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Ten Days That Shook the World

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Ten Days That Shook the World

By John Reed.

Table of Contents

  1. Titlepage
  2. Imprint
  3. Introduction
  4. Preface
  5. Notes and Explanations
    1. Political Parties
    2. Parliamentary Procedure
    3. Popular Organisations
    4. Central Committees
    5. Other Organisations
    6. Chronology and Spelling
    7. Sources
  6. Ten Days That Shook the World
    1. I: Background
    2. II: The Coming Storm
    3. III: On the Eve
    4. IV: The Fall of the Provisional Government
    5. V: Plunging Ahead
    6. VI: The Committee for Salvation
    7. VII: The Revolutionary Front
    8. VIII: Counterrevolution
    9. IX: Victory
    10. X: Moscow
    11. XI: The Conquest of Power
    12. XII: The Peasants’ Congress
  7. Appendix to Chapter I
    1. 1
    2. 2: Wages and Cost of Living Before and During the Revolution
    3. 3: The Socialist Ministers
    4. 4: September Municipal Elections in Moscow
    5. 5: Growing Arrogance of the Reactionaries
  8. Appendix to Chapter II
    1. 1
    2. 2: Democratic Conference
    3. 3: The Function of the Soviets Is Ended
    4. 4: Trotsky’s Speech at the Council of the Russian Republic
    5. 5: The Nakaz to Skobeliev
    6. 6: Peace at Russia’s Expense
    7. 7: Russian Soldiers in France
    8. 8: Terestchenko’s Speech (Resumé)
    9. 9: The British Fleet ( etc.)
    10. 10: Appeals Against Insurrection
    11. 11: Lenin’s “Letter to the Comrades”
    12. 12: Miliukov’s Speech (Resumé)
    13. 13: Interview with Kerensky
  9. Appendix to Chapter III
    1. 1: Resolution of the Factory-Shop Committees
    2. 2: The Bourgeois Press on the Bolsheviki
    3. 3: Moderate Socialist Press on the Bolsheviki
    4. 4: “Yedinstvo”
    5. 5: Were the Bolsheviki Conspirators?
    6. 6: Appeal Against Insurrection
    7. 7: Events of the Night, November 6th
  10. Appendix to Chapter IV
    1. 1: Events of November 7th
    2. 2: Kerensky in Flight
    3. 3: Looting of the Winter Palace
    4. 4: Rape of the Women’s Battalion
  11. Appendix to Chapter V
    1. 1: Appeals and Proclamations
    2. 2: Protest of the Municipal Duma
    3. 3: Land Decree—Peasants’ Nakaz
    4. 4: The Land and Deserters
    5. 5: The Council of People’s Commissars
  12. Appendix to Chapter VI
    1. 1: Appeals and Denunciations
  13. Appendix to Chapter VII
    1. 1: Two Decrees
    2. 2: The Strike Fund
  14. Appendix to Chapter VIII
    1. 1: Kerensky’s Advance
    2. 2: Proclamations of the Military Revolutionary Committee
    3. 3: Acts of the Council of People’s Commissars
    4. 4: The Liquor Problem
    5. 5: Order No. 2
  15. Appendix to Chapter IX
    1. 1: Military Revolutionary Committee. Bulletin No. 2
    2. 2: Events of the 13th in Petrograd
    3. 3: Truce. Krasnov’s Answer to the Committee for Salvation
    4. 4: Events at Tsarskoye Selo
    5. 5: Appeal of the Soviet Government
  16. Appendix to Chapter X
    1. 1: Damage to the Kremlin
    2. 2: Lunatcharsky’s Declaration
    3. 3: Questionnaire for the Bourgeoisie
    4. 4: Revolutionary Financial Measure
  17. Appendix to Chapter XI
    1. 1: Limitations of This Chapter
    2. 2: Preamble—Declaration of the Rights of the Peoples of Russia
    3. 3: Decrees
    4. 4
    5. 5: Ridicule of the New Regime
    6. 6: On the Question of an Agreement
    7. 7: Wine “Pogroms”
    8. 8: Speculators
    9. 9: Purishkevitch’s Letter to Kaledin
    10. 10: Decree on the Monopoly of Advertisements
    11. 11: Obligatory Ordinance
    12. 12: Two Proclamations
    13. 13
    14. 14: Appeals and Counter-Appeals
    15. 15: Elections to the Constituent Assembly in Petrograd
    16. 16: From the Council of People’s Commissars to the Toiling Cossacks
    17. 17: From the Commission on Public Education Attached to the Central City Duma
    18. 18: Diplomatic Correspondence of the Soviet Government
    19. 19: Appeals to the Front Against Dukhonin
    20. 20: From Krylenko
  18. Appendix to Chapter XII
    1. 1: Instruction to Peasants
    2. 2
  19. Endnotes
  20. List of Illustrations
  21. Colophon
  22. Uncopyright

Imprint

The Standard Ebooks logo.

This ebook is the product of many hours of hard work by volunteers for Standard Ebooks, and builds on the hard work of other literature lovers made possible by the public domain.

This particular ebook is based on a transcription produced for Project Gutenberg and on digital scans available at the HathiTrust Digital Library.

The writing and artwork within are believed to be in the U.S. public domain, and Standard Ebooks releases this ebook edition under the terms in the CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication. For full license information, see the Uncopyright at the end of this ebook.

Standard Ebooks is a volunteer-driven project that produces ebook editions of public domain literature using modern typography, technology, and editorial standards, and distributes them free of cost. You can download this and other ebooks carefully produced for true book lovers at standardebooks.org.

Introduction

With the greatest interest and with never slackening attention I read John Reed’s book, Ten Days That Shook the World. Unreservedly do I recommend it to the workers of the world. Here is a book which I should like to see published in millions of copies and translated into all languages. It gives a truthful and most vivid exposition of the events so significant to the comprehension of what really is the Proletarian Revolution and the Dictatorship of the Proletariat. These problems are widely discussed, but before one can accept or reject these ideas, he must understand the full significance of his decision. John Reed’s book will undoubtedly help to clear this question, which is the fundamental problem of the international labor movement.

V. I. Lenin.

End of 1919.

Preface

This book is a slice of intensified history⁠—history as I saw it. It does not pretend to be anything but a detailed account of the November Revolution, when the Bolsheviki, at the head of the workers and soldiers, seized the state power of Russia and placed it in the hands of the Soviets.

Naturally most of it deals with “Red Petrograd,” the capital and heart of the insurrection. But the reader must realize that what took place in Petrograd was almost exactly duplicated, with greater or lesser intensity, at different intervals of time, all over Russia.

In this book, the first of several which I am writing, I must confine myself to a chronicle of those events which I myself observed and experienced, and those supported by reliable evidence; preceded by two chapters briefly outlining the background and causes of the November Revolution. I am aware that these two chapters make difficult reading, but they are essential to an understanding


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