, 1907 In 1903 he married the actress Lyubov (Lyuba) Dmitrievna Mendeleeva, daughter of the renowned chemist
Dmitri Mendeleev. Later, she would involve him in a complicated love-hate relationship with his fellow Symbolist
Andrei Bely. To Lyuba he dedicated a cycle of poetry that made him famous,
Stikhi o Prekrasnoi Dame (
Verses About the Beautiful Lady, 1904). Blok enthusiastically greeted the
1905 Russian Revolution. During the last period of his life, Blok emphasised political themes, pondering the messianic destiny of his country (
Vozmezdie, 1910–21;
Rodina, 1907–16;
Skify, 1918). In 1906 he wrote an encomium to
Mikhail Bakunin. Influenced by Solovyov's doctrines, he had vague apocalyptic apprehensions and often vacillated between hope and despair. "I feel that a great event was coming, but what it was exactly was not revealed to me", he wrote in his diary during the summer of 1917. Quite unexpectedly for most of his admirers, he accepted the
October Revolution as the final resolution of these apocalyptic yearnings. In May 1917 Blok was appointed as a
stenographer for the Extraordinary Commission to investigate illegal actions ex officio Ministers or to transcribe the (Thirteenth Section's) interrogations of those who knew
Grigori Rasputin. According to
Orlando Figes he was only present at the interrogation. In November 1917, a few days after the October Revolution, the
People's Commissar of Education,
Anatoly Lunacharsky invited 120 of the leading writers and other cultural figures to a meeting, which almost all boycotted. Blok was one of five to attend, along with
Vladimir Mayakovsky,
Vsevolod Meyerhold and two others. When the
Socialist Academy of Social Sciences was established in 1918, Blok became a participant. His poem,
The Twelve, written in 1918, describes 12 Red Guards in the violent chaos of the
Russian Civil War, who are likened to the Apostles, while "Ahead of them, Jesus Christ goes." Because this early show of support, Blok continued to be honoured by the Bolsheviks, despite his pre-revolutionary religious imagery, and his later disillusionment. In 1923,
Leon Trotsky devoted a whole chapter of his book
Literature and Revolution to Blok, saying that "Blok belonged to pre-October literature, but he overcame this, and entered into the sphere of October when he wrote
The Twelve. That is why he will occupy a special place in the history of Russian literature." Given the official report on poetry to the
First Congress of Soviet Writers,
Nikolai Bukharin praised Blok as "a poet of tremendous power (whose) verse achieves a chiselled monumentality..." but added that "he thought that with the sign of the Cross he could bless and at the same time exorcise the image of the unfolding revolution, and he perished without having spoke his final word." ==Work==