Boris Kolonitskii

Comrade Kerensky


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pamphlet might have recalled a number of writings prophesying the appearance of a ‘new kind of person’. Leonidov was not the only author to present Kerensky in this light, as we shall see.

      In Odessa, Vlast’ naroda published a pamphlet titled A. F. Kerensky, the People’s Minister.26 Kerensky’s Odessan biographer was a sympathizer of the Socialist Revolutionary Party. We may speculate that he drew on Kiriakov’s writings. At all events, here too the biography is tied in with the history of the Socialist Revolutionaries, and both pamphlets are similar in style and in their choice of material. Like Kiriakov, the author quotes Kerensky’s speeches at length. He makes use of both documentary publications of 1917 and family photographs. In this biography too there are pen portraits made by someone who has been present when Kerensky was giving speeches. The final paragraph is devoted to Kerensky’s personality. His Odessan biographer is confident that the people’s minister will go down in history as the creator of a new social system and as the personification of the revolution.

      When the peaceful life of the nations in obedience to the unseen operation of the laws of history bursts in full flood, people appear on the crest of the foaming waves of a turbulent sea whose names are later preserved with love and pride in the memory of the people. The great Russian Revolution has already brought forth a man so intimately identified with it that at times you are hard pressed to tell whether he is directing events or events are directing him That man is Alexander Fyodorovich Kerensky, the first love of free Russia.27

      Spring 1917 saw the appearance in Petrograd of a weekly magazine titled Heroes of the Day: Biographical Essays. It was intended that it would include articles on the lives of prominent contemporaries. The names mentioned were the Swedish politician Karl Branting; the ‘Grandmother of the Russian Revolution’ Yekaterina Breshko-Breshkovskaya; General Alexey Brusilov; the revolutionary publisher Vladimir Burtsev; the Belgian socialist Emile Vandervelde; US President Woodrow Wilson; the writer Maxim Gorky; Kerensky’s predecessor as minister of war, Alexander Guchkov; the radical German Social Democrat Karl Liebknecht; the anarchist Peter Kropotkin; the Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin; the British prime minister David Lloyd George; and other Russian and foreign political and public figures.28 The first issue of this publication, A. F. Kerensky: the Love of the Russian Revolution, was devoted to the revolutionary minister.29 This is clear testimony to Kerensky’s popularity. The author, ‘Tan’ (Vladimir Bogoraz, 1865–1936), had been a member of the People’s Will circles and became famous as an ethnographer, linguist and writer. Tan, like Kiriakov, was active in the All-Russia Peasant Union and the organization of the Trud (Labour) Group, so was acquainted with and politically close to Kerensky.

      The theme of political love for Kerensky, which Tan featured in his title, is found in other popular biographies but is particularly stressed by Tan. ‘I would call him “the Revolution’s love”, that first virginal love.’ He returns to the theme at the end of his study. ‘The Russian Revolution will have many favourites and special intimates, but that first, virginal love of the young revolution will never fade, never be forgotten.’30 Like other biographers, Tan reminded the reader of Kerensky’s Socialist Revolutionary allegiance and pointed out the special place he had in the party: ‘Kerensky is the highest type of SR. He is a dazzling member of that heroic generation of heroes who threw at the struggle their personal fearlessness, their indomitable spirit and their sublime heroism.’31 This endorsement from a veteran of the revolutionary movement would have carried special weight with readers, although it is unlikely that all the Socialist Revolutionary leaders would have gone along with it. Like other biographers, Tan writes of his subject’s ‘prophetic insights’ and calls him ‘the Leader’ and even ‘the spiritual focus of Russia’. He too writes about Kerensky’s singular hard gaze: ‘There is something leonine in the depths of those wide-open eyes.’32

      After the July Crisis,33 when Kerensky became prime minister of the Provisional Government, the Moscow Educational Commission of the Provisional Committee of the State Duma brought out another biography of him. Its author, a certain Lieutenant Vysotsky, hailed the achievements of the ‘tamer of the unquiet spirits of the rank-and-file soldiers’. ‘The army obeyed him. It obeyed him as its Leader.’34

      Vysotsky notes both the extreme fatigue of an ‘ill and exhausted’ Kerensky and the inspired vitality of ‘the great enthusiast’ and ‘romantic’, which exercises an almost hypnotic effect on the masses. This writer too points out the special relationship between the Leader and the people, the emotional connection between the minister and his audiences. ‘Outbursts of that same inspiration and delight thunder towards him, reciprocation of the enthusiasm by which the speaker is himself possessed.’ ‘The people “feel” Kerensky, and Kerensky feels the people.’ ‘The people itself creates Kerensky, itself creates around him an atmosphere of boundless trust and love, in which his every word can assume almost biblical power.’36 Like some of Kerensky’s other biographers, Vysotsky sees the source of Kerensky’s influence not only in his ability to mesmerize his listeners but also in the need of the people for a strong ruler. ‘Additionally there is alive in [the people] a longing for Kerenskys, for someone to believe in, to whom it can surrender its soul, whom it would want to follow, into whose hands it could surrender its power in order then to submit to him.’37 This interpretation of the relationship between the Leader and the people may be in line with Leonidov’s writing, but it is far from the Narodnik canon of praise of famous heroes as practised by Kiriakov.

      In the autumn of 1917, Lidiya Armand (née Tumpovskaya, 1887–1931) wrote a pamphlet titled Kerensky. She more usually wrote on pedagogy and popularization of culture, and also fiction. The main focus of her writing, however, was the organization of cooperatives and the cultural and educational work they did. In 1917 Armand was on the right of the Socialist Revolutionary Party, and in May the Left Socialist Revolutionaries had labelled her articles ‘social chauvinism’ and ‘social patriotism’.38 In other words, politically she was close to Kerensky. It seems safe to assume this item was published with the support of some grouping of the Right Socialist Revolutionaries.

      Armand stoutly defends her political Chosen One from the attacks of his opponents, including some in the ranks of the Socialist Revolutionary Party, who, in her opinion, have delivered ‘the unkindest cut’. If the aim of earlier biographers had been to enhance Kerensky’s influence, Armand’s priority is to put down those questioning the Leader’s authority. She does not deny he has made mistakes but insists