&&S i. ;.. T '-J! ,.V"i 3).J, l V wvfyiqvmMi imi n fr .ii.i. ...... i 1 KVEypyg XEDCR-HILADELPfcA; BATUflDAY, OCTOBER 30, 3 M v (Cepyrlitat. 1B1T, rublle t-tSttr Company. All rliht rtren k tun -mvni iWhfcrf) y. ihBB W T i"". T yQ Xae MirjipLCfeSS RGLcLziwiR k m t m M w.rfrfc. .- - r LJdL- J, flBWVi wnimimm GREGORY RASPUTIN, the "Mack Monk of Russia," who camo - to wield a powerful influence over the Imperial Court, was dirty, uncouth peasant, the victim of circumstances rather than the molder of history. In this story is told how ho was pushed Into tho most important position in Russia a Minister without portfolio, but with power to sway tho Czar and the Court; a "monk" without order but casting a spell over tho people that defied the Holy Synod itself. INTRODUCTION rpiIIS expose, based on facts which have come to my knowledge, 'though probably far from being complete, aims at depicting tho recent stato of things in Russia, and thus to explain how tho great changes which havo taken place in my country have been rendorod possible. A lot of exaggerated talcs have been put into circulation concerning tho Empress Alexandra, tho part she has played in the perturbations that have shaken Russia from ono end to nnother and the extraordinary lnfluenco which, thanks to her nnd to her efforts in his behalf, the sinister porsonago called Rasputin camo to acquire over public affairs in tho vast empiro reigned over by Nicholas II for twenty-two years. A good many of these tales rcposo on nothing but imagination, but nevertheless it is unfortunately too true that it is to the conduct of tho Empress, and to tho part sho attempted to play in the politics of the world, that tho Romanoffs owe the loss of their throne. Alexandra Feodorowna has been the evil genius of tho dynasty whoso head sho married. Without her it is probable that most of the disasters that have overtaken tho Russian armies would not have happened, and it is certain that tho crown which had been worn by Peter tho Great and by Catherine II would not havo been disgraced. I Sho was totally unfit for the position to which chance had raised her, and she never was able to understand the character or the needs of the people over which she ruled. Monstrously selfish, she never looked beyond matters; purely personal to her or to her son. whom she idolized in an absurd man ner. She, who had been reared in principles of true liberalism, who had had in her grandmother, tho lato Queen Victoria, n perfect example of a constitutional sovereign, became from the very first day of her arrival in Russia tho enemy of every progress, of every attempt to civilize the nation which owned her for its Empress. She gavo .her confidence to the most ferocious reactionaries tho country possessed. She tried, and in a certain degreo succeeded, in inspiring in her husband the disdain of his people and the determination to uphold an autocratic system of government that ought to havo been overturned and replaced by an enlightened one. Haughty by ature and by temperament, she hod an unlimited confidence in her own abilities, and especially after she had becomo the mother of the son sho had longed for during so many years, she came to believe that everything sho wished or wanted to do had to bo dono and that her subjects were but her slaves. She had a strong will and much imperiousnes8 in her character, and understood admirably the weak points in her husband, who became but a puppet in her hands. She herself was but a plaything in the game of a few unscrupulous adventurers who used her for the furtherance of their own ambitious, money-grubbing schemes, and who, but for the unexpected events that led to the overthrow of the house of Romanoff, would in time have betrayed Russia into sullying her fair fame as well as her reputation in history. Rasputin, about whom so much has been said, was but an inci dent in tho course of a whole series of facts, all of them more or less disgraceful, and none of which had a single extenuating circumstance to put forward as an excuse for their perpetration. He himself was far from being the remarkable individual he has been represented by some people, and had he been left alone it is likely that even if one- had heard about him it would not have been for any length of time. Alexandra Despised the Tsar Thoso who hated him mostly did so because they had not been able to obtain from him what they had wanted, and they applied themselves to'paint him as much more dangerous than ho really was. They did not know that ho was but the mouthpiece of other people far cleverer and far more unscrupulous even than himself, who hid themselves behind him and who moved him as they would have done pawns in a game of chess according to their personal aims and wants. These people it was who nearly brought Russia to the verge of absolute ruin, and they would never have been able to rise to tho power which they wielded had not tho Empress lent herself to their schemes. Her absolute belief in the merits of the wandering preacher, thanks to his undoubted magnetic influence, contrived to get hold of her mind and to persuade her that so long ns he was at her side nothing evil could befall her or her family. It is not generally known outside of Russia that Alexandra Feodorowna despised her husband, and that sho mado no secret of the fact. Sho considered him as a weak individual, unable to givo himself an account of what was going on around him, who had to bo guided and never left to himself. Her flatterers, of whom she had many at a time, had persuaded her that she possessed all the genius and moat of the qualities of Catherine II, and that sho ought to follow the example of the latter by rallying around her a sufficient number of friends to effect a palace revolution which would trans form her into the reigning sovereign of that Russia which she did not know and whose character she was unable to understand. Love for Nicholas II she had never had, nor esteem for him, and from tho very first moment of her marriage sho had affected to treat him as a negligiblo quantity. But influence over him she had taken good care to acquire. She had jealously kept away from him all the people from whom he could havo heard the truth or who could havo signaled to him the dangers which his dynasty was running by the furtherance of a policy which had becomo loathsome to the country and on account of which the war with Germany had taken such an unexpected and dangerous course. The Empress, like all stupid people, and her stupidity has not been denied, even by her best friends, believed that one could, rule a nation by terror. She, therefore, always Interposed herself whenever Nicholas II was induced to adopt a more liberal system of government and urged him to subduo by forco aspirations it would have been far better for him to havo encouraged. She had listened to all the repre sentatives of that detestable old bureaucratic system which gave to the police the sole right to dispose of people's lives and which relied on Siberia and tho knout to keep in order an aggrieved country eager to be admitted to the circle of civilized European nations. Without her and without her absurd fears, it is likely that the Vlrst Duma would not havo been dissolved. Without her entreaties, it Is probable that the troops composing tho garrison at St. Peters burg would nop have been commanded to fire at tho peaceful popu lation of the capital on that January day when, headed by the priest Gapone, It had repaired to the Winter Palace to lay its wrongs before tte Tzar, whom it still worshipped at that time. She. was at the bettom of every tyrannical action which took placo during the reign o Nicholas II. And lately she was tho movjng spirit in tho cam paign, engineered by the friends .of Rasputin, to conclude a sepa rate peace with Germany. In the long intrigue which came to an end by the publication of the Manifesto of Pskow, Rasputin undoubtedly played a considerable pmtt, but all unconsciously. Thoso who used him, together with his iaftwaqce, were very careful not to initiate him into their different But tbey paid aim, they fed him,-they gave him cham PiClH A twites W WmmWMmM 1m RASPUTIN AND THE EMPRESS OF RUSSIA pagne to drink and pretty women to make love to in order to induce him to represent them to the Empress as being the only men capable of saving Russia, about which she did not care, and her crown, to which sho was so attached. With Rasputin she never discussed politics, nor did the Emperor; But with his friends she talked over every political subject of importance to the welfare of the nation, and being convinced that they were tho men best capable of uphold ing he? interests, she forced them upon her husband and compelled him to follow the advico which they gave. She could not bear con tradiction, and she loved flattery. She was convinced that no one was more clover than herself, and she wished to impose her views everywhere and upon every occasion. Few sovereigns have been hated as sho has been. In every class of society her name was mentioned with execration, and following the introduction of Rasputin into her household this aversion which she inspired grew to a phenomenal extent. Sho was openly accused of degrading the position which sho held and the crown which she wore. In every town and village of the empire her conduct came to be discussed and her person to be cursed. She was held responsible for all tho mistakes that were made, for all the blunders which were committed, for all the omissions which had been performed. And when the plot against Rasputin came to bo engineered it was as much directed against tho person of Alexandra Feodorowna as against that of her favorite, and it was sho whom ono aimed to strike through him. The Empress After Rasputin's Death Had she shown some common sense after the murder of a man whom sho well knew was considered the most dangerous enemy of tho Romanoff dynasty things might havo taken a different course. Though every one was agreed as to the necessity of a change in the system of government of Russia, though a revolution was considered inevitable, yet no one wished it to happen at the moment when it did, and all political parties were agreed as to the necessity of 'postponing it until after the. war. But the exasperation of the Empress against those who had removed her favorite led her to trust even more in those whom he had introduced and recommended to her attention. She threw herself with a renewed vigor into their schemes, urging her husband to dishonor himself, together with his signature, by turning traitor to his allies and to his promises. She wanted him to conclude a peace with Germany that would have allowed her a free hand in her desires to punish all the, people who Had conspired against her and against the man upon whom she had lookod as a saviour and a saint. Onco this fact was recognized the revolution became inevitable. .It is to tho credit of Russia that it took place with tho dignity that has marked its development and success. This, in broad lines, is the summary of the causes that have brought' about the fall of the .Romanoff dynasty, and, they must never bo lost Bight of when one is trying to describe it. It is; how- ever, far too early to judge the Russian revolution in its effects becauaefor one thing, it is far from being at an end, and may yet rpiIE foil of the House of the Romanoffs is the most drtmaL crcnt in European ntsiory since muis .vi was gnlllotiiJ Behind the veil of events stood this sinister Personage-.; Rasputin working In his quiet way for the ends desire Russia's enemy bureaucrats. From the time this peasant-mnZ left his home in Siberia until he was murdered he, was a tontZ disturbing factor In the Empire's political and civil, as wti( religious, life. take quite an unexpected turn. For another, the events connected with it are still too fresh7 to Ce considered from an objective point of view. I have, therefore, refrained from expressing an opinion In this narrative. My aim has been to presont to my readers a descrip tion of the personality of Rasputin, together with thu part, such ns I know it, that ho has played in the development of Russian history during the last five years or so, and afterward to describe tho course of the revolution and the reasons that have led to its explosion in such an unexpected manner. CHAPTER I A Court Favorite TXTE LIVE in strange times, when strange things happen which at ' ' first sjght seem unintelligible and the reason for which we fall to grasp. Even in Russia, where Rasputin had become the most talkod of person in tho wholo empire, few people fully realized what he" was and what had been the part which he had played In Russia's modern , history. Yet during tho last ten years his name had became a familior one In the palaces of tho great nobles whoso names were written down in the Golden Book of the aristocracy of tho country, as well as in tho hut3 of the poorest peasants in the land. At a time when incredulity was attacking the heart and the intelligence of tho Russian nation tho appoaranco of this semivagrant and semi monk of one of the most persecuted sects in the empire was almost as great an event as was that of Cagliostro during tho years beforo the fall of the old French monarchy. ' There was, however, a great difference between the two per sonages. One was a couttjer and a refined man of tho world, while the other was only an uncouth peasant, with a crude cunning which mado him discover soon 'in what direction his bread could be but tered and what advantages ho might reap out of the extraordinary positions to which events, together with the ambitions of a few, had carried him. He was a perfoct impersonation of tho kind of indi vidual known In the annabVof Russian history as I'Wromienschtchlk," literally "the Man of tho Day,"1 an appellation which since the times of Peter the Great had clung to all the different favorites of Russian sovereigns. There was one difference, however, and this a most essential ono. He had never been the favorite of the present Tzar, who perhaps did not feef as sorry as might have been expected by his sudden disappearance from the sqene of the world. I shall say a thing' which perhaps will surprise my readers Personally, Rasputin was never the omnipotent man he wajs believed to be, and more than once most of the things which were attributed to him were -not at all hjs own work. But he liked the public to think that ho had a finger in every pie that was being baked. And he contrived to imbuo 'Russian society at large with such a profound conviction that he could do absolutely everything he chose in regard to the placing or displacing 6f poople In high places, obtaining money grants and. government contracts for hla varlpus J'proteges," that Very often-the persons, from whom certain things depended fcnslnned to errant them to thoso who asked In tho hnmn t r out of sheer fright of finding this terrible being in their way. jS feared to refuse compliance with any request preferred to thS cither by himself or by ono who could recommend himself on S strength of his good offices on thejr behalf. But Itnsputin . tool of a man far more clever than himself, Count Wltte. It J! partly duo to the lattcr's influence and directions that lie tried loij himself up In affairs of state and to give advice to people whom U thought to be In need of It. Ho was an Illiterate brute, but h fcJ all the instincts of a domineering mind' which circumstances and tiy station of life in which he had been born had prevented from dtl. ' Ing. He had also something else an undoubted magnetic W which allowed him to add nuto-suggestion to all his words hJ which mado even unbelieving people succumb sometimes toii, hypnotic practices which he most undoubtedly exercised io .a cot siderablo extent during the last years of his adventurous cxistes Rasputin Universally Attacked Amidst the discontent which, it would be Idle to deny, Jud existed in the Russian empiro during the period which immedUfcl. preceded the great war the personality of Rasputin had played t great part in giving to certain people the opportunity to exploit la almost constant presenco at the side of the sovereign as a meani U foment public opinion against the Emperor and to throw ditcreft upon him by representing him aa being entirely under the inflows of the cunning peasant who, by a strange freak of destiny, had nj, denly becomo far more powerful than the strongest ministers the. Belves. Tho press bolonging to tho opposition parties had got ink the habit of attacking him and calling his attendance on the imperial ', court an open scandal, whicii ougnt in tno interest 01 the dynattj to bo put nn end to by every means available. In the Duma his name had been mentioned more than onco, tnl always wjth contempt. Every kind of reproach had been hurled , him, and others had not been spared. Ho had become at last a Ian. tastic kind of creaturo, more exploited thnn anything, more destroy, able thnn destructive, one whoso real "rolo" will never be knorni,t its "full extont, who might in other countries than Russia and it another time havo becomo the founder of some religious order ot secret association. His actions when examined In detail do nitdlfftt very much from those of the fanatics which in" Paris Tinder the n!n of Louis XV were called the "Convulsionnaires," and who gavi vtif to all kind of excesses under tho pretext that these wore acceptabji to God by reason of the personality of the people whd inspired them. In civilized, intelligent, well-educated Europe such an appu,. tlon would have been Impossible, but in Russia, that land of mysUriti nnd of deep faiths, where there still exist religious sects given lotvll kinds of excesses and to attacks of pious madias, (for tt ch hardly be called by any other name), ho acquired within a,relatively short tlmo the affections of a whole lot of people. Th?ywer inclined to see in him a prophet whose prayers were capable of winning for them the Dhine Paradise for which their hungry cosh were longing. There was nothing at all phenomenal about it. It was even in a certain sense quito a natural manifestation o. this large Russian nature, which is capable of so many good or td v.c.nn nnd which has decnlv incrustcd at the bottom of its heart KAgaavu ..- w . a tendency to seek the supernatural In default of the religious con victlons which, thanks to circumstances, it has como to lose. The American public is perhaps not generally aware of tie character of certain religious sects in Russia, which is considered l- ...... l,.., nf nlimlnvv wifh ihn Trir nfr. it Kpad. and when XO DC p cuuuuj v- . ...-,,,, -. .. 14 T. : neonlo. think there is no room left for any other rejigibn yian tai ; 1 ' . . ,...,... , T tSl... 1LI .... Jl ..f official ono to acveiop usmi. in reumy, iiiiiiga uri: vcij ui-u-, and to this day, outside of the recognized nonconformists, vrno have theirwn bishops and prjests, and whoso faith is rogn!:ed and acknowledged by the State, there aro any number of Sects, Mci more superstitious and each more poworful than the other in regard to tho influence which they exercise over their adherents. Theee, though not numerous by nny means, yet arc actuated by sud fanaticism that thoy become apt at certain moments td tecomt sub jects of considerable embarrassment to the authorities. Some an inspired by tho conviction that the only means to escape froin til --clutches of the devil consists in suicide or in the murder of other people. ' . .. The Two Principal "Heresies" For instance, the Baby Killers, or utetoouousy, as uisy called, think it a duty to send to Heavon the souls of new-born infants, which they destroy as soon as they see the light of theiday, thinking thus to render themselves agreeable to the Almlgnty by , snatching children away from the power of tho cvjl one. Anottifr sect, which, goes by the name of Stranglers, fully believes that i door's pf Heaven are. only opened before those who have died violent death, and whenever a relative or friend Is dangerously lu - they proceed to smother him under the weight of many pillows M as to hasten the end. The Philipowtsy preach salvation througi j suicide, and the voluntary death of several people in common ii considered by them ns a most meritorious action. Sometimes whoM villages decldo to unite themselves In ono Immense holocauSt.MW i barricade themselves in a house, which is afterward set on fire. An incident that occurred during tho reign of Alexander Ufa f remembered to this day in Russia. A peasant called Khodkine p suaded twenty people to retire together with him into a grotto hidden in the vast forests of the government of Perm, where compelled them to die of hunger. Two women having contriv'! escape, the fanatics, fearing that they might be denounced, WllM themselves with the first weapons which fell under their hand. TJ. V.: trn -flinf ttinir TnitrVlt find VlPmCo1 VCB COmDOllcd t renounce their sinister design, and thus fall again into the clutciM I of that Satan for fear of whom they had made up their minaa encounter an awful death. Even as late as the end of the I i -... . . fnMntij.:..M Al.u u mAf itith iipr nnd tnero.ui , nf nn,l rpntnr nf RiiRnln. Tn IflRS. under tho reign V w 1 father of the preient Tzar, a peasant in the government of K'? 1I-,1 TVV Kilrnt Mmanlf rlnoth , anHnir fire tO hiS ClOttM, 3 which he had previously soaked in paraffin, and expired under w I most awful torments, singing hymns of praise to, tho Lord. Among all these heresies there are two which have attract J more than the others the attention of the authorities, thanks to W A secret rites and to their immoral tendencies. They aro the bK,PrJ' or Voluntary Eunuchs, about which it is useless to say anrtoilf here, and tho Khlysty, or Flagellants, which to this day has a eon stdernble number of adepts and to which Rasputin undoubtedly W-1 iqngea, mi which, h iaci, no openiy owou uuouinu". - - - which calls Itself "Men of God," has the strangest rites wnien nu-" ImrnilniitUn Mn Jnvpnt Arvni-dfno tn lf nrpfftntjf. a human CreW should tryo raise Its soul toward tho Divinity with theieIp1: sexual excesses'of all kinds. During their assemblies they indulK a muu w nM u.wn.m u.,u oiuum uto ivywi .....v.. . - - nothing so much ao the rounds of the Dancing Dervishes in tne u Thoy dance and dance until their strength falls them, when tw drop to the floor in a kind of trance or ecstasy, during which, ecu l.nsllt, nnAiinfntilA for tliftlr npflnno tbmr mairlnf thflt tnOy "V Christ and the Virgin Mary among them. They then threw them selves into the embrace of the supposed divinities. CONTINUED IN MONDAY'S uenin9e&gpr t- 'f Z. n i, '-4 '' ' ' 4, m ' ' .s i . i w.'i'.i