Page:John Reed - Ten Days that Shook the World - 1919, Boni and Liveright.djvu/77

 hold a Krestny Khod—Procession of the Cross—in honour of the Ikon of 1612, through whose miraculous intervention Napoleon had been driven from Moscow. The atmosphere was electric; a spark might kindle civil war. The Petrograd Soviet issued a manifesto, headed “Brothers—Cossacks!”

The procession was hastily called off…

In the barracks and the working-class quarters of the town the Bolsheviki were preaching, “All Power to the Soviets!” and agents of the Dark Forces were urging the people to rise and slaughter the Jews, shop-keepers, Socialist leaders…

On one side the Monarchist press, inciting to bloody repression—on the other Lenin’s great voice roaring, “Insurrection!… We cannot wait any longer!”

Even the bourgeois press was uneasy. Birjevya Viedomosti (Exchange Gazette) called the Bolshevik propaganda an attack on “the most elementary principles of society—personal security and the respect for private property”.

But it was the “moderate” Socialist journals which were the most hostile. “The Bolsheviki are the most dangerous enemies of the Revolution,” declared Dielo Naroda. Said the

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