On 23 January, the coffin with Lenin's body was transported by train from Gorki to
Moscow and displayed at the Hall of Columns in the
House of the Unions, and it stayed there for three days. On 27 January, the body of Lenin was delivered to
Red Square, accompanied by martial music. There assembled crowds listened to a series of speeches delivered by
Mikhail Kalinin,
Grigory Zinoviev, and
Joseph Stalin, but notably not
Leon Trotsky, who had been convalescing in the
Caucasus. Trotsky would later claim that he had been given the wrong date for the funeral. Stalin's secretary,
Boris Bazhanov would later corroborate this account as he stated "Stalin was true to himself: he sent a telegram to Trotsky, who was in the Caucasus undergoing medical treatment, giving a false date for Lenin's funeral". French historian
Pierre Broue also cited the Moscow archives which documented written correspondence between Stalin and the secretary of the
Abkhazian party,
Nestor Lakoba, as evidence of Stalin's efforts to keep Trotsky in
Sukhumi during Lenin's funeral. Trotsky would also deliver a tribute to Lenin with his 1925 short book, "Lenin".
Alexei Rykov was also absent from the funeral as he had gone to Italy with his wife and had experienced
influenza. Afterwards the body was placed into the vault of a temporary wooden mausoleum (soon to be replaced with present-day
Lenin's Mausoleum), by the
Kremlin Wall. Despite the freezing temperatures, tens of thousands attended. Against the protestations of
Nadezhda Krupskaya, Lenin's widow, Lenin's body was embalmed to preserve it for long-term public display in the Red Square mausoleum. The commander of the
Moscow Garrison issued an order to place the
guard of honour at the mausoleum, whereby it was colloquially referred to as the "Number One Sentry". During the embalming process, Lenin's brain had been removed; in 1925, an institute was established to dissect it, revealing that Lenin had had severe
sclerosis. According to Bazhanov, Stalin was jubilant over Lenin's death while "publicly putting on the mask of grief". Similarly,
Old Bolshevik Grigory Sokolnikov reported Stalin making disparaging remarks about Lenin's passing with the words that he "couldn't die like a real leader!". == Post-Soviet period ==