Page:John Reed - Ten Days that Shook the World - 1919, Boni and Liveright.djvu/109

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

Tsay-ee-kah, on the eve of the Congress, had no right to assume the functions of the Congress. The Tsay-ee-kah was practically dead, he said, and the resolution was simply a trick to bolster up its waning power…

“As for us, Bolsheviki, we will not vote on this resolution!” Whereupon all the Bolsheviki left the hall and the resolution was passed…

Toward four in the morning I met Zorin in the outer hall, a rifle slung from his shoulder.

“We’re moving!”[N 1] said he, calmly but with satisfaction. “We pinched the Assistant Minister of Justice and the Minister of Religions. They’re down cellar now. One regiment is on the march to capture the Telephone Exchange, another the Telegraph Agency, another the State Bank. The Red Guard is out…”

On the steps of Smolny, in the chill dark, we first saw the Red Guard—a huddled group of boys in workmen’s clothes, carrying guns with bayonets, talking nervously together.

Far over the still roofs westward came the sound of scattered rifle fire, where the yunkers were trying to open the bridges over the Neva, to prevent the factory workers and soldiers of the Viborg quarter from joining the Soviet forces in the centre of the city; and the Cronstadt sailors were closing them again…

Behind us great Smolny, bright with lights, hummed like a gigantic hive…


N

  1. References in this chapter refer to the Appendix to Chapter III. See page 330.