Petrograd by a former professor whose name I do not recall at the moment, was dis- solved by the Checka last summer, its leader and a number of members put into jail, and I myself was recently in prison with members of the Russian branch of the Salvation Army. Added to all these denominational movements there is the inexorable tie of habit and tradition which binds the great mass of the peasants to their religion, the Russian temperament, idealistic and mystical, which holds the better educated in the spell of various fanatical movements, the old love of the super- natural which is as strong in human nature as ever. The peas- ants have clung to many of their ancient superstitions and leg- ends, particularly the one about the coming of the Anti-Christ, and many of them believe that he is Trotzki. At times all Moscow is vibrating with rumors of mysterious signs and por- tents seen in the heavens. Last August the people were all agog over a flaming crown said to have rested over the church on the Pokrovka, where the Empress Elizabeth was married. They declared that it was a sign that the monarchy would be miraculously restored. Then there is the great new religion of Communism, for to its sincere and devoted followers it is a religion for which they are just as willing to sacrifice themselves and their neigh- bors as the Raskolniki in the days of Peter the Great, who im- molated themselves and their families in great auto da fes, hundreds at a time, the willing sacrificed with the unwilling victims. The propaganda of Communism as a faith has its appeal to the young and imaginative, as well as to the more mature idealists and the fanatics of Marxism. There are many IKONS AND ANTI-CHRIST 139 people who take a fierce delight in the renunciation of their individual freedom for the collective good, and there are many features of the Communistic doctrine which, when studied from this angle, have a tremendous appeal. These dreamers of a new social order based on the religion of Marxism are inevitably doomed, in my opinion, to failure, for economic and political reasons as well as from the fact that the vast majority of members of their own party are not actu- ated by any such altruistic motives. They are having great success, however, in the organization of the Communist youth, boys and girls of the working classes, who do not see the prac- tical failure of Communism, who are at the age which hopes and believes all things. It will be interesting to see what fruit the purely spiritual and intellectual side of Communism pro- duces in the next generation. CHAPTER XIV RADICAL ANTI-REDS At about this time I began to make the acquaintance of members of some of the opposition poHtical parties, among which were the Mensheviks and the Anarchists. Both of these groups had a semi-legal status, held meetings and had their headquarters, the former having a club on the Miasnitskaya, the latter on the Tverskaya. At the Mensheviks' club I met both the leaders, Martov and Abramovitz, who have now taken refuge in Germany. They, being like the Bolsheviki, Social Democrats, were anxious to cooperate with the Soviet Govern- ment, but differed radically from the Communists on the question of the status of the trades unions, and were opposed to Trotzki's policy of the militarization of labor. I had great trouble in hunting them out, for they were under suspicion even at that time, and my visit to the club, together with those to Tchertkov and the Anarchists, were known and noted against me though I was not conscious of it at the time. The Anarchists held open meetings every Sunday, and were allowed to preach their doctrines undisturbed, though to tell the truth, at their meetings there was at least one Checkist to every Anarchist or impartial listener, and they held debates with corresponding prudence and due realization of this fact. The Anarchists were divided into two groups, the Communist Anarchists, who believed that Communism was a necessary stage in the evolution of anarchism, and those who wished at once to abolish all government. Numbers of them had already been arrested, and during my own term of imprisonment a general roundup of all Anarchists was made by the govern- ment. The Anarchists were a rather faddy lot, one of their pet schemes being the launching of a new universal language which they claimed to be far superior to Esperanto, and in which letters were replaced by numbers. 140 RADICAL ANTI-REDS 141 They also ran a restaurant on the Tverskaya, open to the public, where a very good meal could be had for thirty-five roubles, astonishingly cheap for Moscow. Undoubtedly many of their supplies were purloined from Soviet stores, for they claimed the right to rob the government, whose authority they did not recognize. It was at about this time that large numbers of deported American Anarchists began to arrive in Russia. They were not by any means welcome visitors. Many of them were to all intents and purposes Americans, having left Russia as small children, and did not speak a word of the language. Some of them had left their families behind in the United States, others found absolutely no trace of their relatives whom they had left in Russia many years before; nearly all were very poor, and found great difficulty in obtaining work. They soon became bitterly disillusioned about the Soviet Government, and the Russians themselves were not unnaturally indignant at having a lot of what they were pleased to term foreigners, radically disagreeing from them politically, dumped down in their midst. Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkmann, who arrived at the same time, and who commanded almost universal respect on account of their personal character and intellectual attainments, established a sort of unofficial employment bureau for these poor people and formed as a nucleus to hold them together a society called "The Russian Friends of American Freedom." They had interviews with Lenin on the subject, and hoped to be able to form a powerful organization of Russians with ties connecting them with America to help promote revolutionary doctrine in the United States, but as it was sponsored chiefly by Anarchists Lenin did not look on it with any great degree of favor and the project was, I believe, eventually dropped. I saw a great deal of Emma Goldman and Berkmann dur- ing their stay in Moscow. Berkmann lived at my guest house and for several weeks had the room next to mine. He is a quiet little man with a big domed forehead brought more into prominence by his baldness, with kindly, somewhat near-sight- ed gray-green eyes, rather owlish in expression behind his huge horn-rimmed spectacles. Long imprisonment and much 142 MAROONED IN MOSCOW thought have given his anarchism a rather speculative, theoret- ical character, and he is by nature a gentle, exceedingly sweet- tempered person. Knowing him as I do I cannot imagine him trying to blow up Mr. Frick or anyone else with bombs. I think the two subjects on which he feels most strongly are the prison system in general as a form of punishment, and mili- tarism. For these reasons, whatever he might see of good in the Soviet Government was overbalanced by his horror of the Checka and the Red Army. He told me many stories of the men he had seen turned into enemies of the human race by im- prisonment, and he regarded death as a much more humane form of punishment. He admitted that until society reached an ideally altruistic state it would be perhaps necessary to keep some individuals under restraint in reformatory colonies, or under treatment for mental abnormalities not clearly under- stood at present, and of which he believed much more ex- haustive study should be made. He also felt that in an an- archistic state where individualism was given full rein, and people were directly interdependent, this sense of social respon- sibility would develop much more rapidly than is possible under any present system of government. We had long conversations on these subjects, and he told me many stories of his life in the Atlanta penitentiary. In all he has spent twenty-five years in prison, but it has not destroyed his interest in life or influenced his point of view. In his judg- ments of individuals he is exceedingly charitable, though sweeping in his condemnation of man-made systems. We also had long chats about literature, art and music, in which he has very good taste and a fine appreciative faculty. Long years of imprisonment have considerably undermined his health, and he found Moscow fare, black bread and kasha, very trying. Finally, his digestive troubles culminated in a very severe attack of intestinal disorder. I helped Emma Goldman heat and prepare special dishes for him on my little kerosene stove, and he found my hot water bottle very useful. I often won- dered what my conventional American friends would think if they could see me sitting by the hour in Berkmann's bedroom administering medicines and changing hot water bottles. If RADICAL ANTI-REDS 143 I had thought about him at home at all I had always pictured him as a wild man with a bomb in one hand and equally ex- plosive literature in the other. As a matter of fact I found him one of the gentlest, most courteous and kindliest individ- uals it has ever been my pleasure to meet. I liked Emma, too. Honesty, good nature and a delight- fully refreshing sense of humor are her salient characteristics, mixed with a keen intelligence, considerable shrewdness and great executive ability. The feeling of being a round peg in a square hole wore on her energetic temperament. She hated her enforced idleness, but she was absolutely unwilling to go into any sort of work where she would be directly or in- directly supporting Communist policies. She spoke Russian very poorly and she was desperately and humanly homesick for America. I do not believe for one instant that Emma is any the less a sincere anarchist for her experience in Russia, but I believe that she is a much better American. I am not sure even that she is in her heart of hearts not convinced that it is not such a simple thing to bring about a social revolution and that it would not be well to make haste slowly in the United States. I greatly enjoyed listening to her apt criticisms of leading personages, whose weak spots she picked out unerr- ingly, and her efficient scorn of the loose business methods and administrative incapacity of the Russians. After oscillating restlessly between Moscow and Petrograd for some time, "looking over the field," as Emma expressed it, she and Berkmann finally found a job into which they could enter whole-heartedly — collecting material for a historical mu- seum of the revolution. They were given a private car, with a Red Soldier as an attendant, they stocked it well with pro- visions, Emma, who is an excellent cook and housekeeper, superintending the stocking up; and they started off for the Ukraine on an extended tour, on part of which they were ac- companied by an American correspondent, Henry Alsberg, who was then writing for the London Daily Herald and col- lecting material for a series of articles in an American weekly. It was a source of wonder to us that Alsberg was able to take the trip, for the Ukraine was in a very unsettled state at that 144 MAROONED IN MOSCOW time, as indeed it is still, the Polish offensive was on, and no other foreign correspondents were permitted to travel in that part of Russia. The Foreign Office insisted that he had gone without permission, the Checka outwardly raged and swore that Alsberg had been detained in Kharkov, but as a matter of fact this was camouflage to appease the other correspondents, who did not have Alsberg's pull. He traveled over a large part of the Ukraine tranquilly and quite unmolested, returning to Moscow in his own good time many weeks later. There was another class of individuals, many of whom would be ranked as radicals at home, but who were, for the most part, beginning to turn against the Soviet Government — the Jews. That the Jews helped to make the Russian Revolution is a fact too well known to need comment; that they reaped great immediate advantages from it is undoubtedly true ; that many of the men who are leading forces in the political and economic life of Soviet Russia are Jews is unquestionable, and these facts have given rise to the general impression outside of Russia that Bolshevism is a movement sponsored by the great mass of the Jewish population. As a matter of fact the great masses of the Jewish population have gotten less out of the Revolu- tion than any other race or class ; they have been crushed, so to speak, between the upper and nether millstones of revolution and reaction. The majority of them, barring the fact that they dread counter-revolution on account of the inevitable pogroms which would accompany it, would be glad to see the overthrow of the Communist dictatorship in Russia. The immediate result of the Revolution had been to re- move the many disabilities of the Jews. For the first time in history the Russian Jew was a free citizen with all rights and privileges. The Revolution also at first brought many mate- rial advantages to the Jews. In the general demoralization and disintegration of the bourgeoisie the old official class was dispossessed and scattered. Many were executed, others joined the counter-revolutionary armies or escaped while there was yet a chance beyond the frontier. Many of those who were left refused to work for the new government or practiced sabotage. RADICAL ANTI-REDS 145 Among the class-conscious Russian proletariat which had taken part in the revolutionary movement there were few men with the education or training to occupy executive or admin- istrative positions. The Jews, as a race, in spite of their many handicaps, were better fitted for such positions than their Rus- sian co-revolutionists. Nearly all of them were from the mer- chant or small trader class, and had a fairly good education. The percentage of literacy was much higher among them than among Gentiles of the corresponding class. They had never owned land, and in the distribution of land among the peasants they had no share. They were reaping their harvest from the revolution in clerkships and administrative and executive offices. As far as Petrograd, Moscow and the large cities were concerned, they fared well. Thousands of them were taken into the many departments of the Commissariats, primarily because of their fitness for such positions. In the provinces this was also true to a certain extent, but as the Soviet machin- ery there was not so complicated and did not require such a large number of paid workmen the majority were left without employment. The Red Army absorbed some of them, largely in its sanitary service, for the Jews as a race do not take more kindly to military service in Russia than in any other country. But many, in the sections where there was a large Jewish population, were left without resources or employment. They were not trained as industrial workers — even if they had been the constantly decreasing factory production owing to the economic ruin produced by the Great War, the Civil War and the blockade gave them few opportunities in this field; they were town dwellers, and had not profited from the distribution of the land. At first they did not feel their position. True, their little shops were closed, their supplies requisitioned, but long years of persecution had taught them how to evade the law, conceal their goods and practice illicit trade. They did a flourishing underground business, practiced contraband and smuggling very successfully, and lived well for a time. Then as the cen- 146 MAROONED IN MOSCOW tral government became better organized, decrees against spec- ulation were more rigidly enforced, numbers of the Jews were arrested and severely punished, in many cases getting the death penalty. Others became frightened, gave up their illicit occupations, or exhausted their reserve supplies, and then be- gan a period of misery and privation for the provincial Jewish population. Many were over age, entitled to receive workers' pensions, but this branch of the Soviet Government has never been well organized and the destitution among old people all over Russia is very great. Others, as I said before, were un- able to find employment in their provincial towns and drifted involuntarily into the status of nonworkers without the right to draw food rations. In Moscow I found many Jews occupying important political positions, but in positions of greatest authority Jews were not in the majority by any means, although they pre- ponderated in many of the executive offices of the Soviet Government. Among the People's Commissars, seventeen in number, there were actually very few Jews, Trotzki being the only one among those I met, about whom there can be no question. Zinoviev, chairman of the Executive Committee of the Third International, is a Jew, and I believe that Jews are well repre- sented on the committee. On the other hand, the predominant influence in the All- Russian Council of Trades Unions is not Jewish by any means. Among the Communist publicists, Steklov, editor of the Isvestia, the organ of the Central Execu- tive Committee, is not a Jew, while the editorial staff of Eco- nomic Life, the fairest paper published in Russia at the present time, is composed largely of Jews. The Jews registered as members of the Communist party and occupying responsible administrative positions were, in many instances, rank opportunists. There was a far greater proportion of sincere Communists among the real Russians. There were many hundreds of Jews among the "Bez Partini," nonparty members, belonging to the class of intellectuals or professional men who were content to devote themselves to purely educational or executive work, and who were at heart RADICAL ANTI-REDS 147 violently opposed for the most part to the dictatorship of the Communist party. In the opposition Socialist parties, such as the Mensheviks, Right and Left Social Revolutionaries, and even the Anar- chists, I found an ever-increasing number of Jewish members. This was especially interesting as regards the Right Social Revolutionaries. The Social Revolutionary party is essentially a peasants' party, and until a short time ago it had practically no Jewish members. At present it has many hundreds. They are purposely holding back, refusing to take any prominent part in the party councils, because, as one of them who was imprisoned with me said, "There is such a prejudice against Jews in general in Russia that we feel we would do more harm than good by openly occupying important positions in the party." Among my fellow-prisoners was a woman who had been one of the directors of a Jewish Cooperative Artel at Smol- ensk, one of a number which have been organized by Jews throughout Russia to give work to their co-nationalists. This organization was so successfully managed that it executed large contracts for the Soviet Government, and although in size it was far beyond the limit of fifty individuals prescribed for cooperative industrial enterprises, it was left undisturbed for some time. Finally, after several unsuccessful attempts to nationalize the industry, charges of counter-revolution were made against some of its leading members, they were arrested, and sent to Moscow. I was also in prison with a number of Jewish women arrested for membership in the above-named political parties, and with several members of the insurgent faction of the Bund, a Socialist organization composed entirely of Jewish members, which this year split into two factions, the majority refusing to subscribe to the Third International, the minority going over to the Communists. The only Jewish political organization as such, which is preponderantly sympathetic to Bolshevism, is the Poalei Zion, a league of industrial and factory workers. The Zionists are regarded as rank counter-revolutionaries. At their annual convention in Moscow last year the entire body, consisting of 148 MAROONED IN MOSCOW one hundred and twenty-five delegates, was arrested and put in prison for several weeks. A significant illustration of the state of the public opinion with regard to Jews was shown by the reception given a vaude- ville act at the Nikitskaya theater last summer. It was a skit in which a Red and a White officer come out on the stage and engage in a rough and tumble fight for the possession of the throne at the back of the scene. After the Red officer has given the Monarchist a good licking, he turns around to take his seat on the throne and finds perched on it a little Jew who has sneaked in meanwhile and taken his seat there. Jibes, cat- calls and inelegant, if forcible, remarks from the audience with regard to the Jewish gentleman were allowed to go un- challenged by the police authorities. There is a Jewish branch of the Commissariat of Nation- alities in Moscow where Jewish affairs are handled as those of a separate race, just as those of the Tartars, Cossacks, the German communities, the Ukrainians and other nationalities within the Federative Republic. The attitude of the Soviet government is just as hostile to Jewish as to Russian Ortho- doxy in matters of religion. The facts I have cited above are, I think, sufficient in them- selves to justify my belief that Jews as such play no great role in the Soviet Government at the present time. That the Jews had an important part in bringing about the Revolution is undoubtedly true ; that the great masses of the Jewish people in Russia have not reaped the advantages they hoped for from it is equally true ; and it is also a fact that anti-Semitism, per- haps at times unconscious, is directed against the race-con- scious Jews by both Jew and Gentile Internationalists. Added to this is the universal detestation of the Jews by the peasant population, who still do not feel safe from Jewish exploita- tion, and attribute all the evils of Bolshevism to the Jews. Thus the Jews are getting it going and coming. The explanation of their part in the Russian Revolution is self-evident. As long as there was a question of doing away with Czarist Imperialism they were for Bolshevism, but all their inherited instincts and training are against the Soviet RADICAL ANTI-REDS 149 economic and industrial system, as are their religious instincts deeply grounded in the patriarchal or family system. There are, as there always have been, iconoclastic spirits among them running counter to tradition, others whose racial pride is ap- pealed to by the opportunity to exercise widespread political power and influence. Then there is the trader, or speculative instinct of the Jew, which tells him that there is always the chance to profit through political or economic crises. Now that they have brought about these results the majority of the educated Jews are running true to their innate conservatism and to the same iconoclastic instinct which has always placed them on the side of the minor- ity. They realize that the political unity of the Jewish race throughout the Diaspora, as they term the Christian world, is not to be maintained by the merging of the race-conscious Jew in the Internationalist. These are the forces that are pushing many of the intelligent Jews back along the road away from Communism. The Jewish proletariat at large has failed to gain either material prosperity or spiritual freedom through Bolshevism, and will probably remain aloof and passive, hos- tile to Communism but fearing counter-revolution in Russia. CHAPTER XV SOUKHAREVKA For some months I had lived almost entirely on Soviet ra- tions, but I began after a time to feel decidedly undernourished. The food at our guest house, while better than that served in the average Soviet dining-rooms, which I often attended, was not sufificient. At that time it was estimated that the average food ration in Moscow contained only approximately sixty per cent, of the calories necessary for the human organ- ism. Through legal means nobody except those receiving commissars, academic and Red Army payok obtained anything like the requisite amount of nourishment. So, like everybody else who had the means, except a few absolutely honest and devoted Communists, I began to patronize the markets and the illegal restaurants. Practically everything could be bought for a price at the picturesque stalls on the Okhotny Riad, within a stone's throw of the Foreign Office, in the Soukharevka or the Smolensky market. I supplemented my rations with milk, fresh eggs, cream cheese, honey and, later, delicious fruits and vegetables, which were very abundant. I always had permis- sion to use the kitchen in the guest house where I was living, and in addition I had my "primus" supplied with kerosene bought illegally for five hundred roubles a quart. I was often hostess at informal supper parties and frequently had my Rus- sian friends as well as members of the foreign colony to din- ner or tea. It happened that I needed a saucepan in which to do my cooking and so, in order to find out just how the Moscow housewife does her shopping through legal channels, I applied at the Moscow food administration for a permit to buy it through the Soviet stores. Upon presentation of papers prov- ing my identity and my right to live in Moscow as a "corre- iso SOUKHAREVKA 151 spondent of the bourgeois press," I received an order entitling me to purchase a saucepan. This order was countersigned by- three officials in the Food Administration, the process taking an entire day. On the second day I exchanged it for an order permitting me to go to the government store where samples were on ex- hibition and pick out the particular kind of saucepan I desired. I chose it by number, whereupon I received another coupon entitling me to purchase it at the government cooperative in the district in which I lived. Then I had to ascertain on what day saucepans would be on sale. On the morning of that day I was obliged to go early and stand in line until the shop was opened in order to make sure that all the saucepans would not be sold before I arrived. The entire process occupied a large part of my time for a whole week, but the saucepan was good and cheap, only three roubles. Similar ones sold on the Souk- harevka for two thousand five hundred. It was a wonderful sight to see the crowds on the Souk- harevka, particularly on Sundays. Everything under the sun was sold in the wide open space occupying the center of the boulevard on both sides of the beautiful Soukharev gate, which was built by Peter the Great in memory of one of the loyal generals during the revolt of the Streltsi. To the right was the general market, to the left the food market. The wares were classified in sections, by a sort of unwritten law. At the beginning of the market, in long lines along the pavement, were the peddlers with small miscellaneous wares. Then came the shoemakers with new and second-hand shoes, leather and shoemakers' materials. There were always numbers of Red soldiers in this section, holding under their coats and offering surreptitiously for sale, excellent army shoes purloined from the commissary stores. A little farther on, in the center, were vendors of house- hold linen, blankets, rugs, underwear and miscellaneous cloth- ing; to the extreme right the household furnishers with com- plete stocks of kitchen utensils in tin, aluminum, copper and enamel, china and crockery. Here were also sold workmen's tools, most of them stolen from the government tool factories. 152 MAROONED IN MOSCOW On the left was the furniture section, where people brought in huge drays furniture of every description — beds, wardrobes, massive sideboards, rugs. Often superb pieces of great value were offered for sale, and I saw Oriental rugs worth small for- tunes sold for a few thousands. Interspersed among these gentry were the antiquarians, disposing of exquisite old porce- lains, bronzes and bibelots of all descriptions; then came the sections where women's clothing was sold, ball gowns, negli- gees, French lingerie, blouses, street costumes, false hair, cos- metics, toilet articles, in short, everything imaginable for femi- nine adornment. Many of the people who did business in the Soukharevka were professional traders, but there were others, members of aristocratic families, wives and daughters of former generals and imperial functionaries, persons belonging to the intellectual class, who came there to sell their last possessions in order to buy bread. Among them I found many charming people and made several close friends. In the very center between rows of closed booths stood the vendors of gold and gems, always furtive, always on the alert for spies or for an ahlai/a, a raid on the market, for while the sale of one's old belongings was legalized, traffic of this sort was strictly forbidden. There was also considerable mystery about the section where wool and cotton goods were sold by the yard. Legally, anyone had the right to dispose of three arsheens, an arsheen being a little over three-quarters of a yard, but larger quanti- ties, frequently purloined from government stores, were con- stantly changing hands. Numerous people were arrested, but it was a well-known fact that many of the officials of the Moscow Checka which conducted the raids could be "fixed" if vou knew how. I knew of a case where a man was arrested with thirty arsheens of cloth in his possession. He was taken off to the Checka. "How many arsheens were you offering for sale?" demand- ed tiie examining officer. "Three," he answered promptly, with a wink at the official. *Good," was the reply, "you may have your three arsheens bac»^" Thereupon he received his liberty and his three SOUKHAREVKA 153 arsheens, the remaining twenty-seven resting in the possession of the official. Everyone was not so lucky, however. In an apartment where I was a frequent guest a workman lived with his wife and three small children. They had great difficulty in making both ends meet and one day, when the husband was at work and the children at school, the wife, who was employed for only five days a week in a government office, decided to go to the market to sell six silver spoons which had been part of her little dowry. She never came back, and her frantic husband, after repeated efforts, located her in the Moscow Checka three weeks afterwards. The section of the Soukharevka nearest the big gate was devoted to soap and cigarettes. In spite of the universal scar- city of soap, excellent toilet and laundry soap in enormous quantities could always be bought there. Much of it was home- made soap brought in by the peasants, but much was also from apparently inexhaustible hidden stores from the old days. I bought there French soaps of well-known makes. The traffic in cigarettes and tobacco was most of it perfectly legal and quite natural. All Soviet offices give out cigarettes to their employees, often as many as five hundred a month, to smokers and non-smokers alike. In many offices tobacco, of which they had a considerable stock on hand, was given out as part of the workers' compensation instead of the more necessary food supplies which were not sufficient to go around in all depart- ments. I knew an elderly lady who was employed in compiling weather reports in the Moscow Meteorological Observatory. She received three thousand five hundred roubles a month and two pounds of English smoking tobacco which represented in value between seventy and eighty thousand roubles. Natur- ally it was understood that she would dispose of it. In the food market the peasants were allowed to dispose of their home-grown produce undisturbed, and bread was openly sold, though the government was supposed to have the bread monopoly. It was next to impossible to tell what was legally placed on sale by persons who received the maximum allowance of two pounds a day, such as the Red Army work- ers, and those who made it with flour secured through under- 154 MAROONED IN MOSCOW ground channels, or bread stolen from the government bak- eries. Regulations governing the sale on the open market of all these things were constantly being changed. One week it would be legal, for instance, to sell meat, two weeks after- wards there would be a decree forbidding the sale of meat and a raid would be made on all meat dealers. It w^as the same with butter and many other things. In the late spring the mar- ket on the Okhotny Riad was closed and the booths torn down, but the Soukharevka was allowed to go on undisturbed. Still later all the small stores were closed, then they were opened and the Soukharevka closed. Finally, in the early part of March, 1921, after the decree permitting free trade, markets, stores and street booths were reopened once more. The policy of the government with regard to the regulation of private trade was so vacillating that no one knew exactly what was legal and what was not. The frequent raids on the Soukharevka were very exciting, and I happened to be in several of them. Often they were di- rected against a particular class of illegal traders, again they were for the purpose of rounding up deserters or for catching the suspicious characters without a permis de sejour, who al- ways abounded in Moscow. You could almost always tell when a raid was about to take place. Warned by a mysterious system of wireless telegraphy, sellers and buyers alike began to grow restless, wares were gathered up in bundles, portable stands were dismounted, their owners scuttling down side streets and vanishing mysteriously into open doorways. Then a panicky movement of the crowd began, the more timid simply taking to their heels and running. Those who were unlucky enough not to make a quick getaway soon found all exits blocked by militiamen, who examined all documents and looked into all packages. Those who were caught with illegal mer- chandise or who were unprovided with proper documents were herded en masse, surrounded by a cordon of militiamen, and marched off to the Checka, the others were let out one by one. When everything was over sellers and buyers began to re- assemble, cautiously at first, then more boldly, and in half an hour everything was in full swing again. The militiamen SOUKHAREVKA 155 were as a rule very correct in handling- the crowd and I never saw any brutality or violence. The hundreds of thieves who always haunted the market usually took advantage of the con- fusion to help themselves and made rich hauls. Once I saw one of them caught in the act. He was pursued by a young militiaman armed with a rifle. Failing to catch up with his quarry, he lost his head and fired into the crowd after the fugitive, who escaped, but one innocent bystander was killed and two wounded. The rapidity with which illicit dealers managed to dispose of their wares when warned of any approaching raid was posi- tively uncanny. One morning I wished to buy a pound of butter. There was plenty of fresh country butter on the mar- ket, and I was having some difficulty in making a choice. Sud- denly word went around that government inspectors were after the butter dealers. In five minutes there was not a pound of butter to be seen. No one had butter for sale, no one ever heard of butter being on the market. The peasants who came to town with country produce were often very picturesque. I never tired of talking to them or of watching their primitive arrangement for weighing their wares on a notched stick weighted at one end. Many of ihem were enormously rich, in fact, not being able to count, they did not know how much money they actually had. A friend of mine who was employed in the Commissariat of Agricul- ture came in close contact with peasants of this class who came in representing their local Soviets to discuss the distri- bution of seed grain and other matters. One day one of them asked her to come down and spend the week-end in his village, promising to give her comfort- able quarters, milk, eggs and good country food. At first she refused, but finally consented on being promised a large bas- ket of eggs and several pounds of honey to take home. When she first arrived she was treated as an honored guest, but as she knew there was some motive for their invitation she wait- ed to see what was coming. On Sunday morning after church she found out the real object of the invitation. Several of the leading peasants came to see her, carrying huge sacks stuffed 156 MAROONED IN MOSCOW with what was apparently waste paper. "Barischna," they said, "we have a great deal of money. No one in the village knows how much he has, because no one here can count over ten thousand roubles. Will you count our money for us?" She counted all that day and far into the night. Each of the peasants had at least several millions. For all that the peasants are not contented. Their money will not buy them any of the things they most need — agricul- tural implements, tools, nails, rope, harness, substantial boots and clothing. Consequently they are either hoarding it or buy- ing useless luxuries such as bedroom sets of walnut and ma- hogany, silver, fine china, silk gowns and jewelry for their wives, bric-a-brac and graphophones. There is an enormous graphophone section on the Souk- harevka, where dozens of machines and thousands of records change hands every week. To attract attention to his wares each merchant keeps his machine going full blast, and the med- ley of popular airs, classic selections, comic operas and rag- time is maddening. I once saw a rather dramatic incident in this connection. One man, intentionally or unintentionally placed on his machine a record of the old national anthem, "God Save the Czar." As the first bars sounded through the crowd the effect was electric. Everyone within hearing stopped short. Most people were visibly terrified, a few openly exult- ant, some evidently indignant, but all, including the militiamen standing near, were, for the moment, paralyzed. To everyone present the familiar air brought a host of memories and recol- lections. The first person to recover from the shock was an officer in the uniform of the Red Army. Walking up to the merchant, he quietly requested him to stop the machine, the crowd drew a long breath, recovered its balance, and life went on as usual. The open air restaurants on the Soukharevka, and there were hundreds of them, were always liberally patronized, in fact, I often patronized them myself. There you could get white rolls with butter, beefsteaks, more often horse than not, excellent meat cutlets, hot dogs, periojki, or rolls stuffed with forcemeat or chopped hardboiled eggs, tea, coffee, milk by the SOUKHAREVKA 157 glass, cakes and tarts of all descriptions, kasha, varenetz, which is similar to our junket ; kisiel, cran1>erry juice thickened with potato flour, and many other Russian dishes. Prices ranged from five hundred roubles for a glass of tea or coffee with a white roll to nine hundred roubles for a piece of delectable pastry. Beefsteak or cutlet with potatoes was from five hun- dred to seven hundred and fifty roubles, a bowl of kasha or mashed potatoes with chopped u]) carrots and onions was from a hundred to two hundred and fifty roubles. At the illegal restaurants, which were chiefly in private houses where no one could go without an introduction from a patron, delicious dinners were served at prices ranging from three to five thousand roubles. I was taken to one of these, of which later I became an habitue, by an employee of the Foreign Ofiice. It was in a very pretty house on an out-of-the- way street. The hostess, who waited on us herself, assisted by her daughter and an old family servant, was an extremely elegant, very pretty woman of a distinguished Georgian fam- ily. Her husband was a trusted employee in a government office. The table appointments were all most attractive; we had delicious meals and most congenial company. Dinner, which was served from three until five, consisted of a good vegetable soup, followed by roast meat, cutlets, or chicken, with two vegetables. Real coffee, white rolls, cakes and tarts, of which she always had a great variety, and ices were extra. Another restaurant to which I often went was frequented by theatrical people, and there I met many of the best known artists in Moscow. The actors were also allowed to run a semi-legal restaurant not far away, where much better meals than those furnished in the Soviet dining-rooms could be ob- tained at moderate prices. In June, when the American com- mittee from the Joint Distribution Committee came to Mos- cow, I often went with one of its three members to an excel- lent Jewish restaurant where we had "gefiillte" fish, roast goose with apples and onions and other Jewish delicacies. Occasionally these places were raided, their owners arrested and their supplies confiscated, but others were always spring- ing up to take their places. CHAPTER XVI MOSCOW FOYERS AND SALONS For some time I only patronized daytime restaurants, but I soon discovered that there were after-theater restaurants where you could get coffee, cakes and ices. One of these was the "Domino," the poets' club on the Tverskaya, where the new poets read their latest effusions nearly every evening and there were long debates on the relative merits of the rather artificial post-revolutionary schools. I met a number of them, among them the famous Dieman Biedni, chief exponent of the proletarian poets, who are a direct outcome of the revolution and represent the only vital, really interesting literary move- ment in Russia at the present time, and knew Mayakovski, a Futurist and poet laureate of the Red Army. All these men practice poetry on the side as it were, for no one can live in Russia by being merely a poet. Biedni is employed in the Communist propaganda service. He is a bluff, good-natured, wholesome individual, who is immensely popular with the masses and makes stirring revolutionary speeches. Mayakov- ski is a Red Army officer. Two other literary friends of mine, Bobrov and Axionov, were employed, respectively, in the sta- tistical section of the Commissariat of Posts and Telegraphs, and in the Foreign Office. Axionov, who was official host at our guest house on the Horitonevski, was frequently assigned the task of personally conducting foreign visitors, as well as of acting as intermedi- ary between the Checka and the Foreign Office in the case of the arrest of foreign subjects. He comes of an old and very distinguished Russian family. Before the Revolution he was an officer of the Imperial Cavalry, and also, I have heard it rumored, chief at one time of the Okhrana or secret police in Kiev. He later served as an officer in the Red Army in the Petlura and Denikin campaigns. He is a poet of no mean IS8 MOSCOW FOYERS AND SALONS 159 ability, lived for many years in Paris, is a connoisseur of French art and literature with fine critical perceptions, and a great lover of Elizabethan literature. One of his fads is the translation of Ben Jonson, on which he was busily engaged when I first made his acquaintance. He is professedly a de- voted member of the Communist party, and the real object for which he is employed is to keep tab on all foreigners, re- porting their exact state of mind and their attitude towards the Soviet authorities. I sometimes went with him to the concerts of the Moscow Symphony Orchestra, which has kept up its high standard under its old director, Kousevitsky, who was invited to take the direction of the Boston Symphony Orchestra many years ago. At present he is directing concerts in Europe, getting in touch with musicians and buying music for the use of the Conservatory under a commandirovka from the Soviet Gov- ernment. Like most musicians and artists he has carefully kept out of politics. The concerts at the Conservatory — and there were a great many of them — ^were always a delight. The programs were extremely varied, many of them being most in- teresting in character, particularly a series of historical con- certs of Russian music, and a series of Scriabine concerts given on the occasion of the fifth anniversary of his death. With Axionov I also attended several concerts of what is perhaps the most wonderful chamber music cjuartette in the world. It is composed of four of the finest musicians in Russia, and the instruments are all Stradivari! of the first order, taken from private collections. The tone is positively luscious, and I have never heard anything more beautiful than the perfect ensemble of these wonderful instruments in the hands of expert musi- cians. Besides these concerts there were many interesting re- citals at the Conservatory and elsewhere, and I heard several very fine choral concerts of Russian folk music. I also attended an exhibition of the new school of Russian artists which has developed since the Revolution. To apply any name to this school would be impossible; its protagonists are not Cubists, Symbolists or Futurists, but wild individual- ists, and some of the canvases I saw at their salon looked to 160 MAROONED IN MOSCOW me more like the efforts of first year kindergarten pupils than anything else. Amazing conglomerations of the colors of the spectrum, applied in cubes, half moons, circles and streaks, were sup- posed to represent the Spirit of the Revolution, the Genius of Electricity, the Triumph of the Proletariat, or portrait im- pressions. There was one clique which employed as a medium only black on white, or white on black; another which pro- duced so-called paintings by means of wiggly lines of black varnish on a dull black background. Connoisseurs of the new movement professed to find great merit in these extraordinary productions. They seemed to me either utterly childish or mon- strously decadent. The vigorous propaganda posters of the Centro Pechati, the government printing office, and the Rosta cartoons were much more wholesome and interesting. It was the same with regard to sculpture. Most of the squares in Moscow were adorned with preposterous statues of Revolutionary heroes and prophets of the new social order, such as Lasalle, Marx and Bakhounin; in the Soviet square was an obelisk commemorating the October Revolution. The only commendable thing about these productions was that they were modeled in plaster or coarse-grained concrete, owing to the impossibility of chiselling or casting in Russia under pres- ent conditions, and therefore bound to crumble within a com- paratively short space of time. Most of the good artists in Russia have been compelled from necessity to give up purely creative work and go into the designing of posters for the government. For this they are fairly well paid, and receive all their materials from the government stores, as well as ateliers to work in, but many of them, who cannot adapt themselves to this work, are very poor and suffer terrible privations. The same thing is true to a large extent of the poets and authors. The government spends nearly all its energies on the publication of propaganda literature. It is almost impos- sible for an author to have a purely imaginative work pub- lished, for there are no private printing presses, and paper is very scarce. MOSCOW FOYERS AND SALONS 161 The Moscow authors have a club on the Prechistenka, where they hold frequent meetings and read selections from their works, but this is necessarily before a very limited pub- lic. They also have a small bookshop of their own, where they sell the few volumes they are able to put in print, and valuable books from their own libraries with which they are compelled to part to buy the necessities of life. Famous authors take turns keeping shop. It is a cooperative enterprise and the proceeds are divided between them. The poets have a similar establishment opposite the Art Theater in the Kammergierski Pereoulak. To these places the superannuated members of the "intelligentsia" bring their cherished libraries to be sold on commission, for though this traffic is technically illegal, all books being theoretically the property of the state except those allowed individuals for use in their special work, it is impos- sible to control such sales. One of my favorite recreations in Moscow was frequent trips to galleries and museums. All of the old galleries, such as the Tschoukin and Tretiakov, have been preserved intact, and many private collections which were inaccessible to the general public before the Revolution have been thrown open for everyone to enjoy. The famous Rumiantzev Museum, with its historical paintings, its fine library and its remarkable ethnographical section, is well kept up. It is not always safe to indulge, however, even in such harmless amusements as vis- iting museums in Russia. A lady whom I knew very well was caught in the Rumiantzev Museum during a raid of the Checka. Some of the officials, it seemed, were suspected of counter-revolutionary activities, the building was raided and all the visitors were arrested and held for six days in the Checka as witnesses. The Tolstoi museum was open, as was the house of Herzen, which has been turned into an interesting exhibit of original manuscripts and documents on the early history of the Socialist movement among the intellectuals. One of the most delightful collections recently thrown open to the public was the famous Morosov collection of paintings, bibelots, old porcelain and furniture. Then there were the Historical Mu- 162 MAROONED IN MOSCOW seum on the Niglinnaya, the peasant art, or Kustari exhibit in the Leontevsky Pereoulak and many others. In addition, a number of new museums were estaWished. One of these was a Historical Exhibit of Russian Army Uni- forms from the earliest times. It was being assembled in the former home of Prince Youssoupov, the man who murdered Rasputin. The palace, which was a gift of one of the Czars to the Youssoupovs, is a picturesque pile of buildings in a large garden surrounded by a superb wrought iron rail. The oldest portion was built in the seventeenth century, and is typical of the Russian architecture of that period. It is flanked by a semicircle of picturesque one-story outbuildings, formerly used as officers' and servants' quarters. During the imperial war it was turned over to the British Red Cross, and for some time after the Revolution a number of British officers were in- terned there. The proletarian museums, of which there are several devoted to applied arts and technical subjects, were also most interesting. The theatres were an unalloyed pleasure to me, beginning with the Grand Opera, where I was usually able to get a seat once a week or oftener in the box reserved for the Foreign Office. While nothing new has been put on within the last few years, the repertoire of operas and ballets is but little below the pre-war standard, though of the former stars none are left but Gelser, whose dancing is perennially delightful, in spite of the fact that she is nearly fifty, and Nyezhdanova, the leading soprano, who has a really exquisite voice. Much gos- sip is current anent Gelser, who is reputed in Moscow to be an agent of the Checka, her special function being said to be de- nunciation of those who still have jewels or money in their possession or who are trying to secretly dispose of them, but this has been indignantly denied by the dancer herself and many of her friends. SchaHapin does not sing at the "Bolshoi Oper," as the Moscow Grand Opera House is called, and is officially attached to the Marinski Opera in Petrograd. When he comes to Moscow he sings at the Little Opera, as he had a quarrel with the director of the Grand Opera and refuses to appear MOSCOW FOYERS AND SALONS 163 there. I often heard him in "Faust" and "Boris Godounov," his favorite roles. His voice has failed considerably, but his acting is as wonderful as ever. He also frequently appeared at the Hermitage, one of Moscow's summer theaters. The people of the working classes adore him as there is a story of how from a blacksmith he became a great artist. About two years ago he became a Communist and his glorious interpretation of such songs as the Dubinushka or the Inter- national is enough to make any impressionable individual run out and register as a candidate for party membership. Never- theless he is reputed to be immensely rich in the only concrete wealth in Russia at the present time — provisions. As a gov- ernment employee he receives the excellent payok and pay ac- corded to all artists; in addition he gets a premium in food products for every appearance in public and has permission to sing in concerts organized by the trades unions, governmental departments and various Communist organizations. For this he always exacts payment in kind, his price sometimes being prohibitive. I remember one occasion on which he was turned down because his price was too high. The employees of the War Office organized a concert for the benefit of a fund to pur- chase provisions for distribution among those who were in need of extra rations owing to the number of non-workers dependent on them. Schaliapin was asked his terms, which were as follows: half a pood of cocoa (a pood is thirty-six pounds), half a pood of rice, and a pood of white flour. The concert was held without him, but it was a great success. I attended with Mile. Buturlin, daughter of an old Imperial general, and young Madame Brusilov, both of whom worked on the staff of the War Office. After the concert there was an informal dance at which there were many Red Army officers. The girls all wore pretty summer costumes, and it was a very pleasant occasion. I found the regular theaters in Moscow both excellent and at the same time disappointing. To begin with there was the Art Theater, with Stanislavski as its head, which was giving exactly the same class of plays as it had always done, with the same perfection of detail and stage settings, the same finished 164 MAROONED IN MOSCOW acting. The repertoire of the theater included historical plays, such as "Boris Godounov," and "Tzar Feodor," one or two of Tchekov's comedies, Tolstoi's "Living Corpse," Gorki's "On the Bottom," a translation of Dickens' "Cricket on the Hearth," which was very popular; a translation of Berger's American play, "The Deluge," a Russian version of Byron's "Cain," spectacularly staged with wonderful scenic effects quite re- markable considering the difficulties in obtaining materials and technical equipment in Russia at the present time, and an up- to-date version of the old French opera, "The Daughter of Madame Angot." This, as a revolutionary play, had quite a vogue in Moscow, and its permission by the Soviet authorities was a testimony to the liberal views of the government in ar- tistic matters. It is really a satire on the French Revolution. In one scene the hero comes out and says, "It's fine to live in a Republic. Before the Revolution I was locked up in one prison. Now I go from one prison to another." This sally was al- ways greeted with roars of delight from the audience, as was a remark to the effect that a Republic is the last place in which anyone wants to hear the truth. The Art Theater has under its direction two small theaters, known as the First and Second Studios, the former in the Soviet square, the latter in the Miliyutinsky Pereoulak, where new productions are tried out and young artists trained for the main theater. I saw several charming plays there, one a revival of an old Polish legend, "Balladina," which was given at the First Studio, the other a dream play with a socialistic moral, "The Rose Pattern." Both were beautifully staged and excel- lently presented. The Pokazatelni, or Portable Theater, has introduced rather new and original stage settings, but its repertoire is confined to Shakespearian productions and translations of the Goldoni comedies. There were also the Little Theater and the Korsch, where comedies of Tchekov and Madame Gippius were given ; the Gabima, where Jewish plays were presented in Hebrew, the most popular being a version of Eugene Sue's "Wandering Jew," under the title of "The Eternal Jew"; and the Nikit- skaya, a comic opera theater where "The Dollar Princess," MOSCOW FOYERS AND SALONS 165 "The Merry Widow," and "The Geisha," with time-worn cos- tumes and voices, were tlie only attraction. The only really interesting theater from the standpoint of originality was the Kammerni, which was founded several years ago by a group of secessionists from the Art Theater, headed by Tairov and Madame Konen, a delightful artist. Tairov, with whom I had several conversations, has very orig- inal ideas about stage production. He maintains that no mat- ter how fine the lines of any play, its immediate appeal is to the vision alone; that the ear is half as quick as the eye to absorb impressions. Therefore he devotes great attention to gesture and pantomime, according them what seems to the theatergoer accustomed to ordinary stage technique a some- what exaggerated importance. The pantomime of the actor throughout must emphasize every shade of emotion; the in- flections of the voice are of secondary importance. Tairov's stage settings are bizarre, often decidedly Cubistic and somewhat bewildering, but they are all interpretative of the spirit as well as of the actual mise en scene of the play. In "Sakuntala," for example, attention is not paid so much to reproducing with historical accuracy the costumes of the period as to emphasize the erotic symbolism of the old Indian legend. Other plays produced by Tairov during the season of 1919-20 were: "Salome," "Adrienne Lecouvreur," "Pierette's Veil," a pantomime with new and very interesting incidental music, and "Princess Brambilla," a satire taken from the Decameron of Boccaccio, very cleverly ridiculing the blood and thunder plays of the romantic period. Scri-be's "Adrienne Lecouvreur" was interpreted in the same manner. He is the only stage director in Moscow who ignores tradition and ex- presses something of the iconoclastic spirit of the Revolution. After I was imprisoned I was told by some of the people in my room in the Checka that the Nikitskaya Theater, which had existed under private management, had been turned into a theater of Revolutionary Satire, and that very clever perfor- mances were given there. A prisoner from Petrograd described to me the lurid plot of one of these Satires which she had seen shortly before her 166 MAROONED IN MOSCOW arrest. It was called "The Dirty Dog," and was intended primarily to appeal to the Red Army men. Half of the action of the piece took place in the audience itself. It opened with the session of a produce exchange which dealt in human flesh. A manufacturer and a general wearing a death's head appear and order workmen and men for cannon fodder. The brokers dash into the audience and bring out a young working- man who serves as a sample for the merchandise to be delivered for the human sacrifice to Capital and Militarism. He displays his muscles, makes him show his teeth, feels him from head to foot, declares him sound in mind and limb, and finally drives a bargain at a wholesale price, for so many thousands. A revolutionary poet jumps onto the stage and protests, threatens to commit suicide and is thrown out by the "boun- cers." A sleek "Madam," painted, powdered and befeathered, comes on and picks out a lovely young girl from the audience. She is also bought for a price and carried off to white slavery. Predatory capitalism continues its traffic in lives until the inevitable moment of retribution, when there is a terrific thun- derclap, the entire structure of the produce exchange falls, crushing its members and their satellites, and the five-pointed star of the Soviet Republic rises above the ruins. At the circus in Moscow there is a famous clown called Bim Bourn, who has gotten into trouble a number of times over his proclivities for making fun of the Soviet Government. Once he came out and began wearily to tell how hard it was to hve in Moscow, how scarce food was, how next to impos- sible to get a log of wood or a pair of shoes. Then he sat down on a drum and put his head on his hands quite dejectedly. His interlocutor inquired, "Well, Bim Bourn, what are you going to do about it?" No answer from Bim Bourn, "What are you waiting for anyhow?" "I'm waiting to see what the Russian people are going to do about it," was the answer. On another occasion Bim Boum came out with a picture of Lenin and one of Trotzki. "I've got two beautiful portraits," he announced. "I'm going to take them home with me," MOSCOW FOYERS AND SALONS 167 "What will you do with them when you get them home ?" he was asked. "Oh, I'll hang one on a nail and put the other against the wall," was the quick retort. Again Bim Boum propounded a conundrum. "Why is the Soviet Republic like a wheel?" he asked, and receiving no reply, proceeded to give the answer. "Because it is held to- gether by the Checka," checka being the Russian word for hub, and at the same time the popular abbreviation for the title of the much dreaded Extraordinary Commission. For these and other remarks of like character Bim Boum has spent many weeks in prison, but he is always released after a few days because he is about the most popular entertainer in Moscow and the Soviet authorities fully realize the enor- mous importance of keeping up the public morale through theaters and amusements. At the Nikitskaya Circus, a theater where both legitimate drama and vaudeville are given during the summer months, I heard a popular artist sing a song describing the fate of a horse that died in Moscow. First the carcass was sent to the Narkomsdrav, Commissariat of Health, to discover the cause of death, then to the Narkompros, the Commissariat of Education for anatomical research, then to the "Glavkozh" Leather Administration, for the sake of its hide, and finally to the Narkomprod, Food Administration, to be carved into beefsteaks. There was a vaudeville theater called "The Bat," where excellent vaudeville performances were given and there was a very clever monologist who was almost as daring and cjuite as popular, with a rather different audience, as Bim Boum. Be- tween the acts refreshments such as coffee, cakes and ices were served at The Bat. It was a great rendezvous for the rich speculators and their mistresses. The motion picture theaters in Moscow were as a rule gloomy and unattractive places, poorly heated, dirty, and for the most part, displaying worn-out films from pre-war days. There were a few theaters where the Soviet news weeklies were shown together with a number of propaganda films, but the 168 MAROONED IN MOSCOW government has been terribly hampered with regard to film production by the lack of technical material. The motion pic- ture industry is controlled by the Kino Komitet, a branch of the Department of Education, and it has planned a wonderful program on paper for popular amusement and education through the movies, but at present little can be done. I have almost forgotten to mention one of the most delight- ful theaters in Moscow, the Children's Theater, where all last year performances were given on several afternoons during the week and on Sundays, of a dramatization of Kipling's "Jungle Book," under the title "Mowgli." It was charmingly acted and the jungle stage settings were quite extraordinary. There were a number of special performances at this theater for child speculators who were picked up on the streets by special agents of the Department of Education and given free tickets to the performance. Between the acts a woman speaker came out and told them what a mistake they were making, what poor citizens they were, and tried to induce them to give up their illegitimate calling and go back to school. This theater was also used for children's concerts where the various numbers on the program were explained in terms the children could all understand. Most of the theaters and vaudeville houses were national- ized, but others such as the Art Theater and the Nikitskaya were run by collectives as cooperative enterprises. They were compelled to turn over a certain number of seats at each per- formance for distribution among the trades unions and gov- ernment offices at fixed prices, and their artists were required to give their services for a fixed number of free perfomances in various institutions and factories, and for the Red Army. Companies were frequently sent to the front or to the provinces under the management of the Department of Education. It was very amusing to note that ticket speculators flourish in Moscow just as they do on Broadway. In addition to the seats distributed free a certain number of seats for theatrical performances and concerts are sold at the government ticket office on the Petrovka and at the various theaters. These tickets as well as those received by workmen and employees MOSCOW FOYERS AND SALONS 169 free are bought up by the speculators and sold at an advance of sometimes two or three hundred per cent. The curbs in front of the theaters were often lined with them before the evening's performance. They were frequently rounded up and arrested, but in a few days the industry was as thriving as ever. The Art Theater was rather crippled during the winter season of 1920 by the absence of three of its principal artists, Madame Germanova, Madame Knieper and Kachalev, who had gone to Kharkov before it was taken by Denikin in the autumn of 1919 and had, as many people asserted, deliberately allowed themselves to be captured by the Whites. After the defeat of Denikin they were afraid, so it was reported, to come back to Moscow. They finally returned, in the autumn of 1920, and were allowed to resume their work unmolested. At present they are touring Europe. Stanislavski, who is getting old, was much disheartened over the outlook. He missed his bourgeois audiences, and did not feel, so he told me, the same enthusiasm about playing before the proletariat. He complained of the scarcity of stage material, of the diffi- culty of life in Moscow, and was only living for the time when he would be able to take his company out of Russia and tour Europe and America. In this I think Stanislavski was wrong. I found every- where among the lower classes in Russia an intense apprecia- tion, though not always comprehension of all that was best in art, music and literature. On the whole I think the Russian people have more unerring artistic instincts than any people with whom I have ever been brought in contact. The crowds of the great unwashed at operas, plays and symphony con- certs were usually almost reverentially attentive, even if it was at times a bit over their heads. This, of course, applies to the town population only. The peasants were usually mystified, and often frankly bored at efforts made to cultivate them. CHAPTER XVII A PROVINCIAL JUNKET By the end of May the Polish offensive wa> in full swing and I witnessed a remarkable change in the attitude of the people towards the government. It aroused a perfect storm of national feeling, somewhat stimulated, it is true, by adroit propaganda, but none the less sincere at bottom. Thousands of former officers volunteered their services against the Poles in perfect good faith; engineers, doctors, and professional men generally rallied to the support of the government. The Men- sheviks and Social Revolutionaries voluntarily agreed to sus- pend all political activities during the period of the war. The common soldiers were lured by the promise of extra food rations and raids into a country where food supplies were more plentiful. Moscow was plastered from end to end with patriotic placards and posters and some of these were extraordinarily effective. None of them were directed against the Polish people, but all against the Polish Pans, the feudal aristocracy, who, it was alleged, had plunged both countries into war against the wishes of the people. Poles living in Russia, whether Com- munists or not, were bitterly opposed to the war and saw in it the possible ruin of their own country. At this time the morale of the Russian people was further strengthened by the visit of the British Labor Delegation, and the Soviet authorities did not fail to make the most of the propaganda possibilities afforded by its foreign guests. In the beginning of June, I accompanied the British Labor Delegation on its trip down the Volga. We went by rail from Moscow to Nijni-Novgorod, and thence by steamer to Saratov, stopping at Simbirsk, Samara, Kazan, the capital of the Tartar Re- public, Marxstadt, the capital of the German Commune, and many villages en route. 170 A PROVINCIAL JUNKET 171 Our official hosts were Sverdlov, then actual head of the Soviet Railroad Administration, temporarily replacing Krassin who was in London, and Losovski, president of the All-Russian Soviet of Trades Unions. In the party, in addition to the members of the British delegation, were two delegates from the British Shop Stewards' Committee, a German Syndicalist, several Swedish Socialists, and a small international group of correspondents. The latter included Mr. Meekin of the London Daily Nezvs; Henry Alsberg, an American newspaper man, who on the Volga trip as well as in Moscow acted for some time as correspondent of the London Daily Herald; Bertrand Russell, the great Cambridge mathematician and Fabian Socialist, who was to write a series of articles on Russia for the Republic; Ru- dolph Herzog, the German publicist; M. Marsillac of the Lib- eral French paper Le Joiirfial, and Signor Magrini from the Italian Serratist organ, Avanti. We were furnished with offi- cial interpreters by the Moscow Foreign Office, and in the entire party, with the exception of Charles Buxton, who had come to Russia as a member of the British delegation with the specific object of ascertaining whether there were any traces left in the Volga region, of the work of the British Society of Friends among the peasants which was stopped after the Revolution, there was no one who spoke any Russian except myself. For that reason I was able to get a better first-hand estimate of the situation than any of the other foreigners. Our tour was a most luxurious one throughout, giving no idea of the ordinary hardships of travel in Russia at the present time. We had a special train composed of International Sleepers, with all the former comforts including spotless linen, and electric lights, a dining car where we had three good meals a day, service and appointments being very nearly up to peace time standards. The same conditions were reproduced on our steamer which was one of the best boats of the Volga Steam Navigation Company, whose summer tours were form- erly included in the itinerary of every traveler who "did" Russia properly. We had no meals on shore except a superb banquet at Nijni-Novgorod, beginning with the sakouski hors d'ceuvres for which Russia was famous in the old days 172 MAROONED IN MOSCOW and ending with ices. Taking it all in all the only physical hardship endured on the trip was the absence of vodka, which was particularly trying to those who had forgotten to bring their flasks with them. At Sormovo, the great locomotive and munition works near Nijni-Novgorod, a demonstration was arranged in honor of the delegation, with a brass band, red banners galore; the cheer- ing proletariat turned out in force to be told by English and Russian speakers that their troubles would soon be over and that the visit of the British Delegation was the first visible evi- dence of the united support of the Soviet Republic by the working masses of the outside world. Similar meetings were arranged in all the towns, and it soon became evident to the members of the delegation that they were being used to stimu- late the morale of the Russian people and were not getting an insight into real conditions. When the matter was put up to Sverdlov and Losovski they agreed with perfect fairness that this was so, and at once arranged for us to stop at a number of villages, which had not been included in the original itinerary. This was a real sacrifice on their part because it meant cutting out an elaborate celebration at Kazan, including manoeuvres of the Army Reserve Corps stationed there, which was sixty thousand strong. In the towns and villages the members of the delega- tion were given opportunities to talk with the people, but they could only do this by means of interpreters ; and as the peasants are by nature secretive, and by training and habit dating back to pre-revolutionary days, suspicious of any official personages coming from the "center" as the capitol is called, they learned comparatively little about the actual situation. Being able to speak a little Russian, I made a point of cutting loose from the official party, and in many small homes and izbas, where I was received with the wholesouled hospitality and simple friendliness that are among the many lovable traits of the Russian people, I acquired facts that left no doubt in my mind as to the imminence of coming famine. Crops in the provinces on both sides of the Volga were average or above, but the acreage under cultivation had been A PROVINCIAL JUNKET 173 steadily declining since 1916. This was due partly to the fact that most of the young men had been conscripted in the Kolchak or Red Armies and that portions of the country had been devastated during the civil war, but principally to the lack of seeds, fertilizer, farm implements, and the opposition of the peasants to the land tax and requisitioning systems. The land tax required them to deliver to the government everything they produced in the way of farm and dairy prod- ucts above a certain quantity fixed at so much per capita and estimated by the government as sufficient to carry them over till the next harvest. There was no incentive for them to raise anything beyond the amount necessary to supply their own needs, and they had no confidence in the promises of the govern- ment to give them in return the seeds and implements which would enable them to plant a larger acreage another year, when the existing land tax, which it was understood was only a temporary war measure, would be replaced by one based on the return of a percentage of the harvest, leaving them in posses- sion of the remainder. It was evident that some districts would fall far below the quota in the matter of returns and only one, the Tartar Republic, had a prospect of exceeding the required amount. In many places the peasants had concealed huge quantities of food supplies, the hiding places had been betrayed or discovered and everything confiscated, leaving them face to face with the necessity of buying from their neighbors or starving. In addition there had been special requisitions for the immediate needs of the Red Army in many districts, and nom- inally voluntary levies for the children in Moscow and Petro- grad. There was an enormous amount of stealing and corrup- tion among the local government officials, so that many people were actually hungry in the early summer of 1920, with the prospect of the continuance of the requisitions. It was evi- dent that there would not be enough seeds to go around in the autumn distribution and that the acreage planted for 1921 would be less than that of the previous season. Many peasants were emigrating to the large towns in search of factory em- ployment. 174 MAROONED IN MOSCOW I also heard reports of a real famine to the east along the foothills of the Urals, and ran into several large parties of peasants from the Ufa district who told me that there was no bread or work there and that they were emigrating west in search of employment and food. At one of the villages between Samara and Saratov where Sverdlov stopped to meet some people on business matters we met the first party of emigrants. It was late at night when we arrived and the emigrants were camped on the river bank, — men in sheepskin coats, high boots and astrakhan caps ; women in gaily colored shawls and head kerchiefs were huddled in picturesque groups around their fires as the spring nights were still cold, crooning weird songs, laughing and shouting to one another or talking in low tones. Their baggage, boxes, bales, nail-studded red chests and bulky bundles were in conglomerate heaps. In the background was a forest of birch and spruce. Over all was the pale light of the spring moon. It was one of the most picturesque sights imaginable. On the way to Saratov we stopped at the German autono- mous commune of Marxstadt, a colony founded in the days of Catherine the Great, which has kept its German character for almost a century and a half. Many of the inhabitants to this day speak only German. Marxstadt was run with true Teutonic efficiency. All requisitions proceeded in the most orderly manner, available supplies were equitably distributed, schools, hospitals and all community enterprises were well administered, and the small local industries were in a rela- tively flourishing condition. The percentage of illiteracy among the inhabitants was remarkably small for Russia, only fifteen per cent. The inhabitants were already perturbed, how- ever, over the fact that their reserve supplies were exhausted, and they told me that, unless the early harvest in 1921 was a good one, the food situation would be very serious. At Marxstadt we had a small sized scandal which was the subject of much gossip and no little excitement aboard ship. The German syndicalist, who was a member of our party, asked permission when we arrived at Marxstadt, to make a speech to his fellow countrymen. To the horror of the Soviet au- A PROVINCIAL JUNKET 175 thorities he burst forth into a violent denunciation of the en- tire Communist system, asserting that the people were just as much slaves in Russia as anywhere else and denouncing what he termed the military imperialism of the Soviet oli- garchy. Pie was finally cut short by Losovski, who was a most tactful and pacific individual. He made the suggestion that as everybody was hungry we had better go to supper. Across the way from Marxstadt was a village of Old Be- lievers, a primitive Greek sect, of whom there are still several hundred thousands in Russia. They regard all who do not share their faith as unclean, and it is against their principles to use any articles touched by non-believers. Though they in- vited us to have tea and simple refreshments in their houses they would not serve us from their own dishes, but used those specially provided for the purpose. In this village we saw the Executive Committee of the Soviet in session, and it seemed to be transacting its business afifairs with considerable effi- ciency. There was a very clean hospital, well equipped, though lacking in some of the most necessary medicines, a good school building, a library and the newly established village museum, of which the inhabitants were very proud. The chief objects displayed in it were some geological specimens, a few anti- quated muskets, some caterpillars and a large wasp's nest. The farm implements in use in the village were of the most primitive description. I saw ploughs which looked as if they might have belonged to Biblical days with wooden shares, bound together with thongs instead of nails, and the women did not even have spinning wheels, but spun their wool and flax with a distaff and spindle. In the village cooperative store we found a little salt, a few yards of calico and some kegs of nails. That was practically all the people were getting on cards. In the towns food was scarce, and the government rations, except those for the Red Army and war industries workers, were exceedingly meagre, the bread ration being three quarters of a pound a day, and not always regularly supplied. There was a universal dearth of salt and sugar. Meat was cheap and 176 MAROONED IN MOSCOW plentiful in the open market, but this was a bad sign, for it meant that the peasants were kiUing their cows and horses owing to the scarcity of fodder. A vigorous "plant more and plant better" campaign was being waged by the government, but it was not backed up by definite prospects of seeds and supplies to insure its being car- ried out, and the people were fully convinced that a famine was coming. In Saratov we were treated to the usual rounds of recep- tions and public functions. I cut them all and went out to talk with the people. I learned that there was already great scarcity of food, citizens were receiving half a pound of bread a day on cards, and very little else. Prices in the markets were lower than in Moscow, but high as compared with the wage scale which is lower in the provinces. While walking through the streets I saw a young Jewish girl dressed in filthy rags huddled on the steps of a house gaz- ing stolidly ahead in apparently hopeless despair. She told me that she was nearly starving. She was employed for three days in the week in a Soviet dining room, receiving a small stipend, and barely enough food to keep her alive. Her father and mother were dead and she had an old grandfather and grandmother to support, neither of whom received any- thing from the social maintenance department of the provin- cial government. In the dining room, she told me, she was constantly subjected to insults from the other girl employees, who taunted her with being a "Jgid," and only the day before she had had her face scratched and her clothes torn by sev- eral of her companions who set about to beat her up because she was a Jewess. At Saratov I asked permission to remain on the steamer on which Sverdlov was proceeding to Astrakhan as I had been nursing Clifford Allen, a member of the British Delega- tion, who was desperately ill with pneumonia and not in con- dition to be moved. This permission was refused and no correspondents were allowed to go on to Astrakhan. Dr. Haden Guest, Mrs. Snowden and Bertrand Russell remained with Mr. Allen. The correspondents, including myself and A PROVINCIAL JUNKET 177 the rest of the delegation, returned to Moscow on a special train via Tambov, according to the original plan. In the Tambov district we saw thousands of acres of un- cultivated land, the crops looked exceedingly poor and I was told by a man in the station that in many villages the peasants were actually without bread, and the general bad outlook for the harvest was complicated by the activities of Antonov, the Social Revolutionary leader, under whom a number of small sporadic revolts were constantly breaking out. Altogether it was evident that even under the most favorable conditions at least several millions of people would this year be facing complete or partial famine in the Volga and Tambov districts, and that they were not going to be able to contribute their al- lotted quota towards the appro visionment of the cities and the industrial population. On the trip I had many long talks with the members of the delegation. They were divided into three distinct groups, the extreme left represented by Robert Williams of the Transport Workers. Williams apparently saw nothing and believed everything that was told him. He seemed carried away by a sort of romantic hysteria and made many speeches that I am sure he would never have uttered in England. Before he left he had practically pledged the support of the British Trans- port workers to the Third International and direct Revolu- tionary action in England. I am not sure whether the canny Bolsheviks put entire confidence in his Red promises. He was a very popular figure at meetings, however, and he had learned a few words of Russian with which he always brought down the house. With his execrable Russian accent he inter- larded every speech with "Da sdrast vuyet Sovietski Vlast, da sdrast vuyet mimoe revolutye." "Long live the Soviet Government, long live the world revolution." Anything else he said mattered very little. Wollhead, leader of the British Independent Labor Party, was thoroughly in sympathy with the aims of the Soviet Re- public as far as its own internal administration was con- cerned, and like all the members of the delegation and the press people who accompanied it he was unalterably opposed 178 MAROONED IN MOSCOW to blockade and intervention. He regarded the Communist dictatorship as a wonderful experiment, the success or failure of which could only be fairly determined by giving the Bol- sheviks a chance. As a Marxian Social-Democrat he believed in the dictatorship of the proletariat and the combination of parliamentarianism with direct action, but he resented the dic- tatorship of the Russian controlled Communist International. He and Lenin had some hot words on the subject when the delegation returned to Moscow, which resulted in the failure of the Independent Labor Party to join the Third Interna- tional. They proposed to make a revolution in England in due time, but they were not going to have Moscow tell them when to make it or how to make it. I was much amused on one occasion to detect the under- lying sturdy British nationalism of Wollhead, for all his de- testation of the capitalistic class. We were talking about the retirement of the British forces in Northern Persia from the shores of the Caspian sea. A Soviet despatch announced that the Commander had been forced to retire on account of the bombardment by Red gunboats. "By God," said Wollhead impetuously, "if we had had one British gunboat there we could have sent their little tin navy to the bottom of the Caspian." It was the most spontaneous thing I heard said during the entire visit of the delegation. The right wing of the delegation was from the first op- posed to the principles of the Third International. Its favor- able disposition towards the Soviet Government as such was considerably changed by the evident intention of its leaders to exploit them, to use them for propaganda purposes, represent- ing them as sympathizers with rather than investigators of actual conditions, and they resented having their time planned out for them and the efforts made to block any independent investigation and interviews with the representatives of oppo- sition parties. Dr. Haden Guest, Shaw, Turner and Mrs. Snowden took this attitude. Dr. Guest in particular, a former British Army officer and a man close to the coalition govern- ment, was the object of much suspicion. It was openly insin- uated that he was an agent of the British Government and A PROVINCIAL JUNKET 179 only the guarantees given the delegation secured him personal immunity from arrest. Clifford Allen, who was desperately ill during most of his stay in Russia, was the only real Communist in the party, and even he was rather contemptuously looked upon by certain leaders for his pacifism. Bertrand Russell as a Fabian was also profoundly shocked by what he regarded as a tendency to Communist imperialism. The leaders at Moscow were constantly running up against this sturdy independence on the part of foreign Socialists during the summer, and I believe that when the labor history of the present transition period is written, the year 1920 will be marked as the apogee of Russian influence in the World Revolutionary movement, and the beginning of its decline. CHAPTER XVIII PAGEANTS AND PLOTS The two outstanding events of the summer which dragged on without incident except for the depression caused by the mihtary reverses of the Red Army, were the great festival of the Third International, and the train of local disturbances due to the Polish situation. I was not allowed to attend the congress of the International or to talk with the delegates, but I took part in some of the public celebrations, the most elaborate of which was the great parade held in the Red Square in honor of the delegates. The whole square, bounded on the west by the crenelated battlements of the Kremlin, on the south by the cathedral of St. Basil the Blessed, on the east by the buildings of the great Kazansky Bazaar where Mos- cow's trade with the Far East was formerly carried on, and on the north by the Moscow Historical Museum, was transformed into a glorious riot of color by standards hung with red ban- ners and pennants. All the surrounding buildings were draped with huge posters painted on linen, representing the Triumphal of the World Proletariat and of the Soviet armies. Fraternal greet- ings to the delegates floated in letters of gold in every imag- inable language from innumerable banners and placards. Over the cathedral of St. Basil hovered a flock of sausages and other balloons dripping red pennants and streamers ; Red Army airplanes circled overhead, all day long, dropping showers of propaganda leaflets. On the west side of the square was a large tribune with an elevated portion in the center for the People's Commissars and the speakers of the day, flanked by seats on the right for the foreign delegates and on the left for the members of the Central Executive Committee. The delegates were of every nationality under the sun, and i8o PAGEANTS AND PLOTS 181 the sober costumes of the Europeans and Americans threw in rehef the bright spots of color afforded by the Orientals, some of whom wore truly magnificent costumes with jeweled chains around their necks and flashing jewels in their turbans. From the tribune Trotzki reviewed the great parade which began at ten in the morning and lasted until nearly five in the afternoon. First came detachments from every branch of the Red Army, including a picturesque regiment of Uhlans, carrying lances with small red pennants; then followed the militia, the armed bands of factory workers, of whom there are thirty thousand in Moscow, and the great mass of the proletariat representing the twenty-three trades unions and every department of the Soviet Government. Each detachment marched with military precision and carried its own banners inscribed with Revolu- tionary mottoes. The men nearly all had a touch of red somewhere and the women, of whom there were thousands, wore red head ker- chiefs. There were innumerable bands and when these were lacking detachments marched by singing the "Red Flag" or the "International." Thousands of school children and num- bers of regiments of boy scouts were in line, representing the Communist youth. One detachment of boys made a particu- larly good impression. They were members of an athletic organization and marched in swimming trunks only, displaying their sunburned muscular frames to great advantage. It was, "on the surface, a wonderful spontaneous demonstration of the power of the proletariat. Later, however, when I discovered that the employees of the Soviet offices were compelled to take part in the procession under threats of various punishments, one of which was that of losing their weekly food ration, I had some doubts about this fact. It was undoubtedly true, however, that the great mass of factory workers entered heart and soul into the mood of the demonstration. The pageant in the Red Square was vntnessed by few of the inhabitants of Moscow except those who took part in it. Admission was by ticket only, all approaches were most care- fully guarded by detachments of Red Cavalry and infantry, and every guest's credentials were minutely scrutinized. On 182 MAROONED IN MOSCOW either side of the tribunal was a military exhibit representing every branch of the Red Army service. During the afternoon and evening the people of Moscow were treated to a series of open air theatrical performances; special trolleys, equipped with portable stage settings were sent all over the city; the services of artists from all the theatres had been requisitioned for the day and comedies, op- erettas and vaudeville performances were given in all the squares. Accompanying each unit was a Communist propa- gandist, who talked to the crowd between the acts. At night under a great arch which forms one of the entrances to the Kitai Gorod, the walled enclosure which lies just east of the Kremlin, I saw a wonderful performance by a workmen's dramatic club of the Greek tragedy of Eschylus, "Edipus Tyr- annus." There was an even more elaborate pageant, so I was told, in Petrograd, after which the business of the Third In- ternational was conducted, in a very sober manner, in the Imperial Palace at the Kremlin. Another impressive ceremony which took place at about this time was a review by Trotzki, in the Opera Square, of five hundred graduates from the General Staff Officers' School in Moscow. I was lucky enough to meet Kamenev of the Moscow Soviet just before it began and he found an excel- lent place for me on the steps of the Opera House just behind Trotzki, While we were waiting for the review to begin I had a conversation with another Kamenev, Chief of Staff of the Red Armies, He told me something of the plan of mili- tary training. Military service in Russia is compulsory for all citizens between the ages of eighteen and forty. When the army is on a peace footing the term of active service will be six months, after which the soldier becomes part of the re- serves of the Red Army. These reserves are kept in training by compulsory drill of two hours a week. They constitute what is known as The Workers' Militia. Officers' courses in the General Staff school extend over a period of three years. The period of training for line officers in the army and the reserves is from six to eight months. The line schools are scattered all over Russia. At that time there were nearly four PAGEANTS AND PLOTS 183 hundred in operation and it was planned to establish at least three hundred more. Working men and peasants as well as men of university education are eligible for these courses if they show special fitness for such training. Kamenev, who was formerly an officer in the Imperial Army, is a middle- aged man of fine appearance, with all the earmarks of a pro- fessional soldier, and seems to take little interest in politics, his aim being merely to train a first class fighting machine. Petrovsky, chief of the Army Political Schools, whom I met at the same time, was, on the contrary, a red hot Commun- ist. He had the supervision of most of the two hundred and fifty thousand Communists, who were mobilized and sent to the front in every branch of the army as political commissars, teachers, officers, Red Cross men and even as private soldiers. I have already told something of the organization of the Army Political Schools as I saw them on the front. All Moscow was thrilled at that time over the exploits of Tukachevski, who was then starting his famous drive on Warsaw, and Budionny, the great cavalry leader in the Uk- raine. Both had had an equally meteoric rise, and from quite different origins. Tukachevski was a former Imperial officer, was taken prisoner by the Germans during the Great War, and spent over a year in a prison camp at Magdeburg, finally mak- ing his escape to Russia and offering his services to the Red Army. Budionny was a simple peasant who had been a cor- poral in the old army. He was retired from service and re- enlisted voluntarily to fight against the Whites, after return- ing to his home in the province of Tambov and finding that his father and two brothers had been murdered in the raid of Mamontov's cavalry. The young officers whom I saw on the day of their grad- uation were a rather fine looking lot. There were cavalry, ar- tillery, infantry and engineer officers among them. Their khaki uniforms were exceedingly smart and many of them were already wearing the new pointed cap with a large red star on the front, somewhat resembling the old German hel- met. Their oath of allegiance, which was read to them by 184 MAROONED IN MOSCOW Trotzki and subscribed to by every man present, standing at salute, was as follows: 1. I, son of the working people, citizen of the Soviet Re- public, take upon myself the name of a warrior of the Workers' and Peasants' Army. 2. Before the working classes of Russia and of the whole world I undertake to carry this name with honor, to follow the military calling with conscience and to preserve from damage and robbery the national and military possessions as the hair of my head. 3. I pledge myself to submit strictly to revolutionary dis- cipline and to fulfill without objection every command issued by authority of the Workers' and Peasants' Government. 4. I undertake to abstain from and to deter any act liable to dishonor the name of citizen of the Soviet Republic; more- over, to direct all my deeds and thoughts to the great aim of liberation of all workers. 5. I pledge myself to the defense of the Soviet Republic in any danger of assault on the part of any of her enemies at the first call of the Workers' and Peasants' Government, and undertake not to spare myself in the struggle for the Russian Soviet Republic, for the aims of Socialism and the Brother- hood of Nations to the extent of my full strength and of my life. 6. Should this promise be broken, let my fate be the scorn of my fellows. Let my punishment be the stern hand of revolutionary law. That the Bolsheviks intend to make Russia a nation of soldiers is shown by the fact that military training does not by any means begin with the attainment of the age for mili- tary service. The Boy Scout movement which is under the supervision of the remarkable organization known as the Com- munist Youth, is very widespread in Russia. Boys up to the age of sixteen combine physical and military training in these Scout organizations, and it was interesting to note that they had preserved the fleur de lis, the international symbol of the Boy Scouts, as their insignia. Boys from sixteen to eighteen also receive a certain amount of military training in the clubs of the Communist Youth, or, if they are industrial workers, PAGEANTS AND PLOTS 185 in their factory organizations. There are a number of Girl Guides, corresponding to our Campfire Girls, and a few women are in the regular militia and the workers' reserve. The internal situation meanwhile was growing far from satisfactory. The Red Army drive on Warsaw, during which Tukachevski extended his army in a long narrow wedge reach- ing nearly to the German border, was recognized as an impos- sible tactical position. When the offensive was undertaken the government was counting on an immediate revolution in Poland. This idea was so firmly rooted in the minds of the Bolshevik leaders that, after taking Minsk, a Polish committee, headed by Djerzhinsky and Marklevski, were sent to the occu- pied territory and published a proclamation proclaiming Soviet government in Poland. It was expected that the army sup- ported by the peasants would mutiny and start a revolution. It turned out that the Communists were misinformed as to the strength of the revolutionary movement, and they miscal- culated in this respect, falling as far short of realizing the actual situation in Poland as they did that in Germany, when they signed the peace of Brest-Litovsk. After the failure of the Warsaw drive there was much dis- content in the army, stimulated by the reduction of the food rations, the lack of equipment, particularly in shoes, and the long drawn out armistice negotiations. In August there was a mutiny in the Moscow garrison, owing to the fact that straw slippers known as "lapiti" were given out to the soldiers instead of boots. Several regiments on the Western front held meet- ings and sent a delegation to Moscow to protest against the reduction in food rations. The delegation was arrested and several of the members shot, whereupon the front line regi- ments arrested their political commissars, threatening to hold them until their comrades in Moscow were released, and this was done. Mass desertions took place among regiments leav- ing for the front. One regiment passing through Moscow lost over five hundred men between that city and the front. Re- serve troops were not given rifles until they reached the front lines for fear they might start trouble en route. This state 186 MAROONED IN MOSCOW of affairs in the army is nothing new, however, and it was one of the difficulties that had to be contended with throughout the Great War. Wrangel was making some progress on the Crimean front and his raid in the direction of the Caucasus, while not suc- cessful, caused an unsettled condition in that part of the coun- try. Moscow seethed with plots of all descriptions. One day in the Petrovka several armed men in an automobile held up a government truck which was transporting three hundred million roubles and got away with their booty. The money was afterwards recovered in a rather curious manner. Some children in one of the suburbs of Moscow were holding the funeral of a pet cat and started to dig the grave on a vacant lot a short distance from their home. They chose a spot which looked as if someone had been digging there a short time before. About a foot underneath the surface they struck something hard. "Hidden treasure," they said, and began to dig harder than ever. It was indeed hidden treasure, for it proved to be the entire sum which had evidently been placed there during the night by the bandits for temporary safe keep- ing. The Soviet authorities gave it out that this robbery was political in character and had been committed by the Social Revolutionaries for the purpose of securing funds for party propaganda. As the weather was very warm, we often had tea parties in the garden at the Horitonevsky. One Sunday afternoon at about six o'clock, as we were peacefully sipping tea, we were startled by a series of terrific explosions, developing into what sounded like a regular bombardment. The large plate glass windows in our house rattled like castanets, a dense cloud of smoke could be seen to the northwest, and evil looking little white rings rose in the air bursting with a horrible noise. As the thing grew worse one of our windows went, then we could hear the sound of breaking glass in all directions. Evidently something terrible had happened. A few nervous individuals suggested that the Poles might be coming, for it was then well known that they had pushed some distance east of Minsk in the Beresina offensive, but we at once dismissed this idea as PAGEANTS AND PLOTS 187 impossible. The telephone was temporarily out of commis- sion ; so, curiosity getting the better of us, although there was considerable danger in the streets from breaking glass and bits of cornices dislodged by the concussion, we started for the Foreign Office to find out what was the matter. On the way we met many frightened groups of people, and one or two who had been badly cut by pieces of broken glass. Wild ru- mors were current, chiefly of a Polish plot to blow up all Mos- cow. When we arrived at the Foreign Office we found that there had been an explosion at Hodinka, the large munition depot, about eight versts from the city. About fifty persons, chiefly guards, had been killed. Detachments of the militia had been sent to stop the resulting conflagration and prevent the explosion from spreading to a still larger depot, and the avia- tion station nearby. It was said frankly, that if the fire could not be stopped there would be serious danger to Moscow. Meanwhile the town was put under military law, and people warned to keep off the streets unless on urgent business. All that night the explosions continued and it was only by early morning that their decreasing frequency made us realize that the situation must be under control. The bombardment kept up at intervals until the afternoon of the next day. Hundreds of arrests were made in connection with the affair, which turned out to have been a Polish plot for which three Poles, three Russians and three Jews, were eventually executed. CHAPTER XIX A MODERN BABEL Anyone who imagines that the isolation of Russia from the rest of the world is anything more than a material isola- tion is very much mistaken. Moscow is probably today the most cosmopolitan city of Europe. I certainly found it so during the summer of 1920. The meeting of the Third In- ternational brought delegates from every part of the world, as well as hosts of sympathizers and foreign journalists. There were peace delegations, labor delegations, business men, repre- sentatives of oppressed nationalities and political minorities, propagandists, crooks and idealists from the four quarters of the globe. During the Latvian peace negotiations, wKicn took place in June, I met Yoffe, head of the Russian delegation. Yoffe is Russia's professional peace negotiator, having conducted the negotiations with Esthonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland. He is a Jew, short, thick set, bearded, with keen brown eyes and a rather prepossessing manner, and was a frequent visi- tor at our house, where his young daughter and his first wife from whom he had been divorced two years previously, were living. She and her daughter, who was just recovering from an attack of typhus, occupied the two best rooms and had all their meals served in their apartment. When they went out a motor always came for them. Madame Yoffe was beautifully dressed, she was very pretty, a wonderful musician and distinctly bourgeoise in manner and appearance. It was in her sitting room, where he came for tea practically every evening, that I had my talk with Yoffe. The fact that he had another wife in Petrograd did not in the least disturb their amicable relations. I found him very alert and intelligent, a born diplomatist. He was interested in all national questions and was par- 188 A MODERN BABEL 189 ticularly enthusiastic about a proposition he had made on be- half of Russia at the Latvian conference for the cancellation of all war obligations and indemnities by the nations of the world. His ideas in this respect, he told me, exactly coincided with those of the English author, Mr. Keynes, whose book he had read with great interest, and he asked me what impres- sion it had produced in America. I saw a great deal of the members of the Latvian delega- tion which stopped at the Savoy where they had an entire floor to themselves. They had brought their own provisions and servants and had their meals served in their own dining room. Every day they were taken in a big motor bus to the home of Horitonev, the sugar king, on the Sofiskaya Naberezhnaya, where the peace parleys were held. At night they were fre- quently the guests of the Foreign Office at the theater or the opera, but none of them was allowed to walk in the streets or visit private homes. They could not receive any visitors unless the latter had special permission from the Foreign Office, and their callers were compelled to register in conformity with the regulations in force in all the government guest houses in Moscow. Every caller at these places must register with the soldier from the Checka who is on guard at the door, his name, address, occupa- tion and the nature of his business, and show his documents of identity or "permis de sejour." He surrenders these docu- ments on entering, receiving them on leaving the building, when the length of his stay is recorded opposite the informa- tion already furnished. These lists are turned in daily to the Checka and enable it to keep in touch with the activities of foreigners and the extent of their intercourse with Russians. Negotiations with Latvia dragged on for several months, the chief objects of discussion being the economic provisions of the treaty. Finally it was signed and the negotiations with Lithuania began. They were successfully concluded in a few weeks. Meanwhile other negotiations no less interesting than Yoffe's were going on. The Russian Government had openly espoused the cause of the Turkish nationalists in Anatolia and 190 MAROONED IN MOSCOW the notorious Djemal Pasha, accompanied by Halel Pasha and an effendi, arrived in Moscow to secure recognition of the Angora Government under Mustapha Kemal. I found Djemal a most charming person, frankly bour- geois and nationalistic in his ideas, and making no secret of his motives for seeking an alliance with Soviet Russia. "Aren't you afraid of the spread of Bolshevik propaganda in Asia Minor if you sign a treaty with the Soviet Govern- ment?" I asked him. "My dear lady," he said suavely, "if your house is on fire, do you ask the politics of the man who comes to help you put it out?" His one aim, open and avowed, was to secure assistance against the British controlled government at Constantinople, and he did not care on what terms he got it. As for the dan- ger of Bolshevist propaganda, he was counting on conservative Islam to take care of that. He was very careful to remove from my mind any idea that he was pro-German, claiming that the Turks were forced into the position of becoming allies of the Germans in the Great War; that after the war he and Enver and Talaat had wished to come to an understanding with England, but had been driven by British imperialism back into the arms of Germany. The Persian peace delegation arrived shortly after, then the Chinese, with a special train loaded with rice and tea, which they sold quite openly at speculative prices in Moscow, no doubt paying their expenses for the entire trip. At this time an agreement was concluded between the Soviet Government and the Peking Government, under which the latter was to operate the Eastern Chinese railroad, wherein the former Imperial Russian Government had a large interest. Simul- taneously, I believe, negotiations, less open in character, were going on with the Southern Chinese Government. Then there were the Boukharans to whom I have already referred, and the Khivans, who had about this time made a Soviet revolution to order. Later when the Khan of Khiva came to Moscow he was arrested and interned in the Andron- ovski camp, just why I was never able to discover. A MODERN BABEL 191 The delegate from Afghanistan was most picturesque, tall, slender, dark, with wonderful eyes, and he spoke English fairly well. One day I met him in the Savoy Hotel and he invited me to tea, whereupon he began what I presume was a typical Afghan courtship. This was the substance of our conversation : "You long in Moscow?" he asked. "Four months," I told him. "You got husband at home?" "No." "You find a man here ?" "No." "You young, and you look healthy, I got plenty wives in Afghanistan, but here it is very lonely. I don't want Russian woman — I always wanted English woman. We marry now, what you say? We stay married while I'm here or I take you back to Afghanistan. Fine country. You be first wife." All this time he was coming nearer and nearer with the most intense expression which did not take my fancy by any means. I told him I'd have to think it over until the next day, then made my escape as soon as I could. There were other delegates not as official, but just as Im- portant and more mysterious. For example. Dr. Mansur, an Indian nationalist of whom I have already spoken, who lived at the Savoy, lectured at the General Staff College in Moscow, and conducted courses in the Foreign Office school of Oriental languages. He was always busy receiving couriers and mys- terious individuals who came from Berlin and Tashkend where there was a Far Eastern Soviet propaganda center. Mansur was very intimate with Meyerhoeffer, who had stayed on in Russia after he was superseded by the official Austrian Mis- sion. He was a Moslem convert and a strong supporter of Pan-Islamism and was also in receipt of constant communica- tions from India, Asia Minor, Vienna and Berlin. The Sinn Feiners had their delegation and were often in conference with Soviet leaders. So also were the Korean na- tionalists whose leader, Pak, I knew very well. Mexico was 192 MAROONED IN MOSCOW represented by M. N. Roy, an East Indian, with a handsome Mexican wife. Besides the British Labor Delegation there was an official Italian Labor delegation, and I saw something of several of the members, among them Dugoni, one of the Serratists who were exceedingly unpopular with Moscow. At that time were laid the foundations for the open breach which later took place in the Italian Socialist party. Lenin was pressing the delega- tion to support a revolution in Italy ; the more moderate mem- bers represented to him the impossibility of attempting to in- augurate a Soviet regime in Italy without the assurance of the support of other countries. Italy, they said, had a supply of coal for three weeks, bread for a month, and raw materials for six weeks, and an attempt at revolution would only result in an economic blockade which would starve out Italy in a short time. In spite of these statements the abortive attempt to seize control of the factories by the Italian working men was made in the summer of 1920 at the instigation of Moscow. The Italians, like the British, lived at the Dyelavoi Dvor, formerly one of the best hotels in the city, which was reserved for Trades Union and Third International delegates. I was forbidden to go there, but I nevertheless was a frequent visitor and this did not help to make me popular with the authorities. The Italians brought all their own food, had macaroni and chianti every day. Like other foreign visitors who remain a short time they had no idea of the privations and difficulties of the ordinary citizen in Moscow. A German labor delegation was at the Savoy. The Ger- mans were all working men, mostly Communists and they had come to draw up a convention with the Soviet Government for mass colonization in Russia. Negotiations between them and the All Russian Council of Trades Unions dragged on for a long time without results. The Germans wished to take over control of entire factories with their own personnel and to es- tablish their own colonies. Russian living quarters did not suit them; they demanded the right to obtain building mate- rials, construct their own homes, run their own cooperatives, and to bring a certain amount of money into the country with A MODERN BABEL 193 them. All these demands were not agreed to by the Soviet authorities. Meanwhile they were quietly investigating condi- tions for themselves, and it was evident that, while thoroughly in sympathy with Communistic principles, their orderly Ger- man ideas, deeply rooted in tradition and strengthened by training, could not be adjusted to the life about them. One of them said to me : "It's all very fine for everyone to be a productive worker, but I consider that my wife who runs my home and bears my children is just as much of a productive worker as if she worked in an office or factory. I don't want her to go out to work. I don't want to eat in a public dining room ; I want her to stay home and cook for me. It may be that I can buy just as good shirts at one of the gov- ernment stores as she makes, but she's always made my shirts and I like the way she makes them. It may be all right to have your socks mended and your suspender buttons sewed on at a cooperative mending shop, but I like the way she does it. I'm not a religious man, but I want to have my children left free in matters of religion. I don't want them taught Atheism any more than I want them taught Catholicism or Lutheranism." This was the attitude of most of the Germans and, owing to this as well as political and economic reasons, the German scheme for mass colonization was temporarily, at least, aban- doned. For a time Cachin and Froissard, the French Communist delegates, stayed at my guest house, and while they were there it served as a rendezvous for all the French Communists in Moscow. Among them was Jacques Sadoul, who had come up from Kharkov, where he was stationed as military adviser for the Ukrainian Government. I suppose there has been more speculation about the attitude of Sadoul towards the Soviet government than any of the other foreign Communists in Russia. He was attached to the French Military Mission, in Russia during the Great War. At the time of the March Rev- olution he declared himself in favor of the revolutionists and afterwards went over to the Bolsheviks. In his absence he was tried and condemned to death by a military court martial 194 MAROONED IN MOSCOW in France, and of course, whatever his convictions, he has burned his bridges and can never return to his own country unless there is a revokition. Sadoui is, in appearance, a most attractive person. He is short, rather thick set, blond, with a ruddy complexion, with clear blue eyes, rather the Norman type. In conversation he is very animated, and extremely genial. He struck me as being thoroughly happy, absolutely at ease in his strange surround- ings. He was dressed, when I saw him, in a knickerbocker suit of English tweeds, with woolen golf stockings, and smart brown shoes that betokened a rather fastidious care of ap- pearances. He was more interested in hearing from the Frenchmen all about the latest happenings in Paris, even down to what was playing at the theaters, than in talking politics. With regard to Russia he expressed himself as convinced that Communism of the military stamp was the only force which could keep the country from lapsing into chaos. His wife, who had arrived from Paris with his brother, some weeks before, was a Parisienne to her finger tips, beau- tifully dressed and seemed decidedly out of place in her sur- roundings. She impressed me as being Communistic rather out of loyalty to her husband than from personal convictions and complained bitterly of the persecutions she had been sub- jected to in Paris on his account. Monsieur Sadoui, the brother, reminded me more of a floor walker from the Bon Marche than anything else. He was a timid, delicate looking little man, and was the only person I saw in Russia who wore a frock coat and stiff collar. Black bread and kasha dis- agreed with him ; he was evidently bewildered and not a little frightened by the strange new forces with which he found him- self in contact, and I think he heartily wished he was back on the Boulevard Raspail, talking about Socialism in a cafe. Rene Marchand, who is one of the ablest French publicists in Russia, gave me quite a different impression from that which I received from Sadoui. For some years before the Revolution he was correspondent for the Paris Temps in Petrograd ; he also was mysteriously converted, publishing his declaration of faith in a rather remarkable pamphlet entitled A MODERN BABEL 195 "Why I rallied to the formula of the Social Revolution." He is a tall, dark, distinguished looking man, who says very little and appears at times to be suffering under a great nervous strain. He lives simply and very poorly with his wife and children, at the former Hotel Metropole, works very hard, and sees few visitors. Judging purely from superficial indications I would be inclined to believe the gossip current in certain circles which has it that Marchand's conversion to Commu- nism was due to pressure rather than to conviction. Pascal, the Frenchman who writes the "letters" that are sent out periodically by Soviet radio describing social, political and economic conditions in Russia, is a suave, exceedingly agreeable man. He was formerly a priest, more lately member of the French Military Mission to Petrograd, and is now a Communist. Strange to say, he has remained a stanch Cath- olic and goes to mass every Sunday. The most energetic and able of the French Communists in Russia is Henri Guilbeaux. He has rather an interesting his- tory. During the war he was on the staff of a French news- paper, and took part in the Zimmerwaldian movement, attend- ing the congress. For this and for alleged treasonable corre- spondence with German Socialists, charges were preferred against him and he was compelled to leave France. He re- mained for some time in Switzerland and then drifted to Russia. He is an occasional correspondent of UHumanite, Le Populaire, and other French Socialist papers. He is always chosen by the Soviet Government to show around distinguished French-speaking Socialist visitors. He is extremely cultivated, being an author of some distinction, very witty, and an able propagandist. One of the most picturesque delegates to the International was the veteran German Revolutionary, Clara Zetkin, She is a fat little German Hausfrau in appearance, and always wears a black silk dress, with a lace collar and a large cameo brooch. Her cheeks are as ruddy as winter apples and her gray hair is parted and drawn to a demure little knot at the back of her head. In spite of her seventy-six years her speaking voice is 196 MAROONED IN MOSCOW wonderfully clear and she is just as full of revolutionary fire and spirit as if she were sixteen, instead of seventy-six. I also saw something of Belin and Stoklitski, American delegates to the International. Belin was a quiet, unassuming man with a rather attractive personality. I was told that he was a Norwegian by birth. It seemed to me, judging from his conversation, that he was giving the Soviet authorities a rather exaggerated idea of the importance of the Communist move- ment in America. McLean and Quelch, two of the English Communists, were very alert, intelligent men. Most of the other Anglo-Saxon delegates whom I met were either natural- ized Russian Jews, or immature youths, who seemed to regard Communism rather in the light of a great adventure. All the delegates made a sort of club house of the headquarters of the Third International in the Dyeneshni Pereoulak, formerly the home of Count Mirbach, the German Ambassador, who was assassinated in 1918. I was never allowed to set foot within its sacred precincts. I did not meet Zinoviev, the chairman of the Congress, but I frequently heard him speak at meetings. He is a rug- ged, unprepossessing looking individual of a distinctly Jewish type, with an extremely forceful, dominating personality. It is this quality which has given him his present position. Zino- viev is not popular either among his colleagues or among the working classes. Several times during the summer at meet- ings in Petrograd he was hooted down by factory workmen. Once he appeared at a meeting wearing one of the black leather coats that are much affected by the Red Army men and commissars. He spoke of the fact that it was necessary for the workers to make great sacrifices to assure the prosper- ity of the Soviet Republic. "Suppose the fellow in the leather jacket sets us the example," shouted a voice in the audience. Among the foreign visitors at my guest house at this time was a Hungarian journaHst named Holitscher. He was a very delightful person ; sympathetic, but not blind to the flaws in the Soviet Government; more of a literary man than a poli- tician. Through him I met Dr. Varga, formerly Commissar A MODERN BABEL 197 of Education in the short-lived Hungarian Communist ex- periment. He was a dark, intense Httle man, one of those to whom Marxism is a cult, but apart from his fanaticism he was a man of broad general culture, quite different from Bela Kun, whom I saw very often. The latter impressed me as being a decidedly coarse, materialistic person, very much of an oppor- tunist. There were also several French correspondents and two Italians, Dodone of the Corriere delta Sera, and Panunzio of the Socialist paper Avanti. Dodone, who was formerly an Italian officer, was under house arrest during his entire stay which was limited to the prescribed two weeks for correspond- ents. Panunzio stayed longer and his visit terminated in a rather unpleasant experience. At the time of the Polish armi- stice negotiations at Minsk he went with several other cor- respondents to attend the conference, intending, so he told me, to go directly from Minsk to Petrograd and leave the country. About four weeks afterwards I was startled to see Panun- zio appear in my room one morning, haggard, dirty, collar- less and with a scraggly beard. He told me that he had been arrested in Minsk by the Checka without a word of explana- tion, and brought back to Moscow, where he was imprisoned for three weeks in the Lubianka 2, accused, much to his amaze- ment, of espionage. He was not allowed to communicate with any of his Socialist friends, and would probably have been there indefinitely, except for the fact that his interpreter, to whom he had promised to write from Petrograd on a matter of business, grew suspicious and reported her fears to the members of the Italian Socialist Delegation then in Moscow, with the result that explanations were forthcoming and Pan- unzio was set at liberty. It seemed that, while he was in Minsk the Avanti had published a despatch with Moscow date line in which were given statistics and information as to strength, equipment, distribution and morale of the Red Army. Although it was not signed and it was proved later to have been written by the Riga correspondent of the paper, Panun- zio was suspected of being the author. It was thought that 198 MAROONED IN MOSCOW he had illegal means of sending correspondence out of Russia and he was detained on suspicion. One day I went with Beach and Turner, two representa- tives of the English shop stewards, to meet two members of the Executive Committee of the Right Social Revolutionaries. These men were wanted by the Bolshevik authorities, so there was considerable mystery about it. We met by appointment in one of the squares in Moscow a Jewish gentleman, profes- sedly a Menshevik, and formerly the correspondent of the United Telegraph Company in Petrograd. In view of what happened later and of several other circumstances I am in- clined to think he was playing quite another role, and was prob- ably an agent of the Extraordinary Commission, We accompanied him for several blocks, when he disap- peared, after telling us to follow a young lady in a blue head kerchief who was strolling apparently unconcernedly up the street. Presently she disappeared inside of an arched door- way. We did the same, following at a safe distance. Once inside of the hallway at the back of the court, she turned to us, and told us that she would take us to an apartment upstairs, where we would meet our men. I acted as interpreter for the Britishers, during our half hour talk, after which they were obliged to leave and I stayed on for a cup of tea with the two Russians and our hostess, a teacher in the apartment which was used as a kindergarten. When I left I found two soldiers armed with rifles in the hall. "Where did you come from?" they asked. I told them. "Well, you must go back and stay," said one of them. "There is a raid of the Checka on and no one will be allowed to leave the building." Meanwhile anyone was allowed to enter; perfectly inno- cent people calling on their friends were detained pending a room to room search. I went back to my friends, and found that the two Social Revolutionaries had disappeared as if by magic. The teacher, evidently very much alarmed, was still there, so we sat down and decided to make the best of it. In a few minutes two soldiers accompanied by a civil agent of the Checka and the Chairman of the Housing Com- A MODERN BABEL 199 mittce appeared and searched the apartment from end to end. Not a drawer was left unopened, not a paper escaped scrutiny, and they even went through the children's work and kinder- garten material. Pictures were taken off the wall and exam- ined, mattresses and pillows felt for concealed papers or docu- ments; not a nook or cranny was left uninspected. Unfor- tunately some compromising papers were found in the teach- er's desk and at the same moment her husband arrived most inopportunely. They were both arrested and taken away to the Checka. Meanwhile I was told that I would be obliged to remain in the apartment until they had searched the whole building. Seeing that I was a foreigner, the chairman of the Housing Committee, a Lett who spoke German exceedingly well, tried to make matters as pleasant as possible for me. He asked his wife down, brought in the inevitable samovar, and invited me to have a cup of tea with bread and butter. It was then about ten o'clock and I had been there since six. After the search was completed the Checkists retired, leaving a soldier on guard to see that no one left the apartment. He sat there motion- less with his rifle between his knees, while my host and I talked in German. In a few minutes I strolled over to the piano and began to pick out the melodies of a few Russian folk songs. Up to this time he had been perfectly stolid and uninter- ested in the proceedings, then suddenly his whole expression changed. "Fraiilein," he said, in excellent German, "you speak Ger- man almost like a native. Have you lived in the Fatherland ?" I told him that I had spent much time in Germany. He hesitated. "Perhaps you could sing me a German song, just one," he begged. "Yes, indeed," I answered, and sitting at the piano I sang one after another, a number of the homely German folk songs that are known to all the people, "Du, du liegst mir im Herzen," "Ach, du lieber Augustin," "Ich hatt' einen Kam- eraden," and several others. He sat there spellbound and presently I noticed great tears, one after another, rolling down 200 MAROONED IN MOSCOW his lined cheeks. When I finished, for a few minutes he was unable to speak, then he said, quite simply: "Thank you, Fraiilein, you have made me happier than I have been for six long years." After that, little by little, the whole story came out. He was a German prisoner of war who had been captured during the Russian drive in East Prussia, in the summer of 1914. For five years he had been kept in prison camps or in the villages at compulsory labor, then he had given up hopes of ever getting back to the Fatherland again and had taken service with the Checka, because, as he told me, he got better food and pay there than anywhere else. He had renounced his German citizenship just before the arrival of the German Repatriation Mission, his bridges were burned, he could never return to Germany, where he had a wife and three little chil- dren. Such instances among foreign nationals are not un- common in Russia; they are part of the tragic aftermath of the Great War. I talked with my Latvian friends for several hours and it was two o'clock before the raid was over and I was allowed to go home. CHAPTER XX AL FRESCO ADVENTURES It was pretty hot in the dog days, and I was delighted when I received an invitation from some American friends, Mr. Hopwood, formerly manager of the Kodak Company, and his two daughters, to spend a week-end in the country. We stayed in the house of an old peasant woman, a widow, whose son had been killed in the Great War, and who lived alone with her little grandchild. She belonged to the upper class of peasants, the Koulaks, who have always owned their own land, and are still quite prosperous, representing the peas- ant bourgeoisie. In consequence they are much detested by the Communists, and they are rankly counter-revolutionary. She had, until recently, made a very good living out of her cows and her small market garden, but the former had been requisitioned, only one being left her on account of the small boy who had to have milk. She was no longer able to work herself, she informed me, and owing to the tremendous de- crease of man power in the village, due to conscription and the number of peasants who had gone to the city as industrial workers, she had been unable to plant but a small part of her property. She gave us fresh eggs, a little milk, and some black bread. We supplied salt, sugar and real tea, much to her delight, for she had not tasted the last named for more than two years. She told us that the peasants in the village were bitterly discontented over the requisitions made by the government. Each man had been compelled to furnish a certain number of poods of potatoes in proportion to the amount of acreage he had under cultivation. If he did not happen to have raised potatoes he was obliged to exchange something he had raised with his neighbors for potatoes, and furnish the required amount. The hay crop was poor; even there in the country 201 202 MAROONED IN MOSCOW hay cost twelve thousand roubles a bale, and peasants who had had a poor harvest were compelled to buy hay for their horses and cattle. In many cases they were killing them, selling the meat on the open market rather than do this. She told me that all the peasants said there would soon be another revolu- tion. As to where this revolution was coming from, how it was to be brought about, or what was to be their part in it, they had not the faintest idea. That seemed to me to be the weak point in all the opposition to the Soviet Government. Everybody was discontented, everybody expected the Soviet Government would be overthrown, but every man thought the other fellow was going to do it. The sun was blazing hot and we were tired and dirty when we arrived at our destination on Saturday afternoon. We had walked at least ten versts from the station, and the yil- lage was situated near the Moskva River, which looked very- cool and tempting. "Let's go in bathing," said my companions. 'T'd like to," I answered, "but I have no bathing suit." "That makes no difference," they answered. "Nobody wears a bathing suit in Russia. Come down to the river and see for yourself." When I got there I saw the most startling sight I have ever witnessed. At this point the river made a sharp turn, throw- ing up a bank of fine white sand which made an ideal beach. On the beach and in the water beyond were hundreds of naked people, men, women, boys and girls, all indiscriminately mingled. Some were standing knee-deep in the water chatting with their neighbors, others taking a sun bath, quite undis- turbed; no one seemed in the least self-conscious or concerned. "If it's the custom of the country, I suppose I can do it, too," I said, "but let's go a little further up the beach." So we withdrew to a slightly secluded spot, where we undressed, leaving our clothes on the bank in charge of the father of my two friends. They laughed at me because, as a vestige of Anglo-Saxon prudery, I kept on my hat until the last, but after the first agonized moment I quite forgot my embarrass- ment and never enjoyed a swim more in my life. AL FRESCO ADVENTURES 203 This utter absence of conventionality or self-consciousness was to me one of the most delightful things about the Rus- sians. They act and dress exactly as they please on all occa- sions. In the streets in Moscow you see long-haired men, and short-haired women, girls without stockings, and on some occasions wearing men's clothes, while the men wear anything that suits their fancy. The regular summer costume of the un-Europeanized Russian is a pair of loose trousers, of linen or cloth tucked into high, soft boots, a linen or pongee blouse, often beautifully embroidered in cross-stitch with bright colors, buttoning on the side with a high standing collar, worn out- side the trousers. It is sometimes held in by a narrow leather belt, but more often by a bright colored knotted cotton cord with tassels. Once, outside of the University of Moscow, I saw a dis- tinguished professor talking to a friend. He had bare feet, wore long linen trousers, a Russian blouse, widely open at the throat, with flowing sleeves. A black opera cape was thrown back negligently over his shoulders. On his head he wore a small round skull cap embroidered in brilliant colors. He was perfectly unconscious of the fact that his attire was at all un- usual. Of course, the scarcity of clothing has something tQ do with these eccentricities, but the Russians have always done as they pleased in respect to such matters. We spent the night with our peasant friend, sleeping on her little wooden porch on huge feather beds, which she pro- vided for us, and in the morning we paid a visit to an old Russian priest and to two children's summer colonies in the neighborhood. The priest lived in a four room wooden house like most of those in the village, with a large glass enclosed porch. He wore a faded brown cassock with the enormously long sleeves and corded girdle which is the traditional costume of the Sviaschcnnik. His small, pig-like blue eyes squinted slightly when they looked at you; he had a monumental beard and a very red nose, which suggested that in the old days at least he had not been unacquainted with vodka and probably yet had a reserve tucked away somewhere. He owned a small piece 204 MAROONED IN MOSCOW of land on which he had a flourishing market garden where he raised his own tobacco, a number of beehives and a fine lot of chickens. His shock-headed children, eight in number, helped him work the garden, and altogether it struck me that he was probably living very much as he had before the Revolution. He sold us ten pounds of honey at an enormous price — 4000 roubles a pound — but, as he assured us, it was very fine honey. I found him densely ignorant, bjirely able to read and write. He knew nothing about his parishioners, and they cared nothing for him, and contributed nothing towards his main- tenance except the fees he exacted for burials, christenings and marriages. As a specimen of the old fashioned country priest he was very interesting and I could easily see how he and his kind would rouse prejudice against the church in the minds of the more enlightened classes among the population. While we were walking from the village of Strogonov, where we had spent the night, to Troiki, several versts away, where we expected to visit a model children's colony, we had an experience which was particularly illuminating. It was Sunday, and along the road we met many groups of peasants, bearded, stalwart men loafing and smoking mahorka, rolled in newspaper, healthy looking peasant girls, mostly barefoot with bright colored handkerchiefs tied on their heads. As we passed, most of them stared at us in a distinctly unfriendly manner, and two or three times we were greeted with cries of Jgid. At first I was bewildered and my friend Mr. Hop- wood explained. "They think w'e're Jews," he said, "because we evidently come from the city, and are well-dressed. All the peasants hate the Jews." The children's colony we had come to visit was a beautiful old house, which had formerly belonged to the Karsenkins, who were among the merchant princes of old Moscow. It was run by the Commissariat of Public Health, under the direct super- vision of Madame Semashko, wife of the Commissar. Ma- dame Kamenev, wife of the Chairman of the Moscow Soviet, was also a member of the Board of Control. The house was 4L FRESCO ADVENTURES 205 situated in the midst of a fine park, with the remains of a beau- tiful flower garden, on a high bluff overlooking the river, and there was a large vegetable garden from which the colony drew most of its supplies. They had five cows and several horses. The children's quarters were very clean and comfortable. The superintendent was a most intelligent Jewish woman, not by any means a Communist, but she was tremendously inter- ested in the educational and cultural side of the work of the Soviet Government. The older girls were busily sewing on costumes for a little play that was to be given the following week. They all looked healthy and happy, and there seemed to be excellent discipline. Dinner was served at noon and con- sisted of a thick soup, followed by boiled beef tongue, with mashed potatoes, stewed fruit and white rolls. The older children had tea and the younger children each a big cup of milk. In the grounds of the Karsenkin estate was the family mausoleum. It was a small white wooden building, rectangu- lar in shape, the long sides being composed almost entirely of glass. Entrance was through a narrow passage, on one side of which was a kitchenette furnished with samovar and cooking utensils, on the other a small pantry, still stocked with fine porcelain. This passage opened into the main room, bright and sunny with growing plants on the sills of the large windows. It was carpeted with light brown velvet and con- tained luxurious arm chairs, a big sofa and a table on which were still lying some Russian periodicals of three years past. At the further end of the room were eight graves, covered with growing ivy, each with a large stone cross at the head, on the arms of which were hung the Easter eggs which the Russians are in the habit of bringing to their dead at Easter. It had been the custom of the Karsenkins to come fre- quently to the mausoleum, probably on all church holidays and on the name days of their dead. They spent the day sitting in the comfortable arm chairs, chatting, reading and drinking tea. To my Western mind it seemed at first a rather grue- some idea, but in the final analysis there was really something beautiful about it. To these people the dead were no less real 206 MAROONED IN MOSCOW than the living; it was their way of bridging the gulf between the seen and the unseen world. In the afternoon we paid a visit to another children's col- ony run by the municipality of Moscow. It was situated in one of the "Dacha" settlements where the small merchants of Moscow in the old days had cottage colonies where they spent the summer months. There were about sixty children living in five or six cottages, which of course had been taken from their former owners. They were clean and well run, but there was a marked difference in the physical condition of these children from those I had seen at the first colony. The ex- planation was simple — they were living on the regular ration assigned by the Commissary of Education, which runs the ordinary colonies. Their dinner was thin soup and kasha with black bread. For the sixty children, most of whom were be- low nine years of age, only twenty glasses of milk a day were provided. The other colony received the same allowance, but it was supplemented by the private contributions and resources of the wives of the commissars whose children were among its members. I had another delightful midsummer outing at the "Nye- skouchni Sad," Sans Souci Park, a beautiful country seat on the Moskva, which was a gift of Catherine the Great to one of her favorites, Prince Orlov. The palace, a handsome building in the late eighteenth century style, was being transformed into a historical museum of Russian furniture under the supervi- sion of a Russian nobleman, who had formerly collected such things as an amateur. The park surrounding the palace, though terribly neglected, is still a beautiful specimen of land- scape architecture. There are charming vistas, apparently natural waterfalls, deep green pools with overhanging birches and a background of dark evergreens, small Doric temples in unexpected spots, their stone steps green with moss. The very decay of the grass-grown drives and winding paths makes them still lovelier. Here one Saturday afternoon I was a meml^er of a picnic party with General Brusilov, his wife and daughter. General Polivanov, Minister of War under the Czar and later under Kerensky, and a number of other Russians AL FRESCO ADVENTURES 207 of the old regime. We walked until we were tired through the grounds, and then adjourned to the janitor's house where we had tea on an upstairs veranda with a beautiful view of the river, beyond which was Moscow with its hundreds of gilded domes and cross-crowned minarets. The janitor had been a soldier in one of General Brusilov's regiments. He still saluted when he addressed his former commander, calling him "My General," and his wife brought in the samovar with which we made our tea ; and the cups were of rare old Russian porcelain of the eighteenth century. Each of us brought a contribution for our supper, which consisted of white bread and cream cheese, cold ham, butter, tea, honey, and small cakes. The conversation was mostly of the old days. General Brusilov indulged in reminiscences about his Galician campaign; Polivanov told incidents of official life in Petrograd. With such company, and in such surroundings, it was hard to believe that I was in Soviet Russia. Finally our talk drifted to present day matters and I was interested to learn that Polivanov shared the ideas of Brusilov with regard to the Soviet Government. Like him, he believed that ill advised intervention had done more to strengthen the Bolsheviks than anything else. He believed that the Revolu- tion would run an evolutionary course, that the Communists were, for the moment, the only party which could govern the country, preserve order, and keep the administrative machine functioning. Any radical change, he felt, must come from within rather than from without the country if it was to be permanent. The establishment of a new oligarchy, backed by foreign powers would, he was convinced, only plunge Russia into a new civil war, and the idea of foreign influence or in- tervention in any form was repugnant to his sturdy nationalism. Therefore he was one of the thousands of Bez Partini who were willing to work with the Soviet Government. Later he accepted a post on the Commission sent to Riga to negotiate peace with Poland, and died there shortly after his arrival. There were wild rumors current in Moscow that he had been poisoned by Russian Counter-Revolutionaries who regarded 208 MAROONED IN MOSCOW him as a traitor, but I never heard anything to substantiate these reports. The parks and boulevards were always crowded during the long summer afternoons and evenings, for during June and July it is only dark for two or three hours and the people live in the streets nearly all night. In the parks there were numbers of open air concerts ; on the boulevards were all sorts of amusements, fortune tellers, photographers who took your picture while you waited, jugglers, venders of kvass and lemonade and itinerant musicians. One of the last named was a most picturesque figure. He was an old man with a long white beard, and no matter how hot the weather he always wore a winter overcoat that reached to his heels. Every eve- ning he played the flute in one of the open squares. When he had collected a large crowd, mostly children, he placed himself at the head of an impromptu procession and wound fantastic- ally in and out among the paths, playing weird melodies like an antiquated Pied Piper. Just across from the Foreign Office under the walls of the Kitai Gorod (the Chinese city), was a small garden and there, in the long summer nights another musician gave concerts for all who cared to hear. Sitting in the window sill in the office of the Western section, waiting for war news and political bulletins, I passed some of the few restful moments of my stay in Moscow, transported to another world on wings of song, peaceful, immutable and serene. The performer was a little gray nightingale. CHAPTER XXI THE SHADOW OF THE CHECKA During the summer the repatriation of prisoners of war which had been begun some months before by the arrival of the German Mission was given an impetus by the arrival of Czecho-Slovak and Austrian Missions and of Fridtj of Nan- sen, the great Arctic explorer, who came to arrange for the repatriation of nationals whose countries had no official inter- course with Russia on behalf of an International Committee working under the auspices of the Red Cross. The German Mission, headed by a man named Hilger, was managed with true Teutonic efficiency. The Germans were the first in the field, and by the spring of 1920 they had suc- ceeded in repatriating most of their nationals. On arriving in Moscow they regained possession of the former German con- sulate practically intact, also another building which was used as a home for destitute or invalid German soldiers. They purchased rations to feed their prisoners from Soviet stores at Soviet prices, and even got back the three original automo- biles which had been in the possession of the German Mission before the assassination of Mirbach. Mr. Hilger, who was an extremely clever man and a born diplomatist, succeeded in establishing excellent relations with the Foreign Office and also with the German Soviet, for every foreign country has its own Soviet in Moscow. By tactful management he was able to overcome the prejudice of the German Soviet against offi- cers. Other Missions had great difficulties with their Soviets in this respect. In order to secure places in repatriation eche- lons prisoners of war must have their papers vised by the Soviet of the country to which they belong and this body in- variably gives the preference to enlisted men, holding back officers as long as possible. 209 210 MAROONED IN MOSCOW Mr. Hilger's activities were not entirely confined to repatri- ation, for he was also acting as the unofficial commercial agent of Germany and through him contracts were signed with the Soviet Government for the importation of large quantities of chemicals, drugs, medicines, surgical supplies, farm imple- ments and tools. The Czecho-Slovak Mission arrived in June and lived at my guest house. The chief was Mr. Skala, a former officer in the Czecho-Slovak Army in France; his wife, who acted as secretary to the Mission, was an American girl born in Chicago, of Czecho-Slovak parents, who had gone to Europe in 191 5 as a member of the Serbian Unit of the American Red Cross. We became great friends, and she was of considerable assistance to me in carrying on the work I undertook later for the American prisoners. The problem of the Czechs was a particularly difficult one. They were saddled with the work of repatriating about thirty- five thousand Czecho-Slovaks who had been captured in Siberia during the Kolchak retreat. These men were scattered throughout Western Siberia, Southeastern Russia and Turke- stan; some were in internment camps, others had been allowed to settle in the villages where they had gone to work; many had died or simply disappeared. It was a tremendous task to lo- cate all these men, to secure transportation to Moscow, and finally to organize the echelons which left for Reval twice a week. The Russian organization through which the problem of repatriation was handled was the Centro-Evak of which a Lett named Eiduk was chairman. Every foreigner who has been resident in Russia, whether a civilian or prisoner of war, must receive his permit to leave the country through the Centro- Evak and this permit must have the vise of the Foreign Office and of the Checka. Foreign nationals arriving in Moscow from distant points in Russia are housed in enormous con- centration points pending their departure where they are sup- plied with rations and given a place to sleep. I visited one of these concentration points near the Nikolai station with Madame Skala. It had formerly been an alms- THE SHADOW OF THE CHECKA 211 house, and was packed from garret to cellar with a swarming mass of humanity of various nationalities, Letts, Esthonians, Lithuanians, Poles, Italians, Greeks, Rumanians, Ukrainians and many others. The Czecho-Slovaks were assigned special quarters where they were fairly comfortable, but the other nationalities were packed in helter-skelter, men, women, and children together with their filthy, nondescript baggage. I talked to a number of the Czechs, many of whom had heard nothing from their families for four or five years. In the hospital ward were numbers of men from Turkestan, desperately ill with malaria. In one bed was an elderly man in a pitiable mental as well as physical condition. He was a Baron, but on his arrival in Moscow he had registered at the Czecho-Slovak Soviet under his Christian and family names without stating his former rank, thinking, very rightly, that as titles are not recognized at present in Czecho-Slovakia, it was not of the slightest im- portance. His family name was well known, however, and the zealous Czech Communists hunted him up in the Almanach de Gotha, and accused him of some deep counter-revolutionary design in thus concealing his rank. Only his extreme physical weakness and the energetic intervention of Mr. Skala saved him from being sent to prison. At the Centro-Evak concentration point the most pictur- esque inhabitants were the gypsies, large numbers of whom had been conscripted in the Austrian and Hungarian armies. They absolutely refused to live in the buildings, and had built themselves shelters of boards, scraps of old tin roofing, and blankets stretched on poles in the yard, where they bivouacked and did their own cooking. The Hungarians were in a par- ticularly unfortunate situation. The counter-revolutionary government which followed the Hungarian Commune was intensely hated by the Soviet Government and there was no- body to represent their interests. The Austrians fared better and the repatriation of Austrian nationals was conducted in a fairly orderly manner. I saw a great deal of Nansen during his visit to Moscow, as he stayed in our guest house at the Horitonevski. He was 212 MAROONED IN MOSCOW not allowed to bring his own secretary, as he was a Russian, and during his ten days' stay I acted as his secretary. The Russians who have a tremendous respect for intellectual attainment admired Nansen greatly as a scientist, but they gave him little encouragement on the diplomatic end of his mission, and I think he was rather disheartened by the result of his first visit. He was interested in providing transportation from Reval of the foreign nationals whom the Soviet Government was willing to permit to leave the country, but whose govern- ments had not negotiated directly with Moscow on the subject. He had very up-hill work to ascertain the approximate number of these people in Russia and the transportation facilities which would be given by the Russian Government. During his stay he purposely avoided making any investigations or meddling in any way in politics, but he used to spend hours every day sitting in my room, talking about Russia and also about the United States. He speaks English beautifully and is very fond of America and Americans. His youngest daughter was at that time in New York, where she was studying singing. Nansen has changed very little since he was in the United States some years ago. In spite of his sixty-eight years his tall form is as erect as ever, his blue eyes are clear, his complexion fresh and ruddy. He gives the impression of tremendous physical and mental vigor. His innate conserv^atism was profoundly shocked by many things he saw and heard in Russia, but the humanitarian rather than the political side of the situation appealed to him. He went nowhere in Moscow, and did noth- ing except have frequent conferences with Foreign Office officials. The Danish Red Cross, as a neutral organization, confined its efforts entirely to the repatriation of civilians. Its chief. Dr. Martini, also acted as unofficial commercial agent for Danish interests. The French Red Cross, which had no legal status, was in charge of Mademoiselle Charpentier, who cared for all the French hostages and political prisoners, including a number of officers of the French Mission who had been interned since the THE SHADOW OF THE CHECKA 213 October Revolution. She had retained the French Red Cross headquarters on the Chistoprudni Boulevard and the French home in the Milyutinsky Pereoulak, securing her funds prac- tically unaided from members of the French colony in Moscow, many of whom were allowed to remain at liberty, though with- out- permission to leave the country, and from Russians, em- ploying much the same methods as those used by Mr. North. She was often very short of funds, however, and resorted to many expedients, one of which got her into trouble. She asked a number of people to contribute the little gold and silver medallions with images of the Virgin or the Saints that are worn around their necks by ma'ny Catholics, which she sold to obtain money to purchase food supplies. One day she was denounced as a speculator by a Polish woman to whom she had refused to give food, and was put in the Checka where she spent sixteen days, being finally released through the in- tervention of a liberal French journalist who happened to be in Moscow, and of the French Communists, who had not lost all their sympathy for their compatriots. Mademoiselle Charpentier, after the departure of Mr. North, undertook to provide for British prisoners. When I first met her she was also sending weekly food packages to Kalamatiano and Royal R. Keeley, the only Americans then known to be in prison in Russia, but this state of affairs did not last long. The arrest of Mr. Keeley as he was leaving the country in May was followed by that of half a dozen others among them Chabrow, who had come to Russia as correspondent of the Federated Press; Thomas Hazelwood, an American deserter from Vladivostok, who had worked his way across Siberia to Moscow; and Dr. Estes and Mr. Flick, the former a journalist, the latter a motion picture operator who had come from Reval with permission of the Soviet Government; Dr. Lamare, a man claiming American citizenship, who had lived for many years in Russia, and Albert Boni, an American publisher, who was arrested after having attended the session of the Third Inter- national on the invitation of Karl Radek. As I learned of the arrest of these people from time to 214 MAROONED IN MOSCOW time I interviewed the Danish and Czecho-Slovak Red Cross officials with regard to the possibiHty of providing for them in some way, but they dedined to take the matter up officially, as their agreements with the Soviet Government covered only their own nationals. Mademoiselle Charpentier was willing to undertake the work of supplying the Americans, but she had neither the time nor the funds, so I agreed to take them off her hands. Then began one of the most interesting though one of the most dangerous and physically tiring of all my experiences in Russia. From the end of June until the 20th of October, when I was myself arrested, I had from six to eight Americans on the list of those to whom weekly food packages must be sent. They were in the Butierki and Checka prisons and the Andronovski concentration camp. Through the kindness of the Czecho-Slovak Red Cross, I was able to send packages to the Butierki and the Andronovski, but those at the Checka I always delivered myself. Tuesday was the day for the Bu- tierki, Friday was receiving day at the other prisons. Every Monday and Thursday I went to the Soukharevka with several market baskets, and a big knapsack on my back, usually accompanied by Madame Skala, who prepared pack- ages for the Czecho-Slovak prisoners. There we bought our supplies, hired an isvostchik to take us back to the Horitonev- ski, and devoted the afternoon to cooking and preparing the food packages. I tried to vary the contents from week to week, but the average package was as follows : three pounds of black bread, a sixth of a pound of tea or coffee, a quarter of a pound of sugar, half a pound of butter or bacon, a small amount of cooked meat or sausage, a few hard boiled eggs or boiled potatoes, an earthenware bowl of baked beans, baked apples or boiled vegetables, cigarettes or tobacco, matches and once a month a cake of soap. To secure funds was a rather difficult matter. I exchanged the American money I had brought with me at illegal rates through the speculators in Moscow's illicit stock market. The Soviet Government had fixed a legal rate for exchange of for- eign currency, but it is so low that very few foreigners, even ^: THE SHADOW OF THE CHECKA 215 Socialists, chose to avail themselves of it. I was very much amused by the fact that several members of foreign Socialist delegations asked me to exchange their money for them at illegal rates. I also used money sent me by radio, by the As- sociated Press through the Soviet representatives in Copen- hagen, and sold some of my personal belongings. I had an amusing time getting rid of a leather jacket and breeches. The sale of leather is controlled by the Soviet Government, as leather is among the prime needs of the Red Army, but I sold mine to a Checkist for a very good sum, I also received con- tributions from Americans and other foreigners temporarily in Moscow, and through the Czecho-Slovaks I had fifty pounds of sugar, twenty pounds of coffee, a dozen bars of chocolate and a dozen cans of condensed milk from the American Red Cross in Reval. I always obtained receipts from the prisoners for the articles received and occasionally requests for clothing or toilet articles which I bought on the Soukharevka. On one occasion a prisoner asked for shoes, without stating the size. New shoes being utterly beyond my purse, I bought a pair of second hand shoes for twenty-six thousand roubles. To my horror they were returned to me the next day — they were too small. I had no money to purchase another pair, so there was nothing left for me to do, but to go on the Souk- harevka myself, sell my shoes and buy a second pair with the money I received. I went early in the morning and lined up in the shoe mar- ket, holding my goods in one hand, displayed to the public. Pretty soon a man came along and offered me fifteen thousand roubles. I told him that I would not sell for less than twenty- five thousand. Then another man offered me seventeen thou- sand. I held off for a higher price. Presently a small crowd began to gather, each man overbidding the other by a thousand roubles or so, until I was finally offered twenty-five thousand roubles which I accepted, when the first bidder offered me twenty-seven. "I've already sold the shoes," I said. "That doesn't make any difference," he returned, "I'm offering you more." 216 MAROONED IN MOSCOW "That isn't the way we do business in America," I an- swered, whereupon he grabbed one of the shoes and I hit him over the head with the other. At this juncture I saw a mihtiaman sauntering up in the distance, and decided it was high time for me to disappear. I snatched the shoe from my opponent, thrust both into the hands of the man who had offered me twenty-five thousand roubles, grabbed the money and vanished into the crowd. After that I found a very good pair of larger shoes for twenty-four thou- sand roubles, so I came out even on the transaction. One day I received a message from Mademoiselle Char- pentier stating that it was necessary for her to see me at once on an important matter. I went immediately to the headquar- ters of the French Red Cross where I found her waiting for me with a tall, gaunt Jugo-Slav from the Koschukovski prison camp, in which were mainly Polish and Hungarian prisoners. "This man has brought a note from a Polish prisoner of war who claims to be an American," she said. "He writes that he is ill, destitute and nearly starving. I can do nothing for him as the French Government is now negotiating for the re- lease of all prisoners, and as you know relations between France, Poland and Russia are such that aid from us to a Polish prisoner of war might cause a break in the negotia- tions." I took the note — it was from "Corporal Frank R. Mosher," who stated that he had served during the war with the French Aviation Service, had later joined the A. E. F., had volun- teered in the Kosciusko Squadron of the Polish Army and had been taken prisoner near Kiev where his plane was brought down by the Bolsheviks. He wrote that he was in very bad physical condition and asked for food and clothing from the French Red Cross. I had never heard of "Corporal Mosher," but it was evi- dent that he was an American, and that he had to be helped at all costs. It was impossible to do this openly. As the armis- tice with Poland had not even been signed, feeling against the Poles was running very high in Moscow, and I knew that the Foreign Office could not, even if it were willing to stretch a THE SHADOW OF THE CHECKA 217 point, wink at aid to Polish prisoners, particularly as, ac- cording to all accounts, the Russian prisoners were anything but well treated in Poland. In fact, the previous year I had myself seen a most disgraceful Bolshevik prison camp at Bialy- stok, where decent conditions were assured the prisoners only after repeated and vigorous intervention on the part of the American Red Cross, Something had to be done, however, as quickly and as se- cretly as possible. I went back to my room at the government guest house where I was staying, made up a food package from supplies I happened to have on hand, and took them back to my Jugo-Slav acquaintance at the French Red Cross. He had been a prisoner since the early days of the Great War, when he served in the Austrian Army, and, like all prisoners of this class, enjoyed a considerable amount of freedom and was allowed to go into Moscow several times a week without an escort. He had become acquainted with Mosher in the Koschukovski camp where the latter had been transferred from Kiev, and had agreed to smuggle out his letter to the French Red Cross. With the package I sent a message to Mosher asking him what he needed and I arranged to meet our go-between the next time he was permitted to leave the camp, at a safe place where I was sure I would not be observed. A few days later I received the list, which showed that Mosher was in need of practically everything, blanket, pillow, clothing, toilet articles, food. ''And if you can," he wrote, "for God's sake send me a pipe and some tobacco." He also asked to know my name. I was afraid to write, but I sent back word that I was Mrs. Harrison, the correspondent of the Associated Press in Moscow. Little by little I managed to buy all the necessary articles, including the pipe, in the Soukharevka. This itself attracted no attention, as I was in the habit of going there several times a week to purchase supplies for the other American prisoners, but I had to smuggle them in small quantities to our secret meeting place, making sure all the while that I was not being observed or followed. After I had sent in my name to Mosher I was both horrified and delighted to receive a tiny note. 218 MAROONED IN MOSCOW "My name is not Mosher," he wrote, "I gave it when I was captured because it happened to be on the underwear I was wearing, which I had received from the American Red Cross. I am Merriam C. Cooper of Jacksonville, Florida, and I know you well. Don't you remember the last time we danced to- gether at a ball at the Hotel Bristol in Warsaw?" He then explained that he had taken Mosher's name, with his rank of Corporal, first, because as Captain of the Kosciusko Squadron his name was well known to the Bolsheviks and they had been particularly anxious to get him, and secondly because he knew that in the event of an exchange of prisoners enlisted men and non-commissioned officers invariably had the first chance. I certainly did remember only too well, and I knew Captain Cooper's record in the French and American armies. Here was a most important prisoner masquerading under a false name, and I, the only person who could help him, was myself constantly watched and under suspicion. If he were found out the consequences to both of us would be anything but pleasant. It was necessary to take extra precautions, but I managed to send him weekly or semi-weekly packages, even money and books, without being caught in the act, and I secretly forwarded a note from him to his parents in Jacksonville, adding a few lines to say that I was looking out for him, and asking them not to mention the fact that they had had news from him except to the members of their immediate family, as his identity was not known to the Soviet authorities. Our clandestine intercourse kept up for over a month, after which, much to my relief, he was transferred to the Andronov- ski prison camp. There, of course, it was perfectly natural that I should learn about "Mosher" from the other prisoners, who invariably reported the names of any additions to their number. When I was arrested later, and cross-examined by the Checka as to my relations with American and British prisoners, my chief dread was that they would ask inconvenient questions about "Mosher," but his name was never mentioned. I never heard anything more about him until I arrived in Riga and THE SHADOW OF THE CHECKA 219 learned that he had escaped from prison in April, when he had reason to believe for the first time that his identity was sus- pected. When we met a few days later in Berlin I heard his own story of his escape, and how he beat his way to the frontier with two fellow officers. In September when the French Red Cross left under an exchange agreement with the Russian Government, I undertook to provide temporarily for the British civilian prisoners, eight in number, and several elderly English ladies, who had formerly been governesses in Russian families, and to send bread to twenty-six British officers from Siberia, who were interned in the Andronovski camp. Since June I had been sending weekly food packages to Mrs. Harding, an English woman who came to Moscow as correspondent of the New York World, and was arrested immediately after her arrival, I did all this work openly, although I had no permission whatever from the Soviet Government. In fact it would have been quite impossible for them to give me official permission, unless I had some authorization from my own government or from the American Red Cross, and this was out of the ques- tion owing to the policy of the State Department to have no dealings direct or indirect with Moscow. The Foreign Office was officially blind to what I was doing, and I continued to send packages to the prisoners until my arrest. Occasionally I learned of the arrest of other Americans and in September I sent food and clothing to a Mrs. Schwarz, who was confined with her husband in the Andronovski camp. I had met the Schwarzes in the Foreign Office in July just as they were ap- parently on the eve of leaving the country, and had imagined that they were long since back in America. I was told of their plight by Patrick Quinlan, an Irish-American and labor leader who had also spent six weeks in prison. In the early fall I met Washington Vanderlip, who was a guest at the Sofiskaya Naberzhnaya. He came with the out- line of a scheme for the resumption of trade with Russia, claiming that the Republican administration which he confi- dently believed would succeed the Democratic party, would be disposed to open commercial relations with Russia, recognize 220 MAROONED IN MOSCOW the Soviet Government, and to take concessions for the devel- opment of coal lands and the establishment of a naval coaling station in Sakhalin. His personal conductor was an English- man named Humphreys, who had formerly worked in the Y. M. C. A. in Moscow, and was looked on as a member of the Foreign Office staff. Mr. Vanderlip was royally enter- tained during his stay in Russia and saw everything the Bol- sheviks meant him to see. He also did a little private specula- tion on his own account. One of the transactions which hap- pened to be known to me was the purchase of a number of paradise plumes and aigrettes, which he sold at a handsome profit in London. During Mr. Vanderlip's stay Clare Sheridan, the English sculptress, was also a guest at the same house, and she and Mr. Vanderlip were much in each other's company to the great delectation of the Soviet gossips. Mrs. Sheridan, who was in- vited by Kamenev, during his stay in London, to come to Russia and make the busts of Lenin, Trotzki, and other dis- tinguished men, was at first regarded with some suspicion by the ever watchful Checka because she happened to be a relative of Winston Churchill. She was very discreet, however, re- signed herself goodnaturedly to being personally conducted and apparently hugely enjoyed her stay in Moscow. I was at the opera with her one evening and we wisely confined our conversation to talk about art, theaters and such subjects. I only saw Mr. Vanderlip for five minutes, after which we were interrupted by the entry of Humphreys who announced that Mr. Vanderlip had to go to inspect some institution or other. The next day I was notified by the Checka that I had no right to go to see Vanderlip or any other American in Moscow without its permission. In the latter part of the summer, just before he left to at- tend the Eastern Conference of the Communist party at Baku, I met John Reed, leader of the American Communist party, who had been released a short time previously from prison in Finland. He was looking very ill from the effect of the hard- ships he had undergone while in prison and he struck me as being rather dispirited; not that he beUeved any the less THE SHADOW OF THE CHECKA 221 in Communism, but I think he saw some of the mistakes that were being made in Moscow and felt that he was powerless to prevent them. I frequently saw him at the Foreign Office in the evenings and we had long talks about Communism. He told me that he intended to return to America and face the charges then standing against him. He impressed me as an intensely honest, rather fair-minded person, and I always felt that a certain spirit of bravado spurred on by what he regarded as unfair treatment in America pushed him rather farther than he intended to go in his radicalism. He was taken ill with typhoid fever immediately after his return from the Baku conference, and died on October 19th. I also saw something of his wife, Louise Bryant, who ar- riA^ed in the fall, looking very chic and pretty in her New York clothes. She was the only fashionable looking woman I had seen for such a long time that I was c|uite dazzled by her. In Moscow all the women were wearing the full skirts that were fashionable in 191 7. I am sure that her chic tailor-made suit with its narrow skirt and straight lines afforded work for many home dressmakers. I liked Mrs. Reed very much, personally, and I felt sorry for her when her husband died, even risking a visit to the forbidden hotel of the Third Inter- national after his death in order to see if I could be of any assistance to her. The next day, when I was arrested, the allegation that I had, under cover of sympathy, tried to get information from her about the Communist party was one of the accusations made against me. This was reasonable ac- cording to Bolshevist psychology, for it was exactly what a Communist would have done, under similar circumstances. In judging what are in themselves arbitrary, and often cruel acts of the Soviet authorities, many people fail to realize that the Communists are acting in accordance with the tenets of what is really not so much a political creed as a fanatical religion, based on an entirely new system of ethics. Since I have been in America I have heard many rumors about the death of John Reed, all of them absolutely un- founded in my opinion. It has been said that he was mur- dered, and a great deal of other nonsense. As a matter of 222 MAROONED IN MOSCOW fact, I believe that John Reed was not satisfied with the state of affairs in Russia. Like most foreign Communists, he was unwilling to accept the tactical dictation of Moscow. That he would have been arrested or in au}^ way molested, however, I do not believe, much less murdered. He was in wretched health during his entire stay in Moscow, and he was not the only delegate to the Baku conference who came back with typhoid fever, which seems to have been epidemic there last autumn. Mrs. Reed told me that his treatment was not by any means what he would have received in New York. She did not approve of the methods of the Russian doctors; she did not believe that the Russian nurses knew their business, and she told me that his diet was not altogether what she would have wished for him, but she attributed all this to the universal shortage in Moscow, and I never had the impression that she felt the lack of up-to-date treatment was intentional. The only matter about which she took issue with the Soviet authorities was his burial in the Red Square in Moscow, "John was a real American," she repeated over and over again. "I know he would have wanted to be buried on Ameri- can soil." Relief work for Russia was begun on a small scale dur- ing the summer by two foreign organizations, the English Society of Friends and the Joint Distribution Committee of America. The former was supervised by Mr. Arthur Watts, a young Englishman who lived at the Savoy, and consisted in furnishing food for children's dining rooms in Moscow and Petrograd. Up to the time of my arrest nearly two hundred tons of food had been distributed in this manner. Mr. Watts' methods were much criticized by the more conservative for- eigners. He was a Communist of the idealistic type and was quite content to receive and turn over in bulk the food supplies sent from England, leaving the distribution entirely to the Soviet authorities. The Joint Distribution Committee whose representatives. Judge Fischer and Harry Kagan of Chicago, and Max Pein of Brooklyn, signed a contract with the Soviet Government, operated through a local organization and got several trainloads THE SHADOW OF THE CIIECKA 223 of supplies through to the pogrom sufferers and the victims of the PoHsh offensive on the Beresina front and in the Ukraine. They had no American representative in Russia and Mr. Watts was the only foreign relief worker who planned to remain in Moscow for the winter. I often appealed to him to help me care for the British but got very little response from him. At the end of September nearly all the foreigners had left Moscow, the weather was beginning to get very cold, the government guest houses were poorly heated, and the pros- pects for the winter were anything but cheerful. No new news- paper correspondents came in except a few representatives of the European Socialist Press. H. G. Wells was in Moscow for a few days but I was strictly forbidden to see him. Owing to the scarcity of fuel which was every day becom- ing more menacing numbers of factories in Moscow were closed. Food was growing scarcer and at the same time it was announced that the government would shortly close all the markets and prohibit free trade. Nevertheless life on the surface was going on very much as usual : the theaters opened with new programs, schools began on time, railroads were operating, though on a restricted schedule. Passenger trains were cut down, however, and it became increasingly difficult for private individuals to travel. To travel anywhere outside of a limited zone around any of the Russian cities it was necessary to have a special permit, stating the nature of your business, a release from the office where you happened to be working, besides the worker's book with which every citizen must be provided. After securing these documents you had to stand in line for hours at a stretch to obtain the tickets. There was an office of the Kazan Railway underneath the Hotel Metropole and it was no uncommon sight to see peasants sleep- ing all night on the pavement in order to be first in the line the next morning. As only a limited number of tickets were given out for each train, it was necessary to secure them a long time in advance. The signing of the armistice with Poland produced little effect on the people. There was no rejoicing and no excite- ment for there had been so many similar events in the past, 224 MAROONED IN MOSCOW which had always been followed by new wars and new mobili- zations. By this time I had begun to realize that not even the armis- tice with Poland would secure me permission to leave Russia. I was still looked on with suspicion, regarded as a person who knew entirely too much about the internal affairs of the country to be allowed to leave at such a critical juncture. A note from Mr. Colby, then Secretary of State, to Chicherin, announcing continuance of the American Government's policy to refuse to have any intercourse with Russia until the formation of a government which would represent the will of the majority of the people, caused much ill feeling against Americans in general and this was heightened by the arrest of numbers of Com- munists in the United States, who, it was said, were held in Federal prisons under abominable conditions. This impres- sion was fostered by the reports of the American political deportees and by the irritation which the Soviet Government felt at their presence, for they were mostly Anarchists and not persona: grates in Russia any more than they were in the United States. It was evident to me that I and a number of other Americans would be retained as hostages and I was quite prepared to spend the winter in Moscow, hoping however, that I would escape arrest until some arrangement could be made for the care of my prisoners. Meanwhile I lived very quietly, going on with my work as inconspicuously as pos- sible, seeing few people except the members of the Czecho- slovak Mission and a few Russian friends, and waited to see what was coming next. CHAPTER XXII THE TRAP IS SPRUNG There is a current saving in Russia that every citizen "has sat, is sitting or will sit in prison." After eight months in Moscow I had ample proof of the relative accuracy of this statement, so that when I was arrested on the night of the twentieth of October I was not taken unawares by any means. Indeed, for some time, as I have already stated, I had had reason to suspect that my turn was coming, and I often used to lie in bed at night listening to passing automobiles, wonder- ing when one would stop at the door of the government guest house in the Mali Horitonevski Pereoulak. A motor in a quiet street at night in Moscow nearly always means a "Zosad," or raid, or an arrest, for none but official personages on official business use cars and the few commissars who work at night have no business to transact in the residential sections. On this particular night I had come home very late, about two o'clock as usual, from the Foreign Office, where everyone, including Chicherin, works all night, the news bulletin being given to press correspondents at twelve o'clock, and I was just preparing to go to bed when I heard a motor stop outside. In a few minutes there was a knock at my door. "It's all up," I thought, calmly, and without getting up from the sofa where I was sitting I called out in as cheerful a tone as I could muster, "Come in." The door opened and a young, exceedingly well dressed, rather pretty woman came in, followed by two soldiers wearing the pointed caps of the Checka and carrying the rifles which have almost entirely taken the place of revolvers even with the city militia. They were nice looking boys, not at all fierce or formidable, and they seemed rather reticent about stating their errand, so I thought I would help them out. 225 226 MAROONED IN MOSCOW "I suppose you have come to arrest me," I remarked. Without replying the elder of the two boys handed me a small slip of paper. It was an order for my arrest, accom- panied by a search warrant, written with a red pencil, and signed by Piatt, executive head of the "Secret Operative Sec- tion" of the Extraordinary Commission, which is the correct title in English for the Checka. At the same moment the Commandant of the house ar- rived, rubbing his eyes, and looking very sleepy indeed. This was strictly in accord with the prescribed legal routine which requires the presence of the Commandant or the chairman of the house committee whenever a search warrant is served. The two men then began a thorough overhauling of every- thing in the room, and nothing escaped them. They were evi- dently experts at the job. All my personal belongings were gone over, my bags turned inside out and the space between the cover and the lining thoroughly examined. The bed was subjected to a rigid search, as was each piece of upholstered furniture, the carpet was turned up and the space behind the radiator received particular attention. All my papers were collected down to the smallest scrap of writing — blank sheets were held to the light to detect pos- sible invisible characters and my books were gone over page by page. As I had collected a number of books and pamphlets, made innumerable notes, kept copies of all my newspapers, articles and telegrams for eight months, there was much to be inspected. And then my money had to be counted. I had quite a lot of it, a million and a half roubles, for I was at that time supplying weekly food packages to eight Americans and a number of British prisoners and had to keep considerable cash on hand for my purchases in the market. The money was counted twice, I was asked to verify the amount, then money and papers were made into two packages to accompany me to the Checka. Meanwhile I had been subjected to a personal search by the woman who had been sent for that purpose. She examined my pockets, felt in my corsets, my stockings and my hair, went over every inch of my fur-lined coat to see if it concealed any THE TRAP IS SPRUNG 227 papers, but, much to my surprise, I was not compelled to undress, and I was treated most courteously throughout. I asked permission to pack the necessary articles to take to prison with me, and this was immediately granted. Al- though warned that there was not room for much luggage in the automobile, I managed to take a bag containing toilet articles, a change of underwear, some chocolate and cigar- ettes, an army bedding roll with a pillow and a steamer rug and my big fur coat. When the search was over I was asked to sign a document, witnessed by the Commandant, certifying that the search had been conducted in a proper manner, my room was closed, locked and sealed with a large red seal. I was then taken to the waiting motor, a fine English car, and driven through the silent moonlit streets to the prison of the secret section of the Checka, which is in a building on the Lubianka, in the heart of Moscow's business district, formerly the property of the "Rossia" Life Insurance Company. From the outside it looks like anything but a prison. On the ground floor a row of unoccupied shops, divided by temporary unpainted wooden par- titions, serve as offices for the Checka. The car stopped out- side one of these, and I was taken into a small dingy room, with a railed space at one end, behind which were sitting two Checkists in front of a large deal table covered with documents and papers. Lined up along the railing were a number of other people who had evidently been arrested, all men except myself. I was the last in the line, and it was more than an hour before my turn came to fill out the questionnaire pre- sented to me by the men behind the table. It was a most elaborate affair, evidently intended only for Russians, for among the questions to be answered were whether I had any relatives in the Red or White Armies. When this was over my money was again counted, my valuables were all taken, includ- ing my wedding ring, and I was given a receipt for them, as well as for my typewriter and kodak. This done, the commissars behind the table yawned, locked up their books and disappeared, and I was left alone with half a dozen soldiers. Then I was subjected to the only personal 228 MAROONED IN MOSCOW indignity I experienced during my ten months' imprisonment. One of the soldiers, who was what we would call a fresh guy at home, proceeded to search me on his own account, ac- companying the proceedings with a number of witticisms which, fortunately, I did not know enough Russian to understand, but which sent his companions into roars of laughter. They seemed to think it especially funny when I protested on the ground that I was an American. "Much good being an American will do you here, citizen- ness," returned my tormentor scornfully. Finally they had enough, and I was taken through a laby- rinth of ground floor passages and up three flights of stairs to the office of the Commandant, where I surrendered my receipts, and was searched again, this time in a perfectly correct man- ner. The commandant, whom I afterwards got to know quite well from his daily visits, was the living image of "Kaiser Bill," and my Russian companions always called him "Vilgelm" behind his back. Officially we addressed him as Citizen Com- mandant. He was a rigid disciplinarian, but absolutely just, and was always willing to listen to any reasonable complaints or requests. By this time it was nearly six o'clock. I was desperately tired, and very thankful when I was taken to my room on the floor below. Here again the first impression was not that of a prison, though as a matter of fact the "Lubianka 2" is the strictest prison in Moscow. Except for the armed sentinel at the door, the winding corridor into which I was taken might have been the hall of any second-class hotel anywhere in Europe. On both sides were numbered rooms. We stopped opposite number 39, the door was unlocked, the light turned on "for five minutes, so that you can undress if you want to," my guard informed me, the door was banged and locked, and I found myself in a small single room already occupied by three women. Two were lying on the floor, and one on a bed of three boards laid across wooden horses and covered by a thin straw pallet. The only other articles of furniture were a deal table, and the "parashka," a large iron garbage can, which is un- THE TRAP IS SPRUNG 229 pleasant but indispensable considering the fact that prisoners are permitted to go to the toilet but twice a day. On hearing the key turn in the lock all three of my com- panions, who had evidently been "playing 'possum," sat bolt upright and began deluging me with questions as is always the custom in prison. Where was I from, why had I been ar- rested? I retaliated with a cross-fire in French and Russian, which resulted in the discovery that I was already acquainted with one of the prisoners, a pretty Jewish woman whom I had last seen at "The Bat," Lietiischa Muisch, one of Moscow's best known vaudeville theaters, with Mr. Michael Farbmann, the correspondent of the Chicago Daily Neivs. The second was a young girl employed in the Foreign Office. Both had been arrested a few hours before I was and professed to be ignorant of the charges against them, though I suspected that my acquaintance was probably in for what is known as "inter- national speculation," which means that she had had illegal business transactions with foreigners. The third woman, a young Russian girl, had been for six weeks in solitary confine- ment until our advent, which explained why she was the proud possessor of the bed. Hers was a most romantic story. She had fallen in love with a Hungarian prisoner of war, a near relative of Count Szechenyi, who married Miss Gladys Van- derbilt of New York some years ago, and was accused of being implicated in a plot for his escape, together with a number of Hungarian officers. For more than a year she had been taxing her slender resources to provide him with food and other comforts in prison, and I never told her that I had already heard that this same faithless Szechenyi was at the same time receiving food packets from a certain Princess Galitzin. She was what we would call in America a good sport. Though facing charges which might mean the death penalty if they were proved against her, she was always in the best of spirits, and made light of our hardships in the most delightful manner. When our herring soup was served at noon she assured me that it was fine for the digestion, and she told me that the six weeks in solitary confinement had been wonderfully 230 MAROONED IN MOSCOW soothing to her nerves. During all this time she had had no books and no amusements, except conversation through a small hole in the wall near the steam pipe, with the man in the next room, a well known theosophist. The morning passed without any incident except our ma- tutinal trip to the bathroom, where we all performed our ablu- tions together in a big tin trough with cold water. In the af- ternoon, I was taken to be photographed, full face, left and right profile, against a white screen on which my serial number was printed — as nearly as I can remember it was 3041. That night, curled up in my bedding roll on the floor, for there had been so many arrests recently that there were not enough beds to go around, I slept well. Strange to say I was not in the least nervous. After many weeks of suspense the worst had happened, and my first feeling was one of relief, for it must be remembered that my status in Russia had always been illegal, I had been arrested once before, and I knew that I was subject to rearrest at any time. The next day, shortly after dinner, a soldier appeared. "Garrison," he demanded. "Here," I answered. "Na dopros," he said, shortly. I was puzzled, for it was a new word to me. "That means," said my Russian friend, "that you are summoned to a hearing. You are lucky. Sometimes people wait for weeks before they are questioned by one of the judges." I followed my guard out into the hall, up and down a maze of stairways and passages, until I reached a familiar room, the office of Moghilevski, a member of the prsesidium of the Checka, who had questioned me in the spring when I was de- tained for forty-eight hours on account of the fact that I had come to Russia from Poland, an enemy country, without the permission of the authorities. Moghilevski is a tall, slender, dark man, tremendously earnest and intensely fanatical in his Communistic beliefs, ut- terly unsparing of himself and others in his work, but he has his human side, as I discovered when I noticed a beautifully bound copy of Rabelais lying on his desk. I remarked about THE TRAP IS SPRUNG 231 this and he told me that he had a weakness for old French literature. Our conversation in general, however, was not about lit- erary subjects. I was put through a rigid cross-examination, lasting nearly three hours about my acquaintances in Moscow, my relations with foreigners, my relations with the prisoners to whom I had been sending food packages, and other matters, during which, while perfectly courteous, he made it quite plain to me that my position was exceedingly serious. In the midst of his questions a soldier brought in two glasses of tea with sugar, a box of cigarettes was at my elbow, and I sat in a big luxurious leather arm chair. My answers were not altogether satisfactory, and the examination ended with my being re- turned to my companions in room 39, with the admonition to think things over and refresh my memory. I had not been back more than a few minutes, however, when one of the prison guards appeared again. "Pack your clothes," he ordered. "Where am I going?" I asked. "You'll see when you get there," he answered. I started to put on my fur coat. "You won't need that," he said, and then I realized that I was probably to be transferred to solitary confinement, the thing I dreaded most, and I said good-bye to my new-found friends with a sinking heart, and followed my escort down the passage. It was just as I ex- pected. I was shown into an empty room, the key turned in the lock and I was left alone. CHAPTER XXIII ODINOCHKA The autumn days are very short in Moscow, and it was already beginning to grow dark, so I could see little except that I was in a small box-like room about nine feet square, with a large window, the panes of which were whitened, so that I could not see out. There was a plank bed, a small table and the parashka, nothing more. It was very cold in the room, and for a while I walked up and down trying to keep warm and hoping that the light would soon be turned on. At that time I did not know enough about prison ways to realize that the guard had forgotten to turn on the light, and that I could knock and ask him to do so. Later I learned to knock and ask for all sorts of things, from a needle and thread to darn my stockings to a light for a cigarette. When we were short of matches we always knocked on the door, and when the eye of one of the prison guards appeared at the peephole, or glazok, which is covered on the outside by the swinging metal number plate, one of us would stick a cigarette through and get a light. Ordinarily the peephole, though inconvenient if you happen to be doing anything against the rules, is not an unmixed evil, but in the "odinochka," as solitary confinement is called, it is nothing more or less at first than an instrument of torture. The guards are instructed to keep a close watch on prisoners in the odinochka, so at least every half-hour, day and night, the number plate is stealthily pushed aside and an eye appears in the peephole, gazes steadily for a minute, and disappears. For some time I was perpetually watching for the eye, but after a while I grew quite indifferent to it, and it did not even disturb my serenity when I was dressing, undressing, or engaged in any of the intimate mysteries of the toilet. 232 ODINOCHKA 233 But to return to my first evening in the odinochka. In about an hour a boy appeared with a big copper kettle of the infusion of apple parings or dried carrots, which passes for tea in Russia these days, at the same time presenting me with a tin cup and a big wooden spoon, and turning on the light. While I ate the remaining portion of my day's ration of three- quarters of a pound of black bread, sipped my tea and nibbled a cake of chocolate, I looked around my new quarters. The room was very dingy, but fairly clean. The walls were covered with a faded flowered paper that suggested the old rooming-house days, and scribbled all over, as high as a man's head, with inscriptions in various languages. Some were funny, some defiant, others despairing. One man had written — "May 5, dopros. May 7, dopros," and so on through a long series of dates until July 15, un- derneath which was written in Russian "now I've told every- thing. This is the end." Another, a Frenchman evidently, wrote in a bold hand "Rira bien qui rira le dernier." (He laughs best who laughs last.) A Dutchman wrote in his na- tive language, "I lie here between life and death, but what- ever happens I wish to testify to whoever may read this, that if I die, it will be as a loyal Communist." Underneath it a Belgian had written "Vive la Belgique." An artist had sketched several soldier types, and a mathematician had covered many feet of wall space with problems in geometry. There were also innumerable calendars, with each day checked off, and each ending abrupt^. One, in English, run- ning for three months, interested me very much, and I won- dered if it could have been made by one of the four Americans whom I knew were in "Lubianka 2," but I could find no trace of the identity of the man who had written it. Finally this amusement palled, and I sat on the radiator to get warm, meanwhile taking stock of the situation. I had good cause to know that my position was very serious, but at the same time I figured it out that unless the United States actually went to war with Russia it was unlikely that I would be shot. Knowing the policy of our administration, I decided that it would probably be a waiting game on both sides, and that the 234 MAROONED IN MOSCOW only thing for me to do was to keep my nerve and my health as well, if possible, and wait to see what would happen. I had no reason either to complain of my arrest or to expect early liberation. It was simply the fortune of war. When I judged it was about bed time, for watches are not allowed prisoners, and mine had been taken with my other valu- ables, I lay down and tried to sleep, but sleep was impossible. My room was directly opposite the entrance door, where there was a constant stream of traffic. New prisoners arrived all night, others were being taken to or coming back from the dopros, and every time the door was opened there was a loud knock, followed by the challenge of the sentry, and a clanking sound as the chain which held it was unfastened. During slack times the other guards gathered round,' the sentry, exchanging jokes. Occasionally there were frantic knocks from prisoners who demanded in loud tones to be taken to the toilet; occasionally there was the sound of women's voices quarreling in another room, and I was continually haunted by the eye at the peephole. Finally I dozed off in sheer exhaustion. When I woke up it was light, and in a few minutes the door was opened and a woman's hand and arm appeared with a broom. From previous experience I knew that this was the signal for me to clean my room, so I jumped up, swept the floor, piled the refuse in a corner by the door, placed the broom beside it, and proceeded to carry out the rest of the day's routine I had planned for myself. First I made my bed, which process consisted in conduct- ing a hunt for the bed bugs who had invaded the sanctity of my bedding roll during the night; then I knocked and asked to be taken to the toilet, where I took a sponge bath in cold water. Soon came the day's bread ration, and a portion of sugar for two days, about two and a half teaspoons. I spread a clean piece of paper on the table and sat down to breakfast, after which I took a walk — five hundred times the length of the room and back. I repeated this every evening. At about eleven o'clock the Commandant appeared, took a quick ap- praising look around the room, and inquired if I had any re- quest to make. I asked for paper, pencil and a few books. He ODINOCHKA 235 told me that I must first have the permission of my sledovatl, the examining judge, but he did not explain that I might ask for permission; so I resigned myself to waiting until I was next called for cross-examination, as I thought I probably would be in a few days. Dinner, consisting of a bowl of herring soup, followed by a bowl of kasha, the Russian national dish, a cereal made of various grains, most of which are new to Western palates, was served at noon. One sort, is I think, millet, another whole buckwheat. I had already learned to eat kasha, but I never could go the herring soup, though occasionally when I was very hungry I held my nose and ate one of the unpeeled potatoes that floated in it. Later the herring soup was varied, sometimes for some weeks at a stretch, by a thin meat broth, and on Sundays, when we had no supper, it was thicker and sometimes contained a piece of meat. The soup and kasha were served in wooden bowls, some of them of the beautiful enamel work which is one of the most interesting of Russia's fascinating peasant industries. Supper was served at five, and consisted of soup only, followed by tea. This was my regular prison fare for eight months. Compared to that served in Soviet dining-rooms outside, it was a little better if any- thing, and knowing as I did, standards of life in Moscow, I realized that I was no worse off in this respect than thousands of other people. I can well imagine, however, that strangers who were arrested almost on their arrival in Moscow would regard it as starvation diet, and certainly no one could get fat on it. In spite of all efforts to keep myself busy and amused the first day and the succeeding ones were terribly long. I re- sorted to all sorts of expedients to pass the time. In my bag I found some paper cigarette boxes and a cardboard toothpow- der box. Out of these I made a pack of tiny cards, with a pencil I had managed to hide, through all the searches of my belongings. I was playing solitaire very peacefully when my enemy of the peephole looked in, saw me, unlocked the door and ordered me to give them up, for cards are not allowed in the Checka. Then I played jackstraws with dead matches and 236 MAROONED IN MOSCOW a bent hairpin. Then I sang under my breath all the songs I had ever known, recited all the poems I remembered and gave myself oral examinations in languages and history. I shall never forget a little incident which happened one day when I was feeling particularly blue, illustrating the kind- liness of many of the prison guards, which I often experienced in the long months that followed. I had completely exhausted my supply of cigarettes and was wondering what on earth I would do without them when one of the guards appeared with the cigarettes which were part of the regular prison ra- tion. The number given out varied with the supply — some- times we received twenty-five a week, at other times, six a day and occasionally none at all for two weeks. On this oc- casion I asked him how many I was entitled to. "Sixteen," he replied. I suppose I must have looked disappointed, for after glancing at me sharply he counted out sixteen in a loud voice, laid down thirty-five on the table, and went away with- out another word. Finally, when my first week was nearly up, the monotony and isolation had got on my nerves to such an extent that I decided I could not stand it much longer, and resolved on a bold stroke. I wrote to Moghilevski and told him I had a very important communication to make. In two hours I was called to his room. "Well, what is it you have to tell me?" he asked. "I want to tell you that it is very important for me to talk to somebody," I said. "You are the only person I can ask to talk to and I will be very glad to have you cross-examine me again. If you don't want to have any more conversations with me at frequent intervals please put me in a room with other people. I can't stand being alone any longer." For a moment he just stared at me, then he did cross- examine me again, and finally turned me over to his secretary, a studious young Jew with a passion for doing problems in geometry when he wasn't trying to solve personal equations. The end of it all was that I was informed that while I had failed to give a satisfactory account of myself, the charges against me would not be pushed at the moment, and that my ODINOCHKA 237 request to be transferred to another room would be granted. After that I did not see Moghilevski again for over two months. I was rather sorry on the whole, for although we disagreed on practically all subjects from Communism to her- rings, of which he was evidently fond, for he often had a bowl of our prison soup for his dinner, his was a keen, alert mind and he was a very stimulating and resourceful enemy. After my talk with his secretary I was transferred to the general room where I spent the next six months, with plenty of company, for we were rarely less than seven, and often as many as eleven or twelve for days at a time. CHAPTER XXIV CLOSE QUARTERS The room to which I was transferred was much larger than any I had seen before, but my first impression of it was that it was exactly the shape of the coffins that are used all over Europe. It was rectangular, about eighteen feet long, possibly seven feet wide at one end, and ten at the other. There were two windows, whitened of course, at either end. They were double, with an air space between, which we used for cold storage purposes, dropping food down on cords through a small pane at the top, which opened on a hinge. This little opening was our only means of obtaining fresh air, as the windows were hermetically sealed with putty. Through it, by standing on the sill, a glimpse of the courts into which the windows opened could be obtained, but not even a patch of sky was visible. During the six months I lived there I never saw the sun, moon or sky, except twice, once in December, and again in February, when we were taken out to one of the public baths with an armed escort, and I never left the room except for our morning and evening trips to the toilet, or when I was summoned to a dopros. It was well heated by steam, but the atmosphere was terrible owing to the utter inadequacy of the ventilation and the chronic aversion of most Russians to drafts. When I entered it was occupied by seven women, . some sitting, some lying on their beds, which were spread with non- descript coverings, here a plaid shawl, there a silk quilt and a lace pillow, farther on another with only the straw pallet pro- vided by the prison authorities. On a long table there was a miscellaneous assortment of cups and utensils. From under the beds protruded pieces of baggage of all descriptions, from peasant sacks and baskets to fitted dressing bags. 238 CLOSE QUARTERS 239 The women were just as conglomerate as their belongings. They all stared at me curiously, appraisingly, and, as I thought, in a rather unfriendly manner, but I afterwards learned to understand this apparent hostility and insatiable curiosity with regard to newcomers. Living as we did, in such crowded quarters, an addition to our number meant more physical dis- comfort; then she might be a spy. On the other hand we were always hungry to hear the latest news from people who had just been arrested, and we welcomed anything that was a break in the monotonous prison routine. As a matter of fact, the Slavs are the kindliest, gentlest, most hospitable people in the world, wonderfully lovable and sweet-tempered. I was thrown almost entirely with them during my term of imprisonment, for I suspect that I was purposely isolated from persons from Western countries, and I never once had an unpleasant en- counter with any of my fellow prisoners. Besides Russians I had Poles, Finns, Letts, Lithuanians, Esthonians, Ukrainians and Jews as companions. They were drawn from every class of society, from great ladies to illiter- ate peasants ; they represented every political party from mon- archists to anarchists. There were some disagreements in our room of course, but on the whole we pulled together remark- ably well and no backward male can ever tell me again that women are incapable of team-work. In Russia there are no generalizations of this kind about women; there is no femin- ism, there are no "women's questions." Women are just peo- ple. Perhaps this is the^ result of the "broad" Slav nature, perhaps it is one of the good effects of the Revolution. But I have gone a long way from my story. As I dumped my bags on the floor and looked around for a vacant bed, one of the inmates, a slender, aristocratic looking woman in a worn out tailor-made suit that had once been a Parisian creation, and wearing the shuffling straw slippers, known as lapiti, which are given out to prisoners by the prison authorities, advanced to meet me with a smile, very much as if I had been a casual caller in a drawing-room. "I see that you are a foreigner," she said in beautiful French. "This is very poor hospitality to offer you in Russia." 240 MAROONED IN MOSCOW We both laughed, and then she helped me to unpack my be- longings while we exchanged information. She was Made- moiselle Helena Sologoub, a member of one of the oldest and most noted families in Russia. Their Moscow home, a beau- tiful old eighteenth century house on the Povarskaya, which is described by Tolstoi as the home of the hero Piotr in his great novel "War and Peace," is now used by the Commis- sariat of Education as a people's palace where lectures and concerts of the "Prolet-Cult" are held. Up to the time of her arrest Mademoiselle Sologoub had been permitted to retain a room there. She had been accused of acquaintance with a White officer of whom she had never even heard, and had been kept in solitary confinement for two months. We became good friends and I was very sorr}' several weeks later when she was ordered to pack and leave. I did not know what had become of her until a long time afterward, when a prisoner arriving from the Butierki, Moscow's largest prison, told me that she had been there for several months, finally being transferred to an internment camp. My other fellow prisoners were three women clerks from the War Office, who had been arrested as witnesses in con- nection with an alleged counter-revolutionary plot in one of the departments, a Lettish Communist, who was arrested with her husband, suspected of being an "agent provocateur," the young wife of a naval officer who was imprisoned in the ad- joining room, and a sixteen year old girl from Archangel, who had been kept in the local Checka, threatened with death, for six weeks, because she had repeated a remark she had heard to the effect that there would soon be a counter-revolu- tion. I am glad to be able to say that Moscow had more sense than Archangel. After three weeks in prison she was ques- tioned by a woman examiner and immediately offered her choice between being sent back to Archangel or remaining in Moscow and continuing her education. The fact that minors who are arrested are invariably questioned by women and treated with great kindness is a point in favor of the Checka, though it is done with a view to ultimately making good Com- munists. CLOSE QUARTERS 241 It is wonderful how naturally one drops into the routine of prison life. I was fortunate on arriving in finding a vacant bed at the narrow end of the room next to the window. There was just enough space to move freely between me and the bed opposite, but I had light, the benefit of what little fresh air was to be had, and the window sill to use as a bureau. Be- sides it was a wonderful strategic position, commanding a view of the whole room, and as the door was at the extreme end of one of the long sides, I escaped the eye at the peephole. Go- ings and comings afifected me very little — I could sit up in my corner and survey the confusion with a delightful feeling of aloofness. Occasionally, however, even my small measure of privacy was invaded. Eight beds covered the available wall space, nine or ten meant beds in the wide part of the room and the shifting of the table nearer the narrow end. Once, for several nights, a woman slept on the floor between my bed and my neigh- bor's opposite, and I had to literally walk over her to get out. There were then eleven of us, and there was absolutely no floor space left, so when another prisoner arrived about two a.m. we cleared off our cups and dishes and put her on the table. When she had just gotten settled still another appeared, so we offered her our one chair, and she sat up for the rest of the night. These congested times were luckily not very frequent, and our average number was seven or eight. Strange as it may seem, I was really very busy in prison, and while each day seemed interminable, the time on the whole passed very quickly. Realizing the importance of getting some exercise I used to do Swedish gymnastics morning and night, to the constant wonder and amazement of my compan- ions. One evening a woman who had just been arrested, after watching me go through my gyrations, asked me very serious- ly if that was the way we prayed to God in America. Then there was the daily hunt for vermin. All the beds were infested with bed bugs and they had to be gone over several times a week. At first I did not realize the importance of special care of the hair, and consequently acquired what are known to the learned as peticulosis and to school children at 242 MAROONED IN MOSCOW home as "nits." It took me some time to get rid of them, and then only thanks to a good friend who gave me a fine tooth comb which was one of my chief treasures for the rest of my term of imprisonment. When we had prisoners from the South we were pestered with fleas, the most ehisive of all plaguey insects. I always inspected my underclothes twice a day, for we had many cooties, especially when prisoners arrived from a distance, and cooties are not only disagreeable but dangerous in Russia, for they are the carriers of the dreaded typhus. Occasionally we had lazy fellowprisoners who refused to join in the daily hunt, but public opinion usually forced them to it in the end. In spite of all our precautions we had three cases of typhus during the winter. As soon as the diagnosis was clear they were removed, and after each one we waited for two weeks to find out if we were infected. There were also several cases of syphilis in the acute state, one being that of a young girl who went suddenly insane in the middle of the night, and had to be taken off to the hospital. We had many cases of acute hysteria, and I was often kept busy for several hours applying cold compresses and administering valerian. We obtained all simple remedies from the prison dispen- sary. Medical service, while not adequate, was fairly satis- factory. There was a woman physician in charge of the prison, and she made periodical rounds of inspection, usually once a week. There was a "felcher," a third year medical student, who could be summoned at any time during the day or night, though occasionally he was not on hand when wanted; and there were cases in our room when acutely ill persons were obliged to wait for several hours without receiving medical attendance. Prisoners requiring the services of a physician were sup- posed to register their names, when the Commandant made his rounds, which was usually several times a week, and they received a visit from the "felcher" some time within the next twenty-four hours. Simple remedies, such as soda, castor oil and aspirin, could always be obtained from the dispensary and prisoners were allowed to receive medicine from their friends CLOSE QUARTERS 243 outside. All drugs sent in this manner were subjected to analy- sis by the prison physician before being given to the inmates. Cases of acute illness were removed to the hospital as soon as possible and the prison authorities were always on the watch for infectious diseases, which might cause an epidemic in the prison. But people suffering with chronic complaints received little attention and were not able to obtain the necessary care or diet. In the other prisons in Moscow special rations are provided for such persons, but in the Checka no arrangements existed for the Bolnichni Stol, hospital table. Pregnant women and persons suffering from undernourishment received larger portions of the regular rations, that was all. During my eight months in the Checka five or six women who were ex- pecting babies within a comparatively short time were kept on our floor for from two weeks to three months. The close quarters, bad air, and inadequate diet were particularly hard on them, and it seemed curiously inconsistent to me, in view of the Soviet Government's avowed principle of caring first of all for children. The problem of keeping clean took much time. Occasion- ally I cajoled one of the guards into bringing me a kettle of hot water from the huge samovar machine in the court which supplied the prison, but usually there was no hot water to be had, so I used to save hot tea morning and evening in empty bottles that had been sent to the prisoners with milk. At night I took a tea bath in a small earthenware bowl that had been sent me by the Czecho-Slovak Red Cross, and in the morning I washed my underclothes in the same manner, one or two pieces a day. I made coarse lace with a crooked hairpin from linen threads drawn from an old bag, took Russian lessons from my companions and helped to mend the prison linen. All the prisoners are allowed to wear their own clothes and no uniforms are provided, but those who are arrested with- out any baggage may obtain shirts and drawers, furnished once a week. At first men and women alike were provided with these garments, but after a while the privilege of wearing Russian B. V. D.'s was withdrawn from the ladies, owing to their proclivity for altering them to conform to the lines of 244 MAROONED IN MOSCOW feminine lingerie. The shirts we mended were sometimes kasicnni, the regulation blouses, such as are furnished the Red Army. At other times we had shirts of all styles and materials, of finest linen, batiste and silk, sometimes with embroidered monograms. The makers' marks in the collar bands were from all parts of the world : Paris, London, Tokio, New York, Budapest, Berlin. These garments had either been requisitioned from former bourjeoi, or left behind by prisoners of all nationalities, who were either freed or met a grimmer fate. I often wove romances about the former owners as I patched and darned. This work was purely voluntary. We liked it because it gave us needles and thread to mend our own clothes and the privilege of having scissors, which as a rule are strictly for- bidden. I never realized before to how many uses one pair of scissors could be put. We employed them to cut our bread, open tin cans, trim our hair and finger nails, mend our shoes, and even to carve meat and sausage. I believe, as a whole, the women prisoners under exactly the same conditions were relatively far more comfortable than the men. We took a great interest in keeping our room as clean as possible and we often managed to make our prison fare more palatable by simple expedients. For instance when the potatoes were badly cooked or frozen, as they usually were, we used to fish them out of our soup at dinner time, put them in one large bowl and mash them with a wooden spoon until they were reduced to a paste which we flavored with a little salt. Then we made them into croquettes and dropped them into our hot soup in the evening. Although we had a great many lice, I rarely saw a woman with underclothes as filthy as the prison underwear worn by the men. Of course it had all been boiled and laundered when we received it to mend, but the seams were coated with deposits of eggs from all sorts of vermin. Besides, we were all very ingenious at inventing games and amusements. We had several packs of cards made of the mouthpieces of the Russian cigarettes, chessmen and checkers made of hardened bread and paper dominoes, all these being CLOSE QUARTERS 245 kept carefully hidden, for games are not allowed. One of our favorite pastimes was fortune-telling with cards, at which most Russian women are adepts, and in which they believe implicitly. Once we had books, for two blissful weeks at New Years', but they were afterwards taken away from us. We often sang Russian songs in the evening after the lights were out, in an undertone, of course, for we were not allowed to sing or to speak in tones that could be heard outside in the hall. Most of these songs were traditional melodies that had been sung in prisons in Russia and Siberia for many decades. I learned a great many of them at the time, writing down the words, but they were all taken away from me when I left the prison. Perhaps my favorite was ''Baikal," a Siberian prison song that tells of the escape of a prisoner from the galleys in the mountains of Akatuya, bordering on Lake Baikal ; how he rigs up a boat from a herring tub, with a torn shirt for a sail and crosses the lake after running away from the penal settlements at Shilka and Nerchinsk. He calls on the Bar- guzin, the fair wind, to carry him. across the lake. Good comrades had helped him to get away, the guards in the moun- tains fired and missed him, the wild beasts have spared him, he has kept a sharp lookout while in the neighborhood of the towns, the peasants gave him bread, the young boys filled his pipe with mahorka; now he is covering the last stage of the flight to freedom — the trip in his frail craft across the "Holy Sea." Another song is called "Slushai." It begins: Like the close of day, like the conscience of a tyrant, The prison nights are dark, Darker than the nights that come with the storm is the darkness of the dread prison. Below the sentries march lazily, keeping an eye on the prison walls. The poor convict at his window hears their challenge, "Slushai." The song then described how the silence of the prison is de- ceptive. It is alive with the inarticulate murmurs of the pris- oners who are thirsting for liberty. Suddenly a noise is heard — a prisoner has broken his bars 246 MAROONED IN MOSCOW and jumped from the window. Something soft falls in a huddled mass at the sentry's feet ; one prisoner is free. Still another song which has long been a favorite and which I happen to remember as I translated it into English doggerel, runs as follows : Dawn and noon and glowing sunset, To my prison bring no light. Watchful guards beneath my window. Da ya ye, by day and night. Little need you have to guard me, Thick and strong my prison walls. Iron bars twixt me and freedom Da ya ye, deaf to all my piteous calls. Chains ! my clanking iron fetters, You I cannot break or bend. You will be my steel clad guardians Da ya ye, till life shall end. Then there were other songs which were very popular, the old revolutionary melodies, such as the "Varshavianka," the "Red Flag," and the funeral march of the Nihilists. The last named begins as follows : Ye victims, who fell in the desperate fight From love without measure for the people. You sacrificed all that you could for their sakes To bring them a life of happiness and freedom. The last verse is : When we accompany them to the grave We say to our fallen comrades, Farewell, brothers, you loyally trod The shining road to freedom. There were other present-day political songs which were very popular. One was "Yabliki," which is sung all over Russia, the various political parties making up the verses to suit their fancy. "Yabliki," I should explain, means "apples," and it is a slang word for describing what we should in America, term "boobs" or "simps." The chorus is : O, little apple, whither away. The Checka will get you, some fine day — CLOSE QUARTERS 247 One of the verses runs as follows : I am in the Bochka * eating Kasha from a bowl, Trotzki and Lenin are boasting, "We've swallowed Russia whole." In the Bochka drinking tea. Nothing more to fear, My man is a Bolshevik, And I'm a profiteer. There was a satirical song which was much sung by the Social Revolutionaries. "He, he Russki Narod — Hey, hey, Russian people," which satirized the Checka, the commissars and the Soviet system of government. Besides there were many beautiful folk songs, of which I never tired, all with plaintive, haunting melodies, and the oldest of all the Russian national songs, the ballad of "Styenka Razin," the first Russian revolutionary, who was executed in 1572, in the Red Square, which took its name from his execu- tion. Still another popular amusement is one that is not con- sidered good form in other countries, but which is perfectly correct in Russia at the present time. This was looking through the keyhole. If anything exciting was going on out- side, we took turns. The young wife of the Naval officer next door always had the right of way when the occupants of that room were taken out to or returned from the toilet, and I had first call when General Klembovsky went out for his daily walk. He was in solitary confinement for a long time in a room opposite ours, and I was interested in him because I had often met his wife, before my arrest, at the Checka when she was bringing him peredachas or food packages, and I was bound on a similar errand for the American prisoners. Be- sides he was chairman of the committee of Former Generals acting as an advisory commission to the General Staff of the Red Army during the war with Poland, of which my great friend, General Brusilov, was a member. Speaking Russian, I was able to learn the meaning of many mysterious noises that went on in the Checka, which have ♦Bochka is the Russian slang for a low-class restaurant. 248 MAROONED IN MOSCOW often struck terror to foreigners unfamiliar with the language, and to read the prison rules posted on the doors, which kept me from the innocent violation of regulations and the conse- quent penalty of the dark room or the cellar, called the podval. During my entire stay in the Checka no one from our room was ever sent to the podval, but two women were put in the dark room. One of these was a young Russian girl who had demanded to be allowed to go to the bathroom out of her regular turn. We happened to have a very disagreeable guard that day and he refused to let her go. Upon this she grew very indignant, which caused bad feeling ; then a little later she de- manded to be allowed to go to the corridor and get a glass of water. This was also refused and she told him what she thought of him. A few minutes later he appeared. "Na dopros," he said. She followed him out of the room and instead of being taken to the examining judge's office, she was taken to a small room on our floor, absolutely dark except for a little light that came in from the transom. It contained no furniture, not even a wooden bed. She was kept there for twenty- four hours without any place to sit or lie down on, but she received the regular prison fare. We prevailed on the guard to take her a blanket and a plate of food. The guards sounded much gruffer than they really were, and very often apparent threats were only rough jokes or friendly admonitions. Nothing was to be gotten by threaten- ing them, but they were almost always responsive to dignity and quiet good breeding. Many of them were actually in sympathy with us, and not a few were deserters who had been condemned to be shot and pardoned on condition that they should work in the Checka. Once we were all playing cards and although we sat with our backs to the door the guard who was looking in through the peephole as usual, suspected something of the kind and burst into the room very suddenly. I seized the cards and crumpled them up in my fist. "You're playing cards," he said severely. "Never," said I. "We never play cards in this room." CLOSE QUARTERS 249 "What have you got in your hand?" he demanded. I partly opened my clenched fist. "Only a little waste paper," I said casually. "How's the weather this morning?" whereupon he burst out laughing and left the room. The many stories afloat about the nightly shootings in the cellars of the Lubianka are absolutely without foundation at the present time. Prisoners condemned to death are kept in solitary confinement for a time, then taken to be shot to a place which I was told is in the Baranski Pereoulak, an out- of-the-way street. During my stay in the Lubianka I only twice heard the automobile which is supposed to drown the noise of the shooting at night, and then only for twenty min- utes or so. Once I heard a prisoner on our floor being taken out to be shot. He had completely lost his nerve, and strug- gled all the way down the hall with his captors, yelling pite- ously all the while^ — "Oh, God, I won't go, I won't go." In general I believe that the number of political executions in Russia at the present time is very small in Moscow, all but the most flagrant conspirators and spies being condemned to internment camps or prisons. CHAPTER XXV PRISON HOLIDAYS It would seem, naturally, that holidays would be harder to endure than other days in prison, but as a matter of fact this was only partially true. Sunday was, as I have already stated, no different from any other day except that we had a little thicker soup at noon, and no supper. The Soviet holidays, of which we had three important ones, the anniversary of the November and March Revolutions and the birthday of Karl Marx, were the same as Sundays in so far as our rations were concerned, but the day before every prisoner received a peredacha from the Political Red Cross. On the seventh of November, the day of the Bolshevik Revolution, we each got half a pound of butter, a pound of sugar, a quarter of a pound of salt, a quarter of a pound of coffee and fifty cigarettes. The articles were distributed by the prison guards, who came in with big trays heaped with packages. When the coffee was being given out I asked our guard, "What kind of coffee are you giving us — Sovietski?" Soviet coffee, I should ex- plain, is a brew like nothing else in the world. At different times I was told that it consisted of roasted bread crumbs, powdered acorns, roasted barley and cow peas. Sometimes the better qualities were mixed with a little chicory, or flavored with something that resembled vanilla. Our warder evidently considered we were all counter-revolutionaries, for he an- swered with a wink — "No, Nikolaievski." At New Year's, Christmas and Easter we received just about the same. The last two holidays with their home memories were the hardest of all to face, and I shall never forget the two weeks just before Christmas. Some of us, including myself, were foreigners. We knew that there was no hope of our re- lease before the great holiday, but there were several Russian 250 PRISON HOLIDAYS 251 women, detained as witnesses, or on relatively unimportant charges, who hoped up to the last minute. One of them was a woman with three small children. That she was in prison owing in large part to her own stupidity did not make her plight any the less pitiful. She had some time before her ar- rest received a letter by underground mail from her brother in Riga. He enclosed a sum of money, and wrote at length about his plans for the future, sending messages to several of his friends in Moscow as to how to get out of the country. At the close of the letter he instructed her to destroy it as soon as she had read it. Womanlike, however, she wanted to keep it, and hid it under the mattress on her bed. Shortly after- wards there was a raid in the apartment house where she lived, for hidden money and food supplies, and the letter was found quite by accident. She and her sister were immediately arrested and the three children were left alone in the apart- ment, dependent on the care of neighbors, with Christmas coming on. The poor woman, who was really utterly ignorant of poli- tics, was grilled and cross-examined repeatedly as to the ac- quaintances referred to in her brother's letter, and no doubt they were all arrested as well. She spent most of her time in prison weeping or laying out the cards to see whether she would be freed for Christmas. On Christmas Eve the first thing in the morning she reached for the pack under her pil- low. The first card was gramddni rddost — great joy. 'T know I'm going to get home today," she declared triumphantly, but the morning and afternoon passed without a summons. Finally at about nine o'clock in the evening, when she had sobbed herself to sleep on her straw pallet, a guard appeared. "Dmitrova," he called. "Sohirdites s veschidmi" (pack your clothes). In less time than it takes to tell it we had waked her up, packed her things, for she was too dazed to do anything but cross herself, and say "Thank God," and she was hustled off, sobbing but radiant. All of us followed her in our thoughts to the little room we could picture to ourselves, with its small wood stove, its jumble of trunks, boxes, pots and pans, parlor, dining and 252 MAROONED IN MOSCOW bedroom furniture, its pile of wood in the corner, the sack of potatoes under the bed, where three small children were huddled together, tired out with waiting for Mdtushka to come home. Perhaps she would still be able to get a Christ- mas tree at the last moment. We wondered, and meanwhile we finished trimming our own tree. It was an immense stroke of luck that we had a tree at all, and we owed it to the fact that three days before Christmas we had been taken out to the public baths with an armed convoy, and marched for some distance through the snow-covered streets. They were selling trees in the Trubnaya Square through which we had to pass, and we managed to pick up a number of branches which had broken off and lay scattered on the snow. When we got back to our room we tied them together and stuck them in a bottle, which we covered with white paper that had been wrapped around a package received by one of the prisoners. Then we set about making decorations. I had some, silver paper in my bag that had been wrapped around a cake of soap. This we made into festoons of little silver balls, string- ing them together on the thread we received to mend the prison linen. Another woman had a piece of red cardboard that had been part of a cigarette carton, and I had a red label from a can of condensed milk. We cut these pieces of paper into red stars, which we attached to the end of every twig. I complained of a toothache, and received some raw cotton and iodine to put on my tooth from the prison dispensary. We used this to powder the tree, giving the effect of snow. One of the women contributed a little gold chain she wore around her neck with an image of the Mat Boga, the Mother of God, and the Christmas tree was done. We thought it was very beautiful. A clean white towel was spread on the table, and then we prepared our feast. It consisted of a tin of American canned beef which had been sent me by the Czecho-Slovak Red Cross, two salt herrings, a rice pudding that had been sent another of the prisoners, prison bread, butter and sugar sent us by the PoHtical Red Cross and tea, an extra ration of which had PRISON HOLIDAYS 253 been served to us at ten o'clock. We hid it under our blankets and pillows to keep it hot till midnight when we planned to have our supper. The guards had promised to give us light till one o'clock, which they invariably did on great holidays, and we spent the early part of the evening playing games. Promptly at twelve o'clock we all stood around the table. We were a strange cosmopolitan company. First there was Pani Pavlovskaya, a Polish woman, who had been arrested some weeks before because she had had a telephone conversation with a strange man who wanted to rent one of her rooms. The Checka had been listening in, as it does on two hundred and fifty telephones daily in Moscow, and it happened that the gentleman in question was suspected of being a counter-revolutionary. Pani Pavlovskaya had no babies to go back to, and her husband had deserted her and left the country in the first days of the Revolution. But she had a King Charles spaniel and a canary bird, and she was as much worried about them as if they had been a pair of small children. Next was Elizaveta Edouardovna, a pretty young German girl married to a Russian. Her husband was in another prison. She had been arrested some weeks before, and up to that time had no knowledge of the charges against her. Then there was Anna Ivanovna, a Little Russian, prostitute by in- stinct, spy by profession, with the temper of ten devils; the dramatic talent of a great artist. Anna Ivanovna's weakness was that she loved pretty things to wear and good things to eat and drink. She had sold herself for a pair of new shoes at the age of fifteen, had abandoned her baby for a man who promised her a green silk dress, and had betrayed a group of Esthonian Communists for a bottle of champagne. I had won her heart by giving her a box of red nail salve with which she rouged her cheeks. She was generous to a fault, impul- sively affectionate, and if she had lived at another time and in a different environment I am not sure that she would have been what the world calls an abandoned woman. Next to Anna Ivanovna stood Maria Casimirovna, a Lith- uanian peasant woman, one of the refugees who had been 254 MAROONED IN MOSCOW driven Into Central Russia at the beginning of the German offensive, and thence to Kharkov, where she was arrested for having, like the good Catholic she was, carried a letter from a Polish priest to a compatriot who was accused of espionage. Maria could neither read nor write, but she spent hours every day poring over her missal which she knew from cover to cover by heart, or telling her rosary. She seldom talked and never complained, but she just grew paler and thinner, day by day, until, when she was finally released some weeks later, she was almost too weak to walk. Then came a Lettish Communist named Vera Ivanovna, a delicate young girl, still weakened from six months in the Central Prison at Riga. She had come to Moscow, had en- tered the service of the Checka, and had been denounced as an agent provocateur. Although her position was very seri- ous, for such charges against Communists, if not disproved to the entire satisfaction of the Checka are punishable with death, she was not afraid; but she was heartbroken to think that she had been misjudged by her own comrades. The remaining members of our party were Olga Petrovna, a Russian woman, the sister of an old general who had been arrested for failure to declare the possession of a lot of family silver, which she was accused of secreting for counter-revo- lutionary funds, and myself. Before beginning our supper Pani Pavlovskaya, in accord- ance with the beautiful Polish custom, broke into seven pieces our substitute for the consecrated Christmas wafer, an Ameri- can soda cracker, the last of a box I had in my possession when I was arrested, giving one to each of us with a kiss, and wish- ing us a happy Christmas. We in turn divided our bits with our particular friends, wishing them the same. Then we sat down to our simple Christmas repast. During supper each of us told where and how she had spent the preceding Christmas. I had spent mine in Warsaw with the Polish American girls known as the Gray Sisters, who were doing social service work under the auspices of the Young Women's Christian Associa- tion, and I had had my Christmas dinner at the American Le- gation with a crowd of fellow Americans. PRISON HOLIDAYS 255 After supper, one after another we sang our own Christ- mas Carols, and the story of the Holy Night was retold in seven languages. I sang Phillips Brooks' hymn, "Oh, Little Town of Bethlehem," not only because it was one of the love- liest carols I know, but because it was written by an American. Finally Elizaveta Edouardovna, our German comrade, made a short speech which I don't think any of us who were there will ever forget. She said that although we were celebrating Christmas in prison, far away from all that had made previ- ous Christmases dear to us, she did not believe that in the fu- ture we would look back on this Christmas as an altogether unhappy one. Prison had taught us one of the great Christmas messages — the message of good will towards men. Thrown together by fate under the worst possible conditions of mental anxiety and physical discomfort, we had learned to live together in peace and comradeship, to lay the foundation for a real in- ternational based on love and forbearance. She hoped from her heart that each of us would spend the next Christmas in our own homes, but she asked that wherever we were, we would stop for a minute on Christmas Eve and send a silent message of good cheer to every member of the present com- pany. No one spoke for a moment — then the silence was broken by Anna Ivanovna who burst into a fit of wild, uncontrollable sobbing. Vera Ivanovna flung herself on her bed face down, saying over and over again, "Oh, Mother, Mother." The rest began to undress, talking about trivial matters to carry on, and I busied myself in my corner with seven mysterious packages containing seven tiny pieces of chocolate, which I had saved for the occasion, for I had told all my companions about our American Christmas, and I wanted to illustrate it by playing Santa Claus. When they had gone to sleep I slipped one under each of the wooden headrests that were supposed to serve as pillows. After all, I thought, it is possible, if you only try hard enough, to have a real Christmas anywhere. On New Year's Eve, according to the Russian custom, we all played fortune-telling games, very much as people do in America on Hallowe'en. First we tried our luck with the 256 MAROONED IN MOSCOW cards, then, in order to find out who was to be our future hus- band we drew slips from a pile on which were written a num- ber of men's Christian names. I told of the American cus- tom of walking backwards down the cellar stairs at midnight with a lighted candle in one hand and a mirror in the other. As we had none of the necessary paraphernalia, we rigged up a substitute apparatus. Our only chair was put on one of the beds. With many smothered giggles and suppressed screams, we mounted in turn on the chair, holding in one hand a lighted match, in the other our only mirror, the tiny one in the lid of my pocket powder box, and gingerly descended the three steps from the chair to the bed and thence to the floor. One of the girls solemnly averred that she saw the face of a dark man in the mirror. Finally we played another rather gruesome game. On a number of tiny slips of paper were written the possibilities for the future that were facing us at the time — a meeting, a jour- ney, an enemy, cross-examination, liberty, prison, death. These slips were placed on a table underneath a towel, and there were three drawings. I drew prison twice, and the last time a jour- ney. This meant that I would not be released for some time, but that I would eventually get home. The death slip was drawn once by an eighteen-year old girl who was arrested as a witness and knew perfectly well that she was in no danger, so we could afford to make light of it. Our Easter celebration was the most elaborate of all, for the Russians make more of Easter than of any other holiday. The spiritual significance of the Resurrection appeals strongly to the innate mysticism of the Russian temperament, and the more material side, largely manifested by an inordinate love for the fleshpots, finds expression in the great feasts that are spread in all Russian homes to celebrate the festival which marks the end of the long, cold winters, with their intermin- able nights. It happened at that time that all of my compan- ions, except a Polish girl arrested for espionage, were Rus- sians. One was a Communist and one a Jewess, and the rest Orthodox. There were nine of us in all. Most of them had families in Moscow and had received wonderful Easter pere- PRISON HOLIDAYS 257 dachas. Our Easter table was really so beautiful that the guards themselves stared open-mouthed at it every time they opened the door. On Easter eve we fasted according to cus- tom, and supper was served at midnight. The table was covered with a beautiful drawn work linen cloth that had been sent us by a relative of one of the pris- oners. In the center was a nosegay of flowering shrubs in a pottery bowl. It was surrounded by a ring of gaily colored Easter eggs and flanked by the traditional Easter dishes, paska, a concoction of sweetened cream cheese, moulded into a pyramid, on each side of which was a cross in high relief, ham, and the koidich, an enormous loaf of sweetened bread with raisins, prepared according to a special recipe. In addi- tion we had vinagrette, pickled herrings, and small cakes, known in Russia as perioshni. On the stroke of twelve we all stood round the table. Our stdrosta (the room chairman) turned to the woman on her right, and kissed her on both cheeks. "Christ is risen," she said simply. "Christ is risen, indeed," was the answer, and this was done by each woman in turn all around the table. Then, as we ate our supper, through the open window we could hear the bells of the Moscow churches in the distance. In all the churches there is a midnight service beginning with the reading of excerpts from the lives of the twelve apostles. After the first the bell tolls once, after the second twice, and so on until twelve is reached, when all the bells in Moscow to- gether burst out into a mad carillon. I know of nothing more beautiful than the Moscow church bells; there are literally thousands of them. Tradition imputes forty times forty churches to Moscow. As a matter of fact the guide books state that there are four hundred and thirty- five, not counting the private chapels, and each has its chime of bells. Most of them are not constructed on the Western Euro- pean plan. Instead of being rung by means of a pendulum they are struck by little hammers and the sound is unusual, but often mellow and very lovely. Our lights were put out at one o'clock, but it was at least five in the morning before the last chimes died away. Ac- 258 M*AROONED IN MOSCOW cording to custom our table remained spread for three days, and everybody who came into the room, including the guards and the man who gave out the prison linen, was invited to share our Easter feast. CHAPTER XXVI THE MILLS OF THE GODS The physical isolation of prisoners in the "Liibianka 2" is about as complete as possible, but nevertheless we were any- thing but isolated intellectually from the outside world, and from those confined in other prisons. Though we were with- out newspapers we were well informed of everything that was going on in Russia. We knew of all the new decrees, all the negotiations with foreign governments, local and general eco- nomic conditions, and our constantly changing population was an accurate reflection of the political situation. During the first weeks of my imprisonment the majority of the political prisoners were persons arrested in connection with an alleged counter-revolutionary plot in the war office. All the employees of one department, two hundred in num- ber, had been arrested together with the department head. A nimiber of naval officers and their wives were also arrested for the same reason. This was in the days when peace nego- tiations with the Poles were dragging on at Riga, and there was a good deal of disaffection in the army. Most of those arrested were held as witnesses. There seems to be no ar- rangement for subpoenaing witnesses in Russia. They are simply locked up until they have given the necessary testimony, or if the case is a very important one, until it is brought to trial, the principle being that it is better to isolate them. After this excitement had died down we had persons arrested for illegal intercourse with foreign missions. All governments which had signed diplomatic or commercial treaties with Russia sent delegations to Moscow, and naturally at first there was much intercourse between them and private citizens. Many persons who had friends or relatives abroad received letters or packages from them through foreign mis- 259 260 MAROONED IN MOSCOW sions; then, the members of the missions were usually very well housed and entertained delightfully, and besides there was always the chance for the less scrupulous to send valuables out of the country or to do a little profitable private business. The Soviet Government, however, regards all official dele- gations from bourgeois governments as espionage organiza- tions, so the Central Executive Committee issued a decree forbidding Russian citizens any intercourse with foreign mis- sions except through the intermediary of the Foreign Office. Few people were aware of this decree, though it was published in the newspapers, for papers are not on sale; the only way for the average citizen to get the news is to read the papers posted in the streets and public places, and most people have no time for this in the scramble for food and the ordinary ne- cessities of life. Consequently many unsuspecting persons were arrested. Among the cases of which I had personal knowl- edge from being thrown with the actual culprits were the fol- lowing : A well-known comic opera singer signed a contract to ap- pear at a concert at the Esthonian Mission. She was unable to fill the engagement owing to a cold, but nevertheless she was arrested and spent three weeks in our room. Although she was never in the slightest danger she was very temperamental and took her arrest most tragically. After every do pros she would walk the floor for some time with a handkerchief around her head declaring that she had never believed that a woman could be made to suffer so; then she would lapse into violent hysterics and consume huge doses of valerian, after which she revived and entertained us all with clever impersonations of celebrated actors and accounts of her experiences and love affairs in Russia and other parts of Europe. She was con- vinced that imprisonment was making her hair gray, so she feigned a sore throat and got peroxide from the dispensary which she dabbed on her locks four or five times a day. Finally she was released through the efforts of her latest flame, a well-known Communist, who sent her wonderful peredachas nearly every day, though other prisoners were permitted to THE MILLS OF THE GODS 261 receive them only once a week, and we missed her very much when she left us. A young Esthonian woman married to a Frenchman who had become a Russian citizen, and who was expecting her first baby in three months, was arrested for having received a case of condensed milk from her sister in Reval and she spent a month in prison. One night a very pretty Lettish girl, just married to a Russian, was brought into our room. For three weeks she was in complete ignorance as to why she had been arrested. At the first dopros it transpired that she was accused of espion- age because she had had the members of the Lettish Mission to tea in her apartment. She was released after seven weeks. Still other cases were those of a young girl employed in the Foreign Office who had accepted a pair of shoes from a mem- ber of the Persian Mission, and the wife of the president of the Political Red Cross, who was arrested for having had a telephone conversation about the loan of an automobile to take food packages to the Butierki, with one of the members of the Esthonian Mission, and detained for forty-eight hours. An old lady in destitute circumstances, a Czecho-Slovak by birth, who had taken Russian citizenship at the beginning of the Great War, but who was already registered for the re- sumption of her own nationality, was accused of espionage and kept in the Checka for nearly two months because she had received food packages from the Czech Mission, Her alleged offense was rendered more grave by the fact that she was employed as a translator in the censorship department of the Moscow general post-office. The Kronstadt rebellion sent us its quota of witnesses from Petrograd, the defeat of Wrangel furnished us with several "White" prisoners ; we had the aftermath of the war with Po- land in a number of unfinished espionage cases, and of the peace with Latvia in the arrest of many Communists who had been deported from Latvia under the provisions of the treaty. One of the Polish espionage cases was particularly inter- esting and I happened to hear the whole story. A party of five persons engaged in commercial espionage was arrested 262 MAROONED IN MOSCOW at Kiev in July, 1920. There were three men and two women. One of the men, becoming frightened, turned informer and was released, the rest being brought to Moscow. Both of the women were in my room in the autumn. One was condemned to an internment camp until the conclusion of peace with Po- land, as was one of her male companions ; another became con- verted to Communism and entered the service of the Polish section of the Checka. The remaining member of the party, an intensely nervous man, was placed in solitary confinem.ent because he had refused to give the required information, and hung himself in his cell. The Lettish Communists were accused of being agents provocateurs in spite of the fact that most of them had spent several months in the Central Prison at Riga, where they were treated far worse than in Russia, many of them being beaten. I actually saw the scars on the arms, legs and breasts of several of them. One told me that they would have starved to death in the Riga prison had it not been for the nourishing supper given them daily by the American Red Cross. It was very pathetic to see these women, all of whom had suffered much and most of whom I believe were sincere and devoted Communists, held in prison in the country where they had hoped to find an asylum. Among them was a trusted courier of the bureau of the Third International, and she was held for four months because she refused to give testimony against her sister, who was accused of espionage. In the late winter unsettled conditions in the Donski Oblast sent us several Cossack women prisoners, the most in- teresting among whom was a young girl recently married to the Commander of the Second Army. She accompanied him on army business to Moscow, where he was arrested on the charge of having encouraged peasant revolts by refusing to carry out what he thought were unreasonable requisitions among the Don peasants, and she was held as a witness. Be- lieving in his absolute sincerity and devotion to the Soviet Government, she waived her right to refuse to testify as his wife, and was cross-examined several times, once from mid- night until nearly four in the morning. She came back THE MILLS OF THE GODS 263 utterly exhausted and terrified for fear her testimony would be misinterpreted. I don't know if this was the case or not, but I heard late in the spring, long after she had left us, that she was in the Butierki Hospital expecting the birth of a baby, and mercifully kept from the knowledge that her husband had been shot. Our prison diet was about the same all winter. In the morning, anywhere from eight to ten-thirty, we received tea, made of apple parings and dried carrots, or Soviet coffee. I was never able to find out exactly what the latter was made of. We were usually allowed to take as much as we pleased. The tea was followed by our daily ration of from five and a half to eight and a half ounces of black bread, according to the sup- ply on hand. Sometimes it was eatable, at others absolutely impossible and always without salt. The best was made of a combination of dark barley, oats and bran. Frequently it was adulterated with a substance that gave it the consistency of clay, the color of dirty putty. Every other day we received two and a half teaspoons of sugar, or when there was no sugar its equivalent in honey or bonbons. Our dinner, which was served at one o'clock, consisted usually of salt herring soup, chiefly eyes, tails and back bones, thickened with a little cereal or containing unpared, half boiled potatoes. In the winter they were invariably frozen and almost black. Sometimes we had, instead, horse soup with salted cabbage. The cabbage was frequently almost uneatable, as most of the half rotten cabbages are salted to preserve them. Once in a while we had a treat — soup with salt pork or mutton, containing slices of salt cucumber. The second dish was kasha, or boiled cab- bage. The kasha was always edible and usually sufficient, but it required considerable patience to eat the variety made of whole wheat for it was full of hulls. I used to pick them out and make a sort of chevmtx dc frise with which I decorated the edge of my bowl. For supper we had the same soup as that served at dinner, followed by tea. Many of the prisoners received peredachas, or food pack- ages, from their friends and relatives, and sometimes we lived high when we happened to have a number of rich bourgeois 264 MAROONED IN MOSCOW companions. Knowing as I did the prices of food on the open market, I used to wonder at the quantities of white bread, cake, cheese, sausage and other kixuries received by many of the prisoners. Of course in many cases it meant that the fam- ilies of the prisoners were selling their last possessions, but in others it was evidence of the enormous amount of hidden wealth that still exists in Russia. For the first three weeks I received no food packages, and then the first pcredachas came from the Czecho-Slovak Red Cross. I shall never forget my joy when I heard my name called for the first time, and saw the signature of Mr. Skala, the head of the Czecho-Slovak Mission, on the list which ac- companied the package. He and his wife had been good friends of mine, we had lived in the same house, and I felt that the small slip of paper was the one link which connected me with the outside world. The peredachas from the Czechs were often meagre, but each week there was something, with the exception of intervals of several weeks at Christmas and Easter, and three weeks after my transfer to the Novenski prison, when they evidently lost sight of me. They also sent me shoes, needles and thread, soap, and other necessities. Be- sides, as time went on, I began to receive occasional peredachas from my Russian friends who were released from prison. Thanks to one of them after six months I had sheets and a pillow case, a wrapper and many other small comforts. As the winter wore on it became evident that my case was being held in abeyance to see what developments would take place in the international situation. I was seldom called to a dopros. Once, in January, I was informed by Moghilevski that "Mr. Vanderlip, acting as the official representative of President-elect Harding, had practically concluded negotia- tions for large mining concessions and the lease of a naval coaling station on the island of Sakhalin, and that in view of this fact all the American prisoners would probably be re- leased in a few weeks." This was the last time I saw Mog- hilevski until the day I left Russia, and there was no more talk of freedom until I was urged in the spring to write to the State Department practically transmitting an unofficial pro- THE MILLS OF THE GODS 265 posal from the Soviet Government for my release, conditional upon the release of Communists then in prison in the United States, or the opening of negotiations for the resumption of trade relations with Russia. This I always refused to do. While I was in prison I received three letters from rela- tives in the United States, and was allowed several times to write home. On arriving in this country I learned that none of these letters had been received. I had several visits from employees of the Foreign Office who came to inquire after my health. One was from Santeri Nuorteva, who was for some time chief of the English and American department of the Foreign Office. He was later arrested and the rumors as to the reasons for his arrest were various. One had it that he joined the noble army of specu- lators, another that he was the secret agent of a foreign gov- ernment. Following Mr. Nuorteva's visit I had a rather amusing experience. When he asked me if I wanted anything, I told him, no, nothing particularly, except a bath, as I had not had one for four months. That night at half -past two a guard suddenly opened the door, turned on the light and demanded "Garrison!" "Here," I answered sleepily, wondering vaguely at the same time whether I was to be taken out and shot, as prisoners condemned to execution are usually removed at night. "To the bath," he announced solemnly. I was taken upstairs to a very clean bathroom with plenty of hot water, supplied from the tank attached to a huge porce- lain stove in the corner, a nice porcelain tub, clean towels and a piece of soap. Needless to say I took advantage of the op- portunity, and in addition to bathing did a week's washing. This bathroom was ordinarily used for prisoners who were brought in from the provinces covered with vermin or afflicted with some infectious disease, which rendered them dangerous to their fellow prisoners. It was no time to be particular, how- ever, and I never bothered as to whether or not there were any germs left in the tub. In the early spring the government became particularly 266 MAROONED IN MOSCOW active against the members of other Socialist parties, and then began what was the most interesting part of my term in prison, for I had as companions a succession of party members. Our room became a real forum for the discussion of all questions of the day and even of the past. There were some old revolu- tionaries, among them a Maximalist who remembered the ac- tivities of the Nihilists and the assassination of Alexander II, and who had played an important role in the revolution of 1905. While opposed to Marxism on general principles, she had taken no part in activities against the Soviet Government, and indeed had helped to keep the underground Commimist organization alive in the Crimea under Denikin and Wrangel. She was a clearheaded, unemotional person, and the circumstan- tial stories she told me of persecutions under the White Con- trazi'yetka were as bad as any I have ever read in the North- cliffe papers, of the horrors of the Bolshevik regime. She had been engaged in educational work during the past year, and was arrested because, on coming to Moscow on a Kom- mandirovka, that is to say, official business, connected with her department, she had happened to share a room with a Social Revolutionary against whom there were conspiracy charges. Although old and in bad health, she was kept in the Checka from the middle of February to the middle of March, then being transferred to the Novenski prison from which she was released shortly before my arrival there in June. Another, a Left Social Revolutionary, had also been one of the leading spirits of 1905, had spent much time in prison under Nikolai and was an old friend of Lenin. She escaped with him via Finland, and she described to me their journey to Helsingfors — how they hid in closed summer dachas, bunga- lows, near the Finnish coast, doing all their cooking at night so the smoke would not be seen; how they sneaked into Hel- singfors by twos and threes, obtained false passports and were smuggled into steamers bound for England or Sweden. After that she spent many years in exile in Switzerland. When arrested, she claimed that she was not an active party worker ; nevertheless following the obstructionist policy of the Left Social Revolutionaries, she refused to be photographed and THE MILLS OF THE GODS 267 was supremely indifferent to prison discipline, talking in a loud voice, though talking in undertones was a rigidly enforced rule of the prison, summoning the guards and demanding whatever she wanted. Failing to persuade her to be photographed, the guards resorted to stratagem. She was summoned to a fake dopros, but when she found out what was up she sat down on the stairs, refused to move, and dared her escort to violence. Then she demanded immediate release, or transfer to the Socialist section of the Butierki prison, and announced that she would begin a hunger strike within twenty-four hours. Receiving no answer, she struck, and starved for five days, after which she was taken to the Butierki. The same thing happened in the case of another Left So- cial Revolutionary, a young, handsome and exceedingly bril- liant woman from Kharkov. She had been condemned to a term of imprisonment in the Butierki, but as her health broke down, she was transferred to a prison sanatorium from which she escaped, beating her way back to Kharkov without money, papers or documents. The authorities were on her trail, how- ever, and she was arrested almost immediately and brought back to Moscow, absolutely without baggage and still wearing the clothes in which she had made her escape some two weeks before. Naturally she was very dirty and covered with ver- min, but she refused to bathe, comb her hair or change her underclothes or eat any food until she was returned to the Butierki prison. "I am filthy," she said cheerfully. "I shall probably in- fest you all with vermin." In spite of this fact, which was undoubtedly true, I found her a delightful companion, and I was sorry on my own ac- count when she was transferred to the Butierki three days later, though thankful for her sake. At this time obstruction among the Social Revolutionaries in the Checka became general, there was a feeling of tension in the air, mysterious noises were heard from various parts of the building, yells, howls, and the sound of breaking glass. One man, in solitary confinement in our corridor, who had been kept for six weeks without a dopros, spent a whole 268 MAROONED IN MOSCOW morning kicking on his door. For this he was confined in the cellar podval for several days. (The podval is used for the punishment of unruly prisoners. It is cold, damp, dark, infested with rats and vermin.) On being returned to his cell he smashed the window and the transom and made kindling wood of his bed. Another prisoner, on being summoned to a dopros. sent word that he had nothing to say to the sledovatl, and therefore did not care to go, but if the sledovatl had anything to say to him he would be glad to have him call. Then the Anarchists, a number of whom were arrested at about that time, began to practice obstruction. Twelve of them went on a hunger strike simultaneously, one, a very pretty girl about eighteen yeaVs old, being in my room. I later met her in the Novenski prison, from which she was released in July, as she had tuberculosis. The Anarchists caused still more excitement, armed guards were posted along the corridor and we had the feeling that a storm was going to break. The situation was finally relieved, however, by yield- ing to the demands of the obstructionists, and Left Social Rev- olutionaries and Anarchists were transferred to other and bet- ter prisons. All movements of this kind were concerted and simulta- neous. They were even supported by similar action in other prisons, thanks to the underground railway which exists among all political prisoners. The prisoners in my room were in constant communication with others in and out of prison. One means of communication known to the authorities, but which they were unable to control, and in some cases tolerated with a view of trapping the unwary^, was by means of writing on the walls of the bathroom. The Socialists had their ciphers, which were unreadable, but others wrote messages which were sometimes interpreted with disastrous results. Then there was prison telegraphy by means of tapping on steam pipes or walls. There were numerous pipes running through our room and sometimes we heard three or four furtive telegraph messages going on at once. Those of us who were not politically minded used to have THE MILLS OF THE GODS 269 very entertaining conversations with the men in the next room, in which, by the way. Captain Kilpatrick of the American Red Cross was confined for several weeks, unfortunately before my arrival. This was the way it was done. There was a steam pipe which ran along the narrow end of our room close to the floor and passed into the next. We found that by lying flat on the floor and putting our lips to the pipe the sound could be carried to the next room. The person on the other side also lay on the floor, putting his ear against the pipe. Later the men dug a little hole around the pipe, and we passed through notes, all of course absolutely non-political in character because there might have been a spy in the room adjoining. One of the men, who was an artist, drew sketches of all of us as he imagined we would look, and we had a great deal of fun. There was a girl in our room who developed a real ro- mance by means of our clandestine correspondence. She had already had a novel and rather romantic escapade. She was a Russian, but had lived for some time in Tiflis, the capital of Georgia, where she was a student at the University, and when Georgia went Red she decided she would like to get out of the country, so she contracted a Soviet marriage with a Turk in order to leave with him for Constantinople. Of course it was only a mariage de convenance and they were to part as soon as they got to Turkey, but at Batoum, where they were to take the steamer, the Turk was arrested for espionage, accused of being an English agent, and brought to Moscow with his Russian bride, who was held as a witness against him. Once I was summoned to our improvised telephone and to my surprise heard a familiar voice at the other end. It was that of the Commandant of the government guest house where I had lived so long, and whom I had last seen taking part in the search of my room. "Margarita Bernardovna," he whis- pered, *T want to tell you that all your baggage is sealed and quite safe." He also gave me news of my Czecho-Slovak friends and other people whom I had known at the Horitonev- ski. He was accused, it seemed of speculation, but he was shortly taken away and I don't know what became of him. 270 MAROONED IN MOSCOW We always posted sentinels at the door while these clan- destine conversations were going on, but several times we had narrow escapes. Once one of the girls was lying on the floor talking through the pipe, when the guard who had approached on tiptoe, opened the door very unexpectedly. I just had pres- ence of mind ejiough to kick her as a warning not to get up and then I sat down unconcernedly on the bed under which she was lying and swung my feet. Finally we began to feel that we were suspected and we were still more uneasy when a Finnish girl who had been really imprudent, even going to the extent of throwing notes out of the window to compatriots who worked at the electric saw in the yard below, was detected, and taken off to solitary confinement. One night, March 24th, to be exact, at about eleven o'clock, guards came to our room and ordered us to pack immediately.. We were sure that everything had been discovered and that we were bound for the podval. There was nothing to do but make the best of it, so we collected our belongings and prepared to spend our Easter underground. Our stuffy, overcrowded room suddenly looked very comfortable, and we filed out into the corridor, a disconsolate procession of nine women, laden with miscel- laneous baggage of every description. CHAPTER XXVII AN ATTIC CELL Much to our surprise, however, we were taken upstairs, not down, and found ourselves on the top or garret floor, which had formerly been used for employees. Evidently the con- gestion had become so great that it had been necessary to transform this floor also into prison quarters. The room into which we were shown contained about as much floor space as the one below, but it was shorter and wider. The walls, which had been newly painted, sloped at a sharp angle on three sides, making it seem smaller, and there was only one small dormer window, giving most insufficient light, and hermetically sealed. As usual I made for the bed nearest the window, but even there it was intolerably close, the air was damp, cold, permeated with the smell of fresh paint. The beds were new, and therefore absolutely clean, but we had mostly old pallets which were anything but above suspicion. We unpacked and went to bed, but no one was able to sleep. The atmosphere was absolutely stifling and as chill as a vault. To add to the other smells our parashka was without a lid. We knocked repeatedly on the door during the night demand- ing air and a lid for the parashka. The former request was refused, and we were told that there were no lids for the parashkas on that floor, but that they were being made. I remained in that room until the beginning of June, but we never received a cover and we had to make a piece of old porous bagging answer the purpose. By morning we were all fairly gasping for breath, had turned various shades of white, green or yellow, according to our various complexions, and we were so weak we were hardly able to move. We demanded the Commandant ; the Natsiratl, 271 272 MAROONED IN MOSCOW or ofificer on duty, who was one of the few brutal guards, a Lett by the way, refused to send for him. Finally we wrote a collective Zdyavlenye to Menjinski, the head of the Secret Section of the Checka. It simply said : "We are suffocating. If you don't believe it come and see for yourself," and it was signed by all of us. Now the writing of these petitions is one of the inalienable rights of prisoners which has never been questioned. Our warder was afraid to hold it back and sent for the Command- ant. In two hours he arrived, and I think he was frightened himself at our appearance, for he ordered the window to be broken open immediately. After that it was never closed, but we were strictly forbidden to look out of it into the court- yard. Of course we did look when we were not observed, and it was an unfailing source of amusement to us, for it was op- posite the registration office where all prisoners who are dis- charged or sent to other prisons receive their papers, and the pridvoritelne, or general detention room, where prisoners are frequently held pending commitment or cross-examination. By standing on one of the beds, in the shadow, a little back from the window, we had a good view of all who passed through, and when our companions were taken out we always arranged for them to give us a sign to show whether they were to be set at liberty. Sometimes we were indiscreet and were reported on by someone opposite; then there were threats to close the window oi; we were told that if anyone appeared at it the sentry had orders to fire, which he actually did once or twice to frighten us. During the weeks that followed we endured other physical discomforts the chief of which were the frequent breakdowns of the pltunbing, which necessitated repairs that kept us from going to the bathroom sometimes for eighteen hours at a stretch, and the breakdown of the apparatus for boiling water. When this happened, as it did several times, water had to be boiled on the prison stove, we were only allowed a cup of tea apiece morning and evening, though we usually cajoled the guards into giving us a little more, and there was no boiled drinking water in the cooler in the corridor to which we were AN ATTIC CELL 273 usually allowed access. Once during the very hot weather in May this state of affairs continued for a week at a time. Meanwhile, the political situation continued to be very in- teresting. Nearly all the prisoners were Socialists, Menshe- viks, Right Social Revolutionaries and Jewish Bundists, be- longing to the seceding faction of the Bund which did not unite with the Third International. We continued the political dis- cussions begun downstairs, but there were no more hunger strikes and no more obstruction. Having a majority of Socialists, we instituted a Commune, and as I was the oldest inhabitant in point of length of im- prisonment and all the indications were that I was a permanent fixture, I was appointed Food Administrator. We pooled all our peredacJias, and every day I had to plan menus for the three meals. Sometimes when most of us were receiving food packages, we lived sumptuously; again, when there were many from other cities, with no connections in Moscow, there was hardly enough to go around. It must be remembered, how- ever, that all the food we received from the outside was cold, and we had no means of heating It. After eight months of perpetual picnics I began to find this very trying. In our new room we started several new amusements, one of which was Swedish gymnastics, the other Spiritualism. We never had a real medium, but we drew a circle on a large sheet of wrapping paper, marked letters and numbers around it, placed an overturned saucer on it, with an arrow indicator marked on one side, and then put our fingers on the saucer, very lightly, but in such a way as to form an unbroken circle of contact. Then we kept perfectly still. In a few minutes the "spirits" began to get busy spelling out remarkable messages to the credulous. I used to have great fun with this, imper- ceptibly guiding the saucer so that it would stop opposite the letters I wanted, and my companions never caught on. Once or twice, however, when I did absolutely nothing we made some experiments that had really interesting psychic results. There was an old Lithuanian peasant woman in the room, who looked upon our proceedings with grave disapproval, re- garding them as nothing less than necromancy. She always 274 MAROONED IN MOSCOW sat in the far end of the room and crossed herself when we began. One night she was sitting there as usual when she sud- denly jumped up with a wild whoop and commenced switch- ing under the bed with a handkerchief. 'There he is; I see him!" "What is it, Christina?" we cried, thinking that it was probably a rat, for we were pestered with a plague of mice. **The Devil," she answered promptly, and nothing could make her believe that she had not seen the Evil One in per- son lurking under our beds. We had a number of peasants at different times during the winter, and they were all interesting types in their way, but the funniest was Anna Ivanovna "Kapusta." "Kapusta" in Russian means cabbage, and that was just what Anna Ivanovna most resembled with her face and figure exactly like a full blown head of early cabbage. She was arrested by mistake for a person with a similar name who was supposed to have been implicated in the Kronstadt rebellion and she was re- leased after ten days when the error was straightened out. Her account of her arrest, during which she unconsciously implicated herself still further was one of the funniest I ever heard. "I'd just come home from work, sweating all over," she said, "when a fellow comes into my room and says I'm arrested." "'Why?' I asks." " 'Haven't you had relations with sailors from Petro- grad ?' says he." "Sure," I answered, "the fellow I goes out with is a sailor." " 'Give up your papers and documents,' " he orders real sharp, so I hands him out my worker's certificate and my prayerbook which was all the documents I had. " 'Where's your party card?' he asks." "I knew I had to have a bread card, but I'd never heard of them things and I told him so. He wouldn't listen to nothing else, just brought me along and threw me into this room. Wait till I get out of this, I'm going back to the village." Anna Ivanovna had had quite enough of being part of the class-conscious proletariat, and I am sure she kept her word. AN ATTIC CELL 275 I was asked by several of my friends to give a series of talks on foreign countries, to be held every evening after sup- per, so I brushed up my history, geography and economics, and told them all I knew about America, France, Germany, and the British Empire. They were insatiable in their desire for information. I drew geographic and economic maps of the various countries, showing their physical features, various zones of production, natural resources, explained the origin of the people, outlined their history down to the present day, sketched the Great War to its close, and the effect it has had on industrial, social and political conditions the world over. They also wanted to know all about literature, art, architec- ture and national customs. In return they told me all about Russia, for they were ex- ceedingly well up on all subjects pertaining to their own coun- try. Our talks extended over nearly a month, and their interest never flagged. This to me was very remarkable. The Rus- sians possess in a wonderful degree the faculty of forgetting their own personal problems and of complete absorption in purely abstract or impersonal questions. I don't believe that anywhere else in the world it would be possible to find a group of nine women, all in prison with no immediate prospect of release, isolated from their families, suffering great physical discomforts, and many of them facing serious charges, who would be interested in such matters. This attitude on the part of most of the women with whom I was thrown and my blessed sense of humor were the two things that enabled me to carry on through ten long months of imprisonment. Under such conditions you have either got to go under or live for things of the mind and spirit. There is no middle course. In studying the types with whom I was thrown I found that the old aristocrats, trained party workers and simple peasants were the people who stood imprisonment best. The weakest, the most spoiled and also the most treacherous and dishonorable, with few exceptions, were members of the former middle bourgeoisie. They lived best, complained the 276 MAROONED IN MOSCOW most and betrayed their companions the oftenest in prison. Sometimes they almost made me class conscious. Occasionally the terror of some of these poor people who had been arrested without any warning had its comic side. Once an old lady was brought to our room, carrying as her sole piece of baggage an empty milk can. "I was so flustered when I was arrested," she said, "that I grabbed the first thing in sight." This same old lady although she was never in the slightest danger, being held merely as a witness, was obsessed with the idea that she was to be shot. One night her plank bed slipped off the trestle which sup- ported it and fell to the floor, old lady and all, with an awful thud. She waked up shrieking: "I'm shot, I'm shot." It was a long time before we could convince her that she wasn't dead. In the late spring I was at last able to get some books after I had in vain appealed to my Sledovatl all winter to let me have some reading matter. The Commandant of our prison was removed and a Lett appointed in his place. Several times I had occasion to ask small favors of him, which he always granted, and I noticed that his manner towards me was a shade more friendly than towards the other prisoners. I imag- ined that this was because I never had hysterics, never made a scandal, which is the Russian for making a scene, and never made unreasonable demands, but I was soon to know the real reason. One day I asked him if he could let me have some books. He said nothing, but the following afternoon a guard came and called out "Garrison to the Commandant." People who had committed some breach of discipline were usually summoned before the Commandant for reprimand or punishment, and I wondered what I had done. When I arrived at his office he ordered his assistant to leave and shut the door. Then he said very kindly : "You asked for books. I have a few here that have been confiscated from the prisoners' baggage; you can look them over and take your choice." I thanked him, went to the bookshelves in a corner picked AN ATTIC CELL 277 out two, and then he said quite abruptly : "You are an Ameri- can. America is a great country. Tell me all about it." I sat down and talked to him for about twenty minutes. When I had finished he said quietly: "I have a brother in America. I've often wondered how he was living for the past seven years. I meant to go there myself, too, but I was caught by the conscription at the beginning of the Great War. Thank you very much." So that was the secret of his kindness to me. He had once wanted, and perhaps still secretly longed to be an Ameri- can himself. Before I left the ofifice I had persuaded him to give me a pencil and paper, giving him in return my word of honor that I would not let them out of my hands. After that I was able to exchange my books every week or so. There were a number of interesting Russian novels, some good French classics and several German books to choose from. On his shelves I noticed also a number of missals in the old Slavonic that had evidently been taken from priests. Periodically throughout my term of imprisonment in the Checka we were annoyed by spies. I say annoyed merely because anyone who has been in prison for a certain length of time, or who has ever been in prison before, knows how to size up and detect a nasyetka. She is sometimes very clever and plausible, and inexperienced persons often fall for her. Safe general rules are never to trust a person until you have been together for at least two weeks, or unless you know his or her antecedents and record, never to trust anyone who talks too openly at first against the government and to beware of people who are called frequently or at unusual times to a dopros. Even then mistakes are sometimes made with disastrous results, and newcomers are often amazingly indis- creet before they can be warned. Once a young girl employed in one of the Soviet offices was brought to our room in the middle of the night. Before anyone could stop her she burst out, "Oh, I'm so frightened I don't know what to do. My brother was arrested last year, tried for counter-revolutionary activities and condemned to ten years in prison. He escaped from the Butierki three 278 MAROONED IN MOSCOW months ago, and has been hiding in Moscow ever since. The Bolsheviks think he has left the country, but he often comes in to see us. He is living" — here she named the street and house number. "I feel sure they have found out something, and they are going to cross-examine me about him." As it turned out there was no spy with us at the time, but if there had been the brother would have been captured the next day. When the girl was summoned to a cross-examination it turned out that she was accused of having received a present from a member of a foreign mission. She was thoroughly frightened and released on her promise to resist such blandish- ments from Oriental gentlemen in the future. The nasyetkas were of two types: the agents who simply listened to the conversations that went on, and the provocators who tried to get the prisoners to implicate themselves and others by involving them in illicit intercourse with their com- rades in other rooms or with persons at liberty. There was an interesting case of that sort in the early spring. A young Jewish woman, a member of the Social Revolutionary party, who had been in prison for several weeks was suddenly told to pack her things as she was to be freed within an hour. So say- ing the guard left the room. This was rather unusual, as prisoners are generally not told their fate until they are taken to the Commandant's office, and if they are to be released they are not left alone for a minute while packing for fear that they may secrete notes from other prisoners. The girl, who had been arrested before was well aware of this fact, and her suspicions were immediately aroused. She refused all requests to take out notes from her fellow party members, as well as one from an apparently much persecuted Menshevik, who begged her to take a message to party headquarters, and seemed bitterly disappointed when she refused. She was then taken downstairs and searched from head to foot by a woman with a minuteness and in a manner which ordinary decency prevents me from describing in detail. Nothing of course was found. After this she was released, but, happening to remember that she had left something in her, room, she went back to the Commandant's office to ask for ANi ATTIC CELL 279 it and was immediately rearrested and locked up on the same floor, although not in the same room she had previously oc- cupied. It was perfectly evident what had happened. The Menshevik with whom she had been in prison was an agent provocateur, she had offered to send out a message herself and had tried to persuade the other Social Revolutionaries in the room that it was perfectly safe to do so, in-order to obtain information that would lead to the arrest of persons then at liberty. The Checka had never intended from the first to release the girl and if she had not happened to return to the office she would have later been rearrested in her own home. At one time a woman was brought to our room in the mid- dle of the morning, which was unusual as most people are ar- rested at night. She seemed like a rather stupid, unintelligent person, but kindly and good-natured. I had several friends who spoke some French and German and we often conversed in those languages. She always professed that she was sorry she could not join our discussions, as she was unable to speak either language. There was a young girl in our room, almost a child, who for no apparent reason, took a violent dislike to our new companion. One day the child, who was a fiery little thing, got into a violent dispute with her, and to get even dropped her slippers into the parashka. The woman pro- tested, whereupon the little girl threatened to beat her. No one interfered, for she was not a popular person, and the woman was terrified. Turning to me, she shrieked in perfectly good French, "Madame, Madame, save me from this little wild cat! Oh, mon Dieu, the child will kill me!" It was rather amusing, but it did not cause us any uneasiness, because no one had trusted her from the beginning and it only con- firmed our suspicions. In spite of all my interests and activities, and the sys- tematic efforts I made to keep in good physical shape, the long confinement without air or exercise began to tell terribly on my health and in the late winter I started to run a persistent tem- perature, a bad cold in December had left me with a bother- some cough, and I was very weak. I spoke several times to the physician about my condition, but she said that she could 280 MAROONED IN MOSCOW do nothing for me as she only had the power to send people to hospitals. I also wrote several times to my sledovatl, asking to be transferred to some place where I could have fresh air and sunshine, but received no answer. Finally one day when I was feeling particularly ill, one of the medical students who had frequently had occasion to visit our room asked me if he could do anything for me. I told him that no medicine would do me any good, and that all I needed was air and sun. He promised to ask the doctor to write a recommendation for my transfer to another prison. I heard nothing more for a week, and then one afternoon, quite unexpectedly, a guard appeared with the order, "Garrison, pack your clothes." I had given up hope of ever hearing my name called that way, but I stag- gered to my feet, got my belongings together, said good-bye to my friends, half walked, half fell down four flights of stairs with my heavy baggage. Then I was taken to the court through which I had seen so many of my companions pass, and to the registration office, where I received my transfer papers to the Novenski and the receipts for my valuables, which however, were retained in the Checka. Then I was assigned an armed escort, and to my amazement, taken, not back into the court to join an echelon of other prisoners, but out into the street. CHAPTER XXVIII WHEREIN A JAILBIRD TURNS JAILER For a moment I was dazed by the imexpectedness of what had happened. I had thought that I was to be taken to the Novenski in the big Black Maria which was ordinarily used to transfer prisoners from one place to another, and which I had often surreptitiously looked at from my attic window as it was being loaded in the court below. But here I was, thrown out into the Lubianka Square, with my escort, a good-natured, stupid Russian boy about seven- teen years old, with no idea as to where I was going or how I was to get there. I simply knew the name of the prison, that was all. The dazzling sunlight blinded my eyes, and I felt like a mole that has suddenly come up from months underground. The noise of passing trolley cars, carts and droschkes deafened me, and I was confused by the stream of passersby. Still thinking, quite naturally, that as I was ill, some means of transportation would be provided for me, I waited for my guard to call an isvostchik, one of the picturesque cabbies who were waiting nearby for fares, but he made no move, and stood quite dumbly with my bedding roll over his shoulder and his rifle in one hand. "Well, aren't you going to requisition a droschke?" I asked finally. *T have no authority to do that," he answered. "We've got to walk," "I can't walk," I protested. "I am much too weak. Go back and tell the Commandant that I must have a cab," but this he resolutely refused to do. He made no move to go on, but continued to gaze stolidly in front of him at the passing crowd. Seeing that there was nothing to be done, I resolved to try to foot it to the Novenski, but as I was very weak and 281 282 MAROONED IN MOSCOW hampered with a bag and knapsack into the bargain, I had grave doubts as to whether I could make it. "Let's walk, then," I said, "but we must go very slowly. Where is the Novenski prison?" "Ne snaio (I don't know)," was the unexpected answer. Under the circumstances there was nothing for me to do but put myself in prison again, so I walked up to a gentleman who was passing and asked him the way to the Novenski. "I am a prisoner, and am being transferred from the Lubianka," I explained, "but my guard hasn't the faintest idea as to how to get there." Under ordinary circumstances in an ordinary country any- one would have been astonished to say the least, at such a ques- tion, but nobody is ever astonished at anything in present-day Russia. Without any comment he explained the easiest route to get there, and then added very kindly, his voice betraying the sympathy he did not dare put into words — "But you can't walk there, it is very far, at least six versts, and you have a lot of baggage to carry." Then he lifted his hat and passed on, a bit hurriedly, for it isn't very safe to be seen talking to a prisoner in the street. For a few minutes I stood undecided, not knowing what to do ; then I had an inspiration. I had no money, and I could not pay an isz^ostchik, but I had two cans of American corned beef in my bag. Perhaps I could find one who would accept that as payment. I negotiated with three without result, ex- plaining that I was a foreigner, ill and being transferred from the Checka to the Novenski prison, but that I was out of money and could only pay in American canned beef. I got out a can as a sample, it was examined, weighed and turned down, and I was about in despair of ever being able to get locked up again when I struck an old man with one leg who agreed to take me. I was about to get into the droschke when I saw an acquaintance, a woman with whom I had spent more than three weeks in the Lubianka. She dashed up to me, kissed me on both cheeks, and exclaimed effusively how glad she was to see me out again ; but when I explained that I was not free, but WHEREIN A JAILBIRD TURNS JAILER 283 on my way to another prison, she cast one frightened look about her and scuttled away down a side street, hardly waiting to say good-bye. Then my guard andl, having piled the bag- gage in front of us, took our places on the back seat of the droschke, he with his rifle between his knees, both of us smok- ing cigarettes and chatting very amicably. When we arrived at the prison I was very nearly all in, my head was spinning, my knees wobbled, and I felt that I had a high temperature. If I could only get somewhere so I could rest ! The gloomy brick f agade of the prison, which is a sub- stantially built structure, dating from Imperial times, and has long been used as a criminal prison for women, did not look as forbidding as it would have under ordinary circumstances, and it was with a feeling of positive relief that I saw the face of the warder appear at the door in answer to my ring. Inside, I at once realized that I had come to a very different sort of place. Instead of a "checkist" in a tall cap I found a pleasant-faced, gentle-voiced woman in the room for the reception of prisoners, who took my name, asked me a few necessary question and turned me over to a woman attendant to be taken to the prison hospital for a medical examination. Afterwards she and I became great friends. She was a pris- oner herself, the widow of a White officer, which constituted the sole reason for her, being in prison, for she was one of the least politically-minded persons I have ever seen. When I left the office and was taken out into the court on my way to the hospital, I felt as if I were in a sort of terres- trial paradise. The court was a large one, with grass and flowering shrubs, and brilliantly flooded with sunshine. Here and there were benches on which women were sitting, talking, knitting and sewing, a girl was strumming the balalaika, little children were making mud pies. In the center was a small white church, behind it a library. Around were the prison buildings, on one side of which were the one-story offices from which I had just come, on the other the hospital, also a one- story building with a row of large open windows, facing the Western sun. At the back a large arched gate led to the street, and at the 284 MAROONED IN MOSCOW left of the quadrangle was the prison proper, with barred win- dows, it is true, but with growing plants and flowers in them, doors wide open, people coming and going. To the right was a workshop, and at the bottom of the yard which sloped slightly was a building which I afterwards found contained the schoolroom, kitchens, repair shops and a large recreation hall. Just as I was about to enter the door of the hospital I heard a wild shriek of joy from the yard, followed by a glimpse of a familiar figure running towards me, and in a minute two arms were around my neck. One of my best friends, a Social Revolutionary with whom I had spent many weeks in the Checka, had recognized me. Others followed suit, and soon I was the center of a perfect mob of former friends, being kissed violently and repeatedly on both cheeks to the accompaniment of exclamations of "Margarita Bernardovna," "Slava Bog" (thank God), and overwhelmed with questions as to the fate of other friends who had been left behind in the Checka. We had all lived through much together, and we had never ex- pected to see each other again. It was very wonderful. I was swept off to the dispensary, rescued from the medical examination, and from quarantine, where I would ordinarily have spent two weeks. "Margarita Bernardovna is the clean- est woman I ever saw," explained one of my friends solemnly to the "felcheritza," the nurse who was examining all new- comers. "She washes all over twice a day, and she has no in- fectious disease." Then I was carried off in triumph to a large airy room, where at first I nearly fainted. Someone made hot tea for me, someone else helped me unpack and get to bed, where I lay, quite weak, but very happy and holding a sort of impromptu reception. The next day, I began to take up the regular prison life, which, barring the food, that was worse than in the Checka, was as pleasant and as nearly normal as life can be in any prison. I occupied a room with eleven other prisoners, with two exceptions all "politicals." Our beds were composed of iron tubing covered with a canvas slip that was as comfortable as a WHEREIN A JAILBIRD TURNS JAILER 285 good hammock. They were fastened to the wall with hinges and turned up against it in the day time, leaving the floor space free. At the foot of each l)ed was a small chest on long legs, known in prison slang as a "dog," which served to hold our belongings and as a bench. There was a long table with two shelves underneath, where we stored all our provisions and utensils. All of the other rooms were similar, though some were larger, holding as many as twenty-four women, and on each floor were two large clean bathrooms with modern plumb- ing and plenty of toilet facilities. In addition there was a Russian bath in the office building where we could get hot water practically whenever we chose. Technically, each room was supposed to go to the bath once in ten days, but as a mat- ter of fact those who cared to bathe every day could go there whenever they wanted to. They very seldom did, however. Russian ideas of bathing seem very peculiar to the Anglo- Saxon. Every morning they energetically splash themselves with cold water down to the waist, and once a week if they are very fastidious, once a fortnight if they are really particular, and once a month if they are just ordinary people, they go to the bath, where they spend hours, scrubbing themselves with a handful of vegetable fiber called "mahalka," pouring innum- erable basins of scalding water over their bodies, steaming themselves till they are parboiled, and ending with a cold douche. They could never understand why I bathed every day and only took ten minutes to do it. Every morning the rising bell rang at seven, followed immediately by the poverk (inspection), when the naziratelnitsa (woman superintendent) counted us to see if anybody had van- ished during the night. Then the doors were opened and we were practically allowed to come and go as we pleased. There was visiting between the rooms until nine in the evening, when the poverk was repeated and the doors were locked for the night. Some effort was made to separate the political prisoners, of whom there were relatively few, from the criminals. They were confined as nearly as possible in separate rooms. The former were allowed to exercise in the yard from ten to twelve in the morning and from four to six in the afternoon. 286 MAROONED IN MOSCOW The criminals were allowed out from eight until ten and from six until bed-time and the new arrivals who were kept in quarantine for two weeks, took their exercise between two and four in the afternoon. The political prisoners with the consent of their examining judges were allowed to see their friends or relatives at intervals and peredachas were allowed every day. The criminals, subject to good behavior, were allowed to see their relatives on Sundays. It was very amusing to see the way they evaded the authori- ties when permission was not forthcoming. The Novenski was situated half way down the slope of a steep hill, above it and overlooking the prison yard was a large church with a tall bell tower. The relatives of prisoners to whom permission had been denied for a szndanye went up in the tower of the church and yelled to the prisoners in the yard. This started immediately after dinner on Sundays and continued till late in the afternoon. It began like this : Ivan Petrovitch, whose sweetheart, Olga Nikolaievna, had perhaps punched her room- mate in the head that week and therefore was not allowed to see him, would take his stand in the bell tower and shout her name until it attracted the attention of someone in the yard. Then the name was taken up and repeated by the prisoners until Olga Nikolaievna was found. She was pushed to the front of the crowd and then forming a megaphone with her hands she held long distance conversations with Ivan. Sometimes eight or ten of these conversations went on at the same time with the result that the noise was simply deafening. Occa- sionally when one of the women was prevented from hearing what was said to her by her too vociferous companions a fight ensued which usually ended in somebody getting hysterics and a number of hair pullings. The authorities never interfered with these conversations unless the political prisoners took part in them. On several occasions this took place and their un- lucky friends in the bell tower were promptly arrested. Church services were regularly held in the little church and as the Russian calendar is nearly entirely composed of Saints' days, there was mass morning and evening almost every day. It was always crowded and two women were appointed every WHEREIN A JAILBIRD TURNS JAILER 287 day to clean the brasses and sacramental vessels. There were nearly always fresh flowers on the altar contributed by the prisoners. We could get all the books we wanted from the library be- hind the church and I found there all the Russian classics, many interesting bound volumes of the best magazines, plenty of good French books and a few English and German magazines and novels. The Socialists, who were in a class by themselves and had special privileges in certain respects, also had the newspapers every day; and as I had many friends among them, I shared all their interests and activities. The Socialist room, which held twenty-four, was occupied by Right and Left Social Revolutionaries, Mensheviks and Anarchists. Among them were many old party workers as well as a number of girls from the student groups, all keen, intelligent, alive to all the questions of the day. I found them fully equal to, if not superior to the men of a corresponding stage of intellectual and political development. They were just as courageous, just as well trained as party workers, and shared equally with them in organization and the more danger- ous conspirative work. We often had political debates in the evening, "disputes," the Russians called them, without any appreciation of the humorous significance of the word, and fre- quently brilliant papers were read on various aspects of the political and economic situation. At other times we had musi- cal evenings, singing all the beautiful Russian prison songs and innumerable folk and student songs. Several of the girls played the balalaika very well and they accompanied the singers, also playing music for the folk dances which were often a feature of our impromptu performances. There was one pret- ty little Anarchist, only eighteen years old, who danced Cos- sack dances better than anyone I've ever seen off the stage. In a pair of blue bloomers, tucked into high boots, a red shirt and a black astrakhan cap, with her bobbed golden hair, she made a very picturesque boy, and her partner was a slender little slip of a dark girl who had been in prison for six months for complicity in an alleged Social Revolutionary plot, but had lost none of her high spirits. 288 MAROONED IN MOSCOW Several times we had birthday parties, once in honor of the wife of Victor Chernov, leader of the Right Social Revolu- tionaries, who escaped nearly a year before to Esthonia. Olga Alexievna Chernova was first arrested more than a year ago while her husband was still in Moscow, with her youngest daughter, who was but nine years old. After Chernov's escape to Esthonia she was arrested again and spent over six months in the Butierki prison, where she was one of the editors of the prison newspaper gotten out by the Socialists. In the early spring a riot took place among the Socialists in the Butierki, planned as a demonstration to encourage their comrades still at liberty. After this most of the men and many women were sent to provincial prisons, where they suffered untold hardships. Madame Chernova and several others were transferred to the Novenski. Madame Peschkova, the wife of Gorki, was much interested in trying to obtain permission for her and her children to leave Russia, but up to the time of my departure the Soviet authorities were obsti- nate in their determination to hold her indefinitely as a hostage for her husband. In spite of the fact that she had been in prison for nearly a year Olga Alexievna had lost none of her interest in life. At her birthday party she read a very clever poem, "taking off" each of the party groups among the politicals. We had a de- licious supper prepared by the two cooks appointed for the day, for the Socialists have a commune and pool all their pere- dachas. It was followed by games, speeches, and the presen- tation to Olga Alexievna of a number of prison-made birthday gifts. One of these was a work bag woven from the vegetable fiber which was used for hand scrubs in our Russian baths. On it was most artistically applied a little izha, or peasant's cottage, made of twigs picked up in the prison yard, with a roof of birch bark. The landscape was completed by an artistic grouping of trees made from sprigs of arbor vitse which grew in the prison yard. At our political meetings we discussed the new decrees, of which the most important were the "Prodnalog," or natural products tax, imposed on the peasants this year instead of the WHEREIN A JAILBIRD TURNS JAILER 289 former system of requisitioning, the new wage scale and method of payment for factory workers, and the system of leasing factories to private capital, known as the "Arend" system. My Social Revolutionary friends believed that the government had by no means abandoned its plan of eventually establishing a Communist state in Russia, but they felt that the economic reforms being instituted would become perma- nent, as many of the Communists were gradually coming to realize that they could not proceed so far in advance of the rest of the world, that Russia could no longer maintain her position alone as the vanguard of the Revolutionary movement. She must give the rank and file time to catch up, as it were. The fact that no general amnesty was declared, they pointed out, indicated that the Communist Oligarchy was determined to hold the political power in its hands, that it would be a long time before Russia would be able to institute anything approaching a popular form of government. They were pro- foundly discouraged as to the outlook for independent party activity for the future, and for the most part bitterly opposed to the political activities of the emigres and plotters of all par- ties, outside of Russia, who, they said, had done far more harm than good by their abortive, ill planned conspiracies. They had great hopes from the then newly formed All-Russian Famine Relief Committee, but predicted just what has subse- quently happened, that unless all foreign relief was conducted through its agency, the Soviet Govermnent would find a pretext for putting it out of the way and arresting its most influential members. The interests of all the politicals were looked after by the political stdrosta, or chairman, who is elected on the creation of a vacancy, and continues in office until she is released from prison. Ours was an extremely keen, energetic Menshevik. It was her business to distribute the peredachas sent by the Po- litical Red Cross, and keep a list of those eligible for them, to give semi-legal advice to all the political prisoners, and to decide on matters of discipline and general policy. The Political Red Cross, of which I have spoken several times in the preceding chapters, is one of the most remarkable 290 MAROONED IN MOSCOW organizations in Russia. Despite its name, it is absolutely- unpolitical in character. Under the Czar it existed as an ille- gal organization for the purpose of giving assistance to all political prisoners. Under the Soviet Government it has only a semi-legal status, and receives no official support, being merely tolerated. Its members consist mainly of Bez Partini, non-partisans. Its funds are raised entirely by private subscrip- tion. In spite of many handicaps it has for the last two years sent weekly food packages to all the political prisoners in Moscow with the exception of those in the Checka. There it is only permitted to send collective per e dachas to be distributed to all prisoners alike, on Soviet or church holidays. In the other prisons its representatives are allowed to visit the politi- cals periodically. In addition to providing food the Red Cross supplies clothing and medicine and other necessaries to the prisoners. It also supplies counsel and legal advice to persons whose cases are about to come up for trial, furnishes funds and transportation to discharged prisoners who have been brought to Moscow from a distance and have no means of getting back to their homes, conducts a bureau of information to supply in- formation to the relatives of many persons who have been arrested and apparently disappeared, as to their whereabouts or their fate. The Political Red Cross also looks after all foreign nationals detained as prisoners, who are not being provided for by their own countrymen. The Anarchists while in prison received regular peredachas from their comrades, who had organized what was known as the "Black Cross." It was to me a very curious and signifi- cant fact that they should have chosen this name for their or- ganization. Acknowledging no code of laws, human or divine, they could find no better symbol for humanitarian work than the symbol of the Cross. On several occasions the Anarchists' peredachas were very wonderful, containing chocolate, coffee, jam, and other unheard-of luxuries. At the same time an account was published in the papers of a mysterious robbery of one of the government stores. I was told by several persons who knew that the peredachas of the Anarchists came from this source. WHEREIN A JAILBIRD TURNS JAILER 291 Most of the Socialists were a very cheerful lot. Few of them were facing serious charges, nearly all being held in accordance with the general policy recently adopted by Lenin of keeping all the leaders of opposition parties under lock and key, but occasionally we were brought face to face with the real thing, as in the case of a friend of mine, who, with her hus- band, was accused of complicity in the Siberian peasant rebel- lion last February. They were taken to Omsk for trial. An- other was the tragic case of a young woman physician, a Left Social Revolutionary, who had been tried and condemned to death in Kharkov and was brought to Moscow for retrial in a dying condition from tuberculosis. A particularly pathetic feature of her story was that she had been living in safety in Switzerland at the beginning of the Revolution, and volun- tarily came to Russia, aflame with Revolutionary ideals, eager to help in the regeneration of her country. There are many like her, real Revolutionaries at heart, who are sacrificed by the inexorable Juggernaut they have set in motion. I did not stay long in the "otdelenye," as the main section of the prison is called. My cough grew steadily worse, I had a constant temperature, and the prison physician decided that I should be removed to the hospital. CHAPTER XXIX PRISON DE LUXE In the hospital I slept in a real bed for the first time in more than eight months. It was a pretty decrepit bed, and had a straw pallet instead of a mattress, but it was a bed for all that. The hospital diet, too, was far better than that in the prison proper. In the morning we received three-quarters of a pound of bread, two lumps of sugar or a small portion of honey, about half an ounce of butter, margarine or lard, three teaspoons ful of Soviet coffee, occasionally a tablespoonful of salted caviar, and every other day a handful of dried apples. The usual herring soup was often replaced by a meat broth, the second dish at our noonday meal was rice or mannaya kasha, a cereal similar to our cream of wheat, and we were given a good-sized portion of South American corned beef several times a week. The doctor was a most intelligent and sympathetic woman and the nurses were kindness itself. The dispensary was woe- fully lacking in medicines and supplies, but it was remarkable how well the staff managed with next to nothing. For ex- ample, there were two hypodermic needles and one syringe. With this equipment two hundred and forty-eight prisoners received the necessary cholera inoculations within three weeks, and I and a number of other prisoners were given daily injec- tions of arsenic. We had only one clinical thermometer, but the temperature of every patient was taken twice daily. Num- bers of prisoners not hospital patients received dispensary treatment or hospital rations, and there was a good dental clinic once a week. After all I had been through, the Novenski hospital, for all its deficiencies, was a haven of rest. There were only three of us in the cheerful little room I occupied, myself, a Polish lady 2Q2 PRISON DE LUXE 293 who was accused of espionage, and our nianka, or attendant, a ruddy-faced buxom peasant girl as innocent looking as a baby. She was up for the third time, the first offense being the receiving of stolen goods, the second hiding a deserter, and the last, for which she was serving only a three-year sentence, for being an accessory to the murder of her own sister by her brother-in-law, whom she afterwards married. He was her second husband, the first having been killed in the war. A large framed lithograph of the latter adorned the wall of our room. In one corner of it was stuck a photograph of the former. She was lazy and an incorrigible thief, but kind- hearted, generous and impulsive. If we missed anything and remarked about it she would get down on her knees before the ikon in the corner, weeping copiously and howling like a der- vish, declaring that she had never taken as much as a kopeck's worth from anyone. At the same time if she had anything good to eat she always insisted that we should share it with her, and I couldn't help being fond of her in spite of everything. The attendants in the other two rooms of the hospital, one of which held twelve, the other six persons, were both professional thieves, one a railroad station pickpocket, the other a "Ma- dam" who made a business of robbing her clients. I was allowed absolute liberty in the hospital, with per- mission to spend the entire day in the yard if I chose, and I found talking to the criminals and studying their psychology a fascinating occupation. One of the most interesting types was Kousina, the queen of the Moscow Apaches, who had the record of having been arrested twenty-eight times, and of having served several terms in prison, though she was only twenty-three years old. She had twice escaped from prison. Her third attempt was an unsuccessful but almost extraordinary performance. Find- ing the Novenski a difficult place to get out of, she simulated insanity, with perfect success, and was sent to a hospital for the criminal insane. It proved just as hard to escape from as the Novenski, so she turned sane again, and demanded to be sent back there. Being refused, she resolved on what is known in prison as obstruction, but her method was unusual, to say the 294 MAROONED IN MOSCOW: least, and certainly showed a great deal of physical courage and determination. She put a wad of newspaper on her chest, set fire to it and burned herself most horribly. "If you don't send me back, I'll do something worse next time," she said, and she was returned to the Novenski. She absolutely ruled the other criminals, they quailed be- fore her and she was merciless in punishing those who violated the prison code of ethics. Once she led a mob against a woman who was suspected of being a nasyetka (spy), and they beat her until she was rescued almost unconscious by the prison guards. She would never steal from anyone in prison, but her example was followed by few of the others. Stealing was the universal rule. The prisoners stole from the prison kitchen, from the workshop, where they made clothes on government contracts, and received half a pound of bread extra a day in payment, and they also stole from each other. Thefts, if discovered, were punished by beatings, face scratchings and hair-pullings, but the thieves were never informed on, even by the attendants, for most of them stole too if they got the chance. Nothing was safe. Once I took my bedding roll out into the yard to air, spread it on the grass, and sat down on a bench beside it to read. Two girls were lying in the grass near me, very inno- cently it seemed. I did not notice that they moved, but when I got up to go in the house I found that the canvas sheet which covered the pad had been torn off near the top and carried away. I afterwards saw slippers made of it being sold for a bread ration. A flourishing trade was always going on inside the prison, not only in stolen articles, but in food brought in from the outside, and it was possible to buy almost everything for money, also smuggled in, or for bread. Twenty-five cigarettes cost one bread ration, ten fresh eggs cost three bread rations, and you could have your laundry done for two. Other clandestine vices flourished too. Although cards were forbidden, there were plenty of decks, and gambling was universal. The women gambled away their bread rations, their peredachas, their clothing even. One woman I knew lost PRISON DE LUXE 295 everything she had in one night, except her chemise, and the next morning she was compelled to get one of the prison dresses to wear. Unnatural forms of prostitution were also common. I don't know whether it is the case with a similar class of criminals in other countries, but most of those I met seemed to take a personal pride in their achievements. There were few who pretended to be either innocent or repentant, though most of them were very religious and attended church assiduously. The speculators formed a class all to themselves. Most of them were sordid and uninteresting, but there were a few pic- turesque characters, such as a brilliant woman engineer who had embezzled millions from the Supreme Economic Council, had been condemned to death, reprieved and finally sentenced to ten years in prison; and a young girl, who with several confederates had robbed the railroad administration of tons of supplies. She was such a capable executive, however, that she had charge of giving out all the supplies for the hospital. The most attractive inmates, for they could scarcely be called prisoners, were the children. There were at least twenty of them; from babies in arms to sturdy little boys and girls four or five years old. Many of them had been born in prison, others had been brought there with their mothers, the Soviet Government permitting them to keep their babies with them, if desired, until they reach the school age. From the point of view of the morale of the mothers it is an excellent thing, enabling them to lead something approaching a normal life, and the children do not fare badly by any means. They were given a special ration similar to our hospital ration, but with more fats ; children up to two years of age received milk daily. They were subjected to periodical medical inspection, and when ill were sent to a nearby children's clinic for treatment. Nearly all were rosy and healthy, and it was great fun to play with them in the yard. One, a small boy four years old, was a great chum of mine, and he always called me by the name by which I was known to the criminals — the "Afrikanka." Popular ideas as to geography and nationality are somewhat hazy in Russia. I was the only foreigner, and when I first 296 MAROONED IN MOSCOW arrived there were many speculations as to my nationality. One of the prisoners who had played in vaudeville with a troupe of negro minstrels announced that I had come from the same country. They were Africans, therefore I must be an African, too, in spite of the slight difference in complexion. The name stuck, notwithstanding all my explanations. Amusements were not altogether lacking in our prison rou- tine. There was a dramatic club, which gave performances of classic comedies nearly every Sunday. The government furnished the members a fixed monthly sum for the purpose of buying stage properties and make-ups. Occasionally we had a concert with outside artists from the best theaters, and there were often impromptu dances in the prison yard. There were also two social service workers, who super- vised the giving out of books from the library, distributed mail to prisoners and conducted several classes for illiterates. The pohtical prisoners were barred from taking part in the official amusements and activities of the prisoners. I think the government was afraid they might contaminate the crim- inals. The prison kitchen was one of the most popular places. From early morning till late evening it was filled with women of all descriptions, who were allowed to do their own cooking. I often went there to make tea or prepare some special dish for myself. Everybody stood around the stove, keeping an eagle eye on her own skillet or saucepan. If you turned your head for an instant you might find it had disap- peared. Some of the dishes I saw cooked there were perfectly wonderful. One woman had twenty pounds of white flour sent to her and she made rolls, jam turnovers and tarts galore. Other women made delicious soups and ragouts and all the mothers prepared special food for their babies. It was well to keep a sharp lookout in the kitchen, for fights often occurred. Once I narrowly escaped being hit by a potful of hot soup that was thrown by one woman at another one just behind me. The privilege of using the kitchen was one that I greatly appreciated, for it was often possible to make very palatable dishes, even out of the regular prison rations. PRISON DE LUXE 297 Among the prisoners was a small group of women the reason for whose detention I could never understand. With the exception of one, Mademoiselle Sheremetieva, a lady of distin- guished family, who belonged to an affiliated organization, they were all members of the Salvation Army. They were very simple women, absolutely devoid of political ideas, but they were accused of having been the tools of counter-revolutionary organizations, just how had never been explained to them. The opposition of the Communists to the established church on the grounds that it has always been used as a means for the enslavement of the masses, is perfectly understandable from their point of view, but to anyone who knows the purely unpo- litical and essentially proletarian character of the Salvation Army the world over, the arrest of its members on these grounds appears positively fantastic. The Salvation Armyites held a song service in one of the rooms in the "otdelenye" nearly every evening, and it often made me very homesick to hear the familiar melodies, such as "Onward Christian Sol- diers," "Throw Out the Lifeline," and many others sung in such a strange environment. So far I have described the better side of our prison life, and the more fortunate of the prisoners, but there was a very dark side indeed. The Novenski is used as a concentration point for prisoners in transit to internment camps, most of them what are known as Counter-Revolutionaries, and hun- dreds pass through every month on their way to distant points. It seems to be the policy of the Soviet Government to send those sentenced to internment as far away from their homes as pos- sible, which inevitably brings about unnecessary hardships. Families are often separated in a manner recalling the Ger- man deportations from Lille during the Great War; those interned are cut off from the possibility of receiving food supplies from their relatives still at liberty; delicate persons accustomed to the warm climate of Southern Russia are sent to the far North. There were a number of women from the Crimea, arrested as the aftermath of Wrangel's collapse, who were being sent to Archangel. Several of them were old ladies over seventy. 298 MAROONED IN MOSCOW One, who was the widow of a general, had been arrested be- cause her name had been found on a Hst of subscribers to the food cooperatives which existed under the Wrangel regime. Prisoners from Kiev and the Ukraine were on their way to Yaroslav. One day a mother with seven children, the youngest a two-year-old boy, the oldest a girl of seventeen years, ar- rived from Rostov en route for Perm. The entire family was being deported because the mother had hidden her son, who had been with the White Armies. The boy was found in the house and shot, the father had escaped and his wife had no idea as to his whereabouts or his fate. In justice to the Soviet Government, however, it must be stated that all cases are reviewed in Moscow before the pris- oners are sent on to their destination, with the result that some are released and sent back to their homes. We also had a number of prisoners who had been con- demned to death in the provincial Checkas on absolutely in- sufficient evidence. These were mostly espionage cases from White Russia or the Ukraine, and they had been rescued from death in the nick of time by inspectors from the Central Office of the Extraordinary Commission, who periodically visit the provincial prisons. Two young girls who had been saved in this manner had been condemned to death without trial at Moghilev on the testimony of a single individual, that they had been friendly with members of the Polish Commission at Vitebsk, and had spent a month in a condemned cell from which prisoners were taken nightly to be shot. They told me that every night before going to bed they put on clean clothes so that they might die decently. I was told by many of these prisoners that the food in most provincial prisons was utterly inadequate and prepared with- out the slightest regard for ordinary rules of hygiene. In many of the provincial prisons they got nothing but half a pound of bread a day and one bowl of soup. Men and women were kept in the same rooms, prisoners were often beaten by the guards. A Polish lady who came from Rostov told me that her husband had been shot two weeks after the signing of the treaty with Poland. Some of the prisoners from the PRISON DE LUXE 299 provinces had been held for six or eight months simply be- cause their papers had been lost. Such conditions frequently exist in the "Gub Checkas," as the provincial Checkas are called. There much depends on the character of the individual com- missar or sledovatl. Some of them are utterly unfit for their jobs, others are very humane. I knew a Polish woman who told.me that her life had been saved by her sledovatl at Vitebsk, The head of the local Checka was anxious to clean up the con- gestion of the prison and ordered a number of persons shot, herself among them, but the sledovatl insisted that he had not sufficiently looked into her case, and managed to hold it over by a series of dopros until the arrival of the agents of the Extraordinary Commission from Moscow. The government is doing all in its power to control this sort of thing, but so far it has only been partially successful. Among the transients were numbers of immigrants from White Russia and Poland who wished to resume their Rus- sian citizenship, and had crossed the frontier without papers or credentials. Many of them were destitute and virtually starving. Some had relatives in distant parts of Russia, others had simply wandered East from the war-devastated regions in search of work and food. The majority of these were soon sent to their destinations or to parts of the country where liv- ing ^conditions are comparatively good, under the supervision of the Commissariat of Labor. Altogether life in the Novenski was bearable and quite in- teresting. I had many good friends among the prisoners and on the prison stafif, only one member of which, by the way, as far as I could discover, was a Communist. During my stay there I had two visits from my sledovatl, the head of the American bureau of the Checka, the first shortly after my arrival when he came to inquire as to my health, and to see if I was in need of anything. Several times I asked for money to buy milk and eggs, and for the rest of my baggage, which had been sealed on my arrest, but this request was never granted. I had everything I needed, however, for my wants were cared for by my Russian friends, to whom I shall always owe an undying debt of gratitude. CHAPTER XXX RELEASE NUMBER 2961 By the middle of July we had begun to realize from ac- counts in the papers that the famine situation was so serious that the Soviet Government would be utterly unable to cope with it, and all my friends insisted that it would not be long before I was released from prison. "Russia must accept help from foreign governments," they said, "and the first condi- tion for relief from America, will, of course, be the release of all prisoners." I had begun to have faint hopes, but I dared not acknowledge them even to myself. They had been stirred by the fact that Royal R. Keeley had been released from prison and I had, a week or so previously, received a small peredacha from him, with a message that he was well, stating that he would try to get permission to see me. This permission was not granted, nor was a note which he wrote delivered to me, but the fact that he had been released pointed to a more lenient attitude towards foreigners. Then one day, July twenty-third, to be exact, the very day, though neither he nor I knew it at the time, of the receipt of the Hoover offer on behalf of the American Relief Admin- istration, I had my first visit from anyone not a Soviet offi- cial, in more than nine months. It was from Senator Joseph I. France, of Maryland, my own state, of whose presence in Moscow I was not even aware, until I met him face to face. Senator France, who had been in Moscow for some weeks, had made repeated efforts to see me, and had interceded with Chicherin and Lenin on my behalf, though, up to that time, without any prospect of success. He had done this at the risk of considerable unpleasantness to himself as one of the condi- tions upon which he obtained, through the influence of German friends in Berlin, permission to visit Moscow, was that he 300 RELEASE NUMBER 2961 301 should not meddle with the question of the American prisoners. Early in the afternoon 1 had a summons to go to the Com- mandant's office. There I found Kovalski, head of the American Bureau of the Checka. "I have brought you a visitor," he said; "I think you will be rather surprised to see who he is." At the same time he threw open the door of an inner room with a fine dramatic gesture, and I saw standing before me a tall man in a suit of real American clothes. It was curious that I should have noticed the clothes first, but I did, and then I recognized in- side of them Senator France, with whose appearance I was familiar from his pictures in the newspapers, though I had never before had the pleasure of meeting him. For a moment I was dazed — then came two curiously in- consequent thoughts, both of which I dismissed immediately. The first was, "Heavens, has the Senator run amuck and turned Bolshevik?" The next, "Perhaps, oh, perhaps, he has come to take me home." Meanwhile I heard myself in a far-away voice asking him quite composedly when he had arrived in Russia and where he was staying, casually as if we had met in the Senate Lobby at Washington. But Senator France went straight to the point, telling me in a few words that he had seen Lenin, Chi- cherin and Litvinov about my case, that they had until that morning given no encouragement, but that they now showed signs of relenting, and that if all went well, he might be able to take me home with him on the following Monday. Our talk was short, but I managed to get some news from him and to give him a number of messages for friends and relatives at home. After his departure and until Monday afternoon I did a great deal of thinking, all of which as it turned out, I might have spared myself. At first I was inclined to refuse to leave, even if he should be able to secure permission to take me with him, because I felt that I wished to remain in Russia until all the other prisoners were released. Then my Russian friends told me that it was quixotic and unpractical to have such no- tions — that if I got out of Russia I could do mi>ch to get the 302 MAROONED IN MOSCOW other prisoners out, and that I would be insane to voluntarily stay behind, where I could do them no good whatever. I was still weighing the matter in my mind when Monday came and went, without any word from Senator France. "There you see, fate has decided it for me anyway," I said to my room mate, and I resolutely put the idea of freedom out of my mind, and returned to prison routine. On Wednesday evening, July twenty-seventh, I was feeling rather ill, and was going to bed early, about ten o'clock, when Kovalski appeared alone and ordered me to pack my bags and accompany him to the Checka, saying that my case would be brought up for trial in the morning, but not hinting at the probable outcome. The nurse in the hospital refused to let me go out at night as I had a temperature at the time, so Koval- ski left, saying that he would return the next morning at nine o'clock. I was just about to turn in half an hour later when the door was abruptly thrown open, admitting two prison guards and a woman attendant, who searched me and my be- longings without a word of explanation, examining everything including my pillow and mattress most minutely, and taking every scrap of written or printed matter in my possession, among which, much to my regret, were the lovely prison songs I had been collecting and writing down with such interest during long months in the Checka. "What does this mean?" I gasped, when I had recovered from my astonishment, for though an ohiiisk, as the searches are called, are frequent in the Checka, they are rare at the Novenski, and I had done nothing to cause suspicion. "It means that you will be deported tomorrow," said one of the soldiers, a genial looking chap, with a broad kindly grin. At this the other, a severe looking personage in a black leather coat, annihilated him with a look, and I was unable to extract anything more from him. For the rest of the night sleep was impossible. I spent most of the time talking to my room mate, Pani Franziska, a dear elderly Polish lady. The next morning I got up early and packed all my be- longings, but the entire forenoon passed without a word from RELEASE NUMBER 2961 303 the Checka. This did not surprise me, as I was by this time thoroughly accustomed to Russian dilatoriness, I spent the morning talking with my intimate friends. My best friend was a Jewish woman who had been kindness itself to me. We had first been together in the Checka, and afterwards met at the Novenski. When I arrived there I was utterly unable to eat the prison food, and it was thanks to her that I managed to get back my strength. She received peredachas twice a week from her family, and always shared everything with me, even going to the extent of writing home and ordering sent her the dishes she thought would tempt my appetite. She provided me with toilet articles, linen sheets, soap, a real knife and fork and a glass to drink out of instead of the tin cup I had used so long. She was one of the most delightful persons I have ever met, and we spent many hours together, talking of art, literature and many other subjects. She was tremendously interested in Russian art, particularly the old ikons of which she had made an exhaustive study. In addition she was simple goodness and honor personified. In politics she was what is known as Bez Partini, but she had been ar- rested and held in prison for four months as a witness. Her continued detention was owing to the fact that she refused to give testimony which she felt might be damaging to other people in whose activities she had had no share. Most of my other friends were Social Revolutionaries, but I had one who was an Anarchist and another who was a Menshevik. I visited nearly all of the rooms in turn, saying good-bye to my friends among the criminals, who wished me luck, and suddenly I realized that a very close tie was about to be broken. Prison friendships are about the most real things in the world. People know each other as they are, without hypocrisy or concealment, and if they grow to care for each other under such conditions it is something that lasts. For some time before the motor came to take me to the Checka, which was not until early afternoon, we sat in my room, talking of past good times, making plans as to how I was to let them know if I was transferred to another prison, wondering as to when or where we would meet again, for we 304 MAROONED IN MOSCOW were quite sure that we would somehow. Then, when the attendant came to tell me that the motor had arrived, we all sat down, and for a minute there was silence, in accordance with the beautiful Russian custom of thus wishing godspeed to anyone who is about to set out on a long journey. Finally the stillness was broken by Pani Franziska, my Polish room mate, who made the sign of the cross on my forehead. "God bless you, my child," she said brokenly. It was hard for her to see me go, perhaps to freedom, for she had been in prison for fourteen months on a baseless charge of espionage, later disproved and she had been promised repatriation over two months before, but her papers had never been received by the Polish Repatriation Commission from the Checka. At the last I was nearly smothered under an avalanche of hugs and kisses, and deafened with the chorus of cheery Vsyo horo- schos, which meant literally "All's well," and Dos zddanye, the Russian for Au revoir, from half the inmates of the prison, who accompanied me to the door of the Command- ant's office, and peeped through the bars of his window to wave their hands in a last greeting. In spite of my hopes as to what the future had in store for me, it was hard to say good- bye to my Russian friends, to whom I could from the bottom of my heart apply that much abused word — Tovarischi — comrades. I found Kovalski waiting for me in the motor. He told me that if all went well he hoped to have good news for me later, but nothing more. On arriving at the Checka I was taken to the pridzwriteini, a detention room on the ground floor where prisoners awaiting commitment or cross-examina- tion are often held for several days. It was a long narrow room, filled with the wooden beds I have already described, but without the straw pallets given out to the regular pris- oners, and it was packed with homogeneous mass of human- ity, men and women of all classes and nationalities. People were lying two on a bed, and one enterprising individual had gone to sleep on a shelf high up on the wall. It was inde- scribably dirty, and there was only one window which afforded utterly inadequate ventilation for so many people. REJLEASE NUMBER 2961 305 There, much to my surprise I met two acquaintances. One was a woman whom I had known at the Novenski, She was dying of tuberculosis, and literally fighting for every breath in the close atmosphere. In spite of her serious condition, she had been kept for three days, waiting for her dopros. The other was a Frenchman, whom I had met the previous sum- mer, when he had come to Moscow from Novorossisk, where he had started an import and export business between that port and Marseilles. He had been arrested on his third trip to Moscow to sign a contract with the Supreme Economic Coun- cil for the importation of general merchandise. His prin- cipals in France were unaware of his predicament, he had been in prison five weeks, without peredachas, without the pos- sibility of communicating with his friends in Novorossisk, and he was in wretched physical condition, but like a true French- man, he did not fail to apologize for his straggly beard and his collarless state. I also talked to a young Swiss boy, a Com- munist, who had no idea why he had been arrested, and a Ger- man Red Cross officer, who had been held in another prison for several months. Finally, after what seemed to me an endless wait, my name was called, and I was taken by an armed guard to the Ameri- can Bureau, where, instead of judges, I found Kovalski wait- ing for me with the papers which had been taken from me the night before. He asked me several questions about them, which I was able to answer satisfactorily, but he was evidently suspicious of some cross-stitch patterns I had drawn for my lace work. Finally he was convinced that they were not ci- phers, and then he told me that my release had been decided on, at the same time handing me an insignificant looking bit of paper, very like a department store check, but which was a written order for the release of ''Citizeness Garrison, Margar- ita Bernardovna, Number 2961." He told me that Senator France had delayed his departure in order to accompany me and that I was to leave with him for Riga that evening if an automobile could be procured to take me to the station. In a few minutes my former examiner, Moghilevski, came in to say good-bye, telling me at the same time that all other 306 MAROONED IN MOSCOW Americans would be released within a few days, but that as Senator France had been interested in my case, and had shown himself most sympathetic to the Soviet Government, I would be permitted to leave with him in advance of the others. "We have been enemies, it is true," he said, "but it was, as you realize, part of a big game. I hope that you feel that it was nothing personal and that some time, under happier auspices, you will come back to Russia." I assured him that I felt the same way, which was quite true, and added that I sincerely hoped I would come back under different conditions. It was rather amusing, I reflected, how the same expression could be used with equal sincerity by two individuals with radically different points of view, but I merely smiled, shook hands and said good-bye. Kovalski told me that it would be impossible for them to deliver my baggage, money and valuables at such short notice, but that they would be sent to me at Riga. I told him that I wished the money sent to the Political Red Cross for the relief of Russian prisoners, and signed a transfer, which he promised to deliver to the office of the Red Cross. Then I was taken back to the general waiting room, where I spent an anxious hour or so, for it was growing perilously near train time. Finally a soldier came to take me to a waiting automobile, in which I was whirled to the station, at the rate of about sixty miles an hour, arriving just seven minutes before the depar- ture of the train. The platform was filled with a hustling, jostling crowd of homegoing Letts, busy porters carrying trunks and boxes, preoccupied couriers with despatch cases, distinguished foreign visitors saying good-bye to commissars, Soviet officials, going abroad on various missions. I saw the tall figure of Senator France, which was easily distinguishable among them, and in a few seconds I was beside him. A few minutes later I was installed in a sleeping compartment, watching the receding station platform. We had a comfortable, though uneventful trip to Riga, arriving on the morning of the second day. The only incident that disturbed the composure of the Senator and myself was RELEASE NUMBER 2961 307 at the border, where we were held for about six hours for no apparent reason. I had known of so many instances where persons, who had been permitted to leave Moscow were re- arrested on the frontier that I did not quite believe in my good fortune until I was actually on Latvian soil. My first act after greeting the friends who came to meet me at Riga was to indulge in the luxury of a tub bath for the first time in nearly a year, my second was to buy a Rigan out- fit to replace the costume I had worn during my entire term of imprisonment, an exceedingly dirty suit of khaki cloth, a man's pongee shirt, a hat made in prison from the tail of the same shirt, and a pair of men's shoes sent me by the Czecho- slovak Red Cross. Then I had a real dinner. I sta3^ed in Riga for several days, after which the Senator and I left for Berlin, where I met many friends, among them Captain Coop- er who had come from Warsaw to meet me. Ever since his escape from Russia in April he had been working unceasingly for my release. The best news I had in Riga was the confir- mation of what I had already heard from Moghilevski : that owing to the Soviet Government's acceptance of the terms of Mr. Hoover's offer all the American prisoners would probably be in Riga within a week or ten days. In Riga I also saw lists of the packages containing food, clothing and toilet ar- ticles, which had been sent me during my imprisonment, none of which had ever reached me. In the few quiet moments I was able to snatch between calls, writing newspaper articles, and trips to the shops to re- plenish my scanty wardrobe, I looked back on the events of the past eighteen months, during which I had lived on black bread and kasha. From a material standpoint I had suffered, it was true, but I felt that I had gained immeasurably from another point of view. I knew the heart of Russia, and no one in these troublous times of transition can ever know it unless he lives with the Russian people both in and out of prison. I had gained a just perspective, and I felt that I understood all that is good and all that is bad, and all that is historically inevitable in the great upheaval which is, in spite of everything, modernizing Russia. AFTERWORD Though this is an afterword, it is by no means an after- thought. It is rather a summary of the thoughts that have been running through my mind while I have been setting down what I saw and heard during eighteen months in Soviet Russia, It seems to me that the world at large has overlooked an all-important fact in considering the Russian Revolution — its beginning, its present form and its development are following a logical historical, evolutionary process. The great powers of the world have done all that they possibly could to hinder this evolution by blockades, intervention and intrigue. They have never done the obvious thing as far as Russia's internal politics are concerned, which is to let them alone. By isolating Russia they have brought about the very thing they were trying to prevent, a prolongation of the Communist dictator- ship and postponement of the process of evolution. No one can understand the situation in Russia without realizing what is actually the case, that two revolutions have taken place in that country. In the towns a small minority, less than ten per cent, in all of the population, have made a proletarian revolution, conducted by the class conscious work- ers with Karl Marx as their God, and Lenin as his prophet. The remaining ninety per cent, have made an agrarian revolu- tion, they have done away with the feudal system and have gained possession of the land. The vast majority of them are illiterate, haunted by the traditions of serfdom, suffering from the shock of seven years of war, blockade, and internal dis- order, with a capacity for endurance that is utterly incompre- hensible to Western minds, utterly devoid of political opinions, patriotism, or a sense of racial unity. Ask the average Rus- sian peasant what he is. He will answer — not that he is a Russian, not that he belongs to any political party, but simply that he is a person — Ya chelovyek. He is inherently op- 308 AFTERWORD 309 posed to Communism, for as a matter of fact he knew some- thing of a form of village Communism under the Czar. It meant that the land belonged to the village, not to him, and it was parcelled out to him by the village Mir or Zemstvo Council. Now he has his land, and he intends to keep it. Bolshevism is bad, because the Bolsheviks make requisitions; they shut up the cooperatives ; he can no longer get tea, sugar, salt, boots and clothes, seeds and farm implements; but Czar- ism was worse, because then he did not have the land. Of the two extremes, therefore, he prefers Bolshevism to Czarism. Discontent with existing conditions will drive him to sporadic revolt, but as long as he is left alone and has a voice in his village Soviet, he does not care what kind of central govern- ment there is in Moscow. It is despotic, yes, but then he has always been accustomed to some form of despotism. If he cherishes any personal resentment against the government it is because he believes it is a government of and by the Jews. The dominant political factor in Russia today is fear of anar- chy. Few of the peasant uprisings that have taken place in Russia or Siberia within the past few years have been the result of any concerted political movement, but rather of local conditions. The more intelligent of the peasants are beginning to grope in a vague way towards the idea of a representative form of government. They realize dimly that they are the real pro- letariat of Russia, that they are represented in the proportion of one to one hundred and twenty-five thousand in the All Russian Council of Soviets, while the town proletariat is rep- resented by one to twenty-five thousand. This, to them is radically wrong — some day it must all be changed. The Social Revolutionaries are preaching this doctrine, and winning converts through the Peasant Unions, but so far they have not been able to organize the vast masses of the peasant pop- ulation, partly through the ban on free press, free speech, and the all powerful police organization of the Communists, partly owing to the apathy and inertia of the peasants themselves, and their lack of class solidarity. Universal education, particularly the abolition of illiteracy 310 MAROONED IN MOSCOW in the Red Army, will eventually act as a boomerang against the Bolshevist Government by teaching the peasants to think for themselves, but this will be a long and a tedious process. Until it is completed there will be no possibility of establishing the government which I believe to be best suited to the needs of Russia — a democratic federation of sovereign states, held together by a national assembly, elected by universal suffrage, on the principle of direct representation. This state will prob- ably have many socialistic features, comprising the socializa- tion of key industries and a widespread cooperative system. There will be a uniform system of free education and social maintenance, and there will be laws restraining the concentra- tion of capital in the hands of a few individuals, but the rights of private property will be respected. Meanwhile Russia will, for some time, necessarily be a prey to minority government. The question is, whether it is better to have the country ruled by a Communist or a Reac- tionary oligarchy. Of the two evils I believe the former is the lesser one. The Communists, numbering perhaps three quarters of a million in all, of whom probably ten per cent, are absolutely sincere and devoted Marxists, are in complete con- trol of the governmental apparatus, and if they were swept away tomorrow there is no party which is prepared to take their place. They exercise iron discipline in a country where discipline is an unknown quantity. Backed by the best or- ganized secret police and the best propaganda service in the world, they have suppressed all expression of free opinion, and legalized party opposition. The leaders of the Communist party are mostly men who have lived a large part of their lives in Western Europe or America and have studied the organization of party machines in all countries. They have always known what they wanted and have had a program when other parties were in a chaotic condition. Their big men are undoubtedly idealists, working with altruistic aims for what they believe to be the good of humanity, but on the Jesuitic principle that the end justifies the means, and in accord with Marxian philosophy which re- jects all bourgeois ethics. AFTERWORD 311 It must be remembered that these are men who all their lives have been hounded and persecuted, and they have, in many respects, distorted values. They are the exponents of the second stage of every revolution. First must come the work of preparation. The men and women who prepared the Revolution have long since been swept away and are living in exile or confined in Russian prisons. The men who occupy the center of the stage today are the iconoclasts, whose work is to destroy, the new broom that sweeps clean, the scalpels that have cut deep into the old order and removed the sound flesh in order to get at the source of the disease. The men who will come next will be the reconstructionists, and little by little, the iconoclasts will give place to them. Until this comes' about by a process that is historically inevitable, there will be no government in Russia any better than the present one. The universal corruption, the many acts of cruelty and the parasitic growth of the new bourgeoisie since the beginning of the Revolution are not all to be laid at the door of the Com- munist party. They are partly due to the inheritance of Czar- ism, partly to the tendency of all undesirable elements to come to the surface in times of universal demoralization and revolu- tion. Russia is essentially an agrarian country; its future pros- perity will be dependent on the good-will and cooperation of the mass of peasants who form the agrarian population. In order to reconcile the two opposing elements of town and coun- try and to put the nation on a sound social and economic basis, it will be necessary for the Revolution to go back many steps over the road it has travelled. That many of the Communist leaders recognize this fact is shown by the development of dis- tinct Right and Left wings, within the party, by the tendency against centralization and bureaucratism and by the opportun- ist policy of Lenin, who in an effort to preserve the political balance of power is coquetting with the bourgeoisie and fight- ing the other socialist parties. The dictatorship of the Communist party has been con- tinuously strengthened during the past four years by the many attempts at intervention. I cannot too strongly emphasize 312 MAROONED IN MOSCOW the fact which I have tried to bring out in the preceding pages, that the men and women of varying poHtical opinions, who have quietly carried on in Russia throughout the Revolution, are, for the great majority, of the opinion that the ultimate form of government in Russia must be worked out by a grad- ual process of evolution. They are the people who have kept the schools and universities going, furnished the bulk of offi- cers for the Red Army and of physicians for the public health service, the agricultural experts who have helped to avert a still more ghastly famine, the factory experts who have kept alive what is left of Russia's industries, the engineers who are running the mines and the railroads. They have developed a new nationalism based on real patriotism, a quality which hitherto has never existed in Russia, and they are opposed to intervention in any form or to the forcible overthrow of the Soviet Government. It has been said that aid to Russia through Soviet con- trolled institutions will have the effect of strengthening the Communist party by making the people believe they owe the improvement in conditions to the present regime. The effect in my opinion, will be just the opposite. Famine relief and contact with the outside world will strengthen the morale of the Russian people and give the few men who are capable of undertaking opposition party activities sound human material to work on. At the same time it will help to accelerate the changes which are taking place within the Communist organi- zation itself and will force the Bolsheviks to undo with their own hands, much of what they have already done. So much for the political factors which are making for evolutionary changes, and now for the economic factors which are for the present, the more important of the two. Inheriting an unsound economic fabric, weakened by the Great War, the civil war and the blockade, hampered by em- bryonic industrial and trades union development and a back- ward agrarian population, the Communists have completed the ruin already begun, by the introduction of an economic system which, even if it is admitted that it is practicable, as the basis on which to run a prosperous government, presupposes AFTERWORD 313 a highly developed industrial organization and a large class- conscious mass of industrial workers. Even under highly favorable conditions they could never have succeeded, in my opinion, in establishing a sound Communistic state in Russia, though their tremendous dynamic energy and their remarkable educational propaganda might have produced somewhat bet- ter results. No private individual or corporations can hope to derive immediate profit from trade with Soviet Russia, but there is danger that if the great powers do not come to the aid of Rus- sia the present economic collapse will be followed by a collapse of the entire political and social system with a tendency to revert to utter anarchy. The good features of the Soviet Gov- ernment will be swept away with the bad and Russia will lapse into barbarism. Personally I believe that state capitalism will be the next development in Russia. The new decrees, while permitting the development of private capital, still uphold the principle of state ownership; therefore, the only adequate pro- tection for foreign interests doing business in Russia will be afforded by a de facto recognition by all the great powers, the appointment of general commercial agents with consular powers and the guaranteeing against loss of all interests un- dertaking trade with, or internal development in Russia, by means of national or international organizations under the official protection of a single government or an aggregation of governments. Frankly, I have no idea as to how this can be brought about, but it can and must be done if the world is ever to get out of the present tangle. The Russian Government has not the money to furnish large credits ; no satisfactory working basis has as yet been found for concessions ; the supply of raw mate- rial for exchange is insignificant. Obviously the first thing to do is to devise some scheme for the reconstruction of Russia's transportation system, for without the railroads nothing can be done. Eventually it is impossible that some profitable way of doing business with a hundred and fifty million people liv- ing in a country which is probably richer in natural resources than any country in the world, and which needs everything 314 MAROONED IN MOSCOW from locomotives to shoe strings, cannot be found. The soon- er this is done the sooner will the inevitable political readjust- ment between the agrarian and proletarian revolutions be made in Russia. From an international standpoint immediate foreign aid to Russia is even of greater importance. Such action by all the great powers will help to prevent a world economic crisis by opening new markets ; it will assist in normalizing labcr con- ditions and allaying the present industrial and social unrest, and it will do away with many of the delusions as to condi- tions in Russia, which have been fostered in the minds of the working class the world over by Communist propaganda to which Russian isolation has been a powerful ally. If the Bol- sheviks succeed in building up their social, political and eco- nomic fabric, it will be, even with every outside assistance, a lengthy process, to be achieved only at the price of the sacri- fice of many basic principles. Such a process of evolution is not likely to put strong arguments in the hands of the advo- cates of world revolution. For the present, however, it is impossible to accord dip- lomatic recognition to a government which has, as its ac- knowledged object, the promotion of armed revolution in the countries with which it seeks to make diplomatic treaties. The promises of the Soviet Government in this respect are not worth the paper they are written on, as long as the Central Committee of the Third International guides the world revo- lution from Moscow. There is a strong tendency among the radicals in all coun- tries to break away from the dictation of Moscow. There were many quarrels and bickerings at this year's meeting of the Third International. The differences among the German and Italian Communists were thoroughly aired to the public, and there was a no less sturdy tendency towards independence in the matter of tactics among various other national groups, such as the Jewish Bundists, the Finnish Communists, the British, the French and Americans. These differences were still more marked in the congress of the Red Trades Union International, which was only just able to save its face and AFTERWORD 315 preserve a semblance of unity. All these indications point to a weakening of the power of Moscow in the international rev- olutionary movement. It is possible in the not too distant fu- ture that the Russian Communists will be forced by radical opinion in other countries to give up their idea of a world propaganda directed from the Kremlin. De facto recognition and trade with Russia will give an opportunity to prove the sincerity of the moderate Com- munists who claim that their world propaganda is largely a measure of self defense against the bourgeois governments who are bent on bringing about an internal economic, social and political collapse in Russia — that, given peace and a chance for peaceful development, they are willing to stop stirring up trouble in Asia, South America, Europe and the United States. We may as well recognize the fact that the Germans will eventually dominate Russia commercially and perhaps eco- nomically. At present in their desperate financial situation German business men are willing to take chances and embark on enterprises which the large interests in other countries are unwilling to undertake. They have nothing to lose and every- thing to gain from the exploitation of Russia and they can afford to wait for returns. But there is a political side to the situation. Things may not remain as they are in Germany. If the country swings more to the right, there will be a renascence of militarism, the desire for revenge on England, the old Berlin-to-Bagdad dream. I have told how I saw in Russia more than a year ago evidences that many Germans have not altogether aban- doned it. There will be an attempt at political domination with a view to utilizing the vast man power and natural re- sources of Russia to bring about the "Day," which many Germans regard as only postponed for a matter of ten years or so. On the other hand, if Germany ever goes Red the Ger- mans will practice Communism with deadly efficiency. It will be quite a different matter from Communism in Russia and they will introduce their brand into that country. The English think they have found an antidote to all this, 316 MAROONED IN MOSCOW and to the old bugbear of Russian ascendency in Asia, which might threaten their colonial possessions and their political supremacy on that continent, in their policy of Balkanizing Russia. The trend of British statesmanship is to permanently weaken the former Russian Empire by dividing it into a num- ber of relatively small independent states, which will be easier to exploit commercially and politically. That is the meaning of their support of various efforts at intervention, which has always been withdrawn at the critical moment. The British do not want any side to come out on top. The French are only looking for one thing in Russia — gold. What then should be the policy of the United States? We distinctly want a strong and a united Russia. The United States is the only country which can look at the Russian ques- tion dispassionately at the present time. It has no political axe to grind in Europe, no need to exploit the natural resources of Russia, for its own are just as great. It needs new markets and new routes of trade, orders for its idle factories, cargoes for its great fleet of rusting ships. The whole matter may be summed up as follows : We may not like the Soviet Government, but it is a real government. To refuse to help and continue to isolate Russia will have the effect of completing the economic ruin of the country, with the consequent reaction upon world economics, of strengthening the political dictatorship of the Communist party, pushing them still further in their tactical program of promoting world rev- olution, and perhaps of finally driving them in desperation to military aggression. The eventual outcome will be anarchy or possibly a reaction far more bloody and far more terrible than the Communist regime. The only way to bring about a government in Russia which will represent the will of the great mass of the people is to give them a chance to develop the moral force to express that will in action. This can only be done by giving them peace and food. It is up to the Ameri- can people to give them that chance. Therefore I believe that our only sane policy from the political and the economic as well as from the humanitarian standpoint is cooperation to the fullest possible extent with the Soviet Government. APPENDIX THE RUSSIAN SOCIALIST FEDERAL SOVIET REPUBLIC The sovereign governing authority is the All Russian Con- gress of Soviets, consisting of representatives of Town So- viets and of the provincial congresses of Soviets. The for- mer are represented in the proportion of one per twenty-five thousand electors, the latter one per one hundred and twenty- five thousand inhabitants. The All Russian Congress meets twice a year and appoints a Central Executive Committee of up to two hundred members. The Central Executive Commit- tee is a continuous body and appoints the Council of People's Commissaries, which is the principal governing authority. The President of the All Russian Congress of Soviets is M. Kalenin. Nikolai Lenin (Ulianov) is Chairman of the Central Executive Committee and Ex Officio of the Council of the People's Commissaries. The People's Commissariats, sixteen in number, with the Commissars holding office in August of this year, are as fol- lows: COUNCIL OF people's COMMISSARS People's Commis- Assistant People's Commissariat sary Commissars 1. War L. D. Trotzki Sklyanski 2. Internal Affairs F. E. Djerzhinski M. F. Vladimirski 3. Justice D. I. Kurski Not known 4. Ways and Communica- J V. M. Sverdlov t'«"s F. G. Djerzhmski | Borisov 5. Finance N. M. Krestinski S. E. Chutskaev 6. Education A. V. Lunacharski M. N. Pokrovski 7. Posts and Telegraphs. . . A. M. Lyubovich Not known (Acting) 8. Public Health M. A. Semashko Z. P. Soloviev 9. State Control (Work- ers' and Peasants' Con- trol) I. V. Stalin A. V. Avanesov 317 318 MAROONED IN MOSCOW COUNCIL OF PEOPLE S COMMISSARS 10. II. 12. 13. 14. IS- 16. People's Comtnis- Commissariat sary Nationalities (Non-Rus- sian Nationalities of Russia) I. V. Stalin Agricultural A. P. Sereda Labor and Social Wel- fare V.V.Schmidt Foreign Afifairs G. V. Chicherin Food A. D. Tsyuryupa Foreign Trade l. B. Krassin Supreme Council of Peo- ple's Economy Bogdanov Assistant People's Commissars N. Narimanov N. N. Osinsky A. N. Vinokurov L. M. Karakhan N. P. Vryukhanov {Yazikov A. M. Lezhava V. P. Milyutin G. I. Lomov { Both the members of the Central Executive Committee and the People's Commissars are elected for three months, but the People's Commissars can be recalled or superseded at any time by the Central Executive Committee. The local Soviets, which constitute the basic units of the whole system and are at the same time the organs of local government, are grouped according to successive areas of ad- ministration. 1. Town Soviets of one per one thousand inhabitants elected by factories, wards, trades unions and parties. 2. Village Soviets of one per one hundred inhabitants which com- bine to form district (Volost) and County (Uyezd) congresses of Soviets on a basis of one per one thousand inhabitants. 3. Provincial (Gubernia) or Regional (Oblast) Congresses of Soviets, elected by both town and country Soviets. The Soviet Republic at present includes thirty-nine prov- inces, of which nineteen are classed as Autonomous Federated Republics with complete freedom in the matter of local self- government. The largest of these is the Ukrainian Republic with Kharkov as its capital. Rakovski is Chairman of the Central Executive Committee of the Ukrainian Republic. The next most important is the Tartar Republic with Kazan as its capital. Electoral rights in Russia are extended to all persons over eighteen who "earn a living by productive work or by work of social usefulness." No distinction is made between Rus- APPENDIX 819 sians and aliens; excluded are "employers, persons living on investments, traders, monks, clergy, members of the former Russian reigning house, officials and agents of the police forces of the old regime, lunatics, minors and criminals." Political parties to participate in elections must recognize the Soviet authority. At the present time the only party except the Com- munist party which nominates candidates is the Menshevik party. Economic: By the constitution of the Soviet Republic private property in land is declared abolished, all land being the common property of the people. Up to the present time, however, nationalization of the land exists only in principle, the peasants retaining possession of the land distributed to them after the October Revolution. All forests, mines and waters of national importance as well as all live stock and fix- tures, model estates and agricultural concerns, are declared na- tional property. All factories, works, mines, railways and other means of production and transport are brought under the Commissariat of Factory Control and the Supreme Eco- nomic Council with a view to their complete trans ferance to the Soviet Republic. The Supreme Economic Council is the controlling authority in production and distribution. Its members are appointed in agreement with the All Russian Central Council of Trades Unions. Under it are Central Industrial Departments appoint- ed by the Supreme Economic Council in agreement with the Central Committees of the corresponding trades unions. Lo- cal organizations reproduce the same scheme with District Economic Councils and District Economic Departments. The actual management of the factories was at first in the hands of Boards, but these have since, in most cases, been replaced by one-man management. Recent decrees have licensed the leasing of factories to private individuals or cooperative organizations. The govern- ment exacts an initial license fee and a fixed tax on the gross receipts. The operators must conform to the regulations of the Code of Labor Laws. The Commissariat of Labor, which is controlled by the 320 MAROONED IN MOSCOW Trades Unions, fixes wages and labor conditions under the gen- eral provisions of the Code of Labor Laws. The Code of Labor Laws makes work compulsory for all males between the ages of sixteen and fifty, all females between the ages of sixteen and forty, except for medical reasons. Those who are ill or unemployed are entitled to remuneration at their usual rate of wages during the time they are not working. Education is compulsory to the age of sixteen or until the completion of what would in America be considered as high school education. University courses and special tech- nical courses are open to all who desire to avail themselves of them. University students receive free lodgings, fixed food rations and a small monthly stipend. Justice is administered in Russia by means of the People's Courts and Revolutionary Tribunals. Military tribunals and the praesidium of the Extraordinary Commission have the power to judge cases of espionage, counter-revolution and de- sertion. SOCIALIST PARTIES IN RUSSIA The Bolsheviks who, since the dissolution of the Constitu- ent Assembly in 191 8 have adopted the name of the Communist party. The Communist party at present exercises complete and absolute dictatorship in Russia. The programs adopted at its congresses constitute the government programs, and it is the nerve of contact between the government and the Trades Unions, Soviets, and other organizations. Membership involv- ing as it does both burdens and powers is jealously guarded. Access is not made easy, discipline is severe and expulsion frequent. The present membership is stated to be seven hun- dred thousand. They believe in the dictatorship of a prole- tarian minority composed of class-conscious workers. They are Marxists. The Mensheviks are also Marxists like the Communists, but they differ with them as to tactics, being in favor of more power for the Trades Unions, less centralization and more freedom of speech and action. They are a small group. At APPENDIX 321 present they are virtually disfranchised and their leaders, Mar- tov and Abramovitz, are in exile. The Left Social Revolutionaries approach the Bolsheviks very closely in their belief that the dictatorship of the Prole- tariat must be imposed by force, but they would have the chief power vested in the Soviets and not in a Centralized govern- ment. They believe in the socialization of all industries. Their leaders were Kankov and Spiridonova. At present their status is illegal as is that of The Right Social Revolutionaries. They interpret the word "Proletariat" in its broader sense to include all workers, particularly the peasants. They believe in an organization of Trades and Peasants' Unions for economic and industrial administration, and in the vesting of the governing authority in a national assembly, elected by universal suffrage. They favor socialization of essential industries, extensive develop- ment of the cooperative system and the licensing, under certain restraint, of private enterprise and capital. Their leader, V. Chernov, is in exile, their prominent members are all in prison. Numerically the Right Social Revolutionaries are the largest of the opposition Socialist parties. Anarchists recognize no form of government, but they are divided into two factions, those who believe that Communism is a necessary stage in the development of Anarchism and those who believe in putting it in practice by force. They are especially numerous in the Ukraine and in the neighborhood of Saratov. Their status is also illegal. The Poalei Zion and the Bund are both Jewish Social Dem- ocratic or Marxist parties. The former cooperate with the Bolsheviks, the latter are divided into two factions of which one is in thorough sympathy with the Soviet Government, Non-Socialist parties are non-existent as such. A few groups of Cadets and Constitutional Democrats still exist, but they are numerically insignificant and politically inactive. There is no organized Monarchist party. 322 MAROONED IN MOSCOW TRADES UNIONS Trades Unions, though nominally independent, are part of the Soviet State. Membership, December, 1920, 5,222,000. The structure of the Russian Unions is based on the fac- tory as a unit. Each factory has its committee, and this is the local unit of the union. These factory or shop units are grouped into industrial Unions with the factory as the basis, no mat- ter what a man's trade. Entrance fee, half day's pay, sub- scription two per cent, of the pay. Membership is virtually obligatory. The Unions are as follows : I. Medical 13- Printing 2. Transport 14. Paper 3- Mines 15. Food 4- Wood 16. Building 5. Land 17. Sugar 6. Art 18. Soviet Institutions 7. Public feeding and housing 19. Tobacco 8. Leather 20. Textile 9- Metal industries 21. Chemical 10, Communal Services 22, Clothing II. Education 23- Finance Department 12. Postal Services COOPERATIVES The Russian Cooperatives, the organs of distribution, work under State Control. Each district has a Cooperative Society, "Soyous," on which state or local authorities are rep- resented. The franchise is identical with the political fran- chise. All Cooperative Societies come under the Control of the Centrosoyous, which in 1920 was composed of ten members appointed by the government and eight electoral members. Shares of individual members of the old cooperatives have been repaid to them, the value being insignificant, however, owing to the depreciated currency. Credit Societies are under the Nationalized People's Bank. Recent legislation has restored a measure of independence to the cooperatives by permitting them to deal with peasants on an exchange basis and to buy and sell goods at fixed prices. THE LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Santa Barbara THIS BOOK IS DUE ON THE LAST DATE STAMPED BELOW. Series 9482 LL UC SOUTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY A A 000 315 420 m