The Witness by Grace Livingston Hill Lutz (best fiction novels of all time .txt) 📖
- Author: Grace Livingston Hill Lutz
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With The Lord God, And A Man Who Was Set To Follow Him!
Tennelly Looked Up And Raised His Eyebrows As Courtland Closed The Door.
"Guess You Needn't Have Written That Letter, After All!" Chuckled Bill
Ward. "I Thought Gila Would Get In Her Little Old Work!"
"Well, It's Written And Mailed, So That Doesn't Do Any Good Now. And,
Anyway, It's Always Well To Have More Than One String To Your Bow!"
Growled Tennelly. Courtland In Love! He Wasn't Exactly Sure He Liked It.
Courtland And Gila! What Kind Of A Girl Was Gila, Anyway? Was She Good
Enough For Court? He Must Look Into This.
"Say, Bill, Why Don't You Introduce Me To Your Cousin? I Think It's
About Time I Had A Chance To Judge For Myself How Things Are Getting
On," Growled Tennelly, Presently.
"Sure!" Said Bill. "Good Idea! Why Didn't You Mention It Before? How
About Going Now? It's Only Half Past Ten. Court Didn't Stay Very Late,
Did He? No, It Isn't Too Late For Gila. She Never Goes To Bed Till
Midnight, Not If There's Anything Interesting On. Wait. I'll Call Her Up
And See. I'm Privileged, Anyway, You Know. Cousins Can Do Anything. I'll
Tell Her We're Hungry."
So It Came About That An Hour After Gila Had Sat In The Firelight With
Courtland And Listened, Puzzled, To His Reverent Talk Of A
Soul-Friendship, She Ushered Into The Same Room Her Cousin And Tennelly.
She Met Tennelly With A Challenge In Her Eye.
Tennelly Had One In His. Their Glances Lingered, Sparred And Lingered
Again, And Each Knew That This Was A Notable Meeting.
For Tennelly Was Tall And Strikingly Handsome. He Had Those Deep Black
Chapter 21 Pg 121Eyes That Hold A Maiden's Gaze And Dare A Devil; Yet There Was Behind
His Look Something Strong, Dashing, Scholarly. Gila Saw At Once That He
Was Distinguished In His Way, And Though Her Thoughts Were Strangely
Held By Courtland She Could Not Let One Like This Go By Unchallenged. If
Courtland Did Not Prove Corrigible, Why, There Was Still As Good Fish In
The Sea As Ever Was Caught. It Were Well To Have More Than One Hook
Baited. So She Received Tennelly Graciously, Boldly, Impressively, And
In Three Minutes Was Talking With That Daring Intimacy That Young People
Of Her Style Love To Affect; And Tennelly, Fascinated By Her Charms, Yet
Seeing Through Them And Letting Her Know He Saw Through Them, Was
Fencing With Her Delightfully. He Told Himself It Was His Duty For
Courtland's Sake. Yet He Was Interested For His Own Sake And Knew It.
But He Did Not Like The Idea Of Court And This Girl! They Did Not Fit.
Court Was Too Genuine! Too Tender-Hearted! Too Idealistic About Women!
With Himself, Now, It Was Different. He Knew Women! Understood This One
At A Glance. She Was "A Peach" In Her Way, But Not The "Perfect Little
Peach" Court Ought To Have. She Would Flirt All Her Life And Break Old
Court's Heart If He Married Her.
So He Laughed And Joked With Gila, Answering Her Challenging Glances
With Glances Just As Ardent, While Bill Ward Sat And Watched Them Both,
Chuckling Away To Himself.
And Courtland, On His Knees, Talked With God!
The Next Morning Courtland Awoke With A Pleasant Sensation Of Eagerness
To See What Life Had In Store For Him. Was This Really The Wonderful
Experience Of Lov
Student Of Russian History, Speaking The Language Fluently, It Was His Good
Fortune To Spend Several Weeks In Petrograd Immediately Before And After
The Bolshevik Counter-Revolution. He Testifies That The "Freedom Of The
Press Established By Kerensky" Was "Terminated By The Bolsheviki."[27]
This Is Not The Testimony Of "Capitalist Newspapers," But Of Socialists Of
Unquestionable Authority And Standing. The _Dielo Naroda_ Was A Socialist
Paper, And The Volunteer Venders Of It, Who Were Brutally Beaten And Shot
Down By Red Guards, Were Socialist Working-Men.[28] When Oskar Tokoi, The
Well-Known Revolutionary Finnish Socialist Leader, Former Prime Minister Of
Finland, Declares That "Freedom Of Assemblage, Association, Free Speech,
And Free Press Is Altogether Destroyed,"[29] The Bolsheviki And Their
Sympathizers Cannot Plead That They Are The Victims Of "Capitalist
Misrepresentation." The Attitude Of The Bolshevik Leaders Toward The
Freedom Of The Press Has Been Frankly Stated Editorially In Pravda, Their
Official Organ, In The Following Words:
The Press Is A Most Dangerous Weapon In The Hands Of Our Enemies.
We Will Tear It From Them, We Will Reduce It To Impotence. It Is
The Moment For Us To Prepare Battle. We Will Be Inflexible In Our
Defense Of The Rights Of The Exploited. The Struggle Will Be
Decisive. We Are Going To Smite The Journals With Fines, To Shut
Chapter 21 Pg 122Them Up, To Arrest The Editors, And Hold Them As Hostages.[30]
Is It Any Wonder That Paul Axelrod, Who Was One Of The Representatives Of
Russia On The International Socialist Bureau Prior To The Outbreak Of The
War, Has Been Forced To Declare That The Bolsheviki Have "Introduced Into
Russia A System Worse Than Czarism, Suppressing The Constituent Assembly
And The Liberty Of The Press"?[31] Or That The Beloved Veteran Of The
Russian Revolution, Nicholas Tchaykovsky, Should Lament That "The
Bolshevik Usurpation Is The Continuation Of The Government By Which Czarism
Held The Country In An Iron Grip"?[32]
Iii
Lenine, Trotzky, Zinoviev, And Other Bolshevik Leaders Early Found
Themselves So Much At Variance With The Accepted Socialist Position That
They Decided To Change Their Party Name. They Had Been Social Democrats, A
Part Of The Social Democratic Party Of Russia. Now Ever Since Bronterre
O'brien First Used The Terms "Social Democrat" And "Social Democracy," In
1839, Their Meaning Has Been Pretty Well Established. A Social Democrat Is
One Who Aims To Base Government And Industry Upon Democracy. Certainly,
This Cannot Be Said To Be An Accurate Description Of The Position Of Men
Who Believe In The Rule Of A Nation Of One Hundred And Eighty Millions By A
Small Party Of Two Hundred Thousand Or Less--Or Even By An Entire Class
Representing Not More Than Six Per Cent. Of The Population--And Lenine And
His Friends, Recognizing The Fact, Decided To Change The Name Of Their
Group To The _Communist Party_, By Which Name They Are Now Known In Russia.
Lenine Frankly Admits That It Would Be A Mistake To Speak Of This Party As
A Party Of Democracy. He Says:
The Word "Democracy" Cannot Be Scientifically Applied To The
Communist Party. Since March, 1917, The Word Democracy Is Simply A
Shackle Fastened Upon The Revolutionary Nation And Preventing It
From Establishing Boldly, Freely, And Regardless Of All Obstacles
A New Form Of Power; The Council Of Workmen's, Soldiers' And
Peasants' Deputies, Harbinger Of The Abolition Of Every Form Of
Authority.[33]
The Phrase "Harbinger Of The Abolition Of Every Form Of Authority" Would
Seem To Indicate That Lenine's Ideal Is That Of The Old Nihilists--Or Of
Anarchists Of The Bakuninist School. That Is Very Far From The Truth. The
Phrase In Question Is Merely A Rhetorical Flourish. No Man Has More
Caustically Criticized And Ridiculed The Anarchists For Their Dream Of
Organization Without Authority Than Nikolai Lenine. Moreover, His
Conception Of Soviet Government Provides For A Very Strong Central
Authority. It Is A Newof State, But A State, Nevertheless, And, As We
Shall Discover, Far More Powerful Than The Political State With Which We
Chapter 21 Pg 123Are Familiar, Exercising Far Greater Control Over The Life Of The
Individual. It Is Not To Be A Democratic State, But A Very Despotic One, A
Dictatorship By A Small But Powerful Ruling Class. It Was Not The Word
"Democracy" Which Lenine Felt To Be A "Shackle Upon The Revolutionary
Nation," But Democracy Itself.
The Manner In Which They Betrayed The Constituent Assembly Will Prove The
Complete Hostility Of The Bolsheviki To Democratic Government. In Order To
Excuse And Justify The Bolsheviki's Actions In This Regard, Their
Supporters In This Country Have Assiduously Circulated Two Statements. They
Are, First, That The Provisional Government Purposely And With Malicious
Intent Delayed The Convocation Of The Constituent Assembly, Hoping To Stave
It Off Altogether; Second, That Such A Long Time Had Elapsed Between The
Elections And The Convocation That When The Latter Date Was Reached The
Delegates No Longer Represented The True Feeling Of The Electorate.
With Regard To The First Of These Statements, Which Is A Repetition Of A
Charge Made By Trotzky Before The Bolshevik Revolt, It Is To Be Noted That
It Is Offered In Justification Of The Bolshevik _Coup D'état_. If The
Charge Made Were True, Instead Of False, As It Can Easily Be Shown To Be,
It Would Only Justify The Counter-Revolution If The Counter-Revolution
Itself Were Made The Instrument For Insuring The Safety Of The Constituent
Assembly. But The Bolsheviki _Suppressed The Constituent Assembly_. By What
Process Of Reasoning Do We Reach The Result That Because The Provisional
Government Delayed The Convocation Of The Constituent Assembly, Which The
People Desired, A Counter-Revolutionary Movement To _Suppress It
Altogether_, By Force Of Arms, Was Right And Proper?
With Regard To The Second Statement, Which Is A Repetition Of An Argument
Advanced In Russia, It Should Be Sufficient To Emphasize A Few Dates. The
Bolsheviki Seized The Power Of Government On November 7th And The Elections
For The Constituent Assembly Took Place On November 25th--Nearly Three
Weeks Later. The Date Set By The Kerensky Government For The Opening Of The
Constituent Assembly Was December 12th And On That Date Some Forty-Odd
Members Put In An Appearance. Recognizing That They Could Not Begin
Business Until A Quorum Appeared, These Decided To Wait Until At Least A
Quorum Should Be Present. They Did Not Attempt To Do Any Work. What
Happened Is Told In The Following Passages From A Signed Statement By 109
Members--All Socialist-Revolutionists.[34]
On The Appointed Day And Hour Of The Opening Of The Session Of The
Constituent Assembly ... The Delegates To The Constituent Assembly
Who Had Arrived In Petrograd Gathered At The Tavrichesky Palace.
The Elected Representatives Of The People Beheld Innumerable
Banners And Large Crowds Surrounding The Palace. This Was
Petrograd Greeting The Representatives Of The People. At The Doors
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