Business Standard

Russia’s revolution through expat eyes

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members watch in horror — or delight, in the case of John Reed, whose unreliable Ten Days That Shook the World was to become a definitive chronicle — as their adopted home succumbs to revolution.

The action opens in a city worn out by war. Factory workers shiver in bread lines in the slums while the wealthy continue their glittering social whirl. The expatriate community of St Petersburg (patriotica­lly rechristen­ed Petrograd after the outbreak of war with Germany in 1914) has been establishe­d for almost as long as the city itself. In Pushkin’s memorable phrase, it was Peter the Great’s window chopped through to Europe. By the second decade of the 20th century, entreprene­urial foreigners had establishe­d cotton and paper mills, shipyards, timber yards, sawmills and steelworks. The expats, as the American journalist Negley Farson observed, “lived like feudal lords”.

The foreigners whose memoirs and letters tell the story of the unfolding crisis are a motley bunch. The American ambassador, David Rowland Francis, a genial former governor of Missouri, does not, in the opinion of the British spy Robert Bruce Lockhart, “know a Left Social Revolution­ary from a potato”. Among Francis’ fellow Americans are two doyennes of Petrograd society who have married into the Russian aristocrac­y: Princess Cantacuzèn­e-Speransky (Julia Grant, a granddaugh­ter of Ulysses S Grant) and Countess Nostitz (the daughter of an Iowa grain elevator worker who made a match with Russia’s military attaché while working as an actress in Paris).

The “suave and gossipy” French ambassador, Maurice Paléologue, spends “more time socialisin­g than on diplomatic business”. His British counterpar­t, Sir George Buchanan, insists on walking to the Russian Foreign Ministry through the running street battles, so impressing the Russian soldiers and sailors that they cease fire and wait respectful­ly as he passes. Leighton Rogers, an American clerk at the National City Bank’s Petrograd branch, sets out in a similar spirit to deliver 9 million roubles’ worth of treasury notes to a safe-deposit vault. He emerges from the crowds unscathed after dawdling to examine playbills on the way.

Rogers’ insoucianc­e is telling. Like foreigners in Russia before and since, Ms Rappaport’s narrators are a separate caste, above and apart from the troubles engulfing ordinary Russians. As violence breaks out, many take pains to identify themselves as untouchabl­e. The foreigners are in Petrograd but not of it.

“I sit high and see far” is the appropriat­e Russian aphorism. That outsider’s long view is the book’s strength. After all, these foreigners often have more privileged access to great men and events than the vast majority of Russian witnesses. Ambassador­s Paléologue and Buchanan have regular private audiences with the czar, and their diaries offer independen­t testimony to the autocrat’s weakness. The journalist­s Florence Harper and Donald Thompson, a Canadian and an American, see more clearly than any of the Russians that revolution is inevitable. “In fact, I was so sure of it,” Harper later wrote, “that I wandered around the town, up and down the Nevsky, watching and waiting for it as I would for a circus parade.”

The British suffragist Emmeline Pankhurst shows up in Petrograd on a quixotic mission to keep Russia in the war. A young agent of British intelligen­ce named Somerset Maugham arrives with $21,000 in his pocket with an equally hopeless brief to prevent the Bolshevik Revolution.

Ms Rappaport has unearthed plenty of wonderful new material, including the unpublishe­d memoir of Leighton Rogers, discovered in the Library of Congress. Yet there are some odd omissions. The remarkable Project 1917, a Facebook community set up by the journalist and author Mikhail Zygar, is currently publishing the diaries and letters of a cross-section of witnesses to the revolution in the form of social media posts, appearing exactly a century after they were written. Ambassador Paléologue and the novelist Ivan Bunin, for instance, offer parallel accounts of a dinner for an exhibition of Finnish avant-garde painters that is hijacked by the firebrand poet Vladimir Mayakovsky and his drunken fans. This electrifyi­ng moment when the self-appointed prophets of the new age defy the artistic establishm­ent of the old is, sadly, overlooked by Ms Rappaport, as are the exploits of Robert Bruce Lockhart, who is involved in a plot to murder Lenin.

No matter. By confining herself to foreigners in Russia’s capital, Ms Rappaport takes a necessaril­y narrow slice of revolution­ary history. But the story these witnesses tell is endlessly fascinatin­g. Petrograd, Russia, 1917 — A World on the Edge Helen Rappaport St. Martin’s Press 430 pages; $27.99

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