In the hut we have immediately felt ourselves calmer. Life began to “normilise.” Around us there was no one for miles. Tired and exhausted by work and hardships, Vladimir Ilyich enjoyed involuntary rest for the first couple of days.
As much as the clandestine considerations allowed, he took walks, went swimming in Razliv, lay in the sun. In the meantime, two lines of communication were being established from the hut: one—with Petrograd, another—with Finland. The main focus was, of course, the first one.
Kerensky's attack on the South-Western Front and retreat. Adoption of the death penalty within sedentary war. In all other free revolutionary Russia are only prisons and penal servitude.
The height of “Bolshevism’s” insolence! Plunder and violence committed by the “comrades” have reached the apex of prehistoric savagery—soon, it seems, they will start eating each other. Cossacks and the cavalry are our only protectors from mass manifestations of revolutionary and plundering impulses of “free” Russian citizens! See more
The situation is still the same. Terrible misfortunes at the front and other circumstances provoke a sharp reaction in us, but also in Germany. Times are dismal. Perhaps, I will also be arrested on charges of "incitement" or something like that. But it’s not important. See more
I will never take power, I will never join a party, I will never make a choice, I have nothing to be proud of, I don’t understand anything. See more
For the last two days bad information has come from the front. After our attack in Galicia, many units, thoroughly infected with bad defeatist teachings, not only refused to go forward but are retreating with no pressure from the enemy. See more
The situation is hopeless. Never, even in 1915, it was not so bad, but I believe that the Revolution still has more resources.