to a man to bring in my
kit, while the women, all of them flat-faced peasants, made room for me
at the stove.
From where I stood I could hear the sound of desultory firing across the
bridge, and inquired what was in progress.
But there was an ominous silence. They did not reply; for, as I
afterwards discovered, they had taken me for a high police official from
Petersburg, thus accounting for the innkeeper's courtesy.
"Tell me," I said, addressing the wrinkle-faced old Pole, "what is
happening over yonder?"
"The Cossacks," he stammered. "Krasiloff and his Cossacks are upon us!
They have just entered the town, and are shooting down people
everywhere. The fight for freedom has commenced, Excellency. But it is
horrible. A poor woman was shot dead before my door half an hour ago,
and her body taken away by the soldiers."
Terrible reports of the Russian revolution had filtered through to
England, but I had no idea when I started that I was bound for
the disturbed district. I inquired for the house of the Countess
Alexandrovsky, and was directed to it--across the town, they said.
With a glance to see that my revolver was loaded, I threw aside my
shuba, and leaving the inn walked across the bridge into a poor
narrow street of wretched-looking houses, many of them built of wood.
A man limped slowly past me, wounded in the leg, and leaving blood-spots
behind him as he went. An old woman was seated in a doorway, her face
buried in her hands, wailing--
"My poor son!--dead!--dead!"
Before me I saw a great barricade composed of trees, household
furniture, paving-stones, overturned carts, pieces of barbed wire--in
fact, everything and anything the populace could seize upon for the
construction of hasty defence. Upon the top, silhouetted against the
clear, frosty sky, was the scarlet flag of the Revolution--the Red
Rooster was crowing!
Excited men were there, armed with rifles, shouting and giving orders.
Then I saw that a small space had been left open against the wall of a
house so that persons might pass and repass.
As I approached, a wild-haired man shouted to me and beckoned
frantically. I grasped his meaning. He wished me to come within. I ran
forward, entered the town proper, and a few moments later the opening
was closed by a dozen slabs of stone being heaped into it by as many
willing hands.
Thus I, an inoffensive chauffeur, found myself in the very centre of the
Revolution, behind the barricades, of w
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