The pleasure afforded to me by your letter is enormous yet almost painful. How greatly things have changed since we saw each other last – and not always for the better. I, for my part, have been recalling the moment you told me that to be called my pupil isn’t tantamount to martyrdom.
I would point one of these changes out to you were I not afraid of the censor. I’ve a great deal of work once again: nine new patients, with whom I spend eight to nine hours each day. This diverts me and is good for my health, which is also boosted by my financial security – I shall not go bankrupt. My income remains the same, but the value of money has changed significantly since the start of the war.
Kerensky didn’t think to “lay down” any sort of “authority”. Now they are setting up a “pre-parliament” so that the gov. (the future one) will have the answer to the one that came before it. There is one affair prepared for this pre-parliament (others are not quite developing): to overthrow the government. See more
This morning I left Frankfurt and headed towards Basel. Basel is rather turbulent. I attended an art gallery where they'll be hosting German art exhibition very soon. In the evening I reached Bern.
Yasnaya Polyana destroyed.
The Ministry of Internal Affairs has received very distributing information from Yasnaya Polyana. Peasants are destroying Yasnaya Polyana, killing crops, plundering gardens and allotments, cutting down the forest. See more
During the morning a lot of snow fell again. The weather was overcast toward evening. We took a walk at 2 o'clock asviusual. The other day our good Baron Bode arrived with a cargo of some of our things from Tsarskoe Selo.
Our friends in Montevideo asked us to visit them again at the end of the Argentine season, which we did, and, at the request of the French and English Ambassadors, Vaslav gave an extra performance for the wounded soldiers of the Allies, Rubinstein accompanying him on the piano. The public went wild with enthusiasm. See more
Despite all these worries, which fell upon BarocchiRandolfo Barocci is the administrator of the Russian ballet troupe, the husband of the ballerina Lydia Lopukhova. and me as from a cornucopia, our season in Buenos Aires was most successful. As time went on, the company enormously improved and the ensembles became quite excellent. Lopokova and Tchernicheva were extremely popular and so was Gavrilov, who alternated in the same parts with Nijinsky - to compete with whom was a feat in itself. See more