Tom Keneally won the Booker Prize in 1982 with Schindler’s Ark, later made into the Academy Award-winning film Schindler’s List by Steven Spielberg. He has written ten works of non-fiction, including his recent memoir Searching for Schindler, and the histories The Commonwealth of Thieves,TheGreat Shame and American Scoundrel, and 27 works of fiction, including TheWidow and Her Hero (shortlisted for the Prime Minister’s Literary Award), An Angel in Australia and Bettany’s Book. His novels The Chant of JimmieBlacksmith,Gossip from the Forest and Confederates were all shortlisted for the Booker Prize, while Bring Larks and Heroes and Three Cheers for the Paraclete won the Miles Franklin Literary Award.
   BY THE SAME AUTHOR
   Fiction
   The Place at Whitton
   The Fear
   Bring Larks and Heroes
   Three Cheers for the Paraclete
   The Survivor
   A Dutiful Daughter
   The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith
   Blood Red, Sister Rose
   Gossip from the Forest
   Season in Purgatory
   A Victim of the Aurora
   Passenger
   Confederates
   The Cut-rate Kingdom
   Schindler’s Ark
   A Family Madness
   The Playmaker
   Towards Asmara
   By the Line
   Flying Hero Class
   Woman of the Inner Sea
   Jacko
   A River Town
   Bettany’s Book
   An Angel in Australia
   The Tyrant’s Novel
   The Widow and Her Hero
   Non-fiction
   Outback
   The Place Where Souls Are Born
   Now and in Time to Be: Ireland and the Irish
   Memoirs from a Young Republic
   Homebush Boy: A Memoir
   The Great Shame
   American Scoundrel
   Lincoln
   The Commonwealth of Thieves
   Searching for Schindler
   For Children
   Ned Kelly and the City of Bees
   Roos in Shoes
   		 			 			All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted by any person or entity, including internet search engines or retailers, in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including printing, photocopying (except under the statutory exceptions provisions of the Australian Copyright Act 1968), recording, scanning or by any information storage and retrieval system without the prior written permission of Random House Australia. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
   			The People’s Train
   			ePub ISBN 9781864714975
   			Kindle ISBN 9781864717624
   			A Vintage book
   			Published by Random House Australia Pty Ltd
   			Level 3, 100 Pacific Highway, North Sydney NSW 2060
   			 				www.randomhouse.com.au
   			First published by Vintage in 2009
   			This edition published in 2010
   			Copyright © Tom Keneally 2009
   			The moral right of the author has been asserted.
   			All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted by any person or entity, including internet search engines or retailers, in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying (except under the statutory exceptions provisions of the Australian Copyright Act 1968), recording, scanning or by any information storage and retrieval system without the prior written permission of Random House Australia.
   			Addresses for companies within the Random House Group can be found at
   			 				www.randomhouse.com.au/offices
   			National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication Entry
   			Keneally, Thomas, 1935– The people’s train.
   			ISBN 978 1 74166 745 5
   			Soviet Union – History – Revolution, 1917–1921 – Fiction.
   			A823.3
   			Internal design by Post Pre-Press Group, Australia
   To Judith
   Table of Contents
   		 		 			Cover
   		 			ABOUT THE AUTHOR
   		 		 			BY THE SAME AUTHOR
   		 		 			Title Page
   		 		 			Copyright
   		 			Dedication
   		 		 			Part One
   		 			Chapter 1
   		 			Chapter 2
   		 			Chapter 3
   		 			Chapter 4
   		 			Chapter 5
   		 			Chapter 6
   		 			Chapter 7
   		 			Chapter 8
   		 			Chapter 9
   		 			Chapter 10
   		 			Chapter 11
   		 			Chapter 12
   		 			Chapter 13
   		 			Chapter 14
   		 			Chapter 15
   		 			Chapter 16
   		 			Chapter 17
   		 			Chapter 18
   		 			Chapter 19
   		 			Chapter 20
   		 			Chapter 21
   		 			Chapter 22
   		 			Chapter 23
   		 			Chapter 24
   		 			Chapter 25
   		 			Chapter 26
   		 			Chapter 27
   		 			Chapter 28
   		 			Chapter 29
   		 			Chapter 30
   		 			Chapter 31
   		 			Chapter 32
   		 			Chapter 33
   		 			Chapter 34
   		 			Chapter 35
   		 			Chapter 36
   		 			Chapter 37
   		 			Chapter 38
   		 			Chapter 39
   		 			Chapter 40
   		 			Chapter 41
   		 			Chapter 42
   		 			Part Two
   		 			Chapter 1
   		 			Chapter 2
   		 			Chapter 3
   		 			Chapter 4
   		 			Chapter 5
   		 			Chapter 6
   		 			Chapter 7
   		 			Chapter 8
   		 			Chapter 9
   		 			Chapter 10
   		 			Chapter 11
   		 			Chapter 12
   		 			Chapter 13
   		 			Chapter 14
   		 			Chapter 15
   		 			Chapter 16
   		 			Chapter 17
   		 			Chapter 18
   		 			Chapter 19
   		 			Chapter 20
   		 			Chapter 21
   		 			Chapter 22
   		 			Chapter 23
   		 			Chapter 24
   		 			Chapter 25
   		 			Author’s Note
   		 			Acknowledgements
   Part One
   My Exile and Wanderings
   By F. A. (Artem) Samsurov
   (Late Hero of the Great October Socialist Revolution)
   Translated into English from the 2nd Russian edition,
   Moscow, Progress Publishing, 1953
   1
   When I first came to Brisbane in the year 1911, I wrote often to my sister Zhenya Trofimova, as I had not done during my escape or while Suvarov and I were surviving in Shanghai. That I had not written earlier was not due to lack of affection, but to the fact I was so unsettled. But now I felt that for a time I had reached the end of journeying. I dedicate these pages, which were written in exile, to her.
   Trofimov, my brother-in-law, was at that stage a Donetsk coal miner, a noble soul and a reader, who – although I did not know it at the time – had recently been overcome by gases and dust clouds in the Verkhneye No. 3 mine. When they first opened those workings, the priest came down the shaft with holy water and incantations. But no blessing would prove equal to the unholy atmosphere of the mine.
   I move ahead to 
					     					 			o fast. Exile is my story, not black lung.
   I was amazed at first arrival in the city by the fact that even the poor did not eat horsemeat. Yes, they ate rabbits, of which there are too many. Did that mean it was a working man’s paradise already, without a revolution? Well ... the men in the railway camp near Warwick, where I had worked early in my Australian experience, did not think so. The system remained the system. There were men I knew who fed their children a slice of bread and lard four evenings a week. Yet I remembered intelligent Russians who – having never been there – declared that Australia was a working man’s paradise. But the reality, even in a new country, was that the old world had been imported there in one lump.
   However, this was a good place for a tired old prisoner to rest in the sun and between battles. Brisbane ran up a hill in a bow of river and sat without any fuss under the humid sky. And Russia had come there. I went along to a meeting of the Association of Russian Emigrants on the south side of the river, Stanley Street. There were Russians of all shades there, vague liberals, Mensheviks, disappointed Agrarian Socialists (who once lived with peasants but found them mean and wanting), Socialist Revolutionaries, anarchists and Wobblies. And also people who just wanted to take a rest from the tsar. The association was run by decent people, including an engineer, Rybakov. Old Rybakov had begun as a tally-clerk at Cannon Hill meatworks but, though always suffering bad asthma, was a figure of authority now that he had a good job as an engineer in the tramways.
   My old friend from Shanghai, big lean A. I. ‘Grisha’ Suvarov was there, still a beanpole with freckles. Once he had walked two days from a place named Stanthorpe, through the bush to visit me at the railway camp. But now he had a job at the Cannon Hill meatworks and he had boasted he could get me a job too, as he did – lugging carcases of sheep and beef onto ships. The meatworks and the wharves were heavily Russian, apart from the Australians – there must have been two-fifths Russians there. After my sometimes exhausting adventures, I felt I needed to labour hard – the more carcases I hoisted the more my brain revived.
   In any case, the trouble with this Association of Russian Emigrants was that, apart from wheezy old Rybakov, they seemed to be on a brain holiday too. They showed no consciousness and were purely social and charitable. They went on nature hikes to Mount Coot-tha and so on. I hated to see an organisation so wasted and wanted to make it into something more useful and active. The usual hikes and chess would be all very creditable if our political minds were engaged as well. But it was not so. As Suvarov said correctly, we needed a Russian league, one that looked after newcomers better, was not too scared or comfortable to greet them, and was a union of Russian workers as well. We needed a newspaper too, a political one, not a social flimsy. Where we could get Cyrillic type from in this city I just didn’t know. But at least Rybakov had got hold of the association’s constitution and was writing a new one.
   After we’d discussed it, we all turned up – all we recent Russian arrivals – to the association’s next meeting. In the extra business, after the old committee had decided on a Russian folk concert at the Buranda Hall – to which Australian trade unionists were to be invited and asked to contribute a silver coin to a Russian famine fund – I rose to move that all places on the committee be declared vacant, and that a new committee be elected that night and immediately present a new constitution to the membership, allowing them an hour to read and approve it. So the new Soyuz Russkikh Emigrantov came into existence, and I was elected president. I felt invigorated. I was just at the stage again – after my long escape and pilgrimage – to become active.
   At the next meeting of the soyuz, I moved that we produce a political and social newspaper every two weeks. The old music teacher, Chernikov, who had been president of the association for ten years, was appalled by the idea of politics.
   But we have never had any trouble from the authorities, Chernikov said, his voice trembling. You don’t understand, he said. This is not a country for political philosophy.
   I could hear Rybakov, in his alpaca suit, wheeze angrily. The climate here is bad for his breathing – it is humid and full of vivid flowering plants. One encounter with a frangipani, with its dolorous, opium-like scent, or a walk under a flowering jacaranda, can threaten Rybakov’s health as the cold of Manchuria never did.
   Chernikov went on, The police took an interest in us in the past, but when they discovered we were more a social body, they were happy to leave us alone. Look now, I was a narodnik when it was very dangerous to be. I knew the men of the Second First of March – we published a paper together. So it’s not as if I haven’t done my bit.
   Rybakov kept wheezing angrily. I suppose you were hanged, he suggested. With Generalov and Ulyanov.
   These were the names of men who had tried to kill Tsar Alexander.
   It was important to soothe people who agreed with Chernikov, since we needed their support too. I was willing to edit the newssheet, to get it printed and published, and put my name to it. I wanted a good relationship with the government too, but that does not mean we could not discuss ideas. We could give the paper a pleasant, unprovocative name. I suggested Ekho Avstralii. The old committee were half-consoled by that name.
   As for setting the type, there was a Russian compositor who worked for a Polish printing company in Ernest Street. The owner already printed invitations to the union’s (formerly association’s) events. I said I would employ the compositor – I hoped on a voluntary basis. I would find a printing press – in the hope of having the sum needed to pay for it voted by the committee – and I would do the printing, distributing and posting of the thing.
   And the enthusiasm of Rubinov, the tramways man, and of my friend Suvarov, a fellow member of the Australian Workers Union, clinched it. Both offered to contribute articles, as I knew they were dying to do. The motion was carried with excitement by the young men on the floor, and a frown from old Chernikov and his mates. It was further moved that some articles should be in Russian and some – social events, job advice for émigrés, that sort of thing – in English.
   They have a saying at the abattoirs that busy people race around like blue-arsed flies. I was a blue-arsed fly in the next two weeks. It might have been easier to give ourselves a few months to get the first edition out, but that would have driven me mad with a sense that this great sunny place was howling for voices and I was not providing them.
   I ran into problems. The Polish printer in Ernest Street was not an internationalist and told me he had no Cyrillic script and had come to Australia to get away from Cossacks and Russians. And the Russian alphabet, it seemed. Then I discovered that to begin a newspaper in Queensland you had to deposit a five-hundred-pound bond with the attorney-general of the state. So much for the freedom of the press in the sunny workers’ paradise of Australia! I had received from my membership a budget of one hundred and fifty pounds and did not intend to go back to them for more. Besides, with five hundred pounds, we could do so much for the cane-cutters who came to Brisbane for Christmas, or we could create a Russian library.
   I sent away to Melbourne for Cyrillic script and I was allowed to rent an old, stand-up, Boston-style hand-operated printing press for ten shillings a week from the People’s Printery (the printery used by the Trades and Labour Hall). Our rented press and its printing frames had been rendered obsolete by newer, automatic machines, but when Suvarov and I and a few others dismantled ours in the lane behind the People’s Printery, loaded it onto a dray and took it to the Stefanovs’, where I’d rented a room for the press, I felt the old subversive exhilaration. I wanted our first edition of Ekho to be out by the time the Russian workers came in from the bush for the Russian Christmas, which came twelve days after the Western one, on 7 January.
   It was pleasant to have a reason to write again. It was pleasant to ask my friends for material. My lanky friend Suvarov was self-taught but a genuine thinker. He had already written a piece on the shortcomings and sentimentalities of agrarian socialism, which saw the peasant com 
					     					 			mune, despite all its narrow-mindedness, cheating, lust for land and money-lending, as the structure out of which a revolution could be made. Suvarov and I, being peasants, we knew how crazy the whole thing was – as bad as Tolstoy’s idea that by wearing a smock and helping bring in the harvest he was chasing more than a sentimental fantasy. Rybakov was in fact translating Suvarov’s piece into English for the weekly Brisbane Worker, but now I wished to set it in Russian.
   Altogether, our little group of comrades would make some noise in the great Australian torpor.
   2
   It did not take much attendance at Australian Workers Union meetings and general events at Trades Hall for my friend Suvarov to sense there was a strike coming, and that it would grow out of the Queensland Tramways depot. Although the strike would look only to improvements in the always hard-up life of workers who would utter grievances about wages, health and compensation for injury, it was to be welcomed just the same. Every strike was an education and got us closer to the day when the great truth would break on the workers, and they’d no longer ask for crumbs but for the whole table. The more strikes, the more of an education in the futility and pain of wringing from bosses the right to wear a badge, the right to better hours and overtime pay. But this one was to be an education for Suvarov and me too, in how things worked in Queensland.
   One of the triggers of this strike was a fellow named Joseph Freeman Bender, manager of the Brisbane Tramways, which belonged in turn to the great General Electric company of the United States. Mr Bender grew up in industrial Pittsburgh and had no time for unions, and had told the Brisbane Telegraph so. He was determined to keep union members out of his tramway sheds. Rybakov, who worked on a special project of some kind in Bender’s engineering department, said at dinner at Adler’s one night that he would come out with the strikers and to hell with Bender. That night his coughing woke us like artillery.