A legal project has been developed by the ministry of justice in relation to compensation for losses suffered during the February revolution.
According to the legal project, only losses suffered by those serving in foreign embassies and foreign servicemen are open to indisputable compensation; the cost of weapons taken from private citizens during the revolution is also open to compensation.
Anarchy reigns in Russia. Germans are taking what they want, soldiers are on a rampage, and there's no end to it.
After every meal I would lie down for an hour, the rest of the time I would be up on my feet.
It was 17 degrees outside, so I could stay for a bit longer on my balcony. The dentist, Kostritskiy, paid me a visit to say farewell before his trip to Tobol’sk. See more
Colonel G (a General Staff Officer from the Northern Front), has just been in to see me. He, of course, wants to go to our army, and if there is a separate peace he will go as a private soldier. See more
Day after day the Bolshevik orators toured the barracks and factories, violently denouncing “this Government of civil war.” One Sunday we went, on a top-heavy steam tram that lumbered through oceans of mud, between stark factories and immense churches, to Obukhovsky Zavod, a Government munitions-plant out on the Schlüsselburg Prospekt. See more
Spent the afternoon in Zurich, the evening - in "Mascotte" and "Bonbonniere".
I avoid going outside. It hurts, something's not right with my throat. It's almost a summer day. I'm still reading Fet.