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"During
the first two months of 1917 Russia
was still a Romanov monarchy. Eight months later the Bolsheviks stood at the
helm. They were little known to anybody when the year began, and their leaders
were still under indictment for state treason when they came to power. You will
not find another such sharp turn in history - especially if you remember that
it involves a nation of 150 million people. It is clear that the events of
1917, whatever you think of them, deserve study.
"The
history of a revolution, like every other history, ought first of all to tell
what happened and how. That, however, is little enough. From the very telling
it ought to become clear why it happened thus and not otherwise. Events can
neither be regarded as a series of adventures, nor strung on the thread of a
preconceived moral. They must obey their own laws. The discovery of these laws
is the author's task.
"The most
indubitable feature of a revolution is the direct interference of the masses in
historical events. In ordinary times the state, be it monarchical or
democratic, elevates itself above the nation, and history is made by
specialists in that line of business - kings, ministers, bureaucrats,
parliamentarians, journalists. But at those crucial moments when the old order
becomes no longer endurable to the masses, they break over the barriers
excluding them from the political arena, sweep aside their traditional
representatives, and create by their own interference the initial groundwork
for a new régime. Whether this is good or bad we leave to the judgement of
moralists. We ourselves will take the facts as they are given by the objective
course of development. The history of a revolution is for us first of all a
history of the forcible entrance of the masses into the realm of rulership over
their own destiny.
"In a
society that is seized by revolution classes are in conflict. It is perfectly
clear, however, that the changes introduced between the beginning and the end
of a revolution in the economic bases of the society and its social substratum
of classes, are not sufficient to explain the course of the revolution itself,
which can overthrow in a short interval age-old institutions, create new ones,
and again overthrow them. The dynamic of revolutionary events is directly
determined by swift, intense and passionate changes in the psychology of
classes which have already formed themselves before the revolution.
"The point
is that society does not change its institutions as need arises, the way a
mechanic changes his instruments. On the contrary, society actually takes the
institutions which hang upon it as given once for all. For decades the oppositional
criticism is nothing more than a safety valve for mass dissatisfaction, a
condition of the stability of the social structure. Such in principle, for
example, was the significance acquired by the social-democratic criticism.
Entirely exceptional conditions, independent of the will of persons and
parties, are necessary in order to tear off from discontent the fetters of
conservatism, and bring the masses to insurrection.
"The swift
changes of mass views and moods in an epoch of revolution thus derive, not from
the flexibility and mobility of man's mind, but just the opposite, from its
deep conservatism. The chronic lag of ideas and relations behind new objective
conditions, right up to the moment when the latter crash over people in the
form of a catastrophe, is what creates in a period of revolution that leaping
movement of ideas and passions which seems to the police mind a mere result of
the activities of "demagogues."
"The masses
go into a revolution not with a prepared plan of social reconstruction, but
with a sharp feeling that they cannot endure the old régime. Only the guiding
layers of a class have a political program, and even this still requires the
test of events, and the approval of the masses. The fundamental political
process of the revolution thus consists in the gradual comprehension by a class
of the problems arising from the social crisis - the active orientation of the
masses by a method of successive approximations. The different stages of a
revolutionary process, certified by a change of parties in which the more
extreme always supersedes the less, express the growing pressure to the left of
the masses - so long as the swing of the movement does not run into objective
obstacles. When it does, there begins a reaction: disappointments of the
different layers of the revolutionary class, growth of indifferentism, and
therewith a strengthening of the position of the counter-revolutionary forces.
Such, at least, is the general outline of the old revolutions."
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