The revolution, the war, and the restoration of the government were tied into one knot that could not be cut but had to be unraveled. Not one government has born such a triple burden and such a triple responsibility during a war. We were perfectly aware of all the logical incompatibility of war and revolution.
Until the collapse of the monarchy, we did everything to avoid letting a revolution happen during the war. Then, we confronted the reality of things: a revolution had happened during the war. What remained was either to desert, to hide in the corner, or, risking everything, to salvage whatever was still salvageable.
Given that there is still no quorum for the Constituent Assembly, even if the figure is broadened to include those deputies who have not presented their mandates for registration according to the established procedure; given that many Constituent Assembly members who arrived in Petrograd have since left for the provinces; See more
You should finish sketching the scenery for Scarlatti at once. We need it for the season at the Paris Opera. It begins in February. I’ll be in Paris on January 20th.
A painful episode in the fortress yesterday: the batman Pavlov (an assistant to the commandant) intercepted a letter from Kartashov to his sister in which he’d written that “Russia has become Germany’s hired hand”. See more
I’m not pleased with myself, I’ve done very little. A draft of the Third Concert, planned out the finale. I started rewriting it clean: it was a lot of work to do, although it was nice and easy.
It was a nice sunny day but windy. Today I finished the third volume of General History. From six o’clock on we rehearsed all our parts; they went smoothly.